Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly linkup of book bloggers hosted by The Broke and The Bookish! This week, we’re looking at books coming out in the back half of 2017 that we’re looking forward to. I know I’ve mentioned this before, but I’m not a big “looking forward” reader and don’t pay an especially amount of attention to new releases. So these ones tend to be a little hard for me. But here are ten books coming out later this year that I really want to read.
The King Who Had To Go: I love the British royal family and all of their drama and the abdication crisis is really the height of that kind of upper class drama so I am HERE for a book about it.
Our Little Racket: I always wonder how much the families (especially the spouses) of white-collar criminals actually know. This novel explores the impact of a Bernie Madoff-type’s downfall on his family and it seems like something I’d just love.
Heather The Totality: This was on my most-anticipated-of-the-year list, because it’s the guy who made Mad Men a thing and I loved Mad Men and I will read whatever he writes.
See What I Have Done: Lizzie Borden was tried (and acquitted, although practically no one remembers that) of the brutal axe murders of her parents, and this book looks to tell her story.
Sing, Unburied, Sing: My three years in the South left me with an enduring fascination for a part of the country to which I have not returned since I graduated from law school. This tells the story of a black family in Mississippi and I really want to read Jesmyn Ward, I’ve heard such great things.
Shadow of the Lions: Twisty boarding school novels are like catnip for me (probably because I went to a deeply boring public school).
Worth Dying For: I’m always interested in the symbols humans adopt and cling to, and this nonfiction looks at a symbol loaded with meaning: flags.
The Goddesses: Intense female friendships are another insta-read category, and this seems Single White Female-y in a delightfully dark way.
The River of Consciousness: Oliver Sacks is one of my favorite authors, and this is a book he was working on when he passed and I want to read some of the last words he left behind.
Hunger: I’ve got Bad Feminist on my shelf but haven’t read it yet. Nevertheless, I’ve heard great things about Roxane Gay’s writing (and she’s an A+ Twitter follow, if you haven’t already). This memoir about her relationship with her body has gotten amazing reviews so far.