Play Book Tag discussion
Annual Top 10 Lists
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Top 10 List of 2020

I thought Hamnet and Piranesi would rank higher ... (Piranesi not at all .. :( )

I see you are in South Africa, AJ, and most of our lists are very American-centric. (Though you probably know Trevor Noah's book, Born a Crime). Also Anita seems to read literary fiction and nonfiction, which may not be your main genres.

This list is the compilation of ALL the top-ten lists that PBT members submitted. So, it's not Anita's top ten but the PBT group's aggregate top ten.
Newer members of the group may not be aware that the group does this each year.

I'm afraid Hamnet just didn't sit well with me, Nicole. But, I predict we'll see Piranesi on the list next year. It's popularity is going to pick up.

But I don't read most books until a year or more after they come out, and several of my top 10 were "old" books.


Surprisingly 4 of the Top 13 were on my Top 10 list this year.

This is my favorite list of the year, and I always love the books I read from the assembled experience of this group.


I love seeing how we influence one another's choices. Though we didn't have a runaway favorite like last year's Daisy Jones!

..."
While this list isn't mine and is a PBT compiled top ten, I am very flattered/honored that you know exactly what I read!!

This list is the compilation of ALL the top-ten lists that PBT members submitted. So, it's not Anita's to..."
Oh, I'm sorry, thanks for clarifying, I didn't read Anita's introduction carefully to see that these are the group results! They do look rather serious overall.
I have read 12 1/2 of these (got stuck halfway thru The Splendid and the Vile but plan to go back to it) and I have at least 3 on TBR. I read some of them in 2019 or before - Station Eleven and Big Little Lies have been around a while.
Thanks for doing all the compiling, Anita!

This compilation of books makes a good reading list for the remainder of the year.

I tend to read much less current literary fiction or non-fiction than many in PBT.

Hi Sakari! So, I see you are one of our younger members and that you like scary books. I think you are on the right track with Stephen King! My personal favorite was The Stand. I read a lot of him as a teen and never tired of him. Have you read any R.L Stine? He writes for a younger audience, but I used to read his work with my sons, and it gave me the chills.
Another series that I absolutely loved, but isn't scary unfortunately, is by James Herriott. His initial book is All Creatures Great and Small. I devoured this book as a teen, and the other three in the series.
Another book you might like (which I loved and has scary elements) is And Then There Were None.

Anita, I loved All Creatures Great and Small as a child, but don't remember what I rated it as an adult because I reread it before joining Shelfari I think (or it might have been that year--it was where I sat and waited when one of my kids was having writing tutoring before moving to a brick and mortar public school).


Hi Sakari and welcome!
I would highly recommend Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood - a graphic novel format memoir of growing up in Iran during before and during the Revolution - it was a delight! Yes it is serious but there is also great humor and charm.
I saw one of the books on your shelves is Click Clack Moo which I LOVE! I picked that one up a couple years ago and it makes me chuckle every time I look at it.

Good list! Two were on my top list (including honourable mentions): "Educated" and "Big Little Lies".
Two are on my tbr (Lab Girl, The Dutch House); two are ones I read and really liked in previous years: Born a Crime and Persepolis.
Persepolis! Funny how that came up enough times this year to make it to our list!
One additional I read this year - was good, can't remember what I rated it: "Where the Crawdads Sing".
Two are also on my radar, though not officially on my tbr: The Vanishing Half, The Only Plane in the Sky.

Most of mine are usually older, or less well known.

Sakari, you can check our bookshelf for this group's top 10 of the decade 2010 - 2019 if you'd like:
https://www.goodreads.com/group/books...


Educated, Daisy Jones & The Six, and Station Eleven were on my top 10 in previous years.
From the Honorable Mentions list, On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous and Where the Crawdads Sing were on my Top 10 list this year.
Born a Crime: Stories From a South African Childhood and Persepolis were on my top lists in previous years.
I have Hamnet on my TBR.


This is the first year in which I read the majority (15) of the books mentioned in the poll results. I loved or really liked nearly all of them. That's better than most best lists I've seen. (There is only one I wish I didn't spend time reading -City of Girls.) I'm going to take a look at old top 10 lists to mine for older gems.
I used to always wait a few years to read new books, to save money and to see which books survived the initial marketing hype. But it didn't prevent disappointment. It was really nice this year to read new books fairly early, before building unrealistic expectations. By getting on library waiting lists early, I got nearly all of them for free too.


"“Where the Crawdads Sing,” by Delia Owens. This mystery from 2018 just keeps appearing everywhere, and no one knows why. It’s the Ryan Seacrest of novels."

Unfortunately, I use Excel to analyze all the data so if someone leaves off the article (the), I may or may not pick it up. I caught one other title, but didn't see this one!
Thank you so much, Kimber!!

Bwahahahah. I confess that while this book was super readable, I was not a fan, so this absolutely cracked me up.

They are????? Oh, I need to record it.

OMG - Ryan Seacrest did something on NYE to support front line workers, and I asked "haven't they been through enough?" somebody must like him (and that book, which I haven't read and don't plan to but now I really don't plan to. :)

Bwahahahah. I confess th..."
Me too! I can't explain why I disliked Crawdads, saying it was "unrealistic", yet loved This Tender Land, which is actually much more fantastical. I do like stories about people working together, which happens in Land, while the character in Crawdads is usually alone or in not-helpful relationships.

Another one, eh? I thought there was one before, and sure enough it was from 1978-1980; and, yes, that's been a good 40 years. I don't know who it was that watched it, but it might have been my mother.

I love the book, but I agree that's funny. It's probably because it kept popping back up to the #1 spot on the New York Times Bestseller List. I don't know if it's a record, but it's been on the list since 2018. According to B&N, it's now at #6. Every time it makes a new list, sales pop up again. I imagine it must annoy other authors.
I imagine that some of you view this book the way I viewed Little Fires Everywhere. It was so hyped up, it was annoying. I built up my defenses toward the book before I even read it. When my bookclub picked it last year, I decided to re-read it and I liked it better.
Crawdads is beautiful on audio. It was one of my "comfort books" (re-reads) last year when I was under stress. I could imagine that I was on the water, connected with nature. I can pretend to be an outdoors type (while in real life, I hate the bugs).

Another one, eh? I thought there was one before, a..."
I watched it! I remember watching it while my daughter was a baby and that would have been around 1980. I also read all the books. They are based on true experiences although James Herriot is a pen name.


YAY! Did you like it?"
I think it is a difficult book to "like". It is so hard hitting. ..."
Good point . . .like is not the best word. But I was very impressed by the writer and her fortitude.

I already planned to read Hamnet, Lab Girl, Daisy Jones & The Six, and Educated.
But now I'm intrigued by The Dutch House, Recursion, and Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland so I will probably add those to my TBR.

I already planned to read Hamnet, Lab Girl, Daisy Jones & The Six, and Educated.
But now I'm intrigued by The Dutch House, R..."
Great catch! Vanishing Half was originally an honorable mention, but at the nth hour it garnered an extra vote. I moved it up, but forgot to take it off the honorable mention list.

(I did notice some odd things last year with tags disappearing... I think it was also when I was doing the top 10?)
The only way to add a new tag (as far as I know) is to use a book on the shelf to start with. If it's a book that already has tags, I'm going to need to pay closer attention to what the other tags were in case they disappear!
Luckily, I noticed before saving so I took a screenshot and could add back in the tags that were already there.

https://www.goodreads.com/group/books...
I don't add in the honourable mentions, but if there are ties, of course there are times when more than 10 are often added in. So, this year there are 13.

Books mentioned in this topic
Station Eleven (other topics)Station Eleven (other topics)
Educated (other topics)
Educated (other topics)
Where the Crawdads Sing (other topics)
More...
Without further adieu,
Tied for first (and second) place:
Educated (tied for 5th in 2019)
The Splendid and the Vile: A Saga of Churchill, Family, and Defiance During the Blitz
Tied for 3rd-6th place, we have:
Daisy Jones & The Six (1st in 2019)
Lab Girl
Recursion
The Dutch House (tied for 5th in 2019)
And rounding out our top ten (well actually top 13), the remaining titles all tied:
Apeirogon
Erotic Stories for Punjabi Widows
Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland
Station Eleven
The Only Plane in the Sky: An Oral History of 9/11
The Vanishing Half
This Tender Land
Honorable Mention
Bad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup
Big Little Lies
Born a Crime: Stories From a South African Childhood (tied for 8th in 2019)
City of Girls
Hamnet
How to Be an Antiracist
My Dark Vanessa
News of the World
On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous
Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood
The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet
Where the Crawdads Sing (tied for 2nd in 2019)