This is my annual post listing books I read in the most recent year. It seems kind of hard to believe, but I have produced such a post since 2005. This is a link to the 2022 list if blog readers want to work backwards.
Also, I posted short reviews of most of these books at Goodreads.
Non-Fiction
Amitav Ghosh, The Great Derangement; Climate Change and the Unthinkable
Samara Klar and Yanna Krupnikov, Independent Politics: How American Disdain for Parties Leads to Political Inaction
David Maraniss, Clemente; The Passion and Grace of Baseball's Last Hero
Satchell Paige, Maybe I'll Pitch Forever
Bill James, Bill James Handbook, Walk-Off Edition
Sean Forman, The Negro Leagues are Major Leagues
Anne Jewell, Baseball In Louisville
Jeff Silverman, The Greatest Baseball Stories Ever Told: Thirty Unforgettable Tales from the Diamond
Buzz Bissinger, Three Nights in August; Strategy, Heartbreak, and Joy Inside the Mind of a Manager
Robert D. Kaplan, The Tragic Mind; Fear, Fate, and the Burden of Power
I read several books about climate change this year, but Ghosh's book is the only one that is not fiction. Ghosh writes a great deal about the need for artists to create content about climate change and he emphasizes the importance of imagining some of the catastrophic potential outcomes.
The Klar and Krupnikov book I got via ILL and read it for a project I'm working on with a colleague. The Maraniss and Paige bio and autobiography are definitely worth your time. I was inspired to read about Clemente after attending a Pirates game in Pittsburgh.
I've purchased just about every book Bill James has written about baseball, including the annual Handbook (he is a contributor), but this book was disappointing. I realize the publisher is ending the run of this book because the stats are virtually all available on the internet, but I like to have them all together in one book that I can read at my leisure in my living room without a computer or device. This book does not include very many of the stats long associated with the book. The essays are fine, but the product is below the standard set by the prior editions.
The Silverman edited volume has some great pieces, but I'd previously read most of the best ones. Some of the entries are not that great.
I wrote a long review of Bissinger on this blog.
Literature and Genre Fiction
Larry McMurtry, Terms of Endearment
Anne Tyler, Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant
Nick Hornby, Just Like You
John Updike, Bech is Back
Jenny Offill, Weather
Yevgeny Zamyatin, We
I don't know why I've only recently read Terms of Endearment. I read the prior book in the Houston series decades ago. And I saw the movie with Shirley MacLaine and Jack Nicholson soon after it appeared. Oh well.
Anne Tyler and Nick Hornby are always worth reading and I enjoyed both these books a great deal.
The Bech book is really a set of short stories. It's OK, but uneven for this reason.
The Offill book didn't really click with me, though it occasionally mentions climate change. Zamyatin's We is a classic, but it seemed to fall short of my expectations for dystopian fiction.
Genre fiction:
James Kestrel, Five Decembers
Kurt Anderson, True Believers
Colson Whitehead, Crook Manifesto
Walter Mosley, Bad Boy Brawly Brown
Michael Connelly, Trunk Music
Jason Matthews, Palace of Treason
Derek Raymond, He Died With His Eyes Open
I'd say these books were the cream of the crop. Kestrel's book is excellent and I urge everyone to read it. Kestrel, Anderson, and Matthews have all written books featuring spies and espionage so it was another good year for reading that sort of fiction.
Whitehead, Mosley, Connelly, and Raymond work in the crime genre and these are captivating examples.
Ward Just, Exiles in the Garden
M is for Malice, Sue Grafton
Joe Gores, Hammett
R.D. Rosen, Dead Ball
Richard McGuire, Here
Ian Fleming, On Her Majesty's Secret Service
Donald Westlake, Brothers Keepers
Donald Hamilton, Death of a Citizen
Richard Stark (Donald Westlake), Slayground
David Goodis, The Wounded and the Slain
Charles Willeford, The Burnt Orange Heresy
Robert B. Parker, Taming a Sea Horse
Loren Estleman, Angel Eyes
Ross McDonald, Sleeping Beauty
Donald Westlake, The Hook
Claudia Davila, Luz Sees the Light
Carl Hiaasen, Star Island
Christopher Buckley, Make Russia Great Again
Jack Handey, The Stench of Honolulu
Many, actually most, of the other authors are familiar from past iterations of this summary report. You'll find books here from the Kinsey Milhone, Easy Rawlins, Spencer, and Lew Archer detective series, which I'm generally reading in order.
There are a couple of graphic novels about climate change on this list. Here is an interesting concept as the artist has drawn the changes over time to a single plot of land. The Luz book is for children, which means it is a quick read.
Many of these books were OK, but most were so-so and had some serious flaws. I'm not going to be detailing all of those here, but you can probably find out on my Goodreads account.
Buckley and Handey prove that it can be difficult to be funny.
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