Top 17 Books of 2017

2017 was a great year for reading, and there were so many great books this year that it was a challenge narrowing down this list to just 17!

  1. Smaller and Smaller Circles by F.H. Batacan – a pair of Jesuit priests investigate the deaths of street children in this book touted as the first contemporary Filipino serial killer mystery. A movie version was shown in Philippine cinemas this December, and I’m crossing my fingers for a North American distributor. (Blog review)
  2. El Deafo by Cece Bell – adorable graphic memoir for children about a young bunny who is self-conscious about her giant hearing aid and so invents a superhero persona. (Blog review)
  3. Heart’s Invisible Furies by John Boyne – Beautifully written and quietly epic. It’s almost 600 pages long and I couldn’t put it down. (Blog review)
  4. As If!: The Oral History of Clueless as told by Amy Heckerling and the Cast and Crew by Jen Chaney – this is a full-on nostalgia pick, as Clueless was one of my favourite movies growing up, and it was such a pleasure to get a glimpse behind the scenes.
  5. New Boy by Tracy Chevalier – part of the Hogarth Shakespeare series, this re-tells Othello from the perspective of children befriending each other and fighting for control over a playground. It’s brilliantly understated. (Blog review)
  6. Sputnik’s Children by Terry Favro – cult comic book creator Debbie Biondi finally agrees to write the origin story of her famous superhero Sputnik Chick. It turns out Sputnik Chick’s origins as a superhero has its roots in Debbie’s own childhood during the Cold War, when she was approached by a time traveler to save the world from nuclear annihilation by transporting into an alternate timeline.
  7. Dragonfly in Amber by Diana Gabaldon – I savoured this over a week-long vacation, and it’s the perfect book to lose yourself in.
  8. If the Dress Fits by Carla de Guzman – I rarely see plus-size heroines in romance novels, so this novel was a welcome find. The heroine is a size 24 which, in the Philippines, means she often has to have clothes modified to fit, and the hero is her sweet, bookish, animal-loving best friend. The ending fell short (too rushed, too neat), but otherwise, the book was great.
  9. Scarborough by Catherine Hernandez – This is a moving, multi-voiced story of a community. The characters pulse from the page, and we share in their joy at each minor triumph. The writing is beautiful. Also, I have a soft spot for the character of Bing and his mother Edna, who are Filipino, and I love the references to “Filipino kisses” (lips curled in) and Catholic masses and Filipino pork dishes.
  10. The Borrowed by Chan Ho-Kei, translated by Jeremy Tiang – a compelling collection of mysteries spanning a talented detective’s career, The Borrowed is particularly resonant because of how each of the mysteries links to a larger event in Hong Kong history. (Blog review)
  11. A Brother’s Honor by Brenda Jackson – Sexy romance, compelling characters and intriguing mystery. I downloaded the entire Grangers series from the library and am eager to read more of Brenda Jackson’s books.
  12. Falling into Right by Sharon Kay – the chemistry is hot, but the reason this story shines is the strong emotional connection formed by the hero and the heroine, who are both dealing with emotional scars. The hero also has an adorably vicious K-9 German shepherd, which just made it even more perfect. (Blog review)
  13. Rich People Problems by Kevin Kwan – I’m a huge fan of the Crazy Rich Asians trilogy, and the final book is by far the best. A fitting sendoff to the Shang-Young family. (Blog review)
  14. Duran Duran, Imelda Marcos and Me by Lorina Mapa – This graphic memoir of a young girl’s life during the height and decline of Martial Law is beautiful and bittersweet.
  15. Big Little Lies by Liane Moriarty – small town politics and the friendship between three women culminate in a mysterious death at a party. This was such a fun book to read and the HBO adaptation was just as much fun to watch.
  16. Star Trek Cats by Jenny Parks – feline versions of Kirk, Spock, McCoy and the rest of their crew enact classic Star Trek episodes. How amazing is that? And for all you Picard fans, Star Trek: The Next Generation Cats is due out in March 2018!
  17. Animal Attraction by Jill Shalvis – a handsome, soft-hearted veterinarian hero. His tough, troubled receptionist. And a kitten named Beans. How could I resist?! This was recommended to me when I was looking for a romance with a doctor hero, cute pets and no children, and Shalvis’ Animal Magnetism series more than delivers.

Many thanks to:

  • Family and friends who give me such wonderful bookish gifts,
  • Publishers who are so generous with review copies of this year’s hottest titles,
  • The library for having such an extensive collection of ebooks, and
  • Fellow book bloggers and online book friends who give such great recommendations!

Review | Anatomy of a Scandal, Sarah Vaughan

34466492With all the present-day stories coming out about sexual harassment in the workplace, Anatomy of a Scandal is a timely novel about a government minister accused of rape by a female co-worker. The co-worker Olivia admits she had a consensual affair with James, the government minister and a married man, but alleges that he raped her in an elevator after the affair ended. Anatomy of a Scandal follows the stories of James’ wife Sophie and the prosecuting lawyer Kate during the fallout of the accusation.

Concurrent to the story of the court case are flashback scenes to 1992, when James and Sophie are both students at Oxford University and just starting to date. Central to this storyline is a shy student named Holly, who becomes Sophie’s study partner, and the careless antics of the Libertines, a group of rich young men that includes James and his best friend Tom. James and Tom harbour a secret from Oxford that bonds them together as James grows up to become a government official and Tom grows up to become Prime Minister. When the scandal involving Olivia breaks, the incidents of the past threaten to be brought to light.

This is a very timely, and at times cathartic, read. The promotional blurb — “You want to believe your husband. She wants to destroy him.” — is somewhat representative of the story, but in no way encapsulates the full breadth of psychological responses in the characters. The dichotomy between what Sophie and Kate want isn’t as clear-cut as the blurb suggests, and the story is far more than that of a loyal wife and avenging attorney.

Instead, Anatomy of a Scandal peels away the various layers among the women in James’ orbit and slowly reveals the various ways in which his actions have lasting consequences even long before the trial itself. The novel explores the idea of privilege, how it ebbs and flows throughout one’s lifetime and how dangerous it can be when left unchecked. As the prosecuting attorney out for justice, Kate is the more obvious heroine in this novel, yet it’s Sophie’s quieter conflict that really drew me in. I loved reading about her responses to the trial, and how any hint of doubt about her husband is buried deep between the lines for much of the story. I love how she grows through the events in the story, and how she struggles to find her voice after so many years of being defined as a wife and mother, and I love how she comes to realize the subtle elements that influenced her decisions around her family. Sophie is the heart of the book, a reminder of the ways in which women internalize pain and a welcome example that heroism can take place in the quietest of ways.

Kate has her own vulnerabilities as well. As we learn more about her story, we begin to understand why this trial is so important to her, and why she is so passionate about bringing James to justice. We realize that she lives with a complex history of her own and, unlike Sophie’s more easily apparent sort of vulnerability, Kate’s is lightly concealed under a veneer of power that she’s worked hard to cultivate. While her story wasn’t quite as compelling to me and some of her decisions were questionable, she also provided a welcome form of catharsis, and I like how she handled the courtroom battle.

Both are strong, complex women, and both are impacted in different ways by James’ trial. Anatomy of a Scandal is a fast-paced, entertaining legal thriller that posits the question of how far privilege extends and at one point does it end.

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Thank you to Simon and Schuster Canada for an advance reading copy in exchange for an honest review.

Review | Resort, Andrew Daley

35070293In Resortcon artist tag team Danny and Jill are broke and desperate in Acapulco when Jill introduces Danny to a wealthy English older couple who could be their next target. Even better, the man promises to give Danny a shot at movie stardom, which has been Danny’s dream since he and Jill first met in university. Despite the credit card scams they pull on unsuspecting tourists, all Danny really wants to do is start a theatre company with Jill in a small town, and he hopes that scamming the English couple will give them enough funds to do just that.

A few chapters in, we realize that things have gone wrong, as Danny’s narration shifts from following the English couple across Mexico to announcing that he’s now in King’s Reach minimum security prison on Vancouver Island for drug trafficking. It’s a jarring shift, and one that I admit pulled me from the story somewhat, as the Mexican storyline was, to me at least, just starting to finding its legs. In prison, under the advice of the prison psychologist, Danny plans a stage production of The Tempest, a play whose significance doesn’t become clear until the last few chapters.

Resort begins as a light-hearted crime caper, but soon develops into a more thoughtful reflection of Danny and Jill’s relationship and how love has the potential to keep us wilfully blind to potentially painful truths. Told from Danny’s perspective, the narrative switches between Danny and Jill’s plot to fleece the English couple in Mexico and Danny’s present-day life in prison where directing The Tempest does little to decrease how much he misses Jill and how worried he is that she still hasn’t visited him. The story is later revealed to be an account Danny writes as an assignment for his psychologist, so the veracity of many of the things he says is suspect, but what there is is somewhat of a slow burning tragedy of betrayal.

I found the pacing too slow, and the dual storylines too drawn out. Part of me wishes we didn’t have the early reveal about Danny’s incarceration, as it removed a lot of the suspense around the Mexico storyline. We already know the plan goes awry; it’s just a matter of finding out exactly how, and while some of the reveals along the way are surprising, it takes far too long a time to unravel.

Daley is deliberately cagey about Jill’s motivations throughout the story. Even at the end, it’s never quite clear if the love story is a tragic one about an innocent person duped by their partner, or if it’s a story of true love about con artists who had the perfect partnership and pulled off an extremely complex plot, or possibly even if it’s somewhat of a hybrid of both. I can imagine any of the three possibilities being the truth, but I never quite believed in their love story enough to really feel invested in it. As a result, I felt sympathetic towards both characters for the ways in which their lives turned out, but I never quite rooted for them to get together.

Resort is a well-written novel with commentary about the lives we dream to have, the reality we end up in, and the stories we tell ourselves and other people. It’s not quite the right fit for me, as I never connected emotionally to the characters or their stories, but more patient readers may better appreciate the nuances in the unraveling.

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Thank you to Tightrope Books for a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.