Showing posts with label top 10. Show all posts
Showing posts with label top 10. Show all posts

Thursday, December 31, 2015

Top 15 favorite books of 2015

Holy cow! How did it get to be December 31st already? I am completely unprepared to write this traditional end-of-year post but here we go.

I did not even come close to my goal of reading 515 books in 2015. I was so busy with finishing my last semester of grad school this fall that reading sort of fell off the priority list. I only read 394 books this year, 76 of which were novel-length.

Despite not making my reading goal, I have to say that 2015 was a great year for books. I didn't read much middle grade this year, but I had many YA and picture book favorites.

Picture books:

Waiting by Kevin Henkes
I get the sense that this is a book the Caldecott committee is discussing at length. It has beautiful illustrations, it bares no obvious lessons (award committees tend to shy away from didacticism), and disguises itself as a simple story shrouded in complexity (the Waiting for Godot of the kid lit world as Betsy Bird likes to call it). Henkes fills your heart with affection for these sweet, quirky toys sitting on the windowsill waiting for nothing in particular it seems... 


The Moon is Going to Addy's House by Ida Pearle

Poetry doesn't always have to come in words. Sometimes poetry speaks in pictures, movement, music, or all of these things at once. The Moon is Going to Addy's House is a beautiful example of how poetry can be created in the confluence of art forms. It is a book that feels both classic and modern, both back in time and of the time. 


Drum Dream Girl by Margarita Engle, illustrated by Rafael  Lopez

This is the story of Millo Castro Zaladarriaga, a young Cuban girl who wanted desperately to play the drums, but she lived in a time when only boys were allowed to play them. This book is a gorgeous poem that celebrates the power of a passion, which is paired beautifully with Rafael Lopez's vibrant, dreamlike illustrations.

 
 This is Sadie by Sara O'Leary, illustrated by Julie Morstad   
This book is everything. This book is about as perfect as a book could possibly be. This book isn't just about Sadie. This book is about us all. We are all Sadie. Some of us just have to look harder to find her within ourselves than others. But she is there. To quote one of my 8th graders, "Sadie represents the child within us all."


Tricky Vic: The Impossibly True Story of the Man Who Sold The Eiffel Tower by Greg Pizzoli  
This is what all nonfiction should be: exciting, engaging, and page-turning. Wow! Any guy who conned Al Capone and lived is a guy worth reading about.  


Graphic novels:

Sunny Side Up by Jennifer L Holm & Matthew Holm  
I was born in the very late 70s (Two months before 1980, in fact) but despite the fact that this book takes place in 1975-1976, an incredible sense of familiarity and nostalgia from my own childhood came creeping into my experience of reading this book. Little details as simple as the screen door on Sunny's house in Pennsylvania to the way the Sears logo looked back then, Jenni and Matt Holm clearly did their research on even the smallest of details from this time period. More importantly though, Jenni and Matt Holm tell a heartfelt and compassionate story about a young girl who comes to realize the torment her family is experiencing at the hand of her brother who is overcoming substance abuse. It is through Sunny's experience that many kids will see their own families and the ways a family member's struggles become an entire family's burden.


Displacement: A Travelogue by Lucy Knisley 
In this graphic memoir, Knisely, accompanies her grandparents, who are failing in health and mental faculties, on a Caribbean cruise. It is a sensitive, earnest, fatalistic look at family and mortality, yet also done somehow with a lighthearted touch.


Middle Grade:
 
Echo by Pam Muñoz Ryan

This is one of the most stunning audiobooks I have ever listened to. As someone who studied classical piano for over a decade, the musical themes and accompanying soundtrack with the audiobook made this story come alive. Echo is a book for not only the readers in your life who love music, but also for those sensitive readers who are looking for books to be transcendent – to give you an experience beyond your emotions, becoming almost a spiritual experience. And that is what makes Echo more than just a heartprint book for me – it is a book that feeds my soul.


Young Adult:

Stand Off by Andrew Smith
Ryan Dean West is my all-time favorite character in YA literature. I'm so glad Andrew Smith brought him back for a sequel to help readers heal from the sadness that occurred at the end of Winger

 
All American Boys by Jason Reynolds and Brendan Kiely 
Books save lives. And they change hearts and minds. This will be one of those books. This book is in your face enough to start conversations, but nuanced enough to make it more than a black vs. white, us vs. them issue.  This book is a great ladder to Ta-Nehisi Coates' book which is also on my list of favorite books of 2015.


Enchanted Air  by Margarita Engle
Before I read Engle's memoir in verse, I had very little desire to ever visit Cuba someday. During and after reading Engle's memoir in verse, I have now very eagerly added it to my bucket list.


Challenger Deep by Neal Shusterman
An incredibly powerful and personal tale of a young man's descent into the depths of schizophrenia. The book is a masterfully woven extended metaphor that would benefit a close reading of certain passages because important details are sure to be missed upon first reading.


Solitaire by Alice Oseman  

Tori Spring is a modern-day female Holden Caulfield. Solitaire is a genius work of young adult fiction. It is both literary and accessible. It's a book that I think hasn't been given enough marketing buzz, and so I will be personally recommending it to anyone who likes a good angsty teen drama with a whip-smart, self-deprecating protagonist.  


Adult non-fiction:

Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates
A book that will continue conversations started by All American Boys by looking further into the depths of white privilege and how black bodies are treated in this country. A book every white American should read and one that will make you uncomfortable. That's supposed to happen. And while you wade around in your discomfort, just know that many others continue to drown.


Big Magic: Creative Living Beyond Fear by Elizabeth Gilbert 

Big Magic is a revelation. It is a paradigm shift in how we should approach creativity. Elizabeth Gilbert posits that we need to throw away the trope of the tormented artist in favor of lightness, curiosity and play in our creative work. She has definitely inspired me in how I will approach my writing life from this moment forward. 

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Favorite Food Memories of 2013

So far I've done a list of my favorite books and favorite travel memories of 2013. My final list is favorite food memories of 2013.


1. The Salty Pimp
I walked up to the counter and said, "I'll have two salty pimps, please." Well that felt weird and wrong coming out of my mouth. Despite the wrongness of the words, there's absolutely nothing wrong about this vanilla soft serve cone drizzled with dulce de leche, sprinkled with sea salt and then dipped in chocolate. I'll never forget that first bite. It was an explosion of flavor going off in my mouth. You can find this explosive, awkwardly-named cone at Big Gay Ice Cream in New York City.


2. Eating at Rick Bayless's restaurants three times in 36 hours
When my husband and I went to Chicago on a weekend in December with some friends, we all fully admitted that we were on a food mission: to eat at Rick Bayless's restaurants as many times as possible. The only meal we didn't eat there was breakfast on Sunday but that's only because we couldn't -- they're not open on Sunday.


3. Chicken and Waffles
How have I lived over thirty years and only just this year tried chicken and waffles? Now it's one of my favorite flavor combinations. Chicken and waffles is WAY better than chicken and mashed potatoes. The combo of salty and sweet flavors and light and heavy textures is just perfection on a plate. My first experience with this soul food staple was at Amy Ruth's in Harlem. Since I can't take a trip to Harlem every time I feel the urge, it's now my favorite thing to order for breakfast/brunch at Zingerman's Roadhouse in Ann Arbor.


4. Indian food in Iceland?
Who would have ever guessed that some of the best Indian food I've ever had in my life would be in Iceland? It was so good I would go back to Iceland just to eat at Astur Indafjalagid (try saying that 5 times real fast).


5. Icelandic Arctic char 
Full disclosure: I hate fish. But fresh fish in Iceland? Game changer.


6. Jeni's cherry lambic sorbet
 
Jeni's Splendid Ice Creams just recently opened a shop in Chicago, so on the same trip where we ate a ridiculous amount of Rick Bayless food (see above), we also packed a cooler full of Jeni's Splendid Ice Creams to take home with us. My favorite pint wasn't ice cream at all but this tart, luscious sorbet. I am waiting for the day when Jeni's opens a shop in the Detroit/Ann Arbor area. My waistline, however, is not waiting for that day.


7. Garrett's Chicago Mix Popcorn
You can smell the caramel down the block when you're walking the streets of Chicago. And putting the cheese and caramel together is another perfect salty sweet combo. I get a giant bag of Chicago mix popcorn at Costco for a quick fix, but nothing beats the real thing.


8. Trying goat for the first time
Michael Symon's restaurant Roast in Detroit has the best happy hour in the entire metro Detroit area. You can order burgers and other bar food like rosemary fries and "Roast beast of the day" tacos for $4 a piece. With those prices I decided to get up the courage to try goat for the first time. While the actual taste and texture of the goat was somewhat bland and similar to pork, what's memorable about it for me is the fact that I tried it and didn't hate it. :)


9. Discovering that vegan baking can actually be delicious
 
 I love the idea of being vegan but putting it into practice is not so lovable. I have no willpower, what can I say? But I bought a vegan baking book this summer and tried a few recipes. I was pleasantly surprised when I made the cookies above that (a) they weren't terrible and (b) they weren't hard as a rock and barely edible -- not because they were vegan, but because I am a terrible cookie baker.  These peanut butter surprise chocolate chip cookies (the surprise is sriracha and Chinese five-spice) had a lovely, soft chew to them.


10. This chocolate bar from Mexico
My husband went on a business trip to Mexico in August and brought me back some chocolate. I don't even really like chocolate that much but I fell head over heels for this dark chocolate bar with pink peppercorns. I have been trying to find a place to buy it here in the U.S. or order it online but to no avail. I saved the packaging so the next time he goes on a business trip to Mexico, he knows what to buy me.


11. Crispy pork belly at Mani Osteria in Ann Arbor
This dish is one of their antipasti so it's only about three bites, but it's the best three bites on the entire menu. It has the crispiness and smokiness of bacon and the buttery chew of a perfectly cooked steak. It's superbacon is what it is.


What were your favorite food memories of 2013?

See my favorite food memories of 2012.

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Favorite travel memories of 2013

Last year was the first year I did a recap of my favorite travel memories so I thought I would continue with that tradition this year. I feel so blessed that I have been able to see so much of the world. My husband and I don't really buy each other Christmas gifts. We always prefer to save that money and use it to have experiences rather than things. These are my favorite experiences of 2013.

1. Virtually no crowds greeted us in Iceland
 As much as I love to travel and see popular tourist attractions, I also hate crowds. Iceland gave us the best of both worlds. We were able to see popular travel destinations, but since so few people travel to this remote country, crowds were virtually nonexistent. I talk more about the lack of crowds in my Thoughts from Places video.


2. The Blue Lagoon
By far Iceland's most touristed destination, I worried that it would be little more than a tourist trap and nothing else. Turns out it was a wonderful experience. Despite being in Iceland near the summer solstice, it was unseasonably cold while we were there and relaxing in the milky blue geothermal waters was the warmest I felt the entire seven days were were in Iceland.


3. ALA and the Newbery/Caldecott Banquet in Chicago
Attending the Newbery/Caldecott banquet was a highlight of my life. Not THE highlight of my life,  but definitely A highlight. And being able to celebrate that evening with so many Nerdy Book Club friends made it even more special. 


4. The Comedy Museum AKA Art Institute of Chicago
My husband and I traveled to New York and Chicago with our friends from Germany this summer. I am here to tell you we never had so much fun at an art museum as we did at the Art Institute of Chicago, which our friend Matthias nicknamed The Comedy Museum due to the ridiculousness of some of the art we saw in the modern art wing. One of our favorites was the one above where my husband and Matthias are saying, "Wo ist das Bild?" (Where is the picture?)


5. NCTE/ALAN in Boston 
OK, so I didn't actually get to see any of Boston while I was at NCTE, but I did get to meet and hang out with some iconic authors: Judy Blume, Jack Gantos, and Laurie Halse Anderson just to name a few. Plus this is the first year I attended convention as a staff member AND was able to present at a session with some amazing teachers and one of my favorite authors (pictured above: Jen Vincent, Kellee Moye, Audrey Vernick, and me). So yeah, this was definitely a favorite travel memory. 


6. Getting to see Van Gogh's Starry Night for the first time 
Back in 2004 when my husband and I lived in Germany, we took a trip to Amsterdam. I thought for sure my favorite painting, Starry Night would be at The Van Gogh Musem since it's his most famous painting. Turns out it wasn't. And that was the beginning of an almost ten-year-long journey to see this painting that finally culminated this summer in New York.


7. 9/11 Memorial
It was really difficult to keep it together during my time exploring the 9/11 Memorial. I think I was in a perpetual state of tears the entire time. The emotion just overwhelms you.


8. Social media allowing for spontaneous meet ups with old friends
One of my favorite things about social media is that it allows me to meet new people and also keep in touch with my friends that I otherwise would have lost touch with. Because I was posting on Facebook and Twitter during our trip to NYC, I was able to meet up with two old friends that I wouldn't have been able to otherwise. They saw my FB and Twitter posts and immediately asked if we could get together. I hadn't seen my friend Jerry since high school and it was so wonderful to be able to spend the afternoon with him and his fiance. It's crazy to see how far we both have come since our high school days. :)


9. Big House Tour - AKA Michigan Stadium

OK, so maybe this isn't technically travel since we live 15 minutes from the Big House, but it's something we did with our friends from Germany so we're going to count it as a travel memory. Germans don't really care that much for American football so this tour was completely selfish on my husband's part, but he at least wanted to take them somewhere cool and to him, cool equated to the biggest capacity sports stadium in the country.


10. Skating in Millennium Park
Last December my husband and I took an impromptu trip to Chicago with some friends to visit the German Christmas market. This year we decided to make it a tradition and go again. This time my friend Kirsten and I remembered to bring our ice skates and we were rewarded with a free jaunt around the Millennium Park ice rink. Heck, even the rink at Campus Martius in Detroit makes you pay to skate even if you bring your own. We were thrilled to discover that all we had to do in Chicago was strap on our skates and glide on by the endless line of people.


What were your favorite travel memories of 2013?