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ARCHIVE 2014 > Simon's 30 books in 2014

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message 1: by Simon (new)

Simon Fletcher I am an avid though slightly slow reader which Is why I'm only aiming for 30 books this year. The past couple of years has been spent studying for an MA so has meant that my book count has been on the low side. Its also meant that I have had some difficulty getting back into the practice of reading for pleasure.
I am currently reading:

Not In Your Lifetime by Anthony Summers

It seems a fairly well researched and critical approach to the whole event which was what I was looking for. So far I'm enjoying it.
Next on my to read list is

An Astronaut's Guide to Life on Earth by Chris Hadfield


message 2: by Simon (last edited Jan 17, 2014 04:41AM) (new)

Simon Fletcher ]Ahh the best laid plans of mice and men.
Was hoping to read Chris Hadfield's book but my wife got there first. So having to find something else to read in the interim I came across this:

The Scourging Angel The Black Death in the British Isles by Benedict Gummer

Should keep me entertained on the way home from work.


message 3: by Simon (last edited Jan 17, 2014 04:39AM) (new)

Simon Fletcher Such is the way with my reading. Books get picked up, started, put down, put on hold and even thrown away. My wife finished An Astronaut's Guide to Life so The Scourging Angel is currently on hold.
So far though I'm not sure quite what to make of it. Hadfield is passionate about communicating the importance and beauty of space exploration. Unfortunately though this passion is somewhat lost on the page.
My wife tells me it improves as it goes along. So as the song states time to break on through to the other side.


message 4: by Simon (last edited Apr 28, 2014 10:23AM) (new)

Simon Fletcher Having dyslexia I have always loved Graphic Novels and comics. It was through reading them that I first gained my love of reading. It is therefore a medium I return to regularly and tend to end up splurging out on. This weekend has seen one of these splurge sessions. As a result of which I've added 5 books to my read list for my challenge
Marvel Zombies The Complete Collection Volume 1 by Mark Millar

Batman/Judge Dredd Judgment on Gotham by Alan Grant

Batman/Judge Dredd Vendetta in Gotham by John Wagner

Batman/Judge Dredd The Ultimate Riddle by John Wagner

Batman/Judge Dredd Die Laughing by John Wagner


message 5: by Simon (new)

Simon Fletcher Seem to be racing along with my reading at the moment. might even have to revise my target at this rate as I seem to have read 8 already and January's not finished yet.

Have just finished The Time Keeper by Mitch Albom

I've read all of Ablom's books and have loved them. Admittedly they can be a little schmaltzy and sentimental but the story telling itself in this one is fantastic, broken up as it was into small moments in time. It is for me the best thing he has ever written.
Have now started reading A Chinese Life by Philippe Otie which I'm half way through and enjoying. A strange mix of biography and Graphic Novel, very reminiscent of Logicomix An Epic Search for Truth by Apostolos Doxiadis .


message 6: by Simon (new)

Simon Fletcher BOOKS, BOOKS EVERYWHERE

Books, books everywhere and I do mean everywhere. It’s true to say that I've never seen a book that I didn't think would look good on one of my bookshelves, tables, floor or bag. Its strange though because as a child I was never much of a reader. Point of fact I would do anything to avoid reading. Being dyslexic didn't help because reading meant reading out loud, something I dreaded and still do because I'm so bad at it.
I could read and did as long as I could do it quietly in my own head. But books never meant anything to me. That was until I spent a night at a friend of a friend’s house getting absolutely mullered at a party whilst his parents were away (yes we've all done it).
Matt was the brother of the school genius (Will) and the son of two teachers and they had a lounge that was in essence one huge book case, floor to ceiling, end to end, stacked, packed and rammed with books; books of every shape, size and style. I remember looking at all these books and thinking to myself that I was in some kind of Shangi-la and that when I had my own place I too wanted a room like this. It’s true to say that I also thought that I too could be as clever as the Will if only I read as much as this family seemed to. Like I said I was very drunk. The genius thing never happened but the bookcases did.


message 7: by Ahtims (new)

Ahtims (embeddedinbooks) Nice to know that - that bookcases happened


message 8: by Simon (new)

Simon Fletcher Definately having one of those can't get into a book phases. So the question for the evening is KBO or chuck it in and try something else?


message 9: by Simon (new)

Simon Fletcher Decided to KBO with my current book:
A Nearly Infallible History of Christianity by Nick Page
Making slow progress but getting there.


message 10: by Simon (new)

Simon Fletcher World War Z An Oral History of the Zombie War by Max Brooks

What's the difference between a polymath and a Gadfly when it comes to reading?

Focus.

I have none and therefore I will always be a Gadfly. My taste in reading is wide and I tend to jump between genres and styles with alarming ease and no particular plan other than, oh that looks interesting. Thus my strange ability to go from Christian History (lite) and Zombie literature. Though having said that Brookes' novel is more than just the normal schlock gore fest. Its a mix of post war reportage and zombie apocalypse horror.
Loving it so far.


message 11: by Simon (last edited Apr 28, 2014 10:22AM) (new)

Simon Fletcher Books I'm looking forward to reading at some point this year:

MaddAddam (MaddAddam Trilogy, #3) by Margaret Atwood

Perelandra (Space Trilogy, #2) by C.S. Lewis

The Death of Grass by John Christopher

Tombstone The Great Chinese Famine, 1958-1962 by Yang Jisheng

Hallucinations by Oliver Sacks

How many of them (or indeed, if any of them) I will read though is anyone's guess. The joys of Gadfly reading.


message 12: by Simon (last edited Apr 28, 2014 10:23AM) (new)

Simon Fletcher Resent reads:

Dead Man Walking The Eyewitness Account of the Death Penalty That Sparked a National Debate by Helen Prejean

The Reader by Bernhard Schlink

When the Wind Blows by Raymond Briggs

In Cold Blood by Truman Capote


message 13: by Simon (last edited Apr 28, 2014 10:22AM) (new)

Simon Fletcher Making steady progress towards my goal. No lets be honest I really underestim,ated the number of books I was going to get through this year. 30 was an estimate based on the fact that I had only read about 25 books or so in the past 2-3 years. I forgot to factor in the fact that now having finished my MA I am able to do so much more reading.
So this year is all about the joy of finding out how many books I can read then setting this as a bench mark from now on. The journey I hope will be interesting.
Books I have resently finished:
The Death of Innocents An Eyewitness Account of Wrongful Executions by Helen Prejean

Rogue Trooper (Rogue Trooper 1) by Gerry Finley-Day

Capote by Gerald Clarke

The People’s Manifesto by Mark Thomas


message 14: by Simon (last edited May 01, 2014 04:47AM) (new)

Simon Fletcher Having just finished reading:

The Complete Stories of Truman Capote by Truman Capote

I started out reading it thinking that while this is well written the stories lacked something, like a coherent ending I was particularly let down in this way by the ending of A Tree of Night. I felt he was trying to be too clever by half. As I went on though the writing just got better and better and Capote just seemed to his his stride and was writing beautifully crafted stories. His biographical stories in particular are sublime.
I found though that reading these short stories an oddly disjointed experience. Disjointed because I tended to want to start and finish a story in one sitting so had almost to have to plan my reading so that I had enough time to do this. Normally with novels or other reading I would just read until I had run out of time, stick a bookmark in and feel satisfied that I had made progress with my book. With this though satisfaction was never achieved if I couldn't finish a story.
Is this book worth reading? Oh yes, for the biographical stories alone its worth reading.


message 15: by Simon (new)

Simon Fletcher One last book for the month of April

Permanent, Faithful, Stable Christian Same-Sex Partnerships. Jeffrey John by Jeffrey John

Very much a Ronseal book; does exactly what it says on the tin and does it very well. Well argued though does at times use similar methods of argument that he criticises others for using.
Not a great introduction to the debate though as it is obviously not a balanced approach to the issue. If however you want to read a defense of same sex marriage though you will have to go a long way to find better than this.


message 16: by Simon (last edited May 20, 2014 03:49AM) (new)

Simon Fletcher A little light reading for the beginning of April.


The Incredible Hulk Planet Hulk by Greg Pak
World War Hulk by Greg Pak


message 17: by Simon (new)

Simon Fletcher This has been my big challenge to myself this month:


One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcí­a Márquez

With the passing of the author recently and the rave reviews of his work I thought I would read this.
Speaking purely for myself and with the expectation of the odd "oh what are you talking about", big mistake.
Don't get me wrong it was well written and weirdly compelling in places it was a grind from start to finish.


message 18: by Simon (new)

Simon Fletcher Having waded my way through one hundred years of solitude I decided that i needed something a little brisker for my next read:

The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway
I remember being captivated by the film when I saw it as a kid and I was as captivated by the book.

Now reading:
Conduct Unbecoming Gays And Lesbians In The Us Military by Randy Shilts

Having read both of Shilts' other two books, both of which are fantastic and, especially in the case of And the Band Played on by Randy Shilts , should be on everyone's reading list, I am really looking forward to reading this.


message 19: by Simon (new)

Simon Fletcher Randy Shilts' Conduct Unbecoming was another masterful piece of writing. It is however an incomplete book, incomplete because I don't think his illness allowed him to finish the book as he would want (in fact he died from an AIDS related ilness shortly after finishing the book)and incomplete because the strands of the story continued to play out for a further 30 years and have only recently been resolved as Obama finally saw off "don't ask don't tell".
Shilts had planned to write about the issue of homosexuality in the Church following on from this book. His untimely death though robbed us of what I am sure would have been another amazing book.


message 20: by Simon (last edited Jul 04, 2014 05:19AM) (new)

Simon Fletcher Currently Reading


J. Edgar Hoover The Man and the Secrets by Curt Gentry


message 21: by Simon (new)

Simon Fletcher now on book 54 for the year which when i had thought 30 would be a challenge has surprised me as has the diversity. Comes of having a gadfly mind.
Books read between my last post and now:
House of M by Brian Michael Bendis
Awakenings by Oliver Sacks
All the President's Men by Carl Bernstein
A Kind Of Alaska A Play by Harold Pinter
Oh What A Lovely War by Joan Littlewood
The Final Days by Bob Woodward
Frost/Nixon Behind the Scenes of the Nixon Interviews by David Frost
How I Won the Yellow Jumper Dispatches from the Tour de France by Ned Boulting
On the Road Bike The Search For a Nation’s Cycling Soul by Ned Boulting
Hiroshima Nagasaki The Real Story of the Atomic Bombings and Their Aftermath by Paul Ham
The Coma by Alex Garland
The Bridge  by Iain Banks


message 22: by Kara (new)

Kara (karaayako) | 3984 comments Great job with your goal, Simon! Any favorites so far?


message 23: by Simon (new)

Simon Fletcher The tree standout books this year have been:
Randy Shilts' Conduct Unbecoming Gays And Lesbians In The Us Military by Randy Shilts
the last book he wrote before his death from an AIDS related illness. This along with his book And the Band Played On Politics, People, and the AIDS Epidemic by Randy Shilts and his biography of Harvey Milk The Mayor of Castro Street The Life and Times of Harvey Milk by Randy Shilts are 3 of the three best books books I've ever read.
Iain Banks' The Bridge  by Iain Banks
a surreal tour of the mind in extremis and how the mind uses what it knows to build a world of its own in an attempt to understand itself.
Gerald Clarke's Capote by Gerald Clarke
A well written biography of a complex writer

The worst read of the year:
Gabriel Garcia Marquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcí­a Márquez
I have no idea how this makes it to anyone's must read list, it currently tops my avoid at all costs list.


message 24: by Kara (new)

Kara (karaayako) | 3984 comments Wow, those all sound great.

And I have to admit, I enjoyed One Hundred Years of Solitude, but not without a little struggle and frustration.


message 25: by Ahtims (new)

Ahtims (embeddedinbooks) Regarding One hundred years of solitude , I too didn't find it appealing .


message 26: by Simon (new)

Simon Fletcher I don't know what it was with '100 years' that didn't work for me. I just found it a grind from start to finish. I wanted to like it as I had heard so many good things about it. Maybe the weight of expectation was too much. It just seemed to go nowhere and say nothing to me. I suppose, in one sense, that's the point of the novel; nothing happens and history often repeats.
I love magical realism though, indeed I adore Haruki Murakami His three IQ841Q84 books and his The Wind-Up Bird Chronicleare amongst my favorite books.


message 27: by Ahtims (new)

Ahtims (embeddedinbooks) Murakami is my favourite too. Yet to read I Q 84. Kafka on the shre, Norwegian Wood and Windup bird chronicles were delicious .


message 28: by Kara (new)

Kara (karaayako) | 3984 comments I also love Murakami! 1Q84 is one of my favorites.


message 29: by Simon (new)

Simon Fletcher Last night was the first meeting of the Kidlington men's book club a small but very diverse group of readers.
We each came armed with a couple of books (one that we had read before (and would be willing to read again) and one we had not previously read including:
Every Man Dies Alone
The Circle
The Dark Rose
The Catcher in the Rye
Fatherland
Cryptonomicon
and
Mendel's Dwarf

We've however chosen to give the following a bash over the next 12 months (1 book every 2 months):
Alan Turing The Enigma Abridged  by Andrew Hodges
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
The Long Earth (The Long Earth #1) by Terry Pratchett
Baking Cakes in Kigali by Gaile Parkin
Complications A Surgeon's Notes on an Imperfect Science by Atul Gawande
and
Dissolution (Matthew Shardlake, #1) by C.J. Sansom

Looking forward to these and others in the future.


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