This week's Topic: Top Ten Books I Wouldn’t Mind Santa
Bringing Me
Well, I like to give Santa lots of options, to my list of 10
is a list of 20. I’m a list maker, but I’ve never been good at making short lists.
These Few Precious
Days: The Final Year of Jack with Jackie, Christopher Andersen
Another. Kennedy. Book. But for some reason, this one calls
to me.
Cooking Comically:
Recipes So Easy You’ll Actually Make Them, Tyler Capps
Do you know about this book? If not, check out his
site. You’ll want it too!
Grace and Power: The
Private World of the Kennedy White House, Sally Bedell Smith
Her
Elizabeth the Queen was
so good that I have high hopes for this one.
The Queen Mother: The
Official Biography, William Shawcross
I’m very interested, after reading
Elizabeth the Queen this year, but it is 1096 pages, and I’m not
sure if I have the will for that.
Outrageous Fortune:
Growing up at Leeds Castle, Anthony Russell
Sounds like a sweet coming-of-age story.
The Assassination of
the Archduke: Sarajevo 1914 and the Romance that Changed the World, Greg King
& Sue Woolmans
This is a part of history that I remember studying in school
and being very interested in, but I’ve forgotten so much of my school history.
I look forward to this one.
Fortune’s Children:
The Fall of the House of Vanderbilt, Arthur T. Vanderbilt, II
To fill the void after
Empty
Mansions is over.
Jim Henson: The
Biography, Brian Jay Jones
Folks are making Henson out to be a saint, but I have a
feeling he’s not so much of one. Still, this book is being favorable reviewed,
so I’d like to give it a shot.
I Am Malala: The Girl
Who Stood up for Education and Was Shot by the Taliban, Malala Yousafzai
When this one came out, I thought it was for a YA reading
crowd. The writing seemed a little simplistic, but as I can’t seem to resist a
book about Afghanistan, I’d like to give it a whirl.
The Girls of Atomic
City: The Untold Story of the Women Who Helped Win World War II, Denise Kiernan
Frankly, I wasn’t interested in this book when it came out,
but it’s been so well-received, I think I would like it.
Serving Victoria:
Life in the Royal Household, Kate Hubbard
Another about the English court and throne.
Eighty Days: Nellie
Bly and Elizabeth Bisland’s History-Making Race around the World, Matthew
Goodman
See note for The Girls of Atomic City above.
Johnny Carson, Henry
Bushkin
I kind of don’t want to know the extent of Carson’s
womanizing, but I’m a sucker for a biography, so I’ll read it.
Dinner with the
Smileys: One Military Family, One Year of Heroes, and Lessons for a Lifetime, Sarah
Smiley
This has been so highly recommended on Amazon, that I have
to know what the fuss is about.
Five Days in November,
Clint Hill, Lisa McCubbin
Although I’m a little Kennedy’ed out right now, Hill & McCubbin’s
first book was so spectacular, I’m sure I’ll
love this one.
The Art of Losing:
Poems of Grief and Healing, Kevin Young (Ed.)
I’m not at all interested in the subject matter, but I (a)
love anthologies on a single theme, (b) enjoyed Kevin Young’s
The Hungry Ear anthology so, so much, (c) need more poetry for next
year, and (d) know that poems about death are always just a little better than
poems about happier subjects.
Five Days at
Memorial: Life and Death in a Storm-Ravaged Hospital, Sheri Fink
Okay, I give. It’s all over the place, and it’s
well-reviewed, so I guess I should read it. Even if it is about a hospital.
Quiet: The Power of
Introverts in a World That Can’t Stop Talking, Susan Cain
Innies unite! I’ve been avoiding this book for a while,
dancing around it, ignoring it, then wondering about it. I read the first few
pages the other day, and I was hooked. I don’t like books that get clinical and
diagnose-y, so I really hope this one doesn’t.
Lady Almina and the
Real Downton Abbey: The Lost Legacy of Highclere Castle, The Countess of
Carnarvon
I haven’t even seen a whole episode of
Downton Abbey, but I think I could easily be hooked. And it seems
the book is a well-respected companion to the series.
The Boys in the Boat:
Nine Americans and Their Epic Quest for Gold at the 1936 Berlin Olympics,
Daniel James Brown
Oh my gosh, this book wasn’t even on my radar until a
blogger said it was likely her favorite book of the
year! It sounds like a wonderful must-read.
Have you read any of these? Which one should I start first?