JBR wrote:
1) The Dutch House - Ann Patchett.
2) Traitors of Rome (Eagles of the Empire 18) - Simon Scarrow.
3) Night Frost - RD Wingfield.
4) Chessmen of Mars - Edgar Rice Burroughs.
5) Three Sisters, Three Queens - Philippa Gregory.
6) Away With The Penguins - Hazel Prior.
7) Confessions of a Curious Bookseller - Elizabeth Green.
8. James Acaster's Classic Scrapes - James Acaster.
9) Nina Stibbe - Paradise Lodge.
10) Ann Patchett - Taft.
11) Susanna Clarke - Piranesi.
12) Paul McAuley - War of the Maps.
13) Susan Orlean - The Library Book.
14) Adharanand Finn - The Rise of the Ultra Runners. As it sounds - a look, via personal experience, at ultra running (anything longer than a marathon). He's a funny bloke, keen, I think, not to give anyone else too much exposure, but captures the emotion of it well. I wonder whether that comes across if you've little interest in running, though.
15) Samanta (yes, really) Schweblin - Little Eyes. What if Furby-like toys (Kentukis), with a camera, motorised wheels and squawk box (chirps or squeaks, no voice), were connected to an anonymous user. You could pay to be user or owner, if the device runs out of charge or is broken, the connection is lost forever. A look at the bad and the good that results from those relationships. Sometimes it seems a bit clumsy in expression, but I think that's a translation problem. Early on I mostly thought "god, get a life, people", but then, it's safe to assume some people would have that reaction, and they'd be too boring to put in the book, so eventually I joined in and went with it. It's a mostly interesting experiment.