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Your Top 5 Books of 2020 Reading is a passion of mine and I'm always interested in what other's are reading and recommending. What are your top 5 books that you read this year? Mine are:
American Dirt - Jeanine Cummins Me - Elton John The Nickel Boys - Colson Whitehead Hilary Mantel - The Mirror and the Light Alka Joshi - The Henna Artist
I could name a lot more, but these are my top 5 | |
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I don’t have a top 5 for this year, but I enjoyed the meaning of mariah carey, and a children’s book on mindfulness that my friend wrote
Another book I read though not written this year is Scarborough: a novel written by Catherine Hernandez [Edited 11/27/20 12:36pm] | |
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Jade City (2017) Fonda Lee Jade War (2019) Fonda Lee Home Before Dark (2020) Riley Sager The House in the Cerulean Sea (2020) T.J. Klune Cemetery Boys (2020) Aiden Thomas I’m halfway through Mariah’s book but haven’t picked it up in weeks. I might start over so the first half is fresh in my mind. | |
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Caste: The Origins of Our Discontent - Isabel Wilkerson (author of The Warmth of Other Suns) Pachinko - Min Jin Lee (AppleTV+ is making this into a series, which started production last month) The Screwtape Letters - C. S. Lewis The Institute - Stephen King (this is due to be a limited series at some point) The Book of Harlan - Bernice McFadden (about Blacks in camps during WWII) [Edited 11/27/20 17:11pm] Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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I enjoyed the Elton John book. | |
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PennyPurple said:
I enjoyed the Elton John book. Yes, I thought it was very candid coming from such a famous person. | |
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TrivialPursuit said: Caste: The Origins of Our Discontent - Isabel Wilkerson (author of The Warmth of Other Suns) Pachinko - Min Jin Lee (AppleTV+ is making this into a series, which started production last month) The Screwtape Letters - C. S. Lewis The Institute - Stephen King (this is due to be a limited series at some point) The Book of Harlan - Bernice McFadden (about Blacks in camps during WWII) [Edited 11/27/20 17:11pm] Great list. I enjoyed Caste as well and I know we talked about Pachinko a few months ago. Another excellent book. | |
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I'm not ready to put together a top 5, but Hilary Mantel's book will be on it for sure. I'm going back and re-reading A Place of Greater Safety appreciating how much her whip-smart dialogues have gone over my head . | |
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MarkThrust said:
I'm not ready to put together a top 5, but Hilary Mantel's book will be on it for sure. I'm going back and re-reading A Place of Greater Safety appreciating how much her whip-smart dialogues have gone over my head . When you're ready, please post. Hilary is a fantastic writer. The trilogy that the Mirror and the Light is part of is award winning for sure. | |
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I'm not all the way thru Caste yet, but it's so raw and revealing. I had started reading books about race in 2019, and they all have a unique point of view. But none, and I mean none I've read so far, have this level of realness, examples of hatred and violence, and shows the utter audacity of venom shown to non-white people in this country. Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Shameless Plug! I've written a book about my relationship with Prince's music...and The Org features prominently in the plot! It's called "Purple Bananas: How Prince Saved Me and Other Selections from the Soundtrack 2 My Life." I hope you will all check it out. Peace + B Wild!
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Been re-reading mostly Talking to Strangers Kindred Wild Seed Mind of My Mind Unfu*k Yourself Time keeps on slipping into the future...
This moment is all there is... | |
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A couple I forgot to mention. Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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They read? All you others say Hell Yea!! | |
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Downloaded The Essential Rumi to begin this week. Time keeps on slipping into the future...
This moment is all there is... | |
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Call Me by Your Name by André Aciman Education by Tara Westover (Memoir) The Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead The Salt Path by Raynor Winn (Memoir) I Love Dick by Chris Kraus (Memoir)
Colson Whitehead is incredible--one of only a few authors to win 2 Pulitzers for fiction (and a black man--he's an inspiration!) I love Hilary Mantel--I've only read her memoir, Giving up the Ghost, it was amazing.
The year is 2020 and there's no more fear. | |
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Isabel said:
Call Me by Your Name by André Aciman Education by Tara Westover (Memoir) The Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead The Salt Path by Raynor Winn (Memoir) I Love Dick by Chris Kraus (Memoir)
Colson Whitehead is incredible--one of only a few authors to win 2 Pulitzers for fiction (and a black man--he's an inspiration!) I love Hilary Mantel--I've only read her memoir, Giving up the Ghost, it was amazing.
I've only read 3 of Whiteheads books, but have loved all 3. Educated was an awesome book. Very inspirational. Mantel is a great writer, but her books are very long, so you must have patience. Thanks for your response to this thread. | |
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You're welcome, thanks for starting it! Wasn't Educated a trip--it was incredible!! I want to read the rest of Colson Whitehead but to tell you the truth I was actually scared to read him as the subject matter is so painful as a Black person. I listened to The Nickel Boys on Audible and the narrator just blew me away, but the story was very difficult to hear of course. I think I'll try The Underground Railroad when I feel strong enough. I only just brought myself to watch 12 Years a Slave a few weeks ago. I didn't dare before.
Have you read any Prince-related books? I've only read Mayte's and Parke's. I loved both. I want to read Kim Berry's and some memoirs by fans. I love a good memoir. I'm also scared to read The Beautiful Ones. I get like that, I live for reading, but some books scare me emotionally and I can't bring myself to read them. The year is 2020 and there's no more fear. | |
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Educated was indeed a trip! I can't imagine living the way Tara lived. Both her parents and most of her siblings were way too "out there" for me. I was so happy for her that she escaped that life and educated herself so well.
I've only read 3 of Colson's books (his first and his last 2) and all 3 were fantastic. I just heard he has a new one coming sometime in 2021. I will read it for sure. I'm not black, but I find his books horrifying for many reasons. I'm also a huge fan of Alice Walker. I've read many of her books over the years. She's a terrific writer, but unfortunatley, she's gone in a direction that is hard for me to read. Her books up until the late 90's are excellent, but she kind of lost me after that.
I've read several books on Prince. The Beautiful Ones was emotional and very hard to read as it's so incomplete. There was so much more to say | |
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Love Alice Walker also. Feeling so sad about Prince, don't know if I can read The Beautiful Ones yet. Even just thinking about the title makes me sad. The year is 2020 and there's no more fear. | |
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...OK, could people discuss the damn books ('cept Empress)? Just telling us the NAME, and leaving us to Google for ourselves (Google was down today, btw), is kind of......Shit. What's Alka Joshi for example? | |
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[Edited 12/15/20 20:23pm] Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Goodreads is a great site and they aren't trying to sell you anything either. I'm on it regularly, I find it very informative. | |
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Isn't that owned by Amazon?? | |
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Is it? I'm not sure. Maybe you've just educated me on something. I'll have to look into that. | |
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This has been a weird year for reading...I'm out of touch on a lot of contemporary writers but found I liked a lot of older books that were recommended on FaceBook from friends, etc.
The Mirror and the Light - Hilary Mantel Sticks the landing on the Cromwell trilogy. I have a lot of respect for her unforgiving dialogues, and expect I'll re-read this before my end days (the references and inferences and nuances are so real-time, I could have used annotations to keep up). . An Empire of Their Own - Neal Gabler (subtitled - How the Jews Invented Hollywood) Fascinating take on the romanticism or the father figure amongst the first movie moguls; how the golden age of film defined our ideas of heroism. . The Last Empire (Essays 1992 - 2000) - Gore Vidal At times a little redundant with favored points, there's still some interesting takes on politics. It gave me a new perspective on the Truman Doctrine - something he attacks with vehemenence - and his notions on breaking up the captitol through a Constitutional Convention (not because we can't get along, but because there shouldn't be one focal point where lobbyists can most easily do damage) while not realistic, makes one ponder the possibilities. . If He Hollers Let Him Go - Chester Himes Oddly, this was a random recommendation that I had no context on the subject when I picked it up - it was on someone else's favorite books list. Also by chance, I had just finished Wright's Black Boy, so it felt like a strange continuation. For me, Hime's character is more relatable - in terms of life experience and being caught between classes - along with a very natural anger that cannot but rebel. . The Fifth Season - N.K. Jemisin - I don't read too much science fiction, but I read so much 'heavy' stuff I need something that's a page-turner. I'm looking forward to reading the next 2 books; I don't think since Dune have I enjoyed the creation of a fictional world as much as I have this one. . Honorable Mentions: So You Want to Talk About Race - Ijeoma Oluo; Apropos of Nothing - Woody Allen. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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One of my favorites that I just finished is Nothing to See Here by Kevin Wilson If you want details, here's my Goodreads review, lol: I hesitated to read this since I tend not to enjoy stories centering around kids (usually too bland & sentimental).. This book was sentimental, sure, but it was so entertaining and definitely not a cheesy Hallmark story! I loved it. Very fast paced, funny, cohesive and relatable. The main character's cynicism and nonchalance is so down to earth. Obviously used as a bit of a defensive mechanism, but it's fulfilling to watch her grow and evolve while still remaining herself If you will, so will I | |
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The Ghost Summer stories by Tananarive Due. Horror short stories which I really enjoyed. The 1st one sticks with me the most because of its metaphor. I'm finally finishing up the immortal series by this author. Time keeps on slipping into the future...
This moment is all there is... | |
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