2018’s Big Bookish Wrap-Up of the Year

It feels like I posted 2017’s wrap-up just a couple of weeks ago, but here it is, already time for another. I am every old-person-dazzled-by-the-passing-of-time cliche.


Writing-wise:

It’s been a crazy year: Releasing THE COLLECTORS with a round of school visits and amazing festivals, having CANDLE AND PINS: POEMS ON SUPERSTITIONS come out into the world (I’ve been writing, publishing, and polishing these poems for almost a decade, and all I wanted was to see them gathered between two covers at last), finishing revisions on my next YA novel (LAST THINGS, coming at you in May!), publishing poems and short fiction in Wee TalesMirror Danceand Enchanted Living/Faerie Magazineand ALMOST completing rewrites of THE COLLECTORS 2 (to be called A STORM OF WISHES). 2018 was mostly a year of rewriting, revising, and re-revising. 2019 should allow me to start some things from scratch, and I can hardly wait for the chance to sit down with a brand new, perfectly blank notebook and plunge in.


Reading-wise:

MOONGLOW – Michael Chabon (aloud to Ryan)

WHERE THE MOUNTAIN MEETS THE MOON – Grace Lin

THE DEVILS YOU KNOW – M.C. Atwood

TATTOOS ON THE HEART: THE POWER OF BOUNDLESS COMPASSION – Gregory Boyle

INVISIBLE GIRLS – Nova Ren Suma

THOUSAND STAR HOTEL (poems) – Bao Phi

THE WHITE ALBUM – Joan Didion

ARCHIVIST WASP – Nicole Kornher-Stace

BLISS – Kathryn Littlewood

MAGIC FOR BEGINNERS – Kelly Link

MAGDALENE (poems) – Marie Howe

TED HUGHES: THE UNAUTHORIZED LIFE – Jonathan Bate

THE GREAT GHOST RESCUE – Eva Ibbotson

LATCHKEY – Nicole Kornher-Stace

WALKING ON WATER: REFLECTIONS ON FAITH AND ART – Madeleine L’Engle

THE DARK DARK – Samantha Hunt

BROOKLYN – Colm Toibin

THE KEY TO EXTRAORDINARY – Natalie Lloyd

LAURA INGALLS IS RUINING MY LIFE – Shelley Tougas

BAYOU MAGIC – Jewell Parker Rhodes

THE OSTRICH AND OTHER LOST THINGS – Beth Hautala

RED BIRD (poems) – Mary Oliver

THE BLACK WITCH – Laurie Forest

A STUDY IN CHARLOTTE – Brittany Cavallaro

THE FIRST TIME I GOT PAID FOR IT: WRITERS’ TALES FROM THE HOLLYWOOD TRENCHES – Peter Lefcourt and Laura J. Shipro, eds.

CIVILWARLAND IN BAD DECLINE – George Saunders

STRANGER THAN FICTION – Chuck Palaniuk

CRACKED UP TO BE – Courtney Summers

ELSA LANCHESTER: HERSELF – Elsa Lanchester

HER BODY AND OTHER PARTIES – Carmen Maria Machado

COLD HARD TRUTH – Anne Greenwood Brown

STONEPICKER (poems) – Frieda Hughes

THE TANGLEWOOD TERROR – Kurtis Scaletta

JEALOUS WITNESS (poems) – Andrei Codrescu

THE LETTERS OF SYLVIA PLATH, VOLUME 1

SELECTED POEMS OF T.S. ELIOT (reread)

THE HAZEL WOOD – Melissa Albert

THE GREEN HOUSE (poems) – Joyce Sutphen

WE’LL FLY AWAY – Bryan Bliss

DREADFUL YOUNG LADIES – Kelly Barnhill

WE ARE OKAY – Nina LaCour

DREAD NATION – Justina Ireland

THE 2018 RHYSLING ANTHOLOGY (poems) – Linda Addison, ed.

THE ASTONISHING ADVENTURES OF FANBOY AND GOTH GIRL – Barry Lyga

AND I DARKEN – Kiersten White

BLOOD, WATER, PAINT – Joy McCullough

LONG WAY DOWN – Jason Reynolds

SING, UNBURIED, SING – Jesmyn Ward

SNOW AND ROSE – Emily Winfield Martin

CALYPSO – David Sedaris (aloud to Ryan)

THE SECRET OF ZOOM – Lynne Jonell

THE WICKED DEEP – Shea Earnshaw

SMILE – Raina Telgemeier

GOTH GIRL RISING – Barry Lyga

POPS – Michael Chabon (aloud to Ryan)

AMONG THE SAVAGES – Shirley Jackson (reread)

BROWN GIRL DREAMING – Jacqueline Woodson

THE MAD WOLF’S DAUGHTER – Diane Magras

WE’LL BE THE LAST ONES TO LET YOU DOWN: MEMOIR OF A GRAVEDIGGER’S DAUGHTER – Rachel Hanel

FUN HOME – Alison Bechdel

A COLLECTION OF NIGHTMARES – Christina Sng

AND THE TREES CREPT IN – Dawn Kurtagich

MIDDLEMARCH – George Eliot

ALL THE CROOKED SAINTS – Maggie Stiefvater

THE LAST OF AUGUST – Brittany Cavallaro (aloud to Ryan)

FURIOUSLY HAPPY – Jenny Lawson

THE GRIP OF IT – Jac Jemc

CRAZY FROM THE HEAT – David Lee Roth (aloud to Ryan)

FICCIONES – Jorge Luis Borges

STRANGE THE DREAMER – Laini Taylor

JERK, CALIFORNIA – Jonathan Friesen

BEAUTIFUL MUSIC FOR UGLY CHILDREN – Kirsten Cronn-Mills

THINGS TO DO WHEN YOU’RE GOTH IN THE COUNTRY – Chavisa Woods

THE CASQUETTE GIRLS – Alys Arden

THE LIE TREE – Frances Hardinge

THE ACCIDENT SEASON – Moira Fowley-Doyle

THE LATEHOMECOMER: A HMONG FAMILY MEMOIR – Kao Kalia Yang

THE DOLL’S ALPHABET – Camilla Grudova

THE GRACES – Laure Eve

LUST AND WONDER – Augusten Burroughs

THE MISSING PIECE OF CHARLIE O’REILLY – Rebecca Ansari

CITY OF GHOSTS – Victoria Schwab

THE STRANGERS – Margaret Peterson Haddix

DEAR SISTER – Allison McGhee

TELLING MEMORIES AMONG SOUTHERN WOMEN: DOMESTIC WORKERS AND THEIR EMPLOYERS IN THE SEGREGATED SOUTH – Susan Tucker

SPOOK – Mary Roach

A PROPERLY UNHAUNTED PLACE – Will Alexander

A ROOM AWAY FROM THE WOLVES – Nova Ren Suma

ROBIN – Dave Itzkoff (aloud to Ryan)

LIFE INSIDE MY MIND: 31 AUTHORS SHARE THEIR PERSONAL STRUGGLES – Jessica Burkhart, ed.

FLANEUSE: WOMEN WALK THE CITY IN PARIS, NEW YORK, TOKYO, VENICE, AND LONDON – Lauren Elkin

DEVILS UNTO DUST – Emma Berquist

DAMSEL – Elana K. Arnold

EVERGREEN TIDINGS FROM THE BAUMGARTNERS – Gretchen Anthony

BAD FEMINIST – Roxane Gay (aloud to Ryan)

THE GIRL WHO FELL BENEATH FAIRYLAND AND LED THE REVELS THERE – Catherynne M. Valente

THIS ONE SUMMER – Jillian Tamaki and Mariko Tamaki

HEY, KIDDO – Jarrett Kroscoczka

WADE IN THE WATER (poems) – Tracy K. Smith

THE VANDERBEEKERS OF 141ST STREET – Karina Yan Glaser

THE LETTERS OF SYLVIA PLATH, VOL. 2

LESSONS ON EXPULSION (poems) – Erika L. Sanchez

SADIE – Courtney Summers


 


My six very favorites of the year — HER BODY AND OTHER PARTIES, CALYPSO, THOUSAND STAR HOTEL, THE LIE TREE (with DAMSEL, SADIE, and LONG WAY DOWN tied for second in the YA category), SING, UNBURIED, SING, and THIS ONE SUMMER — happen to fall into six different categories (short stories, essay/memoir, poetry, YA novel, adult novel, and graphic novel). They’re wildly different from each other, obviously, but they share that thing about really great books: not only can you barely stand to put them down, but you remember exactly where you were when you read certain passages, what the light was like, where you were sitting. It’s weird that it works this way. You’re completely absorbed in the book, but at the same time, the book is changing you, making you open your eyes and notice the world around you in a new way. So a great book is like a fresh pair of contact lenses.


Happy reading, happy writing, and happy end-of-2018, everybody.


 


 

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Published on December 30, 2018 10:00
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