Readers,
My annual list of the books I've read in the last year is in a pdf. file so that you can easily read and print it. It also appears below and in a separate page on the right. You may print it to take with you to your favorite book store or library to make selections for yourself or for holiday giving. If you wish to share it, please share the link to to this post. I'll post what I consider the best books of the year in each category throughout December.
The 2013 list has one two new categories.DC - Diet Coke and Gummi Bears (books for teens and young adults) which I've separated from the Peanut Bu.tter and Jelly (books for children) category should make it easier to find those titles. PP - Pigeon Pie (historical fiction set at least 50 years ago) should help all those historical fiction fans find great reads as well.
Hungry for Good Books? Annual Book
List, November, 2013
Find these and more at:
www.hungryforgoodbooks.blogspot.com
©Copyright
November, 2013 by Trina Hayes
Letters after each selection
designate the book as CC: Chinese Carryout (page-turners, great for plane
rides), D: Desserts (delightful indulgences), DC: Diet Coke and Gummi Bears
(books for teens and young adults), G: Gourmet (exquisite writing, requires
concentration), GPR: Grandma’s Pot Roast (books that get your attention and
stick with you), GS: Grits (evocative of the American south), PBJ: Peanut
Butter and Jelly (children’s books adults will like), Pigeon Pie (historical
fiction set at least 50 years ago), S: Sushi
with Green Tea Sorbet (satire, irony, black humor, acquired taste), SF: Soul
Food (spirituality, theology, books for your soul), SN: Super Nutrition (lots
of information, yet tasty as fresh blueberries), and T: Tapas (small bites
including short stories, novellas,
essays, and poetry). The letters BC denote books that would be good for
book clubs. The fiction section is
divided into four categories: general fiction, mysteries and thrillers,
children’s, and teen and young adult books.
* Asterisks depict outstanding
titles in each designation. The number/hash sign (#) denotes books with full
reviews on my blog.
General Fiction
*#Abrams,
David, Fobbit, A 20-year Army veteran, Abrams
used journals from his year on a Baghdad base to write a Catch-22-like tale. It’s a hilarious,
yet searing picture of an upside-down world where winning “hearts and minds”
while killing and fearing Iraqi terrorists (or are they insurgents) is a contradictory
goal that eats at the guts of those sitting safely inside a fortress. Jon Stewart fans, this one’s for you.
Everyone should read it to make sense of our increasingly strange world. G/S/SN,
BC
Akhtar, Ayad, American Dervish is set in 1980s Milwaukee where
Hayat Shah’s father ignores and disrespects his Muslim heritage. When Hayat’s
mother’s best friend moves in with the family she helps Hayat study the Quran
then falls in love with his father’s best friend, a Jew. Hayat’s jealousy leads
him to betray the man and Hayat’s actions return to haunt him years later.
Muslim-American fiction hits the mainstream in this cinematic glimpse of an
immigrant family. GPR/SN, BC
*#Atkinson,
Kate, Life After Life is my pick for best novel of the year. Read it for the splendid, imaginative writing
and to enter a brilliant world that will take you through the first half of the
20th century and make you contemplate life if there were second
chances. It’s like a necklace, circular, with each bead telling a different story.
Rejoice as protagonist Ursula Todd lives and dies over and over again. G/PP,
BC
Aw,
Tash, Five Star Billionaire is a Booker Prize nominee about
Walter Chao, a billionaire, and the four characters whose lives intersect with
his in Shanghai. Filled with secrets,
schemes and insight into China today, this hauntingly skeptical novel is packed
with contradictions, comedy, and pathos. S/SN
*Barnes,
Julian, The Sense of an Ending is a concise, complex, honest, and
sophisticated novel that focuses on Tony’s reexamining his life. The 2011
Booker Prize winner is made for book clubs as there are so many topics like
memory, aging, connectedness, truth, and adolescent miscues to discuss. G, BC
Benjamin,
Melanie, The Aviator’s Wife portrays the life of Anne Morrow
Lindbergh. It’s suitable for readers who haven’t read A Gift from the Sea or Scott Berg’s biography, Lindbergh, as this introduction to the remarkable lives of the
Lindberghs could whet their appetites for more about the pair. CC/PP/SN,
BC
Berg,
Elizabeth, Tapestry of Fortunes is a story about Cece, a
motivational speaker, who quits her job,
moves in with a group of women and finds herself. It’s predictable and
everything is tied up neatly. CC
*Brockmole,
Jessica, Letters from Skye is an epistolary novel that begins
in 1912 when poet Elspeth, who’s never left Scotland’s Isle of Skye, corresponds
with American fan David, a pre-med student at the U. of Illinois who doesn’t
want to be a doctor, and they fall in love but war intervenes. Later in 1940,
Elspeth’s daughter, Margaret, falls for an RAF pilot and Elspeth disapproves.
Then Elspeth disappears and a found letter offers clues to her whereabouts. “Guernsey”
fans will enjoy this. GPR/PP,
BC
*Brooks,
Geraldine, Caleb’s Crossing is set in Martha’s Vineyard and
Cambridge, MA in the 1660s when Caleb, a native American, attends Harvard. Misguided missionary conversions, women
treated like chattel, and prejudice come together in a novel sure to please
every type of reader. G/PP/SN, BC
Chamberlain,
Diane, Necessary Lies is
a light read on an important topic, a Jodi Picoult-ish exploration of forced
sterilization practices in 1960s North Carolina. CC/PP/SN, BC
Chiaverini,
Jennifer, Mrs. Lincoln’s Dressmaker, Elizabeth Keckley, a former slave
who bought her own freedom and became a successful businesswoman and founder of
a relief organization to provide food, shelter, and support to the displaced
black diaspora in the Civil War, was also Mary Todd Lincoln’s confidant. The
novel uses Keckley’s autobiography to illuminate an engrossing era. GPR/PP/SN, BC
Conklin,
Tara, The House Girl, Lina, a New York lawyer, traces the
story of Josephine, a house slave and possible artist, back to 1852.
Josephine’s story is compelling but Lina’s is scattered and uneven as well as
being insensitive and filled with tired clichés. It could have been so much
more. CC/PP, BC
Corasanti,
Michelle Cohen, The Almond Tree, Corasanti is a Jewish American who
lived in Israel for seven years. That she tells this tale from the viewpoint of
Ichmad, a Palestinian boy who tries to overcome hatred, and his family is remarkable
and controversial. From page one, you’ll
be hooked. GPR/SN, BC
*Elliott,
Scott, Temple Grove, Paul is a young Native American
environmentalist trying to save a stand of ancient Douglas firs in Washington
State’s Olympic Peninsula. The FBI is after him so his mother and a man
connected to his past want to find him first. It’s a beautiful evocation of the
land and culture combined with a spell-binding story of survival. The first
chapter will make you hold your breath as you read it. G, BC
#Ford,
Jamie, Songs of Willow Frost tells the story of William Eng, a
Chinese-American orphan in 1934, who believes that his mother is movie actress
Willow Frost whom he hasn’t seen in years. Ford provides intriguing details of
the Seattle Chinese-American community and of early film history which may help
cinema and historical fiction fans enjoy the novel despite the flat, soap-opera-like
characters. PP/SN
*#Fountain,
Ben, Billy Lynn’s Long Half-time Walk, The eight survivors of Bravo Squad
are heroes on a victory tour before returning to battle in Iraq. The book is
set on Thanksgiving at Dallas Cowboy Stadium on the last day of their tour and
Billy Lynn, a 19-year-old hero and good soldier, tries to make sense of the
absurdity of life. This is an important
book that everyone should read and discuss. G/S, BC
*Godwin.
Gail, Flora,
Helen, a novelist, is looking back at the 1945 summer when she was ten
and her mother’s odd, 22-year-old cousin Flora came to “mind” her after her
beloved grandmother’s death (her mother had died several years previously)
while her alcoholic father is over the mountain in Oak Ridge working on a
secret war project. A polio outbreak isolates Flora and Helen in the remote
house. Helen, a precocious, wry child, and Flora transform each other and a
foreshadowed tragedy strikes. Wonderful minor characters and a singularly
unique voice make this novel read like a classic. G/GS, BC
*#Hamilton, Masha, What Changes
Everything is a spectacular rendering combining the kidnapping
of Todd, an American aid worker in Kabul, with the true story of the president
of Afghanistan who was held by the Taliban in 1996. It’s also the story of
Todd’s wife back home in Brooklyn who meets Danil, a graffiti artist who’s lost
his brother to the war. It’s a powerful missive on the way we’re interconnected
and on how things half a world away “slip into your peaceful lungs, changing
everything.” G/SN, BC
Harding, Paul, Enon, the author of 2010’s Pulitzer
Prize-winner, Tinkers, returns to the small New England locale to follow
Charlie Crosby, the grandson of Tinkers' George Crosby, in the year
after his teenage daughter's death. Hallucinogenic scenes provide an excruciating
view of one man's grief. His lush writing isn’t enough to compensate for the
tedium. G, BC
*#Haruf,
Kent, Benediction, “Dad” Lewis finds out he’s dying on
the first page of this wonder of a look into small-town life and what really
matters. Set in Holt, Colorado, the setting of Haruf’s Plainsong, this novel is grace personified. It’s truly a
“benediction” – a blessing for readers.
G/GPR/SF, BC
*Heller,
Peter, Dog Stars is more than a post-apocalyptic
saga; it visits the inner, psychological conflicts engendered nine years after
disease kills off most of the humans in the world including Hig’s pregnant wife.
Readers will love the bond between Hig and his dog and will cheer for the
survivors’ desire to remake the world in love especially when Hig meets Cima
and her father. This is a hope-filled tale. G, BC
Hosseini,
Khaled, And the Mountains Echoed’s many tangential stories distracted
me from Abdullah’s quest to find his sister in the main story of a father
giving away his daughter to a wealthy Kabul man. Hosseini made me care about his main
characters but not those in the side stories that seemed too incidental to
matter. People love this or they don’t so it’d be good for discussion. GPR/SN,
BC
*Irwin, Ron, Flat Water Tuesday is reminiscent of Dead Poet’s Society in its treatment of
boarding school life. Rob, a documentary filmmaker, revisits the tragedy that’s
haunted him since he rowed in high school fifteen years previously. A beautiful
elegy about class, competition, and family pressure. GPR, BC
*Kent,
Hannah, Burial Rites reveals the story of Agnes, the last
person executed in Iceland, in this 1828 character study that shows the
starkness of the land and its people. Kent’s debut offers a riveting tale
demonstrating Agnes’ effect on the family charged with housing her and on the
young priest chosen as her counselor. G/PP/SN, BC
*Kibler,
Julie, Calling Me Home, Isabelle, a white woman in her
80s, asks her friend Dorrie, an African-American beautician, if she’ll drive
her from Texas to Cincinnati. Along the way Isabelle unwinds the tangled secret
of her love of her family maid’s black brother in northern Kentucky 60 years
previously. As Isabelle tells her story, Dorrie examines her own life. Kibler
sensitively brings light to racial tensions by using information from her own
family’s past to infuse the story with authenticity. GPR/PP, BC
Koslow,
Sally, The Widow Waltz is a beach-book adaptation of the
oft-told story of the husband who dies unexpectedly leaving secrets and
unanswered questions. CC
*Krueger,
William Kent, Ordinary Grace is a book for fans of Leif Enger’s Peace Like a River and Kent Haruf’s Plainsong. Forty years after his
friend’s death, a suicide, and a murder in a small 1961 Minnesota town, Frank
remembers his 13th summer when fear ruled but there was still “a
grace so ordinary there was no reason at all to remember it.” This elegiac tale
evokes loss and mercy beautifully. GPR/PP/SF, BC
*Lahiri,
Jhumpa, The Lowland, Two brothers’ lives, like the
lowland between the two ponds near their Calcutta home, ebb and flow into one
during monsoons and separate during the dry season. Cautious Subhash plays by
the rules and moves to America. Udayan’s involvement with a radical group gets
him killed so Subhash “rescues” Udayan’s wife Gauri. The result is a measured
ode to grief, love, and what being a parent means. Lahiri transforms an
unlikeable cast of characters into literary gold. G/SN, BC
*Lancaster,
Craig, 600 Hours of Edward introduces a loveable character sure
to charm. Edward is 39 and he
has issues coping with Asperger's and OCD but in the 600 carefully tallied
hours of this novel, he opens himself to new experiences and hope in this
humor-filled heart warmer. GPR, BC
Loyd,
Amy Grace, The Affairs of Others is seductive and erotic with a layer
of melancholy, Celia, who’s in her thirties, can’t get over her husband’s death
and she’s isolated herself in the apartment building she owns and manages where
she’s involved with, yet at a distance from, her tenants, Hope enters both
figuratively and literally in the person of Hope, a woman subletting the
apartment above hers. The last chapter is pure loveliness but Celia seems too
flat and gets lost in the overly descriptive passages. G
McAdam, Colin, A Beautiful Truth,
a childless couple adopts a chimp as their son and he acts “human” until one
fateful, foreshadowed day. Alternate sections depict an institute where chimps
live in captivity, serve in experiments, and build complex relationships.
McAdam’s use of language is stunning and the novel asks many questions about
parenting, love, friendship, and dominance.
It’s a strangely unsettling meditation on human nature that’s undermined
when McAdam forces his dazzling prose. GPR/SN, BC
*McBride,
James, The Good Lord Bird wryly reimagines abolitionist John Brown’s
life from the perspective of Henry Shackleford, a slave in the Kansas Territory
in 1856. Henry poses as a girl and Brown calls “her” Onion and considers her
his good luck charm as they experience history. Winner of this year’s National
Book Award, it’s clever and ambitious and seems almost like something Mark
Twain would have written. G/PP/SN, BC
*McCann,
Colum, Transatlantic, Three historic transatlantic
crossings: Frederick Douglas’s 1845 trip
to Ireland, aviators Alcock and Brown’s 1919 flight, and George Mitchell’s 1998
attempt at peace in Northern Ireland, forge a connection through the imagined
life of Lily, a maid who escapes to America, and her children and
grandchildren. McCann is an alchemist who weaves their stories into a cohesive stew
in which each ingredient magically flavors the whole. His evocation of the
women is stunning. G/PP/SN, BC
*McDermott,
Alice, Someone is the quiet, contemplative
embodiment of an era in this meditation on one woman’s long life. Death is
always just under the surface as Marie observes those living in her Brooklyn neighborhood.
No one tops McDermott in painting word pictures of love, kindness and grief. G,
BC
*McPherson,
William, Testing the Current is an out-and-out charmer told by
Tommy, an eight-year-old boy living in a small northern Michigan town in the
late 1930s. Originally written in 1984 and reissued by New York Review Books,
this is a gem reminiscent of William Maxwell. It’s an old-fashioned evocation
of place and a character study that never attempts to be an action-packed romp.
G/GPR/PP, BC
Moore,
Edward Kelsey, The Supremes at Earl’s
All-You-Can-Eat is an African-American “Fried Green
Tomatoes” set in southern Indiana where three friends (known as “The Supremes”)
hang out at a café near their church. Moore
uses his short story writer’s touch in telling their troubles and secrets with
humor. He’s also a professional cellist who easily captures the musical rhythm
of this small town. D, BC
Moyes,
JoJo, The Last Letter from Your Lover is romance with a capital “R” in
this tale set in 1960 and today as Ellie looks for clues to her own romance in
a “last letter.” It’s wrapped up perfectly. GPR/D
*Moyes,
JoJo, Me Before You is the British “Sleepless in Seattle”
of books. It’s a love story that will make you laugh and cry. Acerbic Louisa meets her match in Will, a
wheelchair-bound wheeler-dealer, she’s hired to assist. No spoilers but book
clubs could talk for hours about the ending. GPR/BC
Napolitano,
Ann, A Good Hard Look features
Flannery O'Connor in a novel set in her hometown, Milledgeville, Georgia, in
1960 after she returned due to illness. Melvin Whiteson has also moved there to
marry the prettiest and most popular girl in town. Their friendship and the intertwined
lives of Melvin's wife and others in town ask the reader to ponder how to
really live life. GPR/GS/PP, BC
O’Donnell,
Lisa, The Death of Bees, Marnie and Nelly bury their parents
in the garden behind their Glasgow home and pretend that the parents are on
holiday so they can remain together.
They’re better off without their parents and get unexpected help from
neighbor Lennie in this delightful tome. GPR, BC
#Pye,
Virginia, River of Dust, Rev. J. W. Watson and his wife
Grace watch as bandits kidnap their toddler son in China’s Mongolian desert in
1910. While Watson searches for his son, his pregnant wife Grace falls under
the influence of a servant. Pye used her missionary grandfather’s diaries to
tell the story from a unique perspective and to suffuse it with accurate
details that portray the era. PP/SN, BC
*Rash,
Ron, The Cove, Laurel, a woman people think is
cursed because of her purple birthmark, and her brother Hank, who’s back from
World War I missing a hand, live isolated lives when Walter, a fluting-play
mute appears. This is a magnificent
morality play that fits its Appalachian setting. G/GS BC
*Rhodes,
David, Jewelweed returns to Words, Wisconsin, where Driftless was set and the town including
Pastor Winnie’s family try to help Blake adjust to life outside prison. Blake’s
wonderful father, Nate, made me want to move to Words. Meanwhile Danielle and
her son move in with a wealthy family in this Old Testament-like saga of a town
where heavy burdens settle and everyone is a “touch-me-not.” G/S, BC
*Saunders,
George, Tenth of December,
Think you don’t like short stories, think again; these will knock your socks
off. Not since Flannery O’Connor have such edgy tales appeared in one
tantalizing package. Saunders is a
little bit Vonnegut with a touch of Twain. His tense dialogue placed me in each story beginning with “Victory
Lap” that had me shaking as I awaited the fate of the two characters. G/S/T, BC
*Schanbacher,
Gary, Crossing Purgatory captures Indiana farmer, Thompson
Gray’s struggle to rebuild his life after tragedy strikes. He heads to Colorado
where the Purgatory is both a river and a metaphor for his living in limbo.
It’s 1858 and he meets slave traders and abolitionists along with people in
need. Schanbacher’s prose evokes the
land and the power of redemption in a heartfelt saga. GPR/PP/SN, BC
*Sjón,
The Blue Fox is a fable set in 1883 Iceland with
a hunter chasing a mystical fox, a naturalist trying to protect a woman with
Down syndrome he’d rescued years before, and evil and fantasy melding in a dark,
poetic, and comical tale. Poet, playwright, and lyricist for Björk - Sjón is utterly
unique. G/PP/T, BC
*#Sloan,
Robin, Mr. Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore, Quirky, fairy-tale characters in
the land of Google are on an ancient quest in this Don Quixote-like fantasy in
a bookstore with no real customers. Clay uses his computer skills to figure out
what’s really happening with the enigmatic Mr. Penumbra. GPR/D/S, BC
*Stedman,
M. L., The Light Between Oceans, After two miscarriages and a
stillbirth, Tom and Isabel, alone on an island off Australia’s coast, take in a
foundling and call her their own. When Lucy is two, they return to the mainland
and learn that Lucy has a family, and they face a dilemma. When Isabel’s mother
ponders life on page 120, I wanted to frame her words. Almost everyone loves
this book. GPR, BC
*Strout, Elizabeth, The Burgess Boys, Brothers Jim and Bob and sister
Susan still aren’t over the loss of their father in an accident when they were
young. Jim’s a big-shot New York attorney and Bob’s a caring legal-aid lawyer
while Susan remains mired in their Maine hometown unable to move beyond her
divorce. When Susan’s outcast son is charged with a hate crime when an
ill-conceived prank aimed at Somali immigrants becomes a cause celébrè, the
brothers race to the rescue but who actually needs rescuing in this carefully
embroidered tale in which each stitch reveals more of the characters’ needs.
G/GPR, BC
*#Vickers,
Salley, The Cleaner of Chartres, Agnès Morel is an anomaly in the
cathedral town of Chartres where she carefully cleans the labyrinth. She arrived mysteriously twenty years previously
and everyone in town relies on her. When her past threatens to derail her life,
she confronts her trauma and the reader sees why she’s indispensable. It’s
similar to Chocolat - filled with
kindness, healing, and love. GPR/D, BC
*Ward, Jesmyn, Salvage the Bones is Faulkner for today’s south which means it’s universal in scope and
will last long after the effects of Hurricane Katrina have become a footnote in
our troubled history. Set in the days
before and during Katrina, 15-year-old Esch, her brothers, and alcoholic father
prepare for and try to escape the storm in their poor rural African-American
community near Mississippi’s gulf coast. Mythology, metaphors, and the meaning
of motherhood make this a classic for every reader. One of my book clubs is
packed with varied tastes and this is the ONLY book we’ve all agreed is
magnificent. Yes, it features a dog
fight, teen pregnancy, and bleak poverty but it’s also filled with hope. Read
it! G/GS,
BC
Wolitzer,
Meg, The Interestings tells the tale of a group of
privileged teens who meet at a camp in 1974 and embrace Jules, a less privileged
girl, who reinvents herself as she grows up among them. It continues the arc of
their lives after tragedies twist their destinies. Fine writing lifts the
self-absorbed characters from what could have been a clichéd coming-of-age story.
S, BC
Mysteries,
Suspense, and Thrillers
*Ballantyne, Lisa, The Guilty One weaves
two stories: that of Daniel as a troubled foster child taken in by kind Minnie
and of grownup Daniel, now a London lawyer, defending 11-year-old Sebastien
who’s accused of brutally killing a 9-year-old girl. Has Daniel escaped his own past? Lots to ponder! CC, BC
Chapman, Emma, How to be a Good Wife is a
haunting tale set in a small Nordic village where Marta is slipping away from
reality or is she remembering things her husband wants concealed. The suspense
is coupled with her need to follow her mother-in-law’s rules and be a “good
wife.” GPR, BC
*Faye,
Lyndsay, The Gods of Gotham, the
2012 Edgar winner, is set in 1845 New York City when Irish immigrants are
flooding the city and anti-Catholic sentiments run high. Timothy Wilde is a
fledgling Cop (from his copper star) in the newly formed police department when
a 12-year-old murder victim and a girl named Bird lead him to an underground
world with its own language. It’s extraordinary. PP/SN, BC
*French, Tana, Broken Harbor, Two
small children and their father are murdered in their home in Broken Harbor, an
abandoned, half-built “luxury” development. Jenny, the mother, clings to life
as Detective “Scorcher” Kennedy tries to find clues in all the baby monitors,
holes in the walls, and an unexplained break in. But something bad happened to
Scorcher’s family in Broken Harbor years before and it might derail the
investigation. French really knows how to write Irish psychological thrillers.
CC/GPR
George, Elizabeth, Believing the Lie takes
608 pages to do nothing except leave Inspector Lynley’s personal problems
behind while he and others try to find out if a crime has occurred.
Disappointing! CC
George,
Elizabeth, Just One Evil Act will appeal to fans of Detective Sgt. Barbara
Havers but 736 ages was simply too much of a good thing and some of the
characters’ actions didn’t fit them.
*Hamilton, Masha, 31 Hours, 21-year-old
Jonas’s mother wakes up knowing that her son is in danger. Neither she nor his
girlfriend have heard from him and they can’t reach him. Should she call the
police? Could a good kid become a fanatic? Only someone with Hamilton’s Middle
East knowledge could write a story like this and make it so real and chilling.
I held my breath for the last fifty pages. CC/SN, BC
James, P. D., Death Comes to Pemberley, When a
great writer pens a dud at age 91, I blame her publisher for allowing it to hit
the printed page. Jane Austen’s work has suffered zombies but this is
worse. Fans of neither author will find
satisfaction in this nor would Mr. and Mrs. Darcy approve of it. PP
*Krueger,
William Kent, Ordinary Grace - description under general fiction
GPR/PP/SF, BC
*Locke, Attica, The Cutting Season takes
place on an old plantation, now a living history museum and event space along
the Mississippi near Baton Rouge, LA, where Caren Gray tries to figure out who
killed a migrant worker and if it relates to her ancestor’s time as a slave
there. It’s the first book Dennis LeHane chose for his imprint at Harper
Collins. CC/GS/SN, BC
MacBride, Stuart, Birthdays for the Dead is a
gritty, violent mystery set in Scotland. Ash Henderson is a cop with a secret
who thinks he can save the latest victim of a serial killer. The ending is
shocking. CC
*Penny,
Louise, How the Light Gets In, When the last surviving Ouellet quintuplet is found
murdered, Inspector Gamache tries to find out why as his boss, Francour
destroys his department and a dangerous plot has to be stopped. The town of
Three Pines and its quirky residents steal the show. CC/GPR
Pessl,
Marisha, Night Film is
an imaginative, (too, too long), “Mr. Toad's Wild Ride” of a novel filled with
so many clever tricks that the plot gets lost. While ostensibly about the
probable suicide of a larger-than-life cult filmmaker's daughter and a
discredited journalist, it felt more like a parody to me. Others love it. S
*#Robertson,
Peter, Mission is a
traditional mystery with a unique setting and a compelling protagonist. After
Tom, a Scottish expat, helps pull the body of a homeless man from the surging
waters of Boulder Creek he attempts to find out why the man died and learns
more about his own past. It’s a nuanced look at those we rarely see. GPR/SN, BC
*Wolf, Dick, The Intercept, by the
creator of TV’s Law and Order, features
two NYPD Intelligence officers who try to find a passenger who’s disappeared
from a flight after a terrorist incident. The suspense is tangible and
reminiscent of The Day of the Jackal.
CC
Peanut Butter and Jelly: Books for
Children
*Becker, Aaron, Journey, If you love Harold and the Purple Crayon and who doesn’t, you’ll enjoy this
tale of a lonely girl using her red crayon to draw her own magical journey. The
different modes of transportation featured and the gorgeous illustrations will capture
everyone. PBJ, Ages 3 – 8
*Black, Michael Ian, I’m Bored, A
bored girl meets a bored potato and giggles ensue. PBJ, Ages 3 - 8
*Daywalt, Drew and Jeffers,
Oliver, illustrator, The Day the Crayons Quit shows
how crayons feel about how they’re used so they go on strike until Duncan finds
a way to make them happy. PBJ, Ages 4 - 8
*DiCamillo, Kate and Campbell,
K.G., illustrator, Flora & Ulysses, When
an encounter with a vacuum cleaner transforms Ulysses into a super squirrel who
can type poetry and fly, Flora hopes he’ll transform her life. This sweet,
old-fashioned story with an engaging vocabulary is a charmer. PBJ, Ages 9 - 12
*Ellis, Deborah, The Breadwinner,
After the Taliban arrests 11-year-old Parvana’s father, she masquerades as a
boy to support her family. Royalties go to Women for Women. PBJ/SN, Ages 10 - 12
*Foley, Lizzie K., Remarkable Poor Jane lives in Remarkable where everyone is
remarkable but her. Being ordinary when
everyone else is extraordinarily talented and gifted is tough. But when the town is in danger, her gumption
may save the day. PBJ, Ages 8 and up
Gerstein, Mordicai, The First Drawing is an
introduction to the ancient cave paintings of France and will help children see
art in a new way, Who made the world’s first drawing? PBJ/SN, Ages 4 - 7
*Grabensein, Chris, Escape from Mr. Lemoncello's Library, Kyle is an underachiever who, like many boys maker hero, has designed a new town library with
an overnight opening for twelve select 12-year-olds, even Kyle wants to go.
Those looking for books for reluctant male readers will love this. PBJ, Ages 8
- 13
*Heiligman, Deborah, The Boy Who Loved Math: The Improbable Life
of Paul Erdos is
a brilliant and beautiful introduction to math concepts and it’s fun too
(especially the notes at the end that should appeal to older kids that love
math). PBJ/SN, Ages 4 – 8.
*Kalman, Maira, Looking at
Lincoln
makes Lincoln accessible and explains tough concepts like war and slavery with
gorgeous gouache illustrations and appealing language. PBJ/SN, Ages 5 - 8
*Kidd,
Chip, Go, A Kidd’s Guide to Graphic
Design Kids
will love the ideas in this book and so will adults looking to spice up their
own designs. I’d give this to budding
artists and watch them make class assignments come alive as well as
invitations, web sites, and more, PBJ/SN, Ages 10 and up
*Maclachlan,
Patricia, The Truth of Me is
kind, loving and fun. Robbie spends the summer with his eccentric grandmother
who teaches him that small truths make us all brave and magical. PBJ, Ages 7 -10
*Maclachlan, Patricia and
Kellogg, Steven, illustrator, Snowflakes
Fall is
a delightful tribute to the healing power of nature and the fact that it’s
dedicated to the children of Newtown, CT, where Kellogg lived for 35 years
makes this a must buy this season. It’s simply lovely. PBJ, Ages 3 – 7
*Malone, Marianne, The Sixty-Eight Rooms tells
of two kids who find a magic key that lets them shrink and enter the Thorne
Rooms at Chicago’s Art Institute. It’s the first in a series. PBJ/SN, Ages 8 -
12
Rylant, Cynthia, God Got a Dog contains
15 wry poems portraying God in many different ways in a book about what it
means to be human. PBJ, Ages 10 and up
*Savage, Stephen, Where’s Walrus is a wordless
wonder about Walrus’s escape from the zoo. The shapes and clear graphic design
make it easy for parents to enjoy as much as children will. Ages 3 - 6
*Stead, Philip C., Hello, My Name is Ruby, Ruby
is a very small bird who wants to make friends. Wonderful, whimsical illustrations
make it a read-aloud winner. PBJ, Ages 3 - 6
*Stead, Philip C., A Home for Bird, Vernon,
a toad, tries to help his quiet, new friend, Bird, find a home in a sweet story
with wonderful illustrations. An ode to friendship, home, and kindness. PBJ,
Ages 3 - 7
*Stinson, Kathy and Petricic,
Dusan, illustrator, The Man with the
Violin is
based on the story of Joshua Bell’s subway concert and of Dylan making his
mother stop to listen. It’s beautiful. PBJ, Ages 5 - 8
*Vanderpool, Clare, Navigating Early is a
tailor-made treat for boys who aren’t like everyone else. After Jack’s mother
dies as World War II is ending, Jack’s dad sends him to a Maine boarding school
near the base where he’s serving. There Jack meets Early Auden, a brilliant
math student living in the custodian’s closet at the school, and the two are
off on an epic adventure featuring bears, pirates and the Appalachian trial.
This is a kid book with a capital K. PP/PBJ, Ages 10 - 13
*Yerkes, Jennifer, A Funny Little Bird, An
invisible bird wants to be noticed in this artistic fable with sophisticated
vocabulary and color that both kids and parent will love. The use of white for
invisibility will challenge young artists to try drawing invisibility
themselves. PBJ, Ages 4 - 8,
Diet Coke and Gummi Bears: Books for
Teens and Young Adults
*Green, John, The Fault in Our Stars is
magnificent. Hazel is 16 and she’s lived three years with terminal cancer. She
meets Augustus, who’s lost his leg to a malignant bone tumor, at a cancer
support group and they fall in love. Hazel has an “impossible” dream that Gus
makes happen and the two ponder what gives life meaning and celebrate simple
acts of joy. This is one of my favorite books EVER.** Hazel’s very wry sense of humor especially at the book’s
beginning will take hold of you. DC/GPR/S, BC, 9th grade and up
*Lewis, Catherine, Thrice Told Tales: Three Mice Full of
Writing Advice, Using
literary tricks to retell the classic nursery rhyme will make teens and adults
better readers and writers. I can’t
believe how much I learned from this – all while laughing hysterically. DC/S/SN, Ages 12 and up
*Lowry, Lois, Son is the fourth book in The Giver series. It tells what
happened to Gabe, the baby saved from “release” in The Giver. When Claire doesn’t receive pills to keep from feeling
emotions after giving birth, she won’t give up in her quest to find her child.
DC, BC, Ages 12 and up
*Rowell, Rainbow, Eleanor & Park is a spectacular book for teens and
adults. Eleanor is the new kid and she’s bullied because she’s overweight, has
wild red hair, and dresses strangely. Park is half-Korean and feels like an
outsider. He meets Eleanor on the bus and they slowly fall in love but
Eleanor’s home situation threatens everything. One of the best books EVER.** DC/GPR/S, BC 9th
grade and up
*Rowelll,
Rainbow, Fangirl explores
leaving childhood behind without letting go of what matters. It depicts the craft of writing and is a
sensitive treatment of college alcohol abuse, abandonment, and love. Older
Harry Potter fans will rejoice that it “gets” them. Perfect for older teens, DC,
BC, 9th grade and up
*Yang,
Gene Luen, American Born Chinese is a graphic novel with three
intersecting plot lines: 1) a Monkey King folk hero who wants to be a god, 2)
Jin Wang who tries to fit in at his new school, and 3) All-American Danny who’s
ashamed of his cousin Chin-Kee. The three stories meld in a morality tale about
identity, race, and self-acceptance. It’s a great introduction to the genre. DC/SN,
BC, Ages 13 and up
** Yup, two of my favorites EVER, and I read them the same year.
They’re the best since The Book Thief.
Nonfiction
*Adams, Mark, Turn Right
at Machu Pichu is a charmingly witty, historical account
of Hiram Bingham III's exploration of the Andes Mountain region of Peru in 1911
and of Adams retracing of the trek. SN, BC
Aikman, Becky, Saturday Night Widows simplistically
depicts a group of newly widowed women who gather to support each other. Aikman seems to distance herself which makes
the book feel sterile however later sections particularly one set in the desert
in Morocco offer more authenticity. SF
Albright, Madeleine, Prague
Winter: A Personal Story of Remembrance and War, 1937-1948 personalizes the Nazi takeover of Czechoslovakia
through the eyes of a young girl who later became the U.S. Secretary of State.
Even if you know the facts, she makes you feel them. SN, BC
*Brinton, Henry G., The Welcoming Congregation: Roots and Fruits
of Christian Hospitality challenges churches and
Christians to welcome others by loving them where and as they are. It shows
that welcoming cannot be about numbers but must center on meaning. SF, BC
Christensen, Kate, Blue Plate Special is a
memoir of Christensen’s lonely life which she filled with food, sex, a
dysfunctional family, and the books and writing that sated her. She chronicles
cultural changes through her own life arc. GPR
*Fey, Tina, Bossypants, Audio
is the ONLY way to “read” this book. You
must listen to Fey describe her life from her childhood to starring on Saturday
Night Live and trying to do it all. S
*Gaffigan, Jim, Dad is Fat is
hilarious and heartwarming. Yes,
comedian Gaffigan is very funny but his book shows how much he loves his five
kids and being a Dad. A good read for
everyone. S/SF
*Hanagarne, Josh, The World’s Strongest Librarian is a
wry ode to Tourette’s, weight-lifting, books, libraries, family and true
strength. It’s a love letter to life packed into the memoir of a gentle giant
of a man. From his Mormon beginnings through his geeky childhood and adult
life, this book soars. GPR/SN, BC
Iverson, Kristen, Full Body
Burden: Growing Up in the Nuclear Shadow of Rocky Flats shows
the cavalier attitude of the operators and overseers of the Colorado plant
and how it poisoned everything downwind of it while depicting those living there
and emphasizing Iverson's childhood with her alcoholic father. SN
*Kidd, Chip, Go, A Kidd’s Guide to Graphic Design –
description in Children’s Books but this is for every age and anyone interested
in design. PBJ/SN
*#Link, Mardi Jo, Bootstrapper: from Broke to Badass on a
Northern Michigan Farm, Link begins her book as a
funny, somewhat bitter woman hell-bent on keeping her boys and their rural life
style after divorce leaves her almost penniless. Her humor and unyielding grit
will make you laugh out loud and shed a few tears while sharing her family’s
journey. Her honesty and authenticity will have you cheering for her as she
pulls herself out of misery and insolvency. Note: I consider Ms. Link a friend
so I’m thrilled that her intelligence, kindness, humor, and incredible writing
skills are showcased in this magnificent memoir. It won the Great Lakes
Booksellers’ Choice Award for 2013 and Garrison Keillor loved it too! S/SF, BC
*Luxenberg, Steve, Annie’s Ghosts tells the story of the author’s mother who he always believed was an only child. When he learned that her sister Annie had lived in a mental institution from age 21, he used his investigative reporting skills to find out about his mother’s past, her relatives, the Detroit institution where Annie lived, the Holocaust in Ukraine, war-time Philippines, and imperial Russia. GPR/SN, BC
*Luxenberg, Steve, Annie’s Ghosts tells the story of the author’s mother who he always believed was an only child. When he learned that her sister Annie had lived in a mental institution from age 21, he used his investigative reporting skills to find out about his mother’s past, her relatives, the Detroit institution where Annie lived, the Holocaust in Ukraine, war-time Philippines, and imperial Russia. GPR/SN, BC
*#Massie, Robert K., Catherine the Great is an
incredibly detailed, yet compelling, biography of one of the most brilliant
women in history. SN, BC
*#Moss, Michael, Salt, Sugar, Fat is a
book everyone should read to understand how the food industry manipulates salt,
sugar, and fat in what we eat. It will
help you make life-saving decisions and it’s an addictive treat of a read. SN, BC
*Paterniti, Michael, The Telling Room is
like a package of Pop Rocks that explodes in excitement the minute it hits your
tongue. It tells the tale of a great Spanish cheese, the bombastic man who
created it, and the Spanish village where it began and how they all stole
Paterniti’s heart. Peter Mayle meets Man of La Mancha in a travelogue, memoir,
foodie romp of a droll adventure. D, BC (with wine and cheese)
*RFC Fire and Rescue, Tastes and Tales along the Tunnel of Trees is
equal parts cookbook, history book, and photographic essay evoking one of my
favorite place on earth, the area hugging the Lake Michigan shore along Michigan
Hwy. M-119. Since I co-edited the book,
I’ll turn this over to a favorite reviewer who said: “Capturing the essence of
what it means to know your neighbors, honor your ancestors and bring families
together over the table, Tastes and Tales
is an essential addition to every Northern Michigan home . . .with signature
illustrations by Jane Cardinal and the photography of Virgil Haynes.” Even if you’ve never been to Northern
Michigan, it’s a delight. Proceeds benefit the all-volunteer fire and rescue
squad that protects the area. D/SN
Reyes-Chow, Bruce, “But I Don’t See You as Asian:” Curating Conversations
about Race contains many useful
discussion starters. Read it to think
and talk about race. It’s short yet somewhat
wordy. SF/SN, BC
Rice, Ron, editor, My Bookstore: Writers Celebrate Their
Favorite Places to Brows, Read, and Shop is a delectable dessert
for booklovers. The descriptions of my
favorite stores were perfect portraits.
D
Ruta,
Domenica, With or Without You is
searing, tough, and honest. It will
remind you of books like The Glass Castle and Liars’ Club yet it’s
unique in its view of a child turning to alcohol as she watches her mother
drink and ingest everything imaginable while destroying their lives. GPR
*Sullivan, Robert and Wolff,
Glenn, illustrator, A Child’s Christmas
in New England is
a book for the entire family to enjoy.
I’ve long loved Glenn Wolff’s illustrations in books and in the New York
Times. They add just the right touch to
this lovely reminiscence about Christmas for those who grew up in the1950s and
60s. Reading this aloud would spark some great conversations. It made me want real tinsel again. GPR
*Ward,
Jesmyn, Men We Reaped
should be required reading for 21st Century adults. With dazzlingly
poetic prose, Ward shows “what it means to be Black and poor in the South” In
four years five young men she loved died.
She connected the dots and found that their seemingly unrelated deaths
occurred because of who they were and where they were from. She says “We
inherit these things that breed despair and self-hatred, and tragedy
multiplies.” Her brilliant writing makes
this sing. G/SN, BC
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