One of the most pleasurable tasks in December for me is to go back and wander over my reading lists for the past year. It is always a source of pleasure, and sets the intent and purpose for the year ahead at the same time.
Book Club:
This year, I joined a book club and that provided for many hours of companionship with an eye to discussing the books afterwards with your friends.
We managed to do a variety of genres in our book club too.
- When Women Were Dragons – by Kelly Barnhill
- The Great Work of your Life – By Stephen Cope
- Mad Honey – By Jodi Piccoult & Jennifer Finney Bolan
- The Covenant of Water – By Abraham Varghese
A broad array of topics can be discussed with this set of books, and the cups of tea, and the sparkling conversations were truly delightful. Feminism, colonialism, sexism, sense of purpose, and so much more.
Booklegger Books:
I volunteer from time to time in elementary school classrooms and the Bootlegger Volunteer program is one such where I get the opportunity to talk about and discuss books in classrooms.
- Van Gogh Deception – By Deron Hicks
- Life in the Ocean – Oceanographer Sylvia Earle – By Claire Nivola (author of Wangari Maathai – Planter of 30 million trees in Kenya)
- The man who dreamed of infinity – the life of genius Srinivasan ramanujan by Amy alznauer illustrated by Daniel miyares
- The Firework Maker’s Daughter – by Philip Pullman
- Firefly Hollow – by Allison McGhee
- Tesla’s Attic – By Neal Shusterman & Eric Elfman
Guilty Pleasures:
It is the reason I pick up books and authors whose work feels like home every so often. There is familiarity in their worlds – a safe haven for those looking to be refreshed without too much effort. The worlds where humanity has all of the problems we do – only with an eye for humor, magic, and simplicity that we crave to build for ourselves in our real lives. Malgudi, Fairacre, Thrush Green, Hogwarts, Corfu, Blandings Castle, the idyllic worlds of Bertie Wooster and Jeeves, and many more.
- Miss Read
- P G Wodehouse
- J K Rowling and many fan-fiction authors who are frankly brilliant and so deserving. Many times, I’ve hoped I could know if they went on to write other books, for I knew I would read them.
- R K Narayan
- Gerald Durrell
Children’s Books:
I don’t know why people go in for self-help tomes when there are brilliant children’s books for all of us to enjoy and devour. Who was it who said, It takes a true genius to explain things simply? I agree with them.
Some of these authors and illustrators are truly unsung geniuses – I wish there was a way for all places of adult work such as financial hubs, hospitals, Houses of Parliament, civic offices, transportation hubs, technology companies, insurance companies, retailing outlets etc to have a good library with children’s books to dip and delve into for a quick refresher of spirits.
I used to work at a company with an exemplary work culture. (sadly the company is no longer there) The walls were adorned with beautiful artwork, we received books as gifts every now and then, authors came to visit, and we had library nooks – surrounded by excellent books in design, literature and philosophy. I have done some of my most rigorous work in these hallowed halls of the library.
If you had access to places like this, it is truly life-changing. Some noteworthy books:
- The Shape of Ideas – By Grant Snyder
- On Tyranny – By Timothy Snyder (in progress)
- The Oboe Goes Boom – Boom – the band book on the kind of instruments and the brilliant way in which the names in each of the pages actually refers to a famous player of the instrument.
- You Can Learn to be an Artist – this book was brilliant, but it made me want to cry. It made me want to rage against the world for creating AI and taking away that simple joy of art from humans – for those who say you can do the same with the screen and a prompt now, my response is, “Why can there not be any pursuits left to mankind that is not dependent on a screen?”
- A Songbird Dreams of Singing – Poems about sleeping animals – by Kate Hosford – Illustrated by Jennifer M Potter
- Astonishing Animals – Extraordinary Creatures and the Fantastic Worlds They Inhabit – Tim Flannery & Peter Schouten
- Worldwide Monster Guide – By Linda Ashman, Illustration by David Small
- Sometimes, I feel like an Oak – By Danielle Daniel & Jackie Traverse
- My name is as long as a river – Suma Subramaniam
- The fox and the star – Coralie Bickford Smith (brilliant artwork – sweet story – truly captures the loneliness of being – read again)
Understanding Ourselves
What makes us human? How do we know whether we are keeping healthy in our minds and bodies? These are topics that cannot be easily answered – and yet so many philosophers and writers attempt to do just that – understand our complexities.
- Piranesi – Suzanne Clark
- Strangers to ourselves – Unsettled Minds and the Stories that make us – Rachel Aviv
- Healing the Angry Brain
- Bite by Bite – nourishment and jamborees – By Aimee Nezhukumuthattil
Alternate Universes
“I do not miss childhood, but I miss the way I took pleasure in small things, even as greater things crumbled. I could not control the world I was in, could not walk away from things or people or moments that hurt, but I found joy in the things that made me happy. The custard was sweet and creamy in my mouth” – Neil Gaiman in The Ocean at the End of the Lane
- The Lefthand side of Darkness – By Ursula K Le Guin
- Goddess of the River – Vaishnavi Patel
- Our Missing Hearts – By Celeste Ng
- The Ocean at the End of the Lane – By Neil Gaiman
- Generosity – By Richard Powers
- YellowFace – By R F Kuang ( about the publishing industry)
“If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.” -J.R.R. Tolkien, The Hobbit
I would probably add books and nature to the list by Tolkien.