Top Books Read in 2024, #’s 7 & 6

No, you’re not experiencing Groundhog’s Day… I did already do a post with this very title. And now you can’t find it, you say? That’s correct, because I messed up and the two books I posted about a week or sho ago, Sister of Sorcery: A Marvel Untold Novel and The Flick were actually my #’s 5 & 4 books read in 2024! I mistaken skipped over #’s 7 & 6. My sincerest apologies, but we’re getting back to them now. It’s an important pair though, because here we find the highest ranking in 2024 in the female pop/rocker memoir category (but don’t worry, this genre will reappear in 2025) and another novel to take note of. So here we go before diving back into the Top 5 of 2024!

#8 – Another Planet: A Teenager in Suburbia by Tracey Thorn (2019)

Singer/Songwriter, author, Tracey Thorn tackles her boring teenaged years growing up in suburban London in her third memoir, Another Planet. While the books gets off to a slightly slow start, with Thorn commenting on the monotony of her journal (how can that not translate to the memoir?) it’s all in service of the point Thorn is making about her life during those years. She details the food she ate, the clothes she did or didn’t buy, and the television shows she watched, as well as the boys she got off with and the rows with her mother. Yet, as a mom in her 50’s when she wrote the book, she allows herself the observations of an adult looking back, and that’s where Thorn’s power as a writer excels.

As always, Thorn’s strength as a writer elevates her subject matter, along with her insightful eye and self-deprecating humor. Now after four memoirs, I wonder where she will go net? Perhaps motherhood? It doesn’t matter to me, I will be there to read.

#7 – Real Americans by Rachel Khong (2024)

Rachel Khong’s multi-generational saga explores what makes us who we are, our DNA and our our lived experiences. The story starts with May, the family matriarch, born and raised in a village outside of Beijing, struggling through the political unrest of the 60’s and eventually fleeing to America to become a scientist devoted to her fascination with genetics. May’s daughter Lily, born in America, is struggling to find her place as an adult in the early 2000’s, and feeling like a disappointment to her mother. Finally, Lily’s son Nick, raised by his mother in an isolated island town off the coast of Oregon, separated from his father, with an unknown heritage behind him that could alter his future.

Khong’s characters and their extended families each navigate challenges over the course of their lives, making choices that don’t always turn-out well. Some of these choices are tinged with both science fiction and fantasy elements, from the (near?)-future reality of gene manipulation to the potential wish-fufillment powers of the lotus seed, that Khong uses sparingly to tell a powerful saga that is ultimately about forgiveness.

Top Books Read in 2024 #’s 5 & 4

My next two entries are a curious pair: an original novel based on characters from the Marvel Comics Universe, and an Obie Award winning play (that also won the Pulitzer Prize in 2014 for drama). The former is not something that I would usually read, despite my penchant for reading comics. What makes that book unique is its focus on super-heroines, and what’s more, lesser-known super-heroines. And while I read a lot of plays, they seldom make my Top 5 books read!

#5 – Sisters of Sorcery: A Marvel Untold Novel by Marsheila Rockwell (2022)

Being a big fan of the superheroines of the Marvel Comics Universe, I was thrilled to find this original Clea novel among the company’s series of novelizations of comics characters. Clea is the wife, and often adventuring partner of Dr. Strange. In this story, when she is called upon to save a friend from Umar, the current ruler of the Dark Dimension, (and did I mention that Umar is also Clea’s mother?) she enlists the aid of several other powerful, yet obscure sorceresses from the corners of the Marvel Universe. Agatha Harkness — probably the most well known to mainstream audiences due to her recent Marvel TV series — is, at the moment in Marvel chronology that this novelization is set, currently dead, and existing only in the form of a still very powerful ghost. She offers her new disciple Holly as aid to Clea. Margali Szardos, powerful Romani witch and disciple of the Winding Way, is also the adopted mother of the X-Man Nightcrawler, and a women who suffers no fools, reluctantly signs on. And finally, Elizabeth Twoyoungmen, sometimes member of the Canadian band of superheroes called Alpha Flight, who is called Talisman, very reluctantly joins the crew despite her aversion to taking on her sorcerous legacy again.

Author Marsheila Rockwell has a strong handle on the characters’ personalities, expecially placed in a certain moment in time on the convoluted Marvel timeline. Her command of the Marvel way of magic-using is consistent and detailed. Rockwell focuses on the personalities of the characters, and the evolving relationships that emerge after a very rock start. For me it was a delightful read featurig mostly overlooked comic characters, with Clea being one of my favorites. So seeing her take front and center leading this unusual band made for a thrilling read.

#4 – The Flick by Annie Baker (2014)

I’m not sure how or why I missed my several opportunities to see the production of Annie Baker’s The Flick when it played in Boston or beyond. After all, I run an independent film society and am quite passionate about film. Still, I missed Annie’s play about a single-screen, independent movie house in Worcester, MA, so I decided to read it finally. What an amazing work! While exploring the challenges of operating such a cinema through the eyes of three of its employees, she also manages to explore the psyches and interpersonal dynamics between three very different people. I hope to see a full production of this powerful work, or perhaps even direct it if the opportunity presents itself.

Favorite Books Read in 2024, #’s 9 & 8

Moving into the Top 10, I’ve got another memoir, but this one moves into the world of film, thanks to The Brattle Theater’s Podcast. An episode from lat year featured filmmaker Susan Seidelman talking about her memoir detailing her life as a woman creating films in the 80’s to today. Thanks for the tip, Brattle pals! Another genre that I’ve alway enjoyed throughout my life is science fiction. Yuma Kitasei is a Japanese-American author whose second novel has made a respectable showing on this year’s list.

#9 – Desperately Seeking Something: A Memoir About Movies, Mothers, and Material Girls by Susan Seidelman (2024)

Susan Seidelman, best known for directing DESPERATELY SEEKING SUSAN, has written a lively, entertaining, memoir that incorporates growing up in a suburban bubble during the 60’s, then spending most of her adult life in New York City, seeing the evolution of Manhattan from a gritty, urban proving ground, to the gentrified wonderland it is today. Her story focuses on the struggles of being a woman in a man’s world — the world of making movies — and the challenges she face creating both independent films and Hollywood studio pieces. She comes across as smart, fun, and independent. The weaving of various themes into her personal story is masterful.

#8 – The Deep Sky by Yuman Kitasei (2023)

Yume Katiasei’s debut science fiction novel is a space faring journey where a crew of specialized young people who are capable of giving birth are sent as a last hope from Earth to Planet X to create a new civilization. The book bounces back and forth quite nicely between the academy where these young people are trained and tested, where representatives from each country (number based on population or political clout) compete for a spot on the flight, and the ship after ten years of deep sleep, where those selected to go must deal with an unexpected emergency.

Asuke, half Japanese/half American, wants desperately to honor her younger brother who always wanted to go to space, but was killed in a fire. Asuke’s mother doesn’t want her to go. Asuke lives in a perpetual state of underestimating her skills and doubts herself every step of the way. Even after she makes the cut (not a spoiler, you know that immediately) her doubts continue to plague her as does the turbulent relationship with her mother who she left behind on Earth.

The rest of the crew are filled with varied personalities that make the story interesting and fun. The tension is high, as this crew must deal with an emergency, potential sabotage, and maybe even a traitor in their midst. Kitasei keeps the drama and the suspense ever-present, and Deep Sky provides an action packed, emotional roller-coaster of a ride for a fun space suspense story.

Favorite Books Read in 2024, #’s 11 & 10

Deborah Conway

While I am continuing to enjoy reading memoirs written by women in rock ‘n roll, I’ve also found myself expanding my subject matter to other areas of interest in the memoir field. As we hit the Top 10, I’ve chosen a pair of memoirs, one in the women in rock vein, the other focusing on a subject whose got several connections to my interest: comics, birds, and the fact that he’s gay.

#11 – Better Living Through Birding: Notes from a Black Man in the Natural World by Christian Cooper (2023)

Better Living Through Birding

With my recent renewed interest in birding, combined with my somewhat less recent interest in memoirs, Christian Cooper’s autobiography as a gay, black man who is both an avid birder, but also spent a stint working at Marvel Comics, seemed a perfect fit for me. And I did enjoy it. Cooper does a good job weaving the story of his upbringing by activist parents, the challenges of being a gay man as well as a black man, a behind-the-scenes look at the Marvel bullpen, and the not-so flattering look at racial strife in America (something he is also extremely well-known for personally) into an entertaining and compelling read. Oh yeah, he travels the world a bit too – so his experiences birding and searching for himself in Brazil, the Himalayas, and the Galapagos are chronicled as well.

However, as I continue to read more and more memoirs, unless they are exceptional, most come across as fairly self-involved and somewhat annoying at times. I suppose that seems like a silly thing to say, as they are autobiographies, and they are inherently people talking about themselves, but the best memoirs don’t come across that way, and while I enjoy this book, I did find it occasionally a bit too self-involved to make it great.

#10 – Book of Life by Deborah Conway (2023)

Book of Life

I’m a big fan of Deborah Conway’s music, for which I thank my Australian pen pal and the Internet, otherwise I would have heard very little of it, being largely unreleased in the U.S. Deborah got started in the 80’s in an Australian band called Do Re Mi, that achieved success after the release of their first single Man Overboard. I believe I first became aware of them at 1985’s Oz for Africa concert that was broadcast across the world. Deborah’s voice certainly stood our, and as her memoir reveals, she knows how to use her voice and her words in more ways than singing.

An outspoken person who followed up her career with Do Re Mi as a solo artist. Her solo career started strong, but hit some stumbles after her first couple of albums, and she and her husband, guitarist/song-writer Willy Zygier eventually went independent, releasing their albums on their own. Deborah also dabbled in acting, appearing on stage as Patsy Cline, and in Peter Greenaway’s film, PROSPERO’S BOOKS.

Because of how much I enjoy Deborah’s music, I was hoping to enjoy her memoir just as much. Sadly, this was not the case. While it kept my attention, and Deborah is certainly an interesting subject, it didn’t reach the heights of challenging moments that her music did. Still, It was entertaining, and I did learn about her very full life. And I realized that I didn’t own her most recent two albums, which i promptly remedied by purchasing them.

Reading Books in 2024

2024 was not a good year for me with regard to reading books. While my reading consumption has plummeted over the decades (I used to be a voracious reader) I could always count on getting at least 30, and up to 50 in a good year, books read. This year I only read 21 books. Less than two books per month. I can do better. It’s my one real resolution. Read more books. I’m off to a good start. I began a book on December 23, expecting it to be the first book I completed in 2025, but I finished reading it on December 30, so I was able to count it in 2024, and it even made my list of top books.

As far as trends, with so few books read, all I can really say is that my pursuit of memoirs by female rock & rollers is still going strong with four books read this year representative of that genre. I expanded a bit into film as well with two additional memoirs, and also a novel written by a female rock & roller, and a brief treatise on a rock & roll album. Music has indeed come back into my life fairly strongly since the pandemic. But this is about books, and here are my #’s 12 & 13 from my Top 13 books read in 2024.

Honeybees

#13 – Honeybees & Distant Thunder by Riku Onda (2016)
Riku Onda has constructed a novel around an international piano competition in a town outside of Tokyo. The top young pianists from around the world come together in a week-long competition. Each competitor the novel follows has their own unique story; a consummate performer, handsome, talented and beloved Masaru; Aya, child genius whose career evaporated after the death of her mother, making a comeback; Akashi, the oldest competitor at thirty-years old who hopes to finally achieve his first moment of glory; and the mysterious youth, Jin, secretly mentored and taught by a Japanese master who recently died, whose playing confounds as much as it exhilarates.

Onda’s take on all the performances exalts and pays homage the power of music as a life-altering mystery, but the detailed descriptions of each piece does begin to get repetitive as the competition proceeds. She excels at some of the gorgeous descriptions, as she delves deep into the personalities of each spotlit performer, and how their experiences evolve throughout the week. Sadly, by the time she reaches the final days of the competition, she has little new to say, and the conclusion is a bit of a let down. Still, there were passages describing the music, the way people interact with music, and the individuals making the music that were so uplifting and powerful I was moved to tears. A mixed bag, but one that ends up anchoring my Top 13.

Face It

#12 – Face It by Debbie Harry (2019)
Debbie Harry’s Face It: A Memoir delivers on what a good memoir should be. Someone who has led an interesting life, looking back from a vantage point with experience and wisdom in a way that’s engaging and revelatory. It’s not a tell-all, but a curated story that paints a picture of a fascinating person during a pretty amazing time and place. After reading this memoir, Harry comes across as someone who I would enjoy spending time with; someone who has seen and done a lot, and who’s ups and downs through life balance the potentially mind-warping fame she experienced as the front-person and persona for the hugely successful band, Blondie.

While the book is a fairly chronological account of Debbie’s life, I enjoyed how she would sprinkle stories throughout where relevant, regardless of timeframe. Starting with childhood, her young, punk life in 79’s New York City, the meteoric success of Blondie, the struggles after the band broke up, the successful return to the spotlight, and her life today, Face It covers a lot of territory. Because of this, we get a broad overview of Debbie’s entire ife, rather than a deep dive into specific parts. It works, precisely because Debbie’s entire life provided an interesting read. Through it all, the love for her friend, business and creative partner, and former lover, Chris Stein, is the strongest throughline.

That and the sharing of dozens of portraits painted/drawn by her fans and given to Debbie, underscoring the challenge of owning an iconic look that many people simply equate with the person herself make for a fascinating rumination.

An interesting note about these two books. Face It was the first book I completed in 2024, and Honeybees & Distant Thunder the last.