Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Saturday, January 2, 2016

2015 Reading Challenge Results

See? I was keeping track!
Well, I couldn't mark all of the boxes on POPSUGAR's reading challenge for last year, but I did the best I could. Without further ado, here are the results!

Total Books Read: 24
Total Pages Read: 7,922
Total Books Read For Challenge: 18
Boxes Checked 29 / 50 (58%)

Challenge Books


The Agony and the Ecstasy – Irving Stone (good)
  • A book with more than 500 pages (776 pages)
  • A book set in a different country (Italy)
  • A book based on a true story (Michelangelo’s Life)
  • A book with antonyms in the title
  • A book set somewhere you've always wanted to visit (Italy)

Dave Barry Turns 50 – Dave Barry (very good)
  • A book with a number in the title
  • A funny book
  • A book from an author you love that you haven't read yet

Seventh Son – Orson Scott Card (good)
  • A book that came out the year you were born (1987)
  • A book with magic

Captive Paradise – James L. Haley (okay)
  • A nonfiction book
  • A book by an author you've never read before

Lolita – Vladimir Nabokov (good)
  • A banned book
  • A book you started but never finished

Age of Innocence – Edith Wharton (very good)
  • A classic romance
  • A book by a female author

The Martian – Andy Weir (very good)
  • A book that became a movie
  • A mystery or thriller

  • A book published this year

Pepper – Marjorie Shaffer (okay)
  • A book with a one-word title

The Metamorphosis and Other Stories – Franz Kafka (okay)
  • A book of short stories

Spam Nation – Brian Krebs (good)
  • A popular author's first book

The Billion Dollar Spy – David E. Hoffman (very good)
  • A book a friend recommended

The Emperor of All Maladies – Siddhartha Mukherjee (bad)
  • A Pulitzer Prize-winning book (2011, general non-fiction)

So, Anyway... - John Cleese (good)
  • A memoir

Behold the Man – Michael Moorcock (very good)
  • A book you can finish in a day

Anya's Ghost – Vera Brosgol (okay)
  • A graphic novel

4000 Years of Uppity Women – Vicki León (bad)
  • A book you own but have never read

Ada's Algorithm – James Essinger (very bad)
  • A book written by an author with your same initials (JE)


Non-Challenge Books

These are books I just read for fun, and have nothing to do with the reading challenge.
I, Claudius – Robert Graves (good)

The Orchardist – Amanda Coplin (very good)

Undeniable – Bill Nye (good)

Muhammad – Karen Armstrong (good)

God's Problem – Bart D. Ehrman (bad)

Physics for the Rest of Us – Roger S. Jones (okay)

Thursday, December 3, 2015

My Top 15 Books

In alphabetical order, one entry per author. I tried to rank them, but found it too difficult.

The Age of Innocence – Edith Wharton

I originally picked this book up on a whim to fulfill the "classic romance" checkbox on the 2015 reading challenge. I expected another boring, Jane Eyre-like romance that would be a slog to get through. I was wrong. What I got was a roiling romance that, surprisingly, ended unhappily. Or maybe it did have a happy ending. The main character was given two alternatives: stability or excitement (I'm reducing to the extreme here). The conclusion impressed me so much that it gave the book a place on my list.

Alamut – Vladimir Bartol

If I was forced to rank this list, Alamut would appear darn near the top. It gives a somewhat fictionalized portrayal of the birth of the assassin order in what is now Iran. More broadly, it gives a view into how faith can be weaponized. To vastly oversimplify the plot, the leader of Alamut has deceived a large group of religious devotees into believing he has the God-given powers to allow followers to ascend directly into heaven upon death in the line of duty. In doing so, he creates a fearless set of soldiers that will willingly sacrifice themselves to accomplish his goals.

Behold The Man – Michael Moorcock

This is a short book. I was able to read it in a day. Nevertheless, it was interesting. It's about a time traveler with some serious mental troubles who decided to try and find the historical Jesus. The machine breaks upon arrival, and what follows is his journey of discovery and eventual realization of what he must do. I'm a sucker for these kinds of time travel stories, and this was one of the good ones.

The Billion Dollar Spy – David E. Hoffman

A coworker and I have a certain understanding: we have very different tastes, so we "recommend" books we dislike to each other. This book was the one exception to that rule. We both ended up liking it. It was weird. Anyway, the book tells the tale of Adolf Tolkachev, a spy working against the Soviets during the Cold War. It was a very impressive overview of espionage tradecraft and the hoops agents have to jump through to give information.

The Birth of Satan – TJ Wray and Gregory Mobley

I picked up this book after watching the 43alley YouTube video about the subject, and I have to say this is one of my favourite books concerning religious history. It chronicles the concept of Satan from its original, generic Jewish roots through to the proper-noun personification of evil that currently exists in the minds of many. It's an amazing insight into how something as stubborn as religious thought can change over time.

The Crusades Through Arab Eyes – Amin Maalouf

This one gives a fascinating view into how Euro-centric a lot of literature about the Crusades is presented. I always understood it as: four major crusades (of varying levels of success), three lesser crusades no one cares about, and that's about it. Instead, the view is flipped around as a more-or-less constant barbaric invasion force that takes a backseat compared to the rising threat from the east.

Dave Barry's Money Secrets – Dave Barry

Dave Barry is my favourite author, and if I didn't limit this list to one book per author, it'd be dominated by his literary masterpieces. He is the only author that can consistently make me laugh out loud with his writing. This one is probably my favourite, but it's so darn hard to choose!

The Great Theft – Khaled Abou El Fadl

If I had to recommend an introduction to Islam for someone, I'd offer this book above any other generic "Introduction To" books. The first half gives an overview of the religion in an approachable way, while the back half explains, from the author's point of view, the modern rise of extremism. It blows away all manners of stereotypes and assumptions, and reminds everyone that people are people.

How To Lie With Statistics – Darrell Huff

Do you ever feel like the news and politicians are lying to you? You're probably right. And this book goes over exactly how they do it. For a book written well over 50 years ago, it's still just as relevant today. It certainly made me pay way more attention to graphs and charts than I normally would've.

Jesus, Interrupted – Bart Ehrman

The Bible is not the wholesome, consistent book folks like to think it is. Jesus, Interrupted goes over several of the glaring inconsistencies in the New Testament stories that can only come from reading them critically. Mind, the author isn't trying to disprove God, or force atheism down anyone's throat. He's just writing about them, and leaving everything else as an exercise for the reader. I've read several of Ehrman's books, but this one is definitely my favourite of the lot.

The Jungle – Upton Sinclair

Even if the story is heavy-handed, this book did much to convince me that my left-leaning political outlook is probably for the best. It regularly comes to mind whenever I hear people saying that the free market will solve everyone's problems.

Jurassic Park – Michael Crichton

For the longest time, Michael Crichton was my favourite author (Dave Barry has since supplanted him). His thriller novels, while completely silly, sound just scientific enough that you suspend your disbelief and enjoy the ride. Jurassic Park (now a major motion picture from Universal!) is the best example of this. I mean, a theme park with cloned dinosaurs sounds absurd. But it gets explained well enough that you start to believe it. It's very engrossing, and that's why I love it.

The Martian – Andy Weir

I picked this book up shortly after hearing about the movie. Sure enough, it deserves all the praise it gets. It was funny, immersive, and cleverly written. I love the way it bounces between serious storytelling and light-hearted diary entries. It's like a love letter to science and wonder, and I feel like the world truly needed something like that.

The Time Traveler's Wife – Audrey Niffenegger

This is my favourite book. I know this list isn't ranked or anything, but this is The One. It has comedy, romance, suspense, time travel! It has everything going right for it. I think I may give it another read next year.

1984 – George Orwell

Do I even need to describe this one? Everyone already knows about this book. It's awesome. Look, I'm tired and don't feel like writing any more. Give me a break, here.