2017 in books.
/I set out to read 52 books in 52 weeks this year. As someone who works full-time and goes to school mostly full-time and also appreciates a good, long Netflix binge, I wasn't sure if it could happen. But last night, I curled into a blanket and stayed awake until 12:30 in the morning to finish my last book of the year, a murder mystery by Gillian Flynn. So I did it. That was number 52.
I have a lot of reflections on this year of reading. About discipline, and falling into habits, and creating new ones, and redefining and relearning solitude, and what it means to spend time. And I have a lot of reflections on this list of books, too. I realized that I read a lot of books about death (The Year of Magical Thinking, When Breath Becomes Air, The Bright Hour); in some ways, that seemed fitting for 2017. I finally dug into collections of poetry (Citizen, Salt, Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude) that, in other ways, restored my faith in 2017. I realized that I can read mysteries and thrillers, but still can't watch horror movies. I unashamedly read self-help books and young adult novels and memoir, and read even more of some of my favorite authors (Rob Bell, Anne Lamott, Roxane Gay), their books lining my shelves. And maybe most importantly, I realized that it doesn't matter what you like to read -- non-fiction or sci-fi or historical biographies -- as long as you read. Or not read. What matters is that you spend your free hours doing something that is good to you; maybe that is reading 52 books, or hiking 52 hikes, or doing 52 of literally anything that makes you smile/light up/feel true to yourself. What matters is that you spend your time enjoying your life.
And I loved this year of reading. The hours sitting in my bed or on my couch or at my desk, in coffee shops and the library and in bookstores. The stories and feelings and voices that met me each time I opened a book, started a chapter, read through the acknowledgments and dedication. I've kept track of every book I've read in a spreadsheet since I was a 9th grader to remember these moments, these words and titles, but I wanted to put this year in books in a separate list here. To remember, and to maybe add a few new titles to your lists, too. They're listed in the order that I read them, and then I added my top three below.
2017 in Books:
- The Year of Magical Thinking, Joan Didion
- When Breath Becomes Air, Paul Kalinithi
- The Art of Memoir, Mary Karr
- There Is No Good Card for This, Kelsey Crowe & Emily McDowell
- Wherever You Go, There You Are, Jon Kabat-Zinn
- Salt, Nayyirah Waheed
- Citizen, Claudia Rankine
- A Prayer Journal, Flannery O'Connor
- Furiously Happy, Jenny Lawson
- Scrappy Little Nobody, Anna Kendrick
- The Marriage Plot, Jeffrey Eugenides
- Love Warrior, Glennon Doyle
- How to Be Here, Rob Bell
- Hallelujah Anyway, Anne Lamott
- Shrill, Lindy West
- The Practice of the Presence of God, Brother Lawrence
- The Courage to Teach, Parker Palmer
- The Odd Woman and the City, Vivian Gornick
- The Mindful Path to Self-Compassion, Christopher Germer
- The Tao of Leadership, John Heider
- The Girl on the Train, Paula Hawkins
- Why I Wake Early, Mary Oliver
- You Are Therefore I Am, Satish Kumar
- Difficult Women, Roxane Gay
- Upstream, Mary Oliver
- Talking as Fast as I Can, Lauren Graham
- Where'd You Go, Bernadette?, Maria Semple
- Hunger, Roxane Gay
- What is the Bible?, Rob Bell
- Sex Object, Jessica Valenti
- The Dream of a Common Language, Adrienne Rich
- Into the Water, Paula Hawkins
- On Living, Kerry Egan
- The Inner Voice of Love, Henri Nouwen
- The Bright Hour, Nina Riggs
- Dog Songs, Mary Oliver
- The Princess Saves Herself in This One, Amanda Lovelace
- The Sun and Her Flowers, Rupi Kaur
- Everything, Everything, Nicola Yoon
- Turtles All the Way Down, John Green
- No One Belongs Here More Than You, Miranda July
- The Sabbath, Abraham Joshua Heschel
- Make It Happen, Lara Casey
- Braving the Wilderness, Brene Brown
- Manual of the Warrior of the Light, Paulo Coelho
- We Are Never Meeting in Real Life, Samantha Irby
- Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude, Ross Gay
- The Child Finder, Rene Denfeld
- Caribou, Charles Wright
- Unbelievable, Katy Tur
- Devotions, Mary Oliver
- Dark Places, Gillian Flynn
2017's Top Three:
- The Bright Hour, Nina Riggs
- Upstream, Mary Oliver
- When Breath Becomes Air, Paul Kalinithi
I'm not sure I'll read 52 books again in 2018. I have more classes to take and a thesis to write and maybe a new hobby to start or resolution to make. But I went to the library this morning to stock up again, picking up four books I might try to read while in Fargo over the next five days. It's unlikely, but I'm grateful that -- among other things -- this year of reading left me wanting to read more.