1) Memories of Ice (Malazan #3) by Steven Erikson - B+
2) Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco - C (revised down from C+ after some time to think about it)
3) The Nutmeg of Consolation (Aubrey/Maturin #14) by Patrick O'Brian - A-
4) House of Chains (Malazan #4) by Steven Erikson - B+
5) The Library at Mount Char by Scott Hawkins - B-
6) The Maltese Falcon by Dashiell Hammett - A
7) The Truelove (Aubrey/Maturin #15) by Patrick O'Brian - A-
8) Midnight Tides (Malazan #5) by Steven Erikson - A-
These books are notoriously difficult and complex reads, but so far each subsequent book reads more like a traditional fantasy novel. It's hard to tell whether this is more because the writing style is getting clearer or because you're more acclimated to the world and the vocabulary. They're getting better as I go, which is tough for any series to pull off.
9) In Cold Blood by Truman Capote - B
This one had been sitting on my shelf for a few years so I decided to finally knock it out. It's a remarkable book for a lot of reasons, not least of which the biting insight into the late 1950s society. You have the Clutter family (the victims) who are the stereotypical 50s family, and then you have the criminals, who have a totally different life experience in the same time period. The fact that those 50s Ozzie and Harriet stereotypes did actually exist, BUT they were nowhere near universal or without psychological consequence as TV made them seem, hits pretty hard. The main problem I had was that some of the scenes are clearly the author's reconstruction and didn't actually happen.
10) The Republic of Thieves by Scott Lynch - B+
This is such a good series. Neither the second book nor this one lived up to the masterpiece that was book 1, but they don't have to to still be highly entertaining. I did feel like some opportunities were missed in glossing over some of the machinations of the central plot line, but overall still a positive experience.
11) A Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole - B (?)
A seriously funny book with a lot of religious and literary allusions to unpack. There's a lot of structural things going on here too. This is one of those where I genuinely enjoyed large stretches of the book, and I understand why it's a classic, but I don't have enough positive feelings to give it over a B.
12) The Bonehunters (Malazan #6) by Steven Erikson - in progress