As a big reader of fiction I am always surprised that when I come to do this annual summary of the year's best reads that the most memorable titles are always non-fiction. I am pleased to present my best picks for 2018. Enjoy! 1. Kassabova, Kapka (2017) Border: A Journey to the Edge of Europe. Breathtaking… Continue reading Best Picks 2018
Category: Popular reads
December Picks
Askew, Claire (2018) All the Hidden Truths. Hodder & Stoughton. Ryan Summers walks into Three Rivers College and kills 13 young women, then kills himself. The Edinburgh school shooting is told from the viewpoints of three women DI Helen Birch, put in charge of the case on her first day in her new job, Moira, Ryan's… Continue reading December Picks
November Picks
Harper, Jane (2018) The Lost Man. Macmillan. Nathan and Bub Bright meet at the stockman's grave, on the border of their vast cattle properties in outback Queensland. The body of their middle brother Cameron is lying beside the grave. Something had been troubling Cameron - did he walk to his death? This novel meets somewhere… Continue reading November Picks
October Picks
Harari, Yuval Noah (2018) 21 Lessons for the 21st Century. Spiegel & Grau. Building on the ideas explored in Sapiens and Homo Deus Harari offers, through themed essays, advice on how to prepare for a very different future. He looks at the big questions - political, technological, social and existential issues of the 21st century, and… Continue reading October Picks
September Picks
Mawer, Simon (2018) Prague Spring. Little Brown. In the summer of 1968, the year of Prague Spring, students James and Ellie set out to hitchhike across Europe. They decide on a whim to visit Czechoslovakia where Alexander Dubcek’s “socialism with a human face” is being proclaimed. Meanwhile cynical diplomat Sam is monitoring the unravelling situation through… Continue reading September Picks
August Picks
Tyler, Anne (2018) Clock Dance. Knopf. In 1967 Willa is a schoolgirl coping with her mother's disappearance, in 1977 she is a college co-ed receiving a proposal of marriage, in 1997 she is a young widow, and in 2017 she responds to a call for help from a stranger. This latter life decision is impulsive.… Continue reading August Picks
July Picks
Westover, Tara (2018) Educated. Hutchinson. Tara Westover's memoir is a coming-of-age struggle for survival. Tara was raised in a fundamentalist Idaho Mormon family, the youngest of seven. Her father's "End of Days" faith isolates the family from the community. He gives no credence to government, doctors, dairy products or schooling, instead puts his children to work… Continue reading July Picks
May-June Picks
Robertson, Catherine (2018) Gabriel's Bay. Black Swan. In Gabriel's Bay Robertson has created a whole community, an amalgam of beachside small town New Zealand, aka 800 Words. Kerry is on the run from a failed wedding, and takes a job in Gabriel's Bay to begin again. Along the way he becomes involved in the fabric… Continue reading May-June Picks
April Picks
Henderson, Susan (2018) The Flicker of Old Dreams. Harper. Mary Crampton has spent her whole life in Petroleum, a small Great Plains grain town. She lives a quiet introspective life and works as an embalmer for her father's mortuary business. Petroleum has been crumbling for the past 20 years, ever since the grain elevator killed… Continue reading April Picks
March Picks
Matthews, Jason (2013) Red Sparrow. Simon & Schuster. Former ballerina Dominika Egorova is recruited as an intelligence agent, and a seductress, by the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) and as her first assignment she is tasked with operating against ambitious young CIA officer Nat Nash. Nat handles the American's most important Russian mole. As Dominika… Continue reading March Picks
