This year, I read 27 novels written by 22 authors. For those interested in statistics, a whopping 21 of the authors are ladies, and 12 of the authors were ones I never read before (one of which I read two novels). As far as genre, 8 were mysteries, 14 were suspense/romantic suspense, and 5 were speculative.
You notice the title said "fiction works" as opposed to "novels." I sometimes struggle with series, and I read parts of 5 series this year. Some of the series were basically a collection of stand-alone novels where it's easy to decide which you like better, and I count each of those novels separately. However, two series were actually big multi-part stories, and one was similar enough in style that I counted those series as a single entry.
One enjoyable thing about this year is that I was able to resume three series that didn't have any new books in them for 4-5 years, including two of my all time favorite series.
As usual, this list is in alphabetic order by title.
- Act Of Valor by Dana Mentink (True Blue K-9 Unit, part 2). I loved the villain in this story. I also learned that Beagle is French for Big Mouth.
- Against All Fierce Hostility by Donna Fletcher Crowe (The Monastery Murders, part 6). Felecity witnessed a murder in England. But she and her husband Father Antony don't have to worry about the killer as they take a scenic train across Canada. You wouldn't expect the murderer to cross the ocean with them, would you?
- Amish Werewolves of Space by Kerry Nietz (Peril In Plain Space, part 3). Would you believe this series is serious sci-fi? Would you believe it is a good book on building community? If not, it's obvious you haven't read this great series yet. Shame on you. And my tongue is in its proper position as I'm typing this, not in my cheek as you'd suppose.
- Blind Trust by Laura Scott (True Blue K-9 Unit, part 3). A dog trainer who's losing her eyesight is working on a puppy to be her guide dog ... till it gets kidnapped. Good thing a handsome police officer and his Golden Lab are up to the task.
- Cards on the Table by Agatha Chrisie. One of four Poirot novels I read this year (three by Christie, plus the first written by Sophie Hannah). The Belgian detective with three other good guys are invited to dinner by a flamboyant troublemaker with his "tiger collection": four people he considers to be murderers who got away with it. Of course, you know what one problem with a tiger collection is, don't you?
- Cat-groomer Mysteries, parts 1 and 2 (The Persian Always Meows Twice, The Bengal Identity) by Eileen Watkins. A delightful mystery series. Not Christian fiction, but safe reading.
- Dead End by Nancy Mehl (Kaely Quinn Profiler, part 3). The nail biting conclusion of this suspenseful series, where Kaley confronts her serial killer father during a string of copy-cat murders.
- Fatal Reunion by Jessica Patch. Piper runs a karate studio. She can take care of herself. She doesn't need God or her policeman ex-boyfriend. Right? You aren't buying that either?
- The Firebrand Chronicles, parts 2 and 3 (Flare, Burn) by J. M. Hackman. I loved this YA fantasy series, which focuses on Brenna James and includes my hero, the gryphon Arvandus.
- Five Little Pigs by Agatha Christie. Was the mother guilty of the murder she was executed for over a decade ago? Her daughter asks Poirot to solve this, with Poirot interviewing the five eyewitnesses to what happened.
- Seeking The Truth by Terri Reed (True Blue K-9 Unit, part 5). No spoilers here, but this was my favorite in this series (I read installments #2-7 of this 8 part series).
- Tales of Faeraven, parts 3 and 4 (Sojourner, Dawn King) by Janalyn Voigt. An exciting conclusion to this fantasy series.
Thanks for including Flare & Burn! Happy reading in 2021!
ReplyDeleteThanks for including Flare & Burn! Happy reading in 2021!
ReplyDeleteSo glad you enjoyed Seeking the Truth.
ReplyDeleteHi, Jeff! Such an honor to be on your list! And how I wish I were as good at list-keeping as you are!
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