Thursday, December 1, 2016

Top 5 Books of 2016 According to MEEEEEEE

A few nights ago, as I closed the brilliant metafictional “Grief is a thing with feathers” by Max Porter, Goodreads alerted me that I had officially completed my 52nd book of the year, bringing my book-readin’ average to 1 (technically 1.1) books per week.

Reading a buncha books is my singular accomplishment for the year and a feat that is only impressive relative to everything else I have done in 2016 with my dumb life.

I hope you don’t mind me sharing some of my favorites of the year with you. Reading and discussing books is the only thing that brings me genuine joy anymore. Everything else is me acting. 

In order from most mind-blowing to also mind-blowing but slightly less so, here are my favorite books of the year:




1.       The Sellout by Paul Beatty was the best book I read this year. My favorite chapter was “Too Many Mexicans”. This novel was quite possibly the funnest (not funniest, think whee whee slip ‘n slide) way anyone could ever address racism in contemporary America. Filled with relentless and biting satire that shook me to the core (really!), this book left me wide-eyed on a Septa bus asking “Can I…can I laugh at this?”





2.       Fates and Furies by Lauren Groff is like a gorgeous poem with characters who experience this vast spectrum of feelings that doesn’t seem real because of the….vastness of the spectrum. Super vast. If you want to feel like your life is emotionally bland, give Fates and Furies a go. JK. This book is perfect. Lauren Groff is God.




3.      Imagine Me Gone by Adam Haslett was the most accurate portrait of mental illness I’ve seen in an American novel. Armed with a droll, wry, smart sense of humor, Haslett’s Michael is the most intense, heartbreaking character I’ve ever come across. A trillion stars. V. sad tho.




4.       Saga by Brian K Vaughn Volumes 1-5 are just nuts. Read the first one and you’ll feel psychologically obligated to finish the series. Fans of Miyasaki, Neil Gaiman and anything that’s cool will especially enjoy.





5.      Grief is a thing with feathers is a dark and atmospheric “quickie” that centers on a grieving father and his two young sons as they cope with the sudden death of a wife and mother with the “counseling” of Ted Hughes's Crow. Max Porter’s prose is bonkers. Holy shit! Oh and bonus points for brevity. You can finish this guy in like 45 minutes (or 3 breakfastses!).

Let me know if you have any suggestions for 2017 reading based on my list or what you know about me in general.  I cling to your recommendations in earnest.

All the smooches in my smooch arsenal,

E


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