Sunday, January 19, 2025

The Best Books I Read in 2024

As I do almost every year, here I list the best books (in my opinion) out of the many that I read in 2024 (although in some cases they were published earlier). This year I have chosen 11 books for the list. After each title, I give in parentheses the genre, the year, and the date of the blogpost I wrote on that book, in case you want more information. The list is in order of those blogpost dates (NOT ranked). 1. "Onlookers" (stories, 2023), by Ann Beattie (2/6/24); 2. "Season of the Witch: Enchantment, Terror, and Deliverance in the City of Love" (cultural history, 2012), by David Talbot (2/24/24); 3. "The Year of Magical Thinking" (memoir, 2005) (a re-read for me), by Joan Didion (3/2/24); 4. "Banyan Moon" (novel, 2023), by Thao Thai (3/14/24); 5. "Fourteen Days" (group-written novel of episodes, 2024), edited by Margaret Atwood and Douglas Preston (5/20/24); 6. "Ana Turns" (novel, 2023), by Lisa Gornick (6/5/24); 7. "Real Americans" (novel, 2024), by Rachel Khong (6/13/24); 8. "Long Island" (novel, 2024), by Colm Toibin (6/23/24); 9. "Old Lovegood Girls" (novel, 2020), by Gail Godwin (10/5/24); 10. "The Wren, the Wren" (novel, 2023), by Anne Enright (10/24/24); 11. "Tell Me Everything" (novel, 2024), by Elizabeth Strout (11/12/24). PS Although the above list is in order of postings, NOT ranked, I will mention here that my very favorite book on the list, and of the year 2024, is "Tell Me Everything," by Elizabeth Strout, with Colm Toibin's "Long Island" a close second.

Tuesday, January 7, 2025

"Family Reservations," by Liza Palmer

A mother and three competitive daughters. (Queen Lear rather than King Lear?) The elite world of fine dining, also ultra-competitive. A Marin County (where I live) setting. The combination sounds perfect to this fan of family stories, restaurant stories, and settings very familiar to me. Well, "Family Reservations" (get it?) (Lake Union, 2024), by Liza Palmer, is an absorbing novel, definitely, but with painfully sharp edges. The famous restaurant owner Maren Winter (the last name is perhaps too much on the nose) is ruthless, has always controlled everything in her restaurant/professional life and in her daughters' lives, and makes sure that anyone who crosses her will pay, even her own daughters. I found this novel fascinating, but at the same time I found myself wincing and cringing many times as I read it. The four women (mother and daughters) distrust and compete with each other, and are sometimes outright cruel to each other. Consequently, the novel is at times difficult to read. But throughout, there are faint, mostly-hidden signs that underneath everything, there is also love among them. I will leave you to guess how it all turns out. Despite my wincing and cringing, I somehow enjoyed the book, and if you like family stories and restaurant settings, you might too.
 
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