Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly linkup of book bloggers hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl! Even as a power reader, I am always surprised at how many authors I end up reading for the very first time in any given year…and I’m not just referring to debut authors, who I don’t count for these kinds of lists.
Agatha Christie: I can’t believe I’d never read any of her work before! I started with Murder on the Orient Express and was so impressed by her cleverness and storytelling that I can’t wait to read more!
Elena Ferrante: I actually ended up reading two Ferrante books this year, the first of the Neapolitan Quartet as well as The Lying Lives of Adults. I liked the former much better than the latter so I’m glad I read it first or I might not have picked it up, but I do plan to continue the series!
Jasper Fforde: I’d seen his Lost In A Good Book series recommended on lists for forever, and finally got around to reading the first one this year, which I enjoyed enough that I’m intending to keep reading them/his work!
Sarah J Maas: I’m not much of a young-adult reader these days anymore, as I approach 40, but you can’t participate in the bookternet without knowing about Maas and her multiple enormously successful series. I started the Throne of Glass series, which I enjoyed, and I also plan to try out her Court of Thorns and Roses series as well!
Ken Liu: Here’s an author I tried for the first time that I don’t think I’ll be going back to. I’d been super excited to read a fantasy novel that worked outside of the familiar “medieval Europe” tropes, but found The Grace of Kings to be much too shallow on character-building to hold my interest.
Jo Walton: I’d heard good things about her fantasy and alternate history novels, and found her debut, Tooth and Claw, which is a Victorian novel of manners starring a cast of dragons, to be very charming and enjoyable. I’m definitely planning to read more of her work!
Awkaese Emezi: I’d had their novel Freshwater on my list for forever but my book club read The Death of Vivek Oji first. I’m actually not sure that based on Vivek Oji alone I’d be super interested in continuing to read their work, but since I have a copy of Freshwater I’m going to tackle it one of these days.
Naomi Novik: One of my favorite recent reads was the Winternight series, and I constantly read that if you like them, you should try Novik and her book Uprooted. I would have made some different choices in editing the book, but I generally liked the storytelling and am looking forward to her other work!
Maggie O’Farrell: Her novel Hamnet was so incredible that I’m absolutely going to read her entire backlist.
Drew Magary: This one is kind of cheating because I’ve been reading him on the internet (at Deadspin and Defector, among other places) for forever, but this year was the first time I read one of his published books so I’m counting it!