It’s been a cracking year of terrific books! This is what we enjoyed reading the most in 2018.
Wendy Tighe-Umbers - Owner
Never Anyone But You
Rupert Thompson
My book of the year! A beguiling story about two gender neutral feisty young artists who were way ahead of their time.
A Ladder to the Sky
John Boyne
Beautifully written with a sensational plot twist that will keep you turning the pages!
Jenna Todd - Manager
My Year of Rest and Relaxation
Ottessa Moshfegh
A narrator who decides to take the year off by balancing a recipe of prescription medication to keep her asleep for as long as possible. The trouble is, she keeps waking up to find she's been out and about! Bleakly hilarious - My Year is The Bell Jar for the 21st century. My favourite book of 2018.
The Ice Shelf
Anne Kennedy
The Ice Shelf is hilarious, self-aware and clever - following the brilliant anti-hero Janice, as she looks for a temporary home for her fridge before she goes to Antarctica on an artist residency.
This Mortal Boy
Fiona Kidman
Dame Fiona Kidman’s latest book is the fictionalised story of Albert Black, who was the second last person to be hanged in New Zealand in 1955. This Mortal Boy is engaging, very sad and it captures a strong sense of the time. The facts are there, but they are incredibly human. An excellent portrayal of NZ history.
Surinam Reddy - Assistant Manager
Poukahangatus
Tayi Tibble
A sassy, sultry collection of poetry by the Adam Foundation 2018 Prize winner Tayi Tibble. Weaving together pop culture, Maori history, millennial insights and an irreverent brand of feminism, Poukahangatus is an intelligent and punchy debut by a huge New Zealand talent. For fans of Hera Lindsay Bird and Ashleigh Young.
Flights
Olga Tokarczuk
Winner of the 2018 Man Booker International Prize, Flights by Olga Tokarczuk is a novel of infinite fragments and porous borders. A beautifully written meditation on travel, history and humanity, Flights is the perfect novel for fans of Kapka Kassabova and Svetlana Alexievich.
On Michael Jackson
Margo Jefferson
A slim, moving book exploring the life and legacy of The King of Pop by Pulitzer Prize winning critic Margo Jefferson. Filled with little-known insights into his personal and professional life, On Michael Jackson treats the pop icon's personal life with deep empathy and the references in his body of work with an intellectual rigour.
Kiran Dass - Book Buyer
Normal People
Sally Rooney
A startlingly eloquent study of the murky intricacies of emotional and sexual relationships. Normal People charts the intense intellectual and emotional relationship between Marianne and Connell, a young Galway couple from strikingly different backgrounds. It’s a book that you need to read. Right now.
The Cost of Living
Deborah Levy
This may be a short and swift memoir but it’s generous with its wisdom and insight. Riffing on Virginia Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own, Levy writes beautifully about the dualities of being a writer and a woman and the mother-daughter relationship.
Crudo
Olivia Laing
A blazingly raw and sharp work, Laing’s first novel (but fourth book) attempts to capture the atmosphere of anxiety, confusion and shock felt in the UK at the time of the Brexit vote and its aftermath.
In the City of Love’s Sleep
Lavinia Greenlaw
An elegant and exquisitely pitched story about love, recovery and repair, which examines how the tissue of feeling can be prised apart into layers. Lavinia Greenlaw is a poet and it shows in this beautifully crafted, lyrical novel.
Katie Swanson - Children’s Book Buyer
Munmun
Jesse Andrews
A brilliantly original, yet strikingly simple look at privilege through the very tiny eyes of Warner, a Little Poor, whose rat sized stature makes everything in life a challenge. The perfect read for anyone who wants to see the world from a very different point of view.
The List
Patricia Forde
Words; In Ark they are the source of all that’s wrong in the world, the lies, the spin and the way we deny what’s really going on, Speaking List, 500 simple, practical words, is the only way to save us. It’s also how you stop people asking questions.
Wundersmith: The Calling of Morrigan Crow
Jessica Townsend
Mog is learning more about what it means to be a Wundersmith, and how little the people of Nevermoor like and trust them.
The Lost Magician
Piers Torday
The Lost Magician is a lovingly crafted homage to C.S.Lewis, with a literary twist and a lot more robots!
Taylor Adair
Teacher
Gabbie Stroud
An open, painfully, hilariously truthful insight into the life of a teacher in Australia. The PERFECT buy for anyone in your life who is part of the profession, or has been.
Spinning Silver
Naomi Novik
Another fabulous fable from the author of Uprooted,, Novik keeps her slightly dark, yet magical, voice in this Rumpelstiltskin-inspired Novel.
Kingdom of Ash
Sarah J Maas
This epic conclusion to the Throne of Glass series is everything readers hoped it would be. Maas neatly ties the ribbon on this saga, but with a little wriggle room... hopefully for more stories in this world!
Ellen Barr
Milkman
Anna Burns
Set in Northern Ireland during the Troubles, Milkman follows an anonymous eighteen-year-old woman as she battles the unwanted attention of a much older man and the damage his reputation does to hers. Milkman's ominous and atmospheric prose results in a brilliant recreation of Ireland's worst political tensions.
Resin
Ane Riel
Narrated both by 7-year-old Liv and various unsuspecting observers, Resin is a dark, captivating look at one man's crumbling mental state and his increasingly disturbing efforts to keep his dysfunctional family together.
Dictatorland: The Men Who Stole Africa
Paul Kenyon
Chronicling the rise and fall of several African dictatorships—and the Western complicity that allowed them to take root—Dictatorland is a brilliantly researched and extremely compelling read.
Sophie Bijl-Brown
My Year of Rest and Relaxation
Ottessa Moshfesgh This book blends dark and comedy together in THE best way. Moshfegh explores the harsh anxieties of ‘growing up’ with a precision that is almost unbearable.
The Mars Room
Rachel Kushner
The Mars Room offers an emotionally tense critique of the criminal justice system that would move even the coldest right-wing person. You won’t be able to put this book down, or out of your mind.
Never Anyone But You
Rupert Thompson
This is staggeringly beautiful. Rupert Thomson leads your heart into each scene, whether it’s brightly lit or stormy black.
Sight
Jessie Greengrass
Jessie Greengrass perfectly plaits together reminiscence of childhood and ruminations on parenthood. Sight makes you wish that your own folks had some insight into procreation.
Jenn Cheuk
Sabrina
Nick Drnaso
A graphic novel that really uses the medium to enhance the narrative. Following the murder of Sabrina, paranoia and conspiracies start to impact the intertwined lives of each character.
Poukahangatus
Tayi Tibble
Bold, raw and beautiful. Tibble knows how to capture the soul of a situation/experience in her poetry. My favourite description of her work is “classy anger”.
Lucy Diver
The Overstory
Richard Powers
A sprawling novel of many characters, almost Tolstoyian in its breadth and depth of vision, all about the wise old wooden things we depend upon so much. This 400-pager has been described as the Moby Dick of trees, or The Secret Life of Trees in novel form, and it's essential reading for our short-term attention, short-term gain society. You'll never look at trees the same way again.
Crudo
Olivia Laing
With intoxicatingly stylish prose, Olivia Laing takes us through the summer of 2017 in Europe and New York, as her protagonist prepares to get married amidst the political-digital turmoil. A novel about how anyone can be happy when there .are others suffering, about reading the news and feeling numb. Resonated with me and sure to resonate with others.
Convenience Store Woman
Sayaka Murata
A slim but memorable novel about an oddball woman who works in a Japanese convenience store, a bit like a NZ dairy. Is it societal expectations that are disturbing here, or is the protagonist unbalanced? What's really alienating - the alienating job or how everyone expects her to quit it and "be normal"? Either way, Keiko's voice will haunt you long after you've closed the (eye-popping yellow!) covers.
Jony Gabriel
The Mere Wife
Dahvana Headley
A feminist, suburban retelling of Beowulf, this dark fable is both a beautifully written tribute and a haunting story in its own right. Rife with sly commentary and clever satire, this is a novel to savour. My favourite book this year.
Washington Black
Esi Edugyan
Chronicling the adventures of George Washington Black, an escaped slave, as he travels across the globe. From the sugar plantations of Barbados to the Arctic tundra, this is an odyssey that explores colonialism, invention and the complicated meaning of the word “family”.
The Shepherd’s Hut
Tim Winton
When a horrible accident leaves Jaxie Clackton with no other choice but to run away from his small town, he embarks on a lone journey across the Australian bush. Without cellphone signal but with plenty of determination, Jaxie is alone with his thoughts when he stumbles on a few secrets hidden in the bush.
Wyoming Paul
The Pisces
Melissa Broder
This is a rare and strange thing - a novel that manages to perfectly blend terrible Tinder dates and first Brazilian waxes, a frightening and convincing love story between a PhD student and a merman, and the unsettling thoughts of a woman with depression. Smart, funny, sad, and bizarre, The Pisces is a moving story set on Venice Beach and filled with tragic and unforgettable characters.
A Ladder to the Sky
John Boyne
This tells the story of writer and psychopath, Maurice Swift. Told through multiple narrators, most of whom fall for Maurice's looks and charm, we learn what kind of man Maurice is, and what he is capable of doing in the name of success. A compelling and gripping psychological thriller that extends from Nazi Germany to present day.
Normal People
Sally Rooney
Long-listed for the Man Booker prize and written by young Irish writer Sally Rooney, Normal People is a truly modern love story. Alternately told from the perspectives of Connell and Marianne, we learn about their lives, complex relationship, and struggles with mental health during their last year of high school and entrance to university in Ireland. Their story will ring true for anyone who has been in an intense and challenging relationship.