Saturday, December 31, 2022

2022 In Review: Best Fiction

It's hard to believe that another year has flown by.  There have been so many great books that I've read along the way (200+ this year), that even with picking 15 fiction titles to share, there are some excellent books that I'm not even mentioning.   

If you like looking at book lists or need something really good to pick up, I'll be sharing some of my "best of" lists over the next few days.  





These Silent Woods by Kimi Cunningham Grant - a father moves with his young daughter to the Appalachian mountains, living off the grid and running from the past.  There's enough suspense in this novel that I read the entire thing in one sitting.  


Forsaken Country by Allen Eskens- I wish Eskens would get the attention he so deserves. Each book is better than the one before (and the first one was really good so the bar is high at this point).  This has Max Rupert, a recurring character, returning to locate the missing daughter and grandson of a retired sheriff who begs Max for help.  Set in northern Minnesota, this one is a page-turner.  And, even though Max has been in previous books, Forsaken Country certainly stands alone.


Take My Hand by Dollen Perkins Valdez- Historical fiction, set in the early 70s, Civil has just graduated from nursing school and wants to help her African American community.  When she meets two patients, Erica and India, still young girls and realizes they've been sterilized without their understanding or consent, she takes a personal interest in this issue.  Based on true events, the fact that this happened not all that long ago is disturbing and eye-opening.


The Net Beneath Us by Carol Dunbar- Elsa and her husband have chosen to live off the grid in the woods of Wisconsin with their growing family. When her husband is critically injured in a logging accident, Elsa is left to take on all the responsibilities of their life.  There is grief and pain in this story, but fantastic writing, and hope as well. 


Last Summer on State Street by Toya Wolfe - set in the summer of 1999, this coming of age story focuses on three girls who live in Chicago's Robert Taylor Homes that are about to be torn down.  The girls still jump rope for fun, but they're growing up and things they are exposed to are no longer so innocent.


Nora Goes Off Script by Annabel Monaghan - if you are in need of a little romance that is fun, but not too fluffy, this book seemed to take everyone by surprise this summer.  Nora is a screenwriter who strikes it big with the real-life adaptation of her own failed marriage.  Filming takes place at her house and when the handsome movie star shows up - and then stays on after filming is over- Nora might get her own happily ever after.  


The New Neighbor by Karen Cleveland - Beth has worked for the CIA for years, and has spent a great deal of her career trying to track an Iranian informant known as "the neighbor."  Now her marriage has fallen apart just after dropping off their youngest kid at college, and after selling their house, Beth is sure that the wife who now lives there knows something about "the neighbor."  Lots of twists and turns, a Washington, DC, setting and an ending I didn't expect. I've enjoyed all of Cleveland's books.


Our American Friend by Anna Pitoniak - if you've watched The Americans or grew up in the 80s/Cold War era, this book will be right up your alley.  First Lady, Lara Orlov, grew up in Moscow in the 70s and 80s, and now decades later is ready to sit down with a journalist to write her memoir. Sofie isn't sure why Lara has picked her to reveal all of her secrets to, but of course, she's intrigued.  There's a game of cat and mouse going on and a chance that what is revealed could change the political order around the globe.


The Golden Season by Madeline Kay Sneed- Emily grew up in West Texas, where football is the one thing that matters.  Her dad has finally got a head coaching position, but when Emily returns home and tells her parents she's a lesbian, her dad's dreams could be destroyed.  Homosexuality isn't OK in the small town Emily's from and her parents struggle with her announcement - especially her father.  Growing up in a small town, this one feels like it's set a few decades in our past, but Sneed does have the small town politics and way of life figured out, and the writing is good.


Cover Story by Susan Rigetti- I think I've spent more time thinking about this book than any other after I've finished reading it. Lora's internship at Elle Magazine ends, and she is thrilled to be hired by Cat Wolff, a contributing editor as her ghost writer. She moves in with Cat to her Plaza Hotel suite and is sucked in to Cat's world of parties and shopping and glamour.  But there's deceit as well, and a power imbalance, and after I turned the last page, I needed to talk to someone about this book.


The Maid by Nina Prose - Molly has always lived with her grandmother until she passed away, and worked as a maid in a hotel.  She has a hard time with social cues, but she's a hard worker and takes pride in her job.  When she finds wealthy Mr. Black dead in his hotel suite, Molly is named a person of interest in his death.  As some friends rally around Molly, they hunt for clues, knowing that it is only Molly's strange demeanor that has made her a suspect.  This one is unique and fun -and a good mystery.


The Magnificent Lives of Marjorie Post by Allison Pataki- I absolutely love historical fiction centered around people who I don't yet know about. Post's life was incredible - her father started Post Cereal after nearly dying from a chronic illness, and her run-of-the-mill childhood changed dramatically.  She met presidents, tsars, traveled the world over, worked at her father's company at a time when women didn't do that sort of thing, and fell in and out of love.  Although this is fictionalized, much is based on fact and my curiosity was piqued; I want to know more about this remarkable woman.


Schooled by Anisha Lakhani - this is a deep backlist title (published in 2008), I love any book set in a school or education, and this one was a lot of fun.  All Anna wants to do is teach, but having been hired at a wealthy private school it seems there are unwritten rules she must follow.  And the salary isn't enough to live on. So Anna takes on tutoring in her evenings, seemingly indifferent to the fact that she is compromising her values by doing her students' homework for them.  There's a nice resolution to this one and Lakhani's observations about education are spot on.


Home or Away by Kathleen West- West has quickly become a must-read author for me.  This one is set in Minnesota and centers around hockey. Leigh moves her family back to Minnesota in order for her hockey prodigy son to live out his dreams.  The return home forces Leigh to confront her sudden departure from the sport she played in her youth (she just missed making the Olympic team).  A former teammate, Susy, is happy that Leigh is back, but Leigh is doing her best to forget her hockey memories, and the secret she's hidden for decades about why she quit the sport.  


Mad Honey by Jodi Picoult and Jennifer Finney Boylan - Picoult is a master for finding a hot button topic to explore and she's done it again in this novel.   I made the mistake of reading the author's note prior to starting the book, so a big reveal wasn't a surprise to me.....I'm not spoiling anything here - but there's more to the story than Asher, a high school senior, and Lily's boyfriend, being accused and tried for Lily's murder.  I love a courtroom/legal drama, and Picoult and Boylan  do a great job of explaining and writing about a sensitive subject.


There are fifteen great books on this list - most by authors that aren't extremely famous.  I love looking for new authors who have spent years crafting a perfect story.  There are also a lot of books that I could have easily added to this list.  Tomorrow I'll be highlighting the best non-fiction I read this year, and after that I'll share the middle grade/young adult books that I loved.  


If you've got recommendations for me, send them my way.  I love adding books to my TBR stacks. 


Tuesday, December 27, 2022

Waiting on Wednesday: Happy Place




Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly feature where I highlight a soon to be released title I can't wait to read.





This week's pick: Happy Place by Emily Henry

Due out April 25, 2023


Synopsis taken from Amazon:


A couple who broke up months ago make a pact to pretend to still be together for their annual weeklong vacation with their best friends in this glittering and wise new novel from #1 New York Times bestselling author Emily Henry.

Harriet and Wyn have been the perfect couple since they met in college—they go together like salt and pepper, honey and tea, lobster and rolls. Except, now—for reasons they’re still not discussing—they don’t.

They broke up six months ago. And still haven’t told their best friends.

Which is how they find themselves sharing a bedroom at the Maine cottage that has been their friend group’s yearly getaway for the last decade. Their annual respite from the world, where for one vibrant, blue week they leave behind their daily lives; have copious amounts of cheese, wine, and seafood; and soak up the salty coastal air with the people who understand them most.

Only this year, Harriet and Wyn are lying through their teeth while trying not to notice how desperately they still want each other. Because the cottage is for sale and this is the last week they’ll all have together in this place. They can’t stand to break their friends’ hearts, and so they’ll play their parts. Harriet will be the driven surgical resident who never starts a fight, and Wyn will be the laid-back charmer who never lets the cracks show. It’s a flawless plan (if you look at it from a great distance and through a pair of sunscreen-smeared sunglasses). After years of being in love, how hard can it be to fake it for one week…in front of those who know you best?

Tuesday, December 20, 2022

Waiting on Wednesday: Where The Coyotes Howl




Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly feature where I highlight a soon to be released book I can't wait to read.



This week's pick: Where The Coyotes Howl by Sandra Dallas

Due out: April 18, 2023


Synopsis taken from Amazon:

"Addictive. Highly recommended!"―Paulette Jiles, New York Times bestselling author of News of the World

Beautifully rendered, 
Where Coyotes Howl is a vivid and deeply affecting ode to the early twentieth century West, from master storyteller Sandra Dallas.

Except for the way they loved each other, they were just ordinary, everyday folks. Just ordinary.

1916. The two-street town of Wallace is not exactly what Ellen Webster had in mind when she accepted a teaching position in Wyoming, but within a year’s time she’s fallen in love―both with the High Plains and with a handsome cowboy named Charlie Bacon. Life is not easy in the flat, brown corner of the state where winter blizzards are unforgiving and the summer heat relentless. But Ellen and Charlie face it all together, their relationship growing stronger with each shared success, and each deeply felt tragedy.

Ellen finds purpose in her work as a rancher’s wife and in her bonds with other women settled on the prairie. Not all of them are so lucky as to have loving husbands, not all came to Wallace willingly, and not all of them can survive the cruel seasons. But they look out for each other, share their secrets, and help one another in times of need. And the needs are great and constant. The only city to speak of, Cheyenne, is miles away, making it akin to the Wild West in rural Wallace. In the end, it is not the trials Ellen and Charlie face together that make them remarkable, but their love for one another that endures through it all.

Monday Mini-Reviews on Tuesday

I had such a great weekend of reading.  My oldest daughters are back from college which has added a little more noise and excitement to the house.  The Christmas tree did finally get put up - although we didn't do nearly the amount of decorations as normal since our puppy may destroy them.  And I went shopping twice, and yet I still managed to get four books read.  




 

The Ingenue by Rachel Kapelke Dale is the sophomore novel, following up The Ballerinas.  I liked this one, a story centered around a piano prodigy who has returned home to Milwaukee after her mother's death.  The mansion she grew up in is bequeathed to the man with whom Sas has a troubled past, and Sas is left to determine if she should fight for the home she grew up in - and make this man pay for what he did to her and other young girls.


Flight by Lynn Steger Strong - this is a dysfunctional family story - although I am not really sure how dysfunctional this family is.  The dynamics seem fairly normal as three adult siblings and their spouses get together for their first Christmas after their mother's death.  I loved all the siblings' stories and the way the story is resolved.  While not truly a Christmas/holiday story, this may be as close to one as I get this year.


We All Want Impossible Things by Catherine Newman- this one has been reviewed all over social media.  The premise is unbelievably sad - Ash is busy saying goodbye to her best friend, Edi, who is in hospice care.  And while the book is sad, there is humor to it and a great story of friendship.  Despite the many reviews I've read, no one has mentioned Ash's bad decisions (at least bad IMO), which I found a little bizarre.


The Family Game by Catherine Steadman - fast, fun and forgettable.  This was such an easy book to get into and the plot twists were enough to keep me guessing.  I didn't love this one, but it is also set around the holidays, so again, not a true Christmas book, but did a nice job of making feel like I was reading a Christmas story.


This is making me look forward to having a break from work and enjoying more leisure reading like the kind I got to do this past weekend.

Tuesday, December 13, 2022

Waiting on Wednesday: Kunstlers in Paradise



Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly feature where I highlight a soon to be released title I can't wait to read.




This week's pick: Kunstlers in Paradise by Cathleen Schine

Due out: March 14, 2023


Synopsis taken from Amazon:

The beloved bestselling author of The Three Weissmanns of Westport—once dubbed “the modern-day Jewish Jane Austen”—brings forth a comedy of generational manners that glides between 1939 and 2020 L.A. as Mamie Künstler and her grandson weather hard times and discover how to make them their own.

Julian Künstler comes from New York City to L.A. like many a lost twenty-something: to find a job writing in the entertainment industry. But this is 2020 and his temporary visit turns into an extended stay, trapped by the lockdown in a little house in Venice with his glamorous, eccentric, and ancient grandmother. Ninety-three-years old, Mamie came to Los Angeles from Vienna at eleven with her parents in 1939 among a wave of Jewish musicians, directors, and intellectuals escaping Hitler. As the months roll on, she begins to tell Julian her stories of the eminent emigres she’s known and the magical world they inhabited as their old world was destroyed—people like Arnold Schoenberg, Christopher Isherwood, and Greta Garbo. Not quite all her stories, however. The pandemic isolates Julian from his world, but from Mamie he learns of the world that came before him and how much the past holds of the future. A tender, sharply wrought comic novel about exile, the power of stories handed down and handed on, and the power of stories held secretly in the heart.

Cathleen Schine’s writing has been hailed as “sparkling, crisp, clever, deft, hilarious and deeply affecting” by the New York Times, and those qualities stand out more than ever in Künstlers in Paradise. Here, Schine weaves together the story of a family of Jewish émigrés just after they fled from Vienna to LA in the 1930s and life in the pandemic to craft a beautiful, often humorous examination of the identities we inherit and assume and what it means to be displaced. Künstlers in Paradise is the coming-of-age story of a indecisive young man coming into his own and his eccentric, worldly grandmother as they both discover that history does not end.

Monday, December 12, 2022

Monday Mini-Reviews: A Mixed Bag

There is way too much going on right now - both at home and school - as we near the holidays for me to get much reading done.  I'm plugging along but after reading Mad Honey by Jodi Picoult and Jennifer Finney Boylan, I've hit a bit of a reading slump.

These four books are what I've read most recently. I enjoyed a couple of them, but have mixed feelings about the other two.





 

A Hundred Suns by Karin Tanabe is historical fiction at its best.  Set in Siam (what is now Vietnam) in the 1930s, I loved this book which combines a fantastic setting that I enjoyed learning more about with a story that had just enough suspense to keep me turning pages. I did mostly guess how things would resolve, but I really feel that Tanabe's work is under-appreciated and have enjoyed every single thing she has written.  I wish she'd get picked by a celebrity book club so that she'd become a household name.


Verity by Colleen Hoover- I have enjoyed the three previous CoHo books I've read, but I have heard repeatedly that Verity is not for everyone and that there are some trigger warnings that should accompany it.  This book was a little like watching a train wreck. Hard to read, but impossible to put down.  Hoover has such an engaging writing style that she holds a lot of appeal to readers.  However, this book just made me feel icky.  Long ago I read the Flowers in the Attic series by VC Andrews and couldn't stop reading them. The topic isn't the same, but I feel towards Verity like I felt toward FitA.  I'm not recommending this one but there are tons of people who rave about it.


The Search by Michelle Huneven- having attended church my entire life and been in congregations who have had to extend calls to potential pastoral candidates, I found this book a little bit fascinating - and totally unlike my church's process.  Huneven's congregation doesn't seem much into actually reading the Bible or learning about God, which seems not very churchy, but I enjoyed learning about each committee member and could find similarities between her characters and people I know.  I have lots of friends who have struggled with various aspects of how their churches are run, and would love to talk about this book with them.  This is an under-rated gem that I hope more people stumble across.


Someday, Maybe by Onyi Nwabineli- This was a GMA book club pick, and generally I enjoy what is being selected by them, but I'm pretty meh about this pick.  I also enjoy kind of depressing books, but the entire book is literally chapter after chapter of Eve grieving the untimely loss of her husband who committed suicide.  The first chapter has a great hook and I was instantly sucked in, and I know that grief doesn't just evaporate in a few chapters' time, but this was just Too. Much. Sadness.  I am sure somewhere there are readers who feel like this hit the nail on the head when describing the grieving process; it is just really hard to read about. 


I'm not sure what next week's reading will bring, and I'm hoping that there will be time to devote to this in the evenings this week, unlike last week where I seemed to get sucked in to my phone.  

Tuesday, December 6, 2022

Waiting On Wednesday: Stars In An Italian Sky

 Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly feature where I highlight a soon to be released title I can't wait to read.



This week's pick: Stars In An Italian Sky by Jill Santopolo

Due Out: March 7, 2023




Synopsis taken from Amazon:

From the New York Times bestselling author of The Light We Lost comes a sweeping story of two star-crossed lovers in post-World War II Italy, and a blossoming relationship generations later that will reveal a long-buried family secret.

Genoa, Italy, 1946. Vincenzo and Giovanna fall in love at twenty-one the moment they set eyes on each other. The son of a count and the daughter of a tailor, they belong to opposing worlds. Despite this, the undeniable spark between them quickly burns into a deep and passionate relationship spent exploring each other’s minds, bodies and their city, as well as Vincenzo’s family’s sprawling vineyard, Villa Della Rosa—until shifts in political power force them each to choose a side and commit what the other believes is a betrayal, shattering the bright future they dreamed of together.

New York, 2017. Cassandra and Luca are in love. Although neither quite fits with the other's family, Cass and Luca have always felt like a perfect match for each other. But when Luca, an artist, convinces his grandfather and Cass’s grandmother to pose for a painting, past and present collide and reveal a secret that changes everything.

Sunday, December 4, 2022

Monday Mini-Reviews: Five Star Read: Mad Honey

 I have read nearly all of Picoult's books, although there are a few that I still have on my TBR list.

Mad Honey is Picoult's newest book, written with a co-author, Jennifer Finney Boylan. 




I wasn't sure if I'd like a co-author situation, but I couldn't tell that there was more than one author and everything flowed together seamlessly.  

Picoult is the master of always having a twist at the end of her books and writing about a topic that is controversial.  I read the author's note shortly after starting this novel, something I should have waited on until the novel's end.  Once I had read them, I spent more time trying to figure out how the topic they wrote about was going to fit in with the plot that was unfolding. The "big reveal" midway through the book was not surprising to me since the authors' notes disclose the topic, but it certainly brought a timely topic to the forefront for readers to discuss and think about.

I am anxious to talk to others who have read this book.  I also know that the controversy surrounding this topic may make it difficult discuss and bring up some differing opinions. 

Over the past week, this is the book I've been telling everyone they need to read.  There still is nearly a month left before I begin to compile my "best of" lists for 2022, but I am looking for this title to make an appearance there.

Thursday, December 1, 2022

Friday Five: Christmas Shopping Is Underway

 I've been doing a lot of online shopping over the past few weeks. My husband has commented a few times recently about all of the packages showing up.  I hate to tell him that there are lots more soon to arrive.  At some point I need to ban all online purchasing, but I'm still not done with gift purchasing for the girls -or him.  Unfortunately when I am looking at things I often find items I would also enjoy.  


Here are just a few of the many things that have caught my eye:







































10.  Three Pines on Prime - I'm still far behind in this series (and didn't start reading them until recently), but I'm kind of excited about this one.




That's it for me this week. What's caught your eye?