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In 2018 I read 90 books, 23 nonfiction and 67 fiction. I'd had a soft goal of getting to 100 total, but considering the wrench grad school threw into my reading life I'm perfectly content with 90.

  1. Days Without End, Sebastian Barry
  2. Oscar Wilde: The Unrepentant Years, Nicholas Frankel
  3. These Possible Lives, Fleur Jaeggy
  4. Ficciones, Jorge Luis Borges
  5. Guilty Thing: A Life of Thomas De Quincey, Frances Wilson
  6. Alias Grace, Margaret Atwood
  7. The Ruin of a Rake, Cat Sebastian
  8. The Gentleman’s Guide to Vice and Virtue, Mackenzi Lee
  9. Belle: The Slave Daughter and the Lord Chief Justice, Paula Byrne
  10. Measure for Measure, Shakespeare*
  11. Inventing the Victorians, Matthew Sweet
  12. Hamlet, Shakespeare*
  13. The Fortunes of Francis Barber: The True Story of the Jamaican Slave Who Became Samuel Johnson’s Heir, Michael Bundock
  14. At Home: A Short History of Private Life, Bill Bryson
  15. Margaret the First, Danielle Dutton
  16. Lord John and the Private Matter, Diana Gabaldon
  17. Lord John and the Brotherhood of the Blade, Diana Gabaldon
  18. Lord John and the Hand of Devils, Diana Gabaldon
  19. The Scottish Prisoner, Diana Gabaldon
  20. Outlander, Diana Gabaldon
  21. Wildethorn, Jane Eaglund
  22. Cry Liberty: The Great Stono River Slave Rebellion of 1739, Peter Hoffer
  23. If We Were Villains, M.L. Rio
  24. An Echo in the Bone, Diana Gabaldon
  25. American Revolutions: A Continental History 1750-1804, Alan Taylor
  26. His Majesty’s Dragon, Naomi Novik
  27. Written in My Own Heart’s Blood, Diana Gabaldon
  28. Felicity series, Valerie Tripp*
  29. The Lawrence Browne Affair, Cat Sebastian
  30. Ties That Bound: Founding First Ladies and Slaves, Marie Jenkins Schwartz
  31. The Gentleman’s House in the British Atlantic World 1680-1780, Stephen Hague
  32. England’s Wealthiest Son: William Beckford, Boyd Alexander
  33. Patience & Sarah, Isabel Miller
  34. A Gentleman’s Position, K.J. Charles
  35. Wolf Hall, Hilary Mantel
  36. Whose Body?, Dorothy L. Sayers
  37. A Seditious Affair, K.J. Charles
  38. Summit Avenue, Mary Sharratt
  39. The Heart’s Invisible Furies, John Boyne
  40. Earthly Joys, Philippa Gregory
  41. Songs of Innocence and of Experience, William Blake
  42. The Absolutist, John Boyne
  43. Throne of Jade, Naomi Novik
  44. Tell the Wolves I’m Home, Carol Rifka Brunt
  45. A Fashionable Indulgence, K.J. Charles
  46. Life Mask, Emma Donoghue
  47. Silhouette of a Sparrow, Molly Beth Griffin
  48. Circe, Madeline Miller
  49. The Song of Achilles, Madeline Miller
  50. In Other Lands, Sarah Rees Brennan
  51. Pembroke Park, Michelle Martin
  52. Barracoon: The Story of the Last “Black Cargo,” Zora Neale Hurston
  53. Denmark Vesey’s Garden: Slavery and Memory in the Cradle of the Confederacy, Ethan J. Kytle and Blain Roberts
  54. Black Powder War, Naomi Novik
  55. Who Is Very Kelly?, Rosalie Knecht
  56. See What Can Be Done: Essays, Criticism, and Commentary, Lorrie Moore
  57. The Sparsholt Affair, Alan Hollinghurst
  58. The Signature of All Things, Elizabeth Gilbert
  59. The World Only Spins Forward: The Ascent of Angels in America, Isaac Butler and Dan Kois
  60. Quatrefoil, James Barr
  61. Think of England, K.J. Charles
  62. Olivia, Dorothy Strachey
  63. The Invention of Love, Tom Stoppard
  64. The Raven Boys, Maggie Stiefvater
  65. The Dream Thieves, Maggie Stiefvater
  66. Blue Lily, Lily Blue, Maggie Stiefvater
  67. Weapons of the Weak: Everyday Forms of Peasant Resistance, James C. Scott
  68. Incognita, William Congreve
  69. Oroonoko, Aphra Behn
  70. Arcadia, Tom Stoppard*
  71. Provoked, Joanna Chambers
  72. Assassination Vacation, Sarah Vowell
  73. Cahokia: Ancient America’s Great City on the Mississippi, Timothy R. Pauketat
  74. The Raven King, Maggie Stiefvater
  75. Unfit to Print, K.J. Charles
  76. The Work of Writing: Literature and Social Change in Britain 1700-1830, Clifford Siskin
  77. Biography of a Tenement House in New York City: An Architectural History of 97 Orchard Street, Andrew S. Dolkart
  78. Beguiled, Joanna Chambers
  79. Creating Colonial Williamsburg: The Restoration of Virginia’s Eighteenth-Century Capital, Anders Greenspan
  80. Band Sinister, K.J. Charles
  81. Anarchist’s Guide to Historic House Museums, Franklin D. Vagnone and Deborah E. Ryan
  82. Death by Silver, Melissa Scott and Amy Griswold
  83. Her Body and Other Parties, Carmen Maria Machado
  84. Affinity, Sarah Waters
  85. R E D, Chase Berggrun
  86. Clouds of Witness, Dorothy L. Sayers
  87. Death at the Dionysus Club, Melissa Scott and Amy Griswold
  88. Confessions of the Fox, Jordy Rosenburg
  89. Golden Hill, Francis Spufford*
  90. The Mermaid and Mrs. Hancock, Imogen Hermes Gowar
Asterisks indicate rereads; if I reread something within the year it's nonetheless listed only once. (Is this to prevent myself embarrassment re: rereads of Seditious Affair? YOU DECIDE.)

Top 5 Nonfiction:

1. The World Only Spins Forward, Isaac Butler and Dan Kois. I have many and extraordinarily strong feelings about Angels in America, so I was predisposed to love this, but on top of that, the interviews included are wide-ranging and wonderful, and they're put together excellently to create a compelling narrative. This is oral history done right, about a play which will always have an outsized place in my heart.
2. American Revolutions, Alan Taylor. I picked this up because it happened to be on the shelf at my library, but I ended up really liking it. It attempts to give a balanced view of the Revolution, both in terms of geography (east/west, north/south) and in terms of the various actors on each side: the British aren't particularly villainized, and the Patriots not lionized in turn. It also emphasizes the lead-up to the war and the huge role that the French and Indian/Seven Years War played in setting up the Revolution, which I always appreciate. I highly recommend it as an overview of the war and its surrounding contexts.
3. Oscar Wilde: The Unrepentant Years, Nicholas Frankel. Well-written and tightly focused, this provides a wonderful look at the last part of Wilde's life, post-prison. Frankel has no particular animus against anyone involved in the story, which is refreshing among Wilde biographers, and he gives a complicated, sad, but ultimately not depressing look at Wilde's final years.
4. Denmark Vesey’s Garden, Ethan J. Kytle and Blain Roberts. Looks at the history of Civil War monuments in Charleston, and by doing so gives a historical way in to the monuments debate that's been ongoing for several years now. The history is fascinating, and by the end of the last section the title becomes especially haunting and thought-provoking.
5. Assassination Vacation, Sarah Vowell. I don't know how I hadn't read this before, but it's extremely enjoyable. Vowell walks the fine line of becoming too chatty and not substantive enough for even pop history, which this very much is, but her musings on especially the emotional weight of historical places and things provides grounding for the book and makes it worth thinking about as well as fun.

Top 5 Series:

I read a ton of great series this year, so I'm separating them out in their own list; the fiction list below is only books which aren't connected to a larger series.

1. The Lord John series, Diana Gabaldon. I rec'd this series here; in short, eighteenth-century mysteries that feature a gay man navigating his life. I love it dearly.
2. A Society of Gentlemen series, K.J. Charles. I read these months ago and haven't managed to shake my obsessions with them; they're romance novels that feature complex emotional and physical relationships between three (four if you count the prequel novella) sets of men in Regency England. The characters and relationships are well-drawn and fascinating; my favorite, as likely anyone reading this already knows, is the second, A Seditious Affair, but I do love them all.
3. The Lynes and Mathey series, Melissa Scott and Amy Griswold. This one is paranormal, which I tend to avoid, but it's wonderful: the two eponymous men investigate paranormal mysteries in Victorian London and navigate their own relationship. Delightful, particularly the second book.
4. The Temeraire series, Naomi Novik. DELIGHTFUL. The Napoleonic War but with dragons; if that doesn't sell you on them, I'm not sure what else I can say that will. But they're wonderfully done, the relationship between the two main characters (a captain and his dragon) funny and touching, which lots of fun alternate-historical details. I've only read the first three, and I'm very much looking forward to continuing on with the series.
5. The Lord Peter Wimsey series, Dorothy L. Sayers. This is last on the list only because I actually didn't start it in 2018, only continued reading; I read all the Harriet Vane books last year and fell completely in love, and then started at the actually beginning of the series this year. I do think they suffer for being Harriet-less, but I loved Whose Body? especially, with all its post-WWI details and its look at Peter's shell shock.

Top 5 Fiction:

1. Life Mask, Emma Donoghue. I rec'd this book here; in short, eighteenth-century lesbians, historical rpf, and wonderful writing. I highly recommend it.
2. The Signature of All Things, Elizabeth Gilbert. Utterly wonderful; it traces the life of a woman throughout the nineteenth century, as she strives to learn and study and find love and sexual satisfaction. There is something exquisite about this book, and how it captures feelings of longing and love (of people; of things; of places); the writing and overall effect is delicate but sure. I'm still thinking about it, months later, and I very much recommend it.
3. Affinity, Sarah Waters. Absolutely incredible. It traces a wealthy woman's growing obsession with an imprisoned woman she begins visiting as a charitable act; it's clearly but subtly and complicatedly gay, and the emotional intensity is gripping and excellently done.
4. Olivia, Dorothy Strachey. This is such an utter gem of a book. Written in the 1940s and set in the late 1800s, it's about a student at a girls' boarding school who falls in love with her female professor. It's short, but it felt almost (Charlotte) Brontë-esque to me--the boarding school, the writing style, all felt very familiar to me, which made the fairly overt queerness all the more intriguing and wonderful.
5. I told myself I wouldn't include rereads on this list, but I have to mention that some of the books I enjoyed most this year were rereads--Golden Hill, especially, which I'm working on a bigger post about, as my feelings cannot be contained; Arcadia never fails to blow me away utterly, and I enjoyed it more this time around than I ever had before; Hamlet and Measure for Measure were my Shakespeare rereads this year, and they're some of my favorites (Hamlet especially is a text I can sink into and never resurface; my love of Measure is unsurprisingly more complicated, but when it's good it's so good).
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