Sunday, December 30, 2018

books from the past year


This year I didn't enjoy any book as much as my top three from last year -- maybe because I wasted too much time getting sucked into the endless supply of articles chronicling the idiocy of our current administration -- but I still read some good ones. Here are my favorites.

The White Darkness -- I'm listing this article first because it was amazing. It later came out as a book, which I haven't read, but definitely will.


Books

Kitchen Confidential – hilarious peek into the restaurant world. (Here's the original article.)

Chemistry – light, funny, unique perspective (a student pursuing a PhD in Chemistry.)

Spoils – nicely detailed Iraq war story.

All the Ugly and Wonderful Things – novel about an unlikely connection.


Honorable mentions:

Fortune Smiles – A short story collection that I considered putting down after the first two, but the rest turned out to be good. 

Dark Matter – for the beach.


Acclaimed books that were good, but may have been victims of high expectations:

Exit West – Good writing and potential to be an epic, but cut some corners and left me imagining the ways it could have been better. It’s short, so you won’t regret reading it, and again, it is good, and relevant, but it was a letdown after all of the glowing reviews.

The Return – Informative book centered around the true story of the author's father, and definitely worth reading--especially if you’re interested in the Middle East--but the writing felt loose and unfocused at times.


Warnings: 

Go, Went, Gone – A James Wood recommendation. Important subject matter (African refugees in Germany) but should have cut a quarter of it and revised the rest. It was informative, with plenty of flashes of good writing, and I’m glad finished, but it was a slog at times. 

Less – A Pulitzer Prize winning comic novel about a mid-life crisis—which should be right up my alley, but I found it to be a slog almost the entire way through. Lots of little witticisms, funny at times, and a worthy theme, but just never got going for me.


Friday, December 07, 2018

2018 Oscar Nominees


Worst to first:

Darkest Hour – So if Churchill hadn’t taken that subway ride, the British would have surrendered to the Nazis? Or perhaps a different passenger could have convinced him that surrender was the more prudent course of action?
Grade: C

Three Billboards – Tried to craft some multidimensional characters, but eh,
Grade: C+

The Shape of Water – Good writing, acting, score, and cinematography, but a truly ridiculous story.
Grade: B-

Dunkirk – Second movie of the year about the evacuation at Dunkirk. More of an edge-of-your-seat experience than Darkest Hour—which was more of a sleep inducing experience.
Grade: B

The Post – First half nearly put me to asleep, but the story was ultimately moving.
Grade: B

Call Me by Your Name – I’m torn. A touching father-to-son monologue on homosexuality, interesting characters, and a peek into the Italian countryside of the early 80’s, but also one of the most gratuitous scenes I’ve ever seen. The protagonist wasn’t surrounded by homophobes and didn’t suffer as much as his brethren in Brokeback Mountain and Moonlight, which, I suppose, adds a new dynamic to the critically acclaimed homosexual canon, so if you enjoyed those, this might be a logical next step.
Grade: B

Ladybird – Funny at times, good acting, touches on a lot topics, and for a guy like me it was an informative peek into white culture.
Grade: B+

*The Big Sick – Not nominated, but better than a lot of these. Obviously I’m a sucker for south Asian immigrant stories.
Grade: A-

Phantom Thread – I expected this to be the most boring of all, but ended up liking it a lot. Maybe Daniel Day Lewis really is the world's best actor.
Grade: A

Get Out – Highly original, can’t put this one in a genre.
Grade: A+

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