The end of the year is upon us, and we are about to embark into 2017. Given that we both did a lot of reading this past year, and had a lot of opinions about what we read, we thought that we would reveal our top picks of the year this entire week*! So today I’m going to countdown from ten until six. There will probably be some familiar titles on here, but maybe a few I haven’t even talked about yet…
Pick Number 10: “Everything, Everything” by Nicola Yoon
The first book on this list that I haven’t reviewed on this blog! This realistic YA book is about a girl named Madeline who has a rare disease that means she needs to stay in a very clean, sterilized environment, lest she fall incredibly sick. But when she meets the new boy in the neighborhood, she starts to wonder if she could have more. This book is poignant, sweet, and incredibly romantic as well. Though a little predictable, Madeline is so well written and the situation so unique to YA fiction it has to be noted and recognized. Yoon is a great writer, who will hopefully be gracing us with her books and words for a long time.

Pick Number 9: “Disappearance at Devil’s Rock” by Paul Tremblay.
“Disappearance at Devil’s Rock” Review
Paul Tremblay’s newest horror novel, this one concerning the disappearance of a teenage boy, took some time to build up, but once it reached the breaking point it turned into a very disturbing, upsetting, and tragic read. Tremblay is masterful at mounting his suspense, and along with that he knows how to portray some very real and complex people in a heartwreching situation. I had this book in my mind long after I finished it, especially the concept of Shadow Doppelgangers, and “The Third Man” phenomenon personified. And plus, outside of the disturbing, his take on grief is so raw and haunting that thinking about it still aches.

Pick Number 8: “DC Comics Bombshells: Enlisted” by Marguerite Bennett
“DC Comics Bombshells: Enlisted” Review
This was a comic that warmed my DC Girl heart! I loved seeing all my favorite female superheroes from the DC Universe put in an alternate history WWII storyline, and I especially loved that so many of them were incredibly well thought out and strongly portrayed. It was fun seeing Wonder Woman, Batwoman, Supergirl, and many others settling into fun roles that reflect the time period, but also let them show off their unique strengths. And plus, DC Heroines fighting Nazis??? Boy howdy, am I there!! Comics fans looking for a gracefully executed feminist story should pick this up post haste!

Pick Number 7: “Hidden Bodies” by Caroline Kepnes
“Hidden Bodies” by Caroline Kepnes Review
I also read the first book in this series, “You”, but I enjoyed “Hidden Bodies” a bit more than that one. I think the reason for this is because Kepnes was fully comfortable with her sociopathic main character Joe Goldberg in this story. We know he’s a creep now, and we are allowed to revel in his reprehensibility and let ourselves enjoy it in a schadenfreude kind of way. I liked this one so much I actually listened to it on audiobook a few months after reading it, and I still laughed out loud and cringed at the seriously icky parts. I still hold out hope that this isn’t the last we’ve seen of Joe Goldberg.

Pick Number 5: “Afterlife with Archie: Escape from Riverdale” by Robert Aguirre-Sacasa
“Afterlife with Archie: Escape from Riverdale” Review
I’m still dumbfounded that Archie Comics is the publisher that is putting out the best horror comics in the game right now. But “Afterlife with Archie: Escape from Riverdale” is a solid and scary zombie story. Aguirre-Sacasa does a great job of taking these familiar characters and turning them into zombie killers while keeping them true to their characters. Along with that, he makes a few of them far more interesting, and sometimes twisted, than their original iterations. Specifically the Blossom Twins, Cheryl and Jason. I’m still totally gagged by their relationship in this, in both meanings of the word. A great horror comic to be sure.
So that’s ten through six. Next time I will give a countdown of my top five. What have been some of your favorite reads of 2016?
*Note: I won’t be including re-reads on this list. I love you, “Transmetropolitan”, but this is for new titles!







Book: “East” by Edith Pattou
Book: “NOS4A2” by Joe Hill
Book: “The Latke Who Couldn’t Stop Screaming” by Lemony Snicket and LIsa Brown (Ill.)
Book: “In God We Trust, All Others Pay Cash” by Jean Shepherd
Book: “I am Malala” by Malala Yousafzai and Christina Lamb
Book: “Shanghai Girls” by Lisa See
Book: “V for Vendetta” by Alan Moore and David Lloyd
Book: “Hidden Figures” by Margot Lee Shetterly
Book: “Rad Women Worldwide” by Kate Schatz and Miriam Klien Stahl (Ill.)
Book: “Den of Wolves” by Juliet Marillier
Book: “Heartless” by Marissa Meyer
Book: “Flashfall”by Jenny Moyer
Book: “Lovemurder” by Saul Black
Book: “Dead Girls Society” by Michelle Krys
Book: “Gotham Academy (Vol.3): Yearbook” by Brendan Fletcher (cover not final, apparently. Okay, werk.)
Book: Dracula by Bram Stoker
Book: “The Shining” by Stephen King
Book: “Coraline” by Neil Gaiman


Film:
Film:
Film:
Film:
Film:
Book: “The Stand” by Stephen King
Book: “Station Eleven” by Emily St. John Mandel



Book: The “Scary Stories” Series by Alvin Schwartz and Stephen Gammell (Ill.)
Book: “A Clockwork Orange” by Anthony Burgess
Book: “The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian” by Sherman Alexie
Book: “The Giver” by Lois Lowry
Book: “A Wrinkle in Time” by Madeleine L’Engle
Book: “Where the Wild Things Are” by Maurice Sendak
Book: “Tumbling” by Caela Carter
Book: “Fever Pitch” by Nick Hornby
Book: “The Eighty-Dollar Champion: Snowman, the Horse That Inspired a Nation” by Elizabeth Letts