Literary Yard

Search for meaning

Amazon’s Top 10 Best Books of the Year So Far

Begin forwarded message: From: "Dundas, Deborah"  Subject: FW: H is for Hawk images Date: 11 March, 2015 2:04:51 PM EDT To: Photodesk - Toronto Star    From: Myers, Stephen [mailto:smyers@penguinrandomhouse.com]  Sent: Wednesday, March 11, 2015 1:59 PM To: Dundas, Deborah Cc: Robert Wiersema Subject: H is for Hawk images Hi Deborah,   H is for Hawk images are attached, including a couple of shots with birds (sorry, most, aside from her standard handout,  are pretty low res). Any chance you’d be interested in an interview? She’ll be in Toronto for events on March 28/29 and I’ve got a bit of time in her sched prior to her departure on the morning of Monday, March 30.   Looking forward to your thoughts.   Best,   Steve   -- Stephen Myers Manager, Marketing & Publicity, Hamish Hamilton   Penguin Canada 416.928.2420 90 Eglinton Avenue East, Suite 700 Toronto, ON  M4P 2Y3   -- Sent via my carrier pigeon     From: Robert Wiersema [mailto:rjwiersema@gmail.com]  Sent: Wednesday, March 11, 2015 12:03 PM To: Myers, Stephen Subject: H is for Hawk (again)   Hey Stephen - Could you please send, ASAP, an author photo and jacket jpg to Deborah Dundas at the Star -- the review is running this weekend. Thanks, R.

The Amazon Books Editors’ picks for the Top 10 Best Books of the Year So Far are:

  1. H is for Hawk by Helen Macdonald: Enthralling from the first page, Macdonald’s gorgeously wrought prose describes a journey from crippling grief to something resembling grace on the wings of another deadly bird of prey–the notoriously prickly, and murderous, goshawk.
  2. An Ember in the Ashes by Sabaa Tahir: Tahir’s debut is rich fantasy coupled with echoes of historical saga, all vividly rendered on the page. Potent action and liquid language whisk the chapters along all too quickly; there can only be great things in store for the author and her readers.
  3. Dead Wake: The Last Crossing of Lusitania by Erik Larson: Larson once again illustrates his gift for seducing us with history and giving it a human face, putting readers right aboard the famous Cunard liner and keeps them turning the pages until the book’s final, breathless encounter.
  4. Ghettoside: A True Story of Murder in America by Jill Leovy: Los Angeles Times writer Leovy masterfully explores the culture of violence in South Central L.A., producing a transcendent, dismaying, and tragic portrait of neglect and injustice.
  5. The Sympathizer by Viet Than Nguyen: Nguyen’s first novel draws you in with the opening line: “I am a spy, a sleeper, a spook, a man of two faces.” It’s thrilling, rhythmic, and astonishing, as is the rest of Nguyen’s enthralling portrayal of the Vietnam War.
  6. All the Old Knives: A Novel by Olen Steinhauer: Steinhauer’s thriller has a disarmingly quiet start, but good spy novels are like good spies: they draw you in, earn your trust, and then grab hold with both hands. By the last 100 pages, it’s hard not to race to the finish. And the ending? One word: brilliant.
  7. Saint Mazie: A Novel by Jamie Attenberg: Exhibiting the same kind of wit and depth and heart of her previous novel, The Middlesteins, Attenberg weaves an astonishingly heartfelt story of poverty, loss, and unconventionality, while creating a character for the ages.
  8. The Wright Brothers by David McCullough: Pulitzer Prize-winning historian McCullough brings his deft touch with language and his eye for detail to the unusually close relationship between a pair of brothers from Dayton, Ohio who changed aviation history.
  9. The Book of Speculation: A Novel by Erika Swyler: Generous with well-placed detail, lyrical phrases, and mounting tension, Swyler’s bewitching tale of mermaids, deadly floods, and the silent secrets of an ancient tarot deck demonstrates a deftness and assurance rarely seen in debut novels.
  10. Green on Blue: A Novel by Elliot Ackerman: Joining the canon of contemporary war literature, Green on Blue unravels the complexities of the Afghan war, then dissolves it all into the brutal heartache of reality–where home is a battlefield, fighting is a job, and vengeance is a moral right.

Note: Literary Yard does not endorse the list as it is based on the sales made on Amazon.com. It is a pity that sales have become a measure to declare a book best.

Tagged:

Leave a Reply

Related Posts