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Books

Best books 2020: What to read, shared by Amazon Books editors

Best book of 2020 awarded to Brittany Barnett for ‘A Knock at Midnight.’ Other chosen books span genres like history, science, nonfiction and more.
Nov. 19, 2020, 6:04 PM EST
Sydney Williams

Sydney Williams

The best books of 2020, according to Amazon Books editors, span multiple genres including history, science, nonfiction, mystery, romance and more.
The best books of 2020, according to Amazon Books editors, span multiple genres including history, science, nonfiction, mystery, romance and more.Crown; Riverhead Books; Knopf

Amazon Books editors frequently comb through bestsellers and popular books on Amazon, rounding up some of the best for inclusion in various roundups and lists. "In late Fall, they look through the best books published between January and December before casting ballots for the Best Books Of The Year," an Amazon Books spokesperson told NBC News Shopping. "Many of the editorial picks for the best books are also customer favorites and bestsellers, but they strive to spotlight the best books readers might not otherwise hear about, too."

Best books, according to Amazon Books editors

1. "A Knock at Midnight: A Story of Hope, Justice, and Freedom" by Brittany K. Barnett

  • Publisher: The Crown Publishing Group
  • Goodreads: 4.54-star average rating, more than 400 ratings

Al Woodworth: At times, Brittany K. Barnett’s memoir reads like page-turning crime fiction; at others, a galvanizing and redemptive portrait of a lawyer trying to defend Black lives that were never protected in the first place. Urgent, necessary, hopeful—and a knockout read.

A Knock at Midnight: A Story of Hope, Justice, and Freedom

A Knock at Midnight

2. “Migrations: A Novel” by Charlotte McConaghy

  • Publisher: Flatiron Books
  • Goodreads: 4.24-star average rating, more than 4,700 ratings

Woodworth: Teeming with adventure, darkness, love, and loss, Migrations is a novel that’s impossible to put down as you learn about the life of Franny Stone--a sharp, flawed, and determined woman who will stop at nothing to regain what she’s lost.

Migrations: A Novel

Migrations

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3. “Blacktop Wasteland: A Novel” by S.A. Crosby

  • Publisher: Flatiron Books
  • Goodreads: 4.16-star average rating, more than 3,800 ratings

Vanessa Cronin: Blacktop Wasteland is a pedal to the metal thriller about a retired getaway driver, caught between the rock of poverty and the hard place of Southern racism, who gambles on one last heist to get him ahead. Toggling between high-stakes action, and quiet—even tender—family scenes, this is Southern noir with heart.

Blacktop Wasteland: A Novel

Blacktop Wasteland

4. “Group: How One Therapist and a Circle of Strangers Saved My Life” by Christie Tate

  • Publisher: Avid Reader Press / Simon & Schuster
  • Goodreads: 3.87-star average rating, over 1,750 ratings

Sarah Gelman: Christie Tate was a summer intern at a law firm and at top of her class, and yet her memoir opens with her sitting in her car alone, wishing someone would shoot her. Written with the gift of hindsight, Group is an honest, heart-breaking and hilarious look at reaching rock bottom and climbing your way back to life.

Group: How One Therapist and a Circle of Strangers Saved My Life

Group: How One Therapist and a Circle of Strangers Saved My Life

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5. “The Vanishing Half: A Novel” by Brit Bennett

  • Publisher: Riverhead Books
  • Goodreads: 4.29-star average rating, more than 140,000 ratings

Woodworth: Ideal for book clubs, The Vanishing Half examines sisterhood, personal identity, starting fresh, and what it means to be Black (and white) in America. Bennett is known for creating taut family dramas, and like her brilliant debut, The Mothers, this novel shows just how strong the bonds of sisters are, even at their weakest.

The Vanishing Half: A Novel

The Vanishing Half

6. “Fifty Words for Rain: A Novel” by Asha Lemmie

  • Publisher: Dutton
  • Goodreads: 4.01-star average rating, over 3,800 ratings

Erin Kodicek: Set in post WWII Japan, this sweeping story about a love child left with her scandalized, and brutal, grandparents will have you rooting for its resilient heroine, Nori, who must summon the courage to assert her own identity and live life on her own terms. This is a debut you don't want to miss.

Fifty Words for Rain: A Novel

Fifty Words for Rain

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7. “Caste: The Origins of our Discontents” by Isabel Wilkerson

  • Publisher: Random House
  • Goodreads: 4.63-star average rating, more than 15,000 ratings

Chris Schluep: Ten years after her award-winning The Warmth of Other Suns, Wilkerson argues that our entire social structure is built upon an unrecognized caste system. White people—whether their ancestors were slave owners or abolitionists—have been able to live and thrive under these set assumptions of inequality. This is a mind-expanding book.

Caste (Oprah's Book Club): The Origins of Our Discontents

Caste

8. “The Girl with the Louding Voice: A Novel” by Abi Daré

  • Publisher: Dutton
  • Goodreads: 4.48-star average rating, more than 31,700 ratings

Kodicek: In this rousing tale of courage and pluck, a 14-year-old Nigerian girl is sold into servitude by her father when her mother—a proponent of education—passes away. You will root for Adunni as she endeavors to escape her sorry—and often harrowing—lot, and applaud the kind strangers who buoy her efforts, and her spirits.

The Girl with the Louding Voice: A Novel

The Girl with the Louding Voice

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9. “Memorial: A Novel” by Bryan Washington

  • Publisher: Riverhead Books
  • Goodreads: 3.8-star average, more than 1,600 ratings

Schluep: Memorial unfolds with depth, humor, and telling detail. Mike is a Japanese-American chef. His partner, Benson, is a Black daycare teacher. When Mike leaves Houston to visit his ailing father in Osaka, his mother comes to live with Benson. You will laugh, cry, and ask yourself: What makes a family?

Memorial: A Novel

Memorial

10. “Hidden Valley Road: Inside the Mind of an American Family” by Robert Kolker

  • Publisher: Doubleday
  • Goodreads: 4.15-star average rating, over 28,000 ratings

Cronin: Hidden Valley Road is a medical mystery story—with twists and reveals to rival any thriller—that shows how an all-American family was ravaged as an elusive, centuries-old mental illness caught and kept them in its crosshairs for decades.

Hidden Valley Road: Inside the Mind of an American Family

Hidden Valley Road

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11. “Mexican Gothic” by Silvia Moreno-Garcia

  • Publisher: Del Rey
  • Goodreads: 3.76-star average rating, over 58,000 ratings

Adrian Liang: The gothic novels of today are not like those of yesteryear: Female protagonists are smart and proactive, and vaguely disquieting events become truly terrifying. Put plenty of me-time on your calendar, because you won’t want to stop for breaks while you race through Silvia Moreno-Garcia’s creepy, glorious read that is pitch-perfect for today’s audience.

Mexican Gothic

Mexican Gothic

12. “Dear Child: A Novel” by Romy Hausmann

  • Publisher: Flatiron Books
  • Goodreads: 4.17-star average rating, more than 5,700 ratings

Woodworth: In the hands of Romy Hausmann, an age-old premise—a woman escapes her captor—is given a modern twist, which will make your heart beat fast and your palms go sweaty. Burning with anticipation, fear, and the disquieting revelation that not all is what it seems, this thriller is impossible to put down.

Dear Child: A Novel

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13. “A Burning: A Novel” by Megha Majumdar

  • Publisher: Knopf
  • Goodreads: 3.75-star average rating, over 17,700 ratings

Schluep: A thoughtful, thought-provoking debut set in modern India. Told from three points of view, the story mostly follows Jivan, a young Muslim woman who leaves an innocuous Facebook comment that will haunt her. Majumdar explores important themes, but never at the cost of the inner lives of her colorful characters.

A Burning: A novel

A Burning

14. “Luster: A Novel” by Raven Leilani

  • Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
  • Goodreads: 3.65-star average rating, over 14,600 ratings

Schluep: Luster is exciting, surprising, sometimes sad, at times awkward, even shocking. And it’s funny. Any discomfort you experience will mirror the discomfort the characters feel—about age, status, race, sex, salaries, you name it. Luster has an energy and an honesty that makes the words practically shimmer on the page.

Luster: A Novel

Luster

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15. “Oona Out of Order: A Novel” by Margarita Montimore

  • Publisher: Flatiron Books
  • Goodreads: 3.87-star average rating, more than 24,000 ratings

Gelman: It's New Year’s Eve 1982 and moments before Oona Lockhart’s 19th birthday when she passes out and wakes up trapped in the body of a 51-year-old. A fun romp through the adage “youth is wasted on the young,” Oona Out of Order is also a deeper look at destiny, love, and family.

Oona Out of Order: A Novel

Oona Out of Order

16. Sigh, Gone: A Misfit's Memoir of Great Books, Punk Rock, and the Fight to Fit In by Phuc Tran

  • Publisher: Flatiron Books
  • Goodreads: 4.29-star average rating, more than 2,200 ratings

Woodworth: Sigh, Gone is one of the funniest and most profound memoirs of 2020. Without rose-colored glasses and with a flair for humor, Tran recounts his childhood as a Vietnamese kid growing up in a small Pennsylvania town: the racism, dislocation, and violence that surrounded him, how he fought to fit in, and how he fell in love with literature.

Sigh, Gone: A Misfit's Memoir of Great Books, Punk Rock, and the Fight to Fit In

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17. “Pretty Things: A Novel” by Janelle Brown

  • Publisher: Random House
  • Goodreads: 3.93-star average rating, over 19,400 ratings

Cronin: Proving that "all that glitters isn't gold," two women with Insta-perfect lives clash in Pretty Things and it’s up there with House Lannister vs. House Stark. But this is also a slow-build, cat-and-mouse thriller—loaded with reveals and twists—where it’s far from easy to tell the cats from the mice.

Pretty Things: A Novel

Pretty Things

18. “Deacon King Kong: A Novel” by James McBride

  • Publisher: Riverhead Books
  • Goodreads: 4.20-star average rating, over 14,200 ratings

Woodworth: A rowdy cast of beguiling, booze-filled, and larger than life characters collide in 1960s Brooklyn in this unforgettable, laugh-out-loud novel. Deacon King Kong tells a broader story of race and religion, getting by and getting out, and how grudges and alliances become embedded in the foundations of our neighborhoods.

Deacon King Kong: A Novel

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19. “The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue” by V.E. Schwab

  • Publisher: Tor Books
  • Goodreads: 4.45-star average, more than 32,000 ratings

Gelman: In the 1700s, Addie LaRue makes a deal with the devil—she will live forever, although her immortality comes with the curse of being forgotten by everyone, until one day she meets a man who changes everything. This deeply satisfying and cinematic novel rivals contemporary classic The Time Traveler’s Wife in concept and scope.

The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue

The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue

20. “Midnight Sun” by Stephenie Meyer

  • Publisher: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
  • Goodreads: 3.80-star average, more than 71,000 ratings

Seira Wilson: In Stephenie Meyer’s latest novel, she returns to the story that changed a genre, redefined vampires, and put a whole new spin on dangerous obsession and star-crossed love. There are two sides to every story and we’ve long had Bella’s—now, thanks to Midnight Sun, we can see the whole picture.

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Amazon’s Best Books of 2019

Here are the Amazon Books editors' favorite reads from last year.

  • “The Testaments: The Sequel to The Handmaid's Tale” by Margaret Atwood (Nan A. Talese)
  • “The Nickel Boys” by Colson Whitehead (Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group)
  • “Wild Game: My Mother, Her Lover, and Me” by Adrienne Brodeur (HMH Books)
  • “Quichotte: A Novel” by Salman Rushdie (Random House)
  • “The Starless Sea” by Erin Morgenstern (Doubleday Books)
  • “Super Pumped: The Battle for Uber” by Mike Isaac (W. W. Norton & Company)
  • “City of Girls: A Novel” by Elizabeth Gilbert (Riverhead Books)
  • “They Called Us Enemy” by George Takei (Top Shelf Productions)
  • “The Silent Patient” by Alex Michaelides (Celadon Books)
  • "Maybe You Should Talk to Someone: A Therapist, HER Therapist, and Our Lives Revealed" by Lori Gottlieb (HMH Books)
  • “The Dutch House” by Ann Patchett (Harper)
  • “Red at the Bone” by Jacqueline Woodson (Riverhead Books)
  • “Ask Again, Yes” by Mary Beth Keane (Scribner Book Company)
  • “The World That We Knew” by Alice Hoffman (Simon & Schuster)
  • “On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous” by Ocean Vuong (Penguin Press)
  • "I Will Never See the World Again: The Memoir of an Imprisoned Writer" by Ahmet Altan (Other Press)
  • “The Water Dancer”by Ta-Nehisi Coates (One World)
  • “Ninth House” by Leigh Bardugo (Flatiron Books)
  • “Three Women” by Lisa Taddeo (Simon & Schuster)
  • “Things We Didn’t Talk About When I Was A Girl” by Jeannie Vanasco

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