Back in January, I did a post highlighting my top ten favorites of the books I’d read in 2011. This year, I’m doing it a bit earlier so as to coincide with Top Ten Tuesday—this week’s theme being (naturally!) Top Ten Books Read in 2012.
I think it says something about my reading habits that out of the 100-plus books I’ve read this year (excluding individual shorts and a manuscript I beta-read), only three of them were published in my lifetime—and those three were all nonfiction! Another interesting fact about my top ten is that, like last year, several of them (five, to be exact) were found for free or nearly-free on Kindle. On the other hand, four of the remaining five are out of print and I had to endure a long interlibrary-loan wait or resort to buying an antique copy to read them.
So here they are—not in the order of favorites, but just in the order I read them:
A particularly lively and action-filled Bower Western with an intricate plot, this one involving horse-thieving and five wild young sisters who may or may not be mixed up in it. Read my review here.
A bit different from my usual reading fare, this novel of a young doctor working in 1930s New York City stood out because of its powerful, evocative writing. Read my review here.
A beautifully-written Edwardian-era romance, about a woman whose hopes of finding love later in life are imperilled by a rival in her younger cousin. Read my review here.
Fascinating, entertaining, heartbreaking—a look at the Civil War through the diary of a Southern girl who lived through it and saw it firsthand. (I discovered after reading the free Kindle version that it was not, in fact, Sarah Morgan’s complete Civil War diaries, and I want to read the full version someday!)
A charming novella set in a Maine village, about a country girl whose dreams of city glamor affect the course of her romance with her true love. Read my review here.
An engrossing, inspiring adventure in history drawn from the diaries and letters of the author’s grandmother, chronicling her years teaching school in rural Arizona in the early 20th century. Read my review here.
A fine historical adventure novel about a young shipbuilder who undertakes a risky venture to keep his family’s and his town’s fortunes alive in the early days of the young and struggling American republic.
A wonderful short story collection from the early 1900s that explores various family relationships—romantic, touching and humorous. Read my review here.
Have you read any of these books? What were your favorite reads of 2012?