Friday, December 31, 2021

52 books in 52 weeks (2021 edition)



Anyone else find 2021 to be worse and more exhausting than the unprecedented trash year that was 2020? Because I sure as hell did. Thankfully I had books to help get me through. Let's cut to the chase because right now on the last day of 2021 I have no energy left to give.


This is my EIGHTH year of reading 52 books in 52 weeks. So for my maths friends out there, that's FOUR HUNDRED AND SIXTEEN books in the last eight years. Wow. That's quite impressive when you see it like that. Good job, me. That's a lot of reading. #NerdAlert or maybe just #UnemployedAlert.


Over the last eight years, two trends have evolved for me. Firstly, my very British goal of reading through every Agatha Christie book. This year I read a whopping TWO Christie books. And neither was that great. One was actually a stinker. My second (also very British) goal of reading through every Shakespeare play made glacial progress as I only read play this year (The Winter's Tale).


Another goal I had was to read more novels written by women and BIPOC. Out of the 52 books, I read 21 written by women, 31 written by men. It's something, but it's not great. For 2022, I want to increase that goal. Combined, I read 27 books by women and BIPOC, 25 books by white men. So that's... shite. In calculating how many books I read by purely BIPOC, it only amounted to 10. I need to do better in 2022. So here's to more books by women and BIPOC because I want to make sure I am ingesting a wide range of views, stories, and perspectives. No limiting oneself in the new year. And thank you excel sheets for helping me calculate all of this.


Now, onto lists because that's my favorite part of the year end wrap up: 


Least Favorite Book: Cherry. What to say? Misogynistic, terrible writing, no plot, awful characters?

Longest Book: The Secret Commonwealth. So long, and yet nothing happened? How?

Biggest Letdown: Ready Player Two. Literally a cookie-cutter copy of the original but with less stakes, less character development, and just... URGH.

Most Depressing Book: The Fifth Season. If you love apocalyptic, dystopian fiction, this is for you. Not an ounce of joy or happiness in this book about the broken earth and the people damned to try and survive on it. 

Least Favorite Character: Nico from Cherry. Alina from Shadow and Bone. Everyone in French Exit.

Most Batsh*t Character: Mary Katherine Blackwood from We Have Always Lived in the Castle.

Favorite Book: Obvisously Fleabag: The Scriptures. But in close competition behind it: Gossamer, Watchmen, The Midnight Library, and Sphere.

Shortest Book: UR. Kindle readers, BEWARE!

Favorite Character: Fleabag from Fleabag; Nora Seed from The Midnight Library; Kvothe from The Name in the Wind.

Most Surprising Character: Coriolanus Snow from the Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes; Jerry from Sphere.

Favorite Author: Phoebe Waller-Bridge & Michael Crichton, 

And that's it for 2021. 2022, please be better. Maybe George R.R. Martin will save us all by completing The Winds of Winter. Time will tell. Everyone stay safe out there. Covid is that bitch. May we all have a healthy and happy new year. Until next time...

- ben fleck

1. I Am Malala - Malala Yousafzai
2. Ma Rainey's Black Bottom - August Wilson
3. The Name of the Wind- Patrick Rothfuss
4. French Exit - Patrick deWitt
5. Cherry - Nico Walker
6. The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes - Suzanne Collins
7. The Left Hand of Darkness - Ursula K. Le Guin
8. Firefly Lane - Kristin Hannah
9. Fleabag: The Scriptures - Phoebe Waller-Bridge
10. The Ancient Evil - Christopher Pike
11. The Girl Who Lived Twice - David Lagercrantz
12. Foundation - Isaac Asimov
13. Lolita - Vladimir Nabokov
14. Nomadland - Jessica Bruder
15. Behind Her Eyes - Sarah Pinborough
16. A Promised Land - Barack Obama
17. The Three-Body Problem - Cixin Liu
18. Never Let Me Go - Kazuo Ishiguro
19. Emma - Jane Austen
20. Exhalation: And Other Stories - Ted Chiang
21. The Final Empire - Brandon Sanderson
22. The Night Circus - Erin Morgenstern
23. Watchmen - Alan Moore
24. The Graveyard Book - Neil Gaiman
25. Nine Perfect Strangers - Liane Moriarty
26. Diamonds Are Forever - Ian Fleming
27. Dune Messiah - Frank Herbert
28. Gossamer - Lois Lowry
29. Beloved - Toni Morrison
30. Ready Player Two - Ernest Cline
31. The Word for World is Forest - Ursula K. Le Guin
32. We Have Always Lived in the Castle - Shirley Jackson
33. Sphere- Michael Crichton
34. The Midnight Library - Matt Haig
35. The Disaster Tourist - Ko-eun Yun
36. The Testaments - Margaret Atwood
37. Election - Tom Perrotta
38. The Great Hunt - Robert Jordan
39. The Secret of Chimneys - Agatha Christie
40. Appointment with Death - Agatha Christie
41. Shadow and Bone - Leigh Bardugo
42. The Rules of Attraction - Bret Easton Ellis
43. The Leftovers - Tom Perrotta
44. The House of Gucci - Sara Gay Forden
45. Utopia - Thomas More
46. Veronika Decides to Die - Paulo Coelho
47. The Secret Commonwealth - Philip Pullman
48. UR - Stephen King
49. The Winter's Tale - William Shakespeare
50. The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time - Mark Haddon
51. The Fifth Season - N.K. Jemisin
52. The Silmarillion - J.R.R. Tolkien



Friday, January 1, 2021

52 books in 52 weeks (2020 edition)



Wow! What a year it has been, in a not good way... 2020 has been surprising, difficult, tiring, irritating, and more. Never did the world think we would be suddenly facing a pandemic as we entered a new decade & faced an important Presidential election, but HERE. WE. ARE. 

Quarantined inside, separated from loved ones, and doing everything through glitchy video meetings. It's been tough.


And if you think being stuck inside made it easier to read 52 books in 52 weeks, you would be wrong. It was still as difficult as ever. Reading was hard to feel motivated to do, but I did it. And read some pretty good books.

For those keeping track, my goal to read every Agatha Christie book is trekking along. This year I read 8 more of her capers. Some were... not good. Dame Aggie can't hit every book outta the park.

And as for my Shakespeare quest, I only managed to read 2 of his plays. Oop. Look, I just didn't feel up to slogging through ol Willy Shakes' words this year. 

I did read a bunch of teen horror books by Christopher Pike. Lots of fun was had in those pages. Out of the 33 authors I read this year, 13 were female and 20 were male. Narrowing that gender gap. I also tried to read more BIPOC authors. 

I can always do better -- looking to continue reading different books from a variety of authors going forward.

I read some classics, read some books for work, some for the book/movie (boovie) club that I am a part of. Reading remains fun even when it is hard to be motivated to do it. 

Let's stop prolonging the best part of this post--my lists! See below.


Least Favorite Book: Normal People - Sally Rooney (So boring & not for me!)

Longest Book: The Once and Future King - T.H. White (So Long, So Arthurian & Witchy weird)

Biggest Letdown: The House with a Clock in Its Walls - John Bellairs (So much potential just quickly thrown down the drain...or, into the walls or w/e)

Most Depressing Book: Mood Indigo - Boris Vian (c'est tragique!); the Underground Railroad - Colson Whitehead (the tragedy of slavery is fucking awful)

Least Favorite Character: Honestly, I find Sherlock Holmes quite awful & annoying & arrogant & not that fun. Throw in Tummy & Tuppence from Agatha Christie's books too.

Most Batsh*t Character: Any Villain in a Christopher Pike novel -- truly wild people, perhaps the most wild in Remember Me.

Favorite Book: Mood Indigo - Boris Vian (I don't know if because it's translated from French or one of the most beautiful movies I've seen, but it just really hit home for me in this year 2020)

Shortest Book: The Lemesurier Inheritance - Agatha Christie

Favorite Character: Deborah Lacks from The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks. Deborah is a real-life person, so she's not technically a character, but she was astounding to read about. 

Most Surprising Character: Grace Randolph from You Should Have Known - Jean Hanff Korelitz. Let's just say she was nothing like Nicole Kidman and her many coats and accents in the Undoing and it changed the whole way I looked at the story.

Favorite Author: Dame Agatha (durp), Christopher Pike, Boris Vian

And that's it for 2020. Maybe next year is the year I can finally conquer Shakespeare and/or Christie. Maybe George R.R. Martin will complete The Winds of Winter. Time will tell. 7 years of 52 books in 52 weeks. Here's to 7 more years aka 364 more books! CLIMATE CHANGE IS REAL. STAY INSIDE. WEAR MASKS. BE SAFE AND BE EMPATHETIC. We can get through this.  

- ben fleck

1. Remains of the Day - Kazuo Ishiguro
2. A Study in Scarlet - Arthur Conan Doyle
3. The Lemesurier Inheritance - Agatha Christie
4. Leia: Princess of Alderaan - Claudia Grey
5. N or M? - Agatha Christie
6. Cards on the Table - Agatha Christie
7. Parker Pyne Investigates - Agatha Christie
8. By the Pricking of My Thumbs - Agatha Christie
9. The House with a Clock in Its Walls - John Bellairs
10. Dumb Witness - Agatha Christie
11. Artemis - Andy Weir
12. The Collectors - Philip Pullman
13. Remember Me - Christopher Pike
14. Little Fires Everywhere - Celeste Ng
15. The Eternal Enemy - Christopher Pike
16. Bury Me Deep - Christopher Pike
17. Road to Nowhere - Christopher Pike
18. Tales of Terror: Volume 1 - Christopher Pike
19. Tales of Terror: Volume 2 - Christopher Pike
20. The Tachyon Web - Christopher Pike
21. Weekend - Christopher Pike
22. Postern of Fate - Agatha Christie
23. The Underground Railroad - Colson Whitehead
24. Normal People - Sally Rooney
25. The Once and Future King - T.H. White
26. Slaughterhouse-Five - Kurt Vonnegut Jr.
27. Morning Star - Pierce Brown
28. The Wonderful Wizard of Oz - Frank L. Baum
29. The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks - Rebecca Skloot
30. Mañanaland - Pam Muñoz Ryan
31. Bayou Magic - Jewell Parker Rhodes
32. Rebecca - Daphne du Maurier
33. Mood Indigo - Boris Vian
34. The Sign of Four - Arthur Conan Doyle
35. City - Devin Grayson
36. Murder in the Mews - Agatha Christie
37. Love in the Time of Cholera - Gabriel García Márquez
38. Will Grayson, Will Grayson - John Green
39. The Importance of Being Earnest - Oscar Wilde
40. The Canterville Ghost - Oscar Wilde
41. Peter Pan - J.M. Barrie
42. The Lightning Thief - Rick Riordan
43. The Two Gentleman of Verona - William Shakespeare
44. The Case of the Missing Marquess - Nancy Springer
45. I Know What You Did Last Summer - Lois Duncan
46. The City of Ember - Jeanne DuPrau
47. You Should Have Known - Jean Hanff Korelitz
48. Rip Van Winkle - Washington Irving
49. Serpentine - Philip Pullman
50. Julius Caesar - William Shakespeare
51. Brideshead Revisited - Evelyn Waugh
52. Chain Letter - Christopher Pike