BookNut’s 20th Anniversary: The First Posts

I realized this past week that I’ve been blogging here at The Book Nut for 20 years come this November. I haven’t celebrated my blogiversary in years, and honestly I don’t know if anyone even reads blogs anymore, but I think 20 is something to celebrate.

I’m not entirely sure what I want to do to celebrate, but I thought it’d be interesting to go back and look at my first few posts and see what I thought about them, 20 years on.

My first post after the introductory post, was My 10 Most Favorite Youth Fiction Books. First thing thing I realize now is that I didn’t know the terms (or probably the difference between) Middle Grade and Young Adult. Making these lists now, I’d have three: one for MG, one for YA, and one for Graphic Novels (something else I didn’t read 20 years ago).

Let’s look at the books I put on there.
Solid picks, and they’d probably still make an all-time best of post:
The Blue Sword and Hero and the Crown, Robin McKinley
Bridge to Terabithia, Katherine Paterson
The Dark is Rising Series, Susan Cooper
The Giver, Lois Lowry

The most interesting thing about this is, aside from Hero and the Crown, these are all arguably Middle Grade. Also: they have all stood up to rereading over the years, and are still excellent books/series.

Ones that are good, but probably not my absolute favorites anymore:
The Goose Girl
, Shannon Hale – I still adore Shannon Hale, but I think she’s written better books than her first one.
Inkheart, Cornelia Funke – I have fond memories of this one, and I liked the movie (because I pretty much love anything with Brendan Frasier in it), but I haven’t read it in years, so I don’t know if it holds up. I should do a re-read and find out.
The BFG, Roald Dahl – I don’t know what I was thinking: Matilda is a much better book.
Ella Enchanted, Gail Carson Levine – a solid pick, but again: I haven’t read it in years, so I don’t know how it would hold up.

The one I can’t even remember:
Crispin, Avi – It must have bee something I had just finished.

The problematic entry:
The Harry Potter Series, J.K. Rowling – problematic because of the person Rowling has become, but also: I’m not sure these are excellent bastians of children’s literature, anymore. Genre-chaning, sure. Changed publishing, yes. But, excellent books? I’m not sure.

My next list was My 10 Most Favorite Fiction Books. What surprises me most about the list, though, is how balanced it is. Classics! Speculative! Literary Fiction! I was either trying harder to read “good” books and less willing to embrace my love of genre, or I was trying to come up with a balanced list. I wonder if I would do the same if I were doing one of these now. (probably not: I’d be more likely to split it into separate lists.) This list (and the net one tow) is more a portrait of who I was as a person (or who I was trying to be), which is never a bad thing.

Books that would still make a best-of list:
Persuasion, Jane Austen – Still one of Austen’s best, and my personal favorite of hers. (Still has the best love letter ever written.)
I Capture the Castle, Dodie Smith – I don’t know if I’ve reread it in a while, but I do remember really loving it, and I still think it’s an excellent book with one of the best first lines.

Good books, but not my favorite anymore:
A Canticle for Leibowiz, Walter Miller Jr. – An excellent speclative fiction/religious book, and one that I’ve reread, but not one that I would call a favorite anymore.
My Name is Asher Lev, Chaim Potok – Same here. I think it’s an excellent book, but my tastes have changed.
The Lord of the Rings, JRR Tolkien – I’m not surprised this was on my list. I did read it, did enjoy it, love the movies, but I’m not sure my fantasy tates run in this direction anymore. Still a classic, though.
To Say Nothing of the Dog and Doomsday Book, Connie Willis – To be honest, while I remember liking these two, I have no other memory. Maybe it’s time for a reread.
Life of Pi, Yann Martel – I have come to feel like this one is overrated. There are better books out there.

Ones I can’t remember anything about:
So Big, Edna Ferber
The Shepherd of the Hills, Harold Bell Wright

The problematic one:
Speaker for the Dead, Orson Scott Card – Problematic because of the person Card has become over the years, but honestly, I have come to think that Ender’s Game is the better book, and there are better science fiction books out there.

My last list was My 10 Most Favorite Non-Fiction books. The other day at work, we were talking about having classic sections for everything, and I remarked that it’s hard to have classic non-fiction, because information gets outdated so rapidly. Someone joked “how about calling it ‘outdated non-fiction’ then?” I kind of feel that way about putting together an all-time best-of non-fiction (so many hyphens!) list: the information in the books is probably outdated. I think this list is more a reflection of the types of non-fiction I like to read: memoirs, light pop history, foody books, some light science/self help books, travel books, and books about books. While the particular books have changed, my tastes in non-fiction hasn’t, really.

Solid picks, though I’m not sure how well they hold up:
Reading Lolita in Tehran, Azar Nafisi
Seabiscuit, Laura Hillenbrand
Garlic and Sapphires, Ruth Reichl
America’s Women, Gail Collins
Eats, Shoots & Leaves: A No-Tolerance Guide to Punctuation, Lynne Truss

I have no memory of reading any of these:
The Beggar King and the Secret of Happiness, Joel ben Izzy
The Price of Motherhood: Why The Most Important Job is Still the Least Valued, Ann Critteneden
A Trip to the Beach, Melinda and Robert Blanchard
Tales of a Female Nomad, Rita Golden Gelman
Emotional Intelligence, Daniel Goleman

It’s been an interseting trip down memory lane! I’ll probably come up wtih something else to highlight next month.

3 thoughts on “BookNut’s 20th Anniversary: The First Posts

  1. Lu's avatar Lu says:

    Interesting how our tastes change. Hero and the Crown and The Blue Sword are still on my best list. I plan on rereading The Giver series this year.

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  2. Helen Murdoch's avatar Helen Murdoch says:

    20 years of blogging is impressive, congratulations!

    It’s always interesting to go back and see how we ranked books, which one actually ended up sticking with us, etc. It’s fun to have a record of what we’ve read, lived, and how we felt about books.

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  3. I almost pulled all but two of Card’s book because of the reason you mentioned, but I had a student who was enjoying them, so I put them back. It interesting to see how our tastes change over the years, and so much fun to look back at your early posts! I don’t know when I came across your blog, but it must have been fairly early on. Still have fond memories of KidLitCon!

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