Michael’s Top Books Read in 2021, #’s 14 & 15

The Odd Sea#15 – The Odd Sea by Frederick Reiken (1998) – Reiken is a New Jersey-born author who now teaches at Emerson College. He has published three novels, the most recent of which, Day for Night (2010) was my #1 book read in 2012. Going back to his first novel, The Odd Sea, was an odd, and serendipitous choice to read this past year, because it was unplanned, and I just happened to see the book at the library, and the name was familiar (I had forgotten that the other book of his that I read had ranked so highly with me). Published in 1988, The Odd Sea was selected for best debut novel lists in both “Library Journal” and “Booklist,” and charts the territory of a family dealing with the unfathomable, when Ethan, one of their teenaged children disappear, never to return. Focusing mainly on Ethan’s younger brother, Philip, it is an exploration of how a family must cope with a tragedy that cannot be explained, and how it informs the path of Philip’s life and coming-of-age.

Architects of Memory#14 – Architects of Memory by Karen Osborne (2020) – Maryland-based author, Karen Osborne released her debut novel, Architects of Memory in 2020, part one of the proposed The Memory War Trilogy. Ash lost everything during the intergalactic war with the alien Vai. Now struggling with a terminal illness, the salvage pilot encounters something that could change the course of humanity, and must do everything she can first to understand it, then to keep it out of the hands of those whose best interests are perhaps not shared by many. Deft, gritty, hard sci fi, Architects of Memory does an imaginative job at creating a life form so alien to humanity that actions and motivations are nearly impossible to discern. I look forward to reading volume two, Engines of Oblivion, soon.

Michael’s Books Read in 2021

I feel good about the amount of reading I did in 2021. It has still been a strange year, with a pandemic still raging, but we did head back to working on site in June, and that meant commuting again. I managed to squeeze one last book in by finishing it today, so my total is 33 books for the year. That doesn’t match my golden days of reading, but it’s a great improvement over the last several years. I will certainly try to keep up that pace.

For today’s post, I’m just going to list all the books I read in 2021 in alphabetical order. Then starting tomorrow, I will list my favorites. And just in case you’re wondering, the book pictured is one that I liked, but that didn’t make the final list.

The Blade Between by Sam J. Miller came in at #18

Architects of Memory (2020) by Karen Osborne

Bedsit Disco Queen: How I Grew Up and Tried to Be a Rock Star (2013) by Tracey Thorn

The Bird King (2019) by G. Willow Wilson

The Blade Between (2020) by Sam J. Miller

The Guncle (2021) by Steven Rowley

Harlem Shuffle (2021) by Colson Whitehead

The Healing Power of Singing (2021) by Emm Gryner

Hidden Palace (2021) by Helene Wecker

Honor (2022) by Thrity Umrigar

How to Be an Antiracist (2019) by Ibram X. Kendi

Hummingbird Salamander (2021) by Jeff VanDerMeer

If I Knew Then: Finding Wisdom in Aging and Power in Failure (2020) by Jann Arden

Invisible Kingdom, Vol. 2: Edge of Everything (2020) by G. Willow Wilson

Invisible Kingdom, Vol. 3: In Other Worlds (2021) by G. Willow Wilson

Kill Me Now (2018) by Timmy Reed

Kindred (1979) by Octavia Butler

Making Rumours: The Inside Story of the Classic Fleetwood Mac Album (2012) by Ken Caillat with Steven Steifel

Master of the Revels (2021) by Nicole Galland

Memorial (2020) by Bryan Washington

The Next Queen of Heaven (2009) by Gregory Maguire

Night Came With Many Stars (2021) by Simon Van Booy

The Odd Sea (1998) by Frederick Reiken

A Psalm for the Wild-Built (2021) by Becky Chambers

Rachel to the Rescue (2021) by Elinor Lipman

Real Life (2020) by Brandon Taylor

Scardown (2005) by Elisabeth Bear

The Seventh Perfection (2020) by Daniel Polansky

Sex with Strangers (2021) by Michael Lowenthal

A Star is Bored (2020) by Byron Lane

The Stone Sky (2017) by N.K. Jemisen

Storms: My Life with Lindsey Buckingham and Fleetwood Mac (2007) by Carol Ann Harris

Stumptown: The Case of the King of Clubs (2015) by Greg Rucka

Vanya & Sonia & Masha & Spike (2013) by Christopher Durang

Michael’s Top Books Read in 2020, #’s 2 & 1!

Perhaps it’s a little unfair to N. K. Jemisin to rank her #2 behind Octavia Butler’s Parable of the Sower. After all, It’s my second reading of Parable, and The Obelisk Gate is the second installment of a trilogy, which is always a bit of a handicap by not being the beginning or the end of the story. Still, the first part of Jemisin’s trilogy, The Fifth Season was my top book read n 2019 so, she’s doing pretty good here. And honestly, if anyone is going to best her, it may as well be Octavia Butler, whose books inspired Jemisin to be the amazing writer she has become.

The Obelisk Gate#2 – The Obelisk Gate by N. K. Jemisin

The Obelisk Gate is part two of The Shattered Earth Trilogy, and with uncanny imagination and detailed knowledge, author N.K. Jemisin continues to build a world that is complex, wondrous and unforgiving. The story picks up pretty much where the riveting first part (The Fifth Season) ended: Essun has discovered a hidden underground society, the world’s ecosystem is collapsing because of the actions of her one time teacher and lover, Alabaster Tenring. Essun is still desperate to find her daughter, Nassun, who had been spirited away by her former husband after he had murdered their son. What Essun doesn’t realize is that Nsasun has become involved with Schaffa, the Guardian who almost killed Essun (more than once) in the name of protection.

The storyline is complicated, but that’s what makes it so compelling, along with the strong-willed assortment of fascinating characters that populate this world. With the literal destruction of the planet on the line, and immense power being bandied about by individuals, the stakes are high. And what about the mysterious Stone Eaters? Will they help humanity or destroy it?

Jemisin’s imagination seems boundless, and her writing is top notch. Detailed and emotional, yet infused with an urgency that propels the reader ever onward. Here we are a year later, and I have just started the third and final part of the trilogy. Perhaps we’ll see The Fifth Season on 2021’s list of Best Books Read? I suspect so.

Parable of the Sower#1 – The Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler

Twenty-seven years after it was first published (and I first read it), but only five years away from the start of the narrative, Octavia Butler’s Parable of the Sower is more prescient and more frightening than ever. In this dystopian future, society as we know it has succumbed to violence, corruption, and the disintegration of community, as the trajectory of the human race advances to its sadly inevitable collapse. Laws are ignored, or enforced by a corrupt and violent police force, and humanity either live in poorly-secured, walled enclaves, tightly-controlled, violent cities where slavery has re-emerged, or riskiest of all, out in the wilderness, where the weak are preyed upon by the desperate.

Lauren is a teenager living in a small, walled community in California. Her father is the local preacher, and her mother teaches the handful of children in the community. Her younger brothers are wild and reckless. Yet Lauren possesses a maturity and wisdom that set her up as different from the start. For one thing, she is a sharer, afflicted with a condition that forces her to feel the pain of others around her if she witnesses them. This can be a disability if she is trying to defend herself from predatory aggressors, but Lauren is prepared. She knows that the time will come when the encroaching dangers will overrun her community and she carefully plans her escape.

Despite the intellectual rejection of religion, even her father’s, Lauren applies her intelligence and her thoughtfulness in the creation of a new religion, one that espouses God as Change, and she calls it Earthseed. When the inevitable happens, and Lauren’s community is overrun, Lauren finds herself fleeing for her life with other refugees – wandering the dangerous, largely abandoned roads to head north, where there is a belief the life might be better. Along the way, Lauren finds other essential decent people among the cast-offs, and all the while, quietly and reasonably shares the philosophy of Earthseed. Can Lauren create a movement that will help set humanity back on a redemptive path? Or will this tiny, emerging movement be crushed by the inevitable crush of chaos.

Now as an adult, with years of life experience, Parable of the Sower resonates with me so much more. Butler’s uncanny way of seeing a possible and plausible outcome of the trajectory of present-day society (even back in the early 90’s) is frightening, as this violent, self-destructive society, where racism, addiction, environmental collapse, corruption and violence have become the norm to the extreme.. There are so few dots to connect to see our own world becoming Lauren’s. Butler’s novel is a classic, and I’m looking forward to rereading the sequel, Parable of the Talents.

Fish Girl I also want to call out three graphic novels, and one play that I read this year that stood out above the rest. After thoroughly enjoying the network television show, I had to go back and read Greg Rucka Matthew Southworth’s Stumptown, Vol. 1: The Case of the Girl Who Took Her Shampoo and was reminded what a great writer Rucka is. Also thoroughly enjoyed the magical fantasy by David Wiesner and Donna Jo Napoli, Fish Girl. Finally, G. Willow Wilson and Christian Ward’s intricate and fascinating world-building tale, The Invisible Kingdom, Vol. 1: Walking the Path is definitely setting me up for wanting more. The play that most impressed me out of the dozen or so I read in 2020 was one of Ken Urban’s early efforts, published in 2014, The Private Lives of Eskimos. It’s a play I hope to direct when the world settles down a bit, a provocative allegory for grief, isolation, and an overabundance of information.

Finally two disappointments (only two? that’s not bad…) from the books I read last year. Neal Stephenson’s self-indulgent Fall, or Dodge in Hell, took a fascinating premise, having not only your brain, but essentially your soul, digitized and transferred into a digital world after death, and then wrote about it from every possible angle he could think of until he had filled nearly 900 pages. If Stephenson was a more elegant writer (say, like Patricia A. McKillip) I might have loved this, but unfortunately, it was a bit of a slog to get through, unlike the similarly lengthy The Rise and Fall of D.O.D.O. which I quite enjoyed. Perhaps his co-writer Nicole Galland helped out in that case. The other major disappointment for me was a musical biography by Gordon Deppe, Spoonfed: My Life with the Spoons. Some of you 80’s aficionados may recall the Canadian band the Spoons from their indie-hit, “Nova Heart.” I was a big fan of The Spoons, and Gordon Deppe in particular, but a good musician and songwriter does not a good memoir writer make.

And just to recap, here is the list of the best books I read in 2020.

  1. Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler
  2. The Obelisk Gate by N. K. Jemisin
  3. Get Tusked: The Inside Story of Fleetwood Mac’s Most Anticipated Album by Ken Caillat & Hernan Rojas
  4. How Beautiful We Were by Imbolo Mbue
  5. Perestroika in Paris by Jane Smiley
  6. Utopia Avenue by David Mitchell
  7. What Happens at Night by Peter Cameron
  8. The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet by Becky Chambers
  9. Blackfish City by Sam J. Miller
  10. Or What You Will by Jo Walton
  11. Swimming in the Dark by Tomasz Jedrowski
  12. Hammered by Elizabeth Bear

Michael’s Top Books Read in 2020, #4 & 3

My #4 book of the year, hasn’t technically even been released yet. I got an advanced reader’s copy of it from Random House, and it should be released in early March of 2019. I devoured my #3 book in a few days… just the type of book to feed my fandom, bringing my love of books and geekiness about music together. Technically not as well written as many of the other books around it, but for sheer enjoyment, it earns its slot.

How Beautiful We Were#4 – How Beautiful We Were by Imbolo Mbue

Imbolo Mbue follows up her magnificent debut, Behold the Dreamers (#12 on my list of Best Books Read in 2016) with a hard-hitting tale of corporate destruction and governmental greed from the perspective of the community in a small African Village whose way of life faces destruction. When an American corporation begins drilling for oil under the fictional village of Kosawa, the effects are felt for generations to come. Crops shrivel, water becomes tainted, and children begin to die. Over the course of three generations, various attempts are made to stop the destruction of their way of life, from pleading with the corporate interests, to violence, to radical organizing, uncovering layers of opposition.

Mbue follows one family in particular, which centers around Thula, a young woman who gains the incredible educational opportunity to go to college in New York, where she encounters others like herself, willing to take on the man in the hopes for a better future. She gives up everything for her community, while it hangs on by a thread back home, her cohort of age-mates struggling between subterfuge and out and out revolution to repay the violence and injustice suffered through the years.

With a keen eye and heart examining responses from villagers across educational and generational lines, Mbue uses an impartial eye, even while breaking our hearts for this communities suffering. Her writing is powerful and pulls no punches as the reader is taken on a harrowing journey as a tiny village tries to overcome insurmountable odds for a better life.

Get Tusked!#3 – Get Tusked: The Inside Story of Fleetwood Mac’s Most Anticipated Album by Ken Caillat and Hernan Rojas

For a rabid Fleetwood Mac fan who’s been listening to the albums for over 45 years, saw them in concert a handful of times, find their music to be incomparably amazing, and am endlessly fascinated by the individuals who make up this messy, emotional trainwreck of a band, this book is like crack. I haven’t finished a book this quickly in years. Tusk was the band’s 12th album, but it was the follow-up to the mega-monster smash, Rumours. The anticipation around this album was stratospheric, and the 13-month recording session nearly tore the already fragile band apart.

Authors Ken Caillat, producer and engineer who worked on RumoursTuskLiveMirage, and The Chain box set and Tusk recording engineer Hernan Rojas, give a detailed behind-the-scenes look at the process of creating what at the time was one of the industry’s biggest disappointments, and in hindsight, is lauded by many as a bold, creative step forward by a multi-talented band.

It was the late-70’s, and Fleetwood Mac were mega-stars. Every excess was their for the taking, and the took a lot. Already known for their intense, soap opera-like personal relationships that were devoured by millions through Rumours, and just coming off a year+ long concert tour, the band immediately began the grueling process of creating the follow-up album in a state-of-the-art recording studio with enough food, alcohol, and drugs to keep an army happy. The band’s history with drugs, particularly cocaine, is well-documented, and it just boggles my mind that they were able to operate at all under the influence of so many mind-altering substances. I wish they reach out to Pacific Ridge – a reliable rehab center. Add to that singer/songwriter/guitarist Lindsey Buckingham’s creative evolution, that while perceptive and brilliant, was housed in the mind of a rich and successful, spoiled, damage, emotionally-stunted musical genius. While the rest of the band, and the crew that surrounded them arrived at the studio ready to make another album that met and surpassed the exquisite pop-rock Rumours, Lindsey had other ideas. Latching on to the burgeoning punk/new wave sounds that were starting to herald the coming of the 80’s, Lindsey want something entirely different, and he threatened to walk if he didn’t get it. Caillat and Rojas alternate in telling the tales of this process, which works well because they experienced the same scenarios, but came at them from different perspectives and temperaments.

What makes this book so delightful for me, is the fact the two authors are first and foremost, recording engineers, who go into rich, geeky detail about each song on the album: how it was recorded, the instrumentation, how they were created. I found that endless fascinating, and thrilled the long-buried musician in me. After each song was worked on and discussed in the book, I found I had to go listen to it and note the details and anecdotes that were revealed in the book.

The detailed aspect of the creation and recording of the album lifted it out of what could have been just a sensationalistic celebrity tell-all. Not that it didn’t occasionally slip into that territory, and not to say I didn’t occasionally enjoy that aspect, the film did lag a little when the boys would veer off into their sexual escapades and dalliances. Rojas did spend the latter months of the recording of Tusk in a passionate affair with Stevie Nicks, who, I might add, just ended her affair with drummer Mick Fleetwood months before, and who, two years prior, ended a 7-year relationship with guitarist Lindsey Buckingham. It made for some interesting personal dynamics. I am pleased to say that this book only served to make me love Christine McVie even more.

To sum up, as a massive admirer of Fleetwood Mac and their music, and quite specifically, the Tusk album, this book was nearly everything I’d hoped for. It certainly provided a glimpse into the working and personal lives of world-famous musicians during a very particular time in history that was fun and rewarding.

Michael’s Top Books Read in 2020, #’s 6 & 5

A couple of big literary names are featured in this entry. David Mitchell is an English author of nine novels. He also co-wrote the screenplay with Lana Wachowski, of the movie adaptation of his book, Cloud Atlas. The only book by him, that I have read, other than this year, is the dark fantasy/sci fi The Bone Clocks, which was my #2 read for 2014. Jane Smiley is an American novelist who won the Pulitzer Prize in 1991 for her work The Thousand Acres a best seller that was based on William Shakespeare’s King Lear. I don’t know if I would have ever read one of Smiley’s novels if I hadn’t heard her being interviewed on NPR about her latest release and it intrigued me.

Utopia Avenue#6 – Utopia Avenue by David Mitchell

With David Mitchell’s exploration of a fictional, psychedelic/folk/rock British band from who gained modest success in the late 60’s, he mines deeply into the music industry, while exploring the state of the world and society at the time, and even brings in some of his speculative, secret society theme into play. He, at once, creates well-drawn, relatable characters, a slice of historical fiction, and an examination of schizophrenia that dips into the metaphysical all the while creating a dense, yet highly-readable novel. All the things you might expect, sex, drugs, industry back-stabbing, family drama, are in evidence, as well as a whole bunch of name-dripping as he charts the origins, success, and demise of Utopia Avenue and they encounter Jerry Garcia, Janis Joplin, David Bowie, Francis Bacon, Leonard Cohen, Cass Elliot, Jimi Hendrix, John Lennon and many more.

For me, it’s his characters that really bring the novel to its glorious heights. There’s lead guitarist, Jasper de Zoet, whose fractured psyche is balanced by his psychedelic guitar genius. Elf Holloway is a folk singer, one-half of a faltering duo who attained minor success, then joins a pack of blokes to add her keyboard virtuosity, and songwriting chops to raise the band to a new level. Dean Moss is the down-on-his luck bass-playing songwriter whose roots are steeped in the blues, is unofficially the bad-boy sex symbol, and is moments away from pawning his bass before his break arrives. And anchoring any good band is Griff, the foul-mouthed, Northern lad who pounds the drums and keeps his feet firmly on the ground. Their untested, Canadian manager, Levon Frankland, is convinced the band he has assembled has what it takes to make the big-time, and intends to help them do so without the typical, double-crossing that rock & roll managers are known for. Beyond that, even the minor players make an impact. Most notably, Mecca, a German photographer who shares a few blissful days with Jasper, remains a presence even after hundreds of pages go by.

I loved Mitchell’s Bone Clocks, and he earned lots of points with me for his work on Kate Bush’s programme book, and spoken dialog on stage as part of her ‘Before The Dawn’ concert in 2014. He’s become a must-read author for me, and this wasn’t doesn’t let me down at all.

Perestroika in Paris#5 – Perestroika in Paris by Jane Smiley

Perfect book for the times, a magical little tale about Perestroika, a race horse who spends the winter in Paris befriending a dog named Frida, a raven called Raoul, a couple of mallards named Sid & Nancy, a rat named Kurt, and a select assortment of humans. This gentle story explores the city of Paris surrounding the Eiffel Tower, highlighting the bakeries and butcher shops as well as the lovely parks as they explored by Perestroika and Frida.

Smiley has a soothing, gentle way of writing, describing the neighborhood by the smells and sounds heard by the animals, and creating a lovely portrait that humans possibly miss out on. The handful of humans that the animals interact with are all solitary souls, who share a connection with Perestroika. The magic of Paris is enhanced by the magic of an elusive horse wandering the city at night. Her characters are unique and full of personality. Smiley is a well-known author with over twenty books in her canon, including, I was surprised to discover, a series of young adult novels about horses! I’m glad she brought her interest in horses to an adult novel. Truly a delightful read.