My 2024 Books Month-By-Month (in which I cover 102 books)

The days are short and the air hurts my face. It must be that time again! Time to wrap up our calendar and talk about everything we read this year. Each year (and sometimes in between) I share my book lists. Instead of a list of favorites for 2024, I opted to go month-by-month this year and cover them all. I’ve saved my StoryGraph monthly cover collage and will share my reactions by month. You can also check out my science fiction fangirl post from earlier this year for some scifi specific recommendations.

I read 102 books this year and I switched to StoryGraph for my tracking. I love their data and their lack of affiliation with Amazon (heh). What does it all tell me? I like to read fantasy, science fiction, mystery, and/or romance stories, often featuring LGBTQA+ characters, written by women, around 300-500 pages, usually in printed hardcopy, that can be described as adventurous, emotional, mysterious, and dark. I am happy to break or live in this mold. I’m not bound by the data, but it sure is fun to look at!

All the statistics aside, let’s get to the most important bit. The books!

  • House of Striking Oaths by Olivia Wildenstein is the 3rd book in the Kingdom of Crow romantasy series, and it was good enough to wrap up a fun series. It relied on the two main characters being kept apart from each other, etc, and the whole thing has a lot of tropes, but a good time if you’re into that sort of thing (hot shapeshifters, magic, and some smut).
  • If you love graphic novel, greek mythos, and modern retellings and you haven’t been reading Lore Olympus by Rachel Smythe, what are you doing? Stop reading this and go read those.
  • The Book of Witches: An Anthology by Jonathan Strahan is a collection of short stories centered around witchcraft and women’s stories. The poems didn’t do much for me, and like any collection of short stories I had to push myself through some while others I deeply enjoyed. My favorites were The Luck Thief (Tade Thompson), As Wayward Sisters, Hand in Hand (Indrapramit Das), Her Ravenous Waters (Andrea Stewart), and John Hollowback and the Witch (Amal El-Mohtar). Wonderful diversity of authors, themes, characters, and tone while still feeling unified.
  • The Song of Fae was the first in a series… that I read no more of.
  • Crooked Kingdom by Leigh Bardugo is book number two in this series, and I definitely enjoyed the first one more but I still love this crew. In the author interview in the back she mentions that she had to write this book quickly, or at least more quickly, and near the end, you could feel that as a reader. Kaz is a fun and darkly damaged Jonny Ocean character, but some things just felt too slick. Even when she has them tripped up and failing in the middle, he still felt too smooth to be relatable or real. Spoiler-ish: The character death at the end felt random, rushed, and almost forced into the story.
  • I LOVED Erotic Stories for Punjabi Widows by Balli Kaur Jaswal. I thoroughly enjoyed this. A peak into another world and culture, a flawed but relatable main character, female relationships, some funny and sexy stories written by older women, and a murder plot.
  • Wings of Fire is a series I read out loud to my kids. It’s dragons and adventures. Formulaic fun for elementary into early middle school readers.
  • The Empress of Time is the second book in this run by Kylie Lee Baker. I love the setting of this series, the Yōkai, and the characters. It’s just that most of this book is spent on Ren’s internal monologue of self doubt and guilt. That’s important, sure, but I got tired of her. Meanwhile the conflicts came and went too easily. I found Neven’s storyline particularly disappointing, particularly in the first half. There was so much more to explain and cover there. Book one was better.
  • Neil Gaiman’s short story collection is masterful, as always.
  • Brooms by Jasmine Walls was a fun graphic novel about race and broom races.
  • Marion Lane and the Midnight Murder by T.A. Willberg starts strong and has a great premise. It’s overall a fun mystery and had good stakes, but didn’t quite hook me.
  • I’m marching through the Christie library. The Seven Dials Mystery is much more thriller/capper than a pure murder mystery.
  • Station Eternity by Mur Lafferty was a really fun combination of two genres I love: scifi and mystery. Mallory was the quintessential murder mystery female lead, but I loved that by the second half of the book she was almost rarely our narrative voice. The author weaves a pretty complex mystery. I’m not sure every piece of it really held together for me by the conclusion, but it made enough sense, and I hadn’t guessed it!
  • A stand alone Wings of Fire prequel. Read this out loud to kids. Eleanor, age 9, says “ I liked it a lot more than I expected. My favorite character was Wren, because she seems to be very brave and intimidating. I love the element of a dragon loving snails.”
  • Now You See Us was my second read by Balli Kaur Jaswal. This was darker and sadder than her other book, but a glimpse into a world I am generally totally blind to. I found myself so moved by the end. This is maybe one of my favorites of the year.
  • I love a sweet Holmberg novel and Keeper of Enchanted Rooms didn’t disappoint! As always a thoughtful plot, fun characters, magic, friendship – all the boxes checked.
  • The Canopy Keepers by Veronica G. Henry was a creative exploration of environmental disaster, firefighting, and forest fires. I feel like it needed more development and editing to take it to the next level though.
  • I LOVED Brandi Carlile’s memoir, Broken Horses. You must listen to the audiobook version where she plays songs at the end of each chapter. I deeply appreciate and love this artist. The details about the industry, juxtaposed with her day to day life and background were so charming.
  • Extremely Online: The Untold Story of Fame, Influence, and Power on the Internet by Taylor Lorenz is a real deep dive into social media, influencers, and creators. She touches on how the platforms themselves work, but the primary focus is on the users. It also made me strangely nostalgic for the early days of Twitter. It wasn’t perfect, but I miss that little bit of Internet magic.
  • A Psalm for the Wild-Built by Becky Chambers was my first Chamber’s book – and WOW. This short-ish story manages to be deep and philosophical while retaining its whimsical and easy quality. It was charming, relatable, and challenging – all at once. One of my best of the year.
  • Underbelly Yoga (online) got me through COVID. I love this human. If you love yoga but have questioned the wellness world that orbits it, check out Yoke: My Yoga of Self-Acceptance by Jessamyn Stanley.
  • McGuire is one of my fav authors, and I loved Middle Game but Seasonal Fears was too slow and repetitive for me. The constant refrain of the “boy who loves a broken girl” was boring. 
  • Just take it from BookTok, Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros scratches the fantasy romance itch! It’s pretty derivative of other books (Divergent with dragons), but the twists are fun. It could’ve done with a bit more editing, as the “will they won’t they” got a little eye rollingly annoying at times (they will). I listed to this one mostly over a 9 hour drive home from Colorado and the GraphicAudio production was pretty good. I read the second one on my Kindle in their voices.
  • Sea Change by Gina Chung was more sad than I expected, but also pretty great. You find yourself relating and its jarring.
  • Exalted by Anna Dorn had me judging others and occasionally feeling judged. This book makes you feel bummed out, but you still can’t put it down. It’s grimy, gritty, nasty, fascinating. Darkly funny in moments, and bitingly earnest in others. Dawn and Emily are extremely unlikeable and don’t hold your breath for redemption. 
  • Kelly Barnhill is a master. I read The Girl Who Drank the Moon out loud to my 9 and 11 year olds. This is so witty and sophisticated while still perfect for elementary kids. We loved it. The story is simply beautiful.
  • Monster of the Week is a game guide for running the game. I ran this game last spring for a gaming group and it’s fun! Slightly less complicated than D&D.
  • The Night & Its Moon by Piper C.J. is a nice lesbian love story set in a fantasy world – and the cover art is killer – but it needed a little more development and work I think. This felt undercooked. I believe there is more in this series, but I didn’t feel moved to continue.
  • Emily Wilde’s Encyclopaedia of Faeries by Heather Fawcett is a cozy blanket for academic nerds who love fairy mythology. It’s a slow (sloooow) burn romance that never gets on-page spicy. It’s a cup of tea. It’s snow falling while you make a fire in the hearth. It’s a warm hug.
  • You already know I loved A Psalm for the Wild-Built. A Prayer for the Crown-Shy by Becky Chambers follows it up. This sequel truly builds on the nurturing honest nature of the first. The audio books are also excellently performed.
  • Betty’s Little Basement Garden gave me feelings. I almost didn’t finish it and admittedly sped-read through the last quarter. All the ingredients of a good story were there, but it just turned preachy and felt hastily written. I support the medical and recreational use of cannabis but even I got sick of the constant lectures on “the power of this plant.” The two main male characters that Betty forms relationships with speak to her like super aggressive therapists and then randomly in language coded as… Health food sellers? Hippies? Stoners? Their motivation to hound this woman’s boundaries so intensely is baffling. Her friends are awful stereotypes wrapped in nice bows. There was supposed to be some mystical part of this, but it all fell flat to me.
  • The resolution is relatively outlandish, but I loved The Mystery Writer by Sulari Gentill. I was about a half of the way through when I realized it was the same author as ‘The Woman in the Library,’ which I also adored.
  • The second installment in this series, Emily Wilde’s Map of the Otherlands by Heather Fawcett, raises the stakes but is just as cozy.
  • More Wings of Fire with the kids!
  • Luster by Raven Leilani. Just… holy shit. That was so good. Hard, bleak, funny, dirty. The writing was so good. Nuanced and elegant while coarse and blunt somehow.
  • The Unfortunate Side Effects of Heartbreak and Magic by Breanne Randall was charming, and sweet, but predictable and forgettable. The source material was too close to the top. 
  • I wanted to love The First Bright Thing, really I did. The plot in one sentence: A time-traveler, gay, jewish ringleader leads a 1920’s train circus of superheroes through the Midwest, trying to stop WWII from happening after-work, while outrunning her abusive ex whom she met when accidentally saving him the trenches during WWI.  This is a WILD sentence. The messaging was heavy handed and the plot tried to do too much for too many characters. Also time travel almost always fucks up a story. There’s so much more that could’ve been done about the Circus King.
  • I read The Lady with the Dark Hair by Erin Bartels on planes and that the right settings. Not too complicated and a little too easy, but still complex and arty enough to be engaging.
  • Iron Flame, the second in the series is a good time, sexy, and hey! Dragons! Is it serious literature? No. Are the characters a little one-note in tone and inner narrative? Yes. Did that make it less fun to read? No.
  • I struggled to pick up Fables and Spells: Collected and New Short Fiction and Poetry by adrienne maree brown a few times, but then enjoyed it every time I did. I love poetry, but sometimes have to force myself to it. I read a lot of this book out loud to myself which helped quite a bit. I very much enjoyed the short stories. Favorite stories/poems: a moon kind of night, Nikki Giovanni in Space, I’m Rare, The Children (a solstice poem), and Marla and the Creation Committee.
  • Ravenfall by Kalyn Josephson is a sweet middle grade age book I read out loud to my two kids. There’s a sequel and I think we’ll pick it up. We loved all the Irish lore!
  • The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet was a beautiful character study and a fun scifi romp. It is the first in Becky Chamber’s Wayfarer’s series, which follows different characters and places in the same universe each time. I fell in love immediately. Chambers is my author of the year.
  • Legends & Lattes by Travis Baldree… I am admittedly a little done with the whole “dungeons and dragons characters outside of combat” novels, this is sweet and charming and well written. Not a ton of substance here but it was cozy.
  • Glorious Exploits by Ferdia Lennon is one I still think about. It was unexpected and extremely creative. It was so very sad but also so straightforward, veering into dry humor. The tone was really unique.
  • As a feminist science fiction fan, I always feel a bit ashamed that I haven’t read more Le Guin and that (frankly) I don’t enjoy her work more than I do. I found the first 2/3 of The Left Hand of Darkness relatively tedious to get through but the final third was engaging. It’s a lot of politics. I also understand that her interest in exploring gender and sex was revolutionary at the time she was writing, and I admire and respect that, but in modern reading, the constant discussion of the technicalities gets a little old.
  • Escaping Exodus: Symbiosis by Nicky Drayden explored more of the other factions and tribes from the first novel, and asked people to question cultures and norms. I didn’t quite fall into this one as much as I did the first one but really enjoyed it.
  • The Emperor and the Endless Palace by Justinian Huang was much more depressing than I expected and less whimsical than described. A gay love story with lots of pain and violence.
  • I read Serwa Boateng’s Guide to Witchcraft and Mayhem out loud to the kids. It’s full of fun Nigerian folklore and I had to spend some serious time looking up how to pronounce things, but it was worth it.
  • Poor Things … this … made me feel deeply weird. I still haven’t watched the film, and get the impression the tone may be a little different? I couldn’t get beyond the “she has the mind of a toddler and that’s sexy” part of this, from the perspective of our narrator, to really sink into it.
  • I feel like Veridian Sterling Fakes It by Jennifer Gooch Hummer may be needed a little more development? The big twist felt a little haphazard and the buildup felt mismatched to the reveal. I also found I didn’t like our main character very much. She just seemed… I don’t know… annoying. 
  • Chambers manages to take dense science fiction concepts, like how we define sentient beings and the ethics of artificial intelligence and labor, and make them feel like a conversation about humanity and individuals. She is a master of characters and such a gift to this genre and A Closed and Common Orbit is a lovely example of her mastery.
  • The Startup Wife by Tahmima Anam was a nuanced look at business, tech, and gender politics. No one was untouchable or infallible. I was surprised by how much I enjoyed this book – it was not what I expected.
  • Record of a Spaceborn Few by Becky Chambers. Of all the Wayfarers books, this one got me the most emotional. I was initially worried about how many different storylines and characters we were following, but quickly fell into it and sorted them out in my mind. Oh humanity – we so messy.
  • Hard to capture lightning in a bottle twice. Ready Player Two by Ernest Cline comes near to the fun romp of the first novel, but also allows itself to become a less organized carbon copy. 
  • More Chambers. The Galaxy, and the Ground Within is the last Wayfarers. This is the thoughtful introspective science fiction I have wanted my entire life. I have rapidly run through Chambers entire library and I can’t wait for her to write more.
  • I listened to The Blighted Stars by Megan E. O’Keefe as an audiobook and read the next two on my Kindle. This checked all the boxes for me. Definitely had elements of hard science fiction (AI, tech, etc), but also real character growth, cultural friction, political intrigue, and a solid mystery. The romance is incredibly compelling and slow paced – utterly charming as it compliments the plot rather than becoming the plot. This isn’t a romance novel, but a science fiction novel that looks at love. 
  • Nine Tailed by Jayci Lee felt really rushed. I loved the lore and exploring that world, otherwise this felt like several book pitches that were all still under development. It needed a slower placed plot with better character development. I also don’t know what the preoccupation with virginity is in romance novels (or more so why that archaic ideal prevails). We’re supposed to believe that she’s crazy hot but also 132-year-old virgin? Why? You can still showcase that two people deeply love and care for one another, and that makes a physical intimacy more satisfying, without having the women be virgins.
  • The Fractured Dark follows The Blighted Stars. This second installment lacked some of the charm of the first. I lost the threads a little bit as the mystery and character motivations got a little bit more complicated – but I kept going! Still pretty solid.
  • All Systems Red by Martha Wells is the first of the short Murder Bot novellas. The voice and concept feels so fresh. I only wish they were longer! You’ll see I zoomed through Artificial Condition, Rogue Protocol, and Exist Strategy.
  • The Bound Worlds by Megan E. O’Keefe wraps up the triology. Nothing beats the first one for me, but this was a decent wrap-up. I’m wary of time travel stories is it always seems to screw up a decent mystery and plot. This definitely edged that for me. I also could go either way on the ending. There’s a part of me that, while hard, almost wished the author would’ve stuck with the “almost end.”
  • This was not the first time I’ve read The Fellowship of the Ring, but it was my first time reading it with my son. You forget that the book is much slower than the films. So much hobbit lore and time in the shire.
  • Network Effect is the only full length novel in the Murder Bot Diaries series. It’s just as charming and well executed. Martha Wells is great.
  • The Last Animal by Ramons Ausubel is a strange little book. It took a turn about halfway through that I struggled with for a little while, and as we waited through what was a surreal and strange storyline, it wove itself back into reality at the end. The sisters are wry and witty in an honest way, but occasionally felt a little forced.
  • The Dead Take the A Train by Cassandra Khaw and Richard Kadrey was written by two people and it felt like it was written by two people. The mystery was pretty good and the writing was descriptive but got a little repetitive (the phrase lizard brain came up like 25 times).
  • Yes, yes, I’m behind in just now reading several of my scifi picks from this month, including Leviathan Wakes by James S.A. Corey. It holds up to the hype. Scifi meets a film noir detective.
  • Ok, ok. I know everyone else read Andy Weir already and told me to do so immediately as a space nerd. You know that thing where someone tells you that you just have to watch or read something and then it becomes almost physically impossible to make yourself do so? That happened. I started with Artemis which I know was less popular, but I really liked it. A fun moon adventure.
  • I moved on to The Martian and was partially motivated by the fact that Max’s teacher announced the advanced 7th graders would also be reading it. It’s easy to see why this book was so very popular and immediately picked up for a film. Some of the language did not age well, but overall Mark remains a sympathetic character and funny. I wish that his mental health was explored a little bit more spending a year and a half without seeing another human? That would be extremely difficult.
  • Finally, I turned back to Christie. I know The Big Four was written in 1927 and is a product of its time, but this one was actually a little tough to get through. The racial terms regarding characters from China was hard.  I continue my March through every Agatha Christie novel.
  • I’ll admit I struggled to engage with The Three-Body Problem. While it’s really well and tightly crafted the characters were not as developed as I’m used to in scifi. A lot of theoretical physics discussions and I’m not that great on applied physics. The show was pretty OK, but changed up a lot.
  • Caliban’s War is the next installment in The Expanse series. These just scratch every itch! Political space adventure, mystery, tech, romance.
  • I think Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow was a divisive read. I know plenty of people who didn’t love it. For me? This was a truly excellent book, one of the best of the year. It did put me in a weird mood from time to time though and is very character driven. I think it helps if you have a love of games and books that are character driven over plot driven.
  • The Ogress and the Orphans by Kelly Barnhill was probably my favorite middle grade books of the year. I read this to the kids and it was so timely and well written. It really explores the danger of fear, and what fear makes human’s capable of.
  • The Stars Too Fondly by Emily Hamilton was a story that was underdeveloped. We hopped from plot point to plot point too easily and smoothly. I rarely say this, but I think it needed to be longer so that each new discovery, leading to the final, has time to build. The world was interesting and the characters complex, but it felt too simple.
  • Chaos Terminal by Mur Lafferty is the second book in the Midsolar Mysteries series, and honestly, I preferred this one! Killer bugs, mental games, old flames? Check, check, check.
  • I enjoyed the world of Behind the Crimson Curtain by E.B. Golden, and the political mystery was well crafted, but I could not for the life of me care less about this main character and her well-being. The pettiness and stupidity of her actions was just hard to empathize with. 
  • Another Christie! Curtain was my favorite of the Christie mysteries I read this year. I’m sucker for Perot and this is his final curtain.
  • We Ate the Dark by Mallory Pearson was a lot. The prose was lovely if not a little heavy handed. There was lines that were trying very hard and edged into freshman year creative writing cringe. That said, I liked the diverse characters and setting. I’m still a little lost on the mystery resolution. I definitely struggled to like Frankie at all.
  • I love Lucy Foley in all her formula glory. The Midnight Feast was no exception. Foley is so good at the misdirects and keeps you guessing, always. It’s cheeky and dark, with witty criticisms on class and wellness.
  • A Lonely Broadcast: Book One by Kel Byron has a fun premise, love the lonely radio broadcast in the mountains. Found the wind up unsatisfying – but I know there’s other books in the series so perhaps we get more closure later on? I haven’t been moved enough to pick up the next one yet, but probably will.
  • Eileen by Ottessa Moshfegh moved a little slow for me. It is technically a psychological “thriller,” I guess, but I walked away mostly just really depressed. I don’t get the hype. This book thought it was really smart, I think, but I’m not sure it was.
  • I read The Graveyard Book out loud to the kids. We finished in November, but it was primarily over October, with Halloween in mind. I love this book.
  • My daughter begged for Unico: Awakening (Volume 1): An Original Manga by Samuel Sattin at the scholastic book fair (remember those?) and then read it in a few days time. She asked me to read it so we could talk about it and of course I obliged. The art is truly beautiful and I love how it weaves together Greek mythology (sorta) with unicorn legends, Egyptian mythology, and more. Definitely appropriate for 4th graders.
  • The Last Murder at the End of the World by Stuart Turton was a good read. Turton is such a creative mystery author – different every time and yet he uses the same creative approaches to a wild final outcome. I’m a science fiction, lover, and enjoy a post-apocalyptic tale,  so this one really worked for me.
  • I loved The Paris Apartment and Midnight Feast, so I finally got around to reading the one that made Foley famous: The Guest List. She definitely has themes and types that she loves to focus on, but goodness these are just such wonderfully crafted mysteries. I recommend all of them.
  • I loved this writing style and the characters in Dinosaur by Lydia Millet. I was a little unsatisfied by the ending and Gil is almost toooo good of a person, but I zoomed through this.
  • As a self-help book The Most Powerful Woman in the Room Is You: Command an Audience and Sell Your Way to Success by Lydia Fenet is pretty vanilla and obvious, and I will admit I skimmed some pieces, what I found interesting, however, was her! I wanted a memoir. What a career! What stories! A student gave this to me to read and I’m glad I checked it out.
  • The Devil and the Dark Water by Stuart Turton was fun! I continue to really enjoy this author. I liked this setting a lot, though I thought the mystery conclusion was incredibly far fetched in this one. Some character points just didn’t make sense. Regardless the characters were a delight.
  • The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley stood up to the hype. It was dark but thrilling. Introspective but fast paced. The end was… tough? Glimmers of hope? Sexy with a touch of spice in a couple chapters, but not a romance novel.
  • Financial Feminist: Overcome the Patriarchy’s Bullsh*t to Master Your Money and Build a Life You Love by Tori Dunlap. One thing I particularly appreciated after reading this was the realization that I was doing better than I thought. As I was reading this book it occurred to me that I am so insecure about my own finances that I wasn’t even recognizing how OK I was doing. She talks about our relationship to money in such a thoughtful way and it really helped me wrap my brain around that. I also took away some great tips.
  • I’m going to cover Zodiac Academy 1-4 in one bullet. These are… bad. Kind of in that good way, but also in that bad way. After finishing four I just opted to check out the final book (12?!) and just skip to the final few chapters and the epilogue. The whole “bully romance,” enemy to lovers, and 18 year old chosen girls thing was compelling but also a little gross. Spicy scenes were good, but I hated some of these characters so much that they became irredeemable. I also sometimes see these at YA. I wouldn’t let readers under 20ish at these. Not because of the sex, because whatever, but because of the relationship themes. The treatment is not ok and not romantic. Some sexualized abusive behavior here. … at least they weren’t virgins? (see my comments on Ninetailed above)
  • When the Moon Hatched by Sarah A. Parker is another BookTok darling, like the Zodiac Academy. It was.. fine. Honestly, a little boring. Again with the star-crossed lovers thing. We know they will get together. Can we move on to better plot points?
  • Another Foley: The Hunting Party. I will love her mysteries every time. I’m not sorry. She’s so good at what she does.
  • I listened to Storm and Fury and Rage and Ruin by Jennifer L. Armentrout over a road trip to Minnesota and back, and the Graphic Audio production of these was perfect for that sort of thing. Although I didn’t quite finish Rage and Ruin on the drive and I’m not even sure I get to count this book as finished. I listened to about 60% of the audiobook before I just caved and started skipping around to gather the major plot points. The yearning, trembling, forbidden love can really only go on for so many pages (including book one, so like almost 1000 pages) before I completely lose interest. We both know it’s gonna happen guys, just do it and move onto more interesting tension points in the story. I lost interest. Big time. And yes, she was a virgin, but plot twist, so was he!
  • The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches by Sangu Mandanna was the coziest book I’ve read (well listened to) in a while. Also thrilled for main characters over 30 after all my romantasy darlings this month. It was just so sweet and charming.
  • Last book for the year! Babel by R.F. Kuang was a little slow, but the premise and the prose and the characters?! So good. It’s a little complicated but the exploration of colonization alongside magical realism was really well done.

the most interesting things I read in 2023

For my annual book post this year, I’ve changed my title. No longer focused on “the best” but rather on the most interesting or engaging. Most of the time, interesting books are the “best” but sometimes a story comes along that I don’t particularly love or even like, but it’s sticky. It’s sticks in my brain. It’s interesting. It’s engaging.

I’ve also decided to stop copying the Good Reads reviews over and only share my reactions (“review” feels like too generous a word for what I write). I don’t need to recreate the wheel, when the wheel is easily accessible to others on the internet.

As with all my other annual posts, here’s the deal:

  • I read all of these in 2023, but very few actually came out in 2023. This isn’t about the best books written this year, this is just what I read during the year.
  • I include graphic novel volumes but not individual issues.
  • I include audio books and books I read out loud with my children (chapter books) as “read.” I will fight to the death anyone who says these don’t count as “reading.”
  • I read 95 books this year. I read a lot of paperbacks and I fly through them – but I’ve also come to understand and accept that I read exceptionally fast. My family even teases me about it. Maybe it is something I perfected in law school? Regardless, when I tell people how many books I read in a year and their eyes widen I feel a certain amount of embarrassment. Like I’m a real weirdo – but I am a real weirdo – and apparently reading is my superpower. Handy it’s also one of my favorite things to do.

In no specific order, here are the most interesting things I read this year. I’ve added a picture of the cover with my reactions immediately following. Finally, at the end are the covers of all 95 books I read this year.

Persephone Station
Definite Cowboy Beebop vibes, but more modern and certainly more queer. While probably classified appropriately as a “space opera,” they really only very briefly go off planet – but that aside – I enjoyed this! I appreciated the character diversity. The bond between the Angel, Lou, Sukyi, and Enid was so damn charming. I would have enjoyed more relationship building with the Emissaries. The final showdown on the station felt… a little too predictable? Easy? That said the several chapters of on-planet fighting were extremely well done. Writing combat effectively is really hard, and she did it well. Also the cover? I mean, give me this book as a comic, please!!

Lore Olympus (Volume One shown here, but there is much more and its so good)
Good lord, the illustrations. THE ILLUSTRATIONS. So lovely, irreverent, playful, and in moments, surprisingly sophisticated. There is a spread in this volume between Psyche and Eros and the way she uses color to show light and create an intimate conversation between two people in bed was just so well done. I love comic art that doesn’t take its self too seriously and it still excellent. The color is a character here. The story line is also adult and complex enough to keep me engaged in yet another greek god retelling. I love these. Smythe is fantastic.

Paris Appartment
This is a fun and dark read. I love a good mystery – it’s definitely one of my favorite genres. All the clues are there, but there were some twists that surprised me! It was well done. Some pretty dark themes here, but they’re added in service to a convincing narrative and plot.

Divergent
I picked this up from the “teen zone” at the library after thinking, “wait? I haven’t read these?” I had not. I consumed it like air – I read the whole thing in a few days. Scratches all the dystopian YA itches. Not shocking they were hugely popular! I then got my son hooked, and we read through all three and consumed our conversations each morning on the drive to school. It was so cool to share with him.

The Birthday of the World
In all my years as a feminist scifi fan I had some how never read any of Le Guin’s work. This short story collection was my first – which is an admittedly odd place to start. It was primarily dictated by what was available at the library. Many of the stories were more about culture than space travel but then that’s always been the draw of really good science fiction. I was startled by how often she has a significant focus on sex and sexual acts, but again, that’s a key part of culture.

The the final story, Paradises Lost, is almost a quarter of the whole book and was my favorite. It’s the most space focused, but really I loved it as a fascinating exploration of generational space travel. The other story that most stuck with me was Solitude. Not so much in its plot, but in her exploration of the idea that our understanding of other cultures is so deeply narrowed by our own personal histories and understanding. That the practices of other species can’t always be made analogous to our own just to make them easier to understand – we may be entirely unable to conceptualize them.

Witch of Tin Mountain
This is one of those books where I’m not sure I even thought it was good – but I thought about it endlessly. We have two timelines, unfolding throughout the book, representing two different women. It becomes obvious pretty quickly that there is a connection, but I won’t spoil that. I think it helped that I was listening to it as an audiobook because the two voice actors helped me keep the two story lines separate, as in many spots they were quite similar. The author was definitely playing with feminism, racism, homophobia, etc, and at times it felt heavy handed. At other moments it seemed like she had rose colored glasses on given the time periods – could there really be a happily ever after for some of these characters in this time period, in those places? Thankfully, the “mystery” was well crafted and made sense, which can be an issue with fantasy material.

I’ll Stop The World
Definitely feels like a young adult novel, but that’s actually part of it’s charm. Yes, there’s lots of teen angst, but the angst guides their decision making and leads the plot forward. The mystery is well crafted, although one of the big reveals I thought was obvious pretty immediately. Overall though, I couldn’t stop listening. I do love audiobooks for novels that are written in a lot of different perspectives because the actors bring so much life to the individual characters and also help keep it clear what character you’re with.

Daisy Jones and the Six
It was a legit struggle to not stay up till 3AM to finish this the first night. This book is written as a oral history of all of the band members and their team. It’s like watching an old VH1 “behind the music” in print. This is to say I loved it. Clearly doesn’t hurt but I’m a big Fleetwood Mac fan, but even if you’ve never listened to anything from the 70s this is charming. Billy and Daisy are equal parts annoying and frustrating and magical and perfect. I found myself so invested in Karen and Graham too, and I appreciate how the author dealt with their story.

Scattered Showers
I’ve said it 100s of times. I am a Rainbow fangirl. What a beautiful collection of love stories that included establish couples from her former novels, as well as fun new people. Can we get an Anna and James’s novel please? And, of course, Beth, Jennifer and Lincoln, and the whole plot of Attachments, continues to be a favorite.

The Girl in The Tower
This series hits the combination of action, fairytale, adventure, history, and tension just right. The second in the trilogy, this was was plot heavy than the Bear and the Nightingale – we were endlessly in action! I’m not sure I fully understand the ramifications of the ending on our Winter King, but look forward to the third installment!

Shrill
Her show by the same name moved me beyond words and the book did not disappoint. Given everything that’s happened culturally since 2016 some of it feels dated but only because the world turned on its head since she wrote this. That said so much of the changes she talks about are still in place. I do think the world is somehow kinder or at least more open..?

This book is full of beautiful, righteous anger. I was so active on Jezebel in the mid-2000s. Lindy’s work was a pivotal part of my young womanhood. She was born just three years before me, and our lives were so far apart, but so similar, as she wrote. I have also spent a lifetime feeling too big too much too … everything. So, while much of the writing style of that time was often aggressive or snarky, it made me stop giving a fuck quite so intensely. I’m grateful for the courage of her words and for her too-muchness. If I’m too much, go find less.

Six of Crows
I wasn’t sold on this book at first, then I stayed up too late finishing this. Six perspectives, in a heist/caper story, is a lot and she crafts it so clearly. This was just fun and a nice return to the Grisha universe from Shadow and Bone (though unrelated plot wise).

Murder in Mesopotamia
If you know me, you know, I read at least a few Agatha Christie novels per year. I have a loose goal of reading every novel she ever wrote. She’s my comfort food. With there being so many (relatively short) novels from her, they’re not all masterpieces. This one was great though! The setting plus the use of the nurse’s perspective was just so charming. It takes you straight back to 1936 – for better or worse!

Covers of everything I read in 2023: