2018 Top Ten International Reads

Blackout (All Clear, #1) All Clear (All Clear, #2) Passage The Crossing Places (Ruth Galloway, #1) Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine The Keeper of Lost Things The Vanishing Season (Ellery Hathaway, #1) The Wolves of Winter The Queen of Wishful Thinking Death at Wentwater Court (Daisy Dalrymple #1)

As choosing an overall top ten is far too difficult, I broke it up into Aussie authors and ‘the rest’.  I have more US writers on this list than I thought I would.  Of course, this might be Connie Willis’s doing.

Blackout by Connie Willis:  Blackout is part of Willis’s Oxford Time Travel series and  has time travellers heading for England during WW2. The book is full of ordinary characters doing ordinary things. Then, it suddenly dawns on you that the characters and their lives are anything but ordinary! Blackout and All Clear as basically the same book, but it was too long and Willis and her publishers cut it up into two parts.  They are my overall favourite reads of the year.  5 out of 5

All Clear by Connie Willis: After finishing All Clear, my love for Willis’s Oxford Time Travel series has not diminished and in fact I’m sad and depressed that I only have Fire Watch, the short story, remaining. I’d love to demand Willis write another book in the series but as I recently read she took an epic eight years to pen Blackout and All Clear, I don’t see it happening in my near future.  5 out of 5

Passage by Connie Willis: Passage isn’t part of the Oxford Time Travel series but as this is the fifth Willis novel I’ve read, I’ve become very familiar with her style. I can understand why some people become frustrated with it when reading her books, but I just continue to adore it and her. She is truly one of the most deceptively intelligent writers there has ever been. I can’t recommend Passage enough. 5 out of 5

The Crossing Places by Elly Griffiths: Ruth Galloway is a nearly 40 unmarried overweight introverted cat owning archaeologist. DI Harry Nelson is the lead detective working on two missing child cases. When bones are found on the salt marsh near where Ruth lives, Harry asks for her assistance and soon Ruth finds herself drawn further and further into the police investigation and subsequently, danger.T here was something about this book which dragged me in and made me want more. Luckily for me there are another ten books in the series.  I’m currently up to number 8.  I won’t list them all, but I rated them all 5 out of 5.

Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine by Gail Honeymoon: You’d have to live under a rock to not have heard of this debut. There’s several themes Honeyman explores with Eleanor’s story. How people cope with mental illness, of course, plus how people cope with loneliness and the importance of love. We’re all a little crazy. We’re all a little damaged. But in the end, we might find the strength to make it through the day and feel fine — about certain aspects, at least. After all, if Eleanor can do it, so can we.  5 out of 5

The Keeper of Lost Things by Ruth Hogan: There’s a little bit of everything in this book: romance, mystery, comedy, drama. It’s a book about books and a book about movies. It’s a collection of short stories. It has diverse characters who will warm your heart and make you cry. It’s above love and second chances. It’s about loss and the flow on effects of those losses And it’s a keeper. 5 out of 5

The Vanishing Season by Joanna Schaffhausen:  Schaffhausen is a good friend of a good friend of mine meaning I feel like I know her (even though the limit of our friendship is the occasional comment/reply on one of our mutual friend’s Facebook posts, LOL) and, therefore, I felt obliged to pick up a copy of her debut novel. For someone who doesn’t read this genre often, The Vanishing Season definitely had its creepy moments. There’s no huge Gone Girl twist in the end of the book but there is enough tension in the climactic scenes to make you keep turning pages until you reach the end. 5 out of 5

The Wolves of Winter by Tyrell Johnson: A nuclear war ends when a super flu spreads around the world. Those few who have managed to survive both of these events flee the cities, living off the land in isolated areas. Johnson’s debut skips along at a fast pace which had me hooked from the first chapter.   4 1/2 out of 5

The Queen of Wishful Thinking by Milly Johnson: Despite being around 500 pages long, this book was a fast easy read; for the most the characters were ordinary people who you could imagine live down the road; the setting was cute and typically English; the characters too were very English; and I appreciate the fact they were older.  4 out of 5

Death at Wentwater Court by Carola Dunn: First books in mystery/detective series can be tough. The author has to introduce the main characters and establish their personalities, one of whom we need to find very likeable, as well as give us a bit of background on those characters, without using information dumps or corny flashbacks. Then, they need to bait us enough in the ending to ensure we pick up book number two in the series. Dunn’s effort ticked all the boxes all while presenting a half decent murder plot.  Considering there are currently 23 titles in the series, I assume Dunn kept up the high standard and I’m not the only one who instantly became a bit of a fan of Daisy and Dunn’s writing. 4 out of 5

Hopefully I’ll pick up just as many 5 star reads in 2019.

Happy New Year!

My 2018 Aussie Top Ten Reads

Suspect (Joseph O'Loughlin, #1) by Michael Robotham  Lost (Joseph O'Loughlin #2) by Michael Robotham  Life or Death by Michael Robotham  The Right Place by Carla Caruso  The Art Of Preserving Love by Ada Langton  The Way Back by Kylie Ladd  Beautiful Messy Love by Tess Woods  The Sunday Girl by Pip Drysdale   The Secrets at Ocean's Edge by Kali Napier  The Memories That Make Us by Vanessa Carnevale

I am jumping on the bandwagon and posting my best books of the year.  As choosing only ten books though is just way too difficult, I’ve decided to post my top ten books by Aussie authors first.

Suspect by Michael Robotham:  How did I only discover Robotham this year?  This is the first book in the Joseph O’Loughlin series and I adored it. Although this thriller/mystery has so much going on in it, it’s still an easy read, fast paced and a definite page turner. I couldn’t wait to get to the end to find out how Joe would get out of his dilemma. Just a warning, sitting up late at night to finish the book will happen. There was an unexpected twist in the end that left me breathless for a long moment.  5 out of 5

Lost by Michael Robotham:  It’s a gutsy move to relegate the character you’re planning to make the star of a series to a supporting role in only the second book, but I also thought it was a master stroke. In this thriller/mystery, we follow the story of DI Ruiz who’d pursued O’Loughlin in Suspect. The action moves along with breakneck speed and again Robotham made me gasp out loud a couple of times with shock at the many plot twists and unexpected scenes which occur.  5 out of 5

Life Or Death by Michael Robotham:  A stand alone Robotham thriller/mystery.  Set in the US, it starts with the book’s hero, Audie Palmer, escaping from gaol only one day before he is due to be released on parole. Robotham’s skill for writing action sequences is highlighted, especially during the first part of the book which is full of above average fight and flight scenes. The book is much more though. Robotham’s observations of family and society and the dark side of human nature are remarkable and he manages to present many literary elements.  5 out of 5

The Right Place by Carla Caruso:  Nella and Adrian’s story was probably one of the best contemporary romances I’ve read for a while. The book also comes under the genre of historical fiction by featuring Nella’s grandmother’s, Esta, story of migrating to Australia from Italy in the 50s.  There’s beautiful Italian recipes included (and not just a couple — as many as some high priced recipe books I have purchased in the past) which makes  The Right Place double the worth. 4 1/2 out of 5

The Art of Preserving Love by Ada Langton: This rich and unique tale is about preserving love; ensuring it doesn’t fade, no matter the circumstances.  Love in all its forms, not just romantic.  There is romance, of course, but it isn’t written in the traditional form. The romance more or less just weaves its way through what I’d probably class as a historical women’s fiction book.  4 1/2 out of 5

The Way Back by Kylie Ladd: I thought The Way Back would be a mystery cum physiological thriller, perhaps police procedural.Instead it is the dramatic story of a typical Australian family coping with an unbearably heartbreaking situation. I think my favourite thing about this book is that it felt so real. No character or plotline seemed over the top.  I shed a tear more than once.  4 1/2 out of 5

Beautiful Messy Love by Tess Woods:  A contemporary romance done right.  Woods uses modern references and topical political subjects to actually add to the plot and characterisation. Social media, terrorism, fear of Muslims, asylum seekers, Australia’s off-shore detention centres – they’re all integrated into the plot seamlessly. If you’re looking for a book that represents how Aussies really think, talk and act, this is the book for you. The dialogue and slang are spot on.  4 1/2 out of 5

The Sunday Girl by Pip Drysdale:  An addictive psychological thriller in the vein of Girl on the Train. Instead of the big shock twist, Drysdale just keeps the tension on one blood pumping level. She has a knack of making even the most mundane moments feel frightening. From a parrot squawking to a yellow ribbon, you just know, as you read, that these small things will be dangerous.  4 out of 5

The Secrets at Ocean’s Edge by Kali Napier:  Set in 1932, WW1 is still affecting many of this book’s characters either physically, mentally or financially. The secrets of the title are many and varied. Napier covers tough issues: sexual abuse/rape, child abuse, adultery, arson, extortion. The book can be quite harrowing at times but is an impressive debut and will believe it will become an important piece of Australian literature in the future. 4 out of 5

The Memories That Make Us by Vanessa Carnevale:  Our heroine, Gracie, suffers from complete amnesia after being involved in a car accident. She can’t remember her best friend, her mother, or her fiance, Blake, who she was supposed to marry in three weeks. Yes, the old faithful amnesia trope. But with this book and her heroine, Carnevale has really done an excellent job at looking at the fear of memory loss instead of simply using it as a cliched romantic plot device.  4 out of 5