As of approximately one hour ago, with the completion of No Country For Old Men, I accomplished my goal of reading ten books by the end of 2008. Thanks to everyone who recommended books for me to read, and to Kayla for allowing me to hole myself up in our room for hours at a time when I felt more like reading than watching Dancing With The Stars. Hugs and Kisses all around.
For those who care, here's the list of the ten I've read so far, with a ranking of one star (not great) to five stars (highest recommendation). Of course, feel free to recommend more to me, my mind is an open book. That was really lame. Read on, readers, read on...
1)Forever Odd, Dean Koontz-Second in the Odd Thomas trilogy. A good book, but the ceiling is lowered considerably when the story is based on a twenty-year old fry cook that sees ghosts.**
2) False Memory, Dean Koontz- The fifth Koontz book I've read so far, and one of the best. A psychological thriller, this one was gosh-awful long but very very entertaining.****
3) Con Ed, Matthew Klein- Witty, sarcastic novel about an over-the-hill con man who thinks he has one more great con in him. Blunders and hilarity ensue.***
4)21:Bringing Down the House, Ben Mezerich- Faaantastic book. As many of you know, a movie has been made based-very loosely-on the book. Mezerich interviews the actual people that were involved with the MIT blackjack team, and so the book is predictably more accurate and entertaining than the movie.*****
5) Ugly Americans, Ben Mezerich-Another great Mezerich book based on true events. This time Mezerich goes around the world to interview the young American businessmen who made fortunes trading in the Asian markets.***
6)Rammer Jammer Yellowhammer, Warren St John-Reccommended by Justin Scott, this book delves into the rabid fandome of the SEC, focusing on the authors personal obsession with the University of Alabama, and the 2000 football season.****
7) The Final Shot, Darcy Frey-A documentary of Coney Island's Lincoln High Schools 1991-1992 basketball season. In a neat twist of fate, one of the stories main characters is Stephon Marbury, then an up and coming freshman who started on the varsity.****
8) The Blind Side, Michael Lewis-Another fantastic rec from J Scott. This book parallels the
importance of the left takle position in football and the bizzarre upbringing and subsequent recruiting of Michael Oher. It's particularly relavent since the main character is still in college and has a shot at being drafted next April.*****
9) The Bad Guys Won, Jeff Pearlman-An awesome account of the antics of the 1986 World Series Champion, New York Mets. The '86 Mets were an end of an era squad and Pearlman does a great job of chronicling their bad behavior and performance both on and off the diamond.****
10) No Country For Old Men, Cormac McCarthy-Creeeeepy book, couldn't put it down. As great as it was, I'm gonna have to finally watch the movie so I can hopefully tie up the loose ends that I may have missed while reading.****
That's the list, folks. Again, feel free to recommend more, I'm all ears.
-Twig
Tuesday, May 6, 2008
Done, Done, On To The Next One
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3 comments:
Thanks for mentioning Bad Guys ... spent about two years on that—so the kind words are truly appreciated. I strongly suggest reading Jonathan Eig's "Luckiest Man." Just finished it ... remarkable.
Best,
Jeff Pearlman
espn.com
Thanks Jeff, will do. Can't wait for 'Boys will be Boys'
I'm not going to lie... I'm motivated to go read a book from cover to cover in your honor right this second. Props for hitting that 10 book goal.
Reading 13 different issues of Rolling Stone magazine doesn't count so i have Rammer Jammer Yellowhammer on order from Amazon. Thanks holmes.
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