This is my end of year report, looking back at the 10 titles I had eagerly anticipated last year and seeing how many of them I actually got around to reading as well as picking ten more choices for 2022. In 2020 I got round to reading five out of the ten titles , in 2019 three out of the ten and four out of ten the year before. Let's see how I did in 2021.

Memorial - Bryan Washington (Atlantic Books)

I read this in January, the month it was published, and it was my first five star read of the year and narrowly missed out on my end of year Top 10. I'd read Washington's prize-winning short story collection "Lot" but this cranked up to a higher gear for me. The central male couple straddle cultures and the set-up leaves Black American Benson with his partner Mike's Japanese mother, who he had never previously met, whilst Mike goes to Osaka to be with his dying father who had deserted the family years before. Cue much family tension and bonding over cooking.

The Prophets- Robert Jones Jnr (Quercus Books)

An astonishing debut which ended up as number 2 in my end of year list with its haunting appeal hanging over me from January for the rest of 2021. I said "it could very well become a contender for the twenty-first century Great American novel." I hope this becomes a big seller in paperback when it is published later this month.

Girl In The Walls- A J Gnuse (4th Estate)

This was a four star read for me in March. Debut writers are really having to be original and inventive to stand out from the crowd and Gnuse certainly did this with his creepy thriller. 11 year old Elise lives in the space of a house she formerly lived in, now owned by a new family and their teenage boys. Nobody suspects she is there until a younger boy turns up unannounced to the house. This is a high-quality commercial thriller which will really have readers holding their breath.

Lamplighters - Emma Stonex (Picador)

This is a book that seems to have done quite well sales-wise since I read it in February. I've asked a few people who read it their opinion and it feels that it doesn't quite match the expectations which readers have when starting it. I found it entertaining but it did not blow me away and I gave it a three star rating. The 1970's lighthouse setting is great, as claustrophobic and intense as you might expect. A modern day narrative strand sets out to explain what is set up as a classic locked-room mystery. I said at the time; "After months of lockdown I think we are all in a better position to appreciate better Stonex's writing and have stronger ideas of these lives than we would have done a year or two ago, making this a very commercially apposite proposition."

Hot Stew-Fiona Mozley (John Murray)

I rated this three stars in March, an enjoyable urban tale which is very different from the author's Booker shortlisted debut "Elmet" and I applauded the author for that. Early reviews compared to it to a modern day Dickens, I said of this. "It's all likeable and in a way I can appreciate those that are seeing this as modern day Dickens but it all feels a little unresolved which Dickens would not be."

Many Different Types Of Love - Michael Rosen (Penguin)

Read this in March and gave it a five star rating with it ending up at number 4 in my Books of The Year. I said "This was the best non-fiction work I have read this year. I'm not sure how ready I am to read about the Covid-19 pandemic, it might still be a little too much too soon but I was certainly prepared to make an exception for this collection of prose poems from a writer I very much admire who nearly became a Covid death statistic." Moving, funny and with loads of heart from Rosen and those who cared for him.

Kitchenly 434- Alan Warner (White Rabbit)

This one passed me by. It got good reviews so I will hopefully get round to this butler and rock star tale. This year saw a well-received film adaptation of the book of Alan Warner's I've read which I love "The Sopranos" retitled "Our Ladies" which suffered from multiple rescheduling because of the pandemic which I also haven' t seen but hope to do so.

Harlem Shuffle - Colson Whitehead (Fleet)

Like Fiona Mozley, here was an author who did something very different, with this book I rated three stars in September, an understated crime novel which featured on quite a few end of the year lists but I think perhaps my own expectations were a little too high which led to me feeling a tad disappointed. I said "I found plot development a little stop-start and the novel does not flow as well as I would have hoped.

People Person - Candice Carty-Williams (Trapeze)

This was scheduled for September but didn't materialise. I've seen it listed on the BBC news website "Books To Look Forward To In 2022" and it is now due for publication at the end of May.

Diary Of A Suburban Lady - Lucy Mangan (Souvenir Press)

Retitled "Are We Having Fun Yet?", I certainly did when I read it in September and rated it four stars. Written in diary format, I said  "It is a very commercial work, written in a genre where fans will be loyal and supportive, it feels fresh and contemporary, so it's a shrewd move which could sell very well indeed." The paperback is due in June.

Woo-hoo! That's 8 out of 10 read and one of those I couldn't read because it hasn't been published yet. Here are ten more titles which have attracted my attention pre-publication and I will certainly be looking out for in 2022.

The Heretic - Liam McIllvanney (Harper Collins) ( due out on 20th January)

Follow-up to Scottish Crime Book Of The Year "The Quaker" which I read back in 2018 which introduced DI Duncan McCormack in a late 60's Glasgow setting. This location was the setting for my current Book of The Year. Could McIlvanney's Glasgow make it two in a row? This book shifts forward in time to the mid 70's. Last time round I was impressed by the feel of the period and the character of McCormack so this is certainly one I want to read.

Devotion - Hannah Kent (Picador) (due out on 3rd February)

It's been five years since Hannah Kent's last novel "The Good People". "Devotion" is her third, I've read both her others and have given them four star ratings. Set in Prussia in 1836, I've found Kent's previous works to "be saturated with the feel of the times" so expect real authenticity in its setting. We are being promised "a stunning story of girlhood and friendship, faith and suspicion, and the impossible lengths we go to for the ones we love."

Love Marriage - Monica Ali (Virago) (due out on 3rd February)

This is Monica Ali's 4th novel. I haven't read her, inexplicably, since her most famous novel, 2003's "Brick Lane" ended up as runner-up of my favourite reads of 2004. Featuring doctors as the main characters this is being touted as "a story about who we are and how we love in today's Britain - with all the complications and contradictions of life, desire, marriage and family. What starts as a captivating social comedy develops into a heart-breaking and gripping story of two cultures, two families and two people trying to understand one another." That description certainly get the thumbs up from me.

Flicker In The Dark - Stacy Willingham (Harper Collins) (due out on 3rd February)

A debut book already picked up for a television adaptation. This is a tense, edge of the seat thriller. I don't actually read that many of these but there is something about this Louisiana swamps set serial killer tale which I find very appealing. I like small town mentality in my thrillers, where everyone knows everything about everybody and apparently this book will really deliver on this. Author Jeffery Deaver has said of it; "Author Willingham takes us on an unstoppable journey through the psychology of evil, and of courage (in many senses), all told in a pitch-perfect literary style."

A Good Day To Die - Amen Alonge (Quercus Books) (due out on 17th February)

Another debut with a big buzz, the first in a British crime series which will feature a character called Pretty Boy and his desire for revenge. It's being talked about as a British version of "The Wire" and we can expect it to be gritty, brutal yet full of dry humour. The author is currently training to be a solicitor but might find himself needing to change the day job if this book really takes off in the way some suspect it will.

Mother's Boy - Patrick Gale (Tinder Press) (due out on 1st March)

A Cornish historical novel from a writer who can really impress me and who is a great storyteller. I think, judging by what I've read it is a fictional account of the life of poet Charles Causley focusing on his war experiences. His last novel, 2018's "Take Nothing With You" was the best of his books I have read and featured in my 100 Essential Books strand. I hope this will be as good.

Mouth To Mouth- Antoine Wilson (Atlantic Books) (due out on 3rd March)

Lots of praise for this American author's first novel already. The story of an author who wants to find out more about a man's life he saved. Andrew Sean Greer who wrote "Less" which won him both a Pulitzer Prize and a four star review from me says it is; "the best book I've read in ages. Narratively ingenious, delicately written, intriguingly plotted, it is literature of the highest quality. I see you now, dear Reader, with this novel in your hand and already losing track of time " That is an impressive recommendation.

Memphis - Tara M Stringfellow (John Murray) (due out on 7th April)

A debut from African-American writer who here explores three generations of a Memphis family. It comes with a recommendation from my runner up for Book Of The Year author Robert Jones Jnr who describes it as having "an endearing and unforgettable cast of characters who find strength in vulnerability, safety in art, and liberation in telling the truth."

Young Mungo - Douglas Stuart (Picador) (due out on 14th April)

The author of my Best Book of 2021 looking to make it two in a row. A love story between two men from working class Glasgow- one Catholic and one Protestant. The publishers are promising "a gripping and revealing story about the meaning of masculinity, the push and pull of family, the violence faced by so many queer people, and the dangers of loving someone too much." Considering how well everything was handled in the Booker winning "Shuggie Bain" I have high hopes for this one.

Theatre Of Marvels - Lianne Dillsworth (Penguin) (due out on 28th April)

A debut from a Black British author. I love a Victorian London setting and anything with a hint of the Gothic and here the author is said to come up with the goods in her tale of an actress from Crillick's Variety Theatre. The author has an MA in Victorian Studies and early reviews are praising her ability in bringing the setting and location to vivid life. There's a real buzz about this author and this book which will continue to build up to publication.

That's 10 books to look out for all in the first four months of the year with that date of 3rd February looking like a good one for book-lovers. Here's to lots of good reading in 2022!