Monday, February 8, 2021

Books read in 2020

  • Total books read during this year: 22
  • Total books that I started to read but didn't finish: 2
  • physical books read: 22
  • ebooks read: 0
  • physical books started but unfinished: 2
  • ebooks started but unfinished: 0
  • Library books read: 1
  • Library books started but unread: 0
  • Books I liked: 13
  • Books I loved: 4
  • Books I hated: 0
  • Books I disliked or found meh: 2
  • Books I felt strongly about but can't classify as love or hate: 3
  • Books given away: I put at least 1 book in a Free Little Library but I can't remember how many
  • #1 most loved book this year: Something That May Shock and Discredit You by Daniel Lavery
  • #1 most hated book this year: tie between The Bookshop by Penelope Fitzgerald and Love Saves the Day by Gwen Cooper. They just made me so angry!

I keep reading fewer and fewer books each year, but at least for this one I had a pandemic I could pin the blame on. I no longer had four-hour blocks where I sat at a desk in the library and waited for people to come to me, so I read less. When you're doing virtual reference on a computer, you might as well just be on social media as well. Plus there was that whole people dying needlessly at the hands of a hateful and incompetent political regime thing, which was a tad stressful. A lot of people on the internet were reading a lot less as well, while some were reading more, so ymmv. I've completely moved away from ebooks in the last couple of years, and tried to read mostly from my TBR books or new purchases. Fewer library books because I was mostly at home and not trawling the stacks at work. I visited hardly any thrift stores, but I did buy a bunch of books from Barnes & Noble (I know, I know, but they were 50% off or more) and independent bookstores. I also asked for books for my birthday and Christmas, so ¯\_(ツ)_/¯  oh well! I will probably always have more 'in' books than 'out' books.

Once again, an enormous shoutout to Book Riot and their reading spreadsheet. It has truly changed the game for me. Here's their 2021 reading log spreadsheet

Here are some of my pie charts of my reading stats.



Love seeing the variety of genres I've read.


 
"Other" refers to group authors or no author given.


Gains in the queer authors/protagonists sector, I think (I don't believe that info was collected in the 2019 spreadsheet), while I clearly still need to do better with reading authors and characters of color.

Friday, February 5, 2021

November and December books

 Yikes, I am so behind on my book blogging. 

cover of A Tale of Two Castles. a brunette girl faces and looks at the viewer while a dragon flies behind her. two castles are in the background.
A Tale of Two Castles is a book I had on my to read list for a while. I no longer remember where I bought it; I'm guessing I probably got it from Savers or another thrift store; Dollar Tree is another possibility. The book is by Gail Carson Levine, who was one of my favorite authors when I was younger, so I knew it would be good. Despite the title, the book is not a retelling of A Tale of Two Cities, but rather of Puss in Boots. It took me an embarrassingly long time to figure that out; probably halfway through the book at the earliest. The reason for that is because, instead of being told from the perspective of any of the characters in Puss in Boots, it's told from the perspective of an original character. Amazon summary:

Newly arrived in the town of Two Castles, Elodie unexpectedly becomes the assistant to a brilliant dragon named Meenore--and together, they begin to solve mysteries. 

Their most important case concerns the town’s shape-shifting ogre, Count Jonty Um, who believes someone is plotting against him. Elodie must disguise herself to discover the source of the threat amid a cast of characters that includes a greedy king, a giddy princess, and a handsome cat trainer.

Overall, I thought this book was very good and I enjoyed reading it. This book felt more grounded in its  medieval world than Levine's other fantasies have been, probably because she clearly researched life in the middle ages and peppered her book with factoids. For example, Elodie recounted having to bathe last all the time; her father would go first, then her mother, then their adult permanent guest, then Elodie because she's a child. The bath water, by the time she got to it, would be gray. As someone who is interested in medieval Europe, I very much enjoyed this book and most of its characters (Elodie was constantly talking back and interrupting her elders to the point of being annoying, and the only ahistorical thing is that none of them smacked her for it). I'd highly recommend this book to anyone who likes a fairytale retelling, particularly one of a fairytale that has not already been retold to death. Fans of Karen Cushman's medieval girl books will love this one as well. Amazon just told me that there is a sequel, and I absolutely am going to check it out. 4/5 stars, probably giving away. Trigger warnings for this book: attempted murder, poisonings, animal cruelty & possibly murder, imprisonment, descriptions of medieval European hygiene (humans having fleas etc.), speciesism and prejudice against fantastical creature/person, theft, can't think of any others.  Cover notes: I like everything on this cover except for the portrayal of Elodie. Elodie is a peasant who wore plain peasant garb; she would absolutely not be wearing such a fine dress. I don't like the pinched-looking face they gave her.

 

I reread Christmas with Anne and Other Holiday Stories by L.M. Montgomery, as is my custom each holiday season. 

 

I also read (or reread) a book called Politically Correct Holiday Stories by James Finn Garner. He's also written a couple of Politically Correct fairytale retellings. Basically he puts these famous stories through a politically correct lens, which changes them completely. It's difficult to say whether Garner is poking fun at the patriarchal, Christian-centric, sexist stories or at PC culture; it seems to be both. To give you an example, his Frosty the Snowpersun has the titular character start up a protest movement for snowpurson rights, and they eventually melt under the lights of the television studio where they are being interviewed. Rudolph the red-nosed reindeer (can't remember his politically correct moniker) formed a union with the reindeer so that Santa Claus would give them what they were due. Stuff like that. Relatively amusing, but I won't be keeping this one. 3/5 stars.  Cover notes: Santa & Mrs. Claus are looking out their window at a crowd of elf protesters holding picket signs that are decidedly pro-union and anti-Claus. Kind of funny but they deserve it. Trigger warnings for this book: inclusivity and political correctness mocked; depictions of misogyny, capitalism, sexism and speciesism; character death/melting. Can't think of any others.