Goodreads Staffers' Top Three Books of the Year

Every December, as we wrap up our annual Goodreads Reading Challenge, we ask our well-read colleagues a simple yet incredibly tough question:
What were your three favorite books you read this year?
Oh, the angst we caused our coworkers as they whittled down their lists to just their top few books! Hopefully our carefully considered staff picks will inspire additions to your Want to Read Shelf.
You'll notice that our reading habits run the gamut. But if you look carefully, you can see some office favorites emerge, including multiple picks of the Odyssey-inspired fantasy Circe.
Now it's your turn! What are your top three books of the year? Please share them with us in the comments!
Oh, the angst we caused our coworkers as they whittled down their lists to just their top few books! Hopefully our carefully considered staff picks will inspire additions to your Want to Read Shelf.
You'll notice that our reading habits run the gamut. But if you look carefully, you can see some office favorites emerge, including multiple picks of the Odyssey-inspired fantasy Circe.
Now it's your turn! What are your top three books of the year? Please share them with us in the comments!
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Your turn! What are your top three reads of 2019? Share them with us in the comments!
Check out more recent articles:
Very Short 4-Star Books for Your Reading Challenge Books
The Top 40 Book Club Picks of 2019
The Most Read Books on Goodreads in December
Check out more recent articles:
Very Short 4-Star Books for Your Reading Challenge Books
The Top 40 Book Club Picks of 2019
The Most Read Books on Goodreads in December
Comments Showing 51-100 of 363 (363 new)
message 51:
by
Jim
(new)
Dec 17, 2019 07:39AM

flag

I'd add Shadowplay (Joseph O'Connor) and the one I have only just started: The Overstory by Richard Powers

The Dutch House by Ann Patchett
The Weight of Ink by Rachel Kadesh
The Last Good Chance by Tom Barbash

2. Where the Crawdad's Sing by Delia Owens
3. The Last Mrs. Parrish by Liv Constantine
#1 is a must read for families valuing the reason for the season. Absolutely wonderful story.

1. The Grip of It, Jac Jemc
2. Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine, Gail Honeyman
3. Dopesick, Beth Macy

1. A Gentleman in Moscow
2. Becoming
3. Blowout: Corrupted Democracy, Rogue State Russia, and the Richest, Most Destructive Industry on Earth
It looks like I need to read Circe. It appears on many lists.

The Immortalists
Thrity Umriger people! - The Space Between Us and The Secrets Between Us

Lumberjanes: Beware the Kitten Holy
The Gentleman's Guide to Vice and Virtue
Six of Crows

Augustus even better than Stoner- which was great!
Then there is "The Leopard" !!!

3. The Giver of Stars, Jojo Moyes
2. Evvie Drake Starts Over, Linda Holmes
1. The Giver, Lois Lowry
Honorable Mentions:
Gathering Blue, Lois Lowry
Firefly Lane, Kristin Hannah
The Gown, Jennifer Robson
Becoming Mrs. Lewis, Patti Callahan

Algiers, Third World Capital by Elaine Mokhtefi
American Exceptionalism & American Innocence by Roberto Servent & Danny Haiphong
Death of the Liberal Class by Chris Hedges
The Black Jacobins by CLR James

An Ocklawaha River Odyssey, Elizabeth Randall
Murder in St. Augustine, Elizabeth Randall

1) This Life - Martin Hägglund
2) The Work of Mourning - Jacques Derrida
3) Nietzsche and Metaphor - Sarah Kofman

1) The Grapes of Wrath
2) Moby Dick
3) How to Hide an Empire (a book that’s actually from 2019)"
Glad somebody likes MD. It is the first book that I ever hated, 1963.

1. Becoming
2. The Sixth Extinction
3. Daisy Jones and the Six

The Hero and the Crown by Robin McKinley
The Stars Beneath Our Feet by David Barclay Moore
A Time to Dance by Padma Venkatraman

1. "A Man Called Ove", Frederik Blackman
2. "Fried Green Tomatoes", Fannie Flagg
3. " A Town Like Alice", Neville Shute

I only joined Goodreads this year to try and get back into the habit of reading, and these are the bo..."
Loved Born a Crime, recommended to me by my nail tech.

Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman
Off Planet by Aileen Erin


Infinite Jest -- David Foster Wallace
Wolf Hall -- Hilary Mantel

1) A peace to end all peace (David Fromkin)
2) 1913-the world before the great war (Charles Emmerson)
3) Far from the madding crowd (Thomas Hardy)

1) Kevin Kruse - One Nation Under God: How Corporate America Invented Christian America
2) Chuck Wendig - Wanderers
3) Garth Stein - The Art Of Racing In The Rain

1. "Becoming" - Michelle Obama
2. "The Water Dancer" - Ta-Hehisi Coates
3. "The Whisper Man" - Alex North
That said, "This Tender Land" by William Kent Krueger was definitely also in the top of my favorites for 2019...

Digital Minimalism
The Institute
Becoming
So many good books on this list, so little time.

1) Black Beauty- Anna Sewell
2) The Perfect Horse-Elizabeth Letts
3) Five Feet Apart-Rachael Lippincott.
I am currently rereading The Perfect Horse. It is an incredible true story from WW2. It is a very good book.

1. American gods by Neil Gaiman
2. Circe by Madeline Miller
3. The astonishing colour of after by Emily X R Pan

2. Starless Sea by Erin Morgenstern
3. Becoming by Michelle Obama

The Turn of the Key by Ruth Ware
The Hunting Party by Lucy Foley

- Recursion by Blake Crouch
- Becoming by Michelle Obama
- Waking Gods by Sylvain Neuvel
My alternates:
- Hacking Darwin by Jamie Metzl
- The Year of the Flood by Margaret Atwood
- La Belle Sauvage by Philip Pullman

Cantoras--Carolina De Robertis
This Tender Land--William Kent Krueger
The Ragged Edge of Night--Olivia Hawker
...with a nod toward "Bibliophile: An Illustrated Miscellany" by Jane Mount; not a straightforward narrative, but full of tiny delights!

Here goes:
The Testaments by Margaret Atwood
Lost Roses by Martha Hall Kelly
Churchill: Walking with Destiny by Andrew Roberts

1. Metropolis by Philip Kerr (his final Bernie Gunther novel)
2. Ducks, Newburyport by Lucy Ellman
3. Quichotte by Salmon Rushdie
Currently reading Horns by Joe Hill (loved his short story collection Full Throttle).

Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens
The Giver of Stars by JoJo Mayes

This Tender Land by William Kent Krueger
Resistance Women by Jennifer Chiaverini
City of Girls by Elizabeth Gilbert


Runnersup- nickel boys by colson whitehead, what rose forgot by nevada barr, and landline by rainbow rowell
Current reads- the ocean at the end of the lane by neil gaiman, the family upstairs by lisa jewell, and criss cross by james patterson
Next want to reads- the silent patient by alex michaelides, a disvovery of witches by deborah harkness, and the dutch house by ann patchett