A year of plentiful prose: The best books of 2024
The year鈥檚 best books include the novel 鈥淛ames鈥 by Percival Everett and a memoir by historian Doris Kearns Goodwin.
The year鈥檚 best books include the novel 鈥淛ames鈥 by Percival Everett and a memoir by historian Doris Kearns Goodwin.
Fiction
闯补尘别蝉,听by Percival Everett
鈥淲ith my pencil, I wrote myself into being,鈥 asserts James in Percival Everett鈥檚 National Book Award-winning novel. This is Jim of 鈥淭he Adventures of Huckleberry Finn鈥 fame, now at the helm of the story. A self-educated man, James confronts a vivid cast of ne鈥檈r-do-wells, enslavers, and fellow escapees as he wends his way north in the hopes of buying his family鈥檚 freedom. It鈥檚 a gripping tale of reinvention and determination.聽
The Mighty Red,聽by Louise Erdrich
From the masterful Louise Erdrich comes the story of a North Dakota farming community whipsawed by crises. At the book鈥檚 center is Kismet, a high school graduate who gets pulled into a questionable marriage, and her truck-driving, devoted mother. The tale鈥檚 many threads pull together into a rewarding portrait of renewal and honesty.
Frederick Douglass,聽by Sidney Morrison
Frederick Douglass roars from the pages of this meticulous novel, thanks to the voices of his steadfast wife, Anna, and their children, plus confidants, paramours, and even enslavers. A complex man emerges. Proud and persistent, fickle and flawed, he鈥檚 inseparable from the era鈥檚 tumult and hard-fought triumphs.
Tell Me Everything,聽by Elizabeth Strout
Elizabeth Strout鈥檚 warmhearted novel brings together her best-loved characters, including Olive Kitteridge, Bob Burgess, and Lucy Barton, in the fictional town of Crosby, Maine. 鈥淭ell Me Everything鈥 is about how stories about others鈥 lives 鈥 and how really listening 鈥 help us understand and connect.
The Fallen Fruit,聽by Shawntelle Madison
Since the late 1700s, the Bridge farm in Virginia has offered a haven for its freeborn Black owners. But there鈥檚 a caveat: A child born to each Bridge man will fall back in time. As the novel opens, Cecily, a mother in 1964, begins investigating her ancestors鈥 time-traveling troubles. It鈥檚 an engaging take on freedom and free will.
I Cheerfully Refuse,聽by Leif Enger
In a rickety sailboat on storm-tossed Lake Superior, a grieving musician flees a powerful enemy. Set in a speculative future in which the supply chain has failed and a lethal drug holds sway, Leif Enger鈥檚 latest novel steers a harrowing course through a broken world. Yes, it鈥檚 grim, but in Enger鈥檚 capable hands it鈥檚 also a riveting story of resilience.
Time of the Child,聽by Niall Williams
Niall Williams鈥 novel returns to the Irish village of Faha during Christmas 1962. When an abandoned infant is brought to the local doctor on a cold, wet night, it leads to a situation that proves transformative for the widower and his solitary eldest daughter. And it marks a subtle turning point in a community ruled by the twin authorities of church and state.
The Lion Women of Tehran,聽by Marjan Kamali
Fierce women fill the pages of Marjan Kamali鈥檚 engrossing tale of friendship, class, betrayal, and politics in Iran. Ellie is a smart, lonely girl desperate for a sense of family after the death of her father. Zesty, optimistic Homa would rather study to be a lawyer than attract the attentions of a future husband. As girls in 1950s Tehran, the two forge a bond that鈥檚 tested over decades.聽
Come to the Window,聽by Howard Norman
War overseas. Pandemic fears. A shocking scandal. Attacks on 鈥渢he other.鈥 Howard Norman鈥檚 gem of a novel unfolds not in the recent past, but in Nova Scotia in 1918. Indelible characters, taut prose, deft pacing, and resonant questions about bearing witness make this a winner.
The Restless Wave,聽by Admiral James Stavridis USN (Ret.)
Former NATO Commander and four-star Adm. James Stavridis creates a gripping novel about a young Navy officer tested during the early sea battles of World War II, from Pearl Harbor to Midway and Guadalcanal. The novel is action-packed, and filled with insights into leadership and courage.
Mina鈥檚 Matchbox,聽by Yoko Ogawa, translated by Stephen B. Snyder
Yoko Ogawa鈥檚 gemlike novel is a coming-of-age story about 12-year-old Tomoko, who goes to live for a year with her delightful cousin Mina and her family. The girls become kindred spirits, sharing secrets, wonderment, and several key world events. Ogawa鈥檚 storytelling is radiant.
Wandering Stars,聽by Tommy Orange
Tommy Orange weaves a fictional Cheyenne family into such real-life events as the Sand Creek Massacre of 1864, dramatizing the impact of historical events on subsequent generations of Native Americans. 鈥淲andering Stars鈥 is the engaging follow-up to his award-winning first novel, 鈥淭here There.鈥
颁补迟补濒颈苍补,听by Karla Cornejo Villavicencio
Catalina Ituralde is navigating her senior year at Harvard amid fears of deportation and dreams of love, fame, and literature. This lovely debut novel explores the immigrant experience through the lens of an ambitious, funny, smart, and sometimes fragile young woman.
叠别补耻迟测濒补苍诲,听by Marie-Helene Bertino
Adina, a human-looking alien growing up in 1980s Philadelphia, adores astronomer Carl Sagan. 鈥淗e is looking for us!鈥 she enthuses to her otherworldly superiors in one of many life-on-Earth dispatches. Adina navigates human childhood while her single mother, unaware of her daughter鈥檚 true identity, struggles to keep them afloat.聽
My Friends,聽by Hisham Matar
A teenager leaves his cherished family in Libya to pursue higher education at the University of Edinburgh. Protesting against the Qaddafi regime results in exile from his homeland. Hisham Matar provides insights into life under revolution and in exile.聽
厂颈辫蝉飞辞谤迟丑,听by Simon Van Booy
In this charming novel about an English widow whose life is slowly awakened by a stray mouse, novelist Simon Van Booy reaffirms his talent as a master prose stylist. The themes, which include the pain of loneliness and the redeeming power of community, resonate. But in his story about serendipity, Van Booy has given us a tale that is, in its larger dimensions, truly timeless.
Nonfiction
An Unfinished Love Story,聽by Doris Kearns Goodwin
Historian Doris Kearns Goodwin was married for more than 40 years to Dick Goodwin, a speechwriter and adviser to John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson. In the years before Mr. Goodwin鈥檚 death, the couple went through hundreds of boxes of his memorabilia from those administrations. This affecting book, blending history, memoir, and biography, is a personal account of a pivotal
era.
Paris in Ruins,聽by Sebastian Smee
Impressionism emerged in late-1860s Paris. But the movement took off only after the horrors of the Franco-Prussian War drove artists to create works focused on the impermanence of life. This deeply researched and well-written book combines art and biography with political and military history to shed fresh light on the origins of this seminal period in modern art.
The Light Eaters,聽by Zo毛 Schlanger
Atlantic staff writer Zo毛 Schlanger debuts with an exploration of the new science of plant intelligence. In elegant prose and with a sense of awe, she describes plants鈥 remarkable adaptive techniques, communicative abilities, and social behaviors.
Bringing Ben Home,聽by Barbara Bradley Hagerty
Ben Spencer was wrongfully convicted of murder in Dallas in 1987. This compelling book tells the story of his flawed trial, the barriers built into the Texas legal system that made it nearly impossible to get the decision overturned, and how he and a small group of supporters worked to secure his release. Barbara Bradley Hagerty has written a true-crime story that reads like a legal thriller and, at same time, recounts the systemic failures of the judicial system. It is eye-opening, discouraging, and inspiring.聽
Audubon as Artist,聽by Roberta Olson
Much has been written about bird artist John James Audubon as an American original. In 鈥淎udubon as Artist,鈥 Roberta Olson harnesses her insights as a museum curator to reveal the European traditions that informed Audubon鈥檚 art. Drawing on masters as varied as Rembrandt and David, this richly illustrated survey explores Audubon as one of the great dramatists of the natural world, one whose complicated legacy is still shaping our debates about conservation.
Our Kindred Creatures,聽by Bill Wasik and Monica Murphy
This fascinating history traces the shift in American attitudes toward animals in the decades after the Civil War. The authors describe the era鈥檚 widespread mistreatment of animals and profile the activists who convinced their fellow citizens that the prevention of animal suffering was a just cause.
John Lewis: A Life,聽by David Greenberg
This rich biography spans the civil rights icon鈥檚 rural Alabama childhood, his pivotal role in the student movement to desegregate the South, and his service in Congress. Drawing on archival materials and interviews with John Lewis and more than 250 people who knew him, David Greenberg leaves no doubt as to his subject鈥檚 heroism.
Everyone Who Is Gone Is Here,聽by Jonathan Blitzer
Jonathan Blitzer traces the roots of the immigration crisis back to what he terms America鈥檚 misguided Cold War-era interventions in El Salvador and Guatemala. The author鈥檚 powerful, compassionate account highlights individual stories, creating an epic portrayal of migration鈥檚 human stakes.
The Bookshop,聽by Evan Friss聽
Evan Friss explores how American bookstores have helped shape the nation鈥檚 culture, from social movements to retail trends. Although the demise of small indie bookstores has long been forecast, devoted shop owners continue to defy this prediction.聽
Custodians of Wonder,聽by Eliot Stein
While society is quick to celebrate the first person to achieve something, Eliot Stein notes that we rarely honor the last. He travels to five continents to share the stories of 10 artisans practicing ancient crafts 鈥 a rare type of pasta, a grass-woven bridge, soy sauce brewed from the original 700-year-old recipe 鈥 and asks what we might lose if these custodians prove to be the last.