Janis:
thanks so much for the PM and to have my name in a thread!
Seriously though, yes I can usually point people in the direction of a multiplicity of fab books to sink their teeth into.
Lately though, I have had trouble coming up with many that interest me. Since I read a book a day, almost, this pretty much sucks for me! But.....
Did I ever recommend the Deborah Crombie books to you? She's a mystery author, a Texan, but she situates her crime stories in London, my home city, and she nails it. What I love about her books are two things:
1) she has the same family of detectives and each book shows the development of their private and professional lives, so we grow with them,
2) no crime can be solved without an examination of the past. So, the past is never done and dealt with in Crombie's world, instead it clings to the present, causing complications and refusing to ever be done with or over. This adds depth to all Crombie mysteries.
In the romance department, and I am not a snob, I disagree with anyone who sweeps an entire genre under the carpet without ever having tried it, I can recommend several names of authors who can be relied upon for quality writing in a genre that often becomes over-formulaic. I love Julia Quinn, Eloisa James, Judith McNaught, some Susan Wiggs (her "Just Breathe" comes to mind) and my all-time fave, Susan Elizabeth Philips.
For Julia Quinn, browse the shelves or amazon and find the 6 or 7 titles that deal with the Bridgerton family. Wonderful books that demonstrate the art of making a family, family tenderness, loyalty, love and that not all families sink into dysfunction. Quinn is superbly witty. Eloisa James has an ear for a fine turn of phrase, also a very funny writer. McNaught has bigger books, great sweeps of story that you get caught up in. I love "Paradise," "Perfect" and my absolute favourite, my second favourite romance novel of all time, "Whitney my love." This last one is a keeper.
As for Susan Elizabeth Phillips, why do I love her so? A couple of her earlier books are best left on the shelf but then she hits her stride and realizes the secret to her writing is characters. She loves her characters, for all their excesses, mistakes, screw ups and orneriness. We do too! She writes the most hilarious dialogue. To get lost in one of her best books is to wish you could drop in on Texas and join in the party, get to know these characters as real people and have them in your life. My all time favourite of hers is "Aint she sweet?" (Although, not situated in Texas!) I dare you not to love it!
As far as popular fiction is concerned, I recently picked up "The Art of Fielding" and I thought that actually, this guy can really write. Too many of the books I have started this last year, I haven't been able to finish because the writing is not of good quality. Chad Harbach's book had me hooked immediately. Unfortunately, I got bogged down at work and had to return it before I was even half way through, so I am wait listed to get another copy at my local library.... I want to get back to it to discover how does baseball work as a metaphor for life?
I did read and loved Vanessa Diffenbaugh's "The Language of Flowers." Wow, what a book. Couldn't put this one down. How do you learn how to love if you have never been shown any? How do you learn to become part of a family if no family has ever wanted you? How do you learn to let people in and not over-protect yourself so much you risk remaining cut off forever? Enjoy.
On my list of what I want to read next is: Swamplandia, Margot Livesey's new book "The Flight of Gemma Hardy," and just tons more.
Recently I read two books in the Jo Nesbo crime series where the lead character is detective Harry Hole, of the Norwegian police. I read "The Leopard" and "The Snowman" and I thought the latter as the better of the two. Hole reminds me a little of Michael Connolly's Harry Bosch: the whole time I read I am so worried for both the Harry's, thinking, "oh crap, what sort of shit has Harry gotten into now?!?!" I despair of them both sometimes: they are screwing their lives up and I want to leap in and get them sorted out!
I always read, faithfully, any book by Laura Lipmann. I did not, much to my bitter disappointment since I won an autographed copy(!), much like her latest "The Most Dangerous Thing." However, her previous book, "I'd Know You Anywhere" is good and her PI series based in Baltimore featuring the character Tess Monaghan are all fab. Can't wait to read more Tess. A great character. Especially now she has her boyfriend Crow, her baby and her side kick, Mrs. Flowers (hope I got her name right).
I am not a big fan of any books targetting the teen audience. HP, Twilight series and Hunger Games series are for teens. We adults have a wealth of books from which to choose, too many are published each year to possibly get through. So, you will never find me touting the wonders of anything from the teen market. Their view of life is not mine. Teen concerns are not mine. Grown up books for grown up people, that's what I believe in. Let the teens have their own and keep their own secrets.
And yes, I will be picking up the "50 Shades of Grey" book at some point. I want to know what the talk is about, I'm open to all sorts of topics, love, fantasy/erotica, and I want to know: is she actually any good as a writer?
This will always be my number 1 criteria: can the person actually write? There's too much talent out there and good stories waiting to be read, I'm not wasting my time on two-bit talent.
Anyway, I have just started a new professional project, I am writing a textbook for the academic market, teaching an approach to literature for students of Spanish at college, so I am bogged down in Hispanic short stories at the moment and not reading quite as much as I normally do.
But, maybe some of these suggestions will keep you going? Next time I come across a book that takes my breath away, the title will be all yours.
Final mention: in my list of fave books of all time are the following titles: "The House of Mirth" Edith Wharton, The Bone People" Keri Hulme, "Mrs. Dalloway" Virginia Wolf. Even if all you read one year were these three books, you'd have quite a year!
Have fun Janis, thanks for thinking of me! And let me make just one last plug: if you aren't watching "Sherlock", season 1 and 2 with Martin Freeman and Benedict Cumberbatch: what the h*** are you waiting for?!?!?!?!?!
TTYL,
Clare