Five star books 2021

What got a 5/5 in 2021? Here’s the list. I acquired all of these from NetGalley; they’re listed in roughly the order I read them.

Fencing With the King by Diana Abu-Jaber
Oedipus Trilogy by Sophocles, trans. Bryan Doerries
I Hope This Finds You Well by Kate Baer
Skin of the Sea by Natasha Bowen
Subterranea by Chris Fitch
Quiet Night Think by Gillian Sze
The Orchard by Kristina Gorcheva-Newberry
Spear by Nicola Griffith
Abbott: 1973 by Saladin Ahmed
Unlikely Animals by Annie Hartnett
Shapers of Worlds Volume II by Edward Willett
Under Her Skin by Edited by Lindy Ryan & Toni Miller
A Woman’s Voice by Script by Aude Mermilliod, Martin Winckler & art by Aude Mermilliod
Damnation Spring by Ash Davidson
The Year’s Best Science Fiction Vol. 2 by Jonathan Strahan
When Things Get Dark by Joyce Carol Oates; Karen Heuler; Elizabeth Hand; Benjamin Percy
Once Ghosted, Twice Shy by Jessica Arden
Field Guide to Invasive Species of Minnesota by Amelia Gorman
Can You Sign My Tentacle? by Brandon O’Brien
Oil and Dust by Jami Fairleigh
Dark Stars by John F.D. Taff
The Resting Place by Camilla Sten
The Breath Between Waves by Charlotte Anne Hamilton
A Fine Yellow Dust by Laura Apol
Black Cake by Charmaine Wilkerson
Cloud Cuckoo Land by Anthony Doerr
Chouette by Claire Oshetsky
Queen’s Favorite Witch #1 by Benjamin Dickson
Singing Like Germans by Kira Thurman
The Cartographer’s Secret by Tea Cooper
Surviving American History by Max Howard
Mother/land by Ananda Lima
Music Is History by Questlove
The Inheritance of Orquídea Divina by Zoraida Córdova
Take What You Can Carry by Gian Sardar
Home of the Floating Lily by Silmy Abdullah
The Smallest of Bones by Holly Lyn Walrath
Requeening by Amanda Moore
Six Crimson Cranes by Elizabeth Lim
Velvet Was the Night by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
The All-Consuming World by Cassandra Khaw
The Library of the Dead by T. L. Huchu
I Am Margaret Moore by Hannah Capin
All That She Carried by Tiya Miles
The City Beautiful by Aden Polydoros
Paradise by Lizzie Johnson
The Real Valkyrie by Nancy Marie Brown
All’s Well by Mona Awad
Call Me Athena by Colby Cedar Smith
Rule of Wolves by Leigh Bardugo
Good Southern Witches by J.D. Horn (editor)
My Heart Is a Chainsaw by Stephen Graham Jones
Ghost Forest by Pik-Shuen Fung
The Barbizon by Paulina Bren
What Abigail Did That Summer by Ben Aaronovitch
Four Hundred Souls by Edited by Ibram X. Kendi and Keisha N. Blain
Craft in the Real World by Matthew Salesses
We Two Alone by Jack Wang
Home Is Not a Country by Safia Elhillo
The Savage Instinct by Marjorie DeLuca
Folklorn by Angela Mi Young Hur
Nothing But Blackened Teeth by Cassandra Khaw
Firekeeper’s Daughter by Angeline Boulley
A Master of Djinn by P. Djèlí Clark
The Willow Wren by Philipp Schott
The Galaxy, and the Ground Within by Becky Chambers

Book reviews: Griffith’s Spear, West African myth, and excellent poetry

Listening Still by Anne Griffin. 1/5
This was pretty bad: an autistic character who is infantilized and pitied, inconsistent character behaviors, unexplained actions and decisions among the characters, a One True Love. It felt like it needed a heavy edit. The ideas is good: a woman who can hear the dead and works in her family mortuary is lied to by her parents and other family members, and has to decide how she wants to use her gift. But none of the characters are very deep or interesting, and the whole One True Love trope is simply awful, especially as it gets combined with Talented/Beautiful Person Dies Young. I can’t recommend this, despite the interesting premise.

Our American Friend by Anna Pitoniak. 2/5
Journalist Sophie gets the chance of a career to write a bio of the First Lady, a smarter-than-Melania-but-still-nonetheless-inspired-by-her woman who grew up in the USSR. The president here is clearly inspired by Trump, and the clincher is based on the private discussion Trump had with Putin. The book would have been stronger without Sophie’s wishy-washy husband, who can’t decide whether to be supportive of his wife or leave her for doing her job, and if the First Lady had more of a personality.

Spirits and Smoke by Mary Miley. 2/5
A mystery set in Chicago in the 1920s, complete with the mob, a narrator with a Chicago accent and some rough manners, her mostly-fake medium of a landlady, the Chicago river, heists, and did I mention Capone? Not a terrible plot, but so very very many cliches and a lot of deus ex machina keeping the characters alive. The narrator isn’t particularly compelling, but some of the accurate historical details–the author is a historian by trade–are nice.

The Sixteen Trees of the Somme by Lars Mytting. 1/5
This novel was a bit of a slog for me. The plot hinges on family secrets that needn’t have been secrets, wartime loyalties and betrayals, and the narrator’s lack of self. In fact, this book has one of the most unlikeable narrators I’ve ever encountered. He’s even worse that Holden Caulfield. He’s a narcissistic, callous asshole. Other characters are also all pretty awful people as well, and none for any reason that makes sense for the plot. The pace drags and really all I wanted to do was push the protagonist into the sea.

Fencing With the King by Diana Abu-Jaber. 5/5
I really enjoyed this book about the complexities of life in Jordan, homecoming, and family. the characters are beautifully drawn and imbued with reality, and the gentle teasing out of family history is elegant but believable. Through the use of a large cast, the author makes it possible to share information about things like gender, parenting, work, and behavior in ways that aren’t condescending to readers. I’d love to read this with a group of really smart people, or teach it to a class. (Fencers considering reading this: Even most of the fencing terminology is right!)

Oedipus Trilogy by Sophocles, trans. Bryan Doerries. 5/5
This contains not just a fine translation of the three Oedipus plays, but an outstanding introduction, in which editor and translator Bryan Doerries discusses his Theater of War Productions company and how putting on these plays among and for communities affected by racial violence, veterans with PTSD, and other groups struggling with trauma can help in the healing process. I was fascinated by this work and the way the company addresses social justice issues, eldercare, homelessness, and other contemporary issues. Highly recommended.

Wild Imperfections by ed. by Natalia Molebatsi. 4/5
The ebook provided by NetGalley contained just a preview and the front and end matter of the book. What I read was powerful and excellent, so I am rating it based on that; I just wish the file had included more.

Primal Animals by Julia Lynn Rubin. 1/5
Primal Animals has all of the elements of a good horror novel: rich kids at an elite camp, secret societies, family legacies, creepy rituals, murder. But it never quite comes together–the timeline is too short, and doesn’t allow characters, discussions, or events to occur at a realistic pace, and the abruptness and unexplained-ness of character actions and changes keeps things from making sense. The queer romance is sweet, but feels almost tacked on, and the multitude of non-sequiturs in camper and adult behavior make for more of a mess than a chilling narrative.

What Is Written on the Tongue by Anne Lazurko. 3/5
Told from two points of view, one addressing the future and one the past, this novel examines the post-WWII Dutch military buildup in Java to prevent the Javanese independence movement. Sam, just released from a Nazi labor camp, is part of a unit tasked with finding and killing insurgents, a mission that quickly devolves into barbarism and unchecked violence. Numerous secrets and histories come to light over the course of the novel, and in the end, the reader is left to consider the ongoing casualties of colonialism worldwide.

The Silent Unseen by Amanda McCrina. 3/5
and the Soviet Union all struggled for land and power, enlisting teens as soldiers and commanders in their campaigns. While this novel is a bit choppy in its overall form, it tells a good story about siblings and their various allies and enemies as they seek safety and to influence the outcome of the political battles in which they are forced to pick sides.

I Hope This Finds You Well by Kate Baer. 5/5
This is a great book of erasure poetry in which the author offers up first a message attacking her, and then her erasure of much of the messages’ language, revealing new texts. This is a good introduction to erasure poetry, which has been on the upswing in recent years and is becoming more noticeable in poetry.. Baer’s erasures are strong and sure, and creative and thoughtful.

Skin of the Sea by Natasha Bowen. 5/5
Drawing on West African myth and lore, Skin of the Sea is a great middle-grade book about a human girl who has become a mermaid-like water spirit, a Mami Wata, charged with helping the souls of the drowned to their final rest. But when she saves a living boy, things get complicated, and we’re off on a fantastic, high-paced, and thrilling adventure in which readers are introduced to a range of orisas, or gods, their relationships and powers, non-human creatures of all kinds, treachery, and lots of magic. I loved the cooperation of the characters and their understanding of responsibility and compassion. This is a fun book that is full of African representation and that will leaves reader waiting for the next installment of the series.

Cynthia Starts a Band by Olivia Swindler. 4/5
A sweet, short novel about a woman who realizes she’s in an abusive relationship–several of them, in fact–and leaves. That she’s a rock superstar makes her leaving dramatic, but in a nice twist on the celebrity runaway trope, she really does want something different, and makes smart decisions along the way. A great vacation read, and also a good book club read, as there is a lot to discuss about selfhood, trauma, and recovery here.

Subterranea by Chris Fitch. 5/5
Subterranea is a beautiful book with outstanding, tantalizing photos of what lies beneath our feet, and crisp and clear writing about the forming and exploration of these places: caves, sinkholes, tunnels. It’s an ideal book to give as a gift to anyone interested in spelunking, hiking, urban exploration, and similar activities.

The World of Pondside by Mary Helen Stefaniak. 4/5
Full of unexpected twists and unreliable narrators, what seemingly begins as a mystery becomes a complicated morass of confused purposes. The set up: at a nursing facility, computer scientist Robert, dying of ALS, creates an online game that replicates–to tiny detail–places and memories of the other patients, allowing them to spend time with late spouses, far away children, and in places cemented in their memories. But when Robert dies, his friend Foster, a facility employee, is supposed to recover Robert’s laptop and give it to Robert’s mother. But the laptop is missing, and thus begins a wild goose chase for it, various passwords, secret levels of the game, and more. What has the game really been about? Smuggling drugs in from China, where Robert has a connection to a lab making experimental medicines for ALS. There are layers upon layers here, dreams that seem real and memories that are subject to dementia, making for an ultimately less than satisfying conclusion, albeit a noble effort to clean up what had become a big mess in the middle.

Keeping the Home Fires Burning by Phil Carradice. 1/5
I really need to remember to look at the publisher when I request a book, because Pen and Sword History has a bad track record of publishing un-fact-checked opinion pieces masquerading–and not well–as non-fiction. Author Carradice tells us what was good and bad about music and other forms of entertainment used as propaganda in Britain during the Great War, never failing to express elitist attitudes and some good old-fashioned sexism at the same time. There’s no objective analysis or teasing out of meaning or explication, and there’s certainly no expertise on music, theater, film, or print media to be had.

Quiet Night Think by Gillian Sze. 5/5
I can’t wait to introduce my writing students to this book! Gillian Sze offers a gorgeous collection of meditations on writing and the writing life alongside extraordinary poems about parenting, parents, observing, daily life, nature, and more. Drawing on traditional Chinese poetry as well as Western poets like William Carlos Williams, she presents thoughtful, informative, and evocative essays and works to be savored by any practitioner of writing.

The Orchard by Kristina Gorcheva-Newberry. 5/5
In this riveting and heart-wrenching novel about two young women growing up in the Soviet Union, we find every element of the traditional Russian novel turned to new purposes and deftly created amid the turmoil of the 1970s and 1980s. There is a ferocity in Gorcheva-Newberry’s language that drives the book even as it lingers on details and relaxed, timeless moments. For anyone who has read books about the USSR from thrillers or non-fiction, this novel will broaden their concept of this period, and how everyday life was lived.

Spear by Nicola Griffith. 5/5
This is an utterly wonderful book, smart and well-written. I read it in one sitting, beguiled by the story and characters and the very telling of them. My mom, a fan of good Arthurian stories, would have adored this book–I wish she was still here to read it. Griffith brings new elements to the Matter of Britain: disability, obsession, empowered women doing good. There is true collaboration between characters, and the characters are rich and human. The author’s note at the end, recounting Griffith’s research and though processes as she wrote the book, is equally enthralling and a pleasure to read. I cannot wait to discuss this with other people!

The White Girl by Tony Birch. 2/5
In this novel set in Australia, an Aborigine woman seeks to protect her white-passing daughter from the white men of their small village. Ultimately, she takes the girl and runs to a larger city, where by chance she finds refugee with an Aborigine family. I wish this had been better: the subject matter is important and explores a part of Australia that many people don’t know much about. But the characters are mostly flat, and the dialogue is too often unbelievable. There is an abrupt end to the main narrative, with many loose ends, and an awkward epilogue makes the book even more unsatisfying to the reader.

Reviews: Saladin Ahmed, SFF shorts, poetry, and a great graphic novel everyone should read

Would You Rather…? The Hilarious Game for All Ages by Julian Flanders. 1/5
Would You Rather be humiliated or get to humiliate other people? Make fun of disabled people or consider them fodder for pity? The questions posed by this book for what is supposed to be “hilarious” conversation starters or games are unfortunately mostly just awful and thoughtless. Play something else instead.

Greco-Roman Medicine and What It Can Teach Us Today by Nick Summerton. 1/5
You know, when at the very beginning of a book the author makes false claims and sweeping statements of questionable veracity as well as insults, it might not make the read want to continue. But continue I did, alas, and found this full of a mix of fact and opinion about ancient Greece and Rome and their medical practices. Wikipedia honestly has better written and more in-depth and factual information on the topics, and is free, so I recommend readers go there instead of wading through this.

An Impossible Impostor by Deanna Raybourn. 3/5
I like this series quite a lot, but have to say that the complications raised by this installment feel forced. We learn more about Veronica’s past, Stoker gets pensive, there are the usual unpleasant villains and unpleasant side characters (NPCs), and a lot of uncertainty about who is on whose side and who is betraying whom and in the end everyone gets betrayed, maybe, and ends with Veronica setting off on more adventures and to track down Stoker. It’s not bad, but it’s not as good as some of the earlier books in the series.

The Midwife’s Secret by Emily Gunnis. 1/5
Honestly, any book that begins with someone hiding another human in a small, enclosed space in a house is just not going to end well, and of course it will involve that small, enclosed space. So if you had you fill with Sarah’s Key a few years back and/or are claustrophobic, you can give this one a miss. Even if you’re not, you can still give it a miss: it’s not particularly compelling, and the characters are pretty flat, and of course there’s not much tension because after all you know what’s going to happen or has happened or is happening in that small, enclosed space.

Abbott: 1973 by Saladin Ahmed. 5/5
Abbott: 1973 is a superb collection of several issues of the comic. Detroit reporter and general badass Elena Abbott is covering the mayor’s election when she finds herself faced with a gross and sexist boss, the return of the umbra–a malevolent power used by white supremacists to try to bring down the city’s first viable Black mayoral candidate–and the local mob. As always, the storytelling is tight and the characters are deep and resonant. My only quibble is the lettering style, in which Us often look like and L and an I, causing some difficulty reading quickly.. Words like CUT don’t do well in this lettering style.

Such a Pretty Smile by Kristi DeMeester. 4/5
A nice horror-thriller that builds on the fact that no one listens to women–instead, we’re silenced, locked away, ignored. The intergenerational aspect of the novel and the class issues it raises add to the book’s depth and range, and the settings are suitably spooky.

Fire Is Not a Country by Cynthia Dewi Oka. 4/5
This is a rich and powerful collection of poetry, scripts, and prose poems chronicling the passages of life and time, and grappling with pain, displacement, and anger. The writing is lush, sometimes going a little too far beyond metaphor and threatening to lose the track altogether, but broadly readable and engaging. The author’s various genres encourage readers to think about the meaning of form and genre, and how it shapes our reading.

Destroyer of Light by Jennifer Marie Brissett. 3/5
In this clear hat-tip to Octavia Butler, humans and aliens co-exist in a world reminiscent of modern-day Nigeria under Boko Haram control, where women are stolen by gangs of men to become their slaves. Told from several perspectives, the novel follows Cora, a girl torn from her community; a pair of brothers who seek a child kidnapped into sex trafficking; and others trying to find their way in a violent and unpredictable place and time. Readers should be aware that there is a lot of rape and butchery within, and that. ultimately, the narrative may not really be worth grappling with those things–I found it to drag and to be a bit trite, a disappointment given the set-up and possibilities available to the author.

Unlikely Animals by Annie Hartnett. 5/5
I loved this wry and imaginative and funny and sad book. I love the Thornton Wilder-esque chorus of ghosts in the cemetery, the characters with hidden depths, the absurdity of small-town life, the parents grappling–or not–with age and decline, the young characters exploring a mystery, the dedication of the dying father to a missing girl, the savvy schoolkids–everything and everyone in the book. I know people will complain about using Clive’s dementia for laughs, but I found it to be handled very well. My mom died of Lewy Body dementia, which has symptoms like what Clive experiences, and I know that you have to just roll with patients’ hallucinations and ideas and not to argue with them. This is a novel about joy in living and finding joy in your surroundings and making life work, and I can’t wait to talk about it with other readers.

The Last Speaker of Skalwegian by David Gardner. 1/5
Was this written in the 1970s or 80s? Was it not edited? Because it’s one of the most sexist and gender-stereotyped and ugly things I’ve read in a while. The author’s bio says he has a PhD, but seems not to know at all how academia works. He certainly doesn’t know how to write anything without leaning heavily on double entendre, outdated and stale descriptions of women’s bodies, or cliches. I can’t believe anyone liked this.

Shapers of Worlds Volume II by Edward Willett. 5/5
I really enjoyed this collection in which the focus is not on heroic deeds. daring missions, or technology, but on the development of worlds and settings. There are a number of gems here, including The Cat and the Merrythought by Matthew Hughes, The Little Tailor and the Elves by Barbara Hambly, and stories by Carrie Vaughan, Kelly Armstrong, Garth Nix, Helen Dale, and Marie Brennan. There’s something for everyone here, and the collection has spurred me to find other works by the authors in it.

Under Her Skin by Edited by Lindy Ryan & Toni Miller. 5/5
This poetry collection is brilliant and visceral and filled to the brim with gore and horror and pain. I had to read little bits at a time so that I didn’t either get repulsed or numb. The poems are diverse and amazing, ranging from the near-epic to the intimate, and from differing points of view and cultural backgrounds, If you’re a fan of body horror, this book will convince you that poetry is an excellent medium for it.

How to Date a Flying Mexican by Daniel A. Olivas. 3/5
This is a solid collection of fables, stories, lists, and other short, magical writings from author Daniel A. Olivas. I found some of the stories amusing and some sad, but mostly I was intrigued by those that ended abruptly–and there were several–and why the author had made those choices. These short pieces tantalize, provoking the reading into wondering “what next?”, all while feeling appropriately complete.

Christmas Past by John Adcox. 4/5
This is a sweet Christmas ghost story with an unusual take on the traditional hitchhiking ghost genre. The characters are not exactly deep or developed, but they don’t need to be for the story, which is a nice homage to the English tradition of ghost stories at Christmas. It’s a quick and easy read, perhaps best done with a cup of tea on a winter night.

A Woman’s Voice by Script by Aude Mermilliod, Martin Winckler & art by Aude Mermilliod. 5/5
This is a brilliant graphic novel about listening to women and women’s healthcare with excellent characters and an easily-predicted but nonetheless satisfying conclusion. If only all doctors could listen and communicated with patients the way Dr. Karma does! Jean, a newly trained doctor, finds herself in a complicated emotional place as she shadows the doctor, trying to figure out what he’s doing that helps his patients trust him, As she learns, so does the reader. Numerous patients speak of their fears and desires, providing insight into their lives and needs from their caregivers. Ultimately we learn that Jean is intersex, and what that means and how medical professionals approach it, broadening readers’ understandings of why reproductive healthcare is important for everyone.