Here it is, the year's not-much-anticipated reading log. Of note, I finished Will Durant's 4th volume of his Story of Civilization series. I began that book before I began dating Laura. Yay, done.
Another note: a full-time job is an obstacle for reading. I finished fifteen books Jan–Apr, coinciding with unemployment, and managed a meager seven books in the remaining eight months, coinciding with employment. Yay, money.
Lastly, an unsubstantiated opinion: It's too bad George Orwell has captured the modern imagination because Arthur Koestler's Darkness at Noon is a much better book at showing what went wrong with the 20th century Communist Revolution.
John Masefield
The Box of Delights (1935)Walter Tevis
The Man Who Fell to Earth (1963)Neil Gaiman
Anansi Boys (2005)George Orwell
Animal Farm (1945)Arthur Koestler
Darkness at Noon (1940)Kurt Vonnegut
Mother Night (1961)Ray Bradbury
Dandelion Wine (1957)Richard Feynman
Six Easy Pieces: Essentials of Physics Explained by Its Most Brilliant Teacher (1994)Will Durant
The Age of Faith: A History of Medieval Civilization—Christian, Islamic, and Judaic—from Constantine to Dante: A.D. 325-1300 (1950)Joe Hill
Horns (2010)Isaac Asimov
Foundation (1951)Isaac Asimov
Foundation and Empire (1952)Isaac Asimov
Second Foundation (1953)Lewis Thomas
The Lives of a Cell (1974)Isaac Asimov
Foundation's Edge (1981)Isaac Asimov
Foundation and Earth (1986)Dan Brown
Inferno (2013)David Mitchell
Cloud Atlas (2004)Bjarne Stroustrup
The Design and Evolution of C++ (1994)R. M. Sainsbury
Paradoxes (2009)Isaac Asimov
Asimov's Guide to the Bible (vol. 1 1967, vol. 2 1969)Ken Follet
Pillars of the Earth (1989)
2 comments:
What did you think of Cloud Atlas? I read that a few years ago with some pleasure, when my brother lent it to me.
Josh— I liked Cloud Atlas, especially its stack-oriented stories-within-stories format. Nevertheless, I expected more. I wanted the stories to tie together more than them having a reincarnating birthmark.
By the way, the most recent book I finished—NOS4A2, by Joe Hill—gave a shout-out to Cloud Atlas by having a character listen to Robert Frobisher's Cloud Atlas Sextet.
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