So now, by the beginning of 2020, I've really started to get used to my new taste in books, and slowly realizing I don't have to like the things I used to like. If my thing now is plays and journalism, so be it. All the better.
So without further ado, in sort-of approximate order from least to most favourite, are some of the best books I read in 2015:
Runners Up: The Fictional Books
--Behind Her Eyes by Sarah Pinborough. It was good and gripping. I enjoyed the twist quite a lot. Main reason why it's a Runner Up is because some of the drama in the middle of the book was tiring for me.
--The Warded Man by Peter V. Brett. I don't have too much to say about this one, but I quite enjoyed it. It was one of the few fictional books I was able to get through this year. And definitely the world building was part of that. Some great and interesting things in this book! (Although I kind of suspect that half the reason why I liked this one so much was because I read it during our week of no internet. I've discovered more and more how much my internet use is making it hard to focus these days.)
Third Place: The Journalistic Books
A cool guy. (Malcolm Gladwell) |
--How to Change Your Mind by Michael Pollan. Gave me new things to think about. That's mostly what I ask for in a book these days.
--10% Happier by Dan Harris. I'd already experienced the importance of meditation before reading this, but this reinforced my beliefs, and gave me inspiration to get back to my meditation practice.
--QED by Richard Feynman. It actually did help me understand some of quantum dynamics a lot better than before. I've always been fascinated by those mysterious areas of science, and it was great to be just a little clearer about how it works.
Second Place: Some Random Nonfiction Books
--Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman. The human brain is fascinating, and we make many assumptions about life and how we think, without actually having any evidence for it.
--The Mastery of Love by Don Miguel Ruiz. Half of why I loved this book was the experience of reading it: the beautiful feel of the book and pages, the way it felt to hold it. But it was also a lovely, thought-provoking book, for the most part.
A sample of my Pinterest board created for one of the exercises in The Curated Closet |
First Place: The Play
--Saint Joan by George Bernard Shaw. Like last year, I liked the play I read better than any other fiction from the year. And this was so good. Joan herself was such an amazing character. From my Catholic upbringing, I was used to thinking of Shaw as a bit of the bad guy--at least in his opinions (not character). He was the one who disagreed with Chesterton on everything, and Chesterton was the best. That feeling that Shaw was somehow suspect stuck with me, unconsciously, but this book got rid of that. He had many very interesting ideas in this book, and made me think a lot.
The saint herself. |
P.S. See also the Top Ten (Or So) lists from previous years: 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, and 2018.
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