Tag: books

  • 25 New Books in 2025

    25 New Books in 2025

    I’m excited about these twenty-five new books as we enter the second quarter of the digital century.

    Fiction

    My fiction picks include horror, crime, and works in translation.

    Witchcraft for Wayward Girls by Grady Hendrix | January 14th

    Witchcraft for Wayward Girls Cover | Credit: Penguin Random House

    Just one more week until we can read Hendrix’s take on witches and a magical school!

    Strange Pictures by Uketsu, translation Jim Rion | January 16h

    Strange Pictures Cover | Credit: HarperVia

    A creepypasta golden-age mystery from Japan written by a strange anonymous author/YouTuber/uh…maniac? Uketsu’s videos are beyond my comprehension, they kinda seem like Elsagate? I’m intrigued.

    The Unworthy by Agustina Bazterrica, translation Imani Jade Powers | March 4th

    The Unworthy Cover | Credit: Scribner

    Nuns, covenant prisons, and climate catastrophes by the writer of Tender is the Flesh, a profoundly unsettling novel about human clone meat and plandemics.

    The Snares by Rav Grewal-Kök | April 1st

    The Snares Cover | Credit: Penguin Random House

    A federal officer joins a secret program to help target drones that sounds like Total Information Awareness.

    The Impossible Thing by Belinda Bauer | April 8th

    The Impossible Thing Cover | Credit: Atlantic Monthly Press

    A multi-generational conspiracy to steal and nurture rare eggs. I’ll always read an egg heist.

    Vanishing World by Sayaka Murata, translation Ginny Tapley Takemori | April 15

    Vanishing World Cover | Credit: Grove Press

    Sex is forbidden, and babies are grown in labs. A population dystopia initially published in Japanese in 2015 could be eerie!

    The Setting Sun: A New Translation by Osamu Dazai, translation Juliet Winters Carpenter | May 6th

    The Setting Sun: A New Translation Cover | Credit: Tuttle Publishing

    Dazai is having an English resurgence, prompting a retranslation of his oft-cited masterpiece, a book I know nothing about but will read because I liked No Longer Human

    The Country Under Heaven by Frederic S. Durbin | May 13th

    The Country Under Heaven Cover | Credit: Melville House

    Lovecraftian Cowboys fighting Cthulhu’s on the Frontier by a writer with some great stories in F&SF.

    The Black Swan Mystery by Tetsuya Ayukawa, translation by Bryan Karetnyk | June 3rd

    The Black Swan Mystery Cover | Credit: Pushkin Vertigo

    Recent translations of Japanese mysteries have been excellent, and this one’s cited as particularly good, plus there’s a train.

    So Far Gone by Jess Walter | June 10th

    So Far Gone Cover | Credit: Harper

    The author of Citizen Vince writes again about an isolated male protagonist, this time in the pine forests.

    King of Ashes by S. A. Cosby | June 10th

    King of Ashes Cover | Credit: Flatiron Books: Pine & Ceder

    I’ll read anything S.A. Cosby puts out, and this one’s about a Southern mafia!

    Nadja by André Breton, translated by Mark Polizzotti | June 3rd

    Nadja Cover | Credit: NYRB Classics

    A classic, surrealist novel has a new translation, and a generation of new readers will find out it’s a surprisingly realist novel, and there’s very little surreal about it.


    Non-Fiction

    Crime, spies, and tragedies in books reveal networks of criminals leading companies and states.

    The Secret History of the Rape Kit: A True Crime Story by Pagan Kennedy | January 14th

    The Secret History of the Rape Kit Cover | Credit: Vintage

    The secret invention of the rape kit by a crisis counselor who denied credit and then mysteriously disappeared.

    Wiseguys and the White House: Gangsters, Presidents, and the Deals They Made by Eric Dezenhall | January 15th

    Wiseguys and the White House Cover | Credit: Harper

    A public relations and crisis management expert talked to mobsters and combed the archives to reveal the hidden underworld of crime and power. I’ll be reading skeptically.

    Trespassers at the Golden Gate: A True Account of Love, Murder, and Madness in Gilded-Age San Francisco by Gary Kirst | March 11th

    Trespassers at the Golden Gate Cover | Credit: Harper

    I love Kirst’s books about Los Angeles, New Orleans, and Chicago, and I am so excited to see how he treats San Francisco and murder.

    The Church of Living Dangerously: Tales of a Drug-Running Megachurch Pastor by John Bishop | March 25th

    The Church of Living Dangerously Cover | Credit: Harper Horizon

    A pastor of one of America’s fastest-growing churches explains how he got his start smuggling cocaine for drug cartels. Now, he’s got a flock of Christian soldiers ready to die for this country. The American dream!

    The Killing Fields of East New York: The First Subprime Mortgage Scandal, a White-Collar Crime Spree, and the Collapse of an American Neighborhood by Stacy Horn | January 28th

    The Killing Fields of East New York Cover | Credit: Zando – Gillian Flynn Books

    White flight is typically viewed as a preference, but this book exposes the financial motives at play when developing the suburbs and hollowing out American cities in the 1970s.

    One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This by Omar El Akkad | February 25th

    One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This Cover | Credit: Knopf

    What looks to be a righteous text laying blame on the West for the 21st century’s bloodshed and exploitation.

    Whack Job: A History of Axe Murder by Rachel McCarthy James | May 13

    Whack Job Cover | Credit: St. Martin’s Press

    We all fear the axe murderer, but how deeply have we considered his point of view? A look into the most deranged murder weapon.

    The Fort Bragg Cartel: Drug Trafficking and Murder in the Special Forces by Seth Harp | July 15th

    The Fort Bragg Cartel Cover | Credit: Viking

    A crucial node in American drug dealing networks is Fort Liberty (formerly Fort Bragg) in North Carolina. Rolling Stone reporter Seth Harp is bringing light to the story and hopefully remaining vigilant and cautious everywhere he goes.


    Comics & Manga

    Comics publishers haven’t put out their solicits for the year, but here’s a taste.

    Bug Wars by Jason Aaron (writer), Mahmud Asrar (artist), Matthew Wilson (colorist), Becca Carey (letterer) | February 12th

    Bug Wars Cover | Credit: Image Comics

    Aaron’s great and has the art team from King Conan to draw getting shrunk down and fighting angry bugs like barbarians.

    Godzilla: Heist by Van Jensen (writer) and Kelsey Ramsay (artist) | February 19th

    Godzilla Heist #1 Cover | Credit: IDW Comics

    My two favorite things together at last. Does Godzilla pull the heist? Do they rob Godzilla? We’ll see!

    Batman: The Dark Age by Mark Russell (writer) and Michael and Lisa Allred (artist, colorist) | March 25th

    Batman Dark Age Cover | Credit: DC Comics

    The Allreds and Mark Russell unite for an alternative origin story. I love both creators, dark ages and, of course, the freakin’ Batman.

    Assorted Crisis Events by Deniz Camp (writer) and Eric Zawadzki (artist)

    Assorted Crisis Events #1 | Credit: Image Comics

    A twist on the big universe-altering event with popular writers and a twist on Dr. Who. Looks promising!

    Snegurochka of the Spring Breeze By Hiroaki Samura | June 24th

    Snegurochka of the Spring Breeze | Credit: Penguin Random House

    A story of Stalinist Soviet Russia by the mangaka who created Blade of the Immortal, a samurai classic!


    Consulted Lists

    My list stands atop the shoulders of these lists.

    What are you reading while the world burns?

  • Beware, Hell Hounds! Use This Forbidden Knowledge to Survive!

    Beware, Hell Hounds! Use This Forbidden Knowledge to Survive!

    This week’s obsession is hell hounds and devil dogs. The monster reoccurs from folklore across the world. What doth their omen foretell? How do writers use it in contemporary stories? And if the beast is real, how can we stop it? Keep reading…if you dare!


    Encyclopedia

    First, some historical hellhound context to identify and vanquish these beasts.

    Cerberus

    Underworld Cerberus from Magic the Gathering by Svetlin Velinov | Credit: Wizards of the Coast

    Cerberus, the three-headed dog that guards the gates of Hades, was first written down around 500 BC. He’s probably the most popular hellhound, a guardian of the underworld. But is he formidable? Hercules bagged him for a feat, and Orpheus played a lullaby to put his ass to sleep. Despite the three heads, this dog seems like a pushover.

    Garmr

    Cover for New Mutants #82, Illustrator Bret Blevins | Credit: Marvel/Disney

    Garmr offers a Norse twist on an underworld guardian hound and introduces the word hellhound. As “the hound that came from Hel,” Garmr guarded the gates to the underworld, his fur covered in gore, “bloody on his breast.” Odin just sped past him on a horse. As seen above, Marvel’s New Mutants also encountered the big demon wolf once, and they also just snuck past it. Noticing a theme?

    El Cadejo

    Cadejo Blanco | Credit: Carlos Draco Herrera

    El Cadejo, a South American myth popular in El Salvador, is a spectral dog that presents the duality of good or evil as white and black. When the dog has white fur and blue eyes, it’s benign, but if it’s black with red eyes, you gonna die. Remember this rhyme: Blue eyes and white, that’s alright; red eyes and black, you must stand back!

    If you get attacked by El Cadejo, you’re toast. It’s a ghost dog. Weapons can’t hurt it. The dogs look for babies, drunks, vagabonds, and people with grudges, and the ghost dog picks them off lonely roads.

    Black Dogs of the Isles

    The Black Dog of Newgate, from the book The Discovery of a London Monster Called the Black Dog of Newgate published in 1638 | Credit: Wikicommons

    Black dogs of England are demonic ghost dogs, like the ones in South America. England reported devil dogs in almost every county. And they all have hilarious names, e.g., Barghest, Black Shuck, Bodu, Capelthwaite, Hairy Jack, Padfoot, Gytrash, Moddey Dhoo. The dogs approach much like a werewolf. They come out at night, maul passersby, and leave the whole town confused, not unlike the plot of American Werewolf in London. Avoid these creatures!

    TLDR Secrets to Defeating Demon Dogs:

    • Hell Guardians: Surprisingly easy to beat! Sneak past them, use music or Ambien.
    • Ghost Dogs: Odds here are bleak. But if you can’t beat them, join them. Become the beast and pray for lupine revenge.

    Books

    Hell Hound | By Ken Greenhill | Paperbacks from Hell | 1977/2017

    Hell Hound by Ken Greenhill | Credit: Paperbacks from Hell

    Hell Hound is a re-release of a forgotten ’70s horror pulp novel that genuinely creeped me out.

    What happens when a dog becomes a killing machine?!

    I’m a dog person. I love dogs. I’ve owned them. I watch videos of them. I hung out with one just the other day. But this novel showed me a dark side to dogs.

    Baxter is one of those creepy-looking bull terriers. Sid’s dog from Toy Story. The type of dog who’s head looks engineered for biting. Here’s one on the poster for the novel’s French film adaptation

    Baxter (1989) | Credit: MK2 Productions

    I see why the French liked this book. Baxter’s internal monologue is the same detached, selfish nihilism as Camus. When the dog decides to kill a person, he thinks to himself.

    I understand that conditions change; that I must be able to control those changes…I don’t understand it. But I no longer fear things that I don’t understand.

    The dog does nasty stuff. Baxter targets old ladies, babies, little dogs, and he befriends a teenage Nazi. Baxter only finds commonality with the teen fascist. They both are struggling to maintain their base, uncivilized impulses.

    The humans around Baxter are unpleasant, a collection of suburban loners veering on insanity. An elderly neurotic, a couple stuck in a failed marriage, a porn-addict father who buys soiled panties at the thrift store, and a teacher who keeps a card catalog of every student’s forgotten lives and broken dreams. Perhaps Baxter is just mirroring the lead-paint society of the 1970s?

    Today, in 2020s America, no one thinks of dogs as killers. People treat their dogs like children or perhaps royalty. It’s almost socially unacceptable not to like dogs, a preference magnified into a personality flaw.

    And yet, with dogs exists a wolf. Dogs are trained to respect humans. And they can be trained to bite humans, too. There’s a reason prison guards weaponize dogs. Sharp teeth, vice-like jaws, surprising strength relative to size, and far superior speed to a human make a dog brutal to fight. The meme that pitbulls eat babies has some truth to it.

    And we think of dogs as loyal. But Baxter believes it’s people who are loyal to the far superior species. He explains,

    People have a great capacity for loyalty to those who seem to depend on them. I have benefitted from that loyalty, but I don’t understand it. Urinate on their carpets, chew up one of the objects they endlessly accumulate. They sometimes punish, but in their loyalty they always forgive. Does their loyalty have any limits? Some day I’ll know. Soon, perhaps.

    And learn he does when Baxter gives up his freedom, becomes subsumed to someone else, and meets a gory demise. It’s surprisingly poetic and has much to say about a world run on petty cruelties. Hell Hound is an incredible book with excellent prose. I recommend it to anyone who likes horror novels.


    Comics

    Hounds | Sam Romesburg, Sam Freeman, Rodrigo Vázquez | Mad Cave Studios | 2024

    Hound, Writers Sam Romesburg and Sam Freeman, Illustrated by Rodrigo Vázquez | Credit Mad Cave Studios

    Hound is an ultra-violent, anti-war story about British werewolves in WWI and a well-paced, provocative read.

    Our narrator is a young boy, a child soldier, sent to the front line to defend Britain.

    A Panel from Hound: Illustrated by Rodrigo Vázquez | Credit: Mad Cave Studios

    The hells of war will turn the soldiers into hellhounds. The illustrations are well rendered with keen perspective. The color palette reminds me of watercolors and 60s-era war comics, fitting for the balance between military and horror.

    A Page from Hound: Illustrated by Rodrigo Vázquez | Credit: Mad Cave Studios

    Our hero must confront the beast inside himself while trying to take over a German town. And the beasts that are his comrades in arms. When he encounters the werewolves, the combat is fluid and kinetic, with great sound effects.

    A Page from Hound: Illustrated by Rodrigo Vázquez | Credit: Mad Cave Studios

    At its core, the story confronts whether humans instinctually lust for blood. Does war awaken that in humans? Man’s latent cruelty may be the core of hellhound legends. Not what if a man is a dog, but what if a dog was as cruel as a man?

    Two Panels from Hound: Illustrated by Rodrigo Vázquez | Credit: Mad Cave Studios

    Another great release from Mad Cave Studios! They’re putting out cool comics. Check them out at your comic shop or on Hoopla. Thanks to the publisher and Netgalley for a review copy.


    Film

    Cujo | Lewis Teague | 1983 | Warner Brothers

    Cujo, the rabid dog | Credit: Warner Brothers

    How could I write about Demon Dogs without mentioning Cujo? I finally watched the 80s horror classic, and the crazed St. Bernard touches on a different fear than our previous hellhounds. What if a good dog goes bad? All it takes is Cujo sticking his head in a tree full of bats. Then, he loses all context and starts killing people. We humans try to forget that dogs can go crazy, too.


    Pile of the Week

    Dog Reading Book During Daytime by 2Photo Pots | Credit: Unsplash

    Finally, to cleanse the Bad Dog vibes, look at this dog reading a book. That’s nice.


    Thank you for reading! Subscribe to my weekly reading recap newsletter, Book Piles.

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  • Data Analysis of My 2023 Reading

    Data Analysis of My 2023 Reading

    Three years ago, I started a reading database. In 2023, I started learning about the data analysis process and, indeed, spent the best parts of the year reading and learning about data.

    While many posts try to convince their reader to build a “Second Brain,” this post has no such Frankensteinian ambitions. Instead, I will show you my virtual brain, and we will consider what happens when you habitually use the e-brain and how it impacts reading and writing.

    The Big Numbers

    First, how many books did I read in the year? The 21st century adds significant complexity to an otherwise simple question. The books were primarily digital, borrowed, electronic, or audio. I could not pile the books. I often think about book piles as I write a newsletter about my reading piles, but there is no pile. The Pile Is A Lie.

    So, without a database, this simple question would be difficult to answer because most books were not printed on physical paper.

    Counting big numbers showed me interesting things about the veracity of truth and the grand, epistemological nature of knowledge. Far out, number stuff.

    Number of Books – VERIFIED TRUSTWORTHY!

    One hundred eighty-three books is a strongly verifiably datapoint. I opened many books and went from the first to the last page. It averages 3.5 books a week. Of course, this is all self-reported data. I could have forgotten to log a book, or I could be making all this stuff up! But to me, 183 is a strongly knowable number.

    What’s interesting about this number is that I cared a lot about it from 1/1/2023 to 12/31/2023, but today, it is one of the least insightful numbers because the collection is complete. Creating the records drives the collection, but once it’s done, the records become self-evident.

    Number of Pages – UNTRUSTWORTHY!

    Here, things get vaguer and much more imprecise. I am not confident I read 50,574 pages this year for a few reasons. I read about 40% of non-fiction books, which include indexes and footnotes, valuable tools that show the skeleton of a good, well-argued book (or the amorphous blob of a poorly written one). But these pages make the numbers go up arbitrarily.

    Furthermore, page count information online is not reliable. I’ve decided to track this more closely this year. I’ve found wrongly reported numbers of numerous books. I’ve held a copy of a book in my hands and saw a different number on Amazon. Various editions, layouts, and formats all impact a quantifiable fact. But despite it being knowable information, it is not always known. Amazon has consistent errors, and this imprecision must somehow affect their warehouse usage and shipping costs. While exact page counts of books is mostly useless, random information, I find this imprecision hints at the fallibility of Big Data and monopoly capital.

    Authors Read – VERIFIED TRUSTWORTHY!

    In 2022, I read 73 authors and 91 books in total. Thus, I set the goal to read 100 authors. Achieving this goal was one of the drives pushing me to read this much in a year. Again, this is easy to count. I limited each book (record) to one author field, so multi-author books list both authors but count as one author.

    Something I realized binging Elmore Leonard novels was that getting the hang of an author’s style dramatically increases the speed at which one reads their books. I could start pounding these out in a day, even with other stuff to do! I think this quality explains why readers can voraciously consume an author like Brandon Sanderson, who’s written dozens of books and well over a million pages.

    Fiction Vs. Non-Fiction – UNTRUSTWORTHY!

    A new edition to my database, [Fiction: Y/N?]. The checkbox asks the user to consider what is true and what is false.

    I read Mike Tyson’s memoir, Undisputed Truth, which approaches this question from the title. Mike admits to a lot in the book, and there are undoubtedly truths in it. I marked this non-fiction.

    But a book I marked fiction, The Siberian Job, begins with an introduction stating how the book is fact but barely fictionalized because those involved started getting death threats. The book might be total bullshit, but there are also a lot of truths about privatization in the USSR.

    Or one like James Ellroy’s essay collection, Destination Morgue, which is half fiction, half non-fiction, the author recounting his childhood improprieties of huffing paint and breaking into houses, but it’s also fictionalized accounts of him as a police officer solving murders.

    That’s to say nothing of obvious roman à clef French, for a book about real life that probably got the author a vicious enemy. No Longer Human by Osamu Dazai and Queer by William S. Burroughs are two such examples.

    To binarize fact/fiction is to oversimplify reality into an abstraction that doesn’t always capture narratives’ strange, contradictory nature.


    Genre & Format

    Genre –

    A pie chart that doubles as a nifty abstraction for my brain.

    Categorizing what I read has made me keener on the contours of subcategorizations. Whereas most bookstores shelf together crime, mystery, and true crime, because they’re my most represented reading, I break them apart.

    Format –

    Analyzed independently of the content genre was the information’s format. Or, how did I consume the book? Did I read it in physical or digital? Did I own it or borrow it?

    There’s a clear insight from this chart. 64.1% of reading was done with the library. Using digital library apps makes reading cost-free. Most of the books I borrowed were in audio format. These are too expensive to buy individually, so a cost-free way of accessing this information doubled my consumption.

    Multi-modal consumption made reading and writing easier. Borrowing the audio and the digital copies allowed me to copy and paste text or highlight useful passages.

    Next year, I plan to correlate genre and medium and see which books I prefer in which mediums. I currently need to gain the technical skills to do that.


    Age and Quality of Information

    Publication year

    This tells me the age of the information consumed. Most of them are very new. My most represented year is 2023, with 34 books, and books read from the 21st century (137) outnumber books from any previous century (46).

    I think this is for a few reasons:

    This graph prompts the most straightforward conclusion of how to broaden my reading depth. I only read things from the 20th and 21st century. I don’t read any classics. In 2024, I intend to read something written in the 19th century.

    How did I read so many new books? I think there’s three reasons.

    1. Advanced Reader Copies
      • Requesting ARCs explains why 2023 is the year most represented in the data. With a Goodreads account and a website, I could receive free copies in exchange for a review. ARCs are an efficient way to read contemporary books.
    2. Library Power User
      • Again, the library keeps more recent materials in its collection. Because I use the library, I am more likely to read more current work.
    3. Publishing Press Reader
      • I’m also subject to advertising for new books. Because I read blogs like ShelfAwareness, Booklist, and Crimereads, I am recommended new books more frequently than old ones.

    Quality of information

    This is arguably the most subjective data point captured. I grade a book on a 5-star scale and am not a harsh grader. I like most books I read, with the overwhelming majority getting five stars. I find rating the books to be my least favorite part of this process, as it feels arbitrary and inconsequential. So what, more or less? I grade the information on whether I found it relevant. Did I enjoy the thrill of the story? How does it compare to others in the genre? Unlike comparisons is the problem with this category. How do I compare a reference book on sentence structures to an expose of an FBI coverup of the Osage massacre to a literary masterpiece to an enjoyable potboiler thriller? I can’t! I could rank the books I read this year, but that would be excruciatingly dull for me and the reader. If you want that, feel free to print out the blog post, cut it up, and rank it accordingly. Which one was better? WGAF?

    I’ve also noticed this is the field I’m most likely to revise. If I pick a number in a bad mood, it’s lower than one in a good mood. It’s capricious, but my awareness keeps it relevant enough to keep recording. Perhaps it will be fun to compare year after year after a while.


    Narrative Voice

    My favorite category in the database is narrative voice. It asks, how is the story told, whatever the story is?

    Traditionally, there’s first person (I, me), second person (you, yourself), and third person (He, his name), and it’s a way to define fictional tellings. Who Says? By Lisa Zeidner inspired to look closer at narrative voice and how an author chooses to tell a story. Books can have more than one narrative voice. The bar has multiple colors overlapping to show this.

    This year, I noticed more texture in non-fiction tellings. These are terms or flavors. I mostly made up. Historical would be citing multiple sources; Essay is opinionated writing; How To is a descriptive guide; Reporting is interviewing first-hand sources; Fandom is writing about a thing one passionately engaged with for multiple years. I intend to write up something longer about this column in 2024.


    Takeaways

    I have internalized some big takeaways as I am steadfast about continuing and deepening this project in 2024.

    Libraries vs. Book Buying

    I started using the library with regularity in 2022, but I still bought books. I quit my job in 2023, so I “stopped” buying books (I buy fewer anyway). This has dramatically increased my reading, and I now think buying books wastes time more than it wastes money. The biggest takeaway for me in 2023: buying books cuts into reading time. When browsing the library, the evaluation is so much simpler. “Does this look cool?” When buying a book, I ask about ten questions from “Is this a reference text?” To “Do I want to lug this around to more apartments?” Hours wasted browsing used bookstores were better spent walking and listening to books. Last year, I saved thousands of dollars not buying books—this year, I am thinking of it differently. I’ve internalized library usage, and I’ll never buy books in significant numbers again (lol, says the addict, time will tell).

    It Is Surprisingly Easy To Read New Stuff For Free in 2023

    This year, I realized what many book reviewers already knew: reading new books in exchange for a review is a valuable service readers provide. Publishers and authors need this, and asking for free virtual copies is not an imposition on them. Without 5-star reviews, new books are not aggregated on buying markets like Amazon, Kindle, Barnes and Noble, or even library apps like Hoopla. So, in 2024, I’ll keep asking for more free stuff!

    Querying Time vs. Inputting Time

    A subtler trend, but I realized this year I spent comparable time querying the database than creating it. Intuitively, cataloging would take more time in 2023, which intuitively makes sense: more records = more time. However, I streamlined my process for faster entry. So, writing 183 lines in a spreadsheet didn’t take much time at all, especially compared to the time spent reading the books. How often I referred to my notes from this year compared to previous ones surprised me. I referenced the database in bookstores, online conversations, and while writing. I’m comfortable with this data now. I also created the dashboards at the end of 2022 and was able to use them throughout 2023. Through reflection, I could comprehend the iterative progress of these milestones.

    Methodology and Tools

    I used an Airtable database to input, track, and filter the information. Here’s an Interface displaying these visualizations. [link]


    Here’s the entire list of all 183 books considered: