As always, my reading tastes include children's, YA, graphic novel, and audiobook titles. (Sorry not sorry if you think any of those aren't 'really' reading.) Several books could have fit in more than one category, but I tried to contain them to one 'best fit' category. For each book, I link to my LibraryThing review of it. Inclusion of a book here does NOT mean that I necessarily liked that book, only that it met the parameters of each task.
For the final tally, 19 out of 24 isn't so bad, especially considering that I've read books that met most of the other categories in the past. I will admit to a bit of a reach with some of my titles here, but I'm okay with that.
Hope you find something good to read here!
1. A book published posthumously
- Dear Girl by Amy Krouse Rosenthal
2. A book of true crime
- Lovers' Lane by Rick Geary
- Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil by John Berendt
The first is a graphic 'novel' about an unsolved murder committed in the 1920s around the area of New Brunswick, New Jersey. The second is part travelogue, part true crime as it concerns a murder that took places in the 1990s among the storied homes of Savannah, Georgia.
- The Moving Finger by Agatha Christie
- The Tuesday Club Murders by Agatha Christie
These are both mystery books written by the dame of the genre for her "Miss Marple" series.
- Herding Cats by Sarah Andersen
Several others fit this category but are listed in other categories already.
- Shanghai Girls by Lisa See
- Dreams of Joy by Lisa See
These two books are about a Chinese/Chinese-American family and take place in China, then the US, and then back in China again as we follow the family through the generations.
- Hello Autumn by Shelley Rotner
- Hello Spring by Shelley Rotner
- Plants (National Geographic Kids) by Kathryn Williams
7. A western
- Didn't make one in this year but have in the past.
8. A comic written or drawn by a person of color
- Goldfisch by Nana Yaa
This manga is written *and* drawn by Nana Yaa, who I think is of African origin (based on her name and her hand-drawn author's 'photo' in the book).
9. A book of colonial or postcolonial literature
- Indian Killer by Sherman Alexie
Book Riot's definition of postcolonial literature is pretty broad, so I think this one fits. Full disclosure: I began reading this book in 2017 but finished it in 2018, so I'm counting it here.
- The Gentleman's Guide to Vice and Virtue by Mackenzi Lee
This book is many things (YA, adventure, scifi, etc.) but at the core is the romantic feelings the protagonist has towards his best friend, an English born man of African descent. It's a bit of stretch to put here, but I'm hoping better than nothing. Romance is really not my genre.
- Alligators All Around by Maurice Sendak
- The Ghost of Windy Hill by Clyde Robert Bulla
- A Hole Is to Dig by Ruth Krauss
- Higglety Pigglety Pop! or There Must Be More to Life by Maurice Sendak
- In the Night Kitchen by Maurice Sendak
- Katy No-Pocket by Emmy Payne
- The Moon Jumpers by Janice May Udry
- One Was Johnny by Maurice Sendak
- Pierre: A Cautionary Tale by Maurice Sendak
- The Sign on Rosie's Door by Maurice Sendak
- Some Swell Pup: or, Are You Sure You Want a Dog? by Maurice Sendak & Matthew Margolis
- What Do You Say, Dear? by Sesyle Joslin
- Where the Sidewalk Ends by Shel Silverstein
The Ghost of Windy Hill was published in 1968; I'm not sure if it's really a "classic" given how it's hard to find nowadays, but my sister and I both loved it growing up.
I went through a Sendak phase this year and read several of his books (whether he was the author and/or the illustrator) that I never read as a child. There were some titles that were actually more recent than 1980. Then going backwards from that date, Some Swell Pup originates from 1976. In the Night Kitchen was originally published in 1970; Higglety Pigglety Pop! in 1967; Alligators All Around, One Was Johnny, and Pierre in 1962; The Sign on Rosie's Door in 1960; The Moon Jumpers in 1959; What Do You Say, Dear? in 1958; and A Hole Is to Dig in 1952.
Katy No-Pocket is from 1973. Where the Sidewalk Ends was another childhood favorite and was originally published in 1974.
- Believe Me: A Memoir of Love, Death, and Jazz Chickens by Eddie Izzard*
13. An Oprah Book Club selection
- We Were the Mulvaneys by Joyce Carol Oates
14. A book of social science
- Rules of the Game by Phillip W. Magness & Paul Weissburg
With this title, the social science in question is political science.
- Adulthood is a Myth by Sarah Andersen
- Big Happy Mushy Lump by Sarah Andersen
Several others fit this category but are listed in other categories already. I chose not to include short children's books (e.g., picture books and early readers) here as that seemed self-evident.
- The Gentleman's Guide to Vice and Virtue by Mackenzi Lee
The adventures continue with The Lady's Guide to Petticoats and Piracy and The Gentleman’s Guide to Getting Lucky.
- Didn't make one in this year but have in the past.
18. A comic that isn’t published by Marvel, DC, or Image
- The Adventures of John Blake by Philip Pullman
- The Amazing Adventures of the Escapist, Volume 3 by Will Eisner
- Amy's Diary #1: Space Alien...Almost? by Veronique Grisseaux
- Archie: Clash of the New Kids by Alex Simmons
- Audrey's Magic Nine by Michelle Wright
- The Baby-Sitters Club by Ann Martin (Books 1 through 6)
- Bandette, Volume 3 by Paul Tobin
- Black Dahlia by Rick Geary
- Cucumber Quest: The Doughnut Kingdom by Gigi D.G.
- Giant Days by John Allison
- Gingerbread Girl by Paul Tobin
- Heavy Vinyl by Carly Usdin
- Henni by Miss Lasko-Gross
- Hilda and the Troll by Luke Pearson
- House Party by Rachael Smith
- Kid Sherlock by Justin Phillips
- Making Friends by Kristen Gudsnuk
- My Boyfriend is a Bear by Pamela Ribon
- The New Deal by Jonathan Case
- Over the Garden Wall by various authors (volumes 3 through 5)
- Real Friends by Shannon Hale
- Rickety Stitch and the Gelatinous Goo, Book 1: The Road to Epoli by James Parks
- Pride of the Decent Man by T. J. Kirsch
- The Secret Loves of Geek Girls edited by Hope Nicholson
- Trish Trash by Jessica Abel
These are respectively published by:
- Graphix
- Dark Horse
- Charmz/Papercutz
- Archie Comics
- Penny Farthing
- Graphix (again)
- Dark Horse (again)
- NBM Publishing
- First Second
- Boom! Box
- Top Shelf Productions
- Boom! Box (again)
- Z2 Comics
- Flying Eye Books
- Great Beast Comics
- Action Lab Entertainment
- Oni Press
- Graphix (for the third time)
- Dark Horse (for the third time)
- KaBOOM!
- Roaring Brook Press
- Knopf Books for Young Readers
- NBM Publishing (again)
- Dark Horse (for the final time)
- NBM/Papercutz
Several others fit this category but are listed in other categories already.
- Portrait in Sepia by Isabel Allende
This is a work of historical fiction in translation (from Spanish to English).
- There are covers that don't seem to match the book and there are covers that disappoint by whitewashing, but this seems more arbitrary than "harder." I think the challenge's architects were trying to get readers outside of their comfort zone and to actually not judge a book by its cover, but this one struck me as silly and I had no interest in doing this one.
21. A mystery by a person of color or LGBTQ+ author
- Did not get to this one, which is particularly unfortunate because I do love mysteries.
22. An essay anthology
- Jane Austen, Secret Radical by Helena Kelly
- What Matters in Jane Austen? by John Mullan
These are both less of an "anthology" and more a literary criticism, but I'm going to call it as a "close enough."
- The Night Guest by Fiona MacFarlane
24. An assigned book you hated (or never finished)
- Again, I wasn't thrilled with this prompt. The idea I assume is to re-visit something you didn't like originally and see how you feel about it now. I just don't have the time or interest anymore to tackle something I already disliked once. Plus, I've done this in the past when books like A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man that showed up in both my high school and college curricula.
Book Riot has posted the 2019 challenge, and I'm honestly not that thrilled by many of the prompts. Again, there seems to be an arbitrariness to some of them (Why is 2014 a magic date? Who cares about the number of Goodreads reviews?) that I dislike. With so many other things on my plate (book-wise and otherwise), I think I'll probably end up skipping next year's challenge.
*Began in 2018 but did not finish before year end
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