Category Archives: Reader’s Resources

What did you read this year?

The annual literary snowball fight has begun: The media are publishing their top picks for 2013.  You can find out who liked what on a variety of Web sites, for example, NPR offers an interactive grid of choices here. The New York Times weighs in twice with their Ten Best Books of 2013 and 100 Notable Books of 2013

Library Journal‘s top ten selections were based on the theme of “humanity’s struggle against injustices great and small.” However, they also have lists by genre, such as mystery

Kirkus Reviews also nominates by category: fiction, non-fiction, teen books, children’s books–even book apps!

You can browse hard copies of several lists at CCL. A notebook at the circulation desk contains highlighted lists indicating books that are in our library system.

What did you read this year that you really liked (or really didn’t like)? Help us generate a list of reader favorites! Follow the guidelines in “write for us” to submit your selections.

Here are some of the books I’ve enjoyed this year:

Fiction

A Tale for the Time Being, by Ruth Ozeki. Although it didn’t win the Mann-Booker Prize, as predicted by some, it may end up on my desert island book list. Ozeki deftly weaves a rich tapestry that comments on cliches about Eastern and Western cultures, questions our obsession with the past and the future, and has a lot to say about the relationship between writers and readers. Ozeki herself called this book “a parable” about writers’ and readers’ relationships.

A Short Time to Stay Here, by Terry Roberts. Technically published in 2012, this book by local (Chapel Hill) author Roberts is a fictionalized account of  German prisoners  held in Hot Springs, NC, during World War I. Roberts’ characters are deftly drawn and the story so compelling that I was inspired to visit Hot Springs this fall–I highly recommend that as well!

The Burgess Boys, by Elizabeth Strout. I confess–I love Elizabeth Strout’s books. She always manages to produce perfect New England characters who tell you who they are seemingly without the author’s interference. In a way readers feel as though they’re spying on neighbors: the lonely sister, the agreed-upon “loser” brother, and the churlish successful brother who’s been selected by the family to be the winner. The questions this book raises about hate and forgiveness make it an excellent choice for book clubs.

And the Mountains Echoed, by Khaled Hosseini. Like many popular authors, Hosseini suffers the curse of the comparison of all his subsequent work to The Kite Runner. Hosseini is an enthralling storyteller. His writing is amazing and I have to admit that sometimes I have to stop just to admire his gift. Who cares whether or not this is better than Kite Runner or A Thousand Splendid Suns?

Non-fiction

The Hour of Peril, by Daniel Stashower. If you think our country is divided now, take another look at the political atmosphere of the 1860s! Those who are familiar with the many books written about Lincoln probably knew that there had been a plot to assassinate President-elect Lincoln before he could take office; however, this was new information to me. Stashower meticulously documents the political forces at play in 1861 and paints a deeply empathetic portrait of Abraham Lincoln. The surprise of the book is what readers learn about Alan Pinkerton, founder of the renowned detective agency, and his “operatives.”

This Town: Two Parties and a Funeral–plus plenty of valet parking–in America’s Gilded Capital, by Mark Leibovich. A lot of people really, really did not like this book. What about the people who work hard in Washington? How could the author “sell out” his colleagues ? Washington isn’t the only place on Earth where people relentlessly kiss up to win favor, manage to create new images for themselves in a changing political climate,  pursue money and power like hounds on a rabbit’s trail, or rip on colleagues to sell a book. DC is my hometown, but I’m not offended. It’s funny stuff if you let yourself think of it as leafing through a Kitty Kelly tell-all than a scholarly exposition of the way things work in our nation’s capital.

Gulp, by Mary Roach. I am shocked–shocked I tell you!–not to find this book on any of the “Best” lists this year. Mary Roach is the funniest science writer you will ever read, but she takes her research seriously. No detail of digestion is too graphic for this journey through the human body. As she did in her books Stiff and Packing for Mars, Roach answers questions you never even knew you had and then again, maybe didn’t want to have in the first place. Inside every person in my family is a thirteen-year-old waiting for the homeroom teacher to sit on a whoopee cushion. Maybe I would have gotten better grades in Biology if I’d had a teacher like Mary Roach.

New York Times Bestseller List: February 10, 2013

Each week we will post the New York Times bestseller list, with links to our catalog so that you can reserve the book. If a title is not linked, the library does not own a copy of the book. Scroll down or click here for Non-fiction.

private berlinFICTION

1. PRIVATE BERLIN, by James Patterson and Mark Sullivan.  A superstar agent at the German headquarters of an investigation firm
disappears.

2. A MEMORY OF LIGHT, by Robert Jordan and Brandon Sanderson. The 14th and final novel in the Wheel of Time fantasy series.

3. SUSPECT, by Robert Crais. A Los Angeles policeman and a German shepherd, both suffering from PTSD, search for the killers of the cop’s partner.

4. GONE GIRL, by Gillian Flynn. A woman disappears on her fifth anniversary; is her husband a killer?

5. EVER AFTER, by Kim Harrison. The witch Rachel Morgan and an unlikely ally battle a demon in order to prevent an  apocalypse.

6. TENTH OF DECEMBER, by George Saunders. (Random House, $26.) Stories that take on the big questions.

7. THE FIFTH ASSASSIN, by Brad Meltzer. Tracking an assassin who is recreating the crimes of the four men who murdered presidents, Beecher White discovers that they all were working together.

8. THE THIRD BULLET, by Stephen Hunter. The veteran sniper Bob Lee Swagger investigates the assassination of John F. Kennedy.

9. THE RACKETEER, by John Grisham. An imprisoned ex-lawyer schemes to exchange information about a murdered federal judge for his freedom.

10. THE TWELVE TRIBES OF HATTIE, by Ayana Mathis. Fifty-some years in the life of an African-American family whose matriarch arrives in Philadelphia .

11. MRS. LINCOLN’S DRESSMAKER, by Jennifer Chiaverini. A novel about Elizabeth Keckley, who was born a slave, earned her freedom through her dressmaking skill and became a friend of Mary Todd Lincoln; she is a character in the movie “Lincoln.”in 1923.

12. THE FORGOTTEN, by David Baldacci. The military investigator John Puller, the protagonist of “Zero Day,” probes his aunt’s mysterious death in Florida.

13. THE ROUND HOUSE, by Louise Erdrich. A Native American family faces the ramifications of a vicious crime.

14. COLLATERAL DAMAGE, by Stuart Woods. Back in New York, the lawyer Stone Barrington joins his former partner Holly Barker in pursuing a dangerous case.

15. CROSS ROADS, by Wm. Paul Young. A comatose businessman encounters Jesus, the Holy Spirit and God; from the author of “The Shack.”

16. THREAT VECTOR, by Tom Clancy with Mark Greaney. The covert intelligence expert Jack Ryan Jr. aids his father’s administration as China threatens.

NONFICTION

1. MY BEmy belovedLOVED WORLD, by Sonia Sotomayor. The Supreme Court justice recalls growing up in the Bronx, attending Princeton, working for the Manhattan District Attorney’s office and becoming a federal judge.

2. FRANCONA, by Terry Francona and Dan Shaughnessy. The manager’s Red Sox years.

3. GOING CLEAR, by Lawrence Wright. The Pulitzer Prize-winning author examines the world of Scientology.

4. KILLING KENNEDY, by Bill O’Reilly and Martin Dugard. The host of “The O’Reilly Factor” recounts the events surrounding the assassination of John F. Kennedy.

5. KILLING LINCOLN, by Bill O’Reilly and Martin Dugard. The host of “The O’Reilly Factor” recounts the events surrounding the assassination of Abraham Lincoln.

6. THOMAS JEFFERSON, by Jon Meacham. The Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer celebrates Jefferson’s skills as a practical politician.

7. NO EASY DAY, by Mark Owen with Kevin Maurer. An account by a former member of the Navy SEALs, written pseudonymously, of the mission that killed bin Laden.

8. TO SELL IS HUMAN, by Daniel H. Pink. Insights from social science about how to move others.

9. A HIGHER CALL, by Adam Makos with Larry Alexander. An encounter between two pilots in the skies over Germany in December 1943.

10. THE WORLD UNTIL YESTERDAY, by Jared Diamond. The author of “Guns, Germs, and Steel” examines what we can learn from traditional societies.

11. MY SHARE OF THE TASK, by Stanley McChrystal. The former commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan, now retired, reviews his career.

12. UNBROKEN, by Laura Hillenbrand. An Olympic runner’s story of survival as a prisoner of the Japanese in World War II.

13. THE DUDE AND THE ZEN MASTER, by Jeff Bridges and Bernie Glassman. The actor and the Zen master examine the wisdom of Bridges’s character the Dude from the 1998 cult classic “The Big Lebowski.”

14 .THE POWER OF HABIT, by Charles Duhigg. A Times reporter’s account of the science behind how we form, and break, habits.

15. WILD, by Cheryl Strayed. A woman’s account of a life-changing 1,100-mile hike along the Pacific Crest Trail.

16. TEN YEARS LATER, by Hoda Kotb with Jane Lorenzini. Portraits of six people who have undergone personal transformation.

New York Times Bestseller List: February 3, 2013

Each week we will post the New York Times bestseller list, with links to our catalog so that you can reserve the book. If a title is not linked, the library does not own a copy of the book. Scroll down or click here for Non-fiction.

FICTION

memory of light1. A MEMORY OF LIGHT, by Robert Jordan and Brandon Sanderson.  The 14th and final novel in the Wheel of Time fantasy series.

2. GONE GIRL, by Gillian Flynn. A woman disappears on her fifth anniversary; is her husband a killer?

3. THE FIFTH ASSASSIN, by Brad Meltzer. Tracking an assassin who is recreating the crimes of the four men who murdered presidents, Beecher White discovers that they all were working together.

4. TENTH OF DECEMBER, by George Saunders. (Random House, $26.) Stories that take on the big questions.

5. THE THIRD BULLET, by Stephen Hunter.  The veteran sniper Bob Lee Swagger investigates the assassination of John F. Kennedy.

6. MRS. LINCOLN’S DRESSMAKER, by Jennifer Chiaverini. A novel about Elizabeth Keckley, who was born a slave, earned her freedom through her dressmaking skill and became a friend of Mary Todd Lincoln; she is a character in the movie “Lincoln.”

7. THE RACKETEER, by John Grisham. An imprisoned ex-lawyer schemes to exchange information about a murdered federal judge for his freedom.

8. THE TWELVE TRIBES OF HATTIE, by Ayana Mathis. Fifty-some years in the life of an African-American family whose matriarch arrives in Philadelphia in 1923.

9. STANDING IN ANOTHER MAN’S GRAVE, by Ian Rankin. After retiring from the Edinburgh police force, John Rebus investigates the case of a young woman who disappeared in 1999.

10. KINSEY AND ME, by Sue Grafton. Stories about Grafton’s character Kinsey Millhone as well as explorations of Grafton’s own past.

11. THE FORGOTTEN, by David Baldacci. The military investigator John Puller, the protagonist of “Zero Day,” probes his aunt’s mysterious death in Florida.

12. CROSS ROADS, by Wm. Paul Young. A comatose businessman encounters Jesus, the Holy Spirit and God; from the author of “The Shack.”

13. COLLATERAL DAMAGE, by Stuart Woods. Back in New York, the lawyer Stone Barrington joins his former partner Holly Barker in pursuing a dangerous case.

14. THE ROUND HOUSE, by Louise Erdrich. A Native American family faces the ramifications of a vicious crime.

15. THE HUSBAND LIST, by Janet Evanovich. In New York City in 1894, a wealthy young woman yearns for adventure and the love of an Irish-American with new money, rather than the titled Britons to whom her mother hopes to marry her off.

NONFICTION

1. MY BEmy belovedLOVED WORLD, by Sonia Sotomayor. The Supreme Court justice recalls growing up in the Bronx, attending Princeton, working for the Manhattan District Attorney’s office and becoming a federal judge.

2. KILLING KENNEDY, by Bill O’Reilly and Martin Dugard. The host of “The O’Reilly Factor” recounts the events surrounding the assassination of John F. Kennedy.

3. GOING CLEAR, by Lawrence Wright. The Pulitzer Prize-winning author examines the world of Scientology.

4. NO EASY DAY, by Mark Owen with Kevin Maurer.  An account by a former member of the Navy SEALs, written pseudonymously, of the mission that killed bin Laden.

5. KILLING LINCOLN, by Bill O’Reilly and Martin Dugard. The host of “The O’Reilly Factor” recounts the events surrounding the assassination of Abraham Lincoln.

6. A HIGHER CALL, by Adam Makos with Larry Alexander.  An encounter between two pilots in the skies over Germany in December 1943.

7. THE WORLD UNTIL YESTERDAY, by Jared Diamond. The author of “Guns, Germs, and Steel” examines what we can learn from traditional societies.

8. THOMAS JEFFERSON, by Jon Meacham. The Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer celebrates Jefferson’s skills as a practical politician.

9. TO SELL IS HUMAN, by Daniel H. Pink. Insights from social science about how to move others.

10. TOTAL FRAT MOVE, by W. R. Bolen and the creators of TotalFratMove.com. Fraternity humor.

11. MY SHARE OF THE TASK, by Stanley McChrystal. The former commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan, now retired, reviews his career.

12. TEN YEARS LATER, by Hoda Kotb with Jane Lorenzini. Portraits of six people who have undergone personal transformation.

13. THE DUDE AND THE ZEN MASTER, by Jeff Bridges and Bernie Glassman. The actor and the Zen master examine the wisdom of Bridges’s character the Dude from the 1998 cult classic “The Big Lebowski.”

14. UNBROKEN, by Laura Hillenbrand.  An Olympic runner’s story of survival as a prisoner of the Japanese in World War II.

15. WILD, by Cheryl Strayed. A woman’s account of a life-changing 1,100-mile hike along the Pacific Crest Trail.

16 .THE POWER OF HABIT, by Charles Duhigg.  A Times reporter’s account of the science behind how we form, and break, habits.