Reading in the New Year

Part of the fun of end of year movie and music lists is their immediacy. Even if you’ve been hiding under a rock during 2010, listening only to NPR or the music of your youth and watching televison in a stupor before you drift off to sleep  around  10 pm, you can still get    back up to speed during a YouTube/iTunes fueled weekend or a few cinema visits during the Christmas holiday.

Not so with book lists. If you are anything like me, you probably have no idea what was published this year (with the exception of a certain Time  cover boy). I try to pay attention, but Daily Show and Fresh Air guests  tend to blend together and it honestly might be years before I get around to reading the offerings of 2010. However, I still like to keep track of the end of year book  lists because if, heaven forbid, I ever make it all the way through the stack on my bedside table (technically that stack has overflowed into a stack beside the table) or find myself stymied one summer day while pondering the quick selection rack at the library, I want to have a few ideas in my back pocket.

Below, in no particular order, are the list of books published  in 2010 that have caught my attention:

Fiction

  • Freedom by Jonathan Franzen, Franzen’s tale of a disintegrating suburban family arrived in a storm of publicity and controversy. This will be my first read of 2011 and is actually already on the bedside table waiting for me to finish the last 200 pages of Anna Karenina. (More about that in a future post.)
  • Room by Emma Donogue,  A little scared of this one, but I like to face my fears.
  • A Visit From the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan
  • Our Tragic Universe by Scarlett Thomas, I always find Thomas’ novels to be ambitious, uneven, but highly enjoyable.
  • The Finkler Question by Howard Jacobson, Winner of the 2010 Man Booker Prize, but note the bad reviews on Amazon. I’m totally intrigued.

Non-Fiction

  • Delusions of Gender by Cordelia Fine
  • Autobiography of Mark Twain, Vol. 1, by Mark Twain, ed. Harriet Elinor Smith et al., I’ve only read excerpts of Twain’s autobiography, this new and highly praised  definitive version seems like the perfect excuse to read the whole thing.
  • Cleopatra: A Life by Stacy Schiff
  • Life: Keith Richards by Keith Richards, Have I mentioned how much I love rock bios and autobiographies? No? I really love rock bios and  autobiographies.  This one sounds great.
  • Just Kids by Patti Smith, Love Patti Smith. Love books about art and artists and rock stars (see sentence above).

What did I miss? What were the best books you read in 2010? Anything you are looking forward to reading in the new year?