2024 was not a good year for me with regard to reading books. While my reading consumption has plummeted over the decades (I used to be a voracious reader) I could always count on getting at least 30, and up to 50 in a good year, books read. This year I only read 21 books. Less than two books per month. I can do better. It’s my one real resolution. Read more books. I’m off to a good start. I began a book on December 23, expecting it to be the first book I completed in 2025, but I finished reading it on December 30, so I was able to count it in 2024, and it even made my list of top books.
As far as trends, with so few books read, all I can really say is that my pursuit of memoirs by female rock & rollers is still going strong with four books read this year representative of that genre. I expanded a bit into film as well with two additional memoirs, and also a novel written by a female rock & roller, and a brief treatise on a rock & roll album. Music has indeed come back into my life fairly strongly since the pandemic. But this is about books, and here are my #’s 12 & 13 from my Top 13 books read in 2024.
#13 – Honeybees & Distant Thunder by Riku Onda (2016)
Riku Onda has constructed a novel around an international piano competition in a town outside of Tokyo. The top young pianists from around the world come together in a week-long competition. Each competitor the novel follows has their own unique story; a consummate performer, handsome, talented and beloved Masaru; Aya, child genius whose career evaporated after the death of her mother, making a comeback; Akashi, the oldest competitor at thirty-years old who hopes to finally achieve his first moment of glory; and the mysterious youth, Jin, secretly mentored and taught by a Japanese master who recently died, whose playing confounds as much as it exhilarates.
Onda’s take on all the performances exalts and pays homage the power of music as a life-altering mystery, but the detailed descriptions of each piece does begin to get repetitive as the competition proceeds. She excels at some of the gorgeous descriptions, as she delves deep into the personalities of each spotlit performer, and how their experiences evolve throughout the week. Sadly, by the time she reaches the final days of the competition, she has little new to say, and the conclusion is a bit of a let down. Still, there were passages describing the music, the way people interact with music, and the individuals making the music that were so uplifting and powerful I was moved to tears. A mixed bag, but one that ends up anchoring my Top 13.
#12 – Face It by Debbie Harry (2019)
Debbie Harry’s Face It: A Memoir delivers on what a good memoir should be. Someone who has led an interesting life, looking back from a vantage point with experience and wisdom in a way that’s engaging and revelatory. It’s not a tell-all, but a curated story that paints a picture of a fascinating person during a pretty amazing time and place. After reading this memoir, Harry comes across as someone who I would enjoy spending time with; someone who has seen and done a lot, and who’s ups and downs through life balance the potentially mind-warping fame she experienced as the front-person and persona for the hugely successful band, Blondie.
While the book is a fairly chronological account of Debbie’s life, I enjoyed how she would sprinkle stories throughout where relevant, regardless of timeframe. Starting with childhood, her young, punk life in 79’s New York City, the meteoric success of Blondie, the struggles after the band broke up, the successful return to the spotlight, and her life today, Face It covers a lot of territory. Because of this, we get a broad overview of Debbie’s entire ife, rather than a deep dive into specific parts. It works, precisely because Debbie’s entire life provided an interesting read. Through it all, the love for her friend, business and creative partner, and former lover, Chris Stein, is the strongest throughline.
That and the sharing of dozens of portraits painted/drawn by her fans and given to Debbie, underscoring the challenge of owning an iconic look that many people simply equate with the person herself make for a fascinating rumination.
An interesting note about these two books. Face It was the first book I completed in 2024, and Honeybees & Distant Thunder the last.
I saw her with Chris Stein discussing this at book expo. They were so much fun and she shook my hand after. I didn’t want to wash it. I love they stayed friends and she’s a godmother to one of his kids. I own the book but haven’t read it. I want to read Chris stein’s too.