Sunday, January 23, 2011

Reading in 2010

For those interested in the full list, this is everything that I read in 2010. Everything should have gone up in its month's respective Reading In… post, except for those works read in January and February (before the Rack really got going, if you can believe that there was such a time). Quantity wise, this was the best year I've ever had, spurred on, no doubt, by this very blog.


1.     The New Weird
2.     Shine
3.     George RR Martin/Daniel Abraham/Garder Dozois – Hunter’s Run
4.     Liquat Aahmed – Lords of Finance
5.     Daniel Abraham – Leviathan Wept
6.     Leonid Andreyev – Visions
7.     Margret Atwood – The Handmaid’s Tale
8.     R. Scott Bakker – The Darkness That Comes Before [REREAD]
9.     Iain M. Banks – Matter
10.   Iain M. Banks – Surface Detail
11.   John Banville – The Book of Evidence
12.   Clive Barker – Mister B. Gone
13.   Peter Beagle – The Last Unicorn
14.   Mikhail Bulgakov – The Master and Margarita
15.   Raymond Chandler – The Big Sleep
16.   Susana Clarke – Jonathon Strange & Mr. Norrell
17.   Glen Cook – The Shadow Lingers
18.   Justin Cronin – The Passage
19.   J. A. E. Curtis – Mikhail Bulgakov
20.   Philip K. Dick – Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?
21.   Stephen R. Donaldson – The Real Story
22.   Fyodor Dostoevsky – Crime and Punishment
23.   Arthur Conan Doyle – A Study in Scarlet
24.   Margaret Edson – Wit
25.   Tony Earley – Here We Are In Paradise
26.   Tony Earley – Somehow Form a Family
27.   Steven Erikson – Bauchelain and Korbal Broach
28.   Steven Erikson – House of Chains
29.   Steven Erikson – Midnight Tides
30.   Steven Erikson – The Bonehunters
31.   Steven Erikson – Reaper’s Gale
32.   Steven Erikson – Toll the Hounds
33.   Steven Erikson – Dust of Dreams
34.   Ian C. Esslemont – Night of Knives
35.   Ian C. Esslemont – Return of the Crimson Guard
36.   Ian C. Esslemont – Stonewielder
37.   Brian Evenson – Last Days
38.   Neil Gaiman – Neverwhere
39.   Neil Gaiman – American Gods [REREAD]
40.   Neil Gaiman – Anansi Boys
41.   Neil Gaiman – Fragile Things
42.   Neil Gaiman – Sandman: Preludes and Nocturnes
43.   Felix Gilman – Thunderer
44.   Felix Gilman – The Half-Made World
45.   Felix Gilman – Gears of the City
46.   Kate Griffin – A Madness of Angels
47.   Allan Guthrie – Hard Man
48.   John Fowles – The Collector
49.   Peter F. Hamilton – The Reality Dysfunction
50.   Peter F. Hamilton – The Neutronium Alchemist
51.   Peter F. Hamilton – The Naked God
52.   Peter F. Hamilton – Pandora’s Star
53.   Peter F. Hamilton – Judas Unchained
54.   Peter Haswell – Pog Decides to Climb Mount Everest
55.   Robert A. Heinlein – Stranger in a Strange Land
56.   Joe Hill – 20th Century Ghosts
57.   Joe Hill – Heart Shaped Box
58.   Robin Hobb – Ship of Magic
59.   Robin Hobb – Mad Ship
60.   Robin Hobb – Ship of Destiny
61.   Homer – The Odyssey
62.   Arlene Hutton – Last Train to Nibroc
63.   M.R. James – The Haunted Doll House and Other Stories
64.   N.K. Jesmin – The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms
65.   ST Joshi – HP Lovecraft: A Life
66.   Franz Kafka – The Metamorphosis
67.   Stephen King – Carrie
68.   Stephen King – Duma Key
69.   Stephen King – The Shining [REREAD]
70.   Stephen King – Everything’s Eventual
71.   Stephen King – The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon
72.   Thomas Ligotti – Songs of a Dead Dreamer
73.   Thomas Ligotti – Songs of a Dead Dreamer [REREAD]
74.   Thomas Ligotti – The Conspiracy Against the Human Race
75.   Thomas Ligotti – Teatro Grottesco
76.   Thomas Ligotti – Teatro Grottesco [REREAD]
77.   Jeph Loeb – Batman: Hush
78.   Marjorie M. Liu – The Iron Hunt
79.   William Messner-Loebs – Necronimicon  
80.   HP Lovecraft – Various [REREAD]
81.   George RR Martin – A Feast For Crows [REREAD]
82.   George RR Martin – A Song for Lya
83.   Cormac McCarthy – Blood Meridian
84.   Cormac McCarthy – No Country for Old Men
85.   China Mieville – Un Lun Dun
86.   China Mieville – The City and The City
87.   China Mieville – Kraken
88.   Frank Miller – Batman: Year One
89.   Elizabeth Moon – The Sheepfarmer’s Daughter
90.   Alan Moore – Watchmen
91.   Alan Moore –The Killing Joke
92.   Alan Moore – V for Vendetta
93.   Haruki Murakami – Hard Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World
94.   Haruki Murakami – After Dark
95.   Haruki Murakami – The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle
96.   Adam LG Nevill – Apartment 16
97.   Adam LG Nevill – Banquet for the Damned
98.   Mark Charan Newton – Nights of Villjamir
99.   K.J. Parker – The Folding Knife
100.  K.J. Parker – Devices and Desires
101.  K.J. Parker – Purple and Black
102.  K.J. Parker – Evil for Evil
103.  Sam Pickering – Autumn Spring
104.  Tim Powers – Anubis Gates
105.  Terry Pratchett – Going Postal
106.  Wyatt Prunty – Unarmed and Dangerous
107.  Thomas Pynchon – Gravity’s Rainbow
108.  Thomas Pynchon – The Crying of Lot 49
109.  Alastair Reynolds – Zima Blue
110.  Alastair Reynolds – Thousandth Night/Minla’s Flowers
111.  Alastair Reynolds – Century Rain
112.  Alastair  Reynolds – Terminal World
113.  Patrick Rothfuss – The Adventures of the Princess and Mr. Whiffle
114.  Brandon Sanderson – The Way of Kings
115.  Brandon Sanderson/Robert Jordan – Towers of Midnight
116.  John Scalzi – Old Man’s War
117.  John Scalzi – Agent to the Stars
118.  Shakespeare – Hamlet
119.  Shakespeare – King Lear
120.  Dan Simmons – Hyperion
121.  Dan Simmons – Fall of Hyperion
122.  Dan Simmons – The Terror
123.  Jane Smiley – A Thousand Acres
124.  Sophocles – Oedipus
125.  Sophocles – Antigone
126.  Sam Sykes – The Tome of the Undergates
127.  Steph Swainston – The Year of Our War
128.  Tom Stoppard – Arcadia
129.  Catherynne M. Valente – The Habitations of the Blessed
130.  Jeff VanderMeer – Finch
131.  Jeff VanderMeer – Secret Life
132.  Jeff VanderMeer – The Third Bear
133.  Brian K. Vaughan – Y: The Last Man, Unmanned
134.  Brian K. Vaughn – Y: The Last Man, Cycles

2 comments:

  1. You haven't read that many books. Why lie? You're not impressing anyone.

    ReplyDelete
  2. You're free to read my reviews. If you believe I write them from reading back cover blurbs, you're free to continue to do so. Really, you're quite able to believe anything you'd like about my blog, my reading, and my intentions. Just as I'm able to not give a fuck what you think.

    (I'll also point out that you seem to have misunderstood the 'website' portion of the blogger comment area. Unless you happen to run Westeros - which I doubt - it's an odd thing to list as your personal website.)

    ReplyDelete