Fiction
Related: About this forumWhat are the BEST BOOKS you've read in 2020?
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This is a traditional thread for you to use to list the most outstanding books you read during the year of 2020. They don't have to be books that were published in 2020, just whatever books you've read in 2020 that strike you as particularly noteworthy - the kind of book that will stick in your mind for a long time to come.
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CurtEastPoint
(19,320 posts)hermetic
(8,752 posts)There has been a 2019 post pinned up here all along, now it has been moved down into the general flow. This one for 2020 will now stay up all year. This is just traditionally the way it has been done for a long time. When I volunteered to take over a few years back, I just kept doing it the same way.
I do appreciate your checking, though.
CurtEastPoint
(19,320 posts)dweller
(25,631 posts)and finished in 2020... does that count? 🤔
The Black Ice by Michael Connelly
finished another since, but that was the better of 2
✌🏼
The purpose of this post is to keep a record of what the very best book of the year was, for you. And a Connelly could very well turn out to be that best book. Put whatever you like here. It just makes a handy place for people to find suggestions without having to search through hundreds of threads.
CurtEastPoint
(19,320 posts)the movie now. I want to read them all. I find them pretty entertaining.
hermetic
(8,752 posts)Goodness knows, Harry Potter books are a great many people's favorites of all time. So you're in good company.
CurtEastPoint
(19,320 posts)Cartoonist
(7,574 posts)I only hesitate because of the hype. While I may find them entertaining, there is no way they can compete with the great writers. It's like saying some AAA Baseball team is comparable to the Yankees.
sinkingfeeling
(54,016 posts)just draw you in.
applegrove
(124,515 posts)Behind the Beautiful Forevers: Life, Death, and Hope in a Mumbai Undercity is a non-fiction book written by the Pulitzer Prize-winner Katherine Boo in 2012. It won the National Book Award and the Los Angeles Times Book Prize among many others."
I learnt so much by reading this book but especially the massive crime that is corruption. I see things through its lense now.
japple
(10,434 posts)a wonderful book. Enger's writing just snaps, crackles and pops off the page. What a way with words!
dixiegrrrrl
(60,013 posts)It's a memoir. It's beautifully written, tells a mesmerizing tale, and I cannot put it down.
Much as enthralling and lovely as any of Rick Bragg's memoirs.
HarlanPepper
(2,042 posts)Ohiya
(2,503 posts)So far...
PoindexterOglethorpe
(27,163 posts)I've now got his book Magpie Murders checked out and in the stack of books I need to read.
Oldem
(833 posts)by Elizabeth George. It's the 1st book in the Lynley series. I read it years ago and had forgotten how brilliant it is. I won't forgot it, again. Btw, I got it on my Kindle as a library loan, just in case you don't know that this is an available resource.
hermetic
(8,752 posts)To begin with, I had just watched an amazing DVD, Loving Vincent, the worlds first fully oil-painted feature film about the life of Vincent van Gogh. An hour later I opened Sacre Bleu and found quotes from Vincent and one of his self portraits. Quelle coincidence! I have always been fascinated by van Gogh and his art so I knew I was onto something good. This is a book about art and other artists who were van Goghs contemporaries and things that might well have transpired among them, back in the day. Its also full of images and details of masterpieces interspersed throughout the narrative. An absolute delight to read and look at. Its also a typical Moore novel, full of wit and demonry.
Then, after reading it, I found this terrific website, loaded with art and photographs and tales of Christophers experiences while writing the book. Highly recommended. https://guide.sacrebleu.info/
Response to hermetic (Reply #18)
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yellowdogintexas
(23,020 posts)I read it early in the year
It is a WW II story, based on real events, about a young Italian mountaineer who is recruited by a priest to help smuggle Jews over the Italian Alps to safety. The priest's parish is a small mountain area with a hostel for travelers.
He ends up being hired as a driver by the Germans and eventually spies on them for the Americans.
His friends and some of his family ostracize him as a collaborator.
I really don't want to tell you much about it in detail because it is such a good story.
It is a good read about a very good man
It has been optioned as a movie and I do hope it happens.
japple
(10,434 posts)Thanks for the suggestions. Some great ones here!
llmart
(16,332 posts)Author is Jeanine Cummins. The writing is superb!
The story will grab you from the start and pull you in, but it's fairly intense.
Ohiya
(2,503 posts)Karma13612
(4,733 posts)Series of books by Stephen White.
He is a clinical psychologist who also writes about a fictional clinical psychologist named Alan Gregory who lives in Boulder CO.
I fell in love with his writing (1st person mostly). So I bought all 20 books with Christmas gift money in Dec 2019.
I am on #15 right now.
Plenty of intrigue, murder and plot twists to satisfy.
There are no more in the series as White has stopped writing I believe.
I got the whole series from Thrift books for $100 by selecting the books in good condition. Some are paperback and others are hardcover. Not disappointed at all.
japple
(10,434 posts)Now I need to go back and read some of his earlier work.
birdographer
(2,693 posts)From Sea to Shining Sea; One for the Blackbird, One for the Crow; What the Wind Knows all come to mind off the top of my head.
TuxedoKat
(3,823 posts)By James Alexander Thom. Its historical fiction but its about actual people and events that did happen: a young woman who was kidnapped by Indians but escaped. Its about her time with the Indians and finding her way home.
birdographer
(2,693 posts)japple
(10,434 posts)Oldem
(833 posts)by E. Annie Proulx--for the 2nd time. A close 2nd would be Tony Hillerman's Listening Woman, also for the 2nd time.
Chalco
(1,388 posts)Squinch
(53,945 posts)Number9Dream
(1,703 posts)Rollins has become just about my favorite author in the action, page-turner genre. This, his latest, is another great read... probably my favorite of this year. "In the frozen tundra of Greenland, a group of modern-day researchers stumbles on a shocking find: a medieval ship buried a half-mile below the ice. The ships hold contains a collection of even older artifactstools of wardating back to the Bronze Age." It hooked me immediately, and it was a page turner from the beginning.
hermetic
(8,752 posts)I'm always up for a good page turner and as your choice for year's best, I believe it will be most enjoyable.
The King of Prussia
(745 posts)"All Creatures Great & Small" by James Herriot. Prompted by the new TV adaptation - which is wonderful and starting in the US this month.
"The Durrells of Corfu" a biography of the famous family by Michael Haag.
"A Genesis in my Bed" the autobiography of Steve Hackett.
"The 12.30 from Croydon" by Freeman Wills Crofts. A detective story from the Golden Age, but NOT a whodunnit.
hermetic
(8,752 posts)I love the All Creatures stories. Look forward to seeing the new show. Thanks. I will be moving this thread now to be replaced with a new one for 2021. This one will still exist, you'll just have to look further down for it.
The King of Prussia
(745 posts)Let's hope it's a better one. When you watch the TV show look out for the railway scenes - it's the line that terminates in our village.