For once, I agree with my fellow readers at Goodreads. Without a doubt, the best book I read in 2015 was Harper Lee’s Go Set a Watchman. It really resonated with me emotionally. I sat there and sobbed through the entirety of Chapter 8. It’s like I was Jean Louise, in those moments, drowning in a storm of grief and rage. I still get a little steamed when I think about it.
My other top 10 reads for the year are:
The Rosie Project and The Rosie Effect by Graeme Simsion – I loved these books. Don Tillman, professor of genetics, and all around brainiac finds social interaction and emotional situations difficult to say the least. But he has decided it’s time for him to find a wife. He chooses to go about this using logic. That is a list of criteria, some of which he’s willing to be slightly flexible about, but which don’t take into account the fact the woman may have her own set of criteria. Emotion fits nowhere in this search. That is until he meets Rosie. Then everything changes and he has to find ways to adapt. This is often both hilarious and painful to watch. Even after he wins Rosie, Don continues to struggle, especially when others are added to the equation.
Our Souls at Night by Kent Haruf – Haruf’s final novel gives us a last, wonderful visit with our friends in Holt, Colorado. This one is about two older people, widowed, who come together in friendship in order to alleviate their loneliness. But this somewhat unorthodox friendship gradually grows into something more. However, others do not approve and try to tear them apart. Add in a neglected little boy and a dog and you have an emotionally wrenching read. Though I remember being not wholly satisfied with the ending.
The Truth According To Us by Annie Barrows – A thoroughly enjoyable second adult novel from the coauthor of The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, The Truth According To Us takes us to a small town in West Virginia during the Great Depression where things are not what they seem. I couldn’t help but like and loathe the villain at the same time. The resolution of the conflict is rather obvious from early on, but the telling of it is vastly entertaining.
As Sweet as Honey by Indira Ganesan – This story is told by Meterling’s young niece, Mina, as Mina and her cousins, all children, try to puzzle out exactly what’s happening to their beloved aunt in the strange world of adults. An unusually tall South Asian woman, Meterling finds love long after she was considered to be “on the shelf” with a short, slightly rotund Englishman who promptly drops dead during their first dance. Amidst the scandal of a pregnancy and a courtship, Meterling tries to find her place within two very different societies.
My Grandmother Asked Me to Tell You She’s Sorry by Fredrik Backman – Elsa, a very intelligent almost-eight-year-old girl has been tasked with a difficult mission. In a series of letters, her beloved Grandmother, who has recently died of cancer, asks her to apologize on her behalf to a number of people. Grandma was, shall we say, unorthodox. Some would say crazy. My Grandmother Asked Me to Tell You She’s Sorry is a wonderfully sad, wonderfully hilarious read.
The Upstairs Wife: An Intimate History of Pakistan by Rafia Zakaria – This a story of separation. Of a marriage, and of a country. The Partition of India and Pakistan was a difficult, painful process that, in many ways, is ongoing. Then, when you add in the divorce between Pakistan and Bangladesh, it gets even more complicated. More messy. The joys and pains of these separations is mirrored in the marriage of Amina and Sohail. They don’t divorce, but he takes a second wife. Amina moves upstairs while the second wife takes the downstairs and Sohail splits his time between them in a weird kind of custody agreement with which no one is really happy or satisfied. The Upstairs Wife is a complex, emotional, story of a nation and a family.
Two Years Eight Months and Twenty-Eight Nights by Salman Rushdie – Based loosely on The Thousand and One Nights, Two Years Eight Months and Twenty-Eight Nights, is an epic ride from one of the masters of magical realism. With skill and imagination he tells us of the Strangenesses and the War of the Worlds which followed. How the Lightning Princess and the Grand Ifrits battled over the fate of our world while dead philosophers argued about faith and science, terrorism and logic in their graves. Dust arguing passionately with dust.
The Secret Chord by Geraldine Brooks – The story of David, shepherd, warrior, poet, and king as told by Pulitzer Prize winning author, Geraldine Brooks. And, I must say, she does it with style and skill. I wondered what happened next, even though I know very well what, according to the Bible, happened next. If that isn’t a sign of a good book, then I don’t know what is.
I’d say the award, if you can call it that, for worst book would have to go to J. R. Ward’s The Bourbon Kings. What does anyone see in that book? I can’t say I like anyone in that family or that I really care what happens to them next. I was also hugely disappointed in Jacquelyn Frank’s Nightwalker. It just kind of fell flat. The epic battle wasn’t all that epic and, as an ending to a series, or three, it was unsatisfying to say the least.
How about y’all. Read anything awesome in 2015? Or just plain horrible?

The Blurb:
The international bestselling author of Into the Wilderness makes her highly anticipated return with a magnificent epic about the transcendent power of courage in 19th-century New York…
The New York Times bestselling author of Serena—the basis of the movie starring Academy Award-winner Jennifer Lawrence and Bradley Cooper—illuminates lives shaped by violence, passion, and a powerful connection to the land in this haunting tale set in contemporary Appalachia.
The Blurb:
A NOTE FROM JOJO MOYES ABOUT HER EXCITING NEW NOVEL, AFTER YOU:
Paradise, blooded daughter of the king’s First Advisor, is ready to break free from the restrictive life of an aristocratic female. Her strategy? Join the Black Dagger Brotherhood’s training center program and learn to fight for herself, think for herself…be herself. It’s a good plan, until everything goes wrong. The schooling is unfathomably difficult, the other recruits feel more like enemies than allies, and it’s very clear that the Brother in charge, Butch O’Neal, a.k.a. the Dhestroyer, is having serious problems in his own life.
Paige Mahoney has escaped the brutal penal colony of Sheol I, but her problems have only just begun: many of the fugitives are still missing and she is the most wanted person in London.
My name be Ice Cream Fifteen Star. This be the tale of how I bring the cure to all the Nighted States, save every poory children, brief for life. Is how a city die for selfish love, and rise from this same smallness. Be how the new America begin, in wars against all hope – a country with no power in a world that hate its life. So been the faith I sworn, and it ain’t evils in no world nor cruelties in no red hell can change the vally heart of Ice Cream Star.
THE NEW CHARLES AND ANNA NOVEL
National bestselling author Kate Quinn returns with the long-awaited fourth volume in the Empress of Rome series, an unforgettable new tale of the politics, power, and passion that defined ancient Rome.
They are the Sentinels. Three races descended from ancient guardians of mankind, each possessing unique abilities in their battle to protect humanity against their eternal foes: the Synestryn. Now a warrior must protect his onetime enemy—without succumbing to his darkest desires.
Two brothers bound by more than blood fight to change a brutal destiny in the heart-wrenching new novel of the Black Dagger Brotherhood by #1 New York Times bestselling author J. R. Ward.
The “smoldering heat, epic romance, and awesome action”* of Nalini Singh’s New York Times bestselling series continues as two Arrows find themselves caught in a chilling conspiracy that spans all three races…
For the sense of nostalgia it gives us, or the forbidden pleasure of doing something we shouldn’t. I consider certain books to be candy for the brain. Nalini Singh’s Psy-Changeling and Guild Hunter novels, for example, or J. R. Ward’s Black Dagger Brotherhood are like the most luxurious, darkest, richest, most decadent dark chocolate truffle.
The Godiva ones dusted with cocoa. Mmmmmm.

I simply adore Nalini Singh’s Psy/Changeling novels. June 4th can’t get here soon enough to give me my next fix. And, in Heart of Obsidian, we’re supposed to learn who the Ghost is. FINALLY!!!! But, even after the big reveal, I still want to know more about the characters and their world.
Then, there’s the BDB. The Black Dagger Brotherhood. I fell in love with series, and Wrath, the first time I read Dark Lover. The world was interesting, the characters, and the plot, edgy. Finally, a vampire series that wasn’t filled with angsty, emo, wannabe-human-again, vampires. I was hooked. Loved Rhage and Zsadist. Then we got to Butch, who I really didn’t care about one way or the other, but the whole Dehstroyer thing was interesting. I’ve never liked V, but the reveal about his mother kept me reading. Phury, though. I got to the point that I actually wished Z had let him die after that bit of stupidity. Rehv, however, won me back. The symphaths are wonderfully creepy. Spine chilling, with this skin-crawling sensation creepy. I wish they still featured prominently in the series, because, let’s face it, the lessers are becoming cartoonishly ridiculous.
Fast forward the present, the much anticipated Lover at Last. First, kudos to J. R. Ward and her publisher for finally having the guts to release an M/M romance in a mainstream series to a mainstream audience. It certainly took long enough for someone to do it. And, on the M/M front, let me just take a moment to question the absence of lube in this novel. I know they’re vampires, and, therefore, heal quickly, but, still.