2013 Wrap-up

I’m racing the clock to get the rest of my opinions and reflections about 2013 books and reading posted before 2013 ends, so bullet points are the way to go:

  •   I forgot to include Sisters on the Case, edited by Sara Paretsky, in the bit about Mr. K’s bookstore.  I was happy to find a clean paperback copy of this mystery  anthology on my trip to the bookstore, and started reading it as soon as I got home.  I might have read this a long time ago, but I enjoyed it anyway.
  • My current hiatus book is Harry Truman’s Excellent Adventure: The True Story of a Great American Road Trip, by Matthew Algeo.  Harry and Bess Truman were so strapped for cash after he left the presidency, this trip by car from Independence MO to New York and back was motivated as much by frugality as adventure.  The book started with a lot of information about Harry Truman’s background and political history that I already know, and it feels like a long slog to get to the story of the Trumans’ trip across America, meeting Americans without the protection or inhibiting effect of the Secret Service.  Truman is a favorite subject of mine, so I hope I can get back into this Kindle book and get swept into the journey with Harry and Bess.
  • I have had one book on hiatus so long, I’m giving up.  I borrowed The Worst Hard Time, by Timothy Egan, from Amazon’s Prime Kindle lending library more than a year ago, and it needs to go back.  Timothy Egan is a wonderful writer and one of my favorite NYT columnists, as well as a fellow product of the Great Pacific Northwest, and this book about the suffering endured by people during the Dust Bowl is justly famous, but I just can’t get into it.
  • I can’t decide whether to give up on Sweet Tooth, by Ian McEwan, and pass it along or not.  I bought this used hardback because I thought it was one of the books the book group was going to read, worked halfway through it, then found out the book wasn’t on the list.  I wasn’t enjoying it, didn’t care about any of the characters in this lukewarm John Le Carre pastiche, and I haven’t tried to continue reading it since.
  • When I was writing about the new mysteries series books I’ve found, and reminiscing about old favorite series, I found out that there are V.I. Warshawski books I haven’t read.  Vic is Sara Paretsky’s hardboiled Chicago private eye, first and likely greatest of the tough women detective heroines.  I have the first seven books in the series, and the collection of short stories, but there are nine more in the series.  I discovered I’ve read but do not own four of them, and recall I found them overly preachy about social issues (that concern me too!) to the detriment of the quality of the books. Subsequent books in the series fell off my radar screen, but there are four recent ones that sound pretty good.  I’d like to see if Vic has gotten her sleuthing mojo back.
  • While I was trying to work out how many books Sara Paretsky has written, and in what order, I found a fantastic website called OrderOfBooks.  It’s exactly what the name says: you put in the name of a series or the name of an author, and you get a list of the books in order of publication.  Love it, also looked up the Elvis Cole series, there is a total of 15 books.
  • How could I forget Sneaky Pie Brown when I was listing favorite mystery series!  Grey tiger cat Sneaky Pie Brown helped Rita Mae Brown write her series about Mary Minor ‘Harry’ Haristeen and her sleuthing pets, grey tiger cat Mrs. Murphy and corgi Tee Tucker.  I have a lot of the books in this series, but kind of went off it when the books started getting really far-fetched and seemed more of an opportunity for Rita Mae Brown to vent her libertarian politics than fun mystery stories.  Once you’ve accepted the premise of a sleuthing cat and dog, and the first books were good enough that I did, it would seem difficult to get too far-fetched down the line, but Rita Mae Brown’s editor let her get away with it.
  • I loved The Lincoln Lawyer, by Michael Connelly, both the book and the movie, and it looks like Mickey Haller, the Lincoln lawyer, has a series.  I look forward to reading more of his exploits.
  • I won $100 in a sports bar Bingo game (yes, there is such a thing) and used part of it to buy lovely new Penguin trade paperback editions of W. Somerset Maugham’s Collected Short Stories, volumes 1, 2 and 4.  I have read my old copies to tatters, and was afraid they would fall apart in my hands if I tried to read them again.  My Volume 3 is still in good shape, those are the stories about Ashenden the spy, and I don’t like them that much.  W. Somerset Maugham wrote fabulous short stories, and I still love reading my favorites again and again.  I was delighted that Mary Anne and Will Schwalbe of The End of Your Life Book Club loved the stories too.
  • Finally, my lesson learned about book blogging is that if I don’t write about a book I’ve read on Kindle in a timely fashion, I can’t look at the back cover book description or flip through the pages to remind myself of characters’ names or plot points in the story.  I can look on Amazon to glean some of this information, but then I risk picking up and repeating other readers’ opinions about the book.  Also, it’s hard to get caught up on writing about dozens of books I’ve read over a period of months in the last week of the year.  So glad I did it though, it’s been fun remembering all the great, good and fun stuff I’ve read in 2013.  My New Year’s resolution is:

Keep the blog writing on pace with the book reading!!

and lose 10 pounds.

I bought some books

I love finding discounted, really cheap, or no-cost books, but sometimes I do splurge on regular-priced books.  These are nearly always books from Amazon, so even their ‘regular’ prices are pretty reasonable.  I have bought most of the CCR book group books we’ve read as regular-priced Kindle books.  The group tends to choose recent books that are not yet available in paperback, and the Kindle editions are cheaper and less bulky than hardbacks.  I did luck out on Madonnas of Leningrad, which was $2.99 on Kindle, and I bought Mornings on Horseback in a very nice trade paperback edition; it was published some years ago, and I prefer to read nonfiction in print editions, especially if the book has photographs (or maps).  I also bought some of the Maisie Dobbs books at regular price, and several other new-to-me-author books at regular price, but I’ve already written about them.  Here are three I bought and read recently:

Band of Brothers, by Stephen Ambrose:  The book is about the men of Easy Company, 101st Airborne Division, who parachuted into Normandy on D-Day and fought their way through France, the Low Countries and Germany all the way to Hitler’s Eagle’s Nest.  I’d been wanting to read this since I saw the mini-series, even more so after I read The Wild Blue and realized what a good writer Stephen Ambrose was.  It’s a nice trade paperback, and it was definitely the right decision to get it in a print edition.  There are so many people in the book, and they keep moving between companies and platoons and battalions so much I had to keep flipping back to keep track of who was who.  Not to mention I had to keep going back to read the definitions of companies, platoons and battalions.

I loved and appreciated the honesty of the Easy Company men Ambrose interviewed for the book, and he did a phenomenal job of working their stories into a fast-paced, coherent narrative.  The consequences of the higher-ups’ good planning or arrogant folly or dumb luck are starkly clear in Ambrose’s swift scene-setting details of the D-Day landing, the shambles of Market Garden, and the intelligence failures leading to the Ardennes trap in the Battle of the Bulge.  Ambrose also explained how thoroughly the paratroopers were trained; in the movies, it always looks like the group of geographically and ethnically diverse soldiers are plucked from the cities, towns and farms of America, and are in combat the week after basic training.  I was impressed at the planning, selectivity and time the U.S. Army put into the paratroopers’ training, similar to the care that went into training the bomber pilots in The Wild Blue.   It’s unusual for me to think of ‘training’ as heroic and life-saving, but Ambrose makes it crystal clear that even the bravest men benefited greatly from their thorough preparation for the terrible things they had to face in combat.

I remembered some of the men and incidents in the book from the HBO mini-series, and it was good to be able to slowly read and understand many of the dramatic but confusing things in the series. The Afterword in the book was a heartfelt, inspiring and sometimes tragic synopsis of what happened to the men who survived their service in Easy Company.

The End of Your Life Book Club, by Will Schwalbe:  I was attracted to the title of this book, but quailed a little when I read that it’s a memoir Will Schwalbe wrote about books he and his mother Mary Anne read and discussed during the long months of her treatments for pancreatic cancer.  The title makes it clear that the treatments did not save Mary Anne, but the idea of facing death by reading was intriguing; I thought it would either be inspirational or unbearably grim, and it was worth the risk to read and find out.

The overall effect was: inspiring.  Will and Mary Anne and the Schwalbe siblings, spouses and grandchildren are excellent company, without being gooey or pompous, things I find irritating in most memoirs.  I usually feel cynicism coming on when I get an inkling that a book is about ‘celebrating life’ and ‘giving back’ and so on, but the Schwalbes come across as genuinely accomplished, interesting, worthwhile people.  The descriptions of Mary Anne’s extensive high-level work with refugee and development NGOs are matter of fact and highlight the importance of the work and her joy that she can be part of it.  I often think that the lack of self-awareness is a debilitating and annoying personality trait, and Mary Anne is gloriously self-aware about the blessings and good fortune of her cultured, prosperous life, and it serves to make her kind and generous.  Of course, the book’s author has a lot to do with the positive way that Mary Anne and her family are portrayed, but Will seems like an honest broker as well as a loving son, self-aware in his own right.

But all the above is basically background:  the books are the heart of the story and satisfyingly central to it.  Will and Mary Anne think and talk about books the way I do, and I enjoyed the sense of eavesdropping on their conversations.  There is also a list of all the books discussed or mentioned in the book at the end; useful, since I’m interested in reading some of them (yet more books for the list).  Finally, I was surprised that the description of the cancer treatment was so honest and interesting. The doctor tells Mary Anne her cancer can be “treated, not cured”, and the details of the medicines, side effects and complications are so deftly handled, the impression is of a quest, not simply an ordeal.  I found this book moving and very satisfying, I learned a lot and felt a lot.

The Big Book of Christmas Mysteries, edited by Otto Penzler:  The Kindle edition was $10.99, an excellent price for 59 stories with a print length of 674 pages.  I’m still working my through this one.  It’s always comforting to have a good mystery anthology at hand, and this is a very good one.  I wasn’t aware of Otto Penzler before, but it seems he is a well-know editor of mystery anthologies, so I’ll want to get to know him better.  I like the way this book is organized; there is an easy to use table of contents divided into different categories of stories (traditional, funny, hard-boiled and so on) and I can link to any story I want and jump around in the book the way I like to.  But I still can’t tell how long a story is:  I’ll want a quick story to finish before I go to sleep, but the one I’m reading goes on and on and on, with no way of knowing how much more of it there is.  At least I don’t have to find someplace to put a 674 page book.