It’s our best books of 2022, one of our favourite episodes to record as by this point we’ve done all the hard work of reading, now it’s time to sit back and consider which, of all the books we read in 2022, were our very favourites. That might be a new release or it might be a backlist gem. We’ve also got the books that got us through difficult moments, the books that made us laugh or cry, and the ones we recommended and gave to friends. As we’re nothing if not critical we’ve got some books that didn’t quite live up to our expectations before we finally crown our top three books of 2022.
As snow falls gently around the shed, the fairy lights twinkle, the mulled wine is warm, and we discuss our favourite reads of 2022 with regular special guest, journalist Phil Chaffee. Books mentioned are listed below, but if you want to be surprised look away now.
Book recommendations for Best Books of 2022
Favourite new release: Laura loved TRUST by Herman Diaz, Phil’s favourite (with also-rans The Marriage Portrait by Maggie O’Farrell and Love Marriage by Monica Ali) was THE SECRET LIVES OF CHURCH LADIES by Deesha Philyaw, while Kate loved SEVEN STEEPLES by Sara Baume (with honorable mentions Housebreaking by Colleen Hubbard and Briefly: A Delicious Life by Nell Stevens)
Favourite backlist title: Phil picked THE BETROTHED by Alessandro Manzoni (with also-rans The Blackwater Lightship by Colm Toíbín, and Beware of Pity by Stefan Zweig). Kate loved The Homemaker by Dorothy Canfield-Fisher but her favourite was O CALEDONIA by Elspeth Barker. Laura went for WIVES AND DAUGHTERS by Elizabeth Gaskell.
Favourite non-fiction reads: For Kate it was THE PALACE PAPERS, Tina Brown’s engaging examination of the British royal family and our collective fascination with (or indifference) to them. Kate’s also-rans were Fall by John Preston (did Robert Maxwell fall or was he pushed?), 4,000 Weeks by Oliver Burkeman (if we did but have the time to discuss it) and Entangled Life by Merlin Sheldrake (book everyone says is great turns out to be great). Laura only reads non-fiction when her book club forces her too, but luckily she did end up reading CASTE by Isabel Wilkerson, a book that changed her view of the world within the first fifty pages. Phil loved Putin’s People by Catherine Belton and Not One Inch by M.E. Sarotte, but his overall favourite was THE RED PRINCE by Timothy Snyder.
Favourite Book Club reads. Top of the pile for Laura was MICHEL THE GIANT by Tété-Michel Kpomassie while Phil preferred EIGHT MONTHS ON GHAZZAH STREET by Hilary Mantel. Kate loved The Heart is a Lonely Hunter by Carson McCullers but her ultimate choice was LIGHT PERPETUAL by Francis Spufford
Favourite comfort reads: For Phil it was EITHER/OR by Elif Batuman; he now only wants to read books narrated by her protagonist Selin. Laura escaped to a creepy Swiss hotel with THE SANATORIUM by Sarah Pearse while Kate sank into the arms of old friend E.M. Delafield with THE DIARY OF A PROVINCIAL LADY.
A book that made us laugh or cry: For Kate it was A HEART THAT WORKS by Rob Delaney. Phil enjoyed THREE MEN IN A BOAT by Jerome K. Jerome (in audiobook form read by Hugh Laurie). Laura loved Small by Claire Lynch and The Sentence by Louise Erdrich, but her final choice was THE BREAD THE DEVIL KNEAD by Lisa Allen-Agostini
A book we pressed on a friend: Runner-up for Phil was We Don’t Know Ourselves by Fintan O’Toole but his favourite was THE FREE WORLD by Louis Menand. Laura’s pick was THE SIXTEEN TREES OF THE SOMME by Lars Mytting
Books we read that didn’t quite live up to our expectations: THE ABSOLUTE BOOK by Elizabeth Knox promised much for Laura but ultimately didn’t deliver. Phil really didn’t get on with A LITTLE LIFE by Hanya Yanigahara (and has *really* thought about why) and for Kate LIBERATION DAY by George Saunders didn’t quite meet the soaring heights of his other books.
Overall Book of the Year: Laura’s standout was THE TREES by Percival Everett. Kate loved After Sappho by Selby Wyn Schwartz and The Door by Magda Szabó but her overall favourite read was LONESOME DOVE by Larry McMurtry. Phil meanwhile loved the Elena Ferrante Neopolitan quartet, but his overall book of the year is, as mentioned earlier, THE FREE WORLD by Louis Menand.
A few other books we mention in passing:
Golden Hill by Francis Spufford
The Priory of the Orange Tree by Samantha Shannon
Babel by R. F. Kuang
A Place of Greater Safety by Hilary Mantel
Utopia Avenue by David Mitchell
The English Understand Wool by Helen DeWitt
The Little Library Parties and The Little Library Christmas by Kate Young
Listen here or via your favourite podcast app at this link.
Notes
If Laura’s pick of Michel the Giant intrigued you listen to our full book club episode on it.
Listen to our motherhood-themed episode for more on Small by Claire Lynch.
Hear what Simon Schama has to say about The Betrothed by Alessandro Manzoni here.
Most of the other books we discussed in the episode have appeared as part of our bookshelf round-up shows, or prizelist episodes. If you type the title into our search box the relevant episode will come up.
Transcript
Comments
Did you agree with our picks? Let us know your favourite reads of 2022.
2 Comments
My favourite reads for 2022? Rather than split into all sorts of different categories, just a fiction, non-fiction, then other standouts that in another year could have made it:
Fiction book of the year came very late in the year, and was ‘As I Lay Dying’ by William Faulkner. Everybody said this would be a difficult read, but I found it anything but. Loved the polyphonic, stream of consciousness approach, and got completely buried in it.
Non-fiction book of the year was ‘The Invention of Nature’ by Andrea Wulf. Superb writing about an absolutely fascinating individual who was so big in the 18thC, was pretty much the founder of ecological science, but who is barely known nowadays other than when his name is attached to an ocean current or a penguin!
It was a stonking year for reading, and my shortlist of contenders (particularly fiction) was longer than it has been for years. The list, with some notes:
Fiction
‘One Moonlit Night’ by Caradog Prichard*, my first book in translation from Welsh. A very close runner up to the Faulkner. A child’s growing up in a north Welsh village – utterly grim, all the positiveness of a child’s perspective, one of the most gutwrenching twists ever come across.
‘The Measurement of the World’ by Daniel Kehlmann, thoroughly engaging, perhaps as much the subject material as the writing, even if some of the history is a mite wobbly – the book that led me to Andrea Wulf.
‘The Leopard’ by Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa*. My classic of the year.
‘Golden Hill’ by Francis Spufford. Must read Light Perpetual!
‘The Heart Is A Lonely Hunter’ by Carson McCullers – tremendous characterisation and dissection of loneliness.
‘The Trees’ by Perceval Everett*. Can see totally why it was Laura’s choice – my ‘contemporary book of the year’.
‘A Grain of Wheat’ by Ngugi wa Thiong’o*. One of my eye-openers in African writing.
‘Bright Days’ by JB Priestley* – perhaps my individual author discovery of the year (he’s local to me as well)
Non-Fiction
‘Michel the Giant’ by Tete-Michel Kpomassie*. Very, very close behind Andrea Wulf – not sure how I split them, but just felt this was occasionally a mite repetitive on occasions maybe?
‘Cottongrass Summer’ by Roy Dennis. A lifetime of experience and knowledge in ecological restoration (rewilding in current lingo) in a collection of short essays that cover so much ground in a less than 200 pages.
‘The Astronomer and the Witch’ by Ulinka Rublack. Led to this by a book club choice ‘Everyone Knows Your Mother Is A Witch’ by Rivka Galchen. The fiction was a bit ordinary, but the non-fiction (upon which the novel was based) was an outstanding example of a piece of micro-history illuminating bigger issues (the treatment of older women, early modern society, relevance of history to today – read this at the time also reading about women requiring ‘guardians’ in Qatar etc).
*book club reads (I belong to a number!).
What a list, thanks for sharing. So happy to see many of our favourites on your list. The Astronomer and the Witch sounds fascinating.