Saturday, January 2, 2016

2015: A Reader's Year

In the fall of 1969, the year we moved to Vermont, when I was in the eighth grade, 12 years old, our English teacher handed out simple mimeographed forms on which we were to record the books we read outside of the class over the course of the academic year. I dutifully did so. My choices ranged from young adult lit (From the Mixed-up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler, The Witch of Blackbird Pond, Across Five Aprils, and those Kate Seredy books set in early twentieth century Hungary that I still adore and have read, reread, and read to my children: The Good Master and The Singing Tree) to more mature choices (Profiles in Courage, Rebecca, Gone with the Wind).  We did this again in ninth grade, when, although barely a teen, it appears that I fancied myself a pretty adult reader (The Good Earth; Cry, the Beloved Country; The Secret of Santa Vittoria)  I even included that bestselling novella, Love Story, on my list -- it went through the girls of my set like wildfire; I can still see Janice E. holding the book under her desk, surreptitiously reading it during class.

And then, after ninth grade was over, I just kept adding to the list, until this very day.

From tenth grade until I finished my first year of college, I kept a continuous list, and then starting in the summer of 1975, I dated the list by years. Through 2005 I handwrote the lists, and since 2006 I have typed them. (I actually typed the list in 2002, but for some unknown reason reverted to longhand in 2003 and 2004.) The lists are in plastic sleeves and collected in a looseleaf notebook imprinted with Just Manufacturing Company, Stainless Steel Sinks, on the cover (absolutely no idea where that came from). They are not in a database and cannot be searched, except by manually looking through the lists book by book. 

This lifelist of books is not 100% complete. It does not contain any books I read for school or any academic pursuit (that would have made a nice separate list), nor does it contain the books my husband and I read aloud to our children at bedtime over the course of many years (a list which I genuinely regret not keeping).  And it is missing the names of four or five books after we suffered a computer crash in 2007 and realized one of our children had wiped out our backup. I didn't care about anything we lost except my booklist, about which I was pretty distraught. I racked my brains, searched my library checkouts and book group picks, but there remained a few missing titles. The list does, however, include books I have read for my book group since I joined in 1993, as well as audiobooks I have listened to.

Today is New Years Day, and I have just updated, printed, and filed my 2015 list in the Just Manufacturing notebook.  A bird's-eye view:

Favorites:  The Hare with Amber Eyes by Edmund de Waal (can't do it justice in a parenthetical: the subtitle is A Family's Century of Art and Loss, about a wealthy European Jewish family; a collection of Japanese netsuke miniatures that miraculously survived World War II intact and is still in the family serves as an organizing principle); The Boys in the Boat by Daniel James Brown (about the Washington crew team that won the gold medal at the Berlin Olympics in 1936 -- great book and great audio); the opening 75 pages of Two in the Far North by Margaret Murie, where she paints a vivid picture of life in Fairbanks in the post-gold rush early years of the last century, when mail was delivered weekly by dogsled.

Books I reread: I went on a mini-Shaker rereading binge, including June Sprigg's Shaker Gifts: A Memoir of a Shaker Village; Rumer Godden's In this House of Brede, published in 1969, about a successful businesswoman who becomes a cloistered nun; a descriptive passage about a year in the monastery told through the changing seasons is as about as lyrical a passage as I have ever read; and Love Story (see above, ninth grade) -- I found a copy at the thrift shop for a quarter or 50 cents and zipped through it in about 90 minutes; at some point I want to write about the careless and shocking sexism of the book.

Biggest disappointment: I 'm not sure I have a true disappointment, maybe the final book in Updike's Rabbit series, Rabbit Remembered, which he wrote in 2000 but I somehow didn't realize existed until this year. Is it me or did this not quite live up to the four books that preceded it? 

Books I am in the process of reading: Dan and I have been reading Middlemarch aloud together since 2014. We're about halfway through. Maybe we'll finish it in 2106. In addition to Middlemarch, right now I'm listening to Jeffrey Eugenides' (of Middlesex fame) The Marriage Plot, and reading The Seashell on the Mountaintop by Alan Cutler for book group. 

Book I meant to read in 2015: My Brilliant Friend, an English translation of the first of four volumes of Italian novelist Elena Ferrante's Neapolitan quartet. I received the book as a birthday gift nearly a year ago from my friend Susie, whose taste in books I trust, but it seemed dauntingly dense. Over the holidays, it was again recommended to me by my cousin's son Peter, who assured me that it is not daunting but wonderful.  Intriguingly, "Elena Ferrante" is a pen name and the author's true identity is not publicly known. A reading resolution for 2016, then.








7 comments:

  1. Happy new blog, Maria! I envy your life-long records of all you have read. I find it difficult to log what I have read on Goodreads, but it is the closest to any record keeping at all. Currently, I am reading every book I can find (and there are many) on quilting. My current stack of five, borrowed from the library, include two books called The Quilters Bible. Shouldn't there only be one Bible for quilters? Cheryl

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    1. That is so funny, Cheryl - and correct! Multiple revered writings, perhaps, but only one Bible!

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    2. That is so funny, Cheryl - and correct! Multiple revered writings, perhaps, but only one Bible!

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  2. OF COURSE you were smart enough to record the books you've read, Maria! I only started doing that in 2013 :( I can easily remember what I've read, but would love to know WHEN I did so...

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  3. I read Love Story at that age and considered it a feminist allegory. You have an intelligent, ambitious, talented young woman. Love comes her way, she drops her plans for postgraduate study. She gives up her planned career, marries, seeks to have children, then gets sick and dies. (The mom who drove carpool said I was too young to understand. :/ )
    --Martha

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  4. OK, inspired by Maria I have kept a list too for the last 15 or 20 years. This past year’s:

    Favorites: My Life in Middlemarch, Rebecca Mead (a combo memoir and examination of the book), What Jesus Meant, Gary Wills (very compelling look at the actual meaning of Jesus’ acts and sayings), Can't We Talk about Something More Pleasant? Roz Chast (Roz is such a hoot even with a touching subject, the decline and death of her parents), and The Boston Girl, Anita Diamant (growing up female and Jewish in the 20's, a lovely and inspiring story). The first and last we listened to together on vacation. Great books, but the company and ambience also did not hurt.

    Books I reread: Jane Austen, Sense and Sensibility, Mansfield Park, Pride and Prejudice and Northanger Abbey (only 4 of 6–a weak year), Heinrich Böll, Nicht nur zur Weihnachtszeit (Not Just at Christmas), and other short stories. When I got to Germany in 1975 and had decent language skills I went to Herwig, the best local bookstore, and asked what should I read. They directed me to Böll, who was a big fan of Hemingway. Short clear sentences and a wonderful dry irony. Still love to reread them.

    Biggest disappointment: Dance of the Dissident Daughter by Sue Monk Kidd. She made critical realizations early on and then dithered endlessly and did little about them. I kept saying to her “Come on, do something about it!” The way she intellectualized it made me suspect it was written by a man in disguise.

    Books I am in the process of reading: Maria and I have been reading Middlemarch aloud together since 2014. We're about halfway through. Maybe we'll finish it in 2106.Started Mansfield Park again. Just finished Twain’s End by Lynn Cullen, about the last years of Sam Clemens/Mark Twain. A really fascinating historical novel.

    Book I meant to read in 2015: None particularly come to mind. I love to read.

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