I actually didn't get a lot of reading done this year.
Probably my most satisfying reading accomplishment of the year was finishing off Eiji Yoshikawa's Musashi in June. I had started it the summer before, but it got set aside for some reason. I picked it back up and feverishly read through the rest of the book. It's excellent. I'm going to have to go back to Taiko next, which is in a similar half-finished state...
I also read Last Chance to See by Douglas Adams, which served as a nice reminder of what a brilliant writer he is, even when he's operating outside his usual genre.
In July, I read the first volume of Luo Guanzhong's Three Kingdoms in a new translation by Yu Sumei. Three Kingdoms is one of my favourite books, but this edition simply didn't cut it for me. There are some mixed-up names and other little editorial oddities throughout. Moss Roberts is still number one in my books. Either way, it's always nice to see a fresh approach and have an excuse to re-read an old favourite.
In August, a group of friends had a table reading of Yasmina Reza's God of Carnage. We had more readers than characters, so we swapped characters half-way through to give everyone a chance. It was a lot of fun! Even the introverts in our group came out of their shells a little bit to get involved in the acting.
As a part of my vacation to Germany in December, I got to spend the better part of two 8-hour flights reading Haruki Murakami's 1Q84. It was one hell of a weird book. I'm still processing. I'm sure I could say something coherent about it if pressed... but I'm not being pressed.
Finally, over Christmas break, I sped through a couple of my gifts to myself: Mark Dunn's Ella Minnow Pea (which had a decent concept but was disappointingly executed in something of a rote, mechanical way) and Ian McEwan's Nutshell (which was refreshing and original, and a surprisingly compelling page-turner, excepting one awkwardly tangential chapter).
I'm going to open 2017 with Patrick deWitt's Undermajordomo Minor, and I'm really excited about it. After that, it's back to the drawing board/recommendations list.
