Sunday, January 04, 2009

2008 in review

Only 33 books read in 2008. I’ve been keeping track of what I read since 1997, and this is but a fraction of some past years. On the other hand, in the past, I read a lot of … how shall we put it … less than memorable mysteries. These days, I’m busier with work, I have other hobbies and interests, and I often have lunch with friends instead of holing up by myself and reading. Those seem to be good things. (OK, OK, I admit that many days I don’t read while I eat lunch because I’m catching up on email, but still….)

I always used to have to spend a good bit of time going through my list of books trying to come up with the top ten. When there are 200 titles, it’s a little different. I think I’ve had years where my first cut for a top ten was around 30 titles!

Given that I spend less time reading now, I do tend to spend my time with things I enjoy. All of these were well worth my time, and picking a top ten from only 33 seems a bit ridiculous, so I won’t do that this year.

I never set formal reading goals in the past, as I was uncomfortable with making recreation seem like work, but I do have one this year: make sure I read at least one book per month. April 2008 was barren, as you’ll see below, but the March and May reads were on the borders, so the drought was fairly lengthy. That didn’t feel good.

Right now, I’m reading the fourth Stephenie Meyer, to wrap up the Bella-Edward-Jacob saga and have started Pierre Bayard’s Who Killed Roger Ackroyd? I also have the latest Margaret Maron and Laura Lippman from the library.

Happy new year to everyone.

The 2008 List

January

Kate Ellis, The Skeleton Room

Charlaine Harris, Ice Cold Grave

John Hart, The King of Lies

Carol Goodman, The Sonnet Lover

Joanne Trollope, Friday Nights

John Hart, Down River

February

Steve Hamilton, Night Work

Anita Shreve, Resistance

March

Greg Iles, Third Degree

Louise Perry, The Cruelest Month

April

May

Heather Terrell, The Map Thief

June

Carol Goodman, The Night Villa

July

Peter Robinson, Friend of the Devil

Craig Johnson, Another Man’s Moccasins

Harlan Coben, Hold Tight

Ian Rankin, The Naming of the Dead

August

Deborah Crombie, Where Memories Lie

September

David Handler, Sour Cherry Surprise

Hallie Ephron, Never Tell a Lie

October

Robert Crais, Chasing Darkness

Edward Bloor, Taken

November

Ladies’ Night at Finbar’s Hotel (short stories)

Lee Child, Nothing to Lose

Robert B Parker, Rough Water

Edward Bloor, London Calling

Maeve Binchy, Heart and Soul (reviewed for Library Journal, due out in March)

Pierre Bayard, How to Talk About Books You Haven’t Read (non-fiction)

Colin Meloy, Let It Be (memoir of sorts, part of Continuum’s 33 1/3 series, about the Replacements’ album, not the Beatles)


December

Stephenie Meyer, Twilight

Stephenie Meyer, New Moon

Jodi Picoult, My Sister’s Keeper

Agatha Christie, The Murder of Roger Ackroyd

Stephenie Meyer, Eclipse