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Books in 2012
I read a total of 59 books this year, up 21 from 2011’s very dismal 38, and while 59 is not a personal best, I don’t feel like a colossal failure. I’m feeling a bit glum about my inability to parse even a 100 word review of each book I’ve read on Goodreads, however. So many books, so little time—when I come to the last word on the last page of a book I’m reading, I’m already thinking about what to read next. Can’t dwell. Go go go. More excellent books await. Hurry hurry hurry. I put up this picture of my spirit-dog Moxie not just because this particular Tumblr combines two loves, but also because it perfectly captures how I feel about trying to read ALL TEH BOOKS while keeping up with ALL TEH INTERNETS.
Of the 59 books I read, only 5 were published in 2012—May We Be Forgiven (A.M. Homes), Green Girl (Kate Zambreno), What Happened to Sophie Wilder (Christopher Beha), How Should A Person Be (Sheila Heti) and Losing Clementine (Ashley Ream). There were quite a few 2011 releases, and no doubt 2013 will be spend catching up on 2012 publications. Anyway, in no particular order, here are a few standouts:
New Favourite - Kornel Esti by Deszö Kosztolányi
The only book I rated 5 stars on Goodreads. I’m indebted to the Bookslut blog for bringing this to my attention.
Creepiest Book - Sharp Objects by Gillian Flynn
This disturbed me more than Gone Girl. Probably because I am a bit aichmophobic and I find Munchausen syndrome by proxy more fascinating than unreliable narrators.
Best Surprise Ending - Girl Reading by Katie Ward
I had an “Atonement” moment with this book, which really brought it to the next level for me. 
Most Picaresque, also Most Confusing Title - The Sisters Brothers by Patrick DeWitt
After reading Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian last year, it was nice to read an adventure-packed Western full of pathos that did not crush my soul into smithereens. I hope this gets made into a movie!
Best Quiet Book - The Summer Book by Tove Jansson
A young girl spends a summer on a Finnish island where she is supervised by her detached yet devoted grandmother. The literary equivalent to the perfect cup of tea—undramatic, comforting, necessary.
Best Memoir - The Foreskin’s Lament by Shalom Auslander
Poor guy.
Best YA - The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky
1990s nostalgia for the win. Runner-up—The Fault In Our Stars by John Green. I thought I was going to flood my apartment with tears after reading TFIOS, but I was distracted by the over-stylized speech of the book’s precocious teenaged protagonists. Also, I think I really dislike dystopian YA lit—did not enjoy the Delirium and Divergent series at all.
The Bell Jar Award - Green Girl by Kate Zambreno
I’m being glib here, but fact is I’ll try to get people to read Green Girl by comparing it to The Bell Jar.
Most Likely To Win “Best Picture” - May We Be Forgiven by A.M. Homes
Starts off darkly but ends on a hopeful, positive note; entertaining, highly polished.
Also, I think I stepped into a bookstore only once this year—Powell’s City of Books in Portland, OR… back in March. O.o

Books in 2012

I read a total of 59 books this year, up 21 from 2011’s very dismal 38, and while 59 is not a personal best, I don’t feel like a colossal failure. I’m feeling a bit glum about my inability to parse even a 100 word review of each book I’ve read on Goodreads, however. So many books, so little time—when I come to the last word on the last page of a book I’m reading, I’m already thinking about what to read next. Can’t dwell. Go go go. More excellent books await. Hurry hurry hurry. I put up this picture of my spirit-dog Moxie not just because this particular Tumblr combines two loves, but also because it perfectly captures how I feel about trying to read ALL TEH BOOKS while keeping up with ALL TEH INTERNETS.

Of the 59 books I read, only 5 were published in 2012—May We Be Forgiven (A.M. Homes), Green Girl (Kate Zambreno), What Happened to Sophie Wilder (Christopher Beha), How Should A Person Be (Sheila Heti) and Losing Clementine (Ashley Ream). There were quite a few 2011 releases, and no doubt 2013 will be spend catching up on 2012 publications. Anyway, in no particular order, here are a few standouts:

New Favourite - Kornel Esti by Deszö Kosztolányi

The only book I rated 5 stars on Goodreads. I’m indebted to the Bookslut blog for bringing this to my attention.

Creepiest Book - Sharp Objects by Gillian Flynn

This disturbed me more than Gone Girl. Probably because I am a bit aichmophobic and I find Munchausen syndrome by proxy more fascinating than unreliable narrators.

Best Surprise Ending - Girl Reading by Katie Ward

I had an “Atonement” moment with this book, which really brought it to the next level for me.

Most Picaresque, also Most Confusing Title - The Sisters Brothers by Patrick DeWitt

After reading Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian last year, it was nice to read an adventure-packed Western full of pathos that did not crush my soul into smithereens. I hope this gets made into a movie!

Best Quiet Book - The Summer Book by Tove Jansson

A young girl spends a summer on a Finnish island where she is supervised by her detached yet devoted grandmother. The literary equivalent to the perfect cup of tea—undramatic, comforting, necessary.

Best Memoir - The Foreskin’s Lament by Shalom Auslander

Poor guy.

Best YA - The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky

1990s nostalgia for the win. Runner-up—The Fault In Our Stars by John Green. I thought I was going to flood my apartment with tears after reading TFIOS, but I was distracted by the over-stylized speech of the book’s precocious teenaged protagonists. Also, I think I really dislike dystopian YA lit—did not enjoy the Delirium and Divergent series at all.

The Bell Jar Award - Green Girl by Kate Zambreno

I’m being glib here, but fact is I’ll try to get people to read Green Girl by comparing it to The Bell Jar.

Most Likely To Win “Best Picture” - May We Be Forgiven by A.M. Homes

Starts off darkly but ends on a hopeful, positive note; entertaining, highly polished.

Also, I think I stepped into a bookstore only once this year—Powell’s City of Books in Portland, OR… back in March. O.o

Me: Oh god, I bought Ian McEwan's latest while stoned on Ambien. I'm afraid to read it. Solar was awful.
Book-Crazy Friend: Solar was terrible. Sweet Tooth is much better.
Me: Like Atonement better or On Chesil Beach better?
BCF: It's nowhere near as good as those two. But maybe Saturday better.
Me: . . .

Your Brain on Fiction

oliveryeh:

“The brain, it seems, does not make much of a distinction between reading about an experience and encountering it in real life; in each case, the same neurological regions are stimulated. Keith Oatley, an emeritus professor of cognitive psychology at the University of Toronto (and a published novelist), has proposed that reading produces a vivid simulation of reality, one that “runs on minds of readers just as computer simulations run on computers.” Fiction — with its redolent details, imaginative metaphors and attentive descriptions of people and their actions — offers an especially rich replica. Indeed, in one respect novels go beyond simulating reality to give readers an experience unavailable off the page: the opportunity to enter fully into other people’s thoughts and feelings.”

1 year ago - 1542

Lean Back 2.0, a blog about reading on tablets brought to you by the Economist.

(Er, was there ever a Lean Back 1.0 or 1.5?)

1 year ago - 1

How We Will Read: Laura Miller and Maud Newton

fndgs:

Welcome to the second installment of “How We Will Read,” a series exploring the future of reading from the perspectives of publishers, writers, and intellectuals. This week, we talked to Laura Miller and Maud Newton, founders of The Chimerist, a new blog dedicated to exploring the imaginative potential of the iPad.

Laura Miller is a writer and critic. She was a co-founder of Salon and is currently a staff-writer there. Maud Newton is a writer, editor and critic whose work has appeared in the New York Times Magazine, Bookforum, Narrativethe Los Angeles Timesthe Paris Review Daily, Granta, The Awl,and many other publications.

In addition to ruminating on the experience of using the iPad, Maud and Laura discussed the future of narrative forms, interactive storytelling, and their hopes for the evolution of publishing. What resulted was two poetic and nuanced views of what digital reading means to people who love books. Their work at The Chimerist had already distinguished Laura and Maud as thoughtful writers at the intersection of media and technology. It was incredible to hear what else they were thinking about as they navigate this new and rapidly changing space. Check out their interview below, and be sure to check out The Chimerist, too.

Tell me how you guys got together and founded the Chimerist.

Maud Newton: Well, this is the first time Laura and I have spoken over the phone.

Laura Miller: We did actually have lunch in person to talk about it.

MN: And we got drinks once. But those were the only in-person meetings we had about it. I was writing a little diary for the Paris Review about using my iPad, and I was having a back-and-forth with Laura about how annoying the app store is to navigate. I was going to quote her in the interview, so I asked her if that was okay, and we started talking about how great it would be to do a site about the iPad. That was May or June of 2010.

What about the iPad appeals to you as readers and consumers?

LM: I actually had this argument with a friend last night — he was advancing the Cory Doctorow thesis that it’s this horrible, oppressive device because it forces you to be a consumer rather than a creator. And I don’t necessarily disagree with the idea that it is more a device for consumption of culture than production of culture. But I already have a laptop, so it’s not like it’s supplanting my laptop when I want to create something. Most the stuff I create for The Chimerist I create on my laptop, not my iPad.

There’s some sort of disgrace to being a reader, or a viewer, or just absorbing some work of culture — it’s this lesser activity, by that rationale. I really disagree with that. I feel like reading and looking at art and all of these things are creative acts in their own way. The experience of a piece of culture being appreciated takes two people. A poor reader cannot have a great reading experience with a great author.

With the iPad I can be more relaxed and receptive. In the industry lingo, it’s called the “lean back” rather than the “sit forward” mode. That is a buzzword, but I kind of agree — I lean back with my iPad, in a calm mood. I’m not responding to email, I’m not checking Twitter, I’m not feeling like I should be writing something, I’m just there for whatever somebody has created. I’m there to witness it, and appreciate it, and absorb it.

MN: Unlike Laura, I’m not really interested in engaging with people who don’t like the iPad, which is one of the things that appeals to me about The Chimerist. I have a lot of friends who are really skeptical of its use and its value, and that’s fine, I’m not trying to convert anyone. I don’t care. In my opinion they’re missing out, but that’s their choice (laughs).

I like the idea of having a site that is a place to think about what the potential of the iPad is — the narrative potential of the tablet and the potential of the tablet to create venues for new art and new kinds of fun that blur the boundaries of these things. It’s a really exciting time to me. When I first heard about the iPhone, even though I had the most bottom-of-the-barrel phone — that I was always losing — I said, “Ooh, I want that!” And the iPad is just vastly superior to the iPhone, as far as the user’s ability to experience art and to try new things that aren’t just games.

I think I use my iPad for a greater variety of things than Laura does. I do use it a little bit for work. And I do a lot of reading for my non-day job on it, and that basically includes everything I’m known for. When an e-galley is available, I tend to read that, because then I can read it at home, on my iPad, and then take my iPad with me on the subway, or just sync it to my iPhone and read that way.

But it is a special kind of canvas. It is a device that enables you to focus on one thing at a time, and I know some people have a real issue with that, that you can’t open another window inside what you’re doing, but I actually find that really refreshing. Even as someone who loves the internet. When I turn to my iPad, I’m looking for a different kind of distraction-free experience, for whatever I’m working on at the time.

Read More

My taste in books is a touch spinsterly. Bought these paperbacks from Amazon (sorry, indies!) because these titles aren’t available for the Kindle, and I could not find them in bookstores either. I’m entertaining the idea of only reading books by female authors this year as a project.

My taste in books is a touch spinsterly. Bought these paperbacks from Amazon (sorry, indies!) because these titles aren’t available for the Kindle, and I could not find them in bookstores either. I’m entertaining the idea of only reading books by female authors this year as a project.

Looking for Some Literary Tumblrs?

(via oliveryeh)

1 year ago - 47

utnereader:

Andrew Carnegie built an impressive 2,509 libraries around the turn of the 20th century. Now Rick Brooks and Todd Bol are on a mission to top his total with their two-foot by two-foot Little Free Libraries.

The diminutive, birdhouse-like libraries, which Brooks and Bol began installing in Hudson and Madison, Wisconsin, in 2009, are typically made of wood and Plexiglas and are designed to hold about 20 books for community members to borrow and enjoy. Offerings include anything from Russian novels and gardening guides to French cookbooks and Dr. Seuss.

Keep reading …

2011 firsts:
First puppy, obtained in May
First print book I’ve bought all year, delivered in September
To be perfectly honest though, I have bookstore withdrawal.

2011 firsts:

  • First puppy, obtained in May
  • First print book I’ve bought all year, delivered in September

To be perfectly honest though, I have bookstore withdrawal.

Well, not quite.
The book rental store in my hometown had way more English-language books than the state library. You paid a couple of dollars for each book you wanted to rent, and got most of it back when you returned the books whenever you were done with them. It’s where I got all my Sweet Valley High, Danielle Steele, Mills and Boon, and R.L. Stine from.
The last book I rented was Wild Swans by Jung Chang when I was about 17. The person who had read it before me apparently used his dandruff as bookmarks. Huge pieces, too.
utnereader:

(via Hey Mister)

Well, not quite.

The book rental store in my hometown had way more English-language books than the state library. You paid a couple of dollars for each book you wanted to rent, and got most of it back when you returned the books whenever you were done with them. It’s where I got all my Sweet Valley High, Danielle Steele, Mills and Boon, and R.L. Stine from.

The last book I rented was Wild Swans by Jung Chang when I was about 17. The person who had read it before me apparently used his dandruff as bookmarks. Huge pieces, too.

utnereader:

(via Hey Mister)