Books I Read in 2011
The annual list, in the order of reading:
Doctor Who: Nuclear Time, Oli Smith
Silas Marner, George Elliot
The Honorary Consul, Graham Greene
Parrot and Olivier in America, Peter Carey
The Quiet American, Graham Greene
The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, Muriel Spark
The Confession, John Grisham
Horns, Joe Hill
The Dark Night of the Soul, St. John of the Cross
Mere Anarchy, Woody Allen
The Making of Doctor Who, Malcolm Hulke & Terrence Dicks
Tarzan the Ape Man, Edgar Rice Burroughs
We Have Always Lived in the Castle, Shirley Jackson
Doctor Syn: A Tale of Romney Marsh, Russell Thorndyke
The Tenth Man, Graham Greene
The Complete Mr Mulliner Omnibus, P G Wodehouse
The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch, Philip K Dick
The Bone House, Stephen Lawhead
The Uses of Diversity, G K Chesterton
Longitude, Dava Sobel
Supergods, Grant Morrison
The Woman in Black, Susan Hill
A Game of Thrones, George R R Martin
Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, John LeCarre
Espresso Tales, Alexander McCall-Smith
A Clash of Kings, George R R Martin
Snuff, Terry Pratchett
What We Believe But Cannot Prove, ed. John Brockman
The Silent Stars Go By, Dan Abnett
I tried a bunch of new writers this year — Elliot, Spark, Burroughs, Jackson, Thorndyke, Sobel, Martin, and LeCarre. I enjoyed them all, but Jackson, Martin, and LeCarre were particular delights. I hadn't heard much of Shirley Jackson before I picked her book up, but now I fully anticipate reading her complete works in the next few years. For years I'd been calling John LeCarre my favourite author that I've never read, and he didn't disappoint. It was a rich, quick and entertaining read.
Martin was a bit of a surprise. I downloaded the preview on my Kindle and was impressed with how easily it read and how bold the plot was. I had mostly given up on high fantasy reading, but this turned my mind around and I am slightly ashamed at having taken a couple swipes at the sub-genre in REALMS. (But only ever so slightly.) It was made more fun by the fact that several of my friends are reading the same series; it's enjoyable to read as a group.
Grant Morrison's Supergods was quite an experience. It starts out as a superhero analytical retrospective, and turns into a confidential tell-all about life as a drugged-up anarchistic conjurer.
This was the first year that I read anything on Kindle, and I really enjoyed it. It's a great and versatile platform and I wax lyrical on its future of the publishing industry here.
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