This list will functionally a little differently because most of the reading I do is not contemporary. As a result, the following list reflects my top five reads from last year–regardless of their publication date.

As I looked over my Goodreads log of 2016, to be honest, nothing stood out to me like it did in 2015. This was a year of metaphorically eating literary vegetables–I read a number of excellent or acclaimed texts but none of them left me awed or excited. For instance, I finally picked up Salman Rushdie’s infamous postcolonial novel The Satanic Verses and had to force myself to finish it. (It’s a bizarre whirlwind of incoherent magic realism, probably more renowned for the outcry it caused than for the success of the text itself.) I also read a number of interesting, more contemporary novels for a couple of book clubs to which I belong–books that took me out of my comfort zone and challenged me, but didn’t necessarily leave a lasting impression.

Perhaps what did leave a lasting impression in 2016, however, is my newfound love for graphic novels and comic books. In the midst of trying to graduate, move states, and start my Ph.D., comics became a really enjoyable form of escapism into incredibly built and beautifully illustrated worlds. Plus after reading +-200 pages every week, a picture book is a much needed rest for the eyes! So I kick off this list with not one text but a collection of three graphic texts.

1. Watchmen by Alan Moore, Saga by Brian K. Vaughan and Fiona Staples, and The Sandman by Neil Gaiman

These are three very different narratives, though all have been hailed as some of the best in the genre. I’m still developing my literacy in this realm, but it’s easy to recognize how masterfully the authors and illustrators collaborate. These aren’t simply stories with pictures; in graphic texts the images serve to enhance the text as the text in turn serves the images. The two are in constant conversation requiring an attentive and reflexive eye as one reads. Watchmen is a subversion of the classic superhero narrative. Saga is a tale of illegal interspecies love that threatens the very theoretical framework of its universe. The Sandman is the story of Dream (also known as Morpheus) and his realm of the Dreaming. While Watchmen is one cohesive whole (i.e. a graphic novel), the latter two are serial comics told over multiple volumes.

2. A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter M. Miller Jr.

After reading The Sparrow last year, several people recommended this sci-fi classic of the 20th century. In A Canticle for Leibowitz, the world has receded into a second Dark Age after nuclear holocaust obliterates much of Earth, but one monastic order in the American Southwest remains committed to preserving a fragmented collection of scientific and philosophical texts from the 20th century. The novel feels a bit like Willa Cather meets the Fall Out video game series–yes, a strange blend! But that is what gives Miller’s world such a distinct feel. Even if you don’t enjoy science fiction, Canticle reads like historical fiction, so it is very accessible.

3. Critical Theory and Science Fiction by Carl Freedman

A surprise! Something that isn’t fiction . . . though it’s about fiction. I typically don’t include theory in my top five books, but I enjoyed Critical Theory and Science Fiction so much I decided to include it. Science fiction has traditionally not been taken seriously within the canon of “literature”. Freedman argues for why science fiction not only should be taken seriously but why it should also be recognized as a form of critical theory for the 20th and 21st century. He writes, “I do believe that both critical theory and science fiction have the potential to play a role in the liberation of humanity from oppression” (xx). This was a fun and fascinating read that further deepened my love for the genre of science fiction.

4) Career of Evil by Robert Galbraith

This is the third book in J.K. Rowling’s venture into detective fiction, the Cormoran Strike series. Each of the books are really enjoyable reads and the characters are complex and interesting, especially Cormoran Strike, the private eye, who is ex-military with a prosthetic leg and suffering from a form of PTSD. Each mystery is both solving a crime and helping him come to terms with his now civilian life. The next one is supposed to be out this year…and I’m awaiting it eagerly.

5) The Sympathizer by Viet Thanh Nguyen

And finally, I end with a book I read for a book club. The Sympathizer won the Pulitzer Prize last year, and the prize was well deserved. The story is told from the perspective of a Communist double-agent who, during the fall of Saigon, escapes to America with his Vietnamese superior. In Los Angeles, he must make a life for himself while both helping the exiled Vietnamese military plot how to take back Vietnam and while sending intel to the Communist party. He is the sympathizer because he constantly occupies multiple worlds, resonating with those that occupy each. Indeed his conflicted identity began at birth as the son of a French priest and a Vietnamese woman.

I don’t know much about the Vietnam War and what followed, so this was an educational read from that perspective. It was also a compelling and nuanced exploration about identity formation, affiliation and representation in the modern era, especially in the wake of European imperialism. Each character must wrestle with not only how they view themselves, alone and in private, but also how to present themselves to others. This is further complicated when the protagonist finds himself advising a Hollywood crew about Vietnamese culture as they shoot a film about the war.

Special Note: I also finished the remainder of the Red Mars trilogy during 2016. Red Mars made my list last year, and both of its sequels Green Mars and Blue Mars were equally satisfying. 

See my Goodreads Year in Books here.

This next list is a bit different because the choices were not selected from entries produced in the last year. I do not read nearly enough contemporary fiction to single out a top 5 list, so instead this is simply the top 5 works of any fiction, published anytime, that I read in 2015. 

  1. The Sparrow by Mary Doane Russell
    (And its sequel Children of God)

    This is a book about Jesuits in space. It’s a mind-blowing exploration of the implications of Earth-oriented anthropology, philosophy, and theology on a different planet, inhabited by different sentient species. Chances are if you see me on a regular basis, you have heard me obsess about this book. (I actually wrote a review on it last year.) It’s not a light nor easy read. It will likely affect you viscerally. And it will change the way you think about the order of the world around you.
    If you pick it up, make sure to read the sequel right after. Children of God ties up quite a few loose ends, and it provides some much-needed emotional resolution.
    Kudos to Andy Motz for the recommendation.

  2. Red Mars by Kim Stanley Robinson

    Red Mars is another tale set in space, but unlike The Sparrow which is light science fiction, Red Mars belongs quite definitively to the hard sci-fi genre. The delineation of light/hard in science fiction essentially references how “sciencey” the writers gets. If a writer regularly uses complex physics or biochemical equations and notions throughout the text that go straight over your head, then it’s probably hard sci-fi. I am certainly not a scientist, but I have come to love hard sci-fi because it opens up perspectives that I, as a humanities person, don’t often consider.
    Red Mars is the first book in a trilogy documenting mankind’s colonization of Mars. The sequels are Green Mars and Blue Marsso as you might guess, this is also a story about humanity’s transformation of the red planet into something that more resembles Earth. The science of the transformation itself is fascinating (Robinson spent years researching the terraforming of Mars to get his facts right), but even more fascinating is the political, economical, and social ramifications that take place as a result of the physical transformation of the land. As with The Sparrow, Robinson addresses some really interesting philosophical implications underpinning our assumptions about biology and ecology. In addition, his characters are super interesting and complicated.
    Kudos to Aaron Kleist for the recommendation.

  3. Fates & Furies by Lauren Groff

    This is actually a book that came out in 2015, and it is truly phenomenal. Believe all the hype. Groff tells a sort of post-modern epic about a strangely complex marriage in which everything is both as it seems and simultaneously not. The first half of the book documents the marriage from his perspective, and then the second half shifts to hers, following a pattern that has been popularized in films like Gone Girl. The text is saturated with nods to classical mythology and Arthurian romances, building multiple layers of meaning into every scene and every encounter. While in some senses, this is an easy read, if you read it quickly, you will miss the subtle depth to Groff’s prose. As I result, I would recommend working through the text attentively and consider reading it with some friends and discussing it together. For those of you who are sensitive to content in books, just a heads up that there is quite a lot of sexual content in this novel. (As is fitting for a book that is following in the path of the great Greek epics . . . )
    Kudos to Becky Boss-Masi & The Sophias Book Club for the recommendation.

  4. Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

    If you have listened to Beyoncé’s track Flawless, you may be familiar with Nigerian writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichi, who is sampled on the track. Otherwise you may have also seen one of her TEDTalks, my favorite being “The Danger of the Single Story,” or you may have actually read one of her novels. I’m one of those people who had seen her TEDTalks and knew about her connection to Beyoncé, but had never actually picked up any of her written work until I read this for a book club. I had no idea what to expect, so I was pleasantly surprised to discover this intriguing story about a Nigerian woman, Ifemelu, accustomed to her relatively comfortable urban life in Lagos, who moves to the United States and must navigate not only a dramatic shift of culture, but also a sudden reduction of her societal status. While my story is quite different to hers (for instance, I didn’t have to combat the racial tensions that Ifemelu experienced), there were many moments throughout the novel that I resonated strongly with, from my own emigration experience, leaving South Africa for Tennessee. Even for those without a similar experience, Adichie addresses her audience through Ifemelu with such intimacy that it is easy to forget that one is not reading an autobiography.
    Woven throughout this beautifully told narrative are fascinating philosophical and sociological examinations about topics such as the replacement of the intellectual life with an academic life. She also dives right into messy conversations about race and gender, making some extremely bold but insightful statements without hesitation. This juxtaposition of Ifemelu’s vulnerability and transparency with Adichie’s sharp analysis of culture is what makes the book such an incredible read. I look forward to reading more of her fiction.
    Kudos to Cambria Hayashino and the American Spirits Book Club for the recommendation.

  5. Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi

    Finally, we get to number five, which is completely different in genre from the previous four. Tada! A graphic novel. I was assigned this one for class, and I actually got to teach it. Quite simply, its a fictional retelling in comic form of the author, Marjane’s, childhood and adolescence as a young Iranian woman during the rise of the Ayatollah Khomeini. Like AmericanahPersepolis explores themes about migration and diaspora, following Marjane to Austria, where her parents send her during the unrest. It also unpacks the complications and nuances of womanhood and identity, especially within a nation that was secular at her birth but then morphed into an Islamic state.
    While the themes and setting are heavy and often bleak, the story is delightful since it is told from a child’s perspective. Using this framing device, Satrapi offers a sense of wonder and naiveté to aspects of the world towards which we might otherwise be cynical or ignorant.
    She also inspired my new obsession in graphic novels–there will definitely be one or two on next year’s top five list. (I’m collecting recommendations so post below!)

Special Mention: Bone Clocks and Slade House by David Mitchell

Mitchell writes wonderfully chilling urban fantasy. I fell in love with Cloud Atlas, so this past year, I decided to pick up The Bone Clocks and the accompanying Slade House, which came out in 2015. Both were fantastic and well worth a read. I wrote a review on Slade House recently as well.

Special Mention: The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman

Gaiman is another one of my favorite fantasy writers that I discovered in recent years. I’ve been steadily working through his material, and I finally got to The Graveyard Book, a chilling but simultaneously lovely story about a little boy raised by ghosts. Because as the book tells us, it takes a graveyard to raise a child.

As a bonus, if you are interested, here is my Goodread’s Year in Books.

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