Plugged - Eoin Colfer (Best-Selling author of Artemis Fowl, this is supposedly his venture into the realm of Carl Hiaasen. Not a very good first step.)
Behind the Scenes at the Museum - Kate Atkinson (a life from birth to death, but with an ominicent voice that knew and saw more than the narrator. An odd and disconcerting approach. Okay, but not that good)
Galileo's Dream - Kim Stanley Robinson (Fascinating book and subject and realization. Future scientists trying to manipulate Galileo's interactions/reactions with the Church.)
The Discovery of France - Graham Robb (An acquired taste is needed. I've got it, as I'm fascinated by the factors that resulted in modern France. I learned a lot. This is the book that led to his amazing tour de force, The Parisians.)
The Hare with Amber Eyes - Edmund DuWaal (Highly recommended. DuWaal's family history as reconstructed around a collection of Japanese netsuke.)
Ivory and Horn - Charles de Lint (Short stories. Not usually my favorite story form, but I enjoyed this a lot. Of course, I like de Lint's work. Urban Fantasy)
Shadow of the Wind - Carlos Ruiz Zafon (From the Spanish. A mystery novel about books. How could I not like it? Well, I did. In fact I loved it. Well-written and suspenseful tale about someone trying to eradicate ALL the works of an author by burning them.)
Power & Myth - Joseph Campbell and Bill Moyers (Good, but I think it works better as video. This transcription may contain the unedited interviews, but much relies on expressions and tone of voice to carry the full impact.)
Headhunters - Joe Nesbo (without the slash through last "o". Okay. Suspense/Mystery novel about a guy who goes from being a headhunter for a hiring agency to suddenly sparring with a highly trained killer-executive out to kill him. Highly implausible, but an okay read.)
Thunderstruck - Erik Larson (The true story of murderer tied in with the historical development of Marconi's wireless. Told in parallel. Good read.) Also finished his In The Garden of Beasts which I also enjoyed.
The Wise Man's Fears - Patrick Rothfuss (Sequel to The Name of the Wind. Excellent.)
REAMDE - Neal Stephenson (1000+ pages. You gotta like how he writes to tackle this. I was VERY leery after his previous, Anathem, but this is his redemption. Fantastic. Read it TWICE and enjoyed it even more the second time.)
Also reread - The Name of the Wind - Patrick Rothfuss
Tried some audio Agatha Christie that I found for pennies in Paris: One Two Buckle My Shoe and Murder in the Mews. Christie simply doesn't hold up after all these years. At least not with these Hercule Poirot tales.
The Complaints and The Impossible Dead - Ian Rankin (His new series is promising. So far so good. Fox has many of the personality traits of Rebus, but is sufficiently unique to maybe carry a series. Rankin needs to bring the focus back to The Complaints and not let Fox just intrude, Rebus-like, into the nearest murder case.)
The Fifth Witness and The Drop - Michael Connelly (If you like police mysteries, Connelly can do no wrong in my estimation. I eagerly devour his new offerings.)
Steve Jobs - Walter Isaacson (Stunning and hard to swallow at the same time. He comes off as an asshole in his relationships, yet everyone respected him and many loved him. You're left to make up your own mind - which is a powerful accomplishment for a biographer. Recommended.)
The Keeper of Lost Causes - Jussi Adler-Olsen (supposed to be Denmark's answer to Stieg Larsson, but I was under-impressed. I figured out the mystery the minute the clue was dropped and didn't appreciate the abrupt manner in which the detective suddenly (almost) figured it out. Too sloppy.)
I Still Dream of You - Fanny Flagg (light, silly, easy read, but not memorable. Flagg is also an acquired taste and I'm not sure that I've got it.)
probably a couple I missed, but this pretty much catches me up to the present. Currently, I'm reading Cleopatra.
Peace, Jim (|:{>