Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Best of 2019


WINNER: A Woman is No Man by Etaf Rum

Set in both Brooklyn and Palestine, it is the story of three generations of Palestinian women: Fareeda, the grandmother trapped by circumstance of war; Isra, a daughter of refugees, who knows only the confines of her home in Palestine yet follows a stranger in an arranged marriage to America; and her daughter Deya, who questions the plans for her future, who lives in America but is not of America, who wants to find her voice in a voiceless society. This book will take your heart and squeeze it until you cannot breathe, it will make you weep, it will make you stronger, it will give you hope in a hopeless world.


General Fiction: The Dutch House by Ann Patchett / Olive, Again by Elizabeth Strout

The Dutch House is a story of a brother and a sister, abandoned by their mother and death of their father, and a special house - Patchett weaves them all together into an unforgettable story.
In Olive, Again,  welcome back to the world of Olive Kittredge, a curmudgeon of the first order, who shows us what it is to age, to feel frustration and loss, and to love in authentic, very human ways.
Honorable Mention: Twenty-One Truths About Love; Red to the Bone; The Most Fun We Ever Had;  Beyond the Point; The Guest Book; South of Broad; Where the Crawdads Sing; Dear Edward


Mystery: The Lost Man by Jane Harper

The tale of three brothers begins with the death of one of them in the heat of the Outback, found at the mysterious old stockman's grave, a spot rife with legend and secrets. The Lost Man is breathtaking in its beauty, its richness, and its ability to keep one turning pages.
Honorable Mention: The Butterfly Girl (Naomi Cottle, #2); The Chestnut Man; The Whisper Man; Knife (Harry Hole #12); The Ruin (Cormac Reilly #1); 

Thriller: Thirteen (Eddie Flynn #4) by Steve Cavanaugh

Flynn is a conman turned lawyer, whose personal life is a hot mess, who has an intriguing collection of friends, who only defends the innocent, and who will literally do anything, legal and otherwise, to get his client free (in this case, a famous movie star entangled with a serial killer). Cavanaugh wraps his story in intelligent, thoughtful prose with a snappy sense of humor thrown in just when it is needed. 
Honorable Mention: The Silent Patient; Girls Like Us; Whisper Network; The Liar (Eddie Flynn #3); No Exit

Historical Fiction: The Huntress by Kate Quinn / The Great Believers by Rebecca Makkai

The plot line of The Huntress moves through three different perspectives: Nina, the Russian 'witch,' as she relates her time during WWII as a bomber pilot; Ian, a former famous war-time journalist now turned into a Nazi hunter; and Jordan, the young Boston girl, dreaming of work as a professional photographer, but stuck in an antique store with her new stepmother who has some secrets. This book is incredibly well-researched, using fascinating tidbits of history to weave a story of great tension and mystery.
The Great Believers uses the AIDS epidemic as the wheel its characters turn around and the interplay amongst them. Set in two time periods, Chicago in the mid-1980's and Paris in 2015, the characters of Yale and Fiona resonate with all of us who have loved, who have felt marginalized, who have grieved loss, and who have watched a country turn its back on its own people. 
Honorable Mention: The Only Woman in the Room; The Fountains of Silence; This Tender Land; City of Girls; The World That We Know; The Nickel Boys; The Storyteller's Secret; The Island of Sea Women


Fantasy: Ninth House by Leigh Bardugo / Winternight Trilogy by Kathering Arden

Ninth House is a gritty tale of Yale's secret societies, the dark magic used to disrupt society, and a young woman who communicates with dead people.


The Winternight Trilogy (The Bear and the Nightingale, The Girl in the Tower, and The Winter of the Witch) is a magical blend of Russian folklore and historical fiction about 13th century Russia, all held together by one badass woman and truly gorgeous writing.



Sci-Fi:  The Testaments (The Handmaid's Tale #2) by Margaret Atwood

In this sequel, the story is told by three narrators: the baby Offred sends to Canada in hopes of a better life; Offred's first daughter, left behind in Gilead, training to be a Commander's Wife; and Aunt Lydia, the evil manipulator of the first book. Once again, Atwood plays with time as we are yanked back and forth, following the life events that drive the plot for each character. 
Honorable Mention: Recursion


Memoir: Know My Name by Chanel Miller

This is Chanel's story, her voice, her moment and she deserves all the accolades for the courage of her honesty, as she recounts the time in her life when she was raped by Brock Turner and the ensuing court trial.  "This is an attempt to transform the hurt inside myself, to confront a past and find a way to live with and incorporate these memories. I want to leave them behind so I can move forward. In not naming them, I finally name myself." This book was painful, crushing, inspiring, courageous, unforgettable...a Must Read for everyone.
Honorable Mention: Becoming; The Unwinding of the Miracle

Non-Fiction, History: Ashley's War, The Untold Story of a Team of Women Soldiers on the Special Ops Battlefield by Gayle Tzemach Lemmon

Each time I find myself whining about some stupid moment in my privileged life, I remember Ashley White - a 24 year old spitfire, who never gave up, who loved to bake for her fellow soldiers, who could outwork, outrun, outclimb any of the men she trained with, who treated her Afghanistan-American translator with dignity and respect, who left her marriage of six months to serve her country, and who gave her life for it as well. Ashley White is a name we should all know. Read this book and you will understand my passion for this American hero.
Honorable Mention: Stamped from the Beginning, The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America; Say Nothing, A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland 


Non-Fiction, Social Justice: She Said: Breaking the Sexual Harassment Story That Helped Ignite a Movement by Jodi Kantor & Megan Twohey

Written by the reporters who blew the lid off Harvey Weinstein and his sexual harassment and abuse for decades, these two women and their editor are just simply badasses. If you're a woman, read this book. If you know a woman, read this book. If you've been harassed or abused or assaulted, or know someone who has, read this book. If you are desperate for truth in today's world, read this book. It is a masterpiece of journalistic investigation, the power of the press, and the inspiration of true heroes who were willing to put it all on the line to expose the truth. 
Honorable Mention: Maid: Hard Work, Low Pay, and a Mother's Will to Survive; The Witches Are Coming, Amity and Prosperity, One Family and the Fracturing of America; The Moment of Lift


Non-Fiction, Science: The Feather Thief: Beauty, Obsession, and the Natural History Heist of the Century by Kirk Wallace Johnson

The story covers the heist of bird feathers from a small museum in England. One might think "Hmmm, so what? Who cares about bird feathers?" But did you know there's a huge black market for them due to fly fishing? Or that bird feathers from centuries ago can tell how how the earth is doing, or not doing? That the feather industry was humongous in the 19th century, employing thousands of workers? Yep, it's an obsessive story, trust me.
Honorable Mention: Brain Rules, 12 Principles for Surviving and Thriving at Work, Home, and School


Young Adult Fantasy: Kingdom of Ash by Sarah J. Maas

If you like YA fantasy, strong complex characters, creative setting, romance, and taut tense cliffhangers, Throne of Glass is the series for you. (And if you've never done YA or fantasy - give it a shot. It is the best escapism from the crap in this world!) This finale is the best finish to a series that I have ever read. I wept, I turned pages obsessively, and I felt bereft when it was over.
Honorable Mention: The Toll (Arc of a Scythe #3);  The Grace Year; A Curse So Dark and Lonely; A Skinful of Shadows


Young Adult: Long Way Down by Jason Reynold


Fifteen year old Will leaves his apartment with a gun in his waistband, intent on revenge for his brother Sean's death. However, his elevator ride down stops on each floor, and a ghost enters, telling the story of the Gun, the Violence, the Rules. Do Not Miss This Book. My jaw was on the floor with the last two-word line.
Honorable Mention: Frankly in Love

Middle Reader: The Way Past Winter by Kiran Millwood Hargrave

Utterly delightful, this story has a cast of strong, smart, brave sisters who must find a way to rescue their brother, and defeat the enemy who has stolen so many boys, as well as brought years of winter to the harsh land of Russia. Hargrave has a beautiful voice, knows how to create tension without it being too scary, and develops each sister so that they are uniquely their own self. This would be a fantastic gift for either a boy or girl this holiday season.
Honorable Mention: Look Both Ways

Picture Book: Sophie's Squash by Pat Zietlow Miller

A story of a squash brought home from the market, and as time goes by, poor lil Sophie watches her new doll go soft and rotten. It's a beautiful story of fall, of renewal, of faith + it's funny:)
Honorable Mention: Be Kind; I Dissent, Ruth Bader Ginsburg Makes Her Mark; Highest Mountain of Books in the World

Thursday, December 5, 2019

December

Know My Name by Chanel Miller
Do you remember the victim statement of Jane Doe, read in a courtroom after Brock Turner was given only six months minus time served, for raping an unconscious woman at Stanford University? I do. She said every single thing every person who has been sexually assaulted feels - every angry feeling on the lack of justice, every frustrated moment of not being heard, every spark of rage of the 'how dare you?' This is Chanel's story, her voice, her moment and she deserves all the accolades for the courage of her honesty. "This is an attempt to transform the hurt inside myself, to confront a past and find a way to live with and incorporate these memories. I want to leave them behind so I can move forward. In not naming them, I finally name myself." This book was painful, crushing, inspiring, courageous, unforgettable...a Must Read for everyone.

The Butterfly Girl (Naomi Cottle, #2) by Rene Denfield
Sequel to The Child Finder, it is not necessary to read the first one to love this second one. Book #2 follows two story lines: Naomi, the newly married private investigator, famous for finding children no else could, now searching for her sister, the one she abandoned years ago as Naomi fled their kidnapper; and Celia, the young street kid, the runaway from an abusive home, the one the judge discounted, the one no one believed until Naomi did. These two incredible characters form a plot line that deals not only with a world of today's issues of homelessness, the opiate epidemic, and child abuse, but with questions about what makes a family, how does our past mold our future, and how does one move on? This is a beautifully written, compelling tale that I highly highly recommend.

The Education of an Idealist by Samantha Power
Yes, I continue my search for normalcy in the past political world by another memoir of an Obama appointee. I listened to this one and I will say...former UN Ambassador Power is a terrible narrator, but she does write an intriguing story. Power covers everything from the time of her birth, to the aftermath of the 2016 election (and I mean everything - could've used about 200 less pages). However, her life as an Irish immigrant, her time as a war reporter in Bosnia, her beginnings with Obama, her fight to have her voice heard in a world full of men, her close relationship with the President, all of these things do make for a fascinating story, especially if you're a political junkie like me.

Nothing to See Here by Kevin Wilson
The premise is this story is rather silly: former schoolmates and 'friends,' Lillian and Madison have not spoken in years when Madison asks Lillian to come take care of her two stepchildren who can spontaneously combust. Yep, you heard that right - they catch on fire and can pretty much 'light' up a room (sorry, I couldn't resist!) Yet for the implausibility of the story, some home truths also exist. The story deals with privilege (Lillian is dirt poor, Madison has generations of wealth and family social standing), what is it to love a child (the two kids have been emotionally abused and tortured, and just need someone to love them), and what does success actually mean (is it power and money, or is it the attic room in your mother's house?). If you're looking for a light entertaining read, this could be it:)

The Toll (Arc of a Scythe, #3) by Neal Shusterman
I began this trilogy over three years ago, and it has been an exhilarating ride. A mix of fantasy and sci-fi, Schusterman has given us a look into the future. What would earth be like without disease, pain, death? The world population is controlled through 'scythes' (ie. assassins) who are supposed to 'glean' (ie. murder) judiciously, and the 'Thunderhead' is a god-like artificial intelligence who runs the world. But what happens if the scythes become too powerful? If two young acolytes start to distrust the system? If the Thunderhead loves the humans too much? If scythes start to enjoy the killing? This is YA fantasy at its best!

Get A Life, Chloe Brown by Talia Hibbert
I was looking for some light reading after a time of great upheaval in life, so I turned to this audio book. The premise is as follows: Chloe has fibromyalgia and suffers from chronic pain, thus she has lost all her friends and social life so decides to do something about it. Enter Redford, the hot landlord of her apartment building in London. Yeah, can you tell this book is already not my style? Yet the narrator was delightfully British, it has a lot of steamy sex scenes, and is cutely funny yet has decent things to say about the life of chronic pain. Many others loves this book; it just wasn't my cup of tea.

American Predator: The Hunt for the Most Meticulous Serial Killer of the 21st Century by Maureen Callahan
True life crime story about a prolific, dark, evil serial killer...perfect for weird people like me who love the Mindhunter series on Netflix and Erik Larson's book Devil in the White City. Alas, it should have been a long newspaper article by installments; there just wasn't enough to write an entire book about, as there are still so many questions surrounding this killer. Therefore, a bit long-winded with lots of filler - not one I recommend.