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Best Fiction of 2011

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Julian Barnes, The Sense of an Ending.
A retired man is forced to reexamine events from his youth when he is bequeathed a journal written by a school friend who killed himself. Booker prize winner.

T.C. Boyle, When the Killing’s Done.
When rats and feral pigs threaten to upset the ecosystem of the Channel Islands off Santa Barbara, two warring factions disagree over whether to exterminate the invasive species in order to protect the native wildlife.

Geraldine Brooks, Caleb’s Crossing.
In 1665, a preacher’s daughter who yearns for education befriends a young Native American man who goes on to graduate from Harvard College.

Bonnie Jo Campbell, Once upon a River.
After being raped by her uncle and unintentionally causing the death of her father, a teenaged sharp-shooter sets out on a boat journey on the waterways of Michigan to find her missing mother.

Vanessa Diffenbaugh, The Language of Flowers.
On her own after being raised in foster care, an 18-year-old finds work using the knowledge of flowers and their meanings that she learned from the one foster parent who connected with her.

Deby Eisenberg, Pictures of the Past.
When a painting hanging in the Art Institute of Chicago is alleged to have been stolen from its rightful owners by the Nazis, the family history of the man who donated it to the museum comes to light.

Jeffrey Eugenides, The Marriage Plot.
At Brown in the early 1980s, a straight-laced English major falls for a temperamental loner while her old friend thinks he is her destiny.

Siobhan Fallon, You Know When the Men Are Gone.
Interconnected stories about the experiences of military wives at Fort Hood in Texas while their husbands are away at war.

Jennifer Haigh, Faith.
A woman tries to defend her brother Art—a Catholic priest accused of abusing a boy from a troubled home—but she encounters resistance from her family and from Art.

Chad Harbach, The Art of Fielding.
A star shortstop at a small college loses confidence after an errant throw nearly kills his roommate—who gets involved in a risky affair with the college president.

Amanda Hodgkinson, 22 Britannia Road.
After World War II, a Polish man who joined the RAF prepares a home in England for his wife and son who spent years hiding from the Germans in the forests of Poland.

Alice Hoffman, The Dovekeepers.
Four women dovekeepers in Masada share secrets as the Jewish rebels’ mountain stronghold is besieged by the Romans.

Alan Hollinghurst, The Stranger’s Child.
In 1913, Cecil Valance visits the home of his friend George and writes a poem in the autograph book of George’s adoring sister Daphne. After Cecil dies in World War I, his poem becomes famous, and years later a biographer seeks to unravel the true relationship between Cecil and George.

Conn Iggulden, Conqueror.
After the death of Genghis Khan, there is a power struggle to control his vast domain, but it is the scholarly Kublai who conquers territory in China and wins a civil war against his brother to become Great Khan of the Mongol Empire.

Ha Jin, Nanjing Requiem.
Based on the true story of Minnie Vautrin, an American missionary in China who turned her college into a safe haven for 10,000 women and children during the 1937 Nanjing massacre.

Tayari Jones, Silver Sparrow.
A girl who grows up knowing that her father is a bigamist meets her half-sister, who is unaware of their relationship, and secretly befriends her.

Paula McLain, The Paris Wife.
In the 1920s, Hadley Richardson marries Ernest Hemingway and accompanies him to Paris, where their whirlwind life puts a strain on their marriage.  

Tom McNeal, To Be Sung Underwater.
A married woman working in Hollywood thinks back on the first love she left behind in Nebraska when she went off to university and decides to make contact with him again.

Erin Morgenstern, The Night Circus.
Two young magicians are trained by their mentors to compete against each other but end up unexpectedly falling in love.

JoJo Moyes, The Last Letter from Your Lover.
In the 1960s, a woman loses her memory in a car accident and is unsettled to find love letters asking her to leave her husband, while in the present day the letters are found by a journalist intrigued by the story.

Haruki Murakami, 1Q84.
In 1984 Tokyo, an assassin who targets abusive men realizes she’s in a parallel world, while a ghostwriter is hired to rewrite a strange, visionary story by a girl raised in a religious cult.

Tea Obreht, The Tiger’s Wife.
On her way to vaccinate orphans in the Balkans, a woman learns of her grandfather’s death far from home and recalls the stories he told her as a child.

Michael Ondaatje, The Cat’s Table.
In the 1950s, an 11-year-old boy is sent from Ceylon to England aboard a ship where he meets two other boys and an assortment of stray adults who are seated at the cat’s table as far as possible from the captain’s table.

Peter Orner, Love and Shame and Love.
The story of four generations of a Chicago family, centered on Alexander Popper, a failed writer working for the Cook County Public Defender, who meets the mother of his child at the University of Michigan.

Julie Otsuka, The Buddha in the Attic.
A group of “picture brides” from Japan arrive in San Francisco to meet their new husbands and struggle with hard work and a new language and culture.

Samuel Park, This Burns My Heart.
In postwar South Korea, a woman who hopes to become a diplomat is ordered by her father to marry and accepts a suitor who promises to let her work but ends up regretting her decision to turn down another man’s proposal.

Ann Patchett, State of Wonder.
A researcher at a pharmaceutical company is sent into the Amazon to locate her former mentor who has been out of contact for two years while working on a valuable new drug.

Edith Pearlman, Binocular Vision.
A collection of stories presenting a view of the world that the New York Times calls “large and compassionate, delivered through small, beautifully precise moments.”

Rebecca Rasmussen, The Bird Sisters.
Two elderly Wisconsin sisters who have a knack for caring for injured birds and the people who bring them to their house reflect on a summer in 1947 that changed the course of their lives.

Lisa See, Dreams of Joy.
After learning the truth about her parentage, Joy flees to China to find her father and enthusiastically embraces Communism until the new regime’s agricultural policies lead to famine. Sequel to Shanghai Girls.

Kyung-sook Shin, Please Look after Mom.
After a woman goes missing at a Seoul train station, her husband and children look for her and realize they’ve never paid her enough attention.

Rachel Simon, The Story of Beautiful Girl.
In 1968, a developmentally disabled white woman and a deaf African-American man fall in love while they are institutionalized together.

J. Courtney Sullivan, Maine.
Three generations of women from a Boston Irish-Catholic family gather at their summer home in Maine with baggage including a drinking problem, an unplanned pregnancy, and guilt over an untimely death.

Amor Towles, Rules of Civility.
In 1930s New York, two young women who room at a boardinghouse meet a banker in a jazz club and become friends until an accident causes him to choose one of them while the other goes on to forge a career.

Amy Waldman, The Submission.
As part of a jury selecting a memorial for the victims of 9/11, a woman who lost her husband that day champions a plan for a walled garden, but a media circus and public outcry ensue when it is learned that the designer is a Muslim-American architect.

Jessamyn Ward, Salvage the Bones.
A motherless teenage girl living in poverty in Mississippi realizes that she is pregnant as she braces for the arrival of Hurricane Katrina along with her alcoholic father and her three brothers. National Book Award winner.

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