fenchurch: (Doors within doors)
[personal profile] fenchurch
Earlier this year, with my 55th birthday fast approaching, I realized I had a wonderful opportunity to read one book published in each year of my life, sequentially, with the hopes of being done by the time I reach my 60th birthday (I have five years, which means just one a month, so I'm hoping to pull it off), starting with Year Zero (which ultimately means I'll do 61 books for this endeavor). I set rules for it... in particular that the book has to be one I've never read before, with preference given to books I already own (the idea being that I'd obviously already wanted to read it enough to pick up a copy).

It also occurred to me that this would be an ideal opportunity to finally get around to dusting off my old Livejournal/Dreamwidth accounts. If you happen to follow me on Good Reads, you're probably going to end up seeing these things twice.
So, here are the first three months, all at once!

1969: The Camelot Caper by Elizabeth Peters
I've had the book on my shelves for ages, picked up either because I liked the cover and the blurb on the back or because someone recommended it (I no longer remember) and it was a delight. It had some issues in the storytelling... there was more than one occasion where I had to go back and make sure I hadn't accidentally turned two pages, because the narrative would completely skip over bits and then continue as if the reader should know what happened (eventually revealing the details, but it was such an odd way to tell the story). I loved the characters, but I especially loved the dialogue between the two main characters, filled with lots of snappy banter. I'm thinking I need to hunt down some more books by the author (or some of her other pseudonyms).

1970: Deryni Rising by Katherine Kurtz
I have been meaning to read this book since I met the author back when I was a teenager, but it has always somehow slipped by me when looking for something to read. It fit my need for a book published in 1970 that I had not previously read, though, and I thoroughly enjoyed it! It was actually not at all what I'd been expecting... more mystery and intrigue in a high fantasy setting, rather than the sword and sorcery swashbuckler I had somehow imagined it to be.

1971: The Carpet People by Terry Pratchett
Loved this one! A book I would term as "gimmick fantasy" but, unlike the gimmick fantasy book I finished just before it (Ella Minnow Pea, a more recently written book that was a book club pick), this one fully embraced what it was and delivered a wonderfully entertaining story. Really amazing to realize this was Terry Pratchett's first book. I enjoyed it thoroughly and had some good laughs along the way.

Crossposted from my Livejournal.

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