I
read some truly fine adult fiction this year. And there was a lot more I wish I
had read. One thing I’ve begun to notice is that much of the fiction I’m
gravitating toward and reading is British in origin. (I had coffee with a good
friend recently, someone I had seen in several years, and he told me he thought
he knew why I was developing into something of an Anglophile, but that’s
another blog post.)
And
the mysteries – 10 of the 17 below are British; two are Canadian. And three of
the seven children’s /YA books are – surprise – British.
Fiction
Lila by Marilynne
Robinson.
The Voice by Doug Spurling.
All the Light We
Cannot See by Anthony Doerr.
The Curse of Crow
Hollow by Billy Coffey.
Arthur & George by Julian Barnes.
Mysteries
The Return of
Captain John Emmett by
Elizabeth Speller.
The Sherlockian by Graham Moore.
The Dead Key by D.M. Pulley.
Just One Evil Act by Elizabeth George.
Return of the Thin
Man by
Dashiell Hammett.
The Broken Cross by Luke H. Davis.
Sidney Chambers and
the Shadow of Death by James Runcie.
Children’s and YA Fiction
The Day the Angels
Fell by Shawn Smucker.
Revenge! (Adventures
in the Glade) by Martha Jane
Orlando.
Bet Your Life by Jane Casey.
Photograph by Michael Drummond via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
Thanks a million for the recommendation, Glynn!!!
ReplyDelete