It only feels like yesterday that I was trying to pick my top reads of 2023 and now — whoosh — it’s time to do it all again.

Choosing just a handful of favourites is challenging. I don’t read anything like the quantity that some other bloggers mention but even so, weighing up the merits of one book versus another is tough going.

Do I choose The Haven based on the quality of the prose? Or maybe The Factory or Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead, both of which were quirky but still very readable? or do I play it safe and opt for a book like Tom Lake that didn’t have any great literary flourishes but was simply a good yarn?

I could lose valuable sleep wrestling with this conundrum. It would be much easier to pick favourites if I read from just one (two at most) genres. Then I’d be comparing like with like. But I’m all over the genre map, switching regularly between lit fiction, crime, historical fiction and classics.

Having chased this question around for days, I’ve come to the conclusion that the best way to identify my favourites is to ask just one question

Which books did I read in 2024 that have the greatest staying power?

By “staying power” I mean, the way the book lingered in my memory long after I got to the final page. I’ll have likely forgotten the details of the plot or the names of the characters but I’ll remember the atmosphere of the location or how the book made me feel Or months will pass and I’ll still be thinking about some of the questions or issues raised by the book. These are also the books that I’m most likely to talk about with friends and to recommend to other readers.

So based on all those factors, here are the five that rose to the top of my list this year.

Orbital by Samantha Harvey

For the first time in many years, the judges of the Booker Prize actually selected a book that was innovative, elegant AND readable. The narrative follows six astronauts during one day in their mission. In the course of twenty four hours they will circle Earth sixteen times, looping continents and zipping through seasons, conducting scientific experiments and sending observations of weather systems back to base.

This is a really slim book but Harvey packs so much into her prose that it took me a while to read because I kept pausing to let the ideas incubate. Ideas about the fragility of life; the future of our planet; and the ties that connect us to each other. Simply wonderful book.

Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout

What a delight it was to discover Elizabeth Strout this year (yes I know I’m behind the curve but so what). Her titular character Olive Kitteridge is a magnificent creation. She’s obnoxious — rude to neighbours and acquaintances and completely unaware of the hurt she causes her family with her dismissive comments. And yet beneath the brittle exterior she’s a sensitive creature who has to learn what is really important in life. See my review here

The Colony by Audrey Magee

I enjoyed Magee’s debut novel — The Undertaking — but The Colony is even better. The story concerns two men who travel to a small island off the west coast of Ireland one summer. One is an English painter, the other a Frenchman who is conducting a study about the Irish language. Both men maintain they value the purity of life on the island and want to preserve its integrity but their stance takes little notice of what the islanders themselves feel about their language and way of life.

The novel explores the issue of colonisation, one tangent of which concerns the preservation of the Gaelic language. This struck a particular chord for me — I live in a country where there’s been a debate lasting decades about how to halt the decline of the Welsh language.

The Light Years by Elizabeth Jane Howard

For years I went under the mistaken impression that Howard’s Cazalet Chronicles were frothy family sagas. Reading The Light Years (the first book) completely changed my perspective. Yes this is a story of a family with all its domestic dramas, testing relationships and incidents but Howard gives us a wonderful insight into life in Britain on the cusp of World War 2. See my review here

As the possibility of war looms, the Cazalet family members respond in different ways — some believe it’s inevitable, others that it will never happen because the country’s Prime Minister will prevail and win the assurances for peace he desires from Hitler. As an insight into a piece of history told through the eyes of ordinary (though wealthy) people this was fascinating.

Islands of Abandonment  by Cal Flynn

The only non fiction book to make it onto my list was an unexpected delight. Cal Flyn looks at places around the world which have been abandoned for a variety of reasons — including war; disaster; population decline and economic recession. Her research took her from the disaster zone of Chernobyl to an abandoned botanic garden in Africa and to industrial and residential wastelands in the USA. As a journalist Flynn knows how to tell a story in a really engaging way. By the end of the book you’re left wondering whether she’s right and allowing nature to reclaim these abandoned spaces is a model for our future. See my review here

These were my stand out books from 2024. I’m curious whether they made it onto your list of favourites from 2024

19 responses to “Favourite Books of 2024: The Top 5”

  1. […] A thought-provoking novel that was one of my top 5 favourites of 2024. […]

  2. Some great choices there! Orbital is the only one I haven’t read yet, and I shall do so when my other half has finished reading it for her book club.

    1. When you’ve both read it,I’m sure you’ll have a lot to discuss Bobby

  3. Thanks to you and Lisa I have added EJH to my TBR. And I rerally must get to The Colony this year. The originally Olive is also my favourite Strout book (with a pretty good TV series a few years back too).

  4. I loved the Colony. It remains fresh in my mind. Having read Olive K. and seeing the series, that wasn’t advertised much, twice, she is so real to me, I expect I’ll know her if I run into her. Orbital is coming up in our book club later in the year. I’m not one for anything space related but it does get a lot of good reviews.

  5. Orbital almost made my list – I also choose my favourites by what lingered and in regards to Orbital, I read it late in the year and loved it while reading but wondered about its ‘staying power’. Olive Kitteridge was on my favourites years ago when I read it – lucky you, having all that Strout to indulge in now!

  6. You described “staying power” so well. And The Light Years and the rest of the Cazalet Chronicles are books that have lingered in my memory for many years – I first started reading them in 2007, according to my LibraryThing catalogue. I have forgotten the details of the plot and the names of the characters but I definitely remember the atmosphere and how the books made me feel – I loved them. I’ve started to read Islands of Abandonment but set it aside to read more novels – I need to get back to it. The Stars Look Down by A J Cronin made my list this year

  7. I enjoyed a lot Orbital, but in my category literary fiction read as ebook, Murakami won: https://wordsandpeace.com/2024/12/31/year-of-reading-2024-part-1-my-top-24-books/

  8. Yes, the Harvey novella was on my list of stand-out titles too, and I’m pleased it got the recognition it deserved.

    I’ve not tried any Strout but your review (and also that for Islands of Abandonment stuck in my mind as books to look out for, so thank you.

    For me, Jane Gardam’s Old Filth and Nina Bawden’s The Peppermint Pig were recent reads from 2024 that are still strong in my memory – I passed on Bawden to Emily and luckily she found it delightful too!

  9. Amazingly, I’ve read all of these, and you’ve made some cracking choices! The Light Years is indeed absolutely wonderful, far more incisive and insightful than its reputation would have it. Orbital was on my Books of the Year list, too. Such a clever way to write a novel that basically has no plot but is *interested* in something, and I love the way she handles her characters.

  10. That’s a very good way of categorising books of your year. I find I only remember in detail books I review these days. Three of your five hit the spot for me – Olive Kitteridge, The Colony and Islands of Abandonment – and I’m looking forward to Orbital. I did try with The Light Years but it didn’t click for me. I might try again, particulalry as my historian partner is currently raving about the series.

  11. Wow! Some wonderful books over there. All seem interesting but Howard’s interests me the most. Must search for it.

  12. You’ve got some very interesting choices there! I’ve only read Orbital which was amazing. Elizabeth Jane Howard is on my list for 2025.

  13. Well, my list is all Australian as you know, but if I included internationals I’d say The Colony and The Light Years too.
    ‘Memorable’ was the litmus test I taught my students to use to identify literature. There are many books which are entertaining to read but we quickly forget them. Literature is the books we remember for all of our lives.

  14. Three of your books are on my ‘staying power’ list too; Orbital;The Colony: and Islands of Abandonment. For myself. I’d add Benjamin Myers’ Cuddy … and one or two others that I can’t actually pull out of thehat while I’m on holiday!

    1. I’ ve not heard of Cuddy but I’ve just seen that the Guardian reviewer called it a literary sensation. It does sound intriguing – a part of history about which I know zero

      1. You’d certainly know more of you read it – not an easy read, but a rewarding one.

  15. Memorable is a great litmus test!

    1. The more books you read the harder is must be to remember them in detail – so the ones you do recall must be lodged in the memory for a ery good reason!

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