50 Books



The Reality Fuel Challenge has been mentioned in a million places. I generally read a lot so I didn’t think reading 50 books in a year would be a difficult task for me but considering the fact that we’re a quarter way through the year and I’ve only finished eight, it might not work out. Either way, I am going to keep track of them this year, just to see. Below is the list so far. I will put my progress here and you can read excerpts from those books and others here.

1. One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Over the years, I’ve had many friends recommend this book to me. People, it seemed, either loved it or hated it. I thought it would take too much emotional and mental involvement to read it and so saved it for later and later. A few months ago, a friend of Jake’s, whose reading taste I agree with, told me that he had just finished the book and it was the best he ever read. He couldn’t stop talking about it, so I decided I had put it off long enough and checked it out from the library.

The first week of the new year, I took one of my last vacation days and read the whole book in one sitting. The first fifty or so pages were confusing and I didn’t get into the story very much. But somewhere along the line, I got really attached to the characters, especially Ursula, and even started enjoying the insane story Marquez spun. By the end of the book, I could totally understand why people said they hadn’t read anything like this before. The book is difficult to describe. It requires suspension of disbelief. But Marquez is a fine storyteller and I did truly enjoy the book.

I guess this means I’m going to have to read his other favorite as well: Lolita.

2. Life of Pi by Yann Martel
I’m still trying to sort out my feelings about this book. I picked it up assuming it was a true story and felt annoyed at how surreal the story got as it progressed. I didn’t enjoy the large quantities of blood which I felt didn’t necessarily add to the story. I did enjoy the writer’s creativity and thought the story kept me quite interested considering there was one real main character (two if you count the animal) for most of the book. In the end, I did smile and felt the book was clever at making its point but I still can’t confidently say I’d recommend it to everyone.

3. The DaVinci Code by Dan Brown
After months of hype I finally gave up and bought the book. I am a big fan of art history and I’d been told the book had lots of it. I am not quite religious, and definitely not Christian, which was keeping me away from the book but after weeks of hearing about it, I gave in. It was a really quick read and enjoyable for the most part. It was somewhat predictable and pretty badly written. The author kept describing each new character at length instead of giving bits and pieces. The characters were quite flat but the story did keep me interested and it was definitely better writing than some of the writers who spend weeks on the bestsellers list. All in all, entertaining.

4. The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd
Another book that took me a while to get into but then sucked me in completely. The first thirty pages of this Southern story moved slowly. The small book deals with racism and family issues and it’s well written. The characters are interesting and enjoyable. I enjoyed it quite a lot.

5. Mystic River by Dennis Lehane

I heard so much about this movie that I was dying to go see it. I forced myself to wait until I read the book because I knew I would never read it if I saw the movie first. I am really glad I waited because it was definitely the best mystery novel I read in years.

Most mystery writers spend too much time on the plot and not enough time on characterization. These characters were three dimensional. Likable and not at the same time. The grief in the story was overwhelming and made me identify with each of the characters at different times. The mystery itself was a bit odd since I really had no idea who the murderer was until the author revealed it. The ending, for me, was the worst part of the novel and did disappoint me a lot but over all, I still think it was a worthwhile read.

6. The Inferno by Dante Alighieri
I am not sure this should count since it was my second time and it was mostly for research. But I did reread the entire book and enjoyed it even more the second time around. Dante’s creativity and his style are still unparalleled in my opinion. Not to mention the fact that it was one of the first works ever written in the vernacular, as opposed to Latin. I won’t write more because I know I am biased when it comes to The Divine Comedy.

7. The Amateur Marriage by Anne Tyler
As a huge fan of Anne Tyler, I eagerly awaited her new novel for the last six months. This book is quite different from the others I’ve read (and I’ve read all but two of hers). First of all, it spans across about sixty years. Secondly, each sections is written from a different character’s point of view (though, some characters are repeated). While it’s obviously the married couple’s story, it isn’t very distinctly the wife’s or the husband’s. All of these aspects are new to her style. The prose, however, isn’t. Her characters are just as memorable, quirky, and ordinary as they are in all books. The story has the same ‘the extraordinariness of the ordinary’ quality I always find in her novels. As a married person, I found the book to be sad and cried several times. But then again, I cry at all movies and books, so don’t take my reaction as normal. If you enjoy Anne Tyler, I would certainly recommend this new novel. However, if you’ve never read her before and want to try, start with Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant. It’s excellent.

8. Bringing Down the House by Ben Mezrich
The beginning of this story about a group of MIT students who made a huge amount of money in Las Vegas pulled me right it. The story was interesting, the writing was not distracting and certainly not as dull as many non-fiction books I read. A hundred pages into the story, it stopped moving. My interest waned but I kept reading. In the end, I do think it was an interesting, fun and worthwhile book to read but I think it would have done much better as a long article. (a fact true for most non fiction in my opinion)



In progress:
QED by Richard Feynman
Intelligence turns me on. Varied interest coupled with intelligence turns me on even more. If Richard Feyman were alive today, I am confident I would have easily paid a lot of money to sit in one of these lectures. He is a rare example of an extremely intelligent man who has achieved incredible success in Physics and also loved his wife like crazy, played the drums, obsessed over visiting Tuva, and picked locks for fun. He worked on Quantum Electrodynamics (the topic of this book), was part of the team that created the Atom Bomb, and solved why the Challenger blew up among other amazing achievements.

A true sign of understanding a subject, in my opinion, is being able to put it into laymen’s term. For someone who has had an exceptionally bad physics education, Feynman’s lectures are magical to me. The ones in this book are simple, entertaining, make sense, make few assumptions on my previous knowledge, and most importantly, don’t talk down to me. The reading is dense. It takes time. But if you’re interested in physics and know as little as I do about QED, it’s well worth it.

If physics isn’t your cup of tea, I would still recommend two of my favorite Feynman books: What Do You Care What Other People Think? and Surely You’re Joking, Mr. Feynman! both of which aren’t about physics but will entertain you and show you what a curious and amazing person Feynman was.

The Passion by Jeanette Winterson
This book was a Christmas present from my brother in law. It’s his girlfriend’s favorite book. I am not usually a fan of short stories and prefer not to read stories that take place too long ago in history. This author’s style is also a bit too magical for my taste. Despite all that, I am enjoying the stories so far. I’m about sixty pages into the 150-page book and will let you know what I feel in the end.

Next:
The Meaning of Everything by Simon Winchester

Recommendations are always welcome by email, comments below, or chat.

6 comments to 50 Books

  • last saturday, i spent a few hours at my friend cynthia’s house. I went to look for orange flowers and ended up taking pictures of her garden and cats. Over the next few days, I’ll post some of the pictures I took then. This one is one of my favorites.

  • Aleppo

    Karenika,

    I like the colours in this, and the symmetry of the taps. It’s a little blurry though – do you not sharpen in photoshop or whatever you use? I always find it helps even if the original big .jpg was sharp.

    Aleppo

  • aleppo, thanks so much for the comments. I do sharpen the images using “high pass” filter in photoshop. do you sharpen them with a different method? if so, I would be really happy if you told me how since I am still learning. thanks!!

  • Aleppo

    Gosh, I’ve never used ‘high pass’, so I don’t know if it’s good or bad. Personally I sharpen as the last step in the process (after resizing and any tweaking) and use ‘unsharp mask’, with the settings about 55% and 0.4 and 0. Some photos can look a bit too ‘photoshop sharp’ though, so best to play around with this. You can also use ‘sharpen’ and then fade this, but I find it’s harder to get the right balance.

  • Crystal

    There is a long-article version of Bringing Down the House — that’s actually how I found out about the book in the first place:

    http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/10.09/vegas.html

  • Annie

    How about “Absent in the spring”? It’s by Agatha Christie under her pseudonym Mary Westmacott. Don’t worry- it’s not a murder mystery but one of her non-detective fiction works. I read it a long time back, but remember that I liked the writing. Let me know if you like it too!

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