10 Books To Read This Spring

Whether you need a book club recommendation or something to enjoy in your backyard this spring, these books are some of the best of Spring 2015. There are new novels from old favorites, unique voices, and continuing sagas of families you may already know. Plus a memoir that looks fascinating!
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.

Whether you need a book club recommendation or something to enjoy in your backyard this spring, these books are some of the best of Spring 2015. There are new novels from old favorites, unique voices, and continuing sagas of families you may already know. Plus a memoir that looks fascinating!

Continuing the tale of the Todd family, whose daughter Ursula relived World War II in England over and over again in Life After Life, Kate Atkinson's new book A God in Ruins focuses on her younger brother, Teddy.

Elizabeth Berg is the author of many books about the inner lives of women living ordinary lives. With The Dream Lover, Berg steps out and writes a historical novel about the writer George Sand, set in Paris.

The Girl on the Train, by Paula Hawkins, is a blockbuster -- it's sold 750,000 copies so far. Her first novel, it's a mystery with characters you'll despise and characters you'll empathize with, all the while wondering who did it.

Kazuo Ishiguro is the author of Booker Prize winner The Remains of the Day. In his new book, The Buried Giant, set in the very beginning of the 20th century, he follows an elderly couple as they set out, after the Romans leave Britain, to find the son they haven't seen in years. A story of love, discovery, and determination.

Think of Kelly Link's stories as The Twilight Zone with a sense of humor. Each story in Get in Trouble creates a unique and strange world where odd things can happen, and do happen. Her first short story collection for adults in a decade has been widely praised.

When her father suddenly died on a London street, Helen Macdonald, an avid falconer, decides to train a hawk, the deadly predator, from infancy through adulthood. Seeing herself in the demeanor of the bird, Helen grieves while training her hawk. It sounds unusual and fascinating, and makes H is for Hawk certain to be a great read.

Fans of history and biography know that David McCullough is a master of the genre. His new book, The Wright Brothers, tells the story of the brilliant minds behind the creation of the first flying machine. Also check out McCullough's books Truman and John Adams, his two Pulitzer Prize-winning biographies.

If you haven't read Some Luck, do that first. Then come back and read Early Warning, part two (of three parts) of the Langdon family saga. Part one began in 1920 ; part two begins in 1953. Jane Smiley's writing will make you feel as if you're one of them--or wish that you were. If you haven't read her Pulitzer Prize winner, A Thousand Acres, you should. Early Warning is currently available on pre-order until the release on April 28.

Devoted fans of Pulitzer Prize winner Anne Tyler have been waiting patiently for her next book, and A Spool of Blue Thread does not disappoint. Like Jane Smiley (above), Anne Tyler can take an ordinary family and make their lives fascinating. A story of a house, the generations of the Whitshank family who have lived there, and their secrets, both kept and shared.

Set in Baton Rouge, My Sunshine Away juxtaposes the charmed childhood of Lindy Simpson with a horrific crime committed in her neighborhood. Adolescence and unraveling families, summer and cookouts all combine to make M.O. Walsh's book a page turner.

If you like this list, make sure you check out my other book suggestions on other lists!

Earlier on Huff/Post50:

Cheese Puffs And Various Other Unhealthy Snacks

7 Things Post 50s Say They're Addicted To

Popular in the Community

Close

What's Hot