I didn't read a lot of books by my standard this year- I finished 31, which is pretty rubbish especially when you consider I was on 10 by the end of February - but it was a pretty good one nonetheless. No books that blew my mind or totally obssessed me the way a Victoria Goddard or Ada Palmer had in previous years, but a lot of good stuff and some solid new series and authors to be getting on with it.
Best book I read all year: it's not always that the best book I read in a year came out that year, but this year it was probably Georgia Summers' The City of Stardust, so this year it did. It managed the rather impossible trick of being a whimsical, Valente/Morgenstein/that guy we don't talk about anymore-esque tale of magic, yearning, and mystical realms, and a page-turning espionage thriller. Really, really good.
Runner up: The Bright Sword by Lev Grossman is a post-Arthur Arthurian tale which does a lot and will probably stick with me for a while. Great balance of fable, legend, genuine political and cultural commentary, charm, character... don't be put off if you didn't enjoy the Magicians trilogy, it's not at all similar, far less acerbic. You do have to enjoy a diversion, though.
Best space thing: you can tell there was a high standard because I read books by both James SA Corey and Ann Leckie this year but the winner is neither: instead, The Red Scholar's Wake, by Alliette de Bodard, takes it. It's a piratey space adventure and a romance between a woman and her ship (who is also a woman, more or less), and it's rolicking good stuff.
Best book about mysterious events happening on a large, luxuriously outfitted, but isolated vehicle: if I had a Euro for every book that fit this category this year, I'd have two euros, but it's weird that it happened twice. I'm not going to pick an actual favourite, because both Voyage of the Damned by Frances White- a delightfully witty, plotty, twisty murder-mystery about magical heirs being murdered on their big yacht- and The Cautios Traveller's Guide to the Wastelands by Sarah Brooks - imagine a journey on the Trans-Siberian express but Siberia is Area X from Vandermeer's novels and you're a good portion of the way there- are excellent.
Best new series: I'ma give another joint award here, between Elijah Kinch Spector's Kalyna books- of which two are out, I am cheating in that the first one came out last year but I read it in January so it sneaks in - and Rogba Payne's Dance of Shadows, which is the first book in an as-yet-unnamed series but I'm all in.
Best non-SFF book: trying to up my non-SFF reading, not doing that well, but I have become enamoured by the writing of James McBride- his brand of rambling yet insightful community tale really appeals to me, and Heaven and Earth Grocery Store hit the spot.
Best comic: the Warworld Saga, the Superman-vs-Mogul story by Phillip Kennedy Johnson, was superb, in my view an all-timer Superman story. The kind of big epic I love when Superman writers get it down, and he did here.
Your Best Reads of the Year 2024 yes 2024! WITLESS!!!
#202
Posted Yesterday, 02:59 PM
Last two years I have been reading less and even listening less than I'm used to just not been in the mood to try out as many decent but perhaps not brilliant books as I've been used to do so its been a lot of safe bets. 2024 has been more some quality reads reaching 37 books with only a couple of re-reads compared to the for me more normal numbers doubling that.
The brilliant The Sword Defiant, Lightbringer, Disquite Gods, Evil Empire, Breaking Hel, Deep Black,
The very good Rythm of War, Traitor of Readwinter, Innheritance of Magic, Art of Prophecy, Art of Destiny, The Sword Unbound, Suicide Kings, Angelina, The Weavers of Sarmyr, Hate Machine, Homecoming, Sabriel, Instruction in Shadow.
Best in class is probably Breaking Hel, Miles Cameron has been on fire since the Red Knight and his last trilogy is a step above the Traitor Son and Masters and Mages. He does not have the most beautiful prose but he is easily sailing up as my favorite currently productive author. I eagerly hope for even more crossover between his three current worlds in the next installment of what is obviously a well thought out shared universe.
Best new author: Probably Gareth Hanrahan whose The Sword Defiant is brilliant and its follow up The Sword Unbound being only somewhat less awesome.
Biggest Surprise: Probably Rythm of War I really disliked Oathbringer when it came out but Rythm of War gave me a new appreciation for the entire series and what Sanderson is doing. He may never become my favorite author but he is really good when he is good.
Biggest Surprise 2: Probably Lightbringer as with Oathbringer above I quite disliked how Dark Age worked out but Lightbringer is to me a perfect return to form and I eagerly anticipate the next installment.
Worst Books: Due to being a lot more picky recently I probably never read more than a chapter or two of anything that can be called bad all books where average or better and most where good
The brilliant The Sword Defiant, Lightbringer, Disquite Gods, Evil Empire, Breaking Hel, Deep Black,
The very good Rythm of War, Traitor of Readwinter, Innheritance of Magic, Art of Prophecy, Art of Destiny, The Sword Unbound, Suicide Kings, Angelina, The Weavers of Sarmyr, Hate Machine, Homecoming, Sabriel, Instruction in Shadow.
Best in class is probably Breaking Hel, Miles Cameron has been on fire since the Red Knight and his last trilogy is a step above the Traitor Son and Masters and Mages. He does not have the most beautiful prose but he is easily sailing up as my favorite currently productive author. I eagerly hope for even more crossover between his three current worlds in the next installment of what is obviously a well thought out shared universe.
Best new author: Probably Gareth Hanrahan whose The Sword Defiant is brilliant and its follow up The Sword Unbound being only somewhat less awesome.
Biggest Surprise: Probably Rythm of War I really disliked Oathbringer when it came out but Rythm of War gave me a new appreciation for the entire series and what Sanderson is doing. He may never become my favorite author but he is really good when he is good.
Biggest Surprise 2: Probably Lightbringer as with Oathbringer above I quite disliked how Dark Age worked out but Lightbringer is to me a perfect return to form and I eagerly anticipate the next installment.
Worst Books: Due to being a lot more picky recently I probably never read more than a chapter or two of anything that can be called bad all books where average or better and most where good
This post has been edited by Chance: Yesterday, 03:08 PM