1. Michael Chabon's The Yiddish Policemen's Union: 4/5. I liked it a lot, enough that I'm going to read more by Cabon, but I think my unfamiliarity with Jewish religion and culture left me not getting a lot of the humor.
2. Cervantes' Don Quixote: 4/5, for what I've read so far of what I've read so far.
3. Jeff VanderMeer's Cities of Saints and Madmen: 4.5/5. Excellent world building and wonderfully strange and dark stories, though some of the latter material in this short story collection grew tiresome.
4. Frank's Alas, Babylon: 4.5/5. A few minor gripes kept this from getting a perfect rating.
5. Dante's Inferno: 5/5. Loved it. Can't say I understood all of it, though I didn't want to at this point. Just read it to enjoy it. I really liked the Hollanders' translation, and the notes were very good and thorough, though I skimmed a lot of them. Looking forward to the rest of Dante's Comedia.
6. Tad Williams' War of the Flowers. 3/5. (read my super-exciting review here!)
7. Arthur Koestler's Darkness at Noon: 2.5/5. I feel like I'm missing something, here. I tried reading this a couple years ago and quit halfway through. I read the whole thing this time, and it was just to slow and dreary. It is so highly praised, it seems like I failed to grasp the books purported greatness. Maybe I'll give it another read in a few years, see something I missed.
8. Connie Willis's Doomsday Book: 3.5/5. Not bad. The historical setting was quite well done. Unfortunately, this book suffered from a lot of repetition.
9. *Update* Upton Sinclair's The Jungle. My thoughts here.


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