Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly linkup of book bloggers hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl! This week is a favorite annual topic of mine…authors whose work I’ve experienced for the first time in 2018! Even with how much I read, there are so many great writers who I haven’t gotten to yet, so I like keeping track of which ones finally made it only my list each year. I like to reserve this list for established authors only, so I don’t count ones who have only written one no matter how much I might have liked the debut!
Roxane Gay: I’ve loved her Twitter presence for years, but I’d never actually read any of her books until this year, when I read the searing An Untamed State. I’m definitely ready for more!
Iris Murdoch: I’d been curious about her ever since I watched her biopic years ago, but Henry and Cato didn’t really do much for me. I do want to try The Sea, The Sea, but if that one also falls flat I’ll probably call it quits with her.
Rainbow Rowell: One of the bookternet’s favorite authors, I’d heard the for-adults Landline was one of her less successful outings, so I’m not going to let my underwhelm with it push me away from reading her well-loved YA.
Louise Erdrich: I found Love Medicine a little challenging to follow at times, but she’s written a whole series of books based on the same fictional reservation and I’m curious to see how she develops these characters out!
J.M. Coetzee: One of only a few authors who’ve won the Booker Prize twice, I read one of those books (Disgrace) for my book club. It was very depressing but also really well-done, so I’m interested in continuing to explore his backlist.
Lawrence Wright: He’s written a bunch of non-fiction, and reading his The Looming Tower (about al-Queda and 9/11) gave me faith that he presents solid research in a compelling way, so I’ll for sure read more by him!
Elizabeth Strout: I’d heard great things about her writing, so I picked up her Pulitzer Prize-winning short story collection Olive Kitteridge. It was good, and I’ll absolutely grab more of her writing to read!
Jesmyn Ward: She’s an incredible well-regarded young author, and while I have others from her that I’m still looking forward to reading, I thought Sing, Unburied, Sing was powerful but flawed.
Curtis Sittenfeld: Her short story collection got a lot of buzz this year, and reading her debut Prep definitely made me interested in reading it and the rest of her writing!
Michael Pollan: I’ve been aware of his books, especially those about food and eating, but reading In Defense of Food convinced me I don’t need more.