Books of my year.
Dec. 31st, 2011 07:57 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Not a good year for reading in the sense of new books, but overall these have been my favourites:
Two dead obvious that everyone is listing:
1. China Mieville's Embassytown: I really like alien contact novels and there aren't that many at the moment. I also like linguistics books (Delany's Babel 17 and Elgin's Native Tongue are long term favourites. There was never really any doubt I'd love this.
2. Jo Walton's Among Others: fairies, books, teenage angst, immediate sense of recognition all written with wit and elegance. This will be my first nomination for the Hugo this year.
Two non-fiction books only one other person here will have heard of:
1 and 2. Geoffrey Trease, Portrait of a Cavalier, and Lucy Worsley, Cavalier, both about William Cavendish, Duke of Newcastle, friend of Charles II, and husband of Margaret Cavendish.
Two early children's fantasy books I'd like more people to read:
1. Jean Ingelow, Mopsa the Fairy, 1869
2. Boumphrey, E. The Hoojibahs, 1929
Both of these are original, unexpected and deserve more attention.
Three Canadian children's fantasies I loved.
1. Donn Kushner's A Book Dragon, 1987 tho E is correct to point out that Serpent Grimsby cannot possibly be in the south.
2. Barbara Haworth-Attard, Haunted, 2009, a very unusual YA ghost story set in 1920s rural Canada.
3. Paul Yee, The Bone Collector's Son, 2003, set in turn of the century Vancouver China town, also a ghost story.
Two dead obvious that everyone is listing:
1. China Mieville's Embassytown: I really like alien contact novels and there aren't that many at the moment. I also like linguistics books (Delany's Babel 17 and Elgin's Native Tongue are long term favourites. There was never really any doubt I'd love this.
2. Jo Walton's Among Others: fairies, books, teenage angst, immediate sense of recognition all written with wit and elegance. This will be my first nomination for the Hugo this year.
Two non-fiction books only one other person here will have heard of:
1 and 2. Geoffrey Trease, Portrait of a Cavalier, and Lucy Worsley, Cavalier, both about William Cavendish, Duke of Newcastle, friend of Charles II, and husband of Margaret Cavendish.
Two early children's fantasy books I'd like more people to read:
1. Jean Ingelow, Mopsa the Fairy, 1869
2. Boumphrey, E. The Hoojibahs, 1929
Both of these are original, unexpected and deserve more attention.
Three Canadian children's fantasies I loved.
1. Donn Kushner's A Book Dragon, 1987 tho E is correct to point out that Serpent Grimsby cannot possibly be in the south.
2. Barbara Haworth-Attard, Haunted, 2009, a very unusual YA ghost story set in 1920s rural Canada.
3. Paul Yee, The Bone Collector's Son, 2003, set in turn of the century Vancouver China town, also a ghost story.