Books Finished in 2010

In 2009 I kept a list on this blog of books that I read during the year. I ended up reading 35 books. I guess if I live to be 90 which will be 33 more years and continue to read an average of 35 books a year I can read 1,120 more books before I die.

I really like being able to see a summary of what I read. It is surprising to me how fast I forget some books without a list to look back on. So today I am starting my list of 2010 books read. By clicking on the book title you can go to my review of the book. This year I don't think I'll write a review of every book.

  1. Eden's Outcasts – The Story of Louisa May Alcott and Her Father by John Matteson
  2. Men to Match my Mountains by Irving Stone
  3. One Man's Wilderness – An Alaskan Odyssey by Sam Keith from the Journals and photographs of Richard Proenneke
  4. The Sign of the Book by John Dunning
  5. Champlain's Dream by David Hackett Fischer
  6. 9800 Savage Road by M.E, Harrigan
  7. Dark Harbor by Stuart Woods
  8. The Help by Kathryn Stockett  ** My favorite book so far this year
  9. Basin and Range by John McPhee
  10. Hothouse Orchid by Stuart Woods
  11. The Blind Side by Michael Lewis
  12. John Tyler, The Accidental President by Edward P. Crapol
  13. The Yellow-Lighted Bookshop – a memoir, a history by Lewis Busbee
  14. Viva la repartee: clever comebacks and witty retorts from history's great wits & wordsmiths by Mardy Grothe
  15. The Language Hacking Guide by Benny Lewis
  16. Blue Water Green Skipper by Stuart Woods
  17. War is Boring: Bored Stiff, Scared to Death in the World's Worst War Zones by by David Axe and Matt Bors
  18. Ordinary Heroes by Scott Turow
  19. Short Straw by Stuart Woods
  20. Santa Se Dead by Stuart Woods
  21. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larsson
  22. The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest by Stieg Larsson
  23. The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson
  24. The Longevity Prescription by Robert N. Butler M.D.
  25. Blood Orchid by Stuart Woods
  26. Suddenly Sixty by Judith Viorst
  27. Orchid Beach by Stuart Woods

Eden’s Outcasts – The Story of Louisa May Alcott and Her Father by John Matteson

Yesterday the Reno Newcomers Club Book Club discussed Eden's Outcasts – The Story of Luisa May Alcott and Her Father by John Matteson. It was an interesting and thought provoking discussion. Eden's Outcasts is a dual biography of Louisa May Alcott and her father Bronson Alcott. It was at times a slog to read especially in the first 200 pages when Mattteson was focused on Bronson Alcott. Almost everyone in the group agreed that they had to set themselves a daily allotment of pages to read and getting through the daily allotment was very difficult.

002 Bronson Alcott was not an easy man to read about.  Matteson said that

"Allcott's wedding day journal entry confirms a general truth about the nature of his awareness. More often than not, Bronson Alcott tended to live more in his ideas than in his skin"

As a result Bronson could not and did not provide for his family. I was disgusted by him. And yet apparently in his time he was a mesmerizing speaker with a lot of friends who stood by him. Perhaps he was like a television evangelist or a charismatic politician.

When Louisa was 10 years old her father moved the family to a run down house and piece of land that they named Fruitlands. There he and a few followers hoped to form a utopian society. Fruitlands was a dismal failure.  Mattesopn says "At the heart of the transcendentalist impulse was the belief that ones own conscience was sovereign" This group of eccentric individualist  "formed a bedlam of good intentions. It seemed the phrase transcendentalist community was something of an oxymoron.

If the family hadn't finally left Fruitlands and depended on the charity of others they would have starved or frozen to death.

In spite of the difficulty of reading this book I liked the book. It was fascinating and thought provoking to read about Louisa May Alcott and what she overcame. She worked as nurse in a civil war hospital and almost died. She probably did in fact eventually die from the treatment she received for Typhoid while she was at the hospital. 

Louisa was in many ways a  feminist. She supported her family, She never married and she really wanted to produce adult literature. I felt very disappointed that she was too ill and died to soon to try.

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In Eden's Outcasts Matteson refers to the brilliant Alcott biographer Madeline Stern. I haven't read her biography of Alcott but her book Old Books, Rare Friends: Two Literary Sleuths and Their Shared Passion is one of my favorites. It tells about how Stern and her friend  Leona Rostenberg started their rare book business and discovered that Louisa May Alcott wrote and published racey pot boilers in addition to her famous Little Women series. Stern's obituary in the New York Times from August of 2007 is worth reading.