Big Bookish Wrap-Up of the Year

We had a sludgy brown Christmas here in Red Wing, but as I type this, snow is falling, and an untouched layer of whiteness covers the world outside my windows. AT LAST.  I’ve been waiting–at first hopefully, then hungrily, then poutily, then trying to pretend that I didn’t care, even while using each evening’s early-falling darkness to imagine that everything outdoors was blanketed in snow–and now, with a cup of coffee beside me and Brom Bones snoring softly at the other end of the couch, I am content.


It’s been a strange year. And a speedy one. (My last post here had to do with All-Hallows Read, which shows how the final months of 2014 slipped away from me entirely.) The end of a five-book, thirteen-years-in-the-preparation series. Two cross-country tours. More school visits than I can count. New writing projects. Hard losses. One very big, slowly approaching gain. But whatever was happening around me or inside of me, written words kept me company, as they always have.


They’re a lot more reliable than snow.


Here’s what I read this year (rereads marked with asterisks, and read-alouds in bold):


WICKED PLANTS – Amy Stewart

MANHOOD FOR AMATEURS* – Michael Chabon

QUIDDITCH THROUGH THE AGES, THE TALES OF BEEDLE THE BARD, FANTASTIC BEASTS AND WHERE TO FIND THEM – J.K. Rowling

THE VAMPIRE LESTAT* – Anne Rice

THE ELEGANCE OF THE HEDGEHOG – Muriel Barbery

THE STRANGE CASE OF EDWARD GOREY – Alexander Theroux

GOBLIN SECRETS – Will Alexander

BOXERS AND SAINTS – Gene Luen Yang

EMMY AND THE INCREDIBLE SHRINKING RAT – Lynne Jonell

WONDER WOMAN 1 & 2 (Blood and Guts) – Brian Azzarello, Cliff Chiary

ADVENTURES OF A CAT-WHISKERED GIRL – Daniel Pinkwater

SPIN – Robert Charles Wilson

QUIET: THE POWER OF INTROVERTS IN A WORLD THAT WON’T STOP TALKING – Susan Cain

THE PLEASURES AND SORROWS OF WORK – Alain de Botton

SIN AND THE SECOND CITY – Karen Abbott

THE FOURTH STALL – Chris Rylander

A RELIABLE WIFE – Robert Goolrick

BAD MOTHER* - Ayelet Waldman

THE CHILDREN OF ODIN – Padraic Colum

CULTURE SHOCK: JAPAN – P. Sean Bramble

BRADBURY SPEAKS: TOO SOON FROM THE CAVE, TOO FAR FROM THE STARS – Ray Bradbury

COUNTRY GIRL – Edna O’Brien

THE MASTER BUTCHERS SINGING CLUB – Louise Erdrich

THE DROWNED WORLD – J.G. Ballard

TOM WAITS ON TOM WAITS: INTERVIEWS AND ENCOUNTERS – Paul Maher Jr., Ed.

VIRGINIA WOOLF: A BIOGRAPHY – Quentin Bell

DANSE MACABRE – Stephen King

THE BOOK OF JEZEBEL – Anna Holmes, Ed.

A WOLF AT THE TABLE – Augusten Burroughs

THE OCTOBER COUNTRY – Ray Bradbury

FIVE FLAVORS OF DUMB – Antony John

A SONG OF ICE AND FIRE: A GAME OF THRONES – George R. R. Martin

THE OLD WILLIS PLACE – Mary Downing Hahn

CAUTIONARY TALES FOR CHILDREN – Hilaire Belloc and Edward Gorey

THE GHOST IN THE GLASS HOUSE – Carey Wallace

ROOFTOPPERS – Katherine Rundell

SKELLIG – David Almond

THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES*  – Nathaniel Hawthorne

SONG WITHOUT WORDS: DISCOVERING MY DEAFNESS HALFWAY THROUGH LIFE – Gerald Shea

FAR FROM THE TREE: PARENTS, CHILDREN, AND THE SEARCH FOR IDENTITY – Andrew Solomon

COUNTY O – Robert Hedin

THE TRIP TO ECHO SPRING: ON WRITERS AND DRINKING – Olivia Laing

WHAT’S THAT PIG OUTDOORS: A MEMOIR OF DEAFNESS – Henry Kisor

THE APOTHECARY – Maile Meloy

SCARY, NO SCARY – Zachary Schomburg

DOLL BONES – Holly Black

WOULD COULD THAT BE AT THIS HOUR? – Lemony Snicket

THE CABINET OF EARTHS – Anne Nesbit

GALVESTON – Nic Pizzolatto

WE WERE LIARS – E. Lockhart

EON – Alison Goodman

A CROOKED KIND OF PERFECT – Linda Urban

HOW I LIVE NOW – Meg Rosoff

DOLL BABY – Laura Lane McNeal

CLEMENTINE – Sara Pennypacker

CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY* – Roald Dahl

PICTURES OF HOLLIS WOODS – Patricia Reilly Giff

DIAL-A-GHOST – Eva Ibbotson

WISCONSIN LORE – Robert E. Gard and L.G. Sorden, collectors

DANNY THE CHAMPION OF THE WORLD – Roald Dahl

ALABASTER: GRIMMER TALES – Caitlin R. Kiernan

WAIT TIL HELEN COMES* – Mary Downing Hahn

ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT – Erich Maria Remarque

THE GHOST OF CRUTCHFIELD HALL – Mary Downing Hahn

MADE FROM SCRATCH: DISCOVERING THE PLEASURES OF A HANDMADE LIFE – Jenna Woginrich

CHANGING MY MIND: OCCASIONAL ESSAYS – Zadie Smith

THE BLUE JAY’S DANCE: A BIRTH YEAR* – Louise Erdrich

DEMIAN – Herman Hesse

CARSICK – John Waters

DANIEL DERONDA – George Eliot

SEX, DRUGS, AND COCOA PUFFS: A LOW CULTURE MANIFESTO – Chuck Klosterman

CLASS MATTERS –  Correspondents of the New York Times

SPLENDORS AND GLOOMS – Laura Amy Schlitz

THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO – Stieg Larsson

UNACCUSTOMED EARTH – Jhumpa Lahiri

THE MAN IN THE EMPTY BOAT – Mark Salzman

SEX & VIOLENCE – Carrie Mesrobian

OPERATING INSTRUCTIONS: A JOURNAL OF MY SON’S FIRST YEAR* – Anne Lamott

REIGN OF ERROR: THE HOAX OF THE PRIVATIZATION MOVEMENT AND THE DANGER TO AMERICA’S PUBLIC SCHOOLS – Diane Ravitch

THE BEST OF FRIENDS: MARTHA AND ME – Mariana Pasternak

SEXUAL POLITICS – Kate Millett

THE UNLIKELY ADVENTURES OF MABEL JONES: THE VOYAGE OF THE FERROSHUS MAGGOT – Will Mabbitt

NEW ORLEANS CITY GUIDE: AMERICAN GUIDE SERIES – Federal Writers’ Project/WPA, 1938

AN ACCIDENTAL ADVENTURE #3: WE GIVE A SQUID A WEDGIE – C. Alexander London

ANNA AND THE FRENCH KISS – Stephanie Perkins

TALES FROM MOOMIN VALLEY – Tove Janssen

THROUGH THE WOODS – Emily Carroll


It’s crazy — as I type this list, I can suddenly recall exactly which book I was reading at the gate in Reagan International Airport, or Richmond, or Phoenix; which book was with me on a balcony on Jekyll Island, Georgia, or in a teeny white cottage in coastal New Hampshire, or in a patisserie in the French Quarter; which books I read to Ryan in the car on Thursday night trips between Minneapolis and Red Wing and which ones he read to me in the kitchen while I made dinner.  Thank goodness for books. Without them, a lot more of this year would be a blur.


There are lots of wonderful things on this list, including some old favorites, but a few first-time reads that stand out in my mind are David Almond’s SKELLIG, a British children’s novel published in 1998 that is so spare and subtle and strange and beautiful I’ve had trouble describing it without getting teary, THE MASTER BUTCHERS SINGING CLUB, which is one of those books that is so perfectly constructed that you don’t even notice the complex, distinctive writing until it knocks you over with its beauty (and then does it again and again), and THROUGH THE WOODS, Emily Carroll’s 2014 graphic novel, which uses that increasingly well-worn trick of re-imagining fairy tales, but in a way that feels entirely sharp and fresh. Distinctive, rich, eerie, and lovely.


Wishing you a New Year full of good stories–both the true and the almost-true kind.


snowy christmas light

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Published on December 29, 2014 12:43
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