Wednesday, January 2, 2013

What I read in 2012

Hello readers, I hope you all had a wonderful holiday season. Jen, Winston and I had a lovely season – one about which I will share more in another post. As it’s now 2013, and the official time for best of/looking back posts, I thought I’d share what I read in 2012, as I have in the past (with varying success). As I mentioned last year, I started tracking my reading with Goodreads, to my delight in writing this post! Here's a photo:

reading

And you can click the photo for more details about what I read this year. In brief, I read 38 books last year, which is far less than I would like to have read, but it was three books a month. I read 12,725 pages overall, and this is not counting our periodicals. The longest book I read was The Lincoln Anthology: Great Writers on His Life and Legacy from 1860 to Now edited by Harold Holzer. So, without further ado, here are the 38 books I read in 2012. Check back next week for my top 5 books from last year!




  1. Rembrandt's Eyes
    Schama, Simon
    Jan 26, 2012


  2. Makers of Modern Architecture: From Frank Lloyd Wright to Frank Gehry
    Filler, Martin
    Feb 02, 2012


  3. Louis Kahn: Essential Texts
    Kahn, Louis I.
    Feb 11, 2012


  4. Thomas Eakins: Art, Medicine, and Sexuality in Nineteenth-Century Philadelphia
    Werbel, Amy
    Feb 26, 2012


  5. Logotopia: The Library in Architecture, Art and the Imagination
    Klant, Diane
    Mar 2012


  6. The Information: A History, a Theory, a Flood
    Gleick, James
    Mar 14, 2012


  7. The American Future: A History
    Schama, Simon
    Mar 31, 2012


  8. Pure Drivel
    Martin, Steve
    Mar 31, 2012


  9. The Night Bookmobile
    Niffenegger, Audrey
    Mar 31, 2012


  10. Books: A Living History
    Lyons, Martyn
    Apr 2012


  11. The Lincoln Anthology: Great Writers on His Life and Legacy from 1860 to Now
    Holzer, Harold
    Apr 14, 2012


  12. Light in Architecture and Art : The Work of Dan Flavin
    Bell, Tiffany
    Apr 15, 2012


  13. The Art of Raising a Puppy
    Skete, Monks of New
    May 25, 2012


  14. How to Be Your Dog's Best Friend: The Classic Manual for Dog Owners
    Skete, Monks of New
    May 28, 2012


  15. The Passage of Power (The Years of Lyndon Johnson, #4)
    Caro, Robert A.
    Jun 14, 2012


  16. Hark! A Vagrant
    Beaton, Kate
    Jun 15, 2012


  17. Joan Mitchell: Lady Painter
    Albers, Patricia
    Jun 16, 2012


  18. Never Learn Anything From History
    Beaton, Kate
    Jun 19, 2012


  19. Just My Type: A Book About Fonts
    Garfield, Simon
    Jul 04, 2012


  20. Reading Comics: How Graphic Novels Work and What They Mean
    Wolk, Douglas
    Jul 18, 2012


  21. The Well-Made Book: Lectures by Daniel Berkeley Updike
    Updike, Daniel Berkeley
    Jul 19, 2012


  22. Floating Worlds: The Letters of Edward Gorey & Peter F. Neumeyer
    Gorey, Edward
    Jul 21, 2012


  23. Horoscopes for the Dead
    Collins, Billy
    Jul 24, 2012


  24. Call for the Dead (George Smiley, #1)
    Carré, John le
    Aug 03, 2012


  25. A Murder of Quality (George Smiley, #2)
    Carré, John le
    Aug 06, 2012


  26. The Spy Who Came In from the Cold (George Smiley #3)
    Carré, John le
    Aug 09, 2012


  27. The Looking Glass War (George Smiley, #4)
    Carré, John le
    Aug 20, 2012


  28. London: A Social History
    Porter, Roy
    Aug 20, 2012


  29. Mellon: An American Life
    Cannadine, David
    Sep 19, 2012


  30. A Wilderness of Error: The Trials of Jeffrey MacDonald
    Morris, Errol
    Sep 24, 2012


  31. Through the Children's Gate: A Home in New York
    Gopnik, Adam
    Sep 26, 2012


  32. Thomas Eakins
    Goodrich, Lloyd
    Oct 28, 2012


  33. Casino Royale (James Bond, #1)
    Fleming, Ian
    Nov 09, 2012


  34. Live and Let Die (James Bond, #2)
    Fleming, Ian
    Nov 20, 2012


  35. Moonraker (James Bond, #3)
    Fleming, Ian
    Nov 23, 2012


  36. Wolf Hall (Wolf Hall, #1)
    Mantel, Hilary
    Dec 06, 2012


  37. Zeitoun
    Eggers, Dave
    Dec 09, 2012


  38. The American Leonardo: A Tale of Obsession, Art and Money
    Brewer, John
    Dec 20, 2012

Friday, November 2, 2012

We Bought Nooks!?

You all probably have an impression that I am a bit of a luddite when it comes to reading. I don’t think this would be an unfair or inaccurate assessment, but perhaps it’s not entirely true anymore. For our anniversary, Jen and I got Nooks.

Friday, September 7, 2012

Week With Winston

This has been a lovely week for us here - I have had the week off from work, and have spent the workweek at home, chauffeuring Jen about, and spending some quality time with Winston. This time with him has been lovely, and there are a few things after spending so much time with him I want to share.

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Commute Podcasts

Jen, Winston, and I all live in Fayetteville in the house I imagine you all have read about. Fayetteville is a great town – it’s a college town, and has the feel that we really like. People are friendly and have a different mindset than that of other towns in northwest Arkansas. The downside of this is that I have to commute into work. Now, if this were a nice commute (think light rail/subway) I don’t think I would complain too much. But this being the south with an intense aversion to almost all forms of public transit, I must drive to work.

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Four Months Later...

Hi readers,

If you've found your way back here after our four month hiatus here at the files, welcome back. If you're a new reader, I am glad you are here. In sitting down to write this post, I see it has been far too long since my last post. I thought perhaps I owe it to you all to fill you in on some of the happenings around here at the files...

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Reading in our Home

One of the joys of our new home is reading. I’ve read two lengthy nonfiction books since we moved in - and that is with the work we have done to get everything in the house usable and accessible. Just about the time we were moving in, I heard a piece on Fresh Air on NPR about habits and how we form them. According to the author, the times when we can form new habits are times of major change - birth of a child, or moving. With this in mind, I have been making a special effort to create a reading habit in our new home.

Friday, March 9, 2012

Long Form and the Tablet

By my count, it has been a bit over a month since posting here at The Dean Files, and it's nice to be back. My hiatus was prompted by Jen and I buying and moving into our first home in Fayetteville, Arkansas. I know Jen will want to tell you all about that, but here's a photo from a couple of weeks ago of our new living room:



On my commute into work today, I was listening to a story about The New Republic on Morning Edition. Chris Hughes, one of the founders of Facebook purchased that nearly century-old magazine, and hopes to use it to re inspire reading long-form writing and journalism. A couple of things piqued my interest that he mentioned. Hughes seems to think that there is a real lack of that kind of reporting out there, and that The New Republic will be one of a few in a vastly under served market. Also, that tablet computers are the best new way to consume long-form writing.

His implication that his newly purchased magazine will fill a void of long-form, insightful writing and journalism just does not hold water. I subscribe to two paragons of this genre - The New Yorker, and The New York Review of Books. It's all I can do to keep up with these two, but I am tempted by the wiles of Mother Jones, The Atlantic, and Harper's about every three months. Those are five magazines that regularly publish long-form works that I can name off the top of my head, and I am sure there are many more out there. I am curious to see how TNR will establish itself in a niche that is already fairly full.

However, what bothered me more than Hughes' assertion that TNR will be the only publication in this niche was his statement that the tablet is uniquely well-suited to reading long-form periodical writing. It makes little difference to me what people choose to read from - a book, a Nook, an iPad, or a Kindle, but making this statement with Hughes' reasoning bothered me. This was his reasoning:

And he sees a growing ability to connect long-form journalism to digital users, thanks to tablets that allow users to "pause, linger, read and process very important ideas."


As someone who has used a tablet to read long-form journalism, I take strong objection to this argument. Indeed, in an article published this week in The New York Times, some cogent and insightful thoughts were shared on just this very topic - reading on a tablet/ereader. To quote from that article:

Can you concentrate on Flaubert when Facebook is only a swipe away, or give your true devotion to Mr. Darcy while Twitter beckons?

People who read e-books on tablets like the iPad are realizing that while a book in print or on a black-and-white Kindle is straightforward and immersive, a tablet offers a menu of distractions that can fragment the reading experience, or stop it in its tracks.


As someone who has used both - I really still prefer the print version of a magazine for long-form journalism and writing. I read the Times on my iPhone in the mornings, but for anything longer than that, I think that the print version just cannot be beat. I think my coworkers ask for my read copies of The New Yorker and The New York Review of Books for that same reason - to read in print that which (for the most part) can be accessed online or in tablet format.