Continuing on with my 10 favorite novels published from 2014 to 2024. (With only one rule: no WriteByNight staff or clients, and no friends.)
The list so far:
11 (tie). Growing Up Dead in Texas, Stephen Graham
Jones
11 (tie). The Yellow House, Sarah Broom
10. Women Talking, Miriam Toews
9. The Warehouse, Rob Hart
8. Fever Dream, Samantha Schweblin
7. Ohio/The Deluge, Stephen Markley
6. The Idiot, Elif Batuman
I've never been big on the "campus novel" but this is one of the funniest, most charming books
I've read in recent memory. It's the mid-'90s at Harvard and Selin, a freshman and the daughter of Turkish immigrants, wanders the school grounds and the city making observations about people and institutions. Then she goes to Hungary and Paris and does the same. Along the way, she begins exchanging emails with love interest Ivan and discovers that maybe, just maybe, she's meant to become a writer.
(I'll add that when I learned Batuman had written a sequel, I couldn't wait for it to come out. When it did, I... let it go by. I'm not sure what that means. I still
intend to read it.)
5. Swing Time, Zadie
Smith
OK, the truth is that I like NW more than this one. But NW came out in 2012. So I'm kind of cheating
again. But Swing Time is great, and part of it is set in NW London, so. I love Zadie Smith. She's an excellent writer, craft-wise, and her social commentary rarely fails to hit the (my) mark. This one's about two girls who grow up wanting to be dancers. One ends up the assistant to a globe-trotting musician who is building a school in a West African country. The other, if memory serves, has some success in dance but is self-destructive and ends up back where they grew up. I cannot imagine
Zadie Smith writing a bad book.
Next week we're getting into the heavy hitters. I've got a lot to say about them, so we might have to go one per week.
The first
person who can guess my top 4 gets a free 60-minute chat about their writing!
Here are a few hints: global pandemic; local limbo; Y-Not (2); Clew Bay.
Are you a fellow fan of any of the books I'm talking about? Let me know, and let's gush over them together.