2020 Reading Diary Part 2!

AUGUST TO DECEMBER
CONTINUED FROM 2020 PART 1

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Book 19: August began with me about a third of the way through Summer of Night (1991) by Dan Simmons, which coincidentally was published the same year as the last book I read, The Dragon Reborn. I first heard of the author after learning he wrote the book that the TV show The Terror (2018) was based on. More recently, I came across his name on two “BookTube” YouTube channels, one dedicated to science fiction and fantasy and the other to horror.  Summer of Night falls in the latter genre.  After reading six chapters, I went back and skimmed them again while jotting down character names and traits and relationships. The book really started growing on me when I resumed. Somethineg scary happened at around the 50% mark and another scary thing happened soon after. I think is the scariest book I’ve read in a long time and I am just so glad I decided to read this. I finished it a few minutes after midnight on August 6, and I think that was surely one of the best horror books I have ever read. I literally devoured that last 100 or so pages.  (Read between July 27 &  August 6)

And I should give a plug to the BookTuber who introduced me to this book. Thank you Richard!

 

Book 20: I don’t often decide in advance what book to read next; I almost always make that decision straight after finishing the previous book. For a change – I’m only 17% through Summer of Night as I type this, I have decided well in advance that my next book will be Warbreaker (2009) by Brandon Sanderson. Last year, my office mate told me about his Mistborn series, but the name did not stick in my mind. Then when reading about The Wheel of Time, I learned that Brandon Sanderson completed the series after the passing of Robert Jordan in 2007. What surprised and impressed me was the fact that I found nothing but praise for the final three books written by Sanderson. Yes, he had extensive notes to guide him, but finishing such a popular series to the satisfaction of plenty of fans sounds like mission impossible. I then explored his other books – careful to avoid spoilers – and again noticed really nothing but praise. I then started watching some of his lectures from his fantasy and science fiction writing class at Brigham Young University, which he thankfully shared on YouTube. He struck me as both a great teacher with an encyclopedic knowledge of fantasy and science fiction – I guess that’s not surprising – and the art of story creation, again not surprising, but writers aren’t necessarily the best writing teachers. As I type this I am literally drooling at the prospect of reading my first book by him. I’ve yet to read a word of his fiction – apart from skimming quicky out of curiousity the  prologue to The Way of Kings (2010), but I already feel like he is one of my favorite authors. 

It’s the afternoon of Saturday August 8, and I’m about one quarter of the way Warbreaker. Witty dialogue, interesting and very distinctive characters, some surprises, an interesting and vivid world and magic system, all written in prose that is very easy to read. I am enjoying this more and more as I get deeper and deeper into the story. I’m almost a third of the way through as I settle down for some Sundat late-night reading. I’ve reached the point where I am grateful I chose this book and I am sure I’ll read the rest of it fairly quickly. I finished it pretty late the night of August 17 having been at the 80% mark when the day began. I look forward to sooner or later tackling The Stormlight Archive and the Mistborn series. (Read between August 5 & 17)

Here’s an interesting and concise introduction to his career to date:

Book 21: The Three-Body Problem (2008) by Liu Cixin. I normally choose what book to read next upon completing the previous book, but I just noticed that selecting a book much earlier helps me to read the current book faster as I find myself looking forward to what is next. I chose The Three-Body Problem after watching a review of it. In particular it was a desciption of the plot in just a sentence that really piqued my interest.  I had heard of the book before, and a couple of friends have written well of it on Facebook, so I’m confident I’m in for an interesting adventure. Another plus is that this will be the first book I’ve read by a Chinese author. I started it the night I finished Warbreaker and I was halfway throughout by the following afternoon. This is unputdownable, and I read it in less than 24 hours. It’s been a while since that’s happened. (Read between August 17 & 18)

Book 22: The Shadow Rising (1992) by Robert Jordan. After three non-Wheel of Time books, I’m ready to return to that world/universe with the fourth book in the series. A fine sense of dread is established in the first chapter which is befitting of the book’s title. I think my favorite characters are in for a rough few months. Once again, the end of the book was read at a much greater pace as the main plots drew closer to their climaxes. The last third was read in four days while the whole book took me almost three weeks. They were three good weeks though as the story advances, and I have to say a few little tidbits of information revealed throughout came as very intriguing surprises. Book five, The Fires of Heaven, is next, and I recently heard that the prequel, A New Spring, which was originally published after book 10, is best read after the fifth book. I’ll follow that advice, but for now I’ll take another short break and read a few different books.  (Read between August 18 & September 4)

Book 23: Ennio Morricone: In His Own Words (2019) is next for a few reasons including his recent passing, more familairity with his music, and simply because it’s time for a change from the many recent fantasy, horror, and science fiction books I have read. I began reading it the morning of September 4, and it immediately felt like a much needed breath of fresh air. And not just because it’s a return to non-fiction after 15 books in a row, but also because it’s about music and in particular about a composer I admire. A composer who  I’m sure I will admire more by the time I finish this book. And it really just took a few pages before I was totally in awe of not just his intelligence, but his amazing memory. This is an utterly fascinating and detailed journey through his life and career. (Read between September 4 & 20)

Book 24: The Dark Forest (2008) is the sequel to The Three Body Problem, and since the above Ennio Morricone book is something I can read in piecemeal fashion, I decided to start The Dark Forest before I finished reading about Meastro Morricone. I finished it at 12:20 a.m. on Friday morning, and yes, that was truly mind-blowing. Barrack Obama was right. And in related news, a TV adaption is in the works. (Read between September 6 & 11)

Having finished the above book 14 hours ago, and I am still undecided about what book to read next. I decided to read more musical wisdom and film music history from the mouth of Ennio Morricone. His genius comes through on every page. I finished it just after midnight in the early hours of Sunday, September 20. It took me all day to decide what to read next.

Book 25: I returned to science fiction with a short book by Poul Anderson, an author I had not read before. The premise of The High Crusade (1960) piqued my curiosity: an alien spaceship lands in midieval England. That was all I knew of the plot, and it quickly went in a direction I didn’t at all expect. And it was a fun quick read. (Read between September 20 & 22)

Book 26: The End of October (2020) by Lawrence Wright is next. My first book about a pandemic since the pandemic. Another quick read and I’m on track to finish it later tonight (Friday, Sept 25), which I did. (Read between September 22 & 25)

Book 27: Pushing Ice (2005), my first Alastair Reynolds, was next and once I started the first chapter after a puzzling prologue that will make sense later I’m sure. I was hooked. I have students’ homework to check, but I am really keen to read this book in a few days. And that’s what happened. It was one of those books that I absolutely couldn’t put down, more so after the half-way mark. (Read between September 25 & 29)

Book 28: The Doors of Eden (2020) by Adrian Tchaikovsky was a pretty easy choice for my next book. Well, this is certainly an interesting romp through parallel worlds that’s full of twists and turns and fascinating “what-if” scenarios regarding evoltion’s path. I’ll certainly miss the characters when all is said and done. (Read between September 29 & October 6)

Book 29: Next up: Fool Moon (2001 ) by Jim Butcher, the second novel in his The Dresden Files series. I’m loving it. It’s simply a fun read and the kind of book I could finish in a day or two but for other commitments like work and the like.  (Read between October 6 & 17)

What’s Next

A couple of weeks ago, I earmarked 12 books to read next – Fool Moon was on that list, so now 11 remain. I may make some changes, but here are those remaining books. I’m fairly certain the first five on the list will be read next in that order, but that’s as far as I’m prepared to plan ahead, and all plans are subject to change at a moment’s notice for no particular reason.

  1. Remembrance Of Earth’s Past 3: Death’s End by Liu Cixin
  2. The Wheel of Time 5: The Fires of Heaven by Robert Jordan
  3. Jack Reacher 25: The Sentinel by Lee Child & Andrew Child
  4. The Ministry for the Future by Kim Stanley Robinson
  5. The Salvation Sequence 3: The Saints of Salvation by Peter F. Hamilton
  6. Culture 2: The Player of Games by Iain Banks
  7.  William Warwick 1: Nothing Ventured by Jeffrey Archer
  8.  The Wheel of Time 6: The Lord Of Chaos
  9. The Lady Astronaut 3: Relentless Moon by Mary Robinette Kowal
  10. Red Rising by Pierce Brown
  11. Mistborn 1: The Final Empire by Brandon Sanderson

Book 30: Death’s End (2010) is the third and final book in Liu Cixin’s Remembrances of Earth’s Past trilogy which began with The Three-Body Problem. I started it with high expectations and a real sense of excitement. I’ve read and seen on some BookTube channels criticisms of this series, in particular the first book as those critical of it are less likely to continue. Some of those criticisms regarded characters, but for me personally, the ideas in the series are its most distinctive and mind-blowing feature. The scope of the book is equally mind-blowing. I’m half-way through after almost two days of reading, and I am as captivated by the story and the ideas contained therein as I have been by any other story, and I’ll repeat myself and restate that the ideas are simply mind-blowing. (Read between October 18 & 21)

Book 31: It’s time to return to Robert Jordan’s The Wheel of Time series with The Fires of Heaven (1993), the fifth book in the series. I’m now a few chapters in, and it feels good to be back in this world, but I have to admit I had to look up a few characters to remember who they were .  Almost a month after starting, I’m at the 89% mark. The going has been slow because of being busier than expected, and I also encountered a slow patch at one point – the first I’ve experienced in the series so far. That slow patch didn’t last long as another plot thread reached something of a climax soon after, and frankly, that slow patch might have had something to do with me just not finding enough time to read as much as I would have liked. Anyway, the end of book five draws closer, and I’m back looking forward to every moment I can turn my old and battered Kindle on. Things really picked up towards the end – not really unexpected, and I finally finished it the afternoon of November 20. (Read between October 21 & November 20) 

Book 32: The Sentinel (2020)  by Lee Child and Andrew Child.  The 25th Jack Reacher book marks the first time that author Lee Child has brought in a co-writer, his younger brother Andrew Child. The younger Child will eventually take over sole writing duties after a few more collaborations as the olderm Child cuts back on his writing duties. I was a little worried this new book would feel different and inferior to its 24 predecessors.  The first chapter totally confused me, but not in a bad way. Back in April, Penguin Publishing gave the world a sneak peak at chapter one. I read that first chapter last April, but by the time late November had arrived, I had forgotten I had read it. Hence, I was a few pages in when I realized I had aleady read this before. Confusion reigned for a few minutes as my mind tried to grasp this possible supernatural occurance. Had a mistake been made? Did Amazon get their e-books mixed up or had I dreamt the first chapter exactly as written? I browsed the first chapters of the last five or six Reacher books fully expecting to see the same words. I didn’t of course, and then the only really plausible explanation dawned on me. With the confusion out of the way, I continued with the story. Much to my relief, I soon stopped wondering which Child had written which word, and I found myself once again immersed in the exciting, eventful, and dangerous life of Jack Reacher. Some other fans have said they have noticed a difference and a drop in quiality. I certainly didn’t and the pages soon flew by: same Jack Reacher stumbling onto someone needing help, similiar fight scenes, similiar villians and victims, and the same page-turning suspense, and that’s a wonderful thing.   (Read between November 20 & 25)

Book 33: The Saints Of Salvation (2020). It’s time to finish Peter F. Hamilton’s most recent trilogy, The Salvation Sequence. I remember beginning the second book last year with some confusion as I struggled to remember who a few of the characters were what had happened to them. I had the same experience as I began book three. Fortunatel, both times I quickly got back into the swing of things as the story progressed. This then is a trilogy I think best read back to back; it really is one story spread across three books. And I may just do that in the not-too-distant future.  I certainly think the ending would have had more of an emotional payoff if I had read the first book more recently. Anyway, I loved the book, and I read the last half in a few days despite having lots on my mind and lots to do. Having said it was the one story, it is possible my namesake will revisit to tell a further story, and I hope he does. (Read between November 25 & December 4)

Book 34: Nothing Ventured (2019) by Jeffrey Archer was next. I decided I had had enough of alien invasions, wormholes, generational ships, and the like for a while. So it’s back to the real world, albeit to the ficticious life of Detective William Warwick as I begin the first in a new series. It was a typical Jeffrey Archer book – the sentences flowed together quickly and smoothly, and I found it hard to put down. I finished it in the wee hours of Monday, December 7.  (Read between December 5 & 7 )

Book 35: The Relentless Moon (2020) wasn’t next on my list, but it felt like the right time to start continuing the Lady Astronaut’s journey. That the Lady Astronaut herself is only mentioned breifly a few times was a surprise. This third book switches viewpoints to one of her colleagues who, as the book’s title suggests, spends a good portion of the book on the moon, whichis far from where the Lady Astronaut is. The change in viewpoint in no way impacted the feel of the book nor my enjoyment of it, and it’s made all the sweeter as I’m half way through the book as my winter vacation begins. (Read between December 7 & 16)

Book 36: The Player of Games (1988) by Iain Banks is the second in his Culture series, a series of loosely connected SF extravaganzas. I started the first book in late December last year, so given that anniversary is almost upon us, I decided to start number two. (Read between December 17 & 23)

Book 37: The Ministry for the Future (2020) by Kim Stanley Robinson is next, and it totally grabbed me from the first few pages. I loved the structure – short sharp chapters with about half of them focusing on the main characters with the others exploring the next 20 years of climate change through various witnesses and victims. It started desolutely, but slowly things became more hopeful as the numerous painful – and often unwanted by the powers that be – changes were made to human civilization in order for us to live more harmoniously with our plant and our animal colleagues. I read the last 25% on December 30, finishing it in the early hours of 2020’s last day. I was on something of a mission to finish it before the end of the year. Mission accomplished. (Read between December 23 & 31).

Book 38: On 2020’s last day, I began A Fire Upon The Deep (1992) by Vernor Vinge. I didn’t make a lot of progress before 2020 ended, but the opening chapter certainly hooked me.

I chose to read it after seeing it placed in the number one spot in the “Top 100 SF Books” video below, and it’ s a video that has already guided my reading decisions and led me on some other adventures. 2020 was the year I discovered BookTube full of YouTuber whose living rooms and bedrooms look like libraries. They’ve informed me of many interesting books and I think motivated me to finish faster my current book so that I can begin the next. Thank you BookTubers.

 

Well that brings me to the end of 2020. Thirty seven books including the book I was reading when the aweful year  2020 began. Less than previous years – I read almost twice as many books last year – but I’m satisfied with how the book reading part of my life proceeded. The number of books was lower because I was quite busy and at times stressed teaching my first online semester, but I still managed to discover new authors, continue some series, complete and finish others, and begin some more, the most notable being The Wheel of Time series – five down and nine more to go.  Goodbye 2020 and hello 2021 as I continue and soon finish A Fire Upon the Deep.

CONTINUED IN 2021 PART 1

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