- Book of the Year: the late Kent Haruf's Our Souls at Night. Written in his dying days, this short novel is pitch-perfect. [Unfortunately, it seems that Robert Redford and Jane Fonda will star in the film version: good luck to them in making an audience believe they are ordinary people].
- Two non-fiction books about the African-American experience: Deborah Leovy: Ghettoside (deep long-term journalism of the kind that is under great threat) and Ta-Nehisi Coates: Between the World and Me (superb deep thinking, also under threat).
- Sara Baume: Spill simmer falter wither. The moving story of a lost soul, and his dog.
- Thomas Harding: The House by the Lake. Fascinating story of a family house by a lake near Berlin, drilling vertically into German history.
- Mary Aiken: The Cyber Effect. Important thoughts about our world, and especially about our children's place in it.
- Yuval Noah Harari's Sapiens: a brief history of humankind: enormously thought-provoking, with a bracing historical overview which puts our current anxieties into perspective.
The English Department of St Columba's College, Whitechurch, Dublin 16, Ireland. Pupils' writing, news, poems, drama, essays, podcasts, book recommendations, language, edtech ... and more. Since 2006.
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Friday, December 09, 2016
SCC English Books of the Year
As usual, alongside our Books of the Year list round-up, here are the SCC English choices (some of which were published earlier, but appeared in paperback in 2016). Here's the 2015 list.
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