There were many things that got stalled or pushed to the back in the last year. For many of us, reading was not one of them. In fact, a good book was often a saving grace.
I thought to share with you some of the best fiction I read, often historical, starting back from the end of 2019. These books came from several sources – the library; some I purchased online; books purchased at past annual county library book sales; and my own collection.
Here is the best of what I read from late 2019 to present:
Whistling Past the Graveyard – Susan Crandall. This is certainly one of the best books I’ve read in a long time. Told in first person by a sassy, red-headed nine year old, Starla Claudelle, it takes place in 1963 Mississippi at the height of segregation. Being raised by her overly strict grandmother while her father works out on the oil rigs, Starla wants nothing more than to find her mother in Nashville, whom she believes left to become famous and then reunite her family. Upset by a turn of events, Starla decides to run away to Nashville on her own. She is offered a ride by an older black woman, traveling with a white infant, unaware of the dangerous implications of this situation. Whistling Past the Graveyard is a story with deeply felt characters set against the backdrop of the Deep South at a time in history that Starla only begins to understand for what it is, as well as what family can really mean.
One page in, and I was totally hooked.
Shutter Island and Mystic River – Dennis Lehane. If you want two stories you can’t put down … Shutter Island was a book sale pick, and in it I discovered a writer with an excellent capacity for writing tense, fast moving prose with twists and turns at every corner. This story takes place in 1954 when a detective and his partner come to Shutter Island, home for the criminally insane, to investigate a patient’s disappearance, and where we soon discover nothing is as it seems. Later in the year, I read Mystic River, a psychological thriller about three boys growing up as friends, approached one day by a man in a car. One boy gets in; the others do not. And something – never fully articulated – terrible happens. Fast forward to adulthood, and this plays out in a harrowing series of events. (p.s. the movie is also excellent.)
Lehane is a terrific writer who keeps you on the edge of your seat, no matter the subject of the book. There is no doubt that I will pick up another of his novels in the future.
The Alice Network – Kate Quinn. Historical fiction taking place in the times of both World War I and World War II, The Alice Network is based on the true story of a group of women spies of the same name who, at tremendous risk, infiltrated the Germans to save lives in the most daring and heroic of ways. This is Goodreads’ initial description of the book, and as apt as I could write, “In an enthralling new historical novel from national bestselling author Kate Quinn, two women—a female spy recruited to the real-life Alice Network in France during World War I and an unconventional American socialite searching for her cousin in 1947—are brought together in a mesmerizing story of courage and redemption.” Please read the full review and you’ll know why this was a book I could not put down. It’s truly exceptional.
Had I not borrowed it from the library, it would be sitting in my bookcase of books that I would read again some day.
Forever – Pete Hamill. This is a masterful book — on the one hand, a magnificent love letter to New York City and all it’s history; on the other, the story of a young man in 1700’s Ireland, Cormac O’Connor, whose parents were killed by a wealthy lord. Added to the mix, we have some magic of the old religion, which allowed Cormac to live forever if he never left the island of Manhattan and successfully avenged his parents’ deaths. This is not a casual, lightly read book, but one that spans centuries as we follow Cormac’s life from childhood to an America at the moment of its birth. From the slaves in the ship’s hold that he saves and befriends through the politics, greed, and buried secrets of New York right through to 9/11, this is a story of great knowledge and depth. Pete Hamill has written Forever with such compassion. It was a long read, but I was sorry when it ended.
The Giver of Stars – Jojo Moyes. More engrossing historical fiction set in the Depression era in Kentucky. A small group of women who, for different reasons, join together, following the exhortation of Eleanor Roosevelt and her traveling library campaign to bring books to people who had no access to them, but who wanted to read or learn to read. Alice Wright, disillusioned in her new marriage to a distant husband and dealing with a controlling father-in-law, joins with Margery, founder of the group. Margery is strong, outspoken, and independent, and is soon joined by three other women, forming The Pack Horse Library of Kentucky (the real name of the library). The women repeatedly faced danger traversing the rugged landscape by mule and horseback, sometimes from the people who lived there, as well as from men in their lives who would control them. Their loyalty and friendship, finding true love, and always following their mission of bringing books to people in remote areas makes for a rich and rewarding read. An unforgettable story.
Nemesis and the Swan – Lindsay Bandy. This is mature and sophisticated YA, taking place in the French Revolution. Helene d’Aubign, an aristocrat of 19 years old, writes from her cell in a Paris prison. Her diary alternates with her story of being influenced as a young girl by her governess to become a revolutionary and to seek true love at a time when girls were only allowed arranged marriages. Forced to flee Paris as violence breaks out, Helene searches to find the answers to an intricate family mystery involving love and murder, somehow tied together by two unique, painted pins of eyes surrounded by gilt and pearls. She longs to return to her home and the jeweler’s apprentice she’s fallen in love with. When, in disguise, she finally does return to Paris, she finds everything she knows is changed or destroyed. But to make matters far worse, she is being sought – and is soon arrested – by those who suspect her true identity, which will sentence her to the guillotine.
With a richly articulated backdrop of the French Revolution, and the characters enmeshed in a family mystery, you couldn’t help but hope for Helene’s survival and an ending that seemed impossible.
The Mermaid Chair – Sue Monk Kidd. If you have read The Secret Life of Bees, you know Kidd writes with a truly exquisite use of the English language. The Mermaid Chair brings to life the setting of Egret Island off South Carolina where Jessie Sullivan has gone to tend to her mother, now suspected of severe mental instability after severing her finger. But the story is Jessie’s – she is returning to her childhood home of marshes and sea salt, egrets and a monastery where resides the Mermaid Chair. It is a story of love and disillusionment in her marriage, love and awakening with a monk questioning his own commitment, but most importantly, the search for her own self, lost over the years. Interlaced with the loyalty of longtime friends, a mystery surrounding her beloved father’s death, and the idyllic quality of Egret Island, Jessie’s story is stirring and engrossing. This is my own book which I’ve read in the past, and couldn’t wait to return to each evening.
Other notable books – I can’t review them all, but I can mention some other books that stand out from the many I’ve read in the past year+.
The Long Way, A Great Reckoning, Glass Houses, – all by Louise Penny. This is the first series of novels I have ever read as an adult, and I love them. I began at the beginning, and am working my way through the series, always drawn in by Penny’s style, wonderful characters and mysteries, all set in her beloved Canada.
Twigs in My Hair – Cynthia Reyes, friend and fellow blogger here on WordPress
Good Hope Road – Lisa Wingate
The Last Letter from Your Lover – Jojo Moyes
Flower Net and The Interior – Lisa See
With the hope that I’ve inspired a future selection or two, I wish you Happy Reading!
Ooooh! I love book lists! Thank you, Jeanne! I’ve read several of these, but others are new and I can’t wait! I’m an inveterate reader of series. Two other mystery series I love are Donna Leon’s Guido Brunetti series, set in Venice, and Martha Grimes Richard Jury book. She’s American, but the series is British and every title is the name of a real British pub. Tons more to share, but I’ll stop there. I could talk books forever, but then I wouldn’t have time to write or READ! Thank you, again for this delicious list!
LikeLiked by 1 person
You’re very welcome. That post was over a few days, but it was something I had in my mind to write. There are so many wonderful books out there! I’ve heard of Martha Grimes – I have to look into her. I’m starting to feel a little more settled and ready to go back to the library. Maybe even without a mask – since so few people are ever there at one time, I suspect I’m pretty safe!
LikeLike
Hmmm, I think my first try at commenting didn’t take. Thank you for this wonderful list, Jeanne! I’ve read several, but wrote down the names of those that are new and intriguing. Can’t wait!
I’m an inveterate series reader, and, if you’re enjoying Gamache, you might like Martha Grimes’ Richard Jury series. Grimes is an Anglophile American and titles every book after a real British pub. And I love Donna Leon’s Guido Brunetti series set in Venice. I have many more, but I’ll stop there. I could talk books all day and night, but then I wouldn’t have time to write or READ! Thanks again, Jeanne, for this delicious list!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Actually, the first one did come through, but I enjoyed reading your comment all over again. LOL I feel immediately drawn to Grimes because I just like the idea of each book being named after a British pub. Plus my Nana came from London, and I’ve actually been to England a couple times. I’m going to check her out now.
Just finished Mermaid Chair – what an amazing writer. I noticed when I went to vote in the library that she has a recent one on the shelf – here- 2020 – The Book of Longings – https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/52698452-the-book-of-longings Aaahhh. – so many books, so little time!!
LikeLike
p.s. Just looked at some of Grimes’ books – they sound a lot like the PBS mystery series I have come to love – Midsomer Murders with DC Barnaby in charge of the investigations. I will definitely look her up at the library. Thanks! For Guido Brunetti, too!
LikeLike
How I love reading book recommendations from a writer/blogger I respect and follow. You and I have such similar tastes. I read and LOVED The Alice Network, The Mermaid Chair, The Giver of Stars, and every single one of Louise Penny’s mysteries. Now I need to put a number of new books in my library hold list, including Whistling Past the Graveyard and The Last Letter from Your Lover. THANK YOU!! 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
You are so welcome! I’m glad I made a couple new recommendations for you. Maybe I should just take a photo of my “forever bookcase” and post that because that’s where I keep all the books I’ve read once and would read again. 😊 The Alice Network really was fabulous, and guaranteed, you will love “Whistling …” That was another find from our annual county library book sale, not held this past year, but I’m sure next. Thanks for stopping by!
LikeLiked by 1 person
I’ve got them all in my Library shelf now – most as e-books ’cause as soon as they’re available, they’ll download into my Kindle. I’m so excited! 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
How interesting that you have a Library shelf in Kindle. (Says the woman from the 19th century.) I don’t have a Kindle because I still like a book in my hand, but probably could download to my phone. The fact that I’m at a computer screen 40+ hours a week for work and so many communications leaves me running for the “real thing” when I have time. Happy Reading! “Last Letter” was excellent, too. I think another choice by Jojo Moyes might be in order. Though I was a bit disappointed by two earlier books from Lisa Wingate, but only because “Before We Were Yours” was so phenomenal.
LikeLiked by 1 person
An interesting selection Jeanne – I haven’t read any of them though I have seen the film of Shutter Island and enjoyed it. Pretty sure I’ve seen Mystic River too but that was a long time ago….I’ve read all of Louise Penny’s books during lockdown and of course Cynthia’s memoir. I finally finished Edgar Sawtelle – not long after you asked me about it I hit a point where I then couldn’t put it down. I think it’s a book with some beautiful writing, particularly about the dogs, and I did get through it quite easily despite the length. I don’t think I’ll read it again, but it will stay with me.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Hi Andrea – I hope there’s something in there for you. I suspect you would like The Alice Network. Thanks for the update on Edgar Sawtelle. I gave it to the library, and I believe it’s still there. Perhaps I should bring it home again and give it another try. Sometimes books are just slow to get into or we’re not in the right place. I’m always up for another Louise Penny. I think I have 4 more to go before I finish the series. You can never go wrong with her writing. 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
Or … the Giver of Stars. It’s about librarians, and some very heroic ones at that!
LikeLiked by 1 person
A nice list of books, Jeanne. I have read The Secret Life of Bees, and Twigs in My Hair, and loved them both.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks, Lavinia. Haven’t done a book list in a long time (and probably won’t again for quite some time), but I really did come across some wonderful books. If you loved The Secret Life of Bees, you will also love The Mermaid Chair. Her writing is something to get lost in. Hope you’re doing well out there. Hot and muggy the moment here.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I feel like I just found a new kindred reading spirit friend. I agree with you on Shutter Island, The Alice Network, and anything by Sue Kidd Monk. Loved Giver of the Stars. I am a Kentuckian and trail ride on horseback. I am in awe of the fought terrain those women covered. Whistling Past the Graveyard is already on my list and I’ll add Forever passed on your review.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Hi Sarah, I think you’re right. I’m a New Jerseyan (who’s been to Kentucky), and help an equine rescue near me, so we probably do have a bunch in common. 😊 I’ll stop by and visit you very soon! Jeanne
LikeLiked by 1 person
Nice to meet you.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Likewise. Be back tomorrow, but for now wrapping up a day … Have a good night!
LikeLiked by 1 person