So it’s that
time again – time to not recommend books for Christmas. I have this thing about
imposing my book choices on people, so I get around it by not recommending
books I really enjoyed during this past year.
And it was a
good year, perhaps a great year, for reading. This week I cover mysteries and
suspense, fiction, faith, writing, and art. Next week I’ll cover history and
biography, general non-fiction, and poetry.
For all the
listings, the links direct you to my reviews or articles at this blog or
Tweetspeak Poetry.
Mystery and Suspense
Any
of the Inspector Gamache novels by Louise Penny.
Two
Judge Dee Mysteries by Robert Van Gulik.
The
Chessmen by Peter
May.
Burke’s
Gamble by William
Brown.
Murder
and Other Acts of Literature,
edited by Michele Slung.
The
Fifth Gospel by Ian
Caldwell.
As
the Crow Flies by
Damien Boyd.
A
Question of Inheritance
by Elizabeth Edmondson.
Fiction
East
of Coker and Invective
by Andy Owen.
Wolf
Hall and Bring
Up the Bodies by Hilary Mantel.
The
Yoga of Max’s Discontent
by Karan Bajaj.
There
Will Be Stars by
Billy Coffey.
Romey’s
Place by James
Calvin Schaap.
A
Whole Lot by Bradley
Wind.
In
the Light of What We Know
by Zia Haider Rahman.
The
Story of Kullervo by
J.R.R. Tolkien.
The
Whiskey Rebels by
David Liss.
Ember
Falls by S.D. Smith.
Faith
The
Word in the Wilderness
by Malcolm Guite.
Chicken
Scratch by Kelly
Chripczuk.
George
Whitfield: The Evangelist
by John Pollock.
Writing
Christian
Writer’s Guide by
Mary Harwell Sayler.
Art
Sir
Winston Churchill: His Life and His Paintings by David Coombs.
Photograph by George Hodan via Public
Domain Images. Used with permission.
2 comments:
Looooove it! This list made me laugh. Not the titles, of course, but that you're "not recommending" them. Ha! I might have to look into a few...
I'll try and stop by again for Part 2. :)
Your title caught my eye at Semicolon's. :-) I don't think of sharing choices as imposing them, but "not recommending" them is a clever way to present them. The Christian Writer's Guide sounds interesting. I didn't like The Green Ember nearly as much as I thought I would, so I haven't been inclined toward the sequel.
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