The ReadDown
by PRH Editors
As we approach the halfway point of 2024, it is a great time to reflect on the books that stood out the most (even among the list of amazing books published this year). Luckily for us, The New York Times Book Review staff have done a lot of the hard work for us and assembled their favorite books of the year so far. Check to see if your favorite made the list!
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James
by Percival Everett
“In this reworking of the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Jim, the enslaved man who accompanies Huck down the Mississippi River, is the narrator, and he recounts the classic tale in a language that is his own, with surprising details that reveal a far more resourceful, cunning and powerful character than we knew.” —The New York Times Books Review
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$28.00
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2
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Good Material
by Dolly Alderton
“Alderton’s novel, about a 35-year-old struggling to make sense of a breakup, delivers the most delightful aspects of romantic comedy — snappy dialogue, realistic relationship dynamics, funny meet-cutes and misunderstandings — and leaves behind clichéd gender roles and the traditional marriage plot.” —The New York Times Books Review
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$28.00
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3
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Martyr!
by Kaveh Akbar
“A young Iranian American aspiring poet and recovering addict grieves his parents’ deaths while fantasizing about his own in Akbar’s remarkable first novel, which, haunted by death, also teems with life — in the inventive beauty of its sentences, the vividness of its characters and the surprising twists of its plot.” —The New York Times Books Review
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$18.00
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4
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The Hunter
by Tana French
“For Tana French fans, every one of the thriller writer’s twisty, ingenious books is an event. This one, a sequel to The Searcher, once again sees the retired Chicago cop Cal Hooper, a perennial outsider in the Irish west-country hamlet of Ardnakelty, caught up in the crimes — seen and unseen — that eat at the seemingly picturesque village.” —The New York Times Books Review
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$19.00
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5
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Wandering Stars
by Tommy Orange
“This follow-up to Orange’s debut, There There, is part prequel and part sequel; it trails the young survivor of a 19th-century massacre of Native Americans, chronicling not just his harsh fate but those of his descendants. In its second half, the novel enters 21st-century Oakland, following the family in the aftermath of a shooting.” —The New York Times Books Review
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$29.00
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6
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Headshot
by Rita Bullwinkel
“Set at a women’s boxing tournament in Reno, Nev., this novel centers on eight contestants, and the fights — physical and emotional — they bring to the ring. As our critic wrote: This story’s impact ‘lasts a long time, like a sharp fist to your shoulder.'” —The New York Times Books Review
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$28.00
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7
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Knife
by Salman Rushdie
“In his candid, plain-spoken and gripping new memoir, Rushdie recalls the attempted assassination he survived in 2022 during a presentation about keeping the world’s writers safe from harm. His attacker had piranhic energy. He also had a knife. Rushdie lost an eye, but he has slowly recovered thanks to the attentive care of doctors and the wife he celebrates here.” —The New York Times Books Review
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$28.00
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8
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Everyone Who Is Gone Is Here
by Jonathan Blitzer
“This urgent and propulsive account of Latin American politics and immigration makes a persuasive case for a direct line from U.S. foreign policy in Central America to the current migrant crisis.” —The New York Times Books Review
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$32.00
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9
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The Wide Wide Sea
by Hampton Sides
“By the time he made his third Pacific voyage, the British explorer James Cook had maybe begun to lose it a little. The scientific aims of his first two trips had shifted into something darker. According to our reviewer, the historian Hampton Sides “isn’t just interested in retelling an adventure tale. He also wants to present it from a 21st-century point of view. The Wide Wide Sea fits neatly into a growing genre that includes David Grann’s The Wager and Candice Millard’s River of the Gods, in which famous expeditions, once told as swashbuckling stories of adventure, are recast within the tragic history of colonialism.'” —The New York Times Books Review
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Hardcover
$35.00
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