2011 End of the Year Survey

Saw this at A Room of One’s Own and liked the format so much I just had to steal copy use it, too:

2011 in Review:

How many books read in 2011?

Fiction/Non-Fiction?

  • 90/109 – fiction (83%)
  • 19/109 – nonfiction (17%)

Male/Female authors?

  • 28/109 – male (26%)
  • 80/109 – female (73%)
  • 1/109 – multiple authors (1%)

This one required a little detective work, since two of the books were under ambiguously-gendered pseudonyms (and both turned out to be male).

Oldest book read?

Newest book read?

Longest book read?

Shortest book read?

Any in translation?

Best book read in 2011?

  • I have to pick one? Sorry, can’t do it. But here are my 5-Star Reads.

Most disappointing book in 2011?

Most beautifully written book read in 2011?

This was a tough one! In the end, I have to go with Henkes’ lovely prose. But I have to give Franny Billingsley’s Chime some love here, too.

Most surprising (in a good way!) book of 2011?

This is a hard one for me, since I read a whole bunch of books that I liked much more than I expected to. (Thanks, people who nominated them for the Cybils!) But I’ll pick two:

Most thrilling, unputdownable book in 2011?

  • Shine by Lauren Myracle  – As I said when I reviewed it back in January, I was up until 1 in the morning finishing the last few chapters; I just couldn’t put it down.

Book that had a scene in it that had me reeling?

I’d like to say Tabitha Suzuma’s Forbidden, but I kind of knew what to expect before I started reading. So, I think I’ll have to say Words in the Dust by Trent Reedy.

Book(s) I most anticipated in 2011?

Most memorable character in 2011?

How many re-reads in 2011?

Just one:

  • Almost Perfect by Brian Katcher – it was actually a re-read within the year, since I read the book after it won the Stonewall Award early in the year, and then I listened to the audiobook when I was assigned to review it toward the end of the year. It turned out to be a good thing, since I really disliked the book on the first reading, but I found it growing on me the second time.
  • I also started re-reading Neil Gaiman’s American Gods in the new anniversary edition, but I didn’t finish before the end of the year.

Book I read in 2011 I’d be most likely to reread in 2012?

Hmm. I don’t really expect to re-read any of them. There were several first-in-series books that I’m planning on reading sequels to, though, so I might go back and re-read Across the Universe by Beth Revis, Bumped by Megan McCafferty (especially as I just purchased an e-copy in HarperCollins’ 99-cent sale), Delirium by Lauren Oliver, and/or The Emerald Atlas by John Stephens.

Book I recommended to people most in 2011?

A book I read this year that was recommended by a blogger?

I think most of the books I read this year originally came to my attention on one blog or another, not to mention that whole slew of Cybils nominees.

Favorite new authors I discovered in 2011?

Some who were new to me this year and whose books I’ll be looking for in the future:

  • Kirsten Hubbard
  • Megan McCafferty
  • Kate Messner
  • Lauren Oliver
  • Cat Patrick
  • Time Pratt
  • Beth Revis
  • Wendy Wan-Long Shang
  • Tabitha Suzuma
  • Lisa Yee

Most books read by one author this year?

2: Two books about Alvin Ho by Lenore Look, and two books from the Lucky trilogy by Susan Patron. And I read the Brian Katcher book twice.

Favorite cover of a book I read in 2011?

Oh, like I could pick just one! How about one for kids, one for teens, and one for grown-ups?

That sheep in a scarf and hat just cracks me up!

Favorite passage/quote from a book I read in 2011?

  • Ben wished the world was organized by the Dewey decimal system. That way you’d be able to find whatever you were looking for, like the meaning of your dream, or your dad. – Brian Selzick, Wonderstruck
  • Like all fourteen-year-olds, I used to be a nine-year-old. In retrospect, I was an annoyingly perky and enthusiastic nine-year-old. In fact, I’ve been enthusiastic my entire life, up until this fall, when high school sucked every last ounce of enthusiasm right out of me. – Frances O’Roark Dowell, Ten Miles Past Normal
  • Taking up yoga in the middle of your life is like having someone hand you a dossier about yourself. A dossier full of information you’re not really sure you want. – Claire Dederer, Poser

Did I complete any reading challenges or goals that I set for myself at the beginning of the year?

Yep. Two out of three, anyway:

Book I can’t believe I waited until 2011 to finally read?

Looking ahead to 2012:

One book I didn’t get to in 2011 that will be a priority in 2012?

Book I’m most anticipating in 2012?

One thing I hope to accomplish or do in reading/blogging in 2012?

  • I’d really, really like to complete the Off the Shelf Challenge this time
  • I’m also just looking forward to reading lots more good books, writing lots more reviews, and getting to know other book bloggers better in 2012!

One More 5-Star Read

Welcome to Bordertown

Here’s the trouble with putting out that 5-Star List before the year actually ends. I should have known I’d end up adding one more!

Just as well, since I think Welcome to Bordertown deserves special attention, anyway.

The first three Bordertown anthologies – Borderland, Bordertown, and Life on the Border – came out in the mid-80s and very early 90s, just early enough to have passed out of print right at the time I would have loved them as a teen. (The Essential Bordertown came out later and is still in print, so I don’t really have any excuse for having missed it.) So, I’m a latecomer to the party. The one good thing about that is that I have some great books to track down and read now, and it looks like the editors are working on getting e-book editions out.

This is an absolutely fantastic collection. There’s a bit of everything: short stories, poems, a comic, even a faerie jump rope chant. My expectations were high going in, since the list of contributors includes some really big names, and I was not disappointed. My personal favorite was Tim Pratt‘s “Our Stars, Our Selves”. I love when an anthology introduces me to a great author I somehow missed. I love the whole world of Bordertown.

Apocalypsies Love Give-Away!

Presenting Lenore is giving away some fabulous 2012 Debut Author packages, and you could win! Check out the details over there. I’ve already entered.

Hey, wait a second. If more people enter, that lowers the odds for me everyone, doesn’t it?

You know what, forget I said anything.

Oh, all right. Go on. The more, the merrier!

Reading Challenge Wrap-Up: Off the Shelf Challenge 2011

Oh, Bookish Ardour‘s Off the Shelf Challenge. It was such a good idea. I was so excited. I had already picked out 12 books from my shelves to read in 2011, so adding 3 more to make the “Trying” level seemed like no big deal. No problem, right?

So. How’d I do, you ask?

Possessing Genius: The Bizarre Odyssey of Einstein's Brain

Yeah. One book. And I never even managed to post a review. Sad, really.

I still think the challenge itself is a great idea, so I’m going to try again in 2012. I’m going for the “Tempted” level this time. Just five books. No problem.

Reading Challenge Wrap-Up: E-Book Reading Challenge 2011

When I joined in the E-Book Reading Challenge, hosted at Ladybug Reads, I didn’t make a list of titles. I just put my name in for 12 books.

So, how’d I do?

The Goddess Test Science Fair Season: Twelve Kids, a Robot Named Scorch . . . and What It Takes to Win Junonia Invisible Inkling This Girl Is Different Bumped Shine Delirium Bird in a Box Jane Austen: A Life Revealed Made for You and Me: Going West, Going Broke, Finding Home The Rise of the Dorkasaurus The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks The Hunchback of Neiman Marcus: A Novel About Marriage, Motherhood, and Mayhem

14/12 (117%) – Not bad at all.

Thirteen (93%) were e-ARCs courtesy of NetGalley. One (7%) was a library book. This tells me two things: (1) I really should take advantage of the e-books my library has, and (2) I really should read some of the books I’ve purchased (or downloaded for free). I did use my Nook quite a bit to read the New York Times Book Review. Between the Les Mis Read-Along and the fact that I’ll be doing more traveling in 2012 than I did in 2011, I think my Nook will be getting more use next year.

Because lots of people knew I had the Nook, I tended to get referred questions about e-readers. As the prices have come down, more library patrons have been getting them, and the library/e-book check-out isn’t quite as user-friendly as it could be. So, I sort of had to stay on top of how it worked, even though I didn’t use it much myself! (I used it a bit more than my one book up there would indicate, since I checked out a few e-books that I didn’t finish. At least they return themselves!)

Will I be doing the E-Book Challenge again (hosted for 2012 at Workaday Reads)? Absolutely! And I’m planning to get 25 e-books read this time.

Two Days ’til Christmas…

… and the stocking is done!

Pattern: Candy Cane Santa Stocking by Donna Race
Source: Dimensions Gold Collection kit via Jo-Ann Fabric
Notes: This is the third (and final) family stocking, and it definitely took me the longest. It’s also the only one I actually did the final sewing on. (The first sewing I’ve done since I was 14!) Like the others, I lined the front with the white felt that came in the kit and used red felt to create the back of the stocking. It’s probably a good thing that Santa doesn’t stuff the grown-ups’ stockings in our house, since this one might be just a little bit fragile at the seams.

Reading Challenge Wrap-Up: Debut Author Challenge 2011

Last November, I tossed my hat into the ring for my very first Reading Challenge. To complete the Debut Author Challenge, hosted by The Story Siren, I was supposed to read 12 debut MG/YA novels. So, how’d I do?

The Mostly True Story of Jack I Am J The Goddess Test You Will Call Me Drog Ten Miles Past Normal Charlie Joe Jackson's Guide to Not Reading Like Mandarin This Girl Is Different Bumped Sparrow Road The False Princess Forgotten What Can't Wait Across the Universe The Great Wall Of Lucy Wu The Emerald Atlas Rival

17/12 (141%) – Pretty well, I’d say! Seven of them were from my original list. Three more were Middle Grade Fiction Cybils nominations (Lucy Wu was a fourth nomination, but also on my original list).  I posted reviews of twelve of them here, plus one more at GoodReads that never showed up on the blog (oops).

This was a fantastic challenge, and I loved finding new authors. Aimee Carter, Tommy Greenwald, Kirsten Hubbard, Megan McCafferty, Cat Patrick, Ashley Hope Pérez, and Beth Revis all have books slated for publication in 2012, too.

Will I do this challenge again in 2012? Of course!