Today, it’s my pleasure to welcome Kim Hays to the blog to talk about her favorite books read in 2024. Since Kim’s own series has been mentioned here several times, and the fourth in the Linzer and Donatelli series, Splintered Justice, is due out in April, I’ll talk about Kim before turning the blog over to her.

Kim Hays is a dual citizen (Swiss/US) who has made her home in Bern since she married a Swiss. Before that, she lived in San Juan, Vancouver, and Stockholm, as well as the US South, the East Coast, and California. She has worked in a wide variety of jobs, from factory forewoman to director of a small nonprofit, and, in Switzerland, from university lecturer in sociology to cross-cultural trainer at several multinational firms. She has a BA from Harvard and a PhD from University of California-Berkeley. Kim began writing mysteries when her son left for college. PESTICIDE, the first book in the Linzer and Donatelli series, was shortlisted for the 2020 Debut Dagger award by the Crime Writers’ Association.

Kim’s books, in order, are Pesticide, Sons & Brothers, A Fondness for Truth, and the forthcoming Splintered Justice.

Thank you, Kim, for taking time to list your favorite books read in 2024.


Mysteries
I try new mystery writers often; I also have about thirty favorite authors whose books I read
or listen to as they come out. I have followed some of these writers for decades. Many of my
favorite writers have died over my years of reading crime fiction: for example, Margaret
Maron, Reginald Hill, and Ellis Peters. I have mourned them and continue to miss their
books, but I find new writers to take their places.


Last year, I discovered four series that have existed for years, and I invested a lot of 2024
in reading or listening to one book after another with the same characters. I’ve mentioned
many of their titles on Thursday’s “What Are You Reading?” They are:

Ann Cleeves’s Vera Stanhope series (1999-ongoing)
I have read Cleeves’s other series but never got into these books until last year. They
are well-written and exciting, and Vera, a detective chief inspector in
Northumberland, is a fascinating character. I recommend beginning with the second
book, Telling Tales; the first is not as good as the others.

Peter Grainger’s DC Smith series (2016-ongoing)
Set in a small English city in Norfolk, these books feature a police team led by a
brilliant sergeant. The first is An Accidental Death.

Val McDermid’s Karen Pirie series (2007-ongoing)
Karen Pirie works cold cases. She appears in The Distant Echo but first takes a central
role in the series’ second book, A Darker Domain.

Mick Herron’s Slough House series (2010-ongoing)
Unlike the other three, these are not police procedurals, my favorite sort of mystery
(and the type I write myself), but novels about a group of discredited British spies
who still manage to solve domestic terrorism cases and survive the politics of MI5.
The first is Slow Horses.

Other genres

Katherine Addison (pen name of Sarah Monette), The Goblin Emperor (2014)

As a child, I liked books with magic, and I’ve never grown out of them, so I often try
fantasy novels. Although this book is set in a world of elves and goblins, it contains very little
magic. It’s mainly about the complications of learning to lead a country when most of the
court is hostile to you.

Emily Henry, Funny Story (2024)

Henry writes contemporary romances with likable men and women facing realistic
problems and getting happy endings! This is my favorite of the four I’ve read.

Barbara Kingsolver, Unsheltered (2018)

This novel is set in New Jersey in the nineteenth and twenty-first centuries. Like
many of Kingsolver’s books, it addresses complicated family relationships while conveying
the wonder and power of nature and the need to respect it. It was moving and thought-
provoking, with satisfying characters.

Liz Moore, The God of the Woods (2024)

This is a mystery in the sense that it’s about a policewoman trying to solve the
disappearance of two children from the same family, fourteen years apart. But it’s about much
more than that, including the corrupting power of wealth. Not only is the book exciting and
emotionally powerful, but its magnificent setting in the Adirondacks is as vital as any of the
characters.

Jojo Moyes, One Plus One (2014)

I find this English novelist’s books uneven and have left several unfinished. But this
one delighted me. I’m fascinated by the complications of social class differences, and this
story brings together a wealthy single man whose life allows him to be self-centered until he
gets himself into a crisis and a working-class mother with two challenging kids, a slew of
problems, and no money to address them.

Ann Napolitano, Hello Beautiful (2023)

This excellent novel, set mainly in Chicago, tells the story of four sisters from
adolescence to middle age and the man they love in different ways. It deserves all the praise it
received. If you want to know more about it, here’s my review:
https://kimhaysbern.com/2024/07/24/four-sisters/

Natasha Pulley, The Mars House (2024)

This book is about a colony on Mars trying to cope with its despised refugees from
Earth. It has a very appealing main character, a former principal dancer from the London
ballet who is struggling to survive on Mars. Its presentation of the new social order on Mars
is fascinating. My review is at the end of this post on novels that present alternate worlds:
https://kimhaysbern.com/2024/11/20/out-of-this-world/

Jo Walton, Lent (2020)

Jo Walton is Welsh and Canadian, and her books have won many awards. She likes to
play with time and create alternate realities. Lent is about Girolamo Savonarola, an important
historical figure in fifteenth-century Florence, and many of his real-life contemporaries. In
Lent, history and fantasy are woven together brilliantly.


Thank you, Kim!