Tuesday, December 13, 2016

Top Ten Tuesday: Books I’m Going To Read In 2017


Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by The Broke and the Bookish. This week’s topic is top ten books I plan to read in the first half of 2017. I already own all of these books. They’re sitting on my TBR shelf, staring at me . . .


2017 TBR List




Round Ireland with a Fridge – Tony Hawks

Have you ever made a drunken bet? Worse still, have you ever tried to win one? In attempting to hitchhike round Ireland with a fridge, Tony Hawks did both, and his foolhardiness led him to one of the best experiences of his life. Joined by his trusty traveling companion—a domestic appliance, he made his way from Dublin to Donegal, from Sligo through Mayo, Galway, Clare, Kerry, Cork, Wexford, Wicklow—and back again to Dublin. In their month of madness, Tony and his fridge met a real prince, a bogus king, and the fridge got christened. They surfed together, entered a bachelor festival, and one of them had sex without the other knowing. And unexpectedly, the fridge itself became a momentary focus for the people of Ireland.





Between Shades of Gray – Ruta Sepetys

Lina is just like any other fifteen-year-old Lithuanian girl in 1941. She paints, she draws, she gets crushes on boys. Until one night when Soviet officers barge into her home, tearing her family from the comfortable life they've known. Separated from her father, forced onto a crowded and dirty train car, Lina, her mother, and her young brother slowly make their way north, crossing the Arctic Circle, to a work camp in the coldest reaches of Siberia. Here they are forced, under Stalin's orders, to dig for beets and fight for their lives under the cruelest of conditions.  
Lina finds solace in her art, meticulously—and at great risk—documenting events by drawing, hoping these messages will make their way to her father's prison camp to let him know they are still alive. It is a long and harrowing journey, spanning years and covering 6,500 miles, but it is through incredible strength, love, and hope that Lina ultimately survives.





The Clan of the Cave Bear – Jean M. Auel

A natural disaster leaves the young girl wandering alone in an unfamiliar and dangerous land until she is found by a woman of the Clan, people very different from her own kind. To them, blond, blue-eyed Ayla looks peculiar and ugly—she is one of the Others, those who have moved into their ancient homeland; but Iza cannot leave the girl to die and takes her with them. Iza and Creb, the old Mog-ur, grow to love her, and as Ayla learns the ways of the Clan and Iza’s way of healing, most come to accept her. But the brutal and proud youth who is destined to become their next leader sees her differences as a threat to his authority. He develops a deep and abiding hatred for the strange girl of the Others who lives in their midst, and is determined to get his revenge.





The Wave – Morton Rhue

The Wave is based on a true incident that occurred in a high school history class in Palo Alto, California, in 1969.  
The powerful forces of group pressure that pervaded many historic movements such as Nazism are recreated in the classroom when history teacher Burt Ross introduces a "new" system to his students. And before long The Wave, with its rules of "strength through discipline, community, and action," sweeps from the classroom through the entire school. And as most of the students join the movement, Laurie Saunders and David Collins recognize the frightening momentum of The Wave and realize they must stop it before it's too late.





The Girls – Emma Cline

Northern California, during the violent end of the 1960s. At the start of summer, a lonely and thoughtful teenager, Evie Boyd, sees a group of girls in the park, and is immediately caught by their freedom, their careless dress, their dangerous aura of abandon. Soon, Evie is in thrall to Suzanne, a mesmerizing older girl, and is drawn into the circle of a soon-to-be infamous cult and the man who is its charismatic leader. Hidden in the hills, their sprawling ranch is eerie and run down, but to Evie, it is exotic, thrilling, charged—a place where she feels desperate to be accepted. As she spends more time away from her mother and the rhythms of her daily life, and as her obsession with Suzanne intensifies, Evie does not realize she is coming closer and closer to unthinkable violence, and to that moment in a girl’s life when everything can go horribly wrong.





This Savage Song – Victoria Schwab

Kate Harker and August Flynn are the heirs to a divided city—a city where the violence has begun to breed actual monsters. All Kate wants is to be as ruthless as her father, who lets the monsters roam free and makes the humans pay for his protection. All August wants is to be human, as good-hearted as his own father, to play a bigger role in protecting the innocent—but he’s one of the monsters. One who can steal a soul with a simple strain of music. When the chance arises to keep an eye on Kate, who’s just been kicked out of her sixth boarding school and returned home, August jumps at it. But Kate discovers August’s secret, and after a failed assassination attempt the pair must flee for their lives.





Angel Catbird – Margaret Atwood

On a dark night, young genetic engineer Strig Feleedus is accidentally mutated by his own experiment and merges with the DNA of a cat and an owl. What follows is a humorous, action-driven, pulp-inspired superhero adventure—with a lot of cat puns.





Children of the New World: Stories – Alexander Weinstein

Children of the New World introduces readers to a near-future world of social media implants, memory manufacturers, dangerously immersive virtual reality games, and alarmingly intuitive robots. Many of these characters live in a utopian future of instant connection and technological gratification that belies an unbridgeable human distance, while others inhabit a post-collapse landscape made primitive by disaster, which they must work to rebuild as we once did millennia ago.





Sleeping Giants – Sylvain Neuvel

A girl named Rose is riding her new bike near her home in Deadwood, South Dakota, when she falls through the earth. She wakes up at the bottom of a square hole, its walls glowing with intricate carvings. But the firemen who come to save her peer down upon something even stranger: a little girl in the palm of a giant metal hand.  
Seventeen years later, the mystery of the bizarre artifact remains unsolved—its origins, architects, and purpose unknown. Its carbon dating defies belief; military reports are redacted; theories are floated, then rejected.  
But some can never stop searching for answers. 
Rose Franklin is now a highly trained physicist leading a top secret team to crack the hand’s code. And along with her colleagues, she is being interviewed by a nameless interrogator whose power and purview are as enigmatic as the provenance of the relic. What’s clear is that Rose and her compatriots are on the edge of unraveling history’s most perplexing discovery—and figuring out what it portends for humanity. But once the pieces of the puzzle are in place, will the result prove to be an instrument of lasting peace or a weapon of mass destruction?





Smoke – Dan Vyleta

If sin were visible and you could see people's anger, their lust and cravings, what would the world be like?  
Smoke opens in a private boarding school near Oxford, but history has not followed the path known to us. In this other past, sin appears as smoke on the body and soot on the clothes. Children are born carrying the seeds of evil within them. The ruling elite have learned to control their desires and contain their sin. They are spotless.  
It is within the closeted world of this school that the sons of the wealthy and well-connected are trained as future leaders. Among their number are two boys, Thomas and Charlie. On a trip to London, a forbidden city shrouded in smoke and darkness, the boys will witness an event that will make them question everything they have been told about the past. For there is more to the world of smoke, soot and ash than meets the eye and there are those who will stop at nothing to protect it.



Have you read any of these? What did you think?






13 comments:

  1. Between Shades of Gray is also on my to read list soon. Hope we both enjoy it!!

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  2. I haven't read any of these, though there are a couple that are sitting on my shelf as well :p I hope you are able to get to all of them!


    My TTT.

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  3. The Girls is on my to-read list too. I think I'll make it a priority in 2017.

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  4. Between Shades of Grey is fabulous, I hope you enjoy it!
    My TTT: https://jjbookblog.wordpress.com/2016/12/13/top-ten-tuesday-87/

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  5. I own Sleeping Giants, but I haven't read it yet.

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  6. I've never read the Cave Bear series although I've always kinda wanted to. and The Wave sounds kinda scary, the way something like that can happen.

    I read Sleeping Giants and while I didn't love it as much as some did, it's not bad. Very interesting concept.

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  7. YOU MUST READ THIS SAVAGE SONG. It is a GORGEOUS book, and I could not recommend it more. Although, fair warning, the beginning is a little slow, so don't be put off.

    GREAT list, and I hope you get to these soon.

    Aditi @ http://athousandwordsamillionbooks.blogspot.in/

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  8. I hope you love Between Shades of Gray and Sleeping Giants! Those were a couple of my favorites from 2016!

    Here are my Top Ten!

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  9. I ADORED Between Shades of Gray, This Savage Song, and the Clan of the Cave Bear! I hope you enjoy them when you get to read them. :)

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  10. I've read the exact same three as Becca. 13 year old me LOVED Clan of the Cave Bear. Old me loved Savage Song, and very slightly less old me liked Shades of Gray, although I think if I weren't so familiar with the history, it might have had an even bigger impact.

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  11. I read Clan of the Cave Bear when I was a teenager! I don't think I ever actually read the last book in the series---this was the beginnings of my inability to finish series!

    Nicole @ Feed Your Fiction Addiction

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  12. I will be reading The Girls and The Children of the New World too. Here's hoping that we both liked it. You have a wonderful mix of books here to choose from in the coming new year. Enjoy.

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  13. I hope you can manage to enjoy reading all of these novels in 2017! I have a long list of books I want to read as well. I have read The Wave, and seen the movie as well. It's so interesting... especially as it based on a true story and it's all about how the mind can be brainwashed and it is scary in some ways...

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