Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly linkup of book bloggers hosted by The Broke and The Bookish! This week’s prompt is to create a holiday gift guide. As my gift guide, I’m going to tell you about ten books that I’ve reviewed on this blog over the last year, and who they would make a good choice for this holiday season!
Beloved: Someone interested in the ways that slavery’s pernicious evil continues to reverberate. Toni Morrison’s classic makes the horrors of slavery, which can almost seem abstract in their scope, personal and real.
All The King’s Men: Anyone who is interested in what can be hiding behind a populist veneer. President-Elect Trump is not the first politician to rise to power behind a populist message. There are some definite parallels to Robert Penn Warren’s Willie Stark in our incoming administration.
The Creation of Anne Boleyn: Budding feminists. Most of us have heard of and are at least somewhat familiar with Anne Boleyn. Susan Bordo’s examination of the myths that have sprung up around her and how they’ve changed over time is a great primer on variable views of women over time.
The Serpent King: Anyone who has ever felt like they don’t belong. Which is kind of everyone, right? Jeff Zenter’s story about three high school misfits in their senior year brings that aching longing of adolescence rushing right back in the best possible way.
The Namesake: Someone with a complicated relationship with their parents. In Jhumpa Lahiri’s justly lauded novel, Gogol’s angst over his given name mirrors the tension he feels with his immigrant parents and their culture as he grows up in America.
A Tree Grows In Brooklyn: Anyone who’s loved someone unreliable. Little Francie Nolan worships her ne’er-do-well father in Betty Smith’s coming-of-age classic. The pain that he causes both Francie and her mother, Katie, without really “meaning” to will be instantly recognizable to anyone who has tried to count on someone that they shouldn’t.
The Big Rewind: Nostalgic older millennials. Remember mixtapes? If the actual creation of a putting songs on a cassette before your time, Libby Cudmore’s witty, entertaining debut probably won’t resonate with you very hard. But for the rest of us, it’s a treat!
American Gods: Mythology buffs. Neil Gaiman is an incredible writer, and this is one of his most popular works for a reason. It posits a world in which the gods of classical mythology (along with more modern subjects of worship) are actual, corporeal beings…a great mind-stretcher for people who love myths!
The Group: Young women who’ve just graduated from college. When you graduate, you feel like the whole world is in front of you. And it is! But the struggles that exist out there in the real world: relationships, work, motherhood are the same ones that we’ve been dealing with for nearly a hundred years. It’s comforting to realize we’ve all been through it before.
Enchanted Islands: Anyone who feels like the later stages of their life are fated to be boring. After a difficult but not particularly exciting life, the heroine of Allison Amend’s novel experiences real adventure for the first time in her late 40s, in a way that continues to play out through the rest of her days. Life’s adventures never really end.