Sunday, January 3, 2016

Bill's Best of 2015 Fiction

The start of a new year brings to me to a pair of my happiest posts of the year as I put up Bill’s Best of Fiction, Non-Fiction and Most Interesting. Those posts involve reviewing all my posts for the previous year. The process always brings back good reading memories. In 2015 I read 45 books which is below my annual goal of a book per week. The time I spent on newspapers and facebook took time away from reading last year. I am going to read hard in 2016 to get back to a weekly book.

Of the works of fiction I read my favourites were:

1.) The Blackhouse, The Lewis Man and The Chessmen by Peter May are the Best of 2015. It is the second time I have had a trilogy featured as Best. In 2009 it was the first two books in Stieg Larsson’s Millennium series, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and The Girl Who Played with Fire. I justify choosing a trilogy as the Best book of the year as my personal right to define the terms of my awards. As well they are one long story in three parts.

May’s Hebridian trilogy took me deeply into a part of Scotland that I had not been reading about for over 30 years when I read Lillian Beckwith’s autobiographical works of fiction of her life in the Hebrides.

In reading May’s books I felt the bite of the wind off the Atlantic, saw the dazzlingly blue sky swept clear of clouds and felt the unique texture of walking in peat bogs. If the Hebrides were even 2,500 km instead of 7,500 km away from me I would be sure to visit them.

May, in Fionnlagh (Finn) McLeod, has created a character as vivid and compelling as any author in recent memory. The former Edinburgh police officer has his personal troubles but they do not leave him a wreck of a man. After 20 years he returns to the Isle of Lewis and solves a trio of murders.

I have never accepted Thomas Wolfe’s dictum that you can’t go home again. You cannot go back to the same home but you can go home. The returnee will still have profound connections with the past.

Best of all the murders in the trilogy are all related to life on the island, its geography and its history. They could not have been written in a different setting.

2.) Killing Pilgrim by Arlen Mattich was a finalist for the 2015 Arthur Ellis Award for Best Crime Fiction novel in Canada. It did not win the Award though in my analysis of the shortlist I thought it was the best and deserved to win the Award. Maybe being 2nd on Bill’s Best of 2015 Fiction will be a modest recompense.

The book opens with the assassination of Swedish Prime Minister, Olof Palme, by a Yugoslavian secret service agent. I had never appreciated the number of theories that exist on who killed Palme until I did some research after finishing the book. I do not think the real life killer was a member of Yugoslavia’s intelligence agency but Mattich has put together a compelling story.

Killing Pilgrim is the second book in a series with Marko della Torre, a member of the Yugoslavian secret service, who is now coping with the breakup of the country and his role as a Croatian.

The book also features a dangerous American woman agent who destroys gender lines in her lack of morality and affinity for violence.

3.) The Secret of Magic by Deborah Johnson ties for third this year. In mid-year if I had been asked what I expected to be the great legal mystery of the year set in the American South I would have said without hesitation Go Set a Watchman by Harper Lee. Instead, The Secret of Magic was by far the better book.

Regina Mary Robichard, a brand new Negro New York lawyer, is sent by Thurgood Marshall to rural Mississippi in 1946 to investigate the death of Lt. Joe Howard Wilson. Being a war hero could not save Joe Howard from being brutally beaten and killed because he did not keep his place in southern society as he returned from the war.

In Mississippi Ms. Robichard stays in the guesthouse of fabled children’s author, Mary Pickett Calhoun, who is a staple of local society. Mary Pickett wants to do what is right but it is hard in the Deep South of that era.

3.) Joining The Secret of Magic in third position is Another Margaret by Janice MacDonald. It is the second of two books written by Canadians on this year’s Best of Fiction list.

Another Margaret is an excellent academic mystery but it became a Best of the year book for two reasons.

With the lead character, Randy (Miranda) Craig, an Alberta university professor of English the book is filled with references to Canadian literary figures and their works. I enjoyed seeing how many I recognized.

Most important MacDonald had Craig write about the life and novels written by Margaret Ahlers, an Alberta English professor, who was reclusive to the extreme.

To have Craig study the literary work at a university level meant MacDonald created detailed plot lines for five additional books within Another Margaret.

Had the ending been as good as the rest of the book Another Margaret would have been my choice for Best of 2015 Fiction.

I had a good year or reading and hope your year went as well. Happy New Year for 2016!

14 comments:

  1. Bill, I'm glad you had a good year of reading and I can see you read some fine books, "Killing Pilgrim" by Arlen Mattich in particular. I wish you and your family a Happy 2016!

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    1. Prashant: Thanks for the comment. Killing Pilgrim has a fascinating theme. All the best to you and your family in 2016.

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  2. Happy New Year, Bill! I'm very glad you found some excellent reads this year. I couldn't agree more about the high quality of the Lewis trilogy. Those are excellent stories in a very well-drawn context. I liked the characters very much, too. Looking forward to your next post.

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    1. Margot: Thanks for the comment. I appreciate your comments all year long and look forward to hearing what you have to say about my posts.

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  3. All of these books sound great, Bill. I have had The Blackhouse on my shelves for three years and haven't read it yet. Time to get to it. The Secret of Magic by Deborah Johnson sounds very good, although it might be a difficult subject for me. I will definitely get a copy of that.

    Happy New Year to you, too, and happy reading in 2016.

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    1. TracyK: Thanks for the comment and a Happy New Year to you! From your past comments I think The Secret of Magic could be uncomfortable for you. It reflects the segregation that dominated the South in 1946.

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  4. Many thanks Bill, it's very kind of you to flag up Killing Pilgrim.

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    1. Alen: Thanks for the comment. I am glad you dropped by the blog. I am going to read more of Marko della Torre's adventures. (I am sorry for misspelling your name. I have corrected it in the blog.)

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  5. I agree about The Secret of Magic.
    I keep reminding myself to read the Peter May trilogy and must get on it. I did read Entry Island, thought it OK, liked the historical parts the most.

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    1. Kathy D.: Thanks for the comment. I did not really enjoy one of May's earlier books but loved the Hebridean trilogy. I think you will be impressed.

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  6. A recommendation: If you like Grisham's books, read The Rogue Lawyer. It contains a lot of incisive commentary on social issues in the U.S., but has very colorful characters, especially the protagonist, Sebastian Rudd. But the humor reigns supreme; what a riot. It is a treat.

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    1. Kathy D.: Your are prescient. I got it as a gift at Christmas and finished it have just put up a post about Sebastian and will review in my next post. You describe its attractions well.

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  7. As I read your list I remembered several of your posts on the books. And I also remembered that I bought Another Margaret based on your review, and have it waiting for me! Thanks for your helpful and informative reviews all year.

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  8. Moira: Thanks for the kind words. I appreciate every comment you make on my blog. They make it a better blog. I enjoy the posts on your blog. I love your efforts to focus attention on clothes in books.

    Do not keep Another Margaret waiting too long. You will be disappointed in yourself.

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