Sonya Unrein

Sonya Unrein
Location
Denver, Colorado,
Birthday
April 20

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Editor’s Pick
DECEMBER 8, 2009 9:47AM

2009's Best Fiction

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Love it or hate it, the list is the perfect starting point for a conversation. As reliable as Christmas itself--fraught with anxiety and yet still packing a walloping dose of hope?-- around this time of year, every web site you can imagine serves up the year-end list. Last year, my OS 2008 Best Fiction post received good feedback, and so here we are again. I like the fiction lists, and as Umberto Eco says, "We like lists because we don't want to die." In that spirit...

Best Books of 2009

New York Times (This one, at 100 items, is almost as good as browsing at a real live bookstore. Note I said almost.)
100 Notable Books

Of course, the Times would be remiss if they didn't choose their very favorites. For fiction,their top five:

Both Ways is the Only Way I Want It by Maile Meloy
Chronic City by Jonathan Lethem
A Gate at the Stairs by Lorrie Moore
Half Broke Horses by Jeannette Walls
A Short History of Women by Kate Walbert

Of these five, I've read only the Moore, and I didn't like it nearly as much as some people. Did you read it? What did you think?

Publisher's Weekly (This list stirred up the most controversy, as it included no women in its top ten. The internets were abuzz with anger.)

Their fiction picks are: Await Your Reply by Dan Chaon;  Big Machine by Victor Lavalle; In Other Rooms, Other Wonders by Daniyal Mueenuddin; Jeff in Venice, Death in Varansai by Geoff Dyer; and the graphic novel, Stiches by David Small. I read Await Your Reply, which I've talked about  in my Decade's Best Fiction post, but I'll put it here in case you aren't a link-clicker: To write too much about this unnerving novel would be to give away all its rhythm and pacing. But generally, this book is about the nature of self and what that might mean in a world where you can easily slip from one persona to another in both the physical and virtual worlds. It has an undercurrent of decay and loss. Beautiful prose, packed with ideas.

Christian Science Monitor picks Lark and Termite by Jayne Anne Phillips

I like it when non-reviewers get to recommend books, and at NPR, they surveyed indie booksellers. This isn't a "best" list, but a "suggested" one instead. Await Your Reply makes this list.

Guardian (if you love books, you should be reading this site daily. RSS anyone?) The Guardian has a different take. They ask notable authors to suggest best books of the year. Here, Peter Carey recommends Kamila Shamsie, Ishiguro suggests Bolano, etc. This list has the most personality of all the lists. In addition to this feature, they are also summing up every year of the 2000s with sweet recaps written by various authors. 

Atlantic's list includes nonfiction, with the authors in alphabetical order.

Contemporary Lit chooses The Blue Notebook by James Levine

LA Times has a good list.

Chicago Tribune picks Zoe Heller's The Believers as #1, Lark and Termite as #2, and Homer & Langley by EL Doctorow as 3.

Denver Post writer chooses Valerie Martin's The Confessions of Edward Day as the best novel that was largely ignored by the MSM. I read Martin's Trespass and found her to be a smart, nuanced writer.

My list. I didn't read many 2009 titles, but you can be sure that I found a lot of titles to put on my to-read list for future enjoyment. My favorites are: Await Your Reply, Last Night in MontrealOlive Kitteridge, The Financial Lives of the Poets, and The Little Stranger. For more about what I read this year, see this post that sums up my summer reading.

Salon: Laura Miller's list. Includes, yes, Await Your Reply. I'll let you click the link to see the rest.

Best of the Decade Lists

The Millions (link to their decade wrap-up, but put them on your RSS for daily reading. They really love books. They chose The Corrections as their best book of the decade, garnering predictable bitching in the comments section. Though their comments are a walk in the park compared to the mean jabs of Salon's.)
Dirty Realistic (thoughtful book commentary. This is his best of the decade list. The winner? Austerlitz by WG Sebald. That was my pick, too.)
Paste Magazine (The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay by Michael Chabon is their top pick)
Times Online (uk) (They choose The Road by Cormac McCarthy as #1)
UK Telegraph The Telegraph chooses Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows)

Book Talk on OS
Ten Great Books of the Year by Women by Karin Greenberg
Announcing "What to Read" by Saturn Smith
Our Holiday Sets Fantasy and What Are Your Worst Books of 09 by The Biblio Files
Get an autographed copy of Columbine by Dave Cullen
The History of the Snowman by Bob Eckstein
Chicago Guy's Review of Barry Doyle's Dallas Iconography
Loreli's Top Fiction of the Decade
Placebostudman's Pick for Best Book
Amy King on PW's gender bias
Ranjit Souri's posts are all about books; each post contains quotes from a book he's reading. His latest post: Chekov.
Alcibiades Today on Why Good Fiction is Dying
What's Your Favorite Novel, asks Caroline Hargood (she loves House of Leaves)

Don't you just love books? If you have written a books post lately, please PM me and I'll add it here. I like sharing.

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Comments

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Don't you just love books?

yes, and you too. What a terrific haven you provide here on OS, amid the sometimes sturm and drang, we can come here and wander off with a list that will lead to peace, comfort and inspiration.

Thank you.
Yes! I love books and love when others get as excited about them as I do!
I'm in the middle of A Gate at the Stairs by Lorrie Moore and I'm not loving it so much yet. . .but I just started it.
I loved Olive Kitteridge and my alltime favorite of this past year was Cutting for Stone.
bbd, thank you so much.

Karin, I didn't like the Moore much. Let me know when you finish. I'd like to know what you think of it overall. I haven't heard of Cutting for Stone. Is it a novel?
Ooh, a lovely round-up of lists. I heard another non-reviewer's list on NPR last night, a woman talking about her list of "passionate" books (books where people wrote about their passions -- travel, cooking, sports, etc.). I find those off-beat lists almost more entertaining than the majors, which seems to have much (well-deserved, I'm sure) overlap.

And I'm more convinced than ever that I should add Await Your Reply to my wish list. Thanks!
Saturn, I'm really looking forward to your upcoming book posts. It might be fun sometime to pick a single new title and have multiple people review it on the same day. Not sure how one would go about picking the book, but it would be fun. I agree with you that offbeat lists are often more entertaining than the MSM's.
Hey, this is a great list of lists - thanks for doing this! The Guardian sounds like the best one, I love it when great authors name their faves. And I am most intrigued to read Await Your Reply after your description of it.

It is no exaggeration to say that books helped save my life, so the sentiment goes far beyond love.
Ooh, great roundup of "best" lists. This will keep us busy for a while.
Yep, my own buzz for one:

http://amyking.wordpress.com/2009/12/02/the-weenie-roast-–-ingredients-not-how-long-but-what’s-in-it…/
So many books, so little time!
I am way behind. I'm not sure I've read anything actually published this year. I need a vacation, preferably about six months, to catch up on just the books I have in my "read next" pile.

I just finished "Shutter Island" by Dennis Lehane (published in 2003 - see how far behind I am?). This is a crime/horror type story that so far transcends either genre it takes your breath away. The language and the imagery it conjures are far and away Lehane's best work. I will say nothing about the plot lest I spoil the upcoming movie for anyone.
Thank you for mentioning my snowman book and for adding snowmen to your header–EXCELLENT!
thanks for all of this.

just ordered "shutter island" from the library.
GeeBee, I read a Lehane novel before that was a crime novel, really good. Can't remember the name. His writing is wonderful.

Bob, you're welcome. I love my copy of your book.
I love books! Great list, great post...perfect cover piece! xox
Wow. My spreadsheet of books to read is already too big, and undertow, you are not helping me solve that problem. Great post!
Ranjit, do you know about goodreads.com? It's a nice way to keep track of your books, whether to-be-read or finished. It's also fun to see if your friends have read the same books you have, or to get suggestions.
Thank you, thank you, thank you! You did the heavy lifting here, and I just wrote down about 10 new things to read. I am voracious...and you've just whet my appetite.

What a great post!
Yep, do love books, thanks, even trashy ones now and then.

Don't tend to read much top fiction these days because most of what I do read just doesn't stretch my mind enough. (_Await Your Reply_ was a welcome exception.) Kim Robinson recently published a piece about why top SF writers are routinely ignored on all such lists like those above, and his attack certainly included The Guardian.

I also have found, as I've gotten older, that fiction of earlier periods holds as much attraction as anything new, sometimes more so. Harlan Ellison once alluded to this phenomenon in a very curmudgeonly interview with The Onion.

Naamah's Kiss is my vote for best novel of 2009, lonely voice on OS that I will be.
Alcibades, a lot of really good books from small and genre presses aren't represented on the mainstream lists, even the Guardian. I thought about that when I was putting together this post, thought about all the stuff I've read from small presses who work really hard to promote new ideas and they aren't heard. But since I am still really interested in literary fiction and I also follow the chatter about the book world from as many sides as I can, my reading history is a product of the system that rewards the big publishers, for the most part. An exception would be a press like Unbridled Books, which sticks to elegant, small works of lit fiction. If I could have my dream job, it would be working with them.
Ugh... I need to read more books and less OS.
Wow...this is infoporn at its best!
iamsurly: That's what I did this year. Stopped OSsing and started reading more. It was fun.

aliquot: I feel like Nigella Lawson.
Whew. Just reading this post makes me feel like I'm falling behind. I'll never catch up with reading all these good books. But I will give it my best.
Wow. I am so impressed by this list. What a fantastic job you did.
Gwendolyn, I feel the same. I'll never have enough time to read everything I want to. But I remind myself that it's not a race. It's, to be completely cliched, a journey.

Panlindrome, thank you!
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