recommendations

All the 2012 Best-of Reading Lists, Together at Last

From now on if anyone asks me for book recs I’m just linking them to this post. Awesome.

(Source: explore-blog, via yahighway)

Which of the following should I read next?

Ready go!


millionsmillions:

It’s Year in Reading time.

I guess today is a book recommendation kind of day.


I made a Goodreads account if anyone wants to be my reading buddy!

It’s silly that I didn’t do this sooner; Goodreads is an excellent, excellent site for finding new books and tracking the ones that you’ve read. My username is livianelson.


slaughterhouse90210:

BOOKS I LOVED IN 2012

I hate ranking the things I love. So this year, I decided to go high school yearbook-style and give all of my 2012 book crushes some fancy superlatives.  All have provided great source material, and all are highly recommended.

BEST BOOK TO TALK ABOUT IN THERAPY: The Middlesteins by Jami Attenberg

Jami made me feel so many feeeeeeeeeeeelings about food and family and self-destruction and bar mitzvahs. Her masterful novel about the various members of the titular flawed family is mid-sized in length, epic in scope. Catharsis guaranteed.   

BEST STORY COLLECTION: Birds of a Lesser Paradise by Megan Mayhew Bergman

We are all savage animals. All of us. Megan’s stories celebrate wildlife even as they capture the moments in human nature when biology takes over, when instinct and emotion trump rationality or common sense.

I also loved: Battleborn by Claire Vaye Watkins

BEST COMING OF AGE:  Tell the Wolves I’m Home by Carol Rifka Brunt

Shut up. That totally wasn’t me crying on the subway while reading Tell the Wolves I’m Home.  I wasn’t brought to tears by the achingly vivid portrayal of adolescent suburban anguish in the 1980s, as the American AIDS crisis stoked paranoia and intolerance throughout the nation. It wasn’t me! Side note: my favorite Goodreads review of this novel consists solely of the lyrics to the angry countdown part of the Violent Femmes’ “Kiss Off”—if that’s not teen angst, what is?

I also loved: The Round House by Louise Erdrich

BEST BREAKUP MIXTAPE: This Is How You Lose Her by Junot Díaz

At this point you already know if you like Junot Díaz’s writing style. You don’t need me to tell you about it. You love it, right? It makes you wish you’d paid more attention in Spanish class, right? This collection slayed me because it circles around the lead up to and fall out from a monumental breakup, even though it’s about 8 zillion other things as well—disease, death, obsession, the immigrant experience, hyper-masculinity, New Jersey. You know, all the major topics. 

BEST TAKEDOWN OF THE AMERICAN DREAM: Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk by Ben Fountain

A pop culture-heavy novel about the disillusionment of an Iraq War vet set during a Dallas Cowboys game. Somehow it manages to be deadly serious even as it’s bitingly funny. If the politics are a little heavy-handed at times, at least the author is preaching to a Destiny’s Child-loving choir (yes, Beyonce does make a halftime appearance).

I also loved: The Yellow Birds by Kevin Powers

BEST VINTAGE READ THAT STILL FEELS VITAL: The Expendable Man by Dorothy B. Hughes

Originally published in 1963, with a sparkly new edition released in 2012, Hughes’s crime fiction masterpiece screwed with all of my preconceptions of what noir could be. Even as The Expendable Man details the plight of a protagonist with spectacularly bad wrong-place-at-the-wrong-time luck, it manipulates our expectations and reveals our prejudices. Knife-cuttable tension abounds.

MOST WELL-ROUNDED: The Orphan Master’s Son by Adam Johnson

If your most lasting impressions of North Korean culture came from 30 Rock or Team America, it’s probably time to read this novel. Yes, it’s a work of fiction, but the author’s research is evident on every nightmarish, devastating, surreally funny page. In telling the life story of a North Korean Everyman (his name is Jun Do AKA John Doe), Johnson creates a full multi-genre experience—part thriller, part romance, part farce, part serious exploration of life under a dictatorship. Basically, it’s like 1984, but with more karaoke.

SEXIEST: The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller

I’ve always found Greek mythology kinda boring, so many thanks to Madeline Miller for making me care. Her novel portrays Achilles as a charming yet fallible Greek god who is made vulnerable not by his famous heels, but by his pride and petulance and his wild love for his “companion” AKA soul mate, Patroclus. The book contains many hot sex scenes (you don’t stand a chance, E.L. James) and many tender moments even in the heat of war. It’s as much a love story as it is a tale of the battlefield (clearly the two are related, Pat Benatar-style).

BEST PERSONALITY: Where’d You Go, Bernadette by Maria Semple

You know when you just want to read a book that’s breezy and fun, but also really clever and sharp? Here you go. Dysfunctional family mania at its finest.

BEST READ FOR LITERARY TECHIES: Mr. Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore by Robin Sloan

Finally, there’s a mystery for those of us who live and breathe the Bookternet. For all of us nerds who love the smell and feel of a musty old book just as much as we love our shiny new technology. The push and pull of new vs. old creates much of the drama here, bringing us from a fascinating old bookshop to the sprawling campus of Google to the headquarters of an age-old secret society. 

BEST BAD GUYS: The Patrick Melrose Novels by Edward St. Aubyn

Three previously published novellas were repackaged this year into this exquisite volume, featuring characters so privileged, so terrible, so evil, they make Bret Easton Ellis’s characters look like little bitches. It’s divine, then, that in the depiction of so much ugliness, every single sentence is gorgeous. Every single last one.

BEST ACTRESS IN A DRAMA: Laura Lamont’s Life in Pictures by Emma Straub

We’ve all seen films about the ingenue who becomes a nightmare diva, the Behind the Music episodes of rock stars getting big and then imploding. Emma’s debut novel is a standout because she takes the familiar story of a small-town girl making good in Hollywood and makes it feel intimate, nuanced. Here’s a cinematic story that’s devoid of melodrama—it’s Laura’s humanity that ultimately makes her unforgettable.

MOST EMPOWERING: Tiny Beautiful Things by Cheryl Strayed

Wild was incredible. Oprah and your mom and I agree. But put down the hiking boots and delve into Cheryl Strayed’s Dear Sugar advice column, which specializes in the most beautiful-sounding real-talk I’ve ever heard. Most self-help makes my skin crawl, so what a revelation to find practical nonfiction that inspires and never cloys.

MOST CINEMATIC: Beautiful Ruins by Jess Walter

At the risk of sounding like SNL’s Stefon, I’ve gotta say this novel has it all: dramatic scenescapes, tales of desire and loss and poverty and moral ambiguity, sharp parody of modern day Hollywood, and fantastic cameos from everyone’s favorite Lifetime movie subjects—Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor. I wanted to crawl inside this book and live there.

BEST NOT-SO-GUILTY PLEASURE BECAUSE I OWN THIS $HIT: My Crazy Beautiful Life by Ke$ha

She’s a genius. Not sorry.

I’m reblogging this 1. for the great reviews and 2. for the photo, which is spot on and why haven’t I posted Hank reading Walt Whitman on YW before?


scribnerbooks:

The 10 Best Books of 2012 from The New York Times Book Review, including our own Andrew Solomon’s powerful, groundbreaking FAR FROM THE TREE: Parents, Children, and the Search for Identity. Congratulations, Andrew!

Read an excerpt of Far from the Tree or watch the trailer here.

penguinteen:

Today is the final day of voting for the Goodreads Choice Awards! We’re quite proud of our 2012 nominees, so if we might be so bold, we’d like to give a shout-out to (and encourage you to vote for) the following books and authors:

Best Graphic Novels & Comics:

Frostbite (the Graphic Novel) by Richelle Mead

Chopsticks by Jessica Anthony and Rodrigo Corral

Best Goodreads Author: 

Richelle Mead

Best YA Fiction:

The Fault in Our Stars by John Green

My Life Next Door by Huntley Fitzpatrick

Best YA Fantasy/Science Fiction:

The Golden Lily by Richelle Mead

Bitterblue by Kristin Cashore

Best Picture Book:

One Cool Friend by Toni Buzzeo and David Small

If nothing else, this is a great reading list!


NY Times 100 Notable Books of 2012

housingworksbookstore:

paperbackgirl:

Great list to 1. find new books and gift ideas and 2. measure how you did this year on the spectrum of bookwormery.

IT’S LIKE EARLY CHRISTMAS!

(via breathingbooks)

scribnerbooks:

If you’re on Goodreads, don’t forget to vote for the best books of 2012!

Also a great way to find new books to read!

A Highbrow Halloween Reading List | Flavorwire

“Can zombies, werewolves and monsters go highbrow? Why yes they can.”

harpercollins:

The National Book Foundation booth at the Brooklyn Book Festival: what are you reading now?

(via wordpainting)


Does anyone have a book to recommend whose protagonist is in his/her 20s?

I know “YA” usually applies to high school, teenagers, etc., but as a 23-year-old, I feel like I truly am a “young adult”. And there are a lot of common themes in YA books—coming of age, figuring life out, relationships, etc.—that I’m still figuring out, too. I love YA novels, but sometimes I don’t want to read stories that take place in high school when I graduated 5 years ago, yknow? I feel like this age group is a little underrepresented, which is why that new HBO show “Girls” is being received so well. 

Anyway! Any recommendations would be mucho appreciated.


thebookmunkie:
Some stories for your southern gothic request: "A Rose for Emily" by William Faulkner; "The Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge" by Ambrose Bierce; "Good Country People" by Flannery O'Connor (actually Flannery O'Connor's entire short story collection "A Good Man Is Hard to Find" is awesome). As for contemporary, "Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil" by John Berendt is what springs to mind, but that's a full length novel.

This is such an awesome list that I figured I’d publish it. Already just read (reread, actually, I think) A Rose for Emily online. I’m also pretty sure I’ve read something from A Good Man is Hard to Find; I think I’m gonna buy it on my Kindle. Already so inspired. Thank you thank you thank you!

Great YA Books To Start Off Your Summer

(Source: noseinabook)