Saturday, December 29, 2012

And another year bites the dust! It feel almost redundant to have placed the can't put down until you finish, "Gone Girl" on this list, but it's here, cause at the end of the day it's really good. I'm also happy to report I didn't even crack open a copy of one "fifty shades..." book, even when it was for sale at my kids elementary school book fair! I'm sure there are things not here that maybe you thought were great and I'd love to hear what they are. 
Again, not all these book were published this year, this is merely a sampling of what I thought was best from almost sixty books. And the last review was a book I read in January and posted about it, but was too good not to be repeated here. 
Happy Reading book worms!




1) "The Fault of Our Stars" by John Green


John Green wouldn't be the first author to sensitively tackle the subject of a teen dying of cancer. Jenny Downham's, "Before I Die" comes to mind. But he would write the most provocative, and in my opinion, the best. Our narrator, Hazel meets Augustus in a cancer support group. her lungs have been ravaged by the disease and her constant companion is the oxygen tank she wheels along beside her. Augustus is a cancer survivor, and former basketball player who lost the lower half of one of legs to the disease. These are bright, inquisitive kids, full of the smart quippy dialogue that seemed to be muttered by actresses like Emma Stone, or to date myself Janeane Garofalo. Yet I think what makes the book so poignant is in this current culture of social media, and instant celebrity, faced with ones own mortality, the question is asked, How will I leave a mark, how will I be remembered? Did my life, however long or short, matter? Questions that ultimately go beyond these two young souls and cause you to ask yourself the same.
http://www.amazon.com/Fault-Our-Stars-John-Green/dp/0525478817/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1356808805&sr=1-1&keywords=the+fault+in+our+stars

2)"Wild" by Cheryl Strayed
Cheryl Strayed's memoir of hiking through the Pacific Coast trail after the death of her Mother, and the dissolution of her marriage iis simply terrific. I won't go on to recount what so many before me have done, especially now, since the book has garnered mass attention due to Oprah Winfrey. I will say personally I had to have a little patience at the start of the book which dealt a lot with the death of her Mother, but a hundred pages in was hooked, and found myself incredibly moved and rooting for her and her journey, both physical and emotional.
http://www.amazon.com/Wild-Found-Pacific-Crest-Oprahs/dp/0307592731/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1356808832&sr=1-1&keywords=wild+cheryl+strayed

3)"The Round House" by Louise Erdrich
A beautiful coming of age novel shrouded in the mystery and secret behind a brutal rape, Erdrich has written a book that has the feel of an instant classic. Thirteen year old Joe Coutts is our narrator, who lives on an Indian reservation with his parents. When his mother is attacked and reluctant to give up anything in regards to the crime, Joe takes it on himself to figure out who it was, and why.
http://www.amazon.com/Round-House-Louise-Erdrich/dp/0062065246/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1356808865&sr=1-1&keywords=the+round+house+louise+erdrich

4) "Rules of Civility" by Amor Towles
I loved every second of this book which literally transports you back to New York in the late thirties, and makes you feel like you never want to leave. Much of the success of that can be attributed to such an intelligent and winning female protagonist in Katey Kontent, the daughter of Russian immigrants who smartly changes her name from Katya as she embarks on her ambitious life in New York. Towles writes with so much confidence and skill it's hard to believe this is his first novel. I loved these characters, this world, and his stark but visually arresting imagery. A pure delight.
http://www.amazon.com/Rules-Civility-Novel-Amor-Towles/dp/0143121162/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1356808915&sr=1-1&keywords=rules+of+civility

5) "The End of Your Life Book Club" by Will Schwalbe
Will Schwalbe's lovely tribute to his mother who died in 2009 of pancreatic cancer is so wonderful because you walk away from the book not feeling sad or depressed, but instead entirely inspired and invigorated. This was a remarkable woman who truly understood what is was to be a servant of mankind, which she expressed in numerous ways, but especially in her work with various refugee organizations throughout the world.
Her passion though, was books. She loved reading, sharing, and discussing them. They informed her life, and filled countless hours with joy. As she says to her doctor who is asking her if her appetite has returned: "I'm trying to eat as much as I can. But nothing tastes good, so I eat a lot of Jell-O. I still have enough energy to see friends and and go to afternoon concerts and read. No matter how tired I am. I can always read. But maybe that's because of raising three children while working full time. I think I got used to being tired all the time. If I'd waited till I was well rested to read I never would've read anything."
So she and her son, who spends hours with her while she receives her chemotherapy, start their own book club for two.It was fun to hear them discussing something you've already read, however I found many more I hadn't. Yet the gift of the book is a comprehensive Appendix of all the literature discussed, so you don't need to read with a pen and paper to write down all the great sounding tomes you're going to want to immediately throw in your shopping cart at Amazon.
Of course any book involving death brings about thoughts of ones own mortality, and Schwalbe manages to say it succinctly, and appropriately to this particular book. "We're all in the end-of-our-life book clubs, whether we acknowledge it or not; each book we read may well be the last ,each conversation the final one."
Make them count.
http://www.amazon.com/End-Your-Life-Book-Club/dp/0307594033/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1356808987&sr=1-1&keywords=the+end+of+your+life+book+club

6) "Live By Night"by Dennis Lehane
I can't even begin to express how continually in awe I am of Dennis Lehane. He managed to create one of the best crime series with Kinsey and Gennaro, wrote the haunting 'Mystic River', and then the twisted 'Shutter Island', followed by his first historical outing, the phenomenal, 'The Given Day'. Now with his eleventh book, he returns back to the Coughlin family of '...Day', but this time turns his attention on the youngest son, Joe, a young man who quickly begins to rise up through the dark underbelly of the pre prohibition gangster world. Lehane is a genius, because he manages to tell a story that's simply epic in a thorough but condensed narrative that's as distilled as the rum his bootleggers are running up and down the eastern seaboard. it's violent, and funny, and packed with emotional punches that make these brilliant characters feel passionately alive, and helmed by a master. Highly recommended.
http://www.amazon.com/Live-Night-Novel-Dennis-Lehane/dp/0060004878/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1356809047&sr=1-1&keywords=live+by+night+dennis+lehane

7) "Beautiful Ruins" by Jess Walter
An utterly delightful summer escape, Jess Walter has written a story that evokes the same imagery and feelings I got the first time I saw the movie, 'Cinema Paradiso'. Beginning in Italy in a small coastal fishing town in 1962, an American actress arrives on a boat from Rome where she was shooting Burton and Taylor's 'Cleopatra'. The young Italian man who owns the one ramshackled hotel in town, finds himself immediately smitten with the beautiful woman, and from there the story begins. Spanning fifty years, and shifting back and forth in time from modern Los Angeles, to old Hollywood, and the secluded fishing town our hero has spent his life in, Walter has written a poignant story about life, and loss, regret and hope, and mostly, the enduring power of love.
http://www.amazon.com/Beautiful-Ruins-Novel-Jess-Walter/dp/0061928127/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1356809115&sr=1-1&keywords=beautiful+ruins

8) "Gone Girl" by Gillian Flynn
The "it girl" of the literary year, she's sparked millions of conversations, and was immediately snapped up by Reese Witherspoon's production company with Flynn penning the screenplay.The seemingly perfect couple, their fifth wedding anniversary, and she disappears without a trace. Told through alternating chapters narrated by him on the day of the disappearance, and her diary entries beginning years before, Flynn creates a portrait of a marriage that is laser sharp in it's precision, which means uncomfortably honest enough you find yourself cringing and giggling at the same time. The first half of the book moves at a measured pace with a slow roll out, but without giving anything away, she suddenly ratchets up the stakes, and straps you in for a wild ride, that I found myself hard pressed to get off of until it all played out.
http://www.amazon.com/Gone-Girl-Novel-Gillian-Flynn/dp/030758836X/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1356809177&sr=1-1&keywords=gone+girl+gillian+flynn

9) Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson
I spent so much of this book vacillating between being aghast at what a jerk Jobs was to so many around him,and yet being blown away by his visionary leadership, I found it hard to put down. Frankly the biggest surprise was how moved I was by the time I reached the end of the book, and his life was over. It's exhaustively researched, and utterly fascinating, despite the fact his behavior was simply appalling much of the time. I ended up reading passages aloud to friends so we could all shake our heads in disbelief, yet there's no denying the guy was brilliant.
http://www.amazon.com/Steve-Jobs-Walter-Isaacson/dp/1451648537/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1356809202&sr=1-1&keywords=steve+jobs+biography

10) "Afterwards" by Rosamund Lupton
I think if you can get past the device Lupton uses in this novel (which I was able to), you're in for a clever and interesting take on the literary mystery. When she learns her daughter is trapped in her burning school, Grace Covey races in to save her. Ultimately, both she and her daughter wind up in the hospital, Grace with a massive head trauma, and Jenny severe burns both externally and internally. But in a somewhat reminiscent nod to, "The Lovely Bones" both Mother and daughter step outside of their bodies to witness everything that is happening in the aftermath, including the fact that Grace believes this fire was deliberate, and Jenny was it's intended victim. The book seen through Grace's eyes, spends much of the time watching her stoic husband try to wrestle with the fact he might lose two members of his family, while trying to find out what really happened in the school with the help of his police detective sister. I throughly enjoyed the ride, and appreciated that Lupton wasn't satisfied with simple resolves, but kept the story twisting right until it's bittersweet ending.
http://www.amazon.com/Afterwards-Novel-Rosamund-Lupton/dp/0307716546/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1356809292&sr=1-1&keywords=afterwards

11) "An Available Man" by Hilma Wolitzer
The one thing that seems to be lacking in modern pop culture now is charm. It's so rare we see or read something now that is truly charming, like 'The Artist' for example, or for me, 'Midnight in Paris". We've become a crass Kardashian and Jersey Shore loving wasteland. So how wonderful that this book is overflowing with it. When sixty two year old Edward Schuyler finds himself a widow, the last thing he wants is for his stepchildren to place an ad for him listing him as an available man. Yet that's what they do, and so begins his journey navigating through the treacherous waters of dating over fifty when nothing seems to make sense, and time is at a premium. Brimming with genuine sweetness, author Hilma Wolitzer has written a story for anyone who believes that the heart can love again.
http://www.amazon.com/Available-Man-Novel-Hilma-Wolitzer/dp/0345527542/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1356809404&sr=1-1&keywords=an+available+man+by+hilma+wolitzer

12) "A Storm of Swords, Game of Thrones Book 3" by George RR Martin
By far the best of the series so far, and able to produce scenes of literally jaw dropping action, Martin turns the whole narrative on it's head, and does things with, and to characters that left me both speechless, and shocked. Already I'm chomping at the bit to see how HBO will shoot some of the more memorable scenes, and can't wait to see all my friends faces who aren't reading the series when they see what happens. A game changer in the series, and sadly probably the highpoint of the series as a whole.
http://www.amazon.com/Storm-Swords-Song-Fire-Book/dp/055357342X/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1356810232&sr=1-1&keywords=a+storm+of+swords

13)"Salvage the Bones" by Jesmyn Ward
It's your typical story of family sticking together through impossible odds. You know, like The Joads. Only this is a poor black family living in rural Mississippi who are about to face down the Mother of  all storms, Katrina. 
Like the pit bull China that is featured so prominantly in this story, it'll grab hold of your throat and won't let go. Narrated by a teenage age African American girl named Esch, she so beautifully tells of her bother Skeet, and his unfailing love for his brutal dog and her new born pups, her eldest brother Randall, trying desperately to escape the strangling holds of poverty and break into a new life through basketball, and mostly, her burning, unflinching yearning towards Manny, her brother Randall's friend, and the father of her unborn child. Stunning, poetic writing graces these pages, such as this passage describing her brother and a group of boys playing basketball: "they elbow each other, fall and let the concrete peel the skin off their hands, their knees, their elbows away like petals." The great thing about the book is in the face of such terrible adversity that climaxes with, you know, that hurricane, you'd think the book would be a giant downer. Not so.
Instead, Ward manages to create a brutal, beautiful testament to the bonds family and survival.
http://www.amazon.com/Salvage-Bones-Novel-Jesmyn-Ward/dp/1608195228/ref=tmm_hrd_title_0?ie=UTF8&qid=1326674276&sr=1-1

My stinker book for the year would go to Mark Helprin's laborious and overwritten doorstop, "In Sunlight and In Shadow"

Sunday, January 15, 2012

My First Great One This Year

Get your mind out of the gutter! Books people, books! Ah January! renewal, resolutions, and for me the beginning of my busiest time of year, pilot season. Once it's underway I never have enough time to read the mail let, alone a novel. So from mid January through April I save up my trash novels. You know, beach reads, like mindless thrillers that don't require much in terms of attention or thought when you turn the last page. So I was so happy to have gotten this one read before the insanity, and I had to share because it's fantastic, and gets the distinction of being my first great read of 2012. It's gonna sound like a downer, but it's not, really. It's savage, and honest, but so well written and so smart I just couldn't wait till December 31st to share.
"Salvage the Bones" by Jesmyn Ward
It's your typical story of family sticking together through impossible odds. You know, like The Joads. Only this is a poor black family living in rural Mississippi who are about to face down the Mother of  all storms, Katrina. 
Like the pit bull China that is featured so prominantly in this story, it'll grab hold of your throat and won't let go. Narrated by a teenage age African American girl named Esch, she so beautifully tells of her bother Skeet, and his unfailing love for his brutal dog and her new born pups, her eldest brother Randall, trying desperately to escape the strangling holds of poverty and break into a new life through basketball, and mostly, her burning, unflinching yearning towards Manny, her brother Randall's friend, and the father of her unborn child. Stunning, poetic writing graces these pages, such as this passage describing her brother and a group of boys playing basketball: "they elbow each other, fall and let the concrete peel the skin off their hands, their knees, their elbows away like petals." The great thing about the book is in the face of such terrible adversity that climaxes with, you know, that hurricane, you'd think the book would be a giant downer. Not so.
Instead, Ward manages to create a brutal, beautiful testament to the bonds family and survival.

http://www.amazon.com/Salvage-Bones-Novel-Jesmyn-Ward/dp/1608195228/ref=tmm_hrd_title_0?ie=UTF8&qid=1326674276&sr=1-1

Friday, December 30, 2011

Best of 2011

At the close of every year, my friend Paul and I would exchange lists of the books that were our favorites that particular year. Over time, as I've expanded my list of people who-well, get my list, it's taken a life of it's own, and suddenly I've found myself meeting people in work and social situations who say, 'oh yeah, I get your list from so and so'. At it's root, this love of sharing, all stems from what I've heard termed as, 'a gentle madness', which is more related to crazy bibliophile collectors, but I think it works just fine for those of us who simply love the written word. I'm not sure where this blog will necessarily go from here. I don't have some fancy hook, there's no fantastic recipe enclosed (but if I find something, I'll be sure to add it), or tip on the best way to deal with your sleepless nights as a new parent.
Just books. That's it.
Now, to 2011, or as I like to think of it, The Year of Magic. Whether it was two star crossed magicians raised to engage in an epic battle, a mild mannered school teacher who finds a way to go back in time to prevent a presidential assassination, or a group of student at a Hogwarts like academy, these books filled me with wonder, with excitement, and had me thinking about them long after I turned the kindle off.

1) "The Night Circus" by Erin Morgenstern
In 2006 Edward Norton starred in a movie called, "The Illusionist" about a magician in turn of the century Vienna. In one sequence he makes an orange tree magically grow and bear fruit. That scene kept replaying in my mind while reading 'The Night Circus' because it would have felt right at home under Morgenstern's big top. Two magicians are raised knowing one day they will meet their rival and be put to a test to see who is the more accomplished. What they don't anticipate is their playing ground is one of their own making; A massive, immersive, and beyond magical circus that suddenly appears from no where, and only opens at nightfall. To give away what the author has created under the various tents would spoil the fun of discovery, but she has offered a bounty for the imagination. And what the magicians, or their mentors really don't foresee is that the rivals will fall desperately in love. For me this book did what any good entertainment should: It swept me up in this mysterious, romantic, and fantastical world and made me regret having to leave it.
http://www.amazon.com/Night-Circus-Erin-Morgenstern/dp/0385534639/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1325223823&sr=8-1

2)"Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter" by Tom Franklin
Years ago Tom Franklin wrote a terrific novel called, 'Hell at the Breech", but am so thrilled to say this is even better. Set in rural Mississippi much of the book revolves around the unlikely friendship between a young white boy, Larry Ott who comes from a working class family, and an African American boy, Silas, or '32' as he is later referred to, being raised by his single Mother. Silas and Larry are now grown men, and Silas has returned to the town he had left long ago to a be a constable. Quickly, Larry and Silas's lives reconnect following a horrible act of violence that lands Larry in the hospital fighting for his life. But also at play is the mystery surrounding Larry as he is the primary suspect in the disappearance of a girl from the town, which only seems more suspect since as a young man he went out one night with a pretty popular girl from school who never returned home. Franklin has written not only a wonderful character piece, but a terrific mystery as well, that feels vaguely reminiscent of Dennis Lehane.
http://www.amazon.com/Crooked-Letter-Novel-P-S/dp/0060594675/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1325224053&sr=1-1

3) "The Magicians" & "The Magician King" by Lev Grossman
A wonderful adult fantasy that takes what feels like familiar premises and mashes them altogether. Imagine if a young college bound man ended up getting into a prestigious university much like Hogwarts of the Potter world. His life there among the mystical academics feel reminiscent in flavor of Donna Tartt's, 'Secret History', and upon graduation he discovers that the wonderful storybook world he grew up reading, a kind of Narnia like place, is actually real, and it's up to he and his friends to enter it to save the ailing kingdom. In theory you'd think, 'I've seen this all before', but Grossman manages to make the familiar feels fresh, and the magical feel real. He also pulls off making the sequel even better than the first.
http://www.amazon.com/Magicians-Novel-Lev-Grossman/dp/0452296293/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1325224251&sr=1-1
http://www.amazon.com/Magician-King-Novel-Lev-Grossman/dp/0670022314/ref=pd_bxgy_b_img_b

4) "Bossypants" by Tina Fey
It's so worth reading simply because she's always come off as the best friend you'd love to have, and frankly this is as close as most of us will ever come to sitting in a room and picking her brain about "30 Rock", "SNL" or that dead on Palin impersonation.
http://www.amazon.com/Bossypants-Tina-Fey/dp/0316056863/ref=sr_1_sc_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1325224479&sr=1-1-spell

5) "The Savage City" by TJ English
I couldn't put this book down. At times it's hard to believe this story of corrupt cops, racial injustice, and the evolution of the the Black Panthers actually happened. That a nineteen year old African American who was only trying to help the police could be brought into a station house and coerced into admitting to multiple crimes including the brutal murder of two caucasian women and sentenced for it is appalling, What made English's book so gripping was the diverse assembly of people assembled, whose lives still hold such relevance today. Serpico, Xavier Holland, Malcom X, as well as Afeni and Assata Shakur, the Mother and Step Aunt to the late rapper Tupac. This book, with it's unflinching look at racism in all it's ugly glory, should be required reading.
http://www.amazon.com/Savage-City-Race-Murder-Generation/dp/0061824550/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1325224793&sr=1-1

6) "The Fates Will Find Their Way" by Hannah Pittard
"there's so much that we didn't-that we don't-know that it's frightening, that it's distancing and isolating and sad." That quote from the book pretty much sums up the core of the reading experience to me. A group of male friends attempt to find out what happened when one their own, sixteen year old Nora Lindell, disappears. The marvel of the book is how she takes a simple premise and turns it on it's head, by not giving the reader a literal and straightforward solution.Instead she presents a variety of options of what might have happened as imagined by this collective group of boys as they mature over the years into men, while examining where their own lives have led them.
http://www.amazon.com/Fates-Will-Find-Their-Way/dp/B005OHT8PM/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1325224952&sr=1-1

7) "Daughter of Smoke and Bone" by Laini Taylor
If you're anything like me you are so tired of hearing, seeing, reading about,and generally being assaulted by the immortal couple of the century, Bella and Edward.
Thank God there is finally a book that can knock those silly blood suckers off their perch and claim the crown for the Romeo and Juliet type star crossed lovers of the magical kind. Young art student Karou, attends a prestigious school in Prague. She fills notebook after notebook of fantastic mythical creatures, with torsos of humans, and heads of animals or serpents. To her friends they're the invention of a brilliant imagination. To Karou, they are her family and alternate life she hides from everyone else. Having no real idea of where she came from or who her parents were, she was raised by a mysterious creature named Brimstone, whom she runs errands for collecting teeth. Yes, teeth. One day on such an errand she comes face to face with an angel, and her life, well, how could it ever really be the same? Laini Taylor does an amazing job of parsing out just enough information to keep you spellbound, while Karou begins to figure out her past while at the same time falling perilously in love with the beautiful and powerful Akiva. Sophisticated, sexy, and intelligent, this book more than deserves the crossover appeal into adult fantasy literature along with those eclipsed kids that everyone seems so ga ga about.(and side, note, definitely don't judge this book by it's awful cover)
http://www.amazon.com/Daughter-Smoke-Bone-Laini-Taylor/dp/0316134023/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1325225694&sr=1-1

8) "11/22/63" by Stephen King
I feel like Stephen King gets a bad rap by a lot of readers for the assumption that he's nothing more than an overpaid horror writer who churns out books about telekenetic girls killing everyone at their prom, killer clowns hanging out in the sewer and rapid dogs. Okay, yes, and they wouldn't be wrong on any of those character counts. But there's something about this latest novel that I would recommend it to anyone no matter how snobby their taste. It's that good. You just have to give over to one magical caveat of the novel: That a mild mannered schoolteacher is shown by a dying friend a portal to go back fifty years in time. When you return to the present, no matter how long you've been gone, only two minutes have passed. What you do over there can obviously change the future. Finally, if you happen to go back again, everything resets, and you're right back in that same place fifty years ago. With me? Here's the kicker: He goes back to stop Lee Harvey Oswald from assassinating Kennedy. It's long, I'm not gonna lie, but man oh man is it good. Talk about imagination! I guarantee it's one of the most original plot lines you're bound to read, and one of my top three books this year. If you've never read him, give over and give this one a try.
http://www.amazon.com/11-22-63-Stephen-King/dp/1451627289/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1325307687&sr=1-1

9) "The Marriage Plot" by Jeffrey Eugenedis
A little confession here. I didn't actually 'read' this book. I was sent an audio copy by Amazon, and since I had wanted to read it anyway, and hadn't listened to a book since I drove across the country from New York to LA nearly twenty five years ago, I thought, what the hell. I admit this because in no way do I want to lessen how much I enjoyed the actual written word of Jeffrey Eugenides new book, but have to say a large part of my overall enjoyment of this was due to actor/writer David Pittu's phenomenal reading. There's a wonderful neutrality to so much of his reading only interrupted by when a character speaks. And when the characters do speak, Pittu manages to give each of them a distinct and unique voice, crossing races and genders. If I was a writer, I'd want him to read my book. Just masterful. The story itself is so incredibly clever and smart, with Eugenides creating a very modern answer to the marriage plot, (the central theme of so many of the great English novels the likes of Austin, and Henry James where our lovers courtship is hindered  by certain events on the way to their ultimate nuptial bliss), that our heroine Madeline Hanna is writing her thesis paper on. The setting is college academia in the eighties, and Madeline's tortured lover comes in the guise of Leonard Bankhead, a charismatic, brilliant, and mentally weary soul who sucks her in despite the much more suitable and pining friend Mitchell Grammaticus. It's a very modern take on the marriage plot, and a biting look at academia, religion, social class, and depression, as well as being terribly funny, smart and thoroughly enjoyable.
http://www.amazon.com/Marriage-Plot-Novel-Jeffrey-Eugenides/dp/0374203059/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1325303557&sr=8-1


10) "State of Wonder" by Anne Patchett
Patchett creates her own 'Heart of Darkness" as a young pharmaceutical researcher goes deep in the heart of the Amazon to find out what really happened to her lab partner who has supposedly died of malaria. At the same time, she's supposed to report back to her company the progress made by a doctor who is working with a native tribe and developing a fertility drug, and who has seemingly gone completely off the map. Patchett does a commendable job of creating such a dense, lush, and dangerous topography.- Ophidiophobics in particular will be crawling deep into their seats during one tense section. A terrific read.

http://www.amazon.com/State-Wonder-Ann-Patchett/dp/0062049801/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1325304401&sr=1-1

11) "Rich Boy" by Sharon Pomerantz
A sprawling saga of a young Jewish boy growing up in a blue collar section of Philadelphia who rises through the business and social echelon to reach the pinnacle of the American dream. But with success comes compromise, and moving through three distinct women in Robert Vishniak's life, our protagonist learns where true value lies. A rich, (no pun intended), engaging, and terrific first book by an author to watch.
http://www.amazon.com/Rich-Boy-Sharon-Pomerantz/dp/B0055X6IT4/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1325306434&sr=1-1

12) "The Warmth of Other Suns" by Isabel Wilkerson
At once both epic and intimate at the same time, Wilkerson's book is a phenomenal recounting of the great migration of African Americans from the Jim Crow south to the promise of a better life in the North. Following three different people who leave their lives behind to start again in Chicago, New York, and Los Angeles respectively, Wilkerson not only paints with broad stokes the sociological, and cultural impact on the country's make up a whole as cities in the North radically change with the influx of migrating African Americans, but by so closely recounting Ida, George, and Robert's very personal recollections, she creates a poignant and moving intimacy. One segment in particular of Robert Pershing Foster driving all night to reach California and being turned away at multiple hotels along the way is both maddening and horrifying at the same time. An excellent read.
http://www.amazon.com/Warmth-Other-Suns-Americas-Migration/dp/0679763880/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1325306084&sr=1-1

Also of Note:

If you haven't read Michael Scott's wonderful Alchemist series, his latest, "The Warlock" continues to entertain, and the final book in the six book series comes out this upcoming year.

and Michael Connelly's, "The Reversal", proving again why he's one of the most prolific and talented modern crime writers today.

Finally, two books I can't wait for in the New Year:
John Irving's 13th novel, "In One Person", about a bisexual man reflecting on his life from the 1950's through the AIDS epidemic.

and "The Twelve" by Justin Cronin, the second installment of the widely read, 'The Passage"

Happy Reading in 2012 everyone! 

Brett