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Book Chat > Best/favourite books you've read so far in 2019?

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message 1: by Antonomasia, Admin only (new)

Antonomasia | 2659 comments Mod
This can include fiction or non-fiction, old books or new. Or even short stories. Any of the best stuff you've read this year that you care to mention.

Group rankings for best new books are done near the end of the year, but if you'd like to include those here, by all means go ahead.


message 3: by Jan (last edited Jul 11, 2019 05:02PM) (new)

Jan A Fall of Marigolds by Susan Meissner The Woman's Hour by Elaine Weiss The Woman's Hour The Great Fight to Win the Vote by Elaine F. Weiss
The Spy Who Came in from the Cold by John le Carre The Spy Who Came In from the Cold by John le Carré
Circe by Madeline Miller Circe by Madeline Miller


message 4: by Antonomasia, Admin only (last edited Jul 04, 2019 10:38AM) (new)

Antonomasia | 2659 comments Mod
Old books

5 stars
Tom Jones by Henry Fielding
Nada by Carmen Laforet

High 4 stars
Eva Luna by Isabel Allende
Like Water for Chocolate by Laura Esquivel
Mirror Shoulder Signal by Dorthe Nors
Trout Fishing in America by Richard Brautigan


New Books (published since beginning of 2018, incl new translations)

Vernon Subutex 2 by Virginie Despentes
The Years by Annie Ernaux
The Faculty of Dreams by Sara Stridsberg


message 5: by Tommi (new)

Tommi | 659 comments 2018�2019 publications, in no particular order and definitely subject to change:

Animalia by Jean-Baptiste del Amo
Crossing by Pajtim Statovci
Lost Children Archive by Valeria Luiselli
Love in the New Millennium by Can Xue
The Faculty of Dreams by Sara Stridsberg
Lanny by Max Porter

Highlights of older releases include The Melancholy of Resistance by Laszlo Krasznahorkai, still haunting me after finishing it in early Jan (also thanks to the excellent movie), and a reread of Ulysses. As always, reading early modern lit for postgrad studies, which never really shows on my GR, and I’m currently in awe of a very niche book called Literature and Nature in the English Renaissance: An Ecocritical Anthology.


message 6: by Neil (new)

Neil Memories of the Future - Siri Hustvedt
The Man Who Saw Everything - Deborah Levy
Spring - Ali Smith
Night Boat to Tangier - Kevin Barry
The Unauthorised Biography of Ezra Maas - Daniel James


message 7: by Robert (new)

Robert | 2636 comments Here's mine:




message 8: by Paul (new)

Paul Fulcher (fulcherkim) | 13248 comments 1 Panthers and the Museum of Fire by Jen Craig
2 Lanny by Max Porter
3 We Are Made Of Diamond Stuff by Isabel Waidner
4 The Unauthorised Biography of Ezra Maas by Daniel James
5 Lost Children Archive by Valeria Luiselli
6 Spring by Ali Smith
7 The Faculty of Dreams by Sara Stridsberg
8 Animalia by Jean-Baptiste Del Amo
9 The Females by Wolfgang Hilbig
10 The Tartar Steppe by Dino Buzzati

First 9 are all recentish in English - the first is currently seeking a UK publisher to come out here so could become prize eligible.

The last was a wonderful discovery from the past.


message 10: by Karen Michele (new)

Karen Michele Burns (klibrary) | 209 comments Five Star Books:

These are not in any particular order yet and some of them will probably be left off my final list, but I'll list all of my 5 star books so far.

New

Spring
Murmur
Milkman
Pig Iron
The Overstory
Us Against You
Becoming

Poetry

The Tiny Journalist
The Essential Neruda: Selected Poems

Older:

The Birds
Devil in the Grove: Thurgood Marshall, the Groveland Boys, and the Dawn of a New America


message 11: by Lark (new)

Lark Benobi (larkbenobi) | 549 comments These are my most-outrageously-amazing reads so far this year:

Optic Nerve
Season of the Shadow
Lucia
The Blizzard (this was my second read of The Blizzard and my perspective really changed the second time through)


message 12: by Tracy (last edited Jun 30, 2019 06:22AM) (new)

Tracy (tstan) | 597 comments Mid-year favorites (in no particular order):
New(er):
Where Reasons End
The Other Americans
Lanny
Spring
Bottled Goods
Happiness

Oldies but goodies:
Kristin Lavransdatter
Matigari
Native Son
I, Tituba, Black Witch of Salem
The Grass is Singing
A Woman's Life

These are my five star reads so far. It’s been a good reading year!
Adding The Tenth Muse. I loved it


message 13: by Ella (new)

Ella (ellamc) | 1018 comments Most of the books I rated 5 stars this year seem to be older books that I just happened to read this year.

These are my 5 star reads in no particular order, beyond the order I read them inverted:

The Trick is to Keep Breathing -- Janice Galloway
A Place for Us -- Fatima Farheen Mirza
Heavy: An American Memoir -- Kiese Laymon
Lanny -- Max Porter
So Much Blue -- Percival Everett
The Postman Always Rings Twice -- James Cain
In Our Mad and Furious City -- Guy Gunaratne
The Source of Self-Regard: Selected Essays, Speeches, and Meditations -- Toni Morrison
We Cast a Shadow -- Maurice Carlos Ruffin
Milkman -- Anna Burns
The Great Believers -- Rebecca Makkai
The Spy and the Traitor: The Greatest Espionage Story of the Cold War -- Ben Macintyre
If Beale Street Could Talk -- James Baldwin
The Heart's Invisible Furies -- John Boyne

Rereads that are still worth 5 stars:
Our Man in Havana -- Graham Greene
A reread of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn w/ my sister's kids also rated 5 stars for the twins and me (rarely do we all like a book, so that's a good sign.)


Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer | 9805 comments My list. I am surprised I am the first to mention Lanny and Spring

Five star reads so far

Spring /review/show...
Lanny /review/show...
The Unauthorised Biography of Ezra Maas /review/show...
Memories of the Future /review/show...
Where Reasons End /review/show...
Blush /review/show...
Alabaster /review/show...

Re-reads for book groups or prize lists

Midwinter Break
Milkman
Lucia
Sweet Home

Non fiction

Hidden Christmas
Prodigal Prophet
The Squires of Heydon Hall
Rena’s Promise


message 15: by Robert (new)

Robert | 2636 comments You didn’t click my link ;)


message 16: by Antonomasia, Admin only (new)

Antonomasia | 2659 comments Mod
Guessing that might be sarcasm as there are five previous mentions of Spring and six of Lanny even without Robert's blog post


message 17: by Robert (new)

Robert | 2636 comments Yes I was joking as well hence the wink


message 19: by Lark (new)

Lark Benobi (larkbenobi) | 549 comments WndyJW wrote: "Reread of Beloved ..."

I wish I could re-read Beloved! I keep trying to read it for the first time and I get stuck somewhere between "wow this is the best writing I've ever read" and "I'm so sleepy"...


message 20: by Stacia (new)

Stacia | 102 comments I don't think I've read any books published in 2019 yet. That said, the books I've read so far this year that I rated 5 stars:

Freshwater
Tell Me How It Ends: An Essay in Forty Questions
Absalom, Absalom! (my first time reading Faulkner -- finally!)
The 7½ Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle (fun)

Honorable Mention:
Ellen Foster
Insurrecto
Bottled Goods
Seventeen

And, I rarely read series or sci-fi, but I have read the first two Murderbot Diaries & have found them easy, entertaining, brain candy type reading. All Systems Red was a decent intro; Artificial Condition (book 2) was a step up & was quite a fun ride. Waiting on book 3 from the library....


message 21: by WndyJW (new)

WndyJW Lark wrote: "WndyJW wrote: "Reread of Beloved ..."

I wish I could re-read Beloved! I keep trying to read it for the first time and I get stuck somewhere between "wow this is the best writing I've ever read" an..."



I read it the Sunday before it was discussed on the Backlisted podcast. I’m a little surprised that it has you nodding off. I think Beloved and The Bluest Eye are two of the most important American novels.


message 22: by Matthias (new)

Matthias | 52 comments 2019, unranked:

Night Theatre by Vikram Paralkar
Spring by Ali Smith
Lanny by Max Porter

Pre 2019, unranked

Some Trees by John Ashbery
Orkney by Amy Sackville
The Aviator by Eugene Vodolazkin
Max, Mischa und die Tet-Offensive by Johan Harstad
Thomas l'obscur by Maurice Blanchot
The Big Green Tent by Lyudmila Ulitskaya
Die Hauptstadt by Robert Menasse
Seiobo There Below by László Krasznahorkai
The Eight Mountains by Paolo Cognetti
Le Quatrième Mur by Sorj Chalandon
Confessions by Jaume Cabré


message 23: by Paul (last edited Jun 29, 2019 12:13PM) (new)

Paul Fulcher (fulcherkim) | 13248 comments Night Theatre (aka Wounds of the Dead) sounds fascinating - author is a Jorge Luis Borges and Italo Calvino fan and I've also seen comparisons to Saramago. If it lives up to those influences definitelt sounds one to add to my reading list.

Have you read The Afflictions (which seems more explicitly Borgesian)?


message 24: by Matthias (new)

Matthias | 52 comments Paul wrote: "Night Theatre (aka Wounds of the Dead) sounds fascinating - author is a Jorge Luis Borges and Italo Calvino fan and I've also seen comparisons to Saramago. If it lives up to those influences defini..."

Not yet, it's on my tbr. Night Theatre is more emotional than Borges or Calvino. Read it in one single night :)


message 25: by Tommi (new)

Tommi | 659 comments Coincidentally I just reviewed Night Theatre and wasn’t overly impressed. It’s very much possible I didn’t see all nuances and read (or actually listened to) it as a somewhat straightforward story with a little too much focus on surgical details. Happy to see a fan of the book anyway!


message 26: by Paul (new)

Paul Fulcher (fulcherkim) | 13248 comments Good tip Tommi in your review that this may be one for the Wellcome Prize


message 27: by Tommi (new)

Tommi | 659 comments I came across the book in the Wellcome bookshop as a matter of fact � not that it is in any way indicative of what judges will pick, but I found it interesting because none of the major Waterstones or Foyles were displaying the book at least back in May.


message 28: by Scott (new)

Scott | 249 comments Of the 50ish novels I've read, here are my top 15 (alphabetically):

An Orchestra of Minorities - Chigozie Obioma
Disoriental - Negar Djavadi
The Distance Between Us - Renato Cisneros
Drive Your Plow . . . - Olga Tokarczuk
Elefant - Martin Suter
Girl, Woman, Other - Bernardine Evaristo
Fox - Dubravka Ugresic
Little - Edward Carey
Midwinter Break - Bernard MacLaverty
Optic Nerve - Maria Gainza
The Porpoise - Mark Haddon
Southernmost - Silas House
Spring - Ali Smith
T. Singer - Dag Solstad
The Years - Annie Ernaux


Nadine in California (nadinekc) | 358 comments Scott wrote: "Of the 50ish novels I've read, here are my top 15 (alphabetically):

An Orchestra of Minorities - Chigozie Obioma
Disoriental - Negar Djavadi
The Distance Between Us - Renato Cisneros
Drive Your P..."


Thanks for this list, Scott. A few of them jumped my TBR and went straight to library hold :)


message 30: by Scott (new)

Scott | 249 comments You're welcome, Nadine. Should perhaps amend the list with those I haven't read, my next 10, sitting on my nightstand:

Ash Before Oak - Jeremy Cooper
Murmur - Will Eaves
Celestial Bodies - Jokha Alharthi (a re-read)
Animalia - Jean-Baptiste Del Amo
Crossing - Pajtim Statovci
A Modern Family - Helga Flatland
Freshwater - Akwaeke Emezi
Tokyo Ueno Station - Yu Miri
Insurrecto - Gina Apostol
Death is Hard Work- Khaled Khalifa


message 31: by Paul (new)

Paul Fulcher (fulcherkim) | 13248 comments That's a very strong TBR pile - you've lots of excellent reading ahead!


message 32: by Scott (new)

Scott | 249 comments Indeed. It will certainly keep me busy before the Booker announcement in three weeks, which will create yet another list.


Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer | 9805 comments Thanks Erin - Lanny certainly seems the consensus choice (I make that the 10th listing)


message 35: by Sam (last edited Jul 02, 2019 11:19AM) (new)

Sam | 2191 comments I have been waiting till the month ended to add my two cents but my pocket is empty. The 2019 books I have read so far this year, have been overshadowed by better books from the Mookie Madness, the 2019 BTBA longlist, and my ongoing read of Richard Powers suggested by Neil. If I had to pick one favorite, it would be Boy Swallows Universe, because the book put a big smile on my face.


message 38: by Val (new)

Val | 1016 comments Perhaps I should change my name to Little Miss Echo.
Published 2019
Spring
Optic Nerve
Lanny

Published 2018 (in the edition I read), Read 2019
Tell Them of Battles, Kings and Elephants
The Devils' Dance
The Old Slave
Bottled Goods
CoDex 1962
plus an honourable mention (not quite 5*)
Praise Song for the Butterflies

Re-reads
The Leopard
Freshwater
Written on the Body

I have realised, now I come to list them, that nearly 60% of them are translations.


message 39: by Ari (new)

Ari Levine Longtime lurker, first time posting.

Favorites read in 2019, in reverse order:
Spring
Tell Them of Battles, Kings, and Elephants
Katalin Street
Everything Under
Codex 1962: A Trilogy

Summer vacation is here, so I'll finally have time to catch up on what I've been missing...


message 40: by Matt (last edited Jul 05, 2019 04:50AM) (new)

Matt Cook (mattcookwriter) | 2 comments My six five books of the year so far are a mixed bag. Couldn't recommend any of them highly enough, especially the M&G favourite Ezra Maas:
C by Tom McCarthy
The Flame Alphabet by Ben Marcus
The Unauthorised Biography of Ezra Maas by Daniel James
The Quick and the Dead by Joy Williams
Notes from Underground by Fyodor Dostoevsky
What We’re Teaching Our Sons by Owen Booth


message 41: by WndyJW (new)

WndyJW Gumble's Yard wrote: "Thanks Erin - Lanny certainly seems the consensus choice (I make that the 10th listing)"

Lanny is pure joy.


message 42: by Cordelia (new)

Cordelia (anne21) | 132 comments WndyJW wrote: "Gumble's Yard wrote: "Thanks Erin - Lanny certainly seems the consensus choice (I make that the 10th listing)"

Lanny is pure joy."


I agree. It was totally wonderful.


message 43: by Kathy (last edited Jul 08, 2019 03:04PM) (new)

Kathy  | 33 comments My top 5 so far this year:

There There by Tommy Orange
The Overstory by Richard Powers
A Place of Greater Safety by Hilary Mantel
The Fifth Child by Doris Lessing
Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teachings of Plants by Robin Wall Kimmerer


message 44: by Tara (last edited Jul 10, 2019 03:25PM) (new)

Tara (booksexyreview) | 10 comments I know these aren't translations... or even considered literary - but I am enjoying Abir Mukherjee's Wyndham & Banerjee Series . It's probably the book "discovery" I'm most excited about. The fourth book in the series comes out at the end of this year.

It also got me to finally start reading Inglorious Empire: What the British Did to India - which has been sitting on my shelf for much too long and is very good.

Oh, and a book I absolutely loved last year was Léonora Miano 's Season of the Shadow


message 45: by Tara (new)

Tara (booksexyreview) | 10 comments Paul wrote: "1 Panthers and the Museum of Fire by Jen Craig
2 Lanny by Max Porter
3 We Are Made Of Diamond Stuff by Isabel Waidner
4 [book:The Unauthorised Biogra..."


Bad Marie is wonderful! Dermansky has a new book out I've been wanting to pick up.


message 46: by Michele (new)

Michele | 46 comments 1. Embassytown by China Mieville
2. El Hacho
3. Season of the Shadow


message 47: by Tara (new)

Tara (booksexyreview) | 10 comments Michele wrote: "1. Embassytown by China Mieville
2. El Hacho
3. Season of the Shadow"


So glad to see another Season of Shadow fan!


message 48: by LindaJ^ (last edited Jan 03, 2020 02:03AM) (new)

LindaJ^ (lindajs) | 1080 comments Jan 3, 2020 update - only one fiction 5-star from December to add - Olive, Again. Since I cannot pick one, I'm doing "best of categories." The below ranking is done without looking at my reviews, which means I'm picking them based on what I remember about the book - if I don't remember what it was about, it wasn't considered.

Best recent translation: The Faculty of Dreams

Best classic: It is a 3-way tie - Frankenstein, Anna Karenina, Kristin Lavransdatter (all read in audio)

Best modern British classic (a/k/a Best Mooske Madness): 3-way tie - Moon Tiger, The Bookshop, The Remains of the Day

Best 2019 published US-author book: Olive, Again

Best fun read: The Elusive Mrs. Pollifax

Author with most 5-star books on the list: Ali Smith (3)



The first half of the year (Jan thru June) was a great six months for reading. I have 20 five star reads out of 90 books. It is a mixed lot of new, newish, old, translated, and classic. They are below in reverse chronological order --
There but for the,
Autumn (reread),
Disoriental,
On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous,
Death on the Edge,
Fox,
Lanny,
Just Above My Head,
Commonwealth,
Unsheltered,
The Faculty of Dreams,
The Remains of the Day,
The Years,
Lost Children Archive,
The Aviator,
Anna Karenina,
The Bookshop,
The Gray House,
Kristin Lavransdatter,
Moon Tiger,
The Strange Case of Rachel K

It is now November and since I'm reading non-fiction in November, I'm going to add my 5* reads since July. I'll add December's and try to rank them all in beginning of January.
The Elusive Mrs. Pollifax
Frankenstein
Transit
The Dutch House
The Nickel Boys
Optic Nerve
Inland
The Need
Quichotte
The Man Who Saw Everything
Cat's Eye
Girl, Woman, Other
Horror Express
The H-Bomb and the Jesus Rock
Chasing the King of Hearts
Winter


message 50: by Bart (new)

Bart Van Overmeire | 9 comments I haven't read as much as previous years, but the quality made up for the lack of quantity. My favourites so far were:
Spring (who would have thought spring could be even better than autum?),
Milkman,
All My Puny Sorrows (I only discovered Miriam Toews last year, but it's the third 5-star book I've read by her),
River (my first, but probably not my last Fitzcarraldo),
I Who Have Never Known Men (I had no idea Belgium had such brilliant writers, and I'm Belgian ;)),
Slip of a Fish (picked it up at random in my book store, intrigued by the title and what a surpisingly good novel it turned out to be),
Mouthful of Birds (wonderfully weird short stories).
And Ducks, Newburyport is bound to join this list, once I've finished the remaining 850 pages :).


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