Rather than slogging through a lake of year-end lists to find something you’re just going to put down after 30 minutes, Cult of Mac has once again waded through iTunes to compile a list of the best new movies, albums and books to come out in 2013.
Enjoy!
The Ten Best Albums of 2013:
J. Cole – Born Sinner
Pretty much everyone picked Kayne West’s Yeezus as the album of the year, and while I really enjoyed the different direction and sounds Ye slayed us with, I was more impressed with J. Cole’s sophomore album Born Sinner.
iTunes
Arctic Monkeys – AM

In year filled with pop megastars and divine rap albums, good, solid rock was hard to find but the Arctic Monkeys’ latest album AM provided just the right amount of distortion, power and melody with Do I Wanna Know earning more repeats listens on my Rdio list than almost any other song this year.
iTunes
Daft Punk – Random Access Memories

How many times did you listen to Random Access Memories this year? 13? 50? 112? It doesn’t matter, because every single spin of this record was a delight as Daft Punk wooed us with their beats for the best album of summer.
iTunes
HAIM – Days Are Gone

This darling sister trio from Los Angeles created their addictive sound with a combination of R&B, pop, classic rock and more, to create one of the most impressive debut albums of the year. Everything about HAIM is a labor of love. Danielle, Este and Alana won’t do anything if they don’t feel totally comfortable with presenting it, Valley girl tics, snorting laughter and all.
iTunes
Autre Ne Veut – Anxiety

iTunes
Savages – Silence Yourself

iTunes
Tegan and Sara – Heartthrob

Even the best of artists are supposed to fizzle out after their fourth or fifth album, but Tegan and Sara’s seventh effort Hearthtrob was one of their best albums in nearly 10 years. The sisters busted out new songs about regret, failed romance, solitude and self-loathing for their most adult-themed album yet that still managed to feel amazing.
iTunes
Pusha T – My Name Is My Name

If Kanye’s not making the list, we have to give a spot to one of his most visible proteges – Pusha T. After having his first solo album pushed back for years, Push’s My Name Is My Name served up some of the MC’s finest lyrical flows and combined them with more minimalist production to deliver one of the most compelling rap albums of the year.
iTunes
Vampire Weekend – Modern Vampires of the City

Vampire Weekend rose to prominence on a tsunami of hype in 2008 with their fun guitar licks and tales of college romance, but Ezra Koenig and his band have matured into some of the best songwriters of our time with their phenomenal album “Modern Vampires of the City” that spins a chorus of new songs about love and loss while still being one of the funnest bands to listen to.
iTunes
Chvrches – The Bones of What You Believe

I’m almost ashamed to admit how much I listened to The Bones of What You Believe this year. Mostly because it’s like totally a hipster album, but also because I think I’ve been hypnotized by The Scottish trio’s explosive pulsating songs that are layered into some sort of neon electric masterpiece.
iTunes
Ten Best Books of 2013:
League of Denial
by Mark Fainaru-Wada and Steve Fainaru

Maybe I just watch too much SportsCenter, but I don’t recall any sports book making as much noise this year as League of Denial which sent shockwaves through the NFL with its painful stories of NFL players who have suffered football-related concussions and the repercussions of the sport.
The Goldfinch

The Goldfinch starts off with a bang – literally – as a 13-year-old New Yorker named Theo and his mother are rocked by an explosion at a New York museum. Theo survives the blast, but his mother doesn’t, leading to 800-pages detailing the aftermath of his experience over the course of a decade and a half.
The book moves us through the life of Theo as an adult, as he drifts between the drawing rooms of the rich and the dusty labyrinth of antiques in his shop. He is alienated and at the center of a narrowing, ever more dangerous circle as the novel unfolds with a healthy serving of suspense.
Bleeding Edge

The Lowland

Rather than focusing on the culture gap between Bengali immigrants and their Americanized offspring, Jhumpa Lahiri’s work for her second novel takes a turn by exploring a family that is bound together by painful tragedy and bad choices more than by love. Reactions from critics have been mixed despite Lowland’s nomination for the National Book Award, but the Lahiri’s characters are just vivid and lonely as some of her best short stories, making Lowland a must-read for 2013.
You Are Now Less Dumb

Our Newsstand editor recommended David McRaney’s second book to me earlier this year and proved to be one of the funnest and most insightful reads of 2013 thanks to McRaney’s wonderfully smart and entertaining commentary on scientific studies related to self delusion. You Are Now Less Dumb is grounded in the idea that we all believe ourselves to be objective observers of reality–except we’re not. But that’s okay, because our delusions keep us sane.
Lawrence in Arabia: War, Deceit, Imperial Folly and the Making of the Modern Middle East
by Scott Anderson

It seems like not a week goes by without some news reports of violence in the Middle East, but if you want to dig into the history of the region that shaped the problems, dive into Lawrence in Arabia, a group biography that weaves the stories of legendary British officer T.E. Lawrence, who played a key role in the Arab revolt against the Ottoman Turks during World War I; German Curt Prufer, who conspired with the Ottomans; Zionist agronomist Aaron Aaronsohn, and American oil company representative William Yale.
White Girls
by Hilton Als

White Girls, Hilton Als’s first book since The Women fourteen years ago, finds one of The New Yorker’s boldest cultural critics deftly weaving together his brilliant analyses of literature, art, and music with fearless insights on race, gender, and history. The result is an extraordinary, complex portrait of “white girls,” as Als dubs them—an expansive but precise category that encompasses figures as diverse as Truman Capote and Louise Brooks, Malcolm X and Flannery O’Connor. It’s the best book you probably never heard of this year.
This Explains Everything: Deep, Beautiful, and Elegant Theories of How the World Works
by John Brockman

Fans of You Are Now Less Dumb will probably also enjoy John Brockman’s compilation of explanations on everyday occurrences. In This Explains Everything, Brockman asked experts in numerous fields and disciplines to come up with their favorite explanations for everyday occurrences. Why do we recognize patterns? Is there such a thing as positive stress? Are we genetically programmed to be in conflict with each other? Only instead of having to spend years reading research paper for the answer you’re presented with elegant answers to 150 questions for the world’s scientific minds.
Tenth of December
by George Saunders

While Jhumpa Lahiri decided to make another go at writing novels, George Saunders went with what he does best with his fourth collection of rambunctious and original short stories. Tenth of December shows why Saunders is one of the most inventive writers of his generation. The honest, accessible collection has earned nods as a National Book Award finalist and showcases the manic energy of Saunders that few writers possess.
The Good Lord Bird
by James McBride

John Brown’s disastrous raid on Harpers Ferry has already been retold by countless Civil War buffs, but you’ve never heard a retelling of the events leading up to it in as an imaginative a way as James McBride’s The Good Lord Bird.
Ten Best Movies of 2013:
The Spectacular Now

The Spectacular Now was one of the most surprising movies I saw in 2013 even though the plot sounds like its just another teen-angst-drama movie. The film focus on tale of Sutter Keely as he finishes off his senior year of high school and falls in love for a good girl despite his reputation as a wise-ass troublemaker. The movie starts off as a unlikely romance tale but then unfolds into a charming, insightful look at youth with snapshots of the confusion and passion as Keely deals with family drama, friends moving on, in this wonderful coming of age movie based on the book by Tim Tharp.
Dallas Buyers Club

Watching Matthew McConaughey morph from everyone’s favorite shirtless surfer bro to a serious character driven actor over the last two to three years has been quite amazing, but no film showcases McConaughey’s talent more than Dallas Buyers Club.
The Way, Way Back

Steve Carell usually plays the exact same lovable goof in every movie, which is one of the reasons why The Way Way Back is so good as we get to see him take on the role of a sleazy, condescending boyfriend in this endearing coming-of-age tale about shy 14 year-old boy named Duncan who has trouble fitting in.
Fruitvale Station

I only just got around to watching Fruitvale Station last night, but holy crap is this movie a stab in the gut. It quickly jumped into my top 10 list thanks to the performance of Michael B. Jordan in the role of Oscar Grant III, a 22-year-old Bay Area resident, who crosses paths with friends, enemies, family, and strangers on the last day of 2008.
Django Unchained

Technically, Django Unchained came out at the tail end of last year, but I don’t care. Cristoph Waltz’s performance is so perfectly hilarious he won a Golden Globe for his portrayal of Dr. King Schultz and Jamie Lee Fox is both hilarious and brutal, but the real kicker is watching the greatest movie star of our generation fill the shoes of the abhorrent slave trader Calvin Candies.
Mud

Have I mentioned how bad ass Matthew McConaughey is as an actor now? If a movie about a drug dealing cowboy with AIDS isn’t your thing, check out McConaughey’s other incredible film Mud, about two young boys who encounter a fugitive and form a pact to help him evade the bounty hunters on his trail and to reunite him with his true love.
Rush

Formula One has never ever peaked my interest during my past 28 years of existence until Thor himself got behind the wheel. Rush is a re-creation of the merciless 1970s rivalry between Formula One rivals James Hunt and Niki Lauda. Hemsworth fans will undoubtedly fall in love with his portrayal of Hunt, but the most intriguing character in the movie is actually the calculated, obsessive little rat, Niki Lauda.
Pacific Rim

2013 was packed with big budget action movies featuring huge stars and even bigger comic book characters, but my favorite action movie of the year was Pacific Rim. The film doesn’t have much to offer in regards to amazing acting performances – although Idris Elba and Charlie Day give memorable efforts – but it does boast a shit ton of incredible fight scenes between the colossal Yager machines and nasty Kaiju monsters. It’s absolutely ridiculous but you won’t be able to take your eyes away from the visual spectacle of robots and godzilla-like monsters destroying the largest cities in the world without breaking a sweat.
The World’s End

The world was supposed to end in 2012 but instead we were served two great apocalyptic comedies this year with This Is The End and Simon Pegg’s The World’s End. Both films feature a great cast of supporting actors crawling through the end of humankind while all-too-ready to dispense some of the best cracks of the year, but I have to give the nod to The World’s End as the funniest movie of the year thanks to the creative ways morphs from a character character analysis of guys who peaked in high school and are broken people in adulthood, before robots aliens suddenely attack and all hell breaks loose.
Don Jon

Joseph Gordon-Levitt has risen up as one the hottest young actors around thanks to a string of lead roles in indie film over the past few years, but in 2013 JGL decided to get behind the camera in his first directing role for the hit film Don Jon which he also wrote.
Yes, there’s pulchritude aplenty throughout the film, but rather than throwing sex on the big screen for the sake of sex, Jon and Barbara struggles against a media culture full of false fantasies provides a compelling and honest reflection we all can relate to.