2009: Five Books I Have Read
Happy 2010 Everyone!
My final entry on the “5 Things” theme is on books I read in 2009. I read a lot, so this list barely scratches the surface of the dozens of books I’ve enjoyed all or in part this year. I certainly recommend them all to you, though of course your mileage may vary. Each of these transported me to their respective worlds in a memorable way.
Finch by Jeff Vandermeer
I was fortunate enough to meet Jeff when I attended his “Booklife” seminar in Seattle in November. He talked about the challenges of adapting the detective genre to a fantasy novel. I think he managed it quite well. Thanks Jeff!
The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck
I’ve already done a couple of blog entries on this, but it definitely belongs on this list, too.
Altered Carbon by Richard K. Morgan
Another great noir detective story, this time set in a far future where people store their minds on cortical stacks and “resleeve” them into cloned bodies whenever the old body wears out. With such serial immortality in the offing, you wouldn’t think murder would be much of a problem — just resleeve a backup stack into a new body and you’re back in business (if you can afford it, that is). But former UN super-soldier Takeshi Kovacs is pulled out of deep storage to investigate why a prominent businessman was murdered. Kovacs’ client? A resleeved backup of the murdered man.
Altered Carbon is an electrifying page turner, full of lurid sex and cyberpunk-style violence. It challenges fundamental assumptions of what it means to be mortal–what it means to be human–when the rich and powerful can wear whatever body they want. Protagonist Kovacs is even more of an anti-hero than Finch. Both are unwilling detectives with tortured pasts, but Kovacs is closer to his feral nature. He’s a brutal, deadly opponent, wielding the memories of a thousand lifetimes like knives. He’s sometimes hard to sympathize with, but that serves to make our peeks at Kovacs’ vulnerable side more meaningful.
The sequels to Altered Carbon (Broken Angels and Woken Furies) are also quite good, but they didn’t have quite the same impact on me as did Altered Carbon.
The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver
The Poisonwood Bible can at times be painful to read, but it’s a tale well-worth savoring. The characterizations of the four daughters is especially memorable. My favorite was Adah.
Ghostwritten by David Mitchell
A book of ten short stories, each with a different main character, but linked to the other tales by overlapping events and characters. We start and end with misguided Quasar, a member of a Tokyo doomsday cult who helps perpetrate a sarin nerve-gas attack — yet who is not entirely unsympathetic. Through the other stories, we experience themes of reincarnation, chance, artificial intelligence, and quantum physics.
Ghostwritten is definitely on my list to re-read.
Other Notables: Palimpsest by Catherynne Valente, Folktales of China edited by Wolfram Eberhard, Soul of a People: The WPA Writers’ Project Uncovers Depression America by David A. Taylor
Still Reading: Rashomon and Seventeen Other Stories by Ryunosuke Akutagawa, Trial of Flowers by Jay Lake, and Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafón
What did you read in 2009?