Top 30 Books of the Last Decade: A Must-Read List

My favourite books of the last ten years

Every year my librarian husband and I each decide on our top ten reads of the year. This year’s list (2025) will take us into our eleventh year, so before we announce them I thought I’d look back on my 30 favourites from the past ten years. I usually read 80 – 100 books a year, both fiction and non-fiction, and from my top ten each year I pick my top three, apart from 2016 when apparently I found it too difficult, so I have retrospectively picked three from that group.

Famous and less well-known

Some of these books you’ll no doubt have heard of: Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout, Lessons by Ian McEwan, but others are likely to be less well known but still deserve your attention: Halibut on the Moon by David Vann, The Hare by Melanie Finn, and Hot Springs Drive by Lindsay Hunter.

Fiction and Non-fiction and the rest of the stats

There are four non-fiction books in my list: Dadland, After the Eclipse, The Journal of a Disappointed Man, and Maurice and Maralyn. There are 16 female authors and 14 male. The oldest was published in 1947: A View of the Harbour by Elizabeth Taylor. One author appears twice: Ian McEwan. There are 14 American authors, 9 British, 2 Canadian, 1 South African, 1 Italian, 1 German, and 1 New Zealand. There two books in translation. And I love them all.

The full list

Click on the year to be taken through to the page where I reviewed the books, to find out why it made my top three that year and what each is about:

  • 2015
  • The Past by Tessa Hadley
  • Sweetland by Michael Crummey
  • The Sea, The Sea by Iris Murdoch
  • 2016
  • Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout
  • Idaho by Emily Ruskovich
  • Mothering Sunday by Graham Swift
  • 2017
  • Dadland by Keggie Carew
  • Housekeeping by Marilynne Robinson
  • My Absolute Darling by Gabriel Talent
  • 2018
  • The Innocent by Ian McEwan
  • The Wall by Marlen Haushofer
  • After the Eclipse by Sarah Perry
  • 2019
  • The Journal of a Disappointed Man by W.N.P Barbellion
  • Mrs Bridge by Evan S. Connell
  • Halibut on the Moon by David Vann
  • 2020
  • Writers and Lovers by Lily King
  • The Hare by Melanie Finn
  • Bear by Marian Engle
  • 2021
  • In a Strange Room by Damon Galgut
  • Snow, Dog, Foot by Claudio Morandini
  • Leave the World Behind by Rumaan Alam
  • 2022
  • The Swimmer by Chloe Lane
  • Burntcoat by Sarah Hall
  • A View of the Harbour by Elizabeth Taylor
  • 2023
  • Lessons by Ian McEwan
  • Hot Springs Drive by Lindsay Hunter
  • The Great Believers by Rebecca Makkai
  • 2024
  • Maurice and Maralyn by Sophie Elmhirst (called A Marriage at Sea in the US)
  • North Wood by Daniel Mason
  • The Italian Teacher by Tom Rachman

2025 Books of the Year

You’ll have to wait until after Christmas to find out what my and my librarian’s books of this year are, but I can tell you there are some crackers.

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Have you read any on my list? I’d love to know your favourites.

Book titles: Bitter Orange

This is an edited article that first appeared on my website in 2019.

Archaeology

The titles of my books have always tended to evolve, and my third novel, Bitter Orange was no exception. Usually though, the early Word files are simply called, Book 1 or Book 4, or whichever it is. But this novel had a title from the beginning: Archaeology. I thought it was going to be about people digging things up, literally and metaphorically.

I keep a writing diary and on 22nd April 2016 (the novel was started on 23rd December 2015), I thought that Archaeology was too difficult a word to write. ‘Those three bloody vowels in a row are beginning to annoy me,’ I wrote. And on 30th August of that year, I added, ‘I’m thinking of changing the title to Blood Orange’.

Blood Orange

For the rest of the time I was writing it, the novel was called Blood Orange, and this was what it was called when I sent it to my literary agent, and when it was submitted to my publishers in the UK, the US, and Canada. And they bought it with that name. Blood Orange.

The story is about Frances, a woman who is commissioned to survey the follies in the gardens of an English country house in 1969. There she meets and becomes besotted by Cara and Peter and visits the orangery alongside the house which has (or had at the time of writing) a single blood DSCF8951orange tree, so enormous it has broken through the glass panes. Blood oranges are sweet, and the fruit are ripe at a certain time of year. Three blood oranges are picked from the tree and squeezed to make juice – a point integral to the plot.

Then, in July 2017, after the book was sold, my editor at Penguin told me that the sale of another book, a debut thriller by Harriet Tyce had just been announced in The Bookseller (the UK trade magazine for publishing), and it was also called Blood Orange.

Titles of books, or albums or anything else aren’t copyrighted, but it was quickly agreed that publishing books with the same title around the same time was not a good idea, and Harriet’s had been announced, and mine hadn’t. It was mine that would have to change.

Bitter Orange

Changing a title I’d been happy with for months if not years was a difficult thing to accept. I was angry – at no one in particular – for quite a while.

I had lots of conversations with my editors and agents and lots of suggestions were bounced back and forth. I went through the novel with a highlighter and I wrote lists of word combinations. It was Sarah Lutyens, one of the founders of my literary agents, Lutyens and Rubinstein who came up with Bitter Orange. I think she just emailed it to HoAme one day – two words that sounded perfect together.

Except, that a bitter orange (which is not eaten or juiced, but generally used to make marmalade), is a very different thing to a blood orange. I wrote to Patricia Oliver from Global Orange Groves who had been helping me with orange tree advice for the book. Bitter oranges fruit at different times to blood oranges, and the juice is barely drinkable. Anyone who writes will know that you make what might seem like a simple change in the text: blood to bitter, but the repercussions ripple on and on. If I needed my characters to try to drink the juice, someone needed to realise they needed sugar, then they had to get sugar, which meant someone had to go shopping, which meant someone had to leave the house when I needed them to remain there. I faced lots of niggly revising.

Bitter Orange is better

But once I’d sorted out the changes and had lived with the new title for a while, it seemed more suited than Blood Orange, which I think sounds very thriller-like, and Bitter Orange isn’t a thriller.

By the time the book was published in the UK, in the US, and Canada, I loved the title: Bitter Orange.

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What do you think about the title? Let me know

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Bitter Orange has been published in Germany, US, Canada, Greece, France, Spain, and Russia, and Turkey. It is available as a audio book and has recently been optioned for film. 

From Editing to Publication: Proofs, ARCs, Quotes and Blurbs

This is part of a series about the process, from my point of view, of how my sixth novel,
Hunger and Thirst moves from editing through to publication. Read my earlier posts about US Cover Design, structural and line edits, and copyedits.

Atmospheric, psychologically vivid, and unputdownable” Alice Winn, author of In Memoriam

ARCs and Proofs

ARCs (Advanced Reader Copies) and Proofs are the US and UK words for the same thing: a physical or digital version of the book which is sent out to other authors for quotes and blurbs, and to book reviewers, event organisers, and booksellers. This version usually uses the text before the final proofread because of timing, so it often includes typos and sometimes bigger issues in the story, all of which will hopefully be resolved before the hardback is printed.

Blurbs and quotes

A blurb is the US term for a quote (the UK term) provided by another author which is usually put on the cover, and sometimes inside the finished version. I get my fair share of proofs sent to me asking for a quote for the cover, and I’m nearly always happy to receive them*, but I don’t always provide a quote, and never if I don’t like the book and don’t finish it.

Do we need them?

This year (2025) the perennial debate came round again about whether the industry needs blurbs; how time-consuming they are for authors (to read the book and write the blurb), and for editors to ask agents and other editors to ask their authors for blurbs. My UK editor estimated that asking for blurbs takes up 80% of her time!

Lots of readers say they never pay attention to blurbs on books, and choose what they’re going to read from reviews or what the book is about. But although blurbs might still be useful to some readers, they are helpful for when the publisher is trying to get a retailer to stock the book and help promote it. Retailers like Waterstones are pitched many many books by publishers’ sales teams or sent catalogues to pick which books they are going to stock, and quotes for these books help guide them. If your book has a quote from Stephen King, say, then they are very likely to take note.

Why I think writers should say yes to ARCs and proofs

Last week I was speaking to an editor at a large publisher and I asked whether one of her high-profile authors might be interested in a proof of Hunger and Thirst. The editor seemed embarrassed to have to tell me that this author has told her editor and agent to never send her any proofs and never ask if she wants any. Although she writes contemporary fiction, she apparently doesn’t read it. The number of books we’re sent can be overwhelming, I get that, and yet that author was a debut once, trying to find her space in the world of publishing with her editor asking already published authors for quotes. I feel there should be more paying-it-forward going on. Afterall, it’s easy to say yes to receiving a proof but adding the disclaimer that they might not have time to read it. Who knows, they might find a gem.

*Which proofs I won’t accept

I don’t like receiving unsolicited physical proofs, if someone knows my address; I’d much rather be asked via email first because there are some genres which aren’t for me: most historical fiction, most comic novels, most science fiction and fantasy. I never accept digital proofs because I work on screens enough already. And I don’t accept self-published books.

Netgalley

In the UK book bloggers, booksellers, librarians, and reviewers can request a digital proof of books they’d like to read, including Hunger and Thirst. You can sign up here, but please do note that the vetting of whether you’re accepted or not is up to my publisher.

From Editing to Publication: How a Book makes it onto Book Shop Shelves. US Cover Design

Spot the difference between these two images. Answers below

This is the third part in a series about how my next book, Hunger and Thirst moves through the process of editing to arriving onto bookshop shelves. The first part covered structural and line edits with my UK and US editors at Fig Tree/ Penguin and Tin House / Zando, the second part looked at copyedits and the difference between UK and US editions, and in this part I’m going to look at the US cover. (I’ve seen the UK cover, and it’s very different, but I’m not allowed to officially show it yet.)

Readers ask me a lot about covers: how the process works, how involved I get, whether I get any say; I’ve even been asked whether I design them myself given my art background.

The process starts early with Masie Cochran, my editor at Tin House / Zando asking me to send her any book covers I’ve seen recently that I’ve loved. I don’t know how much these feed into her planning, but I like that it makes me feel like I have some influence! So, I sent her half a dozen, and then a few months later she says she has a cover, and attaches it to an email.

It is the most terrifying moment clicking open on that email. What if I don’t like it? Luckily, that’s never happened with any of my books from Tin House. They’ve all been designed by their in-house Art Director who is now Beth Steidle, and who designed this cover for Hunger and Thirst.

I showed the cover to my husband and I kept opening the email over the course of the next day and I only loved it more. But, I had some very small comments, which I fed back to Masie who passed them to Beth, and then a while later I was sent the revised version.

Did you spot the differences between the two pictures? The one on the left was the first one I was sent and the one on the right is the final cover.

  • I wasn’t sure about how the sculpture’s right leg lifts up on the left of the cover. It gave her a look of a mermaid, and so Beth removed that.
  • I wasn’t sure that the flies looked enough like flies, and I wasn’t sure about the fly in the words ‘a novel’. So Beth changed the flies, removed the fly within the words, and put another fly on the sculpture’s arm.
  • Beth made some changes of her own to the colours and density of the dots etc.

The cover was officially revealed on CrimeReads website, along with an extract from the beginning of the novel (which I edited to make it shorter but still work as a narrative). I also wrote a piece about why this cover works so well for the story:

The main character, Ursula is a reclusive and famous sculptor, and so while the figure on the cover might be one of her carvings, it could also be Ursula herself caught in a moment of turning away from the camera. The first line of the novel mentions a murder and a body, so I love how the red shape on the head implies this might even be the victim. One of the narrative strands is the dares teenagers set each other, and it’s very clever how the fonts bring to mind words scrawled in haste or even graffiti. Another theme is the perception of women’s bodies and in particular body hair, and I love how this striking image picks up on this, not only in the angle of the sculpture to the viewer and the beautiful heft of her, but also how the dots give a subtle indication of hair. And then finally, you see the flies, four of them perched there; an unsettling suggestion that something bad is coming.

What do you think of the US cover – send me a comment!

25% Off Hunger & Thirst Pre-orders at Waterstones

Pre-order Hunger and Thirst from Waterstones today and get 25% off! Offer ends 17th October. Just enter OCTOBER25 at checkout. And you’ll get a sneaky preview of the UK cover, which I’m not officially revealing yet.

The book will land on your doormat in early May 2026, and you won’t pay until it’s dispatched. (And if for some reason the price goes down before then, you’ll pay the lower price.)

Pre-orders help books and authors enormously The more pre-orders, the more likely book shops are to stock Hunger & Thirst, and the more they stock, the more readers will see it and hopefully buy it. I’m hugely grateful for every pre-order.

Hunger and Thirst is about Ursula, who at sixteen accepts a dare from her best friend to kill someone and when she does, she is haunted – literally haunted – for the rest of her life.

Pre-order Hunger and Thirst from Waterstones.

US Cover of Hunger and Thirst, Revealed!

I’m delighted to reveal the US cover of Hunger and Thirst which will be published by Tin House, an imprint of Zando, on 2nd June 2026. I love it so much: the boldness of the yellow font, the sculpture (the main character in the book is a sculptor), and the flies… I won’t tell you how the flies come into it; you’ll have to read it find out.

Yesterday, CrimeReads revealed the cover on their website, together with a piece I wrote about why this is the perfect cover – designed by Beth Steidle – for Hunger and Thirst.

They also published an excerpt from the beginning of the book, so if you’d like a taster before you pre-order, you can read it here.

And if you’re in the US here’s a list of places that you can pre-order it from, or of course you local independent bookstore.

For those in the UK and Canada, you’ll have to wait a little longer to see these covers. But let me know what you think of this one!

About the book
1987: After a childhood trauma and years in and out of the care system, sixteen-year-old Ursula finds herself with a new job delivering mail at a local art school, a bed in a halfway house, and—delightfully— some new friends, including wild-child, Sue. When Ursula is invited to join a squat at The Underwood, a mysterious house whose owners met a terrible end, she can’t resist this hodgepodge family. But as Sue’s behavior and demands become more extreme, Ursula who has always been hungry—for food—and more importantly for love, acceptance and belonging, carries out her friend’s terrible dare. And, for this, Ursula finds herself literally haunted.

Thirty-six years later, Ursula is a renowned, reclusive sculptor living under a pseudonym in London when her identity is exposed by true-crime documentary-maker, Emma Zahini who is digging into an unsolved disappearance. But it is not only the filmmaker who has discovered Ursula’s whereabouts, and as her past catches up with her present, Ursula must work out whether the monsters are within her or without.

Pre-order Hunger and Thirst in the US.

Join Our Oxford Novel Writing Retreat—Limited Places!

I’m very excited to let you know that fellow author and Oxford University creative writing tutor, Lucy Atkins and I are running a one-day novel writing retreat in Oxford on 13th November 2025. We’ll be teaching character, setting, inspiration, plot and lots more. It’s going to be intense, informative and fun. Places are very limited, so book yours quickly. Click here to find out more.

Five Things I Can’t Live Without

I’m revisiting some older articles, and this is one, Five on Friday, I wrote for Jill’s Book Cafe Blog back in 2023 just after my fifth novel, The Memory of Animals was published (I’ve edited it slightly to update links etc). Five on Friday takes the format of five questions which require five answers. Read on to find out five things most people don’t know about me, five things I’d still like to achieve, and more.

Continue reading

The Friend by Sigrid Nunez

Five big stars for The Friend by Sigrid Nunez. I chose this book for the book club I run at the Cabinet Rooms in Winchester. It was pretty divisive, with lots of people actively disliking it, but I adored it.

An unnamed narrator is a writer and creative writing teacher living in Manhattan when a close friend of hers – someone she had a brief affair with and is also a writer and teacher – kills himself. The narrator is persuaded by the man’s widow to look after his Great Dane, Apollo even though her apartment doesn’t allow pets. This rather slight story is interspersed with musings about creative writing teaching, loss, suicide, friendship and much more. My father had recently taken his own life when I read it, and rather than it distressing me because of the links (I am still distressed by everything, so a book makes no difference) it brought everything into focus.


And it made a brilliant book club book even though many people hated it. There was so much to discuss and some of the things other members pointed out were brilliantly revealing.

Buy it from Bookshop.org here.

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