Thursday, December 27, 2018

Top 10 Books of 2017

    For whatever reason, I never posted my best books of 2017 even though I had put the list together. I'm not going to go back and write reviews for them, but there is some good stuff here if you want to check them out.


1. The Almost Sisters by Joshilyn Jackson  Amid chaos in her extended family's life, a comic book creator finds out she is unexpectedly pregnant. I have enjoyed everyone of Jackson's novels, but this one is easily her best. Funny and touching, this shows what family really means.  
2. My Absolute Darling - Gabriel Tallent  An absolutely brutal punch to the gut. Hard to read, but the fantastic writing makes it worth the read. Fourteen year old Julia lives in a ramshackle house with her mentally ill, paranoid father. I don't often read books because of the blurbs, but when Stephen King calls something a masterpiece, I'm interested. 
3. Sourdough - Robin Sloan  From the author of "Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore", an earlier favorite of mine, comes this humorous story of a sourdough starter that seems to have special powers.
4. Long Way To A Small Planet - Becky Chambers  This is the first in a science fiction trilogy that I really enjoyed. It felt old fashioned (in a good way) and thoroughly modern at the same time.
5. News of the World - Paulette Jiles A short novel about a post Civil War former Army Captain trying to return a young girl that had been a captive of the Kiowa for several years to her surviving family.   
6. Celine - Peter Heller  Celine is a 68 year old, ill private detective traveling across the US in a motor home on the track of a criminal with her husband. Based on Heller's real mother, who worked for the FBI and became a detective late in life.
7. Beartown - Fredrick Backman  I am a huge fan of Backman and while this is his best written book, it is dark and depressing. It is the story of a small town in Sweden and it's love and how much it depends on it's youth hockey team.
8. Killers of the Flower Moon by David Grann  The best non=fiction I read this year. The story of the Osage Indians of Oklahoma in the 1920's. When oil was discovered on their land, speculators & con men did everything they could to take it away from them.
9. Strange Weather - Joe Hill  Four short fantasy novels, all good, but one of which I am still thinking about almost 2 years later.
10. The Force - Don Winslow  Fantastic antihero thriller about a group of bad cops and their attempts to hang on to their ill gotten games. 

    And the book I couldn't stand this year was "George & Lizzie" by Nancy Pearl. She may be a great librarian, but this romantic comedy of a book was just dreadful.