Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly linkup of book bloggers hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl! This week, we’re actually meant to be talking about books that gave us “hangovers”…you know, the kind where you finish it and it’s so good that you have a hard time getting into your next read because you can’t get it out of your head. As a devoted schedule reader (rather than mood reader), I don’t really get book hangovers, so I’m twisting this just a bit to be the last books that I really got into.
Columbine: This is a hard book to say one “enjoyed” per se, but it’s an incredible piece of journalism about an event that is misunderstood in important ways that have a continuing effect on our culture.
The Talented Mr. Ripley: I’d seen the movie, of course, so I thought this would be similar: kind of lightweight, enjoyable, not especially memorable. But in Tom Ripley, Highsmith created a fascinating villain and I really want to read the sequels!
Marie Antoinette: She’s often held up as a symbol of the worst excesses of pre-French Revolution Europe, but this biography tears down the myths and reveals her as a woman whose own faults didn’t help anything but was mostly caught up in forces beyond her control from the moment she came to France.
The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao: One of those books you finish and immediately want to read again, telling a multigenerational Dominican (and then Dominican-American) story about a family curse with bright, vivid language.
Battleborn: I don’t even particularly care for short stories, but this collection about Nevada was incredible.
Daisy Jones and the Six: I read this before the hype exploded and then became a participant in the hype, because the Behind The Music-style story of a band whose blood and tears created a classic album before it all came crashing down again was impossible to put down.
Bad Blood: We are living in a new era of fraudsters, and Elizabeth Holmes and Theranos were one of the highest-profile ones of all. A fascinating behind-the-scenes look of how the company got so big despite being based on total lies…and how it was all revealed.
Astonish Me: I am a sucker for ballet books, but was a little hesitant because I’d not enjoyed Shipstead’s other novel. This one, though, was a treat: it beautifully balances a domestic story about a family against the drama of the exclusive world of ballet and totally captured my attention.
The Winter of the Witch: I loved the first two books and was so worried that the conclusion of the trilogy would falter, but I was wrong to doubt Arden. It was a perfect ending to an incredible story.
Once Upon A River: A historical fiction tale that celebrates storytelling, as a young girl is brought nearly dead into an English tavern and is claimed by several families, any or none of which might be her own.