Koncocoo

Best Fiction Urban Life

The Wrong Side of Goodbye (A Harry Bosch Novel)
Desperate to know whether he has an heir, the dying magnate hires Bosch, the only person he can trust. At the same time, unable to leave cop work behind completely, he volunteers as an investigator for a tiny cash-strapped police department and finds himself tracking a serial rapist who is one of the most baffling and dangerous foes he has ever faced. Swift, unpredictable, and thrilling, The Wrong Side of Goodbye shows that Michael Connelly "continues to amaze with his consistent skill and sizzle" ( Cleveland Plain Dealer ). Few mystery novelists make background facts and simple descriptions sing the way this writer does. And no writer exploits Los Angeles - its geography, its historical power wars, its celebrity culture, its lore - as compellingly as Connelly....he must be read." "If any novelist is worthy to walk once more through the front door of Raymond Chandler's iconic Sternwood mansion, it's Michael Connelly. For over two decades, Connelly has been brilliantly updating and enlarging the possibilities of the classic L.A. hard-boiled novel, first bestowed upon the world in 1939 with Chandler's debut, The Big Sleep . Moving effortlessly between Bosch's private and public cases, he ratchets up the tension...pulling off in the final few chapters a California noir sleight of hand that would make Ross Macdonald envious." "In each novel, Connelly has dug deeper into Harry's psyche, as he skillfully does in The Wrong Side of Goodbye ....Connelly's melding of the police procedural, private detective novel and intense character study remains solid. "....it is immensely satisfying to see Bosch's sustained and deepened passion for his mission- "Everybody count or nobody counts" - undiminished by age or circumstance, even as a younger generation of detectives of all colors and orientations share the stage to carry on the work that has given Bosch, and this series, such an enduring appeal.
Reviews
"In The Wrong Side of Goodbye, former LAPD detective Harry Bosch is hired as a private eye to find out whether a reclusive billionaire has an heir related to him by blood. The investigation will also expose him and his teenage daughter to great danger, as the board members of the billionaire’s company seek to protect their access to wealth and power."
"In his private investigator role, he is invited to meet an aging aviation billionaire, Whitney Vance, who has a proposition - find out if he has any surviving offspring who could become the heir to his huge fortune. At the same time, Bosch gets tied up almost full time with a major case for the small police force of San Fernando - a serial rapist who gains entry by cutting through the screen door of victims' houses. The hunt for the "Screen Cutter" heats up when more victims are identified and a criminal profile suggests that it is only a matter of time before the rapist also becomes a killer."
"After years of reading all of Connelly's books, including the Haller series, Bosch just keeps piling on layers of character development extensions which keep adding higher resolution to our fully fleshed out detective. Add competent and realistic storylines that don't rely on manipulation of invention, nor alterations to the standard laws of physics, but an assemblage of process and reasoning in which you share with an intimate narrator, and you have a book you can sink your brain into, every time."
"He also fills in his time working as a private detective, in the course of which he's called to see an elderly billionaire, Wilbur Vance, who wants him to track down an heir."
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The Black Book
#1 New York Times #1 USA Today #1 Wall Street Journal #1 Chicago Tribune #1 Entertainment Weekly #1 Publishers Weekly How can you prove your innocence when you can't remember the crime?
Reviews
"This book left me shaking my head and my mouth hanging open and saying how could you?"
"It has everything you need in a great mystery-twists and turns, romance, secrets, intrigue, betrayals at the highest level,not to mention a set of interesting characters.. Mr Patterson and David Ellis make a great duo."
"Sounds like a case that could be happening in any big city where political gains can and does interfere with police policy, procedures and promotions. Be prepared to loose some sleep or work, once you start this book, it is very difficult to put it down."
"This is one of the best James Patterson books I have ever read!"
"Me, the person that has read thousands of murder mystery novels was fooled at the ending. Caught me completely unaware."
"With twists galore- a true old fashioned whodunit!"
"Homicide Detectives staking out a murder suspect become accused of "payoffs" from a high priced brothel with political and celebrity clientele."
"Loved the book."
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The House of Unexpected Sisters: No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency (18) (No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency Series)
Never one to let an act of injustice go unanswered, Mma Ramotswe begins to investigate, but soon discovers unexpected information that causes her to reluctantly change her views about the case. With the generosity and good humor that guide all her endeavors, Mma Ramotswe will untangle these questions for herself and for her loved ones, ultimately bringing to light important truths about friendship and family—both the one you’re born with and the one you choose. "[ Precious and Grace ] is that rare find in a long-running series: a book that can appeal both to newcomers and to longtime fans�. As always, a marvelous mix of humor, startling incidents, contemporary African setting, and memorable characters." "Utterly charming and deliciously entertaining, [with] characters who are as adept as they are appealing--people who become as familiar as neighbors and as welcome as the best of friends--and who, though steady in their beliefs and devotions, will still constantly surprise and amaze."
Reviews
"I've often promoted the theory that AMS has a little game with himself to see if every time he writes a book, he can incorporate less of a plot than in the previous one. But let's be honest, what keeps me and so many others returning to the series is the whimsical charm of AMS's eternally sunny Botswana, where the pace of life is slower, where you welcome a stranger on your doorstep without question, where a cup of tea will solve almost any problem. How can you read this and not feel refreshed: "A good stew smelled like...well, a good stew; it would remind you of that time when the sun has just sunk over the Kalahari, when the cattle have been brought back into their kraal against a background of gentle lowing, when the moon is floating up in the sky over Botswana and the children are sitting about the fire, waiting for their dinner."
"Gentle humor often subtly appears as when her husband comments that cars of "traditionally built women" often sag, realizes she is traditionally built and changes the subject."
"They teach or remind us ways to live our daily lives in a more peaceful way."
"This is 5 stars if you're a nice, relaxed Alexander McCall Smith fan."
"I think Alexander McCall Smith thought he was done with this series until everyone was begging for more."
"Lisette Lecat, the narrator, was perfect as she always delivers and was outstanding choice for this series."
"Alexander McCall Smith is very prolific!"
"The person who this book is for loves this book and all of the books in this series."
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Best Fiction Satire

Animal farm: A Fairy Story
“All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others.”. “ Animal Farm remains our great satire on the darker face of modern history.”—Malcolm Bradbury.
Reviews
"Nothing wrong with the physical book and a must read story."
"Reads like a children's story but settles in your mind like an anvil."
"The pigs rewrite history and convince the others that things happened differently to how they remember, and rewrite their '7 Commandments' subtly in their favour and so on. There is plenty of depth if you want to go into the details of the allegory if you are interested, but the main point is pretty obvious really."
"I kept hoping and hoping that the animals would rise up in a second rebellion, or that Snowball would return with some kind of relief force, when I knew very well that this book is based on Russian history and no such thing happened."
"As with any book review, I do not want to spill the plot, but suffice it to say that the (potential future) world Orwell paints in vivid detail is not always a pretty one. At less than 10 bucks for the Kindle edition this set is a true Amazon bargain!"
"My son and I both enjoyed reading this classic George Orwell novel, there are a lot of discussion points to be had at the end of each chapter, and it's a relatively short read - much like this review."
"I loved this, it is one of my all time favorites, and this was a refresher read for next months discussion at the book club I belong to."
"Small print and smaller book than expected."
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Best Family Life Fiction

Say Goodbye for Now
“Catherine Ryan Hyde delivers once again with this feel-good story guaranteed to be a hit…” — Redbook. When Pete Solomon, a neglected twelve-year-old boy, and Justin bring a wounded wolf-dog hybrid to Dr. Lucy, the outcasts soon find refuge in one another. Catherine Ryan Hyde is the author of thirty-three published books. Her bestselling 1999 novel, Pay It Forward , adapted into a major Warner Bros. motion picture, made the American Library Association’s Best Books for Young Adults list and was translated into more than two dozen languages for distribution in more than thirty countries. More than fifty of her short stories have been published in many journals, including the Antioch Review , Michigan Quarterly Review , the Virginia Quarterly Review , Ploughshares , Glimmer Train , and the Sun , and in the anthologies Santa Barbara Stories and California Shorts , as well as the bestselling anthology Dog Is My Co-Pilot . Her short fiction received honorable mention in the Raymond Carver Short Story Contest, a second-place win for the Tobias Wolff Award, and nominations for Best American Short Stories , the O. Henry Award, and the Pushcart Prize.
Reviews
"It's the kind of story that, while you're reading it and the dogs have to go out or you have to eat dinner, it's an annoyance to have to stop to attend to those everyday events that you normally look forward to. Ryan Hyde's books usually involve animals in their plots. This one is no different, but the involvement of the animals brings out the courage of the characters. With the exception of one brave act by one of the animals, the courage and bravery rests with the humans in this book - to face uncertainty, hatred, bigotry, abuse."
"So here's the bad news: Every Catherine Ryan Hyde book has to end and that moment just never stops sucking. What I love/hate most about this book is how timely the message is, even though it's set in the fifties and sixties. Unfortunately, the part that hit me the hardest was how deeply we hold onto these ideas that hurt other people."
"I know I can count on Catherine Ryan Hyde giving me hours of reading pleasure. Pete is young boy on his way to go fishing when he discovers an injured dog off the side of the road. Justin, who has just moved into the area, sees Pete and the dog and asks if he can walk along with them. He tells Pete to keep to his own kind (white people) and whips him so hard with the belt he draws blood. It gets so bad for him that he winds up living with Miss Lucy when his dad disowns him and tells him to never come back. If you like a story that is compelling and really grabs you right from the beginning and doesn't let go to the very end, read this book now."
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Best War Fiction

All the Light We Cannot See: A Novel
Winner of the Pulitzer Prize, a New York Times Book Review Top Ten Book, National Book Award finalist, more than two and a half years on the New York Times bestseller list From the highly acclaimed, multiple award-winning Anthony Doerr, the stunningly beautiful instant New York Times bestseller about a blind French girl and a German boy whose paths collide in occupied France as both try to survive the devastation of World War II. He is also the author of two story collections Memory Wall and The Shell Collector , the novel About Grace , and the memoir Four Seasons in Rome .
Reviews
"It has been a while since I have found a book that I wanted to read slowly so that I could soak in every detail in hopes that the last page seems to never come. When reading the synopsis of this novel, I never imagined that I would feel so connected to a book where one of the main characters is blind and the other a brilliant young German orphan who was chosen to attend a brutal military academy under Hitler's power using his innate engineering skills. I was invited into the pages and could not only imagine the atmosphere, but all of my senses were collectively enticed from the very first page until the last. In most well-written books you get of a sense of what the characters look like and follow them throughout the book almost as if you are on a voyage, but with this novel, I could imagine what it was like to be in Marie-Laure's shoes."
"On the other hand, as the author describes it, “It’s also a metaphorical suggestion that there are countless invisible stories still buried within World War II.” Add in a newly blinded French girl who is forced to leave her familiar surroundings, and you’ll soon find yourself in literary heaven. There are lessons about the brain, sitting inside the darkness of our skull, interpreting light; there are lessons about coal having been plants living millions of years ago, absorbing light, now buried in darkness; lessons about light waves that we cannot see—all applicable as the story unfolds. The author also includes connections to the song Clair de Lune, the book 20,000 LEAGUES UNDER THE SEA, and a fictional story about a priceless diamond called the Sea of Flames, whose owner “so long as he keeps it, the keeper of the stone will live forever.”. I cannot proclaim loud enough how much this book means to me; I have been left awe-inspired."
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Best Absurdist Fiction

Pale Fire (Everyman's Library Contemporary Classics Series)
The urbane authority that Vladimir Nabokov brought to every word he ever wrote, and the ironic amusement he cultivated in response to being uprooted and politically exiled twice in his life, never found fuller expression than in Pale Fire published in 1962 after the critical and popular success of Lolita had made him an international literary figure. "This centaur-work, half poem, half prose…is a creation of perfect beauty, symmetry, strangeness, originality and moral truth. Pretending to be a curio, it cannot disguise the fact that it is one of the great works of art of this century." "Of all [Nabokov's] inventions, Pale Fire is the wildest, the funniest and the most earnest.
Reviews
"Pale Fire is one of the most beautiful and poignant books I have read for a very long time."
"A lovely book that you can re-read many times."
"Dwight MacDonald, a "high priest" of culture, and author of Against the American Grain (A Da Capo paperback) as well as others, called the work "unreadable." Mary McCarthy, of The Group fame, on the other hand was far more enthusiastic, recognizing that Nabokov was making a "dent" in the orthodox "reality" of acceptable literature, just as Stravinsky did in the musical field, half a century earlier. It is that, but it is also far more akin to a game of three dimensional chess, as Nabokov plays (and you can sense his joy in writing this) along numerous planes, vectors, and assorted intersections. written by John Shade which his wife has bequeathed to his somewhat friend and academic colleague Charles Kinbote for safekeeping, editing, and eventual publication. There are also "svelte stilettos" and "And our best yesterdays are now foul piles, Of crumpled names, phone numbers and foxed files..." As with much of Nabokov, both the poem, and the commentary can serve simply as a vocabulary builder. Consider from the poem: "A proud and happy linguist: je nourris, Les pauvres cigales - meaning that he, Fed the poor sea gulls! Speaking of publishers, "Everyman's Library" has produced an outstanding edition, complete with the cloth bookmark, which serves to supplement your own, as you flip back and forth between poem and commentary."
"Pale Fire is excellent -- although the metafictional style may not be the first choice of some, Nabakov does a brilliant job of unfolding an excellent plot through an unusual format."
"Pale Fire by Vladimir Nabokov is an odd patchwork of literature—part poem, part prose, part criticism, part history, and all fiction."
"(p. 67). Thus Pale Fire is about Charles Kinbote's life as commentary to an abstruse and unfinished poem by John Shade."
"“Pale Fire” is one of top 100 books of the 20th century. The poem is beautiful, an almost perfect piece."
"Good read."
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Best Animal Fiction

The Art of Racing in the Rain: A Novel
A heart-wrenching but deeply funny and ultimately uplifting story of family, love, loyalty, and hope--a captivating look at the wonders and absurdities of human life . “The perfect book for anyone who knows that some of our best friends walk beside us on four legs; that compassion isn’t only for humans; and that the relationship between two souls...meant for each other never really comes to an end.” (Jodi Picoult). “I savored Garth Stein’s The Art of Racing in the Rain for many reasons: a dog who speaks, the thrill of competitive racing, a heart-tugging storyline, and--best of all--the fact that it is a meditation on humility and hope in the face of despair.” (Wally Lamb, Author of She's Come Undone and I Know This Much Is True).
Reviews
"For me, a sad situation with a dog is 1000x worse than with a person, and I just don't have the emotional capability to keep it together. But a friend of mine recommended this book multiple times over the past year, so I finally bite the bullet and read it. I finished this book in an airport and thought TSA was going to have to get involved."
"But the main drama is the conflict between Denny Swift (husband, widower and gentle dog owner) and his in-laws. But the book is more serious than it is funny, and so the story did not have quite as much light-hearted fun as I thought there would be. Still, I thought the book ended on a very happy and uplifting note."
"I would give this 3.5 stars...for all those who say this was a fun read or funny...I want to know if you are commenting on the same book I read...this is very serious stuff...there was only one time that I laughed and that was when Enzo was speaking...but I thoughtmuch of the middle of the book just dragged on and on...lots of bad stuff happens throughout the book and then to make it all better with the last few pages didn't work for me...I understand it...it just left me feeling crappy."
"i dont want to give too much away, ill let other reviewers do that, but i will say, that if u want to know what a great book from a dogs perspective is like, i highly recommend this piece of art. :) this book might be from the perspective of a dog, but really, i felt like i knew exactly what he was going thru, the things he saw, heard, felt.. but without a voice of his own.. the way he would interact to try to get the attention of those around him. (happy about the smart part, not the lack of credit, of course) now, the next time im around a dog, ill have a little secret.. that ill know they know what im saying and ill know they feel what i feel."
"He spends time watching racing videos with his owner, filmed from the driver's seat of the racecar and actually does get to ride in one on a racetrack at one point in the story."
"There was a sample of another of his books at the end featuring beautiful prose--I look forward to reading more of Stein."
"I am aging and will not likely do many of the things that made me into whom I have become, but I share life with a faithful and smart dog who, like Enzo, seems to understand so much ahead and behind."
"He tells the powerful story of his race car driver owner, Denny and his beloved wife, Eve and their daughter Zoe as they face the turmoil in their lives."
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Best Holiday Fiction

Merry and Bright: A Novel
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • Christmas is the season of the heart, and #1 New York Times bestselling author Debbie Macomber is here to warm yours with a delightful holiday novel of first impressions and second chances. Merry Knight is pretty busy these days. Chapter One. “Mom, I need to work overtime, so I won’t be home to help with dinner.”. Robin Knight struggled with mobility issues due to complications with multiple sclerosis. Matterson Consulting, the firm where she worked as a temp, was involved in a huge project, its biggest one to date, for the Boeing Company. All the normal, fun things that were part of this time of year, but for those employed by Matterson, it didn’t matter. Patrick was a dear boy, but he tended to dirty every dish in the house when he cooked. Bogie was Patrick’s golden retriever, who had an appetite that rivaled that of an entire high school football squad. I’ll stop off at the store on my way home and pick some up.” While she was there she’d grab a few other essentials, too, like milk and bread. Her father was in pharmaceutical sales and traveled extensively around the Pacific Northwest and was often on the road. Merry had taken the twelve-month temp job with Matterson Consulting to save tuition money for college. She’d been hired by Matterson Consulting specifically for this Boeing project and had worked extensively on inputting the data. They considered her part of the team and often turned to her with questions, as she had replaced the department head. Most everyone else went to a local café around the corner, where the food was fast, cheap, and tasty. When do I have time to date?” Merry had a fairly good idea what had prompted the question. Her younger brother was involved with a special group that held dances and other events that allowed him to socialize with other teens who had Down syndrome. As a high school senior, he was active in drama and part of the football team. She hoped the state of her social life would change once she could afford to return to school. “Mom, have you seen all the forms and questionnaires that need to be filled out for those dating sites? Her best friend Dakota had met the love of her life online at Mix & Mingle. She started filling out the forms but quickly gave up, exasperated by all the busywork. I have plenty of time to get out there.” Merry didn’t need the reminder about her friend’s happy ending. After Dakota met Michael on the site, she had sung the website’s praises to Merry like a wolf howling at the moon. “Yes, Mom, I heard.” Merry reached for her sandwich and was about to take another bite when the vice president of the company, Jayson Bright, walked past her desk. Her boss’s gaze landed on the sandwich she had on her desk, and for a moment she toyed with the idea of offering him half, but as she doubted he’d find any humor in it, she restrained herself. “Sorry, no, I was distracted.” From Mr. Bright’s look, Merry had to wonder if there was something written in the employee handbook about eating at her desk. The space was often crowded and it was uncomfortable bumbling around, scooting between those at the tables and those waiting in line for a turn at the microwave. The rumor mill in the office said he was related to the Matterson family; the company president was his uncle. Merry’s thoughts drifted to Jayson Bright and she mused at how attractive he would be if he smiled. He was about six feet tall, several inches taller than her five-five, with dark brown hair and eyes. Wanting to be generous in spirit, Merry supposed he carried a heavy responsibility. By the time Merry arrived at home, hauling a ten-pound bag of Bogie’s favorite dog food, it was after eight o’clock. As soon as she walked in the door, Patrick rushed to help her with the heavy sack. “Merry’s home,” he shouted, taking the dog food out of her hands and carting it to the kitchen pantry. Her mom leaned heavily on her walker, now exhausted and fatigued, because she grew tired at the end of each day. “We got you an early birthday gift this afternoon and it’s the best one ever.” Patrick rubbed his hands together, unable to disguise his eagerness. Born on December 26, the day after Christmas, Merry had felt cheated as a child when it came to her birthday gifts. Those with Down syndrome could legally drive in Washington State, but the family couldn’t afford a second car. “You get to pick for yourself, but I’ll help if you want.” From the way his eyes lit up, Merry knew he’d be terribly disappointed if he didn’t get a say in this. Bogie pranced around in his eagerness for Patrick to fill the dish so he could eat. “Now, Mom, now?” Patrick asked, jumping up and down after he poured the dog food into the bowl. Merry hugged her brother and, wrapping her arms around his torso, she gave him a gentle squeeze. Patrick took hold of her hand while their mother opened the laptop and pulled out a chair to sit down. Debbie Macomber , the author of Any Dream Will Do, If Not for You, Sweet Tomorrows, A Girl’s Guide to Moving On, Last One Home, Silver Linings, Love Letters, Mr. Miracle, Blossom Street Brides, and Rose Harbor in Bloom, is a leading voice in women’s fiction.
Reviews
"I loved as a audiobook as I could listen to as I was painting and getting house ready to move into."
"Another great Debbie Macomber book."
"It was very hard to put down as you wanted to know what was going to happen next or see if his attitude would change."
"What a great Christmas read!"
"Macomber Christmas stories are always delightful, this one is no exception."
"Another great read by Miss Debbie ."
"Merry/Mary was blessed in so many ways."
"You have to read this wonderful story!"
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Best Gothic Fiction

The Unremembered Girl: A Novel
In the deep woods of East Texas, Henry supports his family by selling bootleg liquor. As both their worlds spin violently out of control, Henry must make an impossible choice: protect the broken woman who’s claimed a piece of his soul, or put everyone he loves at risk in order to do the right thing. Eliza Maxwell is the author of The Grave Tender and The Kinfolk .
Reviews
"Will it be character-driven, written with flavor and simplicity in the style of great southern American novelists such as William Faulkner? We have his stepfather Livingston, a hellfire-spitting preacher who sees wickedness in people who don't fit his mold. We have broken people like Girl, later called Eve---abused most of her life, fending for herself in the woods, with a self-protective drive like a feral cat—yet deeply needing a family. SETTING AND MOOD: Swampland and backwoods of East Texas, a shack on rotting piers, stately pines with Spanish moss, creaking porch steps. There’s the author’s omnipresent POV, interjecting her style and literary flourishes, some out of sync with her characters. DIALOGUE: Mostly it’s authentic Texan and backwoods, flows smoothly and hardly a problem knowing who is speaking. But still, the personal issues of dealing with gnawing guilt and stumbling faith are about real life."
"The second chapter begins a flashback series of events until we catch back up to reread the first chapter, and beyond as the dominoes of events falls neatly in place."
"I was mesmerised by this unusual family and the strength and goodness, yet naïveté of Henry... Henry supports his family by selling bootleg liquor, putting his life on hold to take care of his sick mother, Caroline and his somewhat freakish stepfather—a fanatical preacher with a sharp and evil tongue. While dealing with their own struggles and getting through each day they have no idea they’ve become the obsession of the girl in the woods. However Henry believes he might be able to save her... there in lies the thriller and the mystery that made my heart race... As the synopsis so eloquently surmises 'Henry must make an impossible choice: protect the broken young woman who’s claimed a piece of his soul, or put everyone he loves at risk in order to do the right thing.'. 'His only hope, the one he clung to during the long nightmare that followed, was that these atrocious acts he was committing had a purpose.'."
"The motley of colorful characters, the atmosphere of small Texan town surrounded by swamps and forest as well as slowly unraveling family’s history and the mystery of the girl in the woods kept me interested and engaged in the plot."
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Best Mashup Fiction

Ship of Theseus
The chronicle of two readers finding each other, and their deadly struggle with forces beyond their understanding--all within the margins of a book conceived by Star Wars: The Force Awakens director J.J. Abrams and written by award-winning novelist Doug Dorst. The book is so perfectly realized that it's easy to fall under its spell. If you want to write a romantic mystery meta-novel in which two bibliophiles investigate the conspiracy around an enigmatic Eastern European author, you couldn't choose a better team." Filled with secrets and stories that are endlessly beguiling and inviting . Reading S., and trying to decode everything [was] an incredibly enjoyable, fun experience, as well as a particularly immersive one. The brilliance of S. is less in its showy exterior than the intimate and ingeniously visual way it shows how others' words become pathways to our lives and relationships." "Both as literature and as a physical object, S. is a profound and tremendous work of art. Brilliantly conceived and perfectly executed, the book harkens back to a golden age of storytelling. An audacious literary achievement that calls to mind Vladimir Nabokov's Pale Fire, Chris Ware's Building Stories and even Charles Portis' Masters of Atlantis. ". Gloriously embroidered with marginalia and jammed with artifacts inserted between its pages . "Both as literature and as a physical object, S. is a profound and tremendous work of art.
Reviews
"Reading and re-reading The Ship of Theseus for clues and inferences to what's happening in the "real world". Then, if you're really adventurous, and you start tapping Google to expand your research, you'll find that the experience goes beyond the book. (Google: Eotvos Wheel) ***I HIGHLY SUGGEST YOU DO THIS***. I'll admit: when I opened the book for the first time, the second thought that went through my mind (after "How frigging cool is this?"). So, for those of you asking that same question, let me tell you how I went about it: As cool as all the inserts are, trying to keep them from falling out of the book as you're reading is a pain, so take them out and use post-it notes to mark what page they came from, then put them in an envelope that you can easily access. ***Read each chapter of the main text of SoT, ignoring all of Jen & Eric's notes."
"I have not finished the book yet but reading the story of the Ship Of Theseus and the notes by Eric and Jen and trying to find if the inserts are in the right spot sure is keeping me alert and interested on finding out the mystery. I wish there had been an insert list in the back of the book listing the inserts and the pages they should be between that would have been helpful in deciding if the placement was intentional or accidental when the books were made."
"This book make me appreciate the value of a physical book truly."
"This amazing book is an exercise in exploring the concept of the book as a medium for expression. You experience the book along with two readers that have interacted with each other in the margins."
"Highly recommended as a gift for literature majors and those who enjoy an interesting concept book that is reminiscent of the experience of finding a book that belonged to someone else and seeing what they put inside."
"The main characters are pretty one dimensional... the actual love story was predictable with no real depth to their dialogue."
"Clever concept, a story within a story (written in the margins) but one story is unclear and hard to follow while the other is a bit of a bore."
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Best Sports Fiction

Beartown: A Novel
People say Beartown is finished. In this story of a small forest town, Fredrik Backman has found the entire world. A thoroughly empathetic examination of the fragile human spirit, Backman's latest will resonate a long time.” ( Kirkus Reviews ). While the story is dark at times, love, sacrifice, and the bonds of friendship and family shine through ultimately offering hope and even redemption.” ( Publishers Weekly ). "The sentimentally savvy Backman (A Man Called Ove, 2014) takes a sobering and solemn look at the ways alienation and acceptance, ethics and emotions nearly destroy a small town and young people." Backman cements his standing as a writer of astonishing depth and proves that he also has very broad range plus the remarkable ability to make you understand the feelings of each of a dozen different characters. The story is fully packed with wise insights into the human experience causing characters and readers to ponder life’s great question of who we are, what we hope to be and how we should lead our lives.” ( The Washington Times ).
Reviews
"The happenings and how the personalities bounce off each other in such human ways (hatefully and lovingly) makes this a fascinating and unforgettable book. This book is not at all like the Ove book except that it is written by a genius of human understanding."
"It begins with a cliffhanger: "Late one evening...a teenager picked up a shotgun, walked into the forest, put the gun to someone else's forehead and pulled the trigger. Fiction is a way to enter into an age-old discussion framed so beautifully by one of the characters: "This town doesn't always know the difference between right and wrong...but we know the difference between good and evil." What is the right thing to do when things go very wrong?"
"Don't be sidelined about it either being set in Sweden, written by a Swedish author, (sometimes some translations don't play out too well) or is about hockey. Even though hockey appears the premise of the story, it is just the background noise that keeps the book and its characters moving forward."
"Without any BUTS I did enjoy this book as I seldom did a modern novel."
"The story is slow to develop but you visit a remote place in the woods and meet people who love and are desperate to win a hockey game; individuals are sacrificed."
"This book speaks of community, passion, and commitment all through the eyes of a hockey team and the town that loves them."
"Important and meaningful story ruined by a bad translation."
"Draining."
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Best Family Saga Fiction

Before We Were Yours: A Novel
But when Avery returns home to help her father weather a health crisis, a chance encounter leaves her with uncomfortable questions and compels her to take a journey through her family's long-hidden history, on a path that will ultimately lead either to devastation or to redemption. Based on one of America's most notorious real-life scandals--in which Georgia Tann, director of a Memphis-based adoption organization, kidnapped and sold poor children to wealthy families all over the country--Lisa Wingate's riveting, wrenching, and ultimately uplifting tale reminds us how, even though the paths we take can lead to many places, the heart never forgets where we belong. "Lisa Wingate takes an almostunthinkable chapter in our nation's history and weaves a tale of enduring power.That Georgia Tann and her Memphis Tennessee Children's Home Society couldactually exist, unraveling the lives of countless children, stealing their pastsand changing their futures, will give you chills. - Paula McLain, New York Times bestselling author of Circlingthe Sun "A powerful taleof family, of sisters, of secrets kept and secrets shared. - Susan Meissner, author of Secrets of a Charmed Life " Before We Were Yours , Lisa Wingate's heart-racing tale of a family ripped apart by the TennesseeChildren's Home Society scandal, r. ang so true I couldn't sleep until I knewtheir fate. . [Lisa] Wingate is a master-storyteller, and you’ll find yourself pulled along as she reveals the wake of terror and heartache that is Georgia Tann’s legacy.” — Parade. It is almost a cliché to say a book is ‘lovingly written’ but that phrase applies clearly to Lisa Wingate’s latest novel, Before We Were Yours . This story about children taken from their parents through kidnapping or subterfuge and then placed for adoption, for a price, clearly pours out of Wingate’s heart. “This story is heartfelt and genuine, especially as Wingate explores the idea of home and family from a youngster’s point of view.” — Historical Novels Review. “Lisa Wingate takes an almost unthinkable chapter in our nation’s history and weaves a tale of enduring power. But the real feat of this stirring novel is how deeply Wingate plunges us into the heart and mind of twelve-year-old river gypsy Rill Foss. Rill’s utterly singular voice will stay with you long after the last page is turned, as will Wingate’s courage to follow her anywhere. Vivid and affecting.” —Paula McLain, New York Times bestselling author of Circling the Sun. I’m still basking in the afterglow, in shock at the true-crime elements, in awe at the journey of these characters who seem to have immortal souls.” —Jamie Ford, New York Times bestselling author of Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet.
Reviews
"It follows the story of the Foss children in the '30s and Avery Stafford in present day, and brings to light a horrifying and shameful real-life scandal. Avery Stafford finds a puzzling photograph that leads her into an ever more confusing story of secrets and lies inside her upright, respected family."
"This is the first book I've ever read by Lisa Wingate, but having read it I will search through her other titles."
"I was a little worried at the beginning since Avery’s family is so wrapped up in politics and I was waiting for the author to head off into a political rant in the middle of the book, but she never did. I liked how Wingate focused on the humanity and family of a major political figure and their response to public scrutiny. I spent the whole book becoming emotionally attached to the Foss kids, but then with the ending, there were too many random add-ins and others left out, and that kept me from being totally happy."
"I was not aware of what occurred in TN with children and learned a lot."
"It was a really nice read and the way the story was told through Rill, May, and Avery's point of view was a good technique."
"I’m sure I will mull it over for some time I really wanted to know what happened to Gabby."
"This is a great book."
"This was a very good read that shows the reader the ugly side of adoption during a period of time in Tennessee."
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Best Medical Fiction

Cutting for Stone
Moving from Addis Ababa to New York City and back again, Cutting for Stone is an unforgettable story of love and betrayal, medicine and ordinary miracles--and two brothers whose fates are forever intertwined. John Irving has been nominated for a National Book Award three times--winning once, in 1980, for the novel The World According to Garp . In 2000, he won the Oscar for Best Adapted Screenplay for The Cider House Rules --a film with seven Academy Award nominations. I’ve not read a novel wherein medicine, the practice of it, is made as germane to the storytelling process, to the overall narrative, as the author manages to make it happen here.
Reviews
"Wow, this is such a great book."
"First book I have actually stayed awake to read in years."
"The diversity of cultures, Indian, Ethiopian, African, and ultimately American was enlightening and enriching."
"It took several chapters to get wrapped up in this book but once I did I didn't want to put It down."
"Did you know that a $500 operation can save girls and women from a lifetime of terrible suffering and ostracism from their communities?"
"Cultures intertwined, a love story, medical details interplaying with history, twists and turns to the tale...a really well crafted read."
"Their unwed mother, a nun, dies in childbirth and their father, a gifted surgeon, abandons them within an hour of their birth. Adopted by two doctors, their mother is a gynocologist and obstetrician, and their father, who was a general practicioner becomes a surgeon after the disappearance of their birth father."
"I didn't want the story to end but i wanted to know what came next."
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Best Historical Fiction

Beneath a Scarlet Sky: A Novel
Now, with the opportunity to spy for the Allies inside the German High Command, Pino endures the horrors of the war and the Nazi occupation by fighting in secret, his courage bolstered by his love for Anna and for the life he dreams they will one day share. “Sprawling, stirring, like the richest of stories, and played out on a canvas of heroism and tragedy, Beneath a Scarlet Sky is like one of those iconic World War II black and white photos: a face of hope and tears, the story of a small life that ended up mattering in a big way.” —Andrew Gross, New York Times bestselling author of The One Man. “Action, adventure, love, war, and an epic hero—all set against the backdrop of one of history's darkest moments—Mark Sullivan's Beneath a Scarlet Sky has everything one can ask for in an exceptional World War II novel.” —Tess Gerritsen, New York Times bestselling author of Playing with Fire. Mark has received numerous awards for his writing, including the WHSmith Fresh Talent Award, and his works have been named a New York Times Notable Book and a Los Angeles Times Best Book of the Year.
Reviews
"It is a gripping story of resilience, the indomitable spirit of a young man that knew no boundaries and courage that sustained him during dark hours. The action intensified throughout the remainder of the book, and one is allowed a rare glimpse into the mind of Il Duce - Benito Mussolini - plus the inner workings of the German High Command. Pino Lello witnesses atrocities he wishes he could forget but keeps soldiering on...wisely... Just a gripping and harrowing Kindle First selection which I feel is the best one I have read."
"He takes us deep inside the love story of his discovery, the unknown hero, Pino Lella, and he crafts an epic tale set against the backdrop of Nazi-occupied Milan and the Italian Alps during World War II that is as intimate and tragic as it is thought-provoking and triumphant."
"I cannot add more to the excellent reviews previously posted other than to say I read this book in one sitting not being able to put it down until 4:00 AM!"
"An amazing epic story of Pino Lella, a true war hero whose story was forgotten and marginalized by history."
"thankdfully, the novel does not leave us in despair and misery, but through the main character Pino Lella, we witness the good still left in people and the human ability to survive and thrive out of the worst conditions."
"Amazing book with a plot line made only better because it is based on a true story during events that changed the world."
"This is compelling story that is beautifully written."
"There was so much substance to the character, that his life became very dear to me: his adventures, his loves, his losses made me grateful for the box of tissue close by!"
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Best Political Fiction

A Gentleman in Moscow: A Novel
A Gentleman in Moscow.
Reviews
"The relationships he forms with staff and guests, his handling of twists of fate, his moral rectitude and his perseverance to go on in the face of his lifelong imprisonment for being a Former Person make for a compelling tale, told beautifully by Towles. I literally sat and stared into space for an hour after I finished A Gentleman In Moscow, contemplating it and wishing it hadn’t ended."
"I had such an emotionally fulfilled feeling at the end of this novel that when I finished the last page, I closed the book, sat back, sighed deeply, and thought, "well, what now? It seems convoluted to start a review with the ending of a book, but this novel is actually a rather long tale, spanning 30+ years, so before I get into the journey, allow me this one break with decorum. But A Gentleman in Moscow, if not completely upsetting Sara Gruen's work, at least pulls level with it, because it is such a satisfying end to this novel, and I'll say no more than that for fear of ruining the experience for anyone else. It feels like such a universal fantasy that, despite the fact that we are not (probably) an aristocrat, a connoisseur of multiple tastes, exceedingly cultured, and currently exiled within our own country, we somehow connect with Count Rostov immediately. Towles writes with such sophistication and beauty in every carefully chosen word that it manages to feel effortless. At times it's witty and funny in that perfectly refined way, and in the next moment it's incredibly astute and insightful. I could ramble on about the the delightful and stunning setting of this book as well as the cast of characters that weave in and out and in again, but it might actually be overkill. I'll revisit often and always with a perfectly paired glass of wine in my hand, as Count Rostov would approve."
"This second novel is as enjoyable and engaging as his first, “Rules of Civility.”. In 1922, the Emergency Committee of the People’s Commissariat For Internal Affairs sentences Count Alexander Ilyich Rostov to spend the rest of his life inside the Hotel Metropol for writing the poem “Where Is It Now?”, which brashly asked the question, “where is our purpose now?” In imposing the sentence, the prosecutor pronounced that the Count “has succumbed irrevocably to the corruptions of his class – and now poses a threat to the very ideals he once espoused. In trying to adjust to his new circumstances, the Count tells himself that “if a man does not master his circumstances then he is bound to be mastered by them” and that “imagining what might happen if one’s circumstances were different was the only sure route to madness.” And so the Count adjusts to the 30 or more years that he ultimately spends in the Hotel. The Count befriends a nine-year-old girl, Nina Kulikova, who is temporarily living in the hotel with her father and who introduces the Count to all of the secrets the Hotel has to offer. While living at the Metropol, the Count meets people from all over the world, begins a love affair with a famous actress, spends many years tutoring a former red Army Colonel about the west, works as the head waiter at the Boyarsky and makes friends and enemies with the various people who lead their lives either in or through the Metropol. Asking for the restaurant manager, the Count is taken to the Hotel’s wine cellar, housing more than 100,000 bottles."
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Best Epistolary Fiction

The Perks of Being a Wallflower
A #1 New York Times best seller for more than a year, an American Library Association Best Book for Young Adults (2000) and Best Book for Reluctant Readers (2000), and with millions of copies in print, this novel for teen readers (or “wallflowers” of more-advanced age) will make you laugh, cry, and perhaps feel nostalgic for those moments when you, too, tiptoed onto the dance floor of life. His first film, The Four Corners of Nowhere , premiered at Sundance Film Festival.
Reviews
"In those days homework was accompanied by radio with Rock and Roll music thanks to Alan Fried, Ranger hockey against Maurice Richard, and Gene Shepard,the best story teller of all time."
"This is one of the most powerful books that I have read."
"The epistolary format of the book was very novel (the only other person that has used it that I can think of has been Alice Walker in The Color Purple). The prose was very pithy, humorous, and engaging-- but the events and dates in each letter do both date the book."
"It a great coming of age movie that works through all the social awkwardness of trying to fit in."
"I also appreciated the lecture Sam gave him, because those are also the values that have brought me success in my life."
"The main character is so well defined, that he is driving you almost crazy along the storyline!"
"Favourable comparisons to "The Catcher In The Rye" have been made by literary critics, and they are valid, even if Salinger's narrator is outwardly the complete opposite of Chboksy's."
"It was quite extraordinary, though it's very faithful (since the author wrote and directed it), and has taken all the suspense out of the book. I'm sure it DOES appeal to lots of young adults, and that's fine, but it's just as powerful for adults."
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Best Coming of Age Fiction

The Queen's Poisoner (The Kingfountain Series Book 1)
King Severn Argentine’s fearsome reputation precedes him: usurper of the throne, killer of rightful heirs, ruthless punisher of traitors. Richard III is near-obligatory context for reading about King Severn Argentine; readers less fond of the Bard can refer to Kylo Ren instead. This is the first title in Wheeler’s projected Kingfountain series, about Owen Kiskaddon, initially the eight-year-old son of a traitorous duke being held hostage at the royal court of Ceredigion.
Reviews
"I'm a fan of Jeff Wheeler and have enjoyed his 3 trilogies in the Muirwood and Mirrowen worlds, and came into this book expecting The Queen's Poisoner to be much of the same, but it was surprisingly different and unique. Although Wheeler's writing style is clear throughout, unlike his other books, this story follows a child, 8-year old Owen, as the main character. As Owen begins to feel the magic of the Fountain, we get a lot of foreshadow, hints, and small demonstrations of what the magic entails, but the magic is not what drives the plot in The Queen's Poisoner-- it's the characters. Lastly, as with all of Wheeler's books, I enjoyed the clean aspect to his writing."
"I purchased this book as my Amazon Kindle First book for March; if there is a Fantasy book listed at all, chances are that's the book I'm going to go for. I felt torn between liking and hating some, which felt like a natural response to the characters Wheeler was developing (I did worry about this from the very beginning of the book, as Wheeler started us out with a list of characters that felt like it was intended to tell us who we were supposed to like and who we weren't; thankfully, the characters were much more developed as the story moved on). The supporting characters are equally well developed and each come with their own surprising traits; Wheeler did a fantastic job of presenting one side of the characters to you early on in the book, but letting you look deeper into who they were and what they were doing where other eyes couldn't see them as you moved further into the book. By the time I reached the end of the book, I knew that this was going to be a series that I would be eagerly waiting for the next book to come out for. While the story wrapped up this part of Owen's life well (you are told in a blurb after the end that the next book will occur 7 years from the end of book one, so it makes sense for the first book to not end in a cliffhanger), there are enough unanswered questions and possibilities yet to be answered or seen."
"If that wasn't bad enough, they are forced to give Owen to the king as his next hostage. While in the castle, he learns many dark secrets. He also learned that he had many in the castle who would do anything to protect him and keep him alive no matter what. I know I harp on a lot of narrators, but the ones who catch my attention really deserve it. If I'm being honest, I think she's the reason I mainly decided to stick with this book when I found it a bit dull."
"This series is my new addiction."
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Best Biographical Fiction

Beneath a Scarlet Sky: A Novel
Now, with the opportunity to spy for the Allies inside the German High Command, Pino endures the horrors of the war and the Nazi occupation by fighting in secret, his courage bolstered by his love for Anna and for the life he dreams they will one day share. “Sprawling, stirring, like the richest of stories, and played out on a canvas of heroism and tragedy, Beneath a Scarlet Sky is like one of those iconic World War II black and white photos: a face of hope and tears, the story of a small life that ended up mattering in a big way.” —Andrew Gross, New York Times bestselling author of The One Man. Sullivan shows us war as it really is, with all its complexities, conflicting loyalties, and unresolved questions, but most of all, he brings us the extraordinary figure of Pino Lella, whose determination to live con smania —with passion—saved him.” —Joseph Finder, New York Times bestselling author of Suspicion and The Switch.
Reviews
"It is a gripping story of resilience, the indomitable spirit of a young man that knew no boundaries and courage that sustained him during dark hours. The action intensified throughout the remainder of the book, and one is allowed a rare glimpse into the mind of Il Duce - Benito Mussolini - plus the inner workings of the German High Command. Pino Lello witnesses atrocities he wishes he could forget but keeps soldiering on...wisely... Just a gripping and harrowing Kindle First selection which I feel is the best one I have read."
"He takes us deep inside the love story of his discovery, the unknown hero, Pino Lella, and he crafts an epic tale set against the backdrop of Nazi-occupied Milan and the Italian Alps during World War II that is as intimate and tragic as it is thought-provoking and triumphant."
"I cannot add more to the excellent reviews previously posted other than to say I read this book in one sitting not being able to put it down until 4:00 AM!"
"An amazing epic story of Pino Lella, a true war hero whose story was forgotten and marginalized by history."
"Wow... this is the most potent and gut wrenching story I've read to date. And that's saying a lot."
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Best Horror Literature & Fiction

It: A Novel
Now a major motion picture Stephen King’s terrifying, classic #1 New York Times bestseller, “a landmark in American literature” ( Chicago Sun-Times )—about seven adults who return to their hometown to confront a nightmare they had first stumbled on as teenagers…an evil without a name: It . But the promise they made twenty-eight years ago calls them reunite in the same place where, as teenagers, they battled an evil creature that preyed on the city’s children. Moving back and forth between 1958 and 1985, the story tells of seven children in a small Maine town who discover the source of a series of horrifying murders. But there is enough material in this epic for several novels and stories, and the excessive length and numerous interrelated flashbacks eventually become wearying and annoying.
Reviews
"When I was on a school field trip in the seventh grade, I took Stephen King's "IT" with me to read. I'd gotten into reading Stephen King two years before by way of a trip over the previous summer to my uncle's house. He had a collection of Stephen King novels and I'd started reading them with Pet Sematary, which had been adapted to the big screen two years before. In the intervening time, I'd devoured Salem's Lot, Carrie, Firestarter, and Misery, and The Shining. Whereas as a kid I identified with those elements as mapping directly onto my friends and setting, I did it unconsciously. I appreciated how well King encapsulated the distance between childhood and adulthood and all the roads we travel in between. King doesn't use mere words to tell stories, he uses meanings themselves, woven seemingly seamlessly into shades of context and pigments of innuendo and occasionally bright, obvious splashes of unobfuscated emotion that jar you because...hey...in real life that's how it works. And in getting that right, King manages to make the impossible elements like the supernatural nature of IT and the relationship IT has with the town of Derry and the inhabitants there...normal."
"Seven outcasts form a bond in order to defeat It, deeming themselves The Loser’s Club. Thinking they defeated It as children, they lead a life outside of Derry until the murders start happening again. Twenty-seven years later, The Loser’s Club makes their way back to Derry to defeat the evil once and for all. With the way King goes into details, it’s like you are actually in the book right beside the characters as they go through the horrors of every day life of living in Derry. His style definitely works by making you really feel terrified as you read, as if It could actually reach out and grab you at any minute. “…she took her washcloth and leaned over the basin to get some water and the voice came whispering out of the drain: ‘Help me….’”. -Stephen King, It. I loved the way this book was formatted. The book is split up into 5 parts, alternating between childhood and adulthood in the perspective of every member of The Loser’s Club. “Can an entire city be haunted?”. –Stephen King, It. This novel wouldn’t be what it is without the addition of the Derry Interludes at the end of every part. She wasn’t a major part of the storyline; therefore, I really didn’t care to hear about her life. Also I feel the need to mention one specific scene that just did not sit well with me, mainly because the ages of the characters at this point in the novel."
"In my opinion, he's at his best when creating young characters - particularly boys around that awkward age of 9 - 12 years old. We meet them when they're all around 11 years old during one horrific summer, and we meet them again 27 years later when they're adults. From all of these characters, we hear stories from that summer and years past; we get a history of the town and of the horrors of Derry."
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Best Religious Literature & Fiction

The Shack: Where Tragedy Confronts Eternity
Mackenzie Allen Philips' youngest daughter, Missy, has been abducted during a family vacation and evidence that she may have been brutally murdered is found in an abandoned shack deep in the Oregon wilderness. "The Shack" cuts through the cliches of both religion and bad writing to reveal something compelling and beautiful about life's integral dance with the Divine. Through my tears and cheers, I have been indeed transformed by the tender mercy with which William Paul Young opened the veil that too often separated me from God and from myself. With every page, the complicated do's and don't that distort a relationship into a religion were washed away as I understood Father, Son and Holy Spirit for the first time in my life.
Reviews
"I didn't read this book when it first came out , I didn't have the interest."
"Both this book and the movie sure made me see that and made my heart so full. My only wish, if for more books and movies to come out like this."
"What I will say is it's an amazing book and if you have ever thought about reading about God and how it all works -- this book is for you."
"This book presents the triune God in a way that humans can relate to."
"A lot of this has helped me cope with my struggle with religion, life, sexual orientation, yet developing a relationship with God."
"I don't normally review books but this one deserves my praise."
"I bought this book for a lady that I work for she reads many books a week."
"A beautiful story that I loved so much I bought one for my sister as a gift."
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Best Small Town & Rural Fiction

Beartown: A Novel
People say Beartown is finished. In this story of a small forest town, Fredrik Backman has found the entire world. A thoroughly empathetic examination of the fragile human spirit, Backman's latest will resonate a long time.” ( Kirkus Reviews ). While the story is dark at times, love, sacrifice, and the bonds of friendship and family shine through ultimately offering hope and even redemption.” ( Publishers Weekly ). "The sentimentally savvy Backman (A Man Called Ove, 2014) takes a sobering and solemn look at the ways alienation and acceptance, ethics and emotions nearly destroy a small town and young people." Backman cements his standing as a writer of astonishing depth and proves that he also has very broad range plus the remarkable ability to make you understand the feelings of each of a dozen different characters. The story is fully packed with wise insights into the human experience causing characters and readers to ponder life’s great question of who we are, what we hope to be and how we should lead our lives.” ( The Washington Times ).
Reviews
"The happenings and how the personalities bounce off each other in such human ways (hatefully and lovingly) makes this a fascinating and unforgettable book. This book is not at all like the Ove book except that it is written by a genius of human understanding."
"It begins with a cliffhanger: "Late one evening...a teenager picked up a shotgun, walked into the forest, put the gun to someone else's forehead and pulled the trigger. Fiction is a way to enter into an age-old discussion framed so beautifully by one of the characters: "This town doesn't always know the difference between right and wrong...but we know the difference between good and evil." What is the right thing to do when things go very wrong?"
"Don't be sidelined about it either being set in Sweden, written by a Swedish author, (sometimes some translations don't play out too well) or is about hockey. Even though hockey appears the premise of the story, it is just the background noise that keeps the book and its characters moving forward."
"His character studies were fascinating and stuck in my brain, making each person a little more understood as the book progressed, although not necessarily more likeable. The book really fires up one's sense of justice, one's disdain for humanity's frailties, one's sense of guilt at the times when we haven't followed through when someone we knew needed us."
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Best Metaphysical & Visionary Fiction

Future Home of the Living God: A Novel
Louise Erdrich, the New York Times bestselling, National Book Award-winning author of LaRose and The Round House , paints a startling portrait of a young woman fighting for her life and her unborn child against oppressive forces that manifest in the wake of a cataclysmic event. Though she wants to tell the adoptive parents who raised her from infancy, Cedar first feels compelled to find her birth mother, Mary Potts, an Ojibwe living on the reservation, to understand both her and her baby’s origins. A chilling dystopian novel both provocative and prescient, Future Home of the Living God is a startlingly original work from one of our most acclaimed writers: a moving meditation on female agency, self-determination, biology, and natural rights that speaks to the troubling changes of our time. “Erdrich stuns again in FUTURE HOME OF THE LIVING GOD…She grounds her story in a kind of sharply drawn reality that makes the standard tropes of dark futurism that much more unnerving…Erdrich is a writer whose words carry a spiritual weight far beyond science, or fiction.” ( Entertainment Weekly ). “A page-turner…with lucid language and gripping scenes…Among the book’s many strengths are its urgency and suspense as well as the immediacy of its voice…Erdrich’s sense of humor manages to make the darkness fresh and plausible…She applies her stinging perspective to remind readers how much has happened, how much keeps happening and how far humans have yet to go.” ( Chicago Tribune ).
Reviews
"In Erdrich's world, the situation has developed quickly in the context of climate change and ecological collapse, rendering most of the social and economic conditions, services and institutions either inaccessible or eradicated. Another point of similarity is that Erdrich gives us a first person narrative in the form of a journal written by Cedar, addressed to the unborn child she is carrying, with occasional additions of letters and excerpts from the manuscript of a novel being written by Eddy, the husband of Cedar's birth mother. Erdrich's heroine, Cedar, is a young woman who has learned she was adopted by her parents, affluent post-hippy types, benevolent and loving. Cedar's situation develops, with a variety of complications related to her encounter with her tribal family, and the beginning of divided loyalties on the personal level as she tries to maintain her loving relationship with her adoptive family and also to cope with her relationship with Phil, the father of her baby. The more serious situation is her effort to hide until she gives birth once it is widely known that pregnant women are being rounded up. There is a sense of desperation that is not part of the narrative (though there is plenty of desperaton and tension in the events), but is a feeling that Erdrich is struggling to take control of a style and narrative form that is not her usual fictional world; it is as though the familiar dystopian tropes exercise a damaging or distorting force that distracts her from the best of her fictional instincts."
"Louise Eldrich’s FUTURE HOME OF THE LIVING GOD is a post-apocalyptic nightmarish novel that brings to mind Margaret Atwood’s HANDMAIDS TALE and MADDADAM trilogy, with bits of P. D. James’s CHILDREN OF MEN thrown in for good measure. The story is set in an undetermined future where genetic anomalies have resulted in the devolution of life on earth. As the story progresses, Cedar must figure out a way to protect her unborn child from a government now ruled by religion (the “Church of the New Constitution”), a government determined to get its hands on any pregnant women in hopes of stopping a genetic nightmare. She is Native American, but she was raised by two white liberal hippies in Minneapolis. How did genetics start working backwards, turning the earth into a mutated mess? There are definitely parts of this novel that are very much like HANDMAID’S TALE (where fertile women are enslaved by a religiously-controlled government) and like the MADDADAM novels (where genetic manipulation has decimated like on earth)."
"As she learns her own history and struggles with the fact that, as a pregnant woman, she's now horribly of interest to society - of such interest that people will do anything to take her - I was so deeply riveted that I simply couldn't stop reading. It's not one of those literary dystopic novels that's really just an excuse for bloviating about art and culture and society and connections. Here, instead, our soft apocalyptic events lead to an unmasking of the rot in the heart of humanity."
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Best TV, Movie & Game Tie-In Fiction

A Game of Thrones / A Clash of Kings / A Storm of Swords / A Feast of Crows / A Dance with Dragons
An immersive entertainment experience unlike any other, A Song of Ice and Fire has earned George R. R. Martin—dubbed “the American Tolkien” by Time magazine—international acclaim and millions of loyal readers. Now here is the entire monumental cycle: A GAME OF THRONES. A CLASH OF KINGS. A STORM OF SWORDS. A FEAST FOR CROWS. A DANCE WITH DRAGONS. “One of the best series in the history of fantasy.”— Los Angeles Times Winter is coming. Meanwhile, across the Narrow Sea, Prince Viserys, heir of the fallen House Targaryen, which once ruled all of Westeros, schemes to reclaim the throne with an army of barbarian Dothraki—whose loyalty he will purchase in the only coin left to him: his beautiful yet innocent sister, Daenerys. It’s a fantasy series for hip, smart people, even those who don’t read fantasy.”— Chicago Tribune “Martin amply fulfills the first volume’s promise and continues what seems destined to be one of the best fantasy series ever written.”— The Denver Post, on A Clash of Kings “Martin has produced—is producing, since the series isn’t over—the great fantasy epic of our era.
Reviews
"This review is primarily to give a feedback on the sizes of leather bound and paperback printed books."
"Going into these books (I read them after the show began but before I'd seen the show...), I enjoyed my share of sci-fi/fantasy along the lines of Harry Potter, Buffy the Vampire Slayer... fairly light-hearted stuff (in comparison, at least) that always felt grounded in the same world I live in. So when I first saw articles and clips from the HBO Game of Thrones series, I thought it looked like the one type of fantasy series that I would never enjoy. I held out for a looong time, until 3 different friends of mine with similar tastes in books/shows/films promised me that, while they too disliked this sub-genre of fantasty, this series was different, and I HAD to read the books or start the show."
"Extremely pleased with this leather edition."
"I was under the impression it would be the "size of a pocket bible" and the pages were so thin u could see through them like bible paper. All of my pages are here (from what I can tell) and although I doubt the quality of the "leather" it still feel great in hand and is just stunning to look at. I've included pictures to show its beauty and also compare the size to an actual pocket bible and its paper."
"4 stars for story, 2 stars for style =3 stars."
"The video production has been so true to the book, and I appreciate the use of the video series impact over a series of movies."
"I can't tell if this is the case for the rest of the books, but I'm certainly dissatisfied with the product."
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Best Sea Stories

The Old Man and The Sea
The Old Man and the Sea is one of Hemingway's most enduring works. Yet Santiago is too old and infirm to partake of the gun-toting machismo that disfigured much of the author's later work: "The brown blotches of the benevolent skin cancer the sun brings from its reflection on the tropic sea were on his cheeks. Just before it was dark, as they passed a great island of Sargasso weed that heaved and swung in the light sea as though the ocean were making love with something under a yellow blanket, his small line was taken by a dolphin. If a younger Hemingway had written this novella, Santiago most likely would have towed the enormous fish back to port and posed for a triumphal photograph--just as the author delighted in doing, circa 1935.
Reviews
"Particularly this work, after almost a half a century, resonate all the more, now that you can feel some of the old man’s pains, and you are much more conscious how you have to use your knowledge and experience to overcome the declining strength of one’s body. It is truly an epic struggle to reel the marlin in – and the old man fishing experience allows him to “think like a fish,” knowing instinctively the most likely tactics the fish will use. But if you read it in high school today, please make a modest commitment to read it a half century later, and undertake the steps to improve your chances of making it that half century."
"This was one of about 3 required readings l read back in high school without resorting to the cheater book, 'The Monarch Guide'.."
"One of those classics that needs reading."
"It appears to be a book about an old man and his desire to catch this big fish."
"I bought this as a gift for my dad who remembers skipping school as a young boy and going to watch the movie in the theater."
"Unfortunately, this book is not new and so I'd heard the "spoilers.""
"Hemingway is lionized in literature."
"I can't tell if the sentences were written in broken English as set by the characters, or if the reprint was done by someone who didn't understand the language (one sentence referred to the Boston White Sox as the "White Fox of the Boston" or something."
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Best Westerns

News of the World
In the aftermath of the Civil War, an aging itinerant news reader agrees to transport a young captive of the Kiowa back to her people in this exquisitely rendered, morally complex, multilayered novel of historical fiction from the author of Enemy Women that explores the boundaries of family, responsibility, honor, and trust. Johanna has forgotten the English language, tries to escape at every opportunity, throws away her shoes, and refuses to act “civilized.” Yet as the miles pass, the two lonely survivors tentatively begin to trust each other, forming a bond that marks the difference between life and death in this treacherous land. In one such town he is given a $50 dollar gold piece to ferry a kidnapped girl back to what’s left of her family--her parents and sister having been murdered by members of the Kiowa tribe--who spare the then 6-year-old and raise her as one of their own. Thus begins a seemingly ill-advised but transformative road trip where the mismatched pair eventually form and uneasy truce, then a not-so begrudging alliance, and finally something more wonderful that neither Captain nor kid could have imagined.
Reviews
"I loved Captain Kidd and the depth of his heart and his mind; and young Johanna was an incredibly clever and touching child. This tale of these two making their way through perils both natural (swollen rivers) and human (Indians and male predators) on the lengthy trip from Wichita Falls to San Antonio is completely absorbing."
"The grizzled former Army Captain Jefferson Kidd has raised his two daughters, and now is passing time until he can convince them to move from the ruins of the post Civil War south to Texas. The former printer turned news reader makes his living and tries to save against the family's future travel costs and expenses by going from one remote community in Texas to another, reading to awe struck residents from the newspapers, telling them about faraway countries and doings there, from the difficulty of taking a census in countries where social and religious mores forbid women from uttering the names of their husbands to scientific experiments and explorations. Indeed, the young Johanna now sees herself as Kiowa, not white, and can't grasp what is happening to her, much less the logic behind such rules as not stripping down in public to bathe in the river..."
"Her newest offering is News of the World. As Jiles reveals it though, the white world and the Indian worlds are in a constant battle for a way of life. In News of the World, the Captain wanders from town to town, holding town halls where he reads the latest news."
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