Tsundoku – an Aspirational list of books to read this year…

In lieu of a list of New Year’s Resolutions, I have decided to publish a list of tsundoku, a Japanese word which means “the piles of books waiting to be read”. Of course, if I were to make a New Year’s Resolution, it would be to post more here and to prepare for the 2023 AtoZ Challenge well ahead of April! However – back to books!

I learned from the blog “Big Think“, that the writer Umberto Eco, a favourite of mine, had a personal library of some 30,000 books “When Eco hosted visitors, many would marvel at the size of his library and assumed it represented the host’s knowledge — which, make no mistake, was expansive. But a few savvy visitors realized the truth: Eco’s library wasn’t voluminous because he had read so much; it was voluminous because he desired to read so much more.

It is in this spirit of aspiration that I share with you the list of books teetering on the edge of various bookshelves around the house waiting to be read. I blame the charity book table at my local CO-OP as well as the access to secondhand books at reasonable prices on the internet… So in no particular order:-

Beautiful Losers – Leonard Cohen

The Favourite Game – Leonard Cohen

The Eyre affair  – Jasper Fforde

South from Granada – Gerald Brenan 

The Atheists Guide to Christmas

Wolf Hall – Hilary Mantel

First we make the Beast Beautiful – Sarah Wilson

Atlas of Vanishing Places – Travis Elborough

A Mind to Murder PD James

This Too Shall Pass – Milena Busquets

Natives Race and Class in the Ruins of Empire – Akala

Siege – Geraint Jones

Land Rover s

the Story of the Car that Conquered the World – Ben Fogle

Kosovo War and Revenge – Tim Judah

The Shifting Realities of Philip K Dick

The Course of Love – Alain de Botton

On Love – Alain De Botton

Samarkand – Amin Maalouf

I Coriander Sally Gardner

On writers and writing Margaret Atwood

Midnight All Day – Hanif Qureishi 

Mostly Harmless – Douglas Adams

Gigi and the Cat – Colette

My Brilliant Friend – Elena Ferrante

Ecstasy – Irvine Welsh

Hellhole – Brian Herbert and Kevin J Anderson

Utopia Avenue – David Mitchell 

The Plot Against America – Philip Roth

An Instance of the Fingerpost Iain Pears

Right of Thirst – Frank Wheeler 

Dream Angus – Alexander McCall Smith

Winter in Madrid C.J. Sansom

Caribbean – James A Michener

The Fault in Our Stars – John Green

The Kappilan of Malta – Monsarrat

The Open Society and It’s Enemies – K. R. Popper

The Moor’s Last Sigh – Salman Rushdie

Blink – Malcolm Gladwell

History of the Rain – Niall Williams

Parable of the Talents – Octavia Butler

Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal – Jeanette Winterson

The Wild Silence – Raynor Winn

The Lamplighters – Emma Stonex

My Name is Lucy Barton – Elizabeth Strout 

No One Writes to the Colonel – Gabriel Garcia Marquez

The Chameleon – Samuel Fisher

Anil’s Ghost – Michael Ondaatje

Untouchable – Mulk Raj Anand

Her Fearful Symmetry – Audrey Niffenegger

Not the End of the World – Kate Atkinson

Cowboys and Indians – Joseph O’Connor

The Paper Man – William Golding

The Visible World – Mark Slouka

The Assassination of Margaret Thatcher – Hilary Mantel

The Late Bourgeois World – Nadine Gordimer

Hag-seed – Margaret Atwood

Codex – Lev Grossman

Wilderness Tips – Margaret Atwood

A Little Life Hanya Yanagihara

Sapiens – Yuval Noah Harari

The White Tiger – Aravind Adiga

Absolute Friends – John le Carre

Love and Other Impossible Pursuits – Ayelet Waldman

Sex Wars – Marge Piercy

The Geometry of Love – Margaret Visser

Stay – Nicola Griffith

Whistling for the Elephants – Sandi Toksvig

The Memory Keepers Daughter – Kim Edwards

Land Rover – Ben Fogle

Mantel Pieces – Hilary Mantel

The Dust That Falls From Dreams – Louis De Bernieres 

Who knows how many I will read before this time next year…

Happy New Year to anyone who stumbles in here!

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