Site icon Dana Stabenow

Books! Books! Books!

This morning I got to do one of my favorite things–be on KBBI‘s Coffee Table to talk about good reads, this time with KBBI’s Shady Grove Oliver and Terry Rensel. We got all your Christmas presents for you right here.

And without further ado, our recommendations:

Dana

I’ve raved before about Martin’s Bruno Chief of Police books set in France’s Perigord. This is the best one to date, about homegrown Muslim extremism brought down to a real, human level in Bruno’s commune of St. Denis.

The fourth book in Gould’s Jumper series, and the second featuring teenage daughter Cent. The family that teleports together stays together.

Hands down the best thriller I read this year, and maybe in the last ten years. Retired sniper Bob Lee Swagger and journalist friend Kathy Reilly investigate the history of the White Witch, a Russian female sniper in World War II. Edge-of-seat plotting between past and present, and boy does this guy know how to write a shootout.

An old-fashioned spy novel going full gallop from Xinjiang to Beijing to Hong Kong to Seoul to London and back again, with echoes of John Le Carre.

A man buys a house in Yorkshire and becomes obsessed with discovering the truth of the alledged murder that happened there years before.

The second outing of Lady Trent, that student of dragons living in a fully realized fantasy world laid down on a Victorian England template. In this one, Lady Trent is obliged to invent flight.

Adrian McKinty’s trilogy about constable Sean Duffy trying to serve and protect in Northern Ireland during the Troubles of the early 80’s. Gritty and real, this is a three-book flash photo of a time and place you won’t be able to forget.

When you’re done reading what his re-entry to Earth after five months on the ISS does to him, you being to wonder if astronauts aren’t becoming aliens or at least evolving into a different kind of human being while they’re on orbit. And you start wondering if space exploration shouldn’t be one-way.

A history of the Atlantic and the Pacific Northwest salmon, with object lessons for any Alaskans who would like to see the salmon runs here outlive them.

The travels of a British woman through Persia in the 1930s. Vivid and very funny.

And (drum roll, please) children’s picture book o’ the year: David Wiesner’s Mr. Wuffles!

Shady

 

Terry

Chatter

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