Books Read, 2006

Every year my little group of friends share our lists of the books we’ve read over the course of the previous year. Below is my list from 2006. It’s near impossible for me to choose favorites since I loved them all. I’m at the point now where if I don’t love a book I stop reading it. My time to read is just so scarce that I’m not going to waste it on a book that doesn’t really grab me, which is something to think about with my own writing projects.

For fun, check out my reading lists for 2005 and 2004. And while you’re at it, check out my friend Berty’s list.

  1. Donnerjack, Roger Zelazny
  2. There’s a New Witch In Town (unpublished), Tawny Weber
  3. Hot Target, Suzanne Brockmann
  4. Breaking Point, Suzanne Brockmann
  5. Dime Store Magic, Kelley Armstrong
  6. Industrial Magic, Kelley Armstrong
  7. Haunted, Kelley Armstrong
  8. Jane Millionaire, Janice Lynn
  9. The Power of Two, Patti O’Shea
  10. Broken, Kelley Armstrong
  11. Dark Lover, J.R. Ward
  12. Lover Eternal, J.R. Ward
  13. Lover Awakened, J.R. Ward
  14. Unmasked, C.J. Barrie
  15. Spook, Mary Roach
  16. Nylon Angel, Marianne de Pierres
  17. Accidental Goddess, Linnea Sinclair
  18. Gabriel’s Ghost, Linnea Sinclair
  19. Finders Keepers, Linnea Sinclair
  20. Blue Moon, Lori Handelund
  21. What Went Wrong? The Clash Between Islam and Modernity in the Middle East, Bernard Lewis

• • •
 

Or there might be monkey poo a-flinging.

Does this stem from writers getting a big head from repeatedly creating worlds where the characters do one’s bidding? I wish my characters would do my bidding. They keep trying to do their own bidding.

Oh wait, maybe that’s a good thing. I mean, who wants to be the Great And Powerful Oz? I’d rather be a flying monkey, myself.


• • •
 

Risa at Cosmic Variance is passing along the One Sentence Challenge:

Physicist Richard Feynman once said that if all knowledge about physics was about to expire the one sentence he would tell the future is that “Everything is made of atoms”. What one sentence would you tell the future about your own area, whether it’s entrepreneurship, hedge funds, venture capital, or something else?

My favorites are comments 14, 15, 23, 32, 44, 48, 49.

What’s my contribution?

  • “We don’t have to be mean because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are. ” (Buckaroo Banzai)
  • “One must still have chaos in one to give birth to a dancing star!” (Nietzsche)
  • “Some say he is a holy man; others say he is a shithead.” (Principia Discordia)

• • •
 

We need tshirts, ya think?

Razib over at the GNXP blog ended up with way more than he bargained for when he pronounced his surprise over finding a “hot chick” who read science fiction. Enough people have already denigrated and defended Razib, so I’ll only touch on a few things here, but if you read or write science fiction/fantasy then you should check out the blog entries on this topic, such as the following:

I’m just supremely tired of the stereotype that women don’t like science fiction. We do. A lot of us do. A lot of us don’t. Whether I’m hot or not is irrelevant (even though, I am hot, incidentally…), just don’t treat me like an anomaly. I am not unusual because I am female and (insert favorite anomalous pursuit here).

Razib said in his long “I, Coolie?” explanation post: “And yes, when I see beautiful women I do stand in awe, and worship even.”

Just don’t. Don’t put beautiful women on a pedestal. Because if they want to discuss Hyperion, you’ll be too befuddled to listen.

One commenter on Aetiology seemed to think that D&D/Sword and Sorcery stuff was a good sample of the science fiction/fantasy genre. Have you ever worn chainmail? Let alone a chainmail bikini? What is the purpose of a chain mail bikini anyway? It might protect one’s nipples, that’s it, and sometimes not even that.

No, thanks. I don’t even think about those kinds of books when I think of science fiction and fantasy. I almost consider it a separate “D&D Genre,” though I do see some overlap. Technically I suppose it’s part of the science fiction/fantasy genre, but it certainly isn’t a representative sample.

Admittedly, I have a tendency to read mostly female authors. It’s just who I’m drawn to, not a consciously Feminist decision. I do read male authors, certainly, but the stories that have stuck with me are generally by female authors. And there quite a few of those. I would add to this list Kay Kenyon and Elizabeth Bear.

I would also point you to a New York Times article on this topic:

Oh, and for some fun, check out Ernest Cline’s recipe for Geek Porno. (Not for the faint of heart, BTW.)

But I don’t wanna watch this misogynist he-man woman-hater porn.
I want porno movies that are made with guys like me in mind:
Guys who know that the sexiest thing in the world
is a woman who is smarter than you are.

You can have the whole cheerleading squad,
I want the girl in the tweed skirt and the horn-rimmed glasses:
Betty Finnebowski, the valedictorian.
Oh yes.
First I want to copy her Trig homework,
and then I want to make mad, passionate love to her
for hours and hours
until she reluctantly asks if we can stop
because she doesn’t want to miss Battlestar Galactica.
Summa cum laude, baby!
That is what I call erotic.


• • •