Reading: Favorite Books of 2022

At the beginning of the new year, I like to look back over my list and reflect on the books I enjoyed the most and thought were the best written.  Most of them are recent works. They are novels with a few nonfiction titles tossed in.  Here are my top 10 favorite books of 2022 arranged alphabetically by title.

2022 FAVORITE BOOKS

Dinners with Ruth by Nina Totenberg.  A wonderful evocation of a long friendship between Totenberg and Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

Daughters of the Flower Fragrant Garden by Li Zhiqing.  An excellent family biography of two accomplished Chinese sisters separated by civil war.

The Diamond Eye by Kate Quinn.  A gripping historical novel about a WWII female Red Army sniper.

Fellowship Point by Alice Elliott Dark.  A Maine novel of the lasting friendship between two women now in their early 80’s.

Leaving Coy’s Hill by Katherine Sherbrooke.  An engaging historical novel about Lucy Stone, activist for women’s rights and abolition.

Lucy by the Sea by Elizabeth Strout.  Lucy spends the pandemic with her ex-husband in Maine in this meditative novel on love and grief.

Miss Benson’s Beetle by Rachel Joyce.  A mismatched pair of women travel to Caledonia in search of a beetle in this humorous yet poignant novel.

Oh, William by Elizabeth Strout.  A predecessor to the other Strout novel about Lucy’s marriage to and divorce from her husband William.  (Strout is obviously one of my favorite authors!)

The Palace Papers:  Inside the House of Windsor by Tina Brown.  A balanced account of the trials and tribulations of the British royals from Diana to Meghan.  

Something to Hide by Elizabeth George.  The latest mystery in the Lord Lynley/Barbara Havers series dealing sensitively with Nigerian immigrants and infibulation.  

RECENT READING

Banville (Irish Times)

April in Spain by John Banville

When the first two sentences read: “Terry Tice liked killing people. It was as simple as that,” you know you are in for something different. Irish writer, Banville’s recent crime story, April in Spain, is set in San Sebastian in the Basque region and in London. Terry Tice is the first character to appear, but the focus is really on pathologist Quirke and his psychiatrist wife, Esther, who are are on vacation in Spain. When reluctant vacationer Quirke believes his sees a young woman who was murdered, he calls his daughter Phoebe in London to alert her to his April sighting. Phoebe feels compelled to inform several others, and the plot literally thickens as a government minister, civil servants, and a detective become involved.

Banville is great at sketching out both the physical details and the personality traits of his characters. How the various players overlap in a surprise ending is masterful. Initially, I found the book a bit slow going, but got propelled forward once I got farther into it. And I loved the punning on the April of the title! (~JWFarrington)

Note: Header photo of readers is from lifeisthisway.com

2 thoughts to “Reading: Favorite Books of 2022”

  1. Happy New Year. I liked your book list and read Dinners with Ruth and both Elizabeth Strout books, which I loved.
    My faves for 2022 are:
    Demon Copperhead – B Kingsolver
    Lucy by the Sea
    Booth -K.J. Fowler
    The Trees- P Everett
    The Swimmers – J Otsuka
    Lessons in Chemistry -B Garmus
    Small Things Like These and Foster- C.
    Keegan
    Madhouse at the End of the Earth- J.
    Sancton
    Finding Me – Viola Davis
    The Death of Mister Wickham – C Gray

  2. So many good books last year. Here are just a few I would recommend.

    Middle grade book: Elsewhere Girls – a delightful middle grade read. Cat and Fanny live in the same area of Sydney Australia, about 100 years apart. Both are star swimmers and suddenly they’ve time-switched and find themselves in worlds they barely recognize.

    YA: Firekeeper’s Daughter by Angeline Boulley, a new Indigenous voice. Native American culture and culture clash as seen through the experiences of Daunis, a biracial teen, Ojibwe and white, in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula.

    Adult:
    – Memory Keeper of Kyiv – frighteningly relevant, a slice of history many haven’t heard of.
    – Christina Baker Kline – The Exiles – Focuses on women in early Australia, women who were deported from the UK as criminals and aboriginal displacement.

    Upcoming:
    – Jane Harper – Exiles – another good twist turny mystery with Aaron Falk
    – Jacqueline Winspear – A new character from the author of the Maisie Dobbs series. White Lady – Elinor White served as a secret operative as a youngster in WWI Belgium and again as an adult during WWII. 1947 finds her involved in a dangerous new personal mission.

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