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My Six Favorite Books of 2015

30 Dec

I first created a Goodreads account in 2011, but this year have used it more actively. My plan was to follow the Book Riot Read Harder Challenge for 2015, but I lost track of it. So many books, so little time. But I will try again with the 2016 Challenge!

I used to track books I read in a little notebook that eventually ran out of pages. I decided that Goodreads would be a better place for this information, and abandoned the notebook to go digital. Goodreads tracks the amount of books and pages I read, plus maintains a list of books I want to read. I challenge myself to write a review of each book I finish to keep my writing skills sharp. According to Goodreads, I read 35 books this year (beating the goal of 33 I set for myself) and 8,559 pages. As a stats nerd, this information is fun for me.

In this post I will write about some of my favorite books I’ve read this year from my Goodreads list.

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The Art of Asking, by Amanda Palmer

What stuck out to me most about The Art of Asking by artist, creator of a wildly successful Kickstarter campaign, and TED presenter Amanda Palmer was her loyalty to her fans and her focus on connecting with them. She collected email addresses and built a list before email marketing was even a practice, and she wouldn’t share the information with a major label that signed her. I now count myself among Palmer’s fans, as I admire her dedication to them. I listened to the audiobook available on eBCCLS, which is read by Amanda and features musical performances.

 

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We Should All Be Feminists, by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

This is a short book (also an eBook on eBCCLS) that transcribes Adichie’s TED Talk of the same name, which was sampled in Beyonce’s track “***Flawless”. I read it while waiting to board a flight last winter, and was so inspired by this accessible explanation of feminism. I’ve long identified as a feminist (fun fact: we don’t hate men!) but it’s great to see the movement, and Adichie’s talk, embraced by someone as influential as Beyonce. (Remember this?) Everyone should read We Should All Be Feminists, and then explore Adichie’s body of work.

 

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The 9/11 Report: A Graphic Adaptation, by Sid Jacobson

This graphic novelization of the 9/11 Commission’s report on the worst act of terrorism in the United States should be required reading for anyone that wants to understand the events leading up to September 11, 2001. I learned a great deal about Middle Eastern history and the rise of Al Qaeda from this book. The world has changed immensely since 2001, with ISIS as the new threat, but I feel that reading the 9/11 Report, either in text form, audiobook from eBCCLS, or the graphic novel, is more important than ever.

 

 

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Modern Romance, by Aziz Ansari

 

Modern Romance, with all its research, focus groups, and statistics could have been boring (unless you love stats like I do), but Aziz Ansari’s intelligence and humor made this book thoroughly enjoyable. One of his points (that I agree with as someone that’s been using online dating platforms for several years) is that online dating has given people too many choices, which can almost be paralyzing. After reading this book (as an eBook through the 3M Cloud Library or eLibraryNJ, or an audiobook through eBCCLS or eLibraryNJ), you will have learned a lot and laughed a lot about dating in the digital age, where men and women equally obsess over how long it takes for a potential date to respond to a text message.

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The Knockoff, by Lucy Sykes and Jo Piazza

As you may have gathered from this list so far, I prefer reading nonfiction. But the Mile Square City Readers Book Club that I co-run at the library compels me to read more fiction than I would choose on my own. I liked The Knockoff (the group’s September choice) a lot as someone that has long loved reading fashion magazines. My favorite part was figuring out the real-life inspirations for certain characters featured in the book. This title is available as an eBook and audiobook in eBCCLS, and as an eBook in eLibraryNJ.

 

 

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The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up, by Marie Kondo

This book is a game-changer. I have followed Kondo’s advice about folding my clothes, and my dresser has never been so organized. I have to restrain myself from showing houseguests how neat my sock drawer looks. Luckily a good friend has read the book, too, so we talk about how we use the KonMari method in our homes. Kondo feels the objects in our home should “spark joy”, which makes sense to me. I still have a lot of work to do (the notion of going through my papers is frightening) but I am pleased with the results thus far. If you enjoy organizing and rearranging your space, you will like this book. eBooks and audiobooks are available in both eLibraryNJ and eBCCLS, and Hoopla Digital has an audiobook.

What books have you loved in 2015? Are you on Goodreads? Cheers to reading great books in 2016!

-Written by Kerry Weinstein, Reference Librarian

The Mile Square City Readers Book Club Half-Year Review

19 Oct

In addition to the Science Fiction & Fantasy Book Club, which my colleague Aimee Harris created and facilitates, the Hoboken Public Library has the Mile Square City Readers. This book club, led by me and Rosary, reads mostly new releases and bestselling fiction, plus the occasional classic.

On March 19, 2015 the Mile Square City Readers had its first meeting. At that time, the name of the group was The Hoboken Public Library New Book Club. In September we reached our six month anniversary and decided the “New” label was, well, old. Our amazing members suggested names and voted on Mile Square City Readers.

Here is a review of the titles we have read so far this year.

The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins

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The first book we read is The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins. The girl is Rachel, who finds herself involved with the disappearance of a woman whose house she passes while riding the commuter train to London. The main question of the story is: Can the reader trust Rachel as a narrator? The group enjoyed this book, and it was a great title for starting off the book club.

To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee

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In April we read Harper Lee’s classic To Kill a Mockingbird ahead of the release of the prequel Go Set a Watchman. I joked that the book club was going “back to school”, as this title appears on many schools’ reading lists. Nearly all members of the group have read this book before, and are fond of the legendary characters Scout and Atticus Finch that Lee created.

Better Than Before by Gretchen Rubin

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We experimented with a nonfiction title in May. Better Than Before by Gretchen Rubin (also known for The Happiness Project) is about how we create habits, good and bad. An interesting discussion came from this book, including theories on how astrological signs can factor into our habits. However, the group wanted to return to fiction so the nonfiction experiment has been shelved.

All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr

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All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr was our June pick. We decided to read this after the announcement that it won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 2015. The Pulitzer website describes the book as “…an imaginative and intricate novel…” The group loved this book and thought it was a beautifully written work of fiction.

In the Unlikely Event by Judy Blume

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In July we read Judy Blume’s In the Unlikely Event, which is based on three plane crashes that happened in Elizabeth, New Jersey in the early 1950s, and how residents were impacted. There are many characters in this book, which the group expressed some difficulty keeping track of, but they enjoyed the story overall, particularly the accurate details included by Blume.

Go Set a Watchmen by Harper Lee

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Harper Lee’s Go Set a Watchman, our August pick, was the most controversial book in the Mile Square City Reader’s Book Club (albeit short) history. There was intense discussion about how Atticus Finch’s character was so drastically different in To Kill a Mockingbird, and how involved Harper Lee was in this work. The group consensus was that this book was better left unpublished.

The Knockoff by Lucy Sykes and Jo Piazza

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The September meeting brought the group’s first author visit: The Knockoff co-author Jo Piazza participated in our discussion over Skype chat! We had a lot of fun talking about the real-life people the characters in The Knockoff are based on (there is an Eve out in the world, yikes!), and how women of a certain age can relate to feeling irrelevant in the workplace when technology changes daily and younger people enter every day.

Looking ahead, we are reading A Head Full of Ghosts by Paul Tremblay. Please join us at our next meeting on Thursday October 29 at 7:30 PM.

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Titles for each month are announced ahead of time, and we offer copies of the book plus, depending on availability, eBooks available through eLibraryNJ and/or the library’s Technology Lending program.

To keep up with the Mile Square City Readers, send an email to reference AT hoboken DOT bccls DOT org to be added to the mailing list.

-Written by Kerry Weinstein, Reference Librarian and Mile Square City Readers Book Club co-founder