This time of years sees a whole lot of year-end lists, with regard to film, music, comics, books, and more. I’ve got film taken care of over at Chlotrudis, and I’m working on something for this blog about comics. I always have a hard time with music because I don’t do a very good job recording what music I have purchased from year to year. I’m going to see if I can pull something together but that leaves books. Fortunately, the Boston Public Library, where I work, launched a new catalog this year, and I was able to use one of its features to keep a list of the books I’ve read in 2011. I only read about 25 books this year, but I’m please to report that 15 of those were worth noting in a year-end list. I’m going to try to double that amount this year… not exactly a resolution, but hopefully a return to a practice that I used to enjoy. But for now, here are my #15 and #14 books of 2011.
#15 – Ready Player One by Ernest Cline
I saw Cline do a talk about his book at BookExpo last May, and Random House was clearly behind this first novel. Cline was personable, but I wrote the book off as not really my thing. Then it came out and got a lot of press and great reviews, so I thought I’d give it a chance. This is basically an adventure story for geeks, especially geeks of a certain age. Fortunately, I do fit into the aimed at categories. In a future where the earth is spiraling deeper and deeper into economic depression and environmental collapse, and the majority of the population spend most of their waking hours online in a life-enhancing virtual reality called OASIS, high-school aged Wade finds himself leading the world in the grandest contest/video adventure game ever conceived. Mining the depths of rich video game/dungeons & dragons/80’s pop culture (and so much more), Cline is sure to capture the nostalgia as well as imagination of many thirtysomethings and beyond. Fortunately, it’s a fun adventure tale for all ages and interests.
#14 – The Leftovers by Tom Perotta
Tom Perotta’s intriguing novel examines how an event very similar to ‘The Rapture’ would effect those who were left behind; especially if the ones ‘taken’ weren’t necessarily the ones expected. Perotta takes his usual middle-class suburban characters and puts them through the ringer. Families break apart, cults form, parades are held, and then there are the murders… The Leftovers is a quick, fascinating read, and it’s now in development to be a television series!