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2006 - Best Reads

Gem

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What were your best reads of 2006?

Mine were:

1) The River of Doubt; Theodore Roosevelt’s Darkest journey, Candice Millard.
A well written, gripping account of Roosevelt’s journey down the unexplored River of Doubt – a tributary of the Amazon.
The expedition is badly prepared for – so badly prepared that they have to make the journey in some rather dodgy dugouts bought from a tribe that had a reputation of being well..crap builders. To sum it up – everything that can go wrong, does go wrong.
The group itself is made up of the most enthralling men. You have Roosevelt himself who is of course indefatigable (his choosing to discard things like clothes instead of the books he had taken along to read, made me grin) but there is also his son Kermit. A very accomplished, brave young man – who just happens to be a tad bit reckless, and prone to the occasional bout of depression. George Cherrie is leading naturalist, Amazonian expert and all round good guy. The co leader of the expedition is Candido Rondon – Brazilian military officer and explorer extraordinaire. His motto when dealing with indigenous tribes is “die if you must, but never kill” – a bit suicidal perhaps, but this very attitude and his support of the tribes resulted in the creation of the Indian Protection Bureau. A fascinating man, completely barmy but fascinating.
We not only get glimpses into the Roosevelt family and the backgrounds of the adventurers but we are also given information about the the wildlife they encounter – Millard makes the rainforest breathe and rattle and scare the living daylights out of wimps like me.
Well written, suspenseful, unputdownable – very highly recommended.

2) Two Lives – Vikram Seth.
Another non-fiction. Vikram ‘A Suitable Boy’ Seth writes about the uncle and aunt he lived with in London. Sounds a bit blergh? What if I said his uncle was a one armed Indian dentist and his aunt a Jewish refugee from Germany?
Although there were parts that dragged, overall this was a remarkable book – ordinary people caught up in extraordinary times, told in such detail that I felt I knew these people and their story moved me incredibly and gave me such a great deal to think about.

3) Kazuo Ishiguro
When We were Orphans - Christopher Banks is a celebrated detective in 1930’s London. He is haunted by the disappearance of his parents when he was a young boy in Shanghai. Do not read this if you are looking for a traditional detective story with a neatly tied up ending. If however you like unravelling things, questioning memory and banging your head against the wall then this and in fact all other Ishiguro books are for you. Everytime I finish one of his books I vow that I won’t be reading another one. But then darn it, the evocative writing and the masterful subtlety reels me back in. After reading A Pale View of the Hills I wanted to throw it against a wall – no other book (that i can recall right now) has left me with so many unanswered questions. I loved it.

4) Middlesex – J Eugenides
We already have a thread here for this one, so I’ll just say that it was incredibly engrossing – I read it in one sitting.

5)Coin Locker Babies – Ryu Murakami
Two baby boys are abandoned by their mothers at a train station’s coin lockers. They are sent first to an orphanage where they are experimented upon and then adopted by the same family., before finally they make their way back to the Tokyo , where one becomes first a prostitute and then a pop star and the other a murderous pole-vaulter . Very dark , grim and violent, every gory detail told graphically. But there’s something very compelling about it and I found that each time I put it down, I couldn’t wait to get back to it.

6) NabokovHis finesse is unmatched; the layers to his story give so much food for thought:
The Real Life of Sebastian Knight
Look at the Harlequins
Ada
7)Palace Walk – Naguib Mahfouz
The story of a family living in Cairo at the end of the first World War. The father is a tyrant at home but an easygoing ladies man once out of the house, the mother is intelligent in her own way but completely under the rule of her husband. Through these characters and their children we are shown the way their society works; from the role of women, politics, the day to day running of a household, music and a lot more besides. It’s Very informative and enlightening. The prose though, takes some getting used to – there is much telling in addition to the showing, and a great deal of musing by the author on the traits of various characters.

The last three spots would go to The Good Earth – Pearl S. Buck, Our Man in Havana – Graham Greene, and The Hotel New Hampshire – John Irving.
Oh and I can’t leave out A Star named Henry and Oh Play That Thing by Roddy Doyle
 
Wow, some of those books sound really interesting--I might be checking them out.

I'd add to the list, but I never pay attention to what year or month I read anything. I guess maybe I should. However, I can tell you how many days it took me to read every single book in my library, and I don't know why I remember that. Probably so I can brag.
 
Hmmm. Off the top of my head the books I enjoyed the most this year include:

The Colony of Unrequited Dreams, Wayne Johnston.
Lolita, Vlad.
Great Expectations, Chuck.
 
My favourite books of the year:

The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde
The Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro
A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson
The Red Tent by Anita Diamant
Wild Swans by Jung Chang
The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy
 
Favorite books I read in 2006 were:

The Kite Runner - Khaled Hosseini
What I Lived For - Joyce Carol Oates
The Russian Debutante's Handbook - Gary Shteyngart
Motherless Brooklyn - Jonathan Lethem
The Brothers of Gwynedd - Edith Pargeter
 
Eh, 2006 was a mixed bag. The best books I remember reading this year were:

Kushiel's Scion by Jacqueline Carey

The Lazarus Heart (The Crow) by Poppy Z. Brite

Phantom by Terry Goodkind

I, Lucifer by Glen Duncan

A Complicated Kindness by Miriam Toews
 
Here are my top 10 books of the year, by category:

Fiction

The Road, Cormac McCarthy
A father and son make their way through a post-apocalyptic world. A thoroughly moody, engrossing and thought-provoking novel.

Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close, Jonathan Foer
Oskar is a 9-year old boy whose mission is to find the lock that fits a mysterious key belonging to his father, who died in the World Trade Center on 9/11. His search through the five boroughs of New York brings him into contact with many different characters.

You Are Not a Stranger Here, Adam Haslett
A haunting book of short stories with a common thread of mental or emotional trauma.

Set This House In Order, Matt Ruff
Andrew is a man who finally has a handle on his multiple personality disorder. Then he meets and reluctantly agrees to help Penny, a woman he believes suffers from the same condition. The (very appropriate) subtitle is “A Romance of Souls”.

Crime Fiction

Sorrow’s Anthem, Michael Koryta
In order to help the person who was his boyhood best friend, P.I. Lincoln Perry returns to his old neighborhood, where he is considered persona non grada. But Perry wants to help safely bring in Ed, currently hiding from the police who are looking to arrest him for arson and murder.

The King of Lies, John Hart
When North Carolina lawyer Work Pickens finds his father murdered, the investigation pushes a repressed family history to the surface and he sees his own carefully constructed façade begin to crack. Work's troubled sister, her combative girlfriend, his gold digging socialite wife, and an unrequited lifelong love join a cast of small town characters in this excellent novel.

All Mortal Flesh, Julia Spencer-Fleming
The latest in the Clare Fergusson and Russ Van Alstyne series is also the best. When Russ’s wife is found murdered, the people of the town point suspiciously at Russ and Clare’s close friendship. They are both soon considered primary suspects in the slaying. A series of stunning surprises turn the book (and the series) on its head.

Fantasy

The Stolen Child, Keith Donahue
On a summer night, Henry Day runs away from home and hides in a hollow tree. There he is taken by the changelings—an unaging tribe of wild children who live in darkness and in secret. They spirit him away, name him Aniday, and make him one of their own. In his place, the changelings leave a double, a boy who steals Henry’s life in the world. This new Henry Day must adjust to a modern culture while hiding his true identity from the Day family.

The Big Over Easy, Jasper Fforde
Detective Inspector Jack Spratt of the Nursery Crime Division, along with a new assistant Mary Mary, investigates the death of Humpty Dumpty. Was it suicide or murder? Hilarious and surprisingly entertaining start of a new series.

The Book of Lost Things, John Connelly
Set during World War II, David's mother dies when he is 12. His father soon marries Rose and then baby George completes a picture from which David feels excluded. He seeks release in the company of books. When the house is attacked by a bomber, David is transported to an imagined world that combines nursery rhymes, fairytales and classical myths.
 
wow, quite a list...
some books I read this year were..

The Blind Assassin - Margaret Atwood
I dont know if I picked this up because this was a Booker winner, but am damn glad I did cos it turned out to be one helluva tale-within a tale -within a tale. I am planning to take up the other stuff by Atwood, at least Hand Maid's Tale this year.

The Professor - Charlotte Bronte
Quite boring considering it came from CB. After Jane Eyre, this was a disappointment, cos the very thing that CB abhorred in Jane Austen - lack of passion-, seemed to pervade this book. A dry prose limply mirroring the passion in CB's words.

A Suitable Boy - Vikram Seth
Delightful, witty, playfully sarcastic, yet oh so tolerant of all the vices of everything Indian. Easily digestable despite its 1200 pages, a must read if you are not an Indian and want to know about India during its just-after-Independance times (the 1940s-50s).

The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde and A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson are among my list of "books to read" this coming year..
 
1. The Shadow of the Wind - Carlos Ruiz Zafon

2. The Remains of the Day - Kazuo Ishiguro

3. Oryx & Crake - Margaret Atwood

4. The God of Small Things- Arundhati Roy

5. We Need to Talk About Kevin - Lionel Shriver

6. Neverwhere - Neil Gaiman

7. Phantom - Susan Kay

8. A Tree Grows In Brooklyn - Betty Smith
 
Motherless Brooklyn - Jonathan Lethem (deconstruction of the year)
Hash - Torgny Lindgren (reconstruction of the year)
Extremely Loud And Incredibly Close - Jonathan Safran Foer (tearjerker of the year)
Return To Ithaca - Eyvind Johnson (myth rewrite of the year)
Drömfakulteten - Sara Stridsberg (faction of the year)
Too Loud A Solitude - Bohumil Hrabal (samizdat of the year)
Lolita - Vladimir Nabokov (villain of the year)
Lighthousekeeping - Jeanette Winterson (fairytale of the year)
The Plot Against America - Philip Roth (alt history of the year)
Beware of God - Shalom Auslander (satire of the year)
 
Lets see... I've read so many great books this year, here's the best IMHO:

Fiction
The Acid House - Irvine Welsh
Middlesex - Jeffrey Eugenides
The Blind Assassin - Margaret Atwood
Empress Orchid - Anchee Min
Nineteen Eighty-Four - George Orwell

Non-fiction
Wild Swans - Jung Chang
The Good Women of China - Xinran
PostSecret - Compiled by Frank Warren

:)
 
I had a pretty good reading year, but I'd highlight:

Crime and Punishment, my introduction to Dostoevsky, and possibly one of the best books I've ever read, José Saramago's Seeing and The Gospel According to Jesus Christ, which cemented my love for this great author, and Thomas Mann's Death In Venice, a wonderful tale of artistic decadence and the pursuit of beauty at the beginning of the 20the century.
 
Gone with the wind - Margareth Mitchell
Middlesex - Jeffrey Eugenides
Nobels testamente - Liza Marklund (swedish crime)
 
You're making me remember everything I read in 2006? Ouch.

1.Celestial Matters by Richard Garfinkle (sci fi set in a ptolemaic universe)
2.Twilight by Stephenie Meyer
3.Eugene Onegin-Pushkin
4.The HIstorian-Elizabeth Kostova (although I didn't like the ending much, the book was a good read)
5.Captain Blood and CAptain Blood Returns-Rafael Sabatini(this author compares to Dumas. I"m extremely glad I discovered him)
6.Dracula-Bram Stoker (it's a classic. How could I not read it?)
7.The Series of Unfortunate Events #13-Lemony Snicket
with this book, I really think he broke the cycle of the endings being unfortunate and there being 13 chapters in every book and everything..
8.The Devil Wears Prada-the movie was as good as the book, which rarely happens, and the book itself was so entertaining to read because of how much fun it made of..well, fashion.
9.Gone With The Wind-Margaret Mitchell (I almost cried
at the end when Rhett just walks out
.But I couldn't stop reading the book, my grandmother kept yelling that I was ruining my eyes, but I couldn't stop, the story was good, and the historical information was very educating.
10. 20 years after, 10 years after(and all of its various parts)-alexandre Dumas. (I'm obsessed with this author, and these books especially really made me think about life and getting old. He's an author that isn't afraid to write about his characters when they're old, unlike most modern authors I see. He helped me see that, well,
people get old and die, although that didn't stop me from crying for about 1/2 hour after I finished The Man in the Iron Mask)
11. The Mediator series by Meg Cabot, as well as her other books. I don't know what it is about Meg Cabot, but her books, despite being the book equivalents of chick flicks, are funny and entertaining and I read them to cool down when i'm in a terrible mo0d.
12. Da Vinci Code, Digital Fortress -ok, we all know what we think of Dan Brown and how some of his facts are wrong and he made stuff sound convenient. However, these books are more captivating than any other similar books I have read, such as The Secret Suppper and The Rule of Four. They have a fast paced plot in addition to lots of info, and don't get dull.
13. 1985-George Orwell(I read animal farm in 8th grade and picked this book up because it kept appearing on lists of books people my age should read and I decided, why not? Now when my dad says 'big brother is watching you, I actually know what he means!)

wow, quite a lot of books..
 
1. The Counterlife by Philip Roth: five contradicting chapters fit together any way you like them, revealing the malleable nature of identity and how easily a search for truth can be obscured
2. One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez: magical, dense masterpiece with some lovely imagery
3. A Confederacy of Dunces: funniest book ever?
4. Going Native by Stephen Wright: some say Wright is the best kept secret in contemporary literature; after reading this deconstruction of the indigenous American berserk, I'm inclined to agree
5. The Human Stain by Philip Roth: the culmination of Roth's America trilogy, a look at how the zeitgeist can ruin men's lives... plus, an absolutely extraordinary ending
 
It's an interesting mix of books.

tartan_skirt & MC - If i'd read Wild Swans this year it would have definitely made my top ten. Empress Orchid was also an engrossing read.

Prairie_Girl & ions, Colony of Unrequited Dreams has gone onto my to buy list - the title enchanted me, not that I'm saying your endorsements aren't greatly appreciated :D .

Ronny, I liked the gothic feel to the Shadow of the Wind. The God of Small Things left a huge impression on me, it was full of some really beautiful thoughts and observations - and there were some really beautiful descriptive gems. But it was pretty hard to find them in the dense prose.

Anamnesis, I haven't read any of the books in your list - but I do have I, Lucifer here somewhere and I'll get to it eventually. What did you like about it?

Appolonia, I liked The Big Over Easy - It's going to be an entertaining series.

Anne, I remeber reading The Professor (a while ago now) and thinking huh? It was completely pointless and dull.

beer good - trust you to have such a wide ranged list. And surprisingly I didn't have to look up what samizdat meant - I wonder when that managed to slip into my head.

Heteronym, Dostoevsky is pretty darn amazing (or rather was pretty darn amazing).

Baddie - I read Gone with the Wind when I was quite young and I loved it - I was swept right along with it. But I'm doubtful that I would love it so much if I read it now. Agreed on Middlesex, made laugh and cry all at once.

HermioneWeasley, your list gets my vote for being the most interesting - Pushkin, Brown, Snicket and Orwell? What a mix.
Say, you don't happen to like that Dumas fella? :p

UnKempt - I really enjoyed the Confederacy of Dunces, had me grinning for a long time.
 
Anamnesis, I haven't read any of the books in your list - but I do have I, Lucifer here somewhere and I'll get to it eventually. What did you like about it?

I loved Duncan's writing style. Also I liked the portrayal of Lucifer; he was wickedly funny and almost charming, as opposed to a one-note, overly evil demon figure. I just thought it was a smart, well-written, and oddly hilarious story.

Just remembered three more books that should be on my "Best of 2006" list:

Girl, Interrupted by Susanna Kaysen

Baudolino by Umberto Eco

Fool the World: An Oral History of a Rock Band Called Pixies by Josh Frank and Caryn Ganz
 
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