Sunday, January 20, 2013

I read this year.

Rereads are italicized.
Favourites are green.
Books I enjoyed very much but have not quite made the favourite list are blue.
Books I disliked are red, not that I have a problem with the colour red or anything. It's a pretty decent colour.
Everything else is black.
Non-fiction is starred.

  • *1: The Brain That Changes Itself
  • 2: An Abundance of Katherines
  • 3: The Fault in Our Stars 
  • 4: The Phantom Tollbooth 
  • 5: Divergent (It's fun. I need that.)
  • 6: Memoirs of a Teenage Amnesiac
  • 7: Castration Celebration
  • 8: The Faceless Fiend
  • 9: Stories from the Vinyl Cafe (Awesome Canadian Lit. It started as a radio show.)
  • 10: Ender's Game
  • 11: Equal Rites
  • 12: The Light Fantastic
  • 13: First Test
  • 14: Neverwhere
  • 15: Paper Towns 
  • *16: A Place for Owls: True Animal Stories
  • 17: Cat's Cradle ("See the cat? See the cradle?")
  • 18: Player Piano
  • 19: Tuesdays With Morrie
  • 20: And Another Thing... (I came in expecting Hitch Hiker's Guide. Did not remotely live up to Hitch Hiker's Guide.)
  • 21: Nation
  • 22: Dr. Horrible
  • 23: Genius Squad (Not as good as previous books in the series)
  • 24: The Wee Free Men
  • 25: A Planet Called Treason
  • 26: Carrie
  • 27: Asterix the Gaul  (I grew up on Asterix. Nice to re-read.)
  • 28: Asterix in Spain
  • 29: The Taming of the Shrew
  • 30: A Faraway Island (A distant family member who died brought me this when he visited from Sweden. It's weird to hold something he personally selected just six months ago. Not a comment on the book, just a thought.)
  • 31: Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close (I might have disliked this because school made me analyze it to death.)
  • 32: Lord of the Flies
  • 33: Catching Fire
  • 34: Maus: My Father Bleeds History
  • 35: The Fault in Our Stars (The second time that year.)
  • *36: Growing Up Jung
  • 37: Asterix in Britain
  • *38: What the Dog Saw
  • 39: So You Want to Be a Wizard
  • 40: Insurgent
  • *41: Let's Pretend This Never Happened (made me laugh.)
  • 42: The Magicians (Beautiful writing. "Literary fantasy" at its best.)
  • 43: Furies of Calderon
  • 44: The Andromeda Strain (Crichton is perfect for camping trips.)
  • 45: The Night Circus
  • 46: Me, Who Dove into the Heart of the World: A Novel
  • *47: Quiet: The Power of Introverts
  • 48: Pride and Prejudice
  • 49: 5 Very Good Reasons to Punch a Dolphin in the Mouth
  • *50: Outliers
  • 51: Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance (If anybody ever gets around to analyzing it, lemme know. I still am unsure of what happened.)
  • 52: Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone (A stolen copy from my middle school's library. I will return it eventually.)
  • 53: The Perks of Being a Wallflower (I thought that it was over-hyped.)
  • 54: Coraline
  • 55: It's Kind of a Funny Story
  • *56: The Psychopath Test
  • 57: Hush, Hush (Twilight-inspired YA Lit the mother bought me.)
  • 58: The Long Earth
  • 59: Good Omens (Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman. Oh my gosh.)
  • 60: Mort

<3 Gabi


P.S. Exams are almost over, then I will have time to write stuff and read other people's posts.

7 comments:

  1. It's Kind of a Funny Story was brilliant and heartbreaking and I adored it. I quite enjoyed Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, but then again, I can be a bit of a pretentious twat.
    Perks is a great book, but I do believe that it was extremely over-hyped, what with the movie that came out (which I still have not seen.) All in all, I did like Perks, but it wasn't life-changing. I haven't read it in a long time, so who knows. I could go back, and my feelings could have changed.
    Yes to all for the John Green. The Fault in Our Stars is in my top 5 favorite books of all time, with good reason.
    Quiet and the Power of Introverts sounds extremely interesting! I love non-fiction works, and being that I work in a library they are extremely easy to come by.
    I quite like Divergent as a book; the characters are good, even if they plot is a bit trite and predictable. You are right it is fun. I may or may not have stolen the name Tris for my main NaNo character. (Truthfully, I didn't. She already had the name Beatrice when I read Divergent. I stole the nickname Tris. Trixie just didn't fit!)
    That was an extremely long comment. Wow.

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  2. The only books I touched were textbooks and scientific papers, which aren't even books.

    Sigh...

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  3. I'm so glad you posted this! I love seeing other people's reading lists, it gives me great ideas for future reads :)

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  4. ASTERIX(!) * is awesome. * and Tintin are the greatest comics ever written. I will stop substituting 'Asterix' with '*'. I was just really excited(!).

    I've really fallen off the reading wagon. I used to read a crapload, but nowhere near as much these days. I think it stems from the fact that I get migraines and headaches much easier now, and that I don't have a comfy chair to read in. I read whilst lying in my bed at night, and research has proven that lying in bed at night makes you sleepy, whilst you are most likely already sleepy - so instead of reading late into the night, I get tired after a bit and then go to sleep. This must be rectified.

    I just finished 'A Dance with Dragons' ('A Song of Ice and Fire' series), and am wondering what to read next. It's a toss-up between rereading the entire 'Malazan Book of the Fallen' series (my favourite series of books)or the entire 'Wheel of Time' series (my second favourite).

    Decisions, decisions.

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  5. Reading this made me very happy. You have excellent taste in books. I really need to read Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance. It's just been sitting on my shelf for a whole year.

    I wish I read more, but I have trouble reading one book at a time, and I end up just not finishing any of them. Not to mention I usually don't have the time.

    Cat's Cradle, Ender's Game, It's Kind of a Funny Story, and Good Omens are definitely on my favorites list as well.

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  6. Reading this list was very helpful. I discovered some books that I would definitely want to read.

    www.modernworld4.blogspot.com

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  7. For ZAMM: Pirsig just replaces the Platonic "Form of the Good" with "Quality" in a very roundabout way (through Eastern religions and his life-story). Not a book that philosophers take seriously, but a great novel.

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Comments make me feel all warm and fuzzy, and I'm very interested in what you say. :D