I read 100 books last year – most are fiction (52 were crime fiction), plus 12 non-fiction (mostly biography/autobiography). I read books by 45 new-to-me authors and 25 books off my tbr lists.
Each month I decided which was the best book of the month. Some months I couldn’t pick just one book!:
- January – Black and Blue by Ian Rankin – I read this in January, very quickly, eager to know what happened next and intended to re-read it slowly – must do that sometime!
- February – The Franchise Affair by Josephine Tey. It was first published in 1948 and it’s set in a post Second World War England reflecting the social attitudes of its time. It’s based on a real case from the 18th century of a girl who went missing and later claimed she had been kidnapped.
- March – A Fatal Inversion by Barbara Vine. I thought it a clever book, with clues dropped casually, so that I had to read it carefully. The plot covers a number of issues ‘“ family relationships, friendship, loyalty, race and class discrimination, the consequences of our actions and above all the nature of evil and guilt.
- also in March – Raven Black by Ann Cleeves. Another murder mystery, this one is set in Shetland. Family ties, heredity and personal relationships are important themes running through the narrative. There is also a strong sense of location and terrific atmosphere – the landscape, the sea, the weather, and the circling ravens.
- April – Take My Breath Away by Martin Edwards. This is a legal mystery, featuring Nic Gabriel, a lawyer turned writer, who is investigating the death of his friend Dylan Rees. Like all good murder mysteries this is a complex book about good and evil, about power and manipulation, about secrets, lies and deception.
- May Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel – the story of Thomas Cromwell, the son of a blacksmith, and his political rise, set against the background of Henry VIII’s England and his struggle with the Pope over his desire to marry Anne Boleyn.
- June – Resurrection Men by Ian Rankin. Not about body-snatchers (as I wondered it might be), but about the cops who need re-training, including D I Rebus. To help them become team players they’ve been given on old, unsolved case to work on. But Rebus was involved in the case at the time and begins to get paranoid about why he is on the course. It’s a tough, gritty story and as with other Rebus books, there’s more than one investigation on the go.
- July – The Comfort of Saturdays by Alexander McCall Smith. What I find so fascinating about the Isabel Dalhousie series is that whilst not a lot actually happens, a lot goes on in Isabel’s head. Isabel is an ‘˜intermeddler’. She can’t resist appeals for help and tries to do the right thing. A variety of themes run through this book – justice, jealousy, guilt, and the nature of freedom.
- August – The Serpent Pool by Martin Edwards – a terrific book. It has everything, a great sense of location, believable, complex characters, a crime to solve, full of tension and well paced to keep you wanting to know more, and so atmospheric.
- also in August – Thirteen Hours by Deon Meyer. It’s tense, taut and utterly enthralling. Moving at a fast pace the book follows the events during the thirteen hours from 05:36 when Rachel, a young American girl is running for her life up the steep slope of Lion’s Head in Capetown.
- September – The ABC Murders by Agatha Christie – a series of murders advertised in advance by letters to Poirot, and signed by an anonymous ‘˜ABC’. One of the best of her books!
- October – Quite Ugly One Morning by Christopher Brookmyre. Another murder mystery. Investigative journalist, Jack Parlabane gets involved. It soon becomes apparent to the reader who did the murder and it is the motive behind it that needs to be ferreted out.
- November – Two Moons by Jennifer Johnston – a warm and intimate novel, portraying the problems of falling in love at all ages and the difficulties of growing old and coming to terms with the disappointments of the past with great sensitivity.
- December –An Autobiography by Agatha Christie. I’ve written several posts about this excellent book and have yet to write a summing up post. It’s not just an account of her life but is full of her thoughts and questions about the nature of life and of memory.
Most of these ‘best books’ are crime fiction, but I think that of all them Wolf Hall has to be my ‘Book of the Year’. It is an exceptional book. What I found most enjoyable was the way it transported me back to that time, with Mantel’s descriptions of the pageantry, the people, the places and the beliefs and attitudes of the protagonists.

I am bookmarking this post. Will check out your picks!
I read 95 books, not bad, considering I was in a reading slump for more than four months.
Happy New Year to you and your family. Have a great reading year in 2011!!!
Here are my Best Reads of 2010.
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Hi Margaret,
There are so many good books here, that chosing one favourite would be very difficult.
Like yourself, the crime genre is one of my greatest favourites and you have selected some of the best authors in that genre.
Biographies and Autobiographies probably wouldn’t feature very highly on my list, unless it was something exceptional.
Best Wishes for 2011
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Margaret – Thanks for the summary of your picks for the year. I’m archiving this one…
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That reminds me I intended to read another Isabel D. mystery!
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I love Thrillers I will have to check out some of these crime choices.
Happy New Year to you
Here is mine if interested.
http://teawithmarce.blogspot.com/2010/12/tea-time-with-marce-2010-list-of.html
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I like that you chose a book a month – it’s good to choose while they are still fresh in your mind, I think. Maybe I’ll do the same this year, if I remember :) The Agatha Christie autobiography sounds good, the more I read of her work the better I like her.
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Margaret, you had some really good reads in 2010. I want to continue Martin Edwards’ Lake District series this year and I’d also like to try to WOLF HALL. So many have praised it and I downloaded it to my Kindle recently. Perhaps soon.
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I am glad to see you enjoyed Wolf Hall. I had such high hopes, but admittedly, I was not a fan.
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A fine selection. I have read around half of them, and of these my favourites are A Fatal Inversion, Raven Black and The Serpent Pool.
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I’ve only read a couple of your monthly picks but I they were good so I’ll have to check out your others. On the Wolf Hall issue though we’ll have to agree to disagree – I just found it dry. Mabye one day I’ll finish it but I’m in no hurry to read the second half of it. Oh well, it’s a good thing we all have different tastes otherwise it would be boring :)
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I’m fond of murder mysteries myself but having just finished Wolf Hall yesterday (alas, too late for my 2010 count), I have to agree with you on its status as best book. So well written, contemporary but not untrue to its time, it was a refreshing view of Thomas Cromwell not just as Henry’s hatchet man.
(Oooh, that came out so nicely! I’m copying this for my review. ;)
Nice that you managed to read a quarter of your books last year out of your TBR stack! I was dead broke but I think only Wolf Hall was from my shelves. (The library, however, was my devoted friend.)
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Margaret: I’m just curious to know what you find special about Black and Blue. I simply could not get into it. i couldn’t distinguish between Rebus’s junior officers and was not at all gripped by the plot. So many people rate Rankin I wish I knew what I’m missing.
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Joyce, I think I like the Rebus books because they are so complicated (several plot lines running concurrently) and they make me concentrate on the detail. I read Black and Blue very quickly because I wanted to find out what happened next. I didn’t write very much about it after I read it as I wanted to go back and read it more slowly, but I didn’t get round to it – maybe this year?! I think that it helps to read his books in the order he wrote them although they do stand alone, but I found that I could see how the characters developed by doing that.
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Maybe they are just too complicated for my simple mind! I’ll try again.
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Well, we can’t all like the same things. Good luck!
BTW I’ve just started reading your book – Payment Deferred – looking good so far :)
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Oh, I like the idea of choosing a favorite book each month. That makes it much easier to select the year’s favorite.
I’m tracking my books read by month this year, in a separate page on my blog (Curl up and Read).
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