This week’s theme from The Broke and the Bookish is “Top Ten Books I Read in 2014”. This one you can probably predict if you follow this blog, but I won’t leave you guessing. Also, links don’t show up on my theme very well, so I’ll just say now that all the titles are links to the reviews I wrote earlier in the year.
- The Goblin Emperor, Katherine Addison. Yep, you probably predicted this one. I just loved it to bits — I’d have happily gone back to page one and started all over again right away. I don’t think it’s for everyone, but it was pretty perfect for me.
- The King of Elf-land’s Daughter, Lord Dunsany. This is definitely not new to a lot of people, but it was new to me. I think I’d read one of Dunsany’s short story collections before, but not this one. It’s a lovely mythic/fairytale-like world. In style and the like, it’s not like the more typical modern fantasy, but that doesn’t put me off at all.
- We Have Always Fought, Kameron Hurley. I haven’t read any of Hurley’s fiction yet; she may even be a writer who appeals to me more as a commentator than as a creator, since I did start God’s War at one point and put it down again. But I loved this collection of her essays. She very much deserved her Hugo.
- My Real Children, Jo Walton. Again, probably predictable. I loved the characters in this — the sheer range of them, the ways small circumstances could change them. It was quite upsetting on a personal level because of the mentions of dementia, but the fact that it had the power to upset me only made me like it more.
- The Movement: Class Warfare, Gail Simone. I think this is a pretty timely comic. This sums it up, from my review: “[T]his is a group of young people getting together against injustice. Not supervillains: injustice. Crooked cops who beat poor people and POC because they can. The whole system of privilege and disprivilege. It’s a team of heroes for the Occupy Movement, for the 99%, for the disenfranchised.”
- Cuckoo Song, Frances Hardinge. Read this all in one go on a train journey and resented every interruption. There’s a great atmosphere to this book.
- Behind the Shock Machine, Gina Perry. I’ve always been fascinated by Stanley Milgram’s experiments, and this was a great way of delving into them — looking at it not from Milgram’s point of view, not looking at the results, but at the people he used in this experiment.
- What Makes This Book So Great, Jo Walton. This is kinda cheating, in that it’s a book chock full of the books Jo Walton likes. Not limited to a top ten, of course, but I have a feeling it could furnish the whole contents of this list.
- Spillover, David Quammen. Fascinating stuff, with some very obvious conclusions that apparently still need to be said. We are destroying habitats, forcing animals closer together and closer to us: we’re creating the perfect situation for a pandemic. It’s going to happen again, as it’s happened before, and we’ve just got to hope it isn’t something exotic and deadly. Even the flu is bad enough when it sweeps the world.
- The Broken Land, Ian McDonald. This is the only book in this list I didn’t give five stars. But it’s stayed on my mind the whole time, and the issues it examines aren’t temporary ones that’re about to go away.
This is gonna be a really interesting week to check out other people’s lists; I’m looking forward to this! Make sure you link me to your list if you comment. I’ll always visit and comment back.
I’m dying to read The Goblin Emperor, I keep seeing it everywhere and hearing such good things!
It’s really good, I love it to bits.
I haven’t heard of any of those books. Glad you enjoyed them! Thanks for sharing! Here’s my Favorite Books of 2014.
Thanks!
Oh man, I’ve been wanting to read The Goblin Emperor so bad, and I agree, it’s been quite fun visiting other blogs and taking in their thoughts on the books released this year 🙂
It’s a great book! I love it to bits. I keep wanting to reread it right away.
I noticed when I was putting together my list that star ratings didn’t always line up. Most of mine I had rated five stars, but there was definitely a 4 star or two that won out over a 5 star option. I think sometimes I rate really quickly after I read, but it’s the books that are still memorable–because they’re unique or they affected my way of thinking–all these months later that wind up at the top of the list.
Agreed! There are some books that I didn’t really think I liked at the time, and then they’ve stuck with me. And then vice versa, too…
My Real Children sounds incredibly powerful. I shall have to look into it!
It really, really is. It made me cry, actually.
I have read or even heard of most of these – I must branch out!! I HAVE read My Real Children and really enjoyed it though! Have you read Among Others? I liked it, but unfortunately didn’t get all the sci-fi author references. My dad, who collects late 20th century sci-fi, loved it though!
Thanks for stopping by!!
I have read Among Others, yes — it’s one of my favourites. I’ve read almost everything of Jo’s, except the new book that’s coming out in January (I’m only halfway through that). She’s great.