It’s that time of year again!! Time to give you The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly of everything I’ve read in 2013! You’d think this list would be dramatically longer since I accomplished my goal of reading 200 books, but most things fell somewhere in the middle.
As always, I determined The Good by looking at everything I rated 5 stars when I added it to Goodreads. Here are the winners:
I think this one was my favorite, but it was a tough call. It’s a graphic novel about a boy who accidentally gets sent into death and the Ghostbusting team who follow to rescue him. It was a really fun version of the afterlife with beautiful illustrations. A quick read, but a good one.
I feel like this book was written specifically for me. It’s about a fanfiction writer and her sometimes-awkward start to college. The excerpts from her so-not-harry-potter-fanfic are amazing.
AHHHHHHHH I was so excited for this book to come out!!! Allie Brosh’s comics/essays are amazing, and the book had a perfect mix of hilarity and truth.
The rest:
All about what life was like living in the Year 1000. A period of history I don’t know a lot about, so it was interesting, and a really unintimidating writing style.
This book was a really interesting exploration into modern parenthood, its fads, its realities, and its fringe groups. Valenti’s writing is engaging and hilarious, and I liked that she included a chapter on the people (like me) who have decided to nope on out of that whole scene and why that continues to be controversial.
Language sticklers: their history and psychology. As a part-time language stickler myself, I was interested.
Douglas Adams goes on epic journeys to try to find endangered animals in the wild. As always, Douglas Adams’ writing style is the best, and the way he genuinely seems to hate travel makes it even more entertaining. I’m right there with you, guy.
A history of different rooms of the house, with chapters on bedrooms, bathrooms, kitchens, and living rooms. Bathrooms was my fave!
I will pretty much like anything written by Rosemary Clement-Moore. Sassy girl ghost whisperer solves a freaky magical mystery. You know.
In a fantasy-renaissance world still scarred by war with dragons, Seraphina has to keep her half-dragon ancestry a secret. Which is more difficult when she goes to court and it’s full of DRAGON INTRIGUE. I know it sounds dumb, but it won me over
This guy quit his job, pulled his kids out of school, sold his house, and dragged his family around the world for a year. He’s pretty smug about it, but it’s still an interesting read
I think a lot of people’s idea of homosexuality in history probably goes “Ancient Greeks???–>Oscar Wilde–>Stonewall Riots” which is pretty ridiculous.
I also decided this year that I didn’t know enough about African history at all, and this book was baller. These ladies kicked some serious ass, including:
Pharaoh Hatshepsut (1497-1457 BCE): started out as regent at 17/18, crowned self pharaoh because girl power
Amina of Zaria (1533-1610 CE): everyone wants to marry her but “I will never be subject to the control of a man,” becomes court official, than badass warrior, then queen at 40 for 34 years
Tata Ajache of Dahomey (1848-???): trained since childhood in an all-female soldier brigade, IS A TOTAL BADASS FOREVER (that’s all my notes say lol)
Translating some forgotten letters from Latin leads to a cross-country treasure hunt and MURDER
Like Clone High, but manga and serious
So guards and their families used to live on Alcatraz. This is historical fiction about those kids
Historical fiction involving a love triangle, lost Civil War gold, and WAS MY MOTHER A WITCH AND WHO KILLED HER
Jaclyn Moriarty is another author who I will probably always love no matter what, possibly because I heart epistolary novels. This one involves a strange correspondence between our world and a strange fantasy one where deadly color attacks can kill your family
FLORA I LOVE YOU FOREVER AND ALWAYS WILL
This memoir about Walls’ life growing up with self-destructive, itinerant parents was sometimes hard to get through, but worth it
Twin sisters! University! Scotland! Romance! MYSTERY
Maps and the people who love them
Intrepid lady travelers!
Each chapter in this book is a separate essay on weirdness.
Library soldiers defend freedom to read WITH THEIR LIVES. Also they find love because it’s shojo
Octavian is a slave, but he doesn’t know it till he’s almost an adult. He’s been given a full classical education as part of an experiment on intelligence and race. Unfortunately for him, the financial backing falls into the hands of some men who want the experiment to have certain results, and also the Revolutionary War breaks out.