Saturday, January 2, 2010

WHAT I READ 2009


I have loved to read ever since the first grade. During lunch, my darling Dad (a voracious reader) would walk from his office to the library across the street and select a stack of books to bring home to me. What a treat! My first grade teacher, Mrs. Stilwell, gave us a feather to put in an indian headdress for each book we read--I read the most and became chief (of course).

It has been a unique year of reading for me as I have found different ways to bring more books into my life. There is the lovely book in a hand approach, a classic that is my favorite way to read. But there are also books on tape which make my drive to and from work entertaining or educational; DailyLit helps me tackle the thick-book classics such as Vanity Fair, by emailing me a page a day; and my Kindle which lets me keep bunches of books at the ready with little effort.

Add to that the many blogs reviewing books and my ever-lengthening "to read" list makes my head hurt. My friend, Tami, hopes that we can still work on our reading list in the next life--Amen!

Recently I was talking to Mr. Talbot, my friend Leslie's darling Dad, about reading. He loves to read new books but in December he always re-reads A Christmas Carol and a Jane Austen book, this year Pride and Prejudice. I love that idea. The winter seems like a great reading season (you know, in other places where it snows), but December is so crazy busy it's hard to find the time to immerse myself in a new book. I think Mr. Talbot's idea of re-reading a few classics in December is brilliant and I shall do that in 2010.

Meanwhile, here is the list of all the books I read in 2009 with a brief note.


  • The Ladies of Grace Adieu - enjoyable, at times unsettling

  • Indian Summer: The Secret History of the End of an Empire - educational

  • Holy Cow: An Indian Adventure - educational but a bit crude

  • Vanity Fair - loved it

  • Cheeful Weather for the Wedding - easy

  • The BFG - loved it

  • Watching the English - too much information

  • Cider with Rosie - lovely

  • The Cemetary Yew - fun

  • Speech-less: Tales of a White House Survivor - enjoyable

  • Unnatural Death - loved it

  • Diary of Provincial Lady - loved it

  • Thank You, Jeeves - loved it, laughed out loud

  • The Help - clever, loved it

  • The Uncommon Reader - clever, loved it

  • The Cranefly Orchid Murders - fun

  • Bringing Home the Birkin - interesting but sophomoric at times

  • Jack in the Pulpit - fun

  • The Wildwater Walking Club - light reading

  • Seven Pleasures: Essays on Ordinary Happiness - good, but smug

  • My French Life - dreamy

  • A Homemade Life - good

  • Striding Folly - very good

  • Richard and John: Kings at War - good but tedious

  • Truman - very good

  • Cold Comfort Farm - loved it

  • Atlas Shrugged - loved it

  • In Defense of Food - loved it

  • Barchester Towers - good

  • Animal, Vegetable, Miracle - loved it

  • Dorothy Parker short stories - too dreary

  • Outliers - interesting

  • My Life in France - loved it

  • The Forgotten Man: A New History of the Great Depression - loved it

  • Joy in the Morning (Wooster & Jeeves) - laugh out loud funny

  • Paris to the Moon - good

  • The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society - so good

  • More Home Cooking: A Writer Returns to the Kitchen - loved it

  • Blink - interesting

  • Home Cooking: A Writer in the Kitchen - terrific

  • Happy All The Time - good

  • The Tipping Point - interesting

  • The Reluctant Widow - so so

  • The Christmas Sweater - so so

  • The Friday Night Knitting Club - very good, tear jerker

  • The Picture of Dorian Gray - creepy, excellent

4 comments:

  1. I am rereading The Picture of Dorian Gray because of an earlier post of yours - I haven't read it since high school - I am quite enjoying it.
    I agree with you on The Christmas Sweater; my mother-in-law loved it and wanted me to read it.
    I have added a few books from your 2009 list to my 2010 list.
    I so enjoy your blogs on books. You inspire me to read more, and to choose from different genres!

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  2. Thanks for reading and posting about my book.
    Happy New Year,
    Michael Tonello~
    p.s. sophomoric is spelled with three o's.

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  3. Terri: Thanks! I think I get my love of reading from the Wold side!

    Michael: Thanks for the note and the correction. Happy New Year to you, too.

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  4. I am always amazed at the divesity of the books you read and that you can finish a book you are not really enjoying. That is determination!

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