Read this post to see what this is all about. For more favorites, see here.
Joseph Finder, author of
Power Play
- Sue Miller -
The Senator's Wife. A galley of Sue (The
Good Mother) Miller's new novel arrived a few months ago with a note
bound in from her editor, Jordan Pavlin, about how this book "has a great
deal to say to women of all ages." Huh? Are men not allowed to read her
books? (That reminds me of this morning at my local ski shop when I picked
up a pair of gloves I liked and the salesguy said, "Those are women's." I
replied with a straight face, "I like to wear women's gloves. You got a
problem with that?") Anyway, no, reading Sue Miller's remarkable novels
won't make a man grow breasts (unlike smoking Virginia Slims, say). I don't
think there's any novelist any better at parsing marriages and home life
than Miller. She's got a wonderfully terse style and incredibly sharp
perceptions. She's better than Anne Tyler or Ann Beattie (and all the other
Ann/e's except Ann Patchett, who does sort of different stuff). The
Senator's Wife concerns a young married couple that moves into a house
next door to the wife of a famous liberal senator, a womanizer -- think Gary
Hart or Ted Kennedy, but with the gravitas of Henry Cabot Lodge. It's a
story about secrets and marriage, love and morality. Really terrific stuff.
Womanly, yes, but I liked it too.
- Ian McEwan -
On Chesil Beach. OK, granted, this is really just a long short story
(208 pages, lots of white space, small format) -- not a novel; maybe a
novellini? -- but it's beautifully constructed, elegantly written, and
devastating. It's a bleak fable about a newlywed couple on their wedding
night -- virgins facing sexual intercourse for the first time -- and the
far-reaching consequences that spiral out of a disastrous misunderstanding.
I don't love all of McEwan's work -- he tends to be a bit too chilly for my
tastes -- but this one he nailed.
- Peter Abrahams -
Nerve Damage. Why is this guy not a major bestseller? I don't get
it. He's Stephen King's favorite suspense novelist, and mine too. He makes
the stuff all the rest of us do look amateurish. Now that the great Ira
Levin has died, Peter Abrahams is easily the finest thriller writer alive.
Nerve Damage is about a sculptor in Vermont with only a few months to
live who gets a sneak peek at his New York Times obituary (through a
hacker friend) and thereby discovers a strange fact about his late wife. The
investigation leads him into a conspiratorial maze. But since this is Peter
Abrahams, nothing turns out the way you predict. And along the way you're
treated to some terrifically stylish, elliptical -- and powerful --
storytelling.
Jeffery Deaver, author of
The Sleeping Doll
Dick Adler, former crime fiction reviewer for the Chicago Tribune, now
blogger
- Elise Blackwell -
Grub. Superb, biting modern homage to Gissing's
New Grub
Street.
- Richard Aleas (aka Charles Ardai) -
Songs of Innocence. Much shame on the MWA for not nominating this.
- T.J. MacGregor -
Kill Time. Has the icing on the cake of one of my favorite subjects:
time travel.
Linda L. Richards, editor
January Magazine, author
Death Was the Other Woman (pub date 2008)
It seems to me 2007 was a stellar year. In fiction, I read a lot more that
was terrific than the other kind. As luck would have it, three stood out for me.
Jon Land,
author of
The Last Prophecy
- David Morrell -
Scavenger. Morrell, the best and most influential thriller writer
ever, has never been better. A manipulative madman enlists two unwilling
players in what is essentially a human video game. Blisteringly paced,
brilliantly structured, and compulsively readable, Scavenger
establishes a new benchmark for both originality and execution.
- Lee Child -
Bad Luck and Trouble.
Child's nomadic, loner hero Jack Reacher reunites with some members of his
former military investigation team to find out why others have been
murdered. This is Child's best book yet, and Reacher rivals James Bond as
the best series hero ever.
- James Lee Burke -
The Tin Roof Blowdown. Burke's latest, set against the tragic
retelling of the Katrina disaster, solidifies his status as America's
preeminent novelist as well mystery writer. Ever-tortured Dave Robicheaux's
efforts to solve a pair of murders are dwarfed by the much larger crime
perpetuated on the people of New Orleans. A visual and visceral masterpiece.