The first quarter of 2020 ended yesterday, despite how many years it feels like it’s actually been. I’m in my third week of working exclusively from home, and my household seems to be holding up OK. I’m thankful I live with a person I love and enjoy spending time with; being alone without another human or a pet in the house would be a lot tougher (though that time with him is still limited as he is keeping his normal long hours – just closed up in the home office now).
I’ve seen an uptick in my reading these past few weeks, in part to escape from the news and in part because I’m not doing much else outside of work. Here’s a brief rundown of my Q1 reading in order, a total of 16 books.
Weather by Jenny Offill
Offill’s writing is spare in this story about a woman named Lizzie who answers fan mail for a friend’s podcast called Hell and High Water. This is certainly not a plot-driven book, though; I feel like giving any sort of plot synopsis is misleading. It’s more about Lizzie’s family, her day to day work as a librarian, and her musings on the state of America in the 21st century. This is a much-lauded book that wasn’t quite to my taste, though it was an interesting way to kick off the year.
The Golden Compass by Philip Pullman
I re-read this for probably the tenth time after watching the BBC/HBO tv series (which I liked but didn’t love). I still love the book just as much.
Guns, Germs, and Steel by Jared Diamond
This modern classic of nonfiction writing is just the kind of nonfiction I love, a mix of history and science that’s fascinating from beginning to end. It tracks the rise of human civilizations all over the world, elegantly and convincingly arguing that geographical and environmental factors shaped humanity (and all its differences) much more than did any innate qualities of race or DNA, which were racist arguments being made by others at the time the book was published.
Earthly Delights and Other Apocalypses by Jen Diamond
I purchased this book at the Texas Book Festival and picked it up again in January when I decided I’d actually read the books I purchased this time. To my delight, I loved it. These are bizarre, creative, profound and often funny stories that all have a tinge of science fiction, fantasy, or the weird. The one that most people who have read the collection talk about is the angler fish romance, possibly the weirdest of all the stories (and great because of its weirdness). My favorite is a tie between the story about old women and sex dolls and the story about social media accounts of dead people being co-opted by A.I. (something we are seeing the beginnings of in the here and now).
The Heavens by Sandra Newman
This is another book I purchased at the book festival, and it was another hit. Good job, me! It’s about a woman who dreams that she’s a woman in Elizabethan England when she’s sleeping – only she doesn’t think they’re dreams. They feel real, and as time goes on, they feel realer than her waking life in present day. Newman manages this concept really well, showing shifts in the world we thought was ours over time and how such a condition (or reality) would genuinely affect a person and her relationships. It’s fascinating to try to put the pieces together. While this is definitely a literary novel, it balances its literary aspects with the science fiction plot well. This is a great readalike for Version Control by Dexter Palmer, which I also loved.
Ninth House by Leigh Bardugo
This is a huge bestseller recommended by Stephen King, and I think my expectations were too high as a result. It’s about Yale secret societies, their use of black magic, and a young woman named Alex Stern who can see ghosts. I was enjoying it well enough until a certain scene involving a child, a ghost, and an act that the book had established ghosts could not do – yet the ghost did it in this scene. It was effectively written, but this type of scene is hard for me to read, and since I was listening to it on audio, it was all the more jarring and upsetting. Still, it was an enjoyable read overall, one I’d recommend to fans of supernatural stories with a hint of horror.
The Chaos Function by Jack Skillingstead
I checked out this book because it was recommended as a readalike for Recursion by Blake Crouch. I’m trying to recall it now and it’s difficult for me to remember the plot without looking it up, so I suppose it didn’t make much of an impact. Like Recursion, it’s about time travel and trying to change things in the past, only to mess things up even more as a result. I enjoyed it well enough while I was reading it, but it’s no Recursion. (Sadly, nothing is!)
Vessel by Lisa Nichols
I really wanted to read a great space book and this seemed like it might fit the bill. It’s about an astronaut, Catherine, who was on a years-long mission to another planet. But something goes wrong, the whole crew – except Catherine – dies, and Catherine makes it back to Earth years behind schedule with no memory of what happened to the rest of the crew or how she got back home. She had been assumed dead for years. The mystery of what happened in deep space is teased out over the course of the book, making way for a big reveal that I unfortunately saw coming from page 1. I finished the book hoping that my initial assumption was wrong, thinking it was too obvious and too overdone – but no. Too familiar for my tastes, but may suit others who only occasionally dip into sci fi.
Conviction by Denise Mina
This is a Reese Witherspoon book club pick and seemed like a great, trashy psychological mystery/thriller from the synopsis: a woman outrunning her past investigates a true crime from a podcast she’d been listening to, learning how her own past intersects with it. Unfortunately, the execution was subpar. She’s running from place to place with a friend (ish) of hers, and they mostly make decisions that are not only just stupid but make no sense. For a lot of the book, the plot doesn’t really go anywhere, even though the mystery really should be quite interesting. I got tired of it and skipped to the end.
Exhalation: Stories by Ted Chiang
Oh my goodness, I loved this book. Every single story was a knockout. I didn’t realize I could love short stories until 2020, and now I don’t think I can get enough of them. Chiang really thinks through his ideas, carefully creating worlds and characters that follow the set of fictional rules he’s established for his SF premises. My favorite story is the first one, The Merchant and the Alchemist’s Gate, about a man who finds a gate that allows him to travel back in time 20 years. It’s reminiscent of One Thousand and One Nights in that it involves a storyteller telling a series of interconnected stories that also connect to the frame story about the storyteller himself. It’s so fascinating and well-executed. Runners up are Omphalos, about a world that really was created by a Creator a few thousand years ago (and what that would look like when it comes to scientific research, including “primordial” trees without rings) and the novella Anxiety is the Dizziness of Freedom, a very fresh take on parallel worlds that I’ll be thinking about for months. Be sure to read Chiang’s notes on each of the stories at the end of the book.
You Are Not Alone by Greer Hendricks and Sarah Pekkanen
Do you want to read a trashy psychological thriller, something like Gone Girl or Girl on a Train, but with even more pathological behavior and guaranteed unbelievable twists? Here you go. Not quite as good as The Wife Between Us but better than An Anonymous Girl, Greer and Pekkanen know how to entertain.
Eight Perfect Murders by Peter Swanson
A bookstore owner specializing in mysteries finds himself caught up in the hunt for a serial killer that’s using one of his old blog posts – about eight perfect murders from classic crime novels – as a blueprint for murder. It’s a clever idea, and the execution is terrific. Malcolm, the protagonist, is an unreliable narrator, something the reader learns slowly over the course of the book. Teasing out what’s true and what’s not is great fun, as is trying to piece together various facts (or lies) to figure out the identity of the serial killer. Incorporating such classic reads as Patricia Highsmith’s Strangers on a Train and Agatha Christie’s ABC Murders, this is a great book for mystery fans, both an homage to old favorites and a modern crime novel.
The Red Lotus by Chris Bohjalian
I checked this one out because I wanted something popular, mystery-like, and available. It was fine; nothing really special. The main plotline involved the threat of the release of a biological agent that would cause a pandemic, so perhaps a bit too close to home right now.
One of Us is Next by Karen M. McManus
McManus is writing fantastic mysteries for teens, and this one might be my favorite of hers. Like this book’s predecessor, One of Us is Lying, I thought the book trafficked too much in teen stereotypes at first, but the characters quickly deepened, and the plot took satisfying twists that kept me guessing until the end. Never one to let the last few pages go to waste with unnecessary resolution, McManus throws one final twist at us that is perhaps too implausible, but great fun nonetheless.
Be Not Far From Me by Mindy McGinnis
I like McGinnis’ books, but they never quite rise to the level of love. Her latest is a solid YA survival story, gripping, well-written, with a complicated protagonist that I appreciated reading about in a teen novel. The descriptions of how Ashley survives in the woods after getting lost on a camping trip were visceral and not for the faint of heart (and I mean this in a good way), interspersed with tidbits from Ashley’s past that give us insight into why she is the way she is. I liked it well enough; I wasn’t blown away.
The Other Mrs. by Mary Kubica
Mary Kubica is known for writing well-received psychological thrillers, a genre I can’t get enough of right now. This one is about a woman, Sadie, who moves to a new town on an island off the coast of Maine with her family. She’s hiding at least one secret from her own past, and when a woman on the island is murdered, Sadie finds herself connected and suspected. I’ve only read one other book by Mary Kubica, her first, The Good Girl, which I thought was just OK. I liked this one a lot more, despite the fact that it used a tired trope as one of its major twists, something I picked up on almost from the get-go. But then she got me with another big twist after that, and my mind was blown. Well done, Mary Kubica.