Prolific Authors – Two Books

It is time once again to take a look at the authors I have read the most, dating back to high school.  This year, I’m once again on pace to set a new record for books read in a year, so I thought it would be nice to take a deeper dive into those books I’ve read through August of this year. Since our last check-in, I’ve read an additional 114 books, so there should be some movement over the past two years.  Without further ado, it’s time to take another look and see if my “favorite” authors have changed much over the years.  We begin today with the 40 authors I’ve read two times, one fewer than two years ago.

Laura Caldwell

I have no idea how I came across the work of this local author, but I must have enjoyed it enough to go back for seconds.  Unfortunately, she passed away in 2020, leaving behind a back catalog of fourteen novels and two non-fiction books.

Michael Chabon

Winner of the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay, the most recent of the two works of his I’ve read.  I have another, Wonder Boys, waiting in the to read pile, so he rise up some day.

Matthew V. Clemens

The co-author, with Max Allan Collins, of the final two chapters of the Reeder and Rogers trilogy.

Ready Player Two – Ernest Cline

Ernest Cline

The man responsible for both Ready Player One and Ready Player Two.

Bill Clinton

The former president has co-written two novels with James Patterson.

Michael Connelly

The creator of Harry Bosch makes his first appearance thanks to his Renée Ballard spin-off series.

Laura Dave

I read my second novel from her, The Night We Lost Him, earlier this year.

Felicia Day

The first author here that I’ve happened to meet in person.

Cameron Dokey

She makes the list based on two entries in the Buffy the Vampire Slayer series.

Warren Ellis

The comic writer, currently in exile after being called out for abusing women, makes the list thanks to two prose novels.

David Fisher Continue reading →

Prolific Authors – 2 Books

Way back in December of 2011 (and again every other December since), we’ve taken a look at the authors I have read the most, dating back to high school.  This year, since I’ve far surpassed my reading output of any year on record, I thought it would be nice to take a deeper dive into those books I’ve read through October. Since our last check-in, I’ve read an additional 118 books, so there could be some movement over the past two years, but it’s time to take another look and see if my “favorite” authors have changed much in that time span.  Today, we start things off with the now 41 authors I’ve read twice, an increase of six over two years ago.

Max Barry

An Australian author, I’ve enjoyed the two novels of his I’ve read, Jennifer Government and Company.

Laura Caldwell

I have no idea how I came across the work of this local author, but I must have enjoyed it enough to go back for seconds.  Unfortunately, she passed away in 2020.

Michael Chabon

Winner of the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay, the most recent of the two works of his I’ve read.  I have another, Wonder Boys, waiting in the to read pile, so he rise up some day.

Fate Of The Union – Max Allan Collins with Matthew V. Clemens

Matthew V. Clemens

The co-author, with Max Allan Collins, of the final two chapters of the Reeder and Rogers trilogy.

Ernest Cline

The man responsible for both Ready Player One and Ready Player Two.

Bill Clinton

The former president has co-written two novels with James Patterson.

Felicia Day

The first author here that I’ve happened to meet in person.

Cameron Dokey

She makes the list based on two entries in the Buffy the Vampire Slayer series.

Diane Duane

Living in Ireland, she is responsible for a Star Trek: The Next Generation book and a Spider-Man novel, of all things.

Warren Ellis

The comic writer, currently in exile after being called out for abusing women, makes the list thanks to two prose novels.

David Fisher Continue reading →

Book 44 (of 52) – Ready Player Two

Ready Player Two – Ernest Cline

Ernest Cline returns with Ready Player Two, the follow-up to his wildly successful 2011 debut.  The members of the High Five have taken control of GSS and the OASIS, but have drifted apart due their new-found fame and responsibilities, and their reactions to it.  When, following the introduction of a new way to connect to the OASIS, a new challenge appears, Parzival sets off to once again solve it.  Once he finds the first shard, however, he learns that everything is not what it seemed and his benefactor may not have been the good person he sold himself to be.  With the fate of the world hanging in the balance, Parzival and his friends have less than 12 hours to solve this latest challenge.

It took me a while to jump on the Ready Player One bandwagon, but, once I did, I thoroughly enjoyed it.  That said, I was a little worried about revisiting the world.  And, as it turns out, my worries were well justified.  This second outing was missing all of the charm of the original, making the callbacks to 80 nostalgia feel much more contrived.  For Cline’s sake, I hope this was caused by the money grab that likely inspired the sequel and not an indicator of the direction his future work will take.

2019: The Year In Books

As we wrap up 2019, it is time to take a look back at the 28 books I read over the past year, an increase of 6 books over last year.  Of those 28, 7 were non-fiction and, of the 21 novels, only 3 were tied to a TV show.  Only one of the books came out of my dwindling “to-read” drawer, 19 were e-books, and, for the first time, there was 1 audio book.  I read nearly 9,500 pages, my second highest total of all time.

Once again, a majority of the books I read this year were by authors I’ve never read before. The 15 authors that I read for the first this year were:

  • Bill Clinton
  • Charles Willeford
  • Nell Scovell
  • Ernest Cline
  • Katrin Schumann
  • Lindy West
  • Luke Jennings
  • Agatha Christie
  • W. P. Kinsella
  • Aziz Ansari
  • John Gregory Betancourt
  • Julie Gregory
  • Mindy Kaling
  • Anthony Stevens
  • Louis Strauss
  • Dean Wesley Smith
  • Kristine Kathryn Rusch
  • Nell Zink
  • Stephanie Wittels Wachs

Jeffery Deaver and Karin Slaughter were the only authors that I read multiple titles from during 2019.

5 of the books I read were released this year, while 5 of them were released last century, with the oldest first published in 1934.

Finally, the breakdown by month.  My vacation to Hawaii in February and being off in December certainly helped pad its totals a tad bit.

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Book 6 (of 52) – Ready Player One

Ready Player One – Ernest Cline

Ready Player One, the debut novel from Ernest Cline, is set in the not-so-distant future, where a long depression brought about by a combination of climate change, overpopulation, and an energy crisis has led most of the world to spend most of their time in a virtual reality simulation known as the OASIS. When the creator of the OASIS dies, he kicks off a years long hunt to inherit his fortune, and control of the virtual world. A band of kids sift through 80s pop culture to figure out the clues and stop the evil corporation IOI from taking over the OASIS and, with it, the world.

When I first heard about Ready Player One, it seemed right up my alley. But, for whatever reason, I never got around to buying it and, over time, my enthusiasm for it waned. The release of the movie last year, if anything, pushed me further away from it.  While the movie didn’t wow me, it wa better than what I expected. After a few recommendations about how the book was so much better than the movie, and a sale in the Kindle store, I finally picked it up.

I cant believe I waited this long. The story was like a roadmap through my childhood, hitting on the movies, music, and video games that I grew up on. While the movie hits most of the main beats of the book, the book does it better, with quests that, while less cinematic, are more engaging and draw you further in to this strange virtual world.  I just may have to keep a look out for any future work by Cline and hope it measures up.