So I started 2024 by continuing the Drina binge and then started a new series of (short) cozy crimes with a home renovation theme. And I’ve already read one of my Christmas books, before it even made it onto the pile! I’ve started a couple of this month’s NetGalley books, but I haven’t finished any yet, so I’m basically already behind there. Hey ho I enjoyed my reading and that’s the main thing right?
Not going to lie, I didn’t want to do this post because, well you’ll see. But I do try to be honest here and so here is some transparency…
We enter 2024 with the to read pile bigger than ever. I’d love to say that all the books in front of the shelves are borrowed, but they’re not. I’ve just expanded beyond the shelves – which I said I wouldn’t do. It’s been a little this way all year, but has got worse in the last few months as I’ve been away from home a lot and so reading off the kindle and not physical books, and while I was trying to finish off the 50 states. So my goal for this year is to try and get back into *just* having the bookshelf of unread books and not piles nearby too. Wish me luck everyone…
Books on the Goodreads to-read shelf (I don’t have copies of all of these!): 728
Well here we are at the end of another year and with a month that turned out to be unexpectedly productive. Who could have predicted that because it was also a really, really busy month. I’ll probably have another rejig of the format of this post for next year, I’m not quite sure how yet but I’ve got a month to think about it haven’t I! I’ve also been thinking about my reading goals and aims for the year but that’s a story for another day. I’ve already told you about my favourite books of the year – you can find those links here, here and here. Onwards we go!
Bonus picture: one last Christmasy photo from the walk to work last week in the Twixtmas.
*includes some short stories/novellas/comics/graphic novels – including this month
So I was about to say this is the last look back at 2023 post, but I realised that I would absolutely be lying because I can think of at least two more. Any how, this is my favourite new-to-me fiction of last year. Many of them you’ll always have heard me talk about, but hey I enjoyed them and they’re worth it.
So in keeping with the celebrities and normal people romances that have been a theme of the year, let’s start with one of those:Nora Goes off Script by Annabel Monaghan. And I think this might have been the first of the trope that I read last year and it was really good. Nora’s been dumped by her husband but has to keep writing screen plays for romance channel movies. But when her new script is picked up by a major studio, the sexual man alive walks into her house (literally) to star in it and then doesn’t want to leave. It’s wonderful and just writing about it makes me want to read it again!
Next up is one of the books that Nora was comped with and which I finally got around to reading this year – Beach Read by Emily Henry. This has got two rival authors living in neighbouring beach houses and struggling with writers block – until they challenge each other to write in their genre. So Augustus had to write something happy, and Janet had to write a Great American Novel. It’s a grumpy-sunshine delight – even if I’ve only just realised that he’s got the summery name and she’s got the wintery one!
More authors in pick three: The Roughest Draft by Emily Wibberley and Austin Sigemund-Broka. This has got estranged writing partners forced back together to complete their original book contract after his new solo effort doesn’t sell. It’s friends to enemies to lovers as you flash backwards and forwards between the two different trips to the same Florida rental house.
Ok, that all the romance done, let’s go for some mystery! And The Three Dahlias by Katy Watson was one of my post Christmas sale buys between Christmas and new year last year and I loved it. It has all the things that I like – Golden Age mystery stories and a modern day cozy crime murder on the set of an adaptation of the books. So much fun and something I’ve recommended a lot this year. I’m counting down to book three.
And finally, something a bit different – Acts of Violet by Margarita Montimore. This one’s a bit quirky – with a missing illusionist and a podcast at the centre of it. I didn’t fully love the ending, but I did love the rest of it. This is actually the only book here from the second half of the year, and I have had a think about that and a look at the stats – there were less five star picks in the second half of the year among the not-new fiction but quite a few four stars that I’ve only just written about, so maybe that’s what’s gone on. And I did read more new fiction in the second half of the year than the first and that played into this too.
Anyway, here’s to the books I’ll discover in 2024!
Well after a bumper week of reading last week to get the fifty states challenge finished, I’m starting the new year with a Kristan Higgins book for Book of the Week which wasn’t one of the missing states. Who could have predicted that!
If You Only Knew is a dual narrative story about two sisters who are both at turning points in their lives. Wedding dress designer Jenny is moving back to her home town to open a new storefront after her divorce in an attempt to get away from her ex and his new wife whose lives she’s still entangled in. Her sister Rachael has a seemingly enviable life – adoring husband and cute triplet daughters. Except Rachael’s just caught him sexting with a colleague and she’s not sure what what to do about it – she’s not sure she believes in second chances but she’s also not ready to give up on her family dream.
This is really readable – I read it across about 36 hours despite it being Christmas – I liked the mix of big city New York and small town New York State and it all works out alright in the end, despite my fears at various points while reading it. As always with stories like this I liked one side of the story better than the other – in this case it was Jenny I wanted more of, but maybe that’s because adultery plots are never really quite my thing and I loathed Rachael’s husband (although now I’ve finished the book I don’t think you were meant to like him but I wasn’t sure about that at the time) and wanted her to burn it all down straight away. That said I’m not sure Jenny’s strand of the plot on its own would have been enough to sustain a novel – and I definitely wouldn’t have read just Rachael’s – so it was probably the right decision to do both!
Anyway you can get this on Kindle and Kobo and it’s only £2.99! It does have a paperback version but as it’s a few years old now it may not be that easy to get hold of a physical copy – Amazon is certainly asking crazy money for it, but the ebook is cheap so that’s something.
Happy New Year! I hope 2024 is every thing you want it to be and more. I have a stack of new year content coming up as well as the last bits of looking back at 2023. And thank you for reading this blog – I don’t say it enough but I appreciate you all. Anyway, I finished off the year with a stack of books – including those last few states for the challenge and also a binge reread of Drina after I put the idea in my head!
I hope you’re all celebrating in style tonight – whatever your style may be. Mine is a trip to the cinema and a Hercule Poirot-themed jigsaw because I am very rock and roll…
Taking a break from my end of the year wrap ups to post my Christmas book arrivals – and they’re just what I wanted! However did everyone know what I was hoping for? Truly a Christmas miracle. I started Capote’s Women on Christmas Day, and will carry on with it just as soon as I’ve finished those last few states…
So after yesterday’s fiction post, today I’m back with the other stuff. And actually I didn’t read a lot of new-new non-fiction this year, so this is a general best non-fiction post, rather than a specific new books one, but hey, I’m all about rule breaking!
So let’s start with the chunkiest book I read this year – Michael Cragg’s Reach for the Stars. My sister and I really enjoyed reading this history of a decade of pop music from the mid 90s. I was a consumer of pop music during this era so it gave me a lot of nostalgia but it also gave me some insights into what I was listening to at the time and the way that the bands involved were covered by the press. One of the bands in this – Girls Aloud – have announced they’re touring again next year, and another (S Club) were touring this autumn so the music and bands are really still out there.
Also in the pop culture sort of space but not new this year is Wild and Crazy Guys by Nick de Semlyen, which I read while I was on holiday this autumn. The Guys in question are the comedians of the early 80s whose careers launched through shows like Saturday Night Live and went on to dominate comedy movies for a decade or more – people like Bill Murray, Steve Martin, Dan Ackroyd and John Candy. I’m too young to to remember this all happening, but some of the movies that they made – Ghostbusters, Uncle Buck and Cool Runnings – were all over my childhood and some of them are still all over movies and streaming now – after all I’ve just binged Only Murders in the Building!
Also in the new to me not new new is Maiden Voyages by Sian Evans. This is a look at women on board the cruise liners during the Golden Age of ocean liner travel. It touches on some of the famous faces who travelled on the ships but mostly focusses on the women who worked on board and the opportunities that shipboard work offered them. I really enjoyed Evans’ Queen Bees a few years back and this is also a really good read.
And that’s the lot I think. I think one of my resolutions for next year is to read more non fiction – and I’ve certainly got a delightful selection to chose from to help me!
It’s that time of year again, where I’m rounding up the best things that I’ve read this year, and I’m starting with the new fiction because it has been a really good year for it.
As I’ve said already, in contemporary romance 2023 has been the year of the celebrity and normal person romance in my reading life. I’m still not sure if it’s an actual trend or if it’s just what the algorithm has been feeding me but I’ve really enjoyed it and the hardest part is how do I pick just one for this list? Well the answer is I’m not. I’m picking two: Romantic Comedyby Curtis Sittenfeld and Once More with Feeling by Elissa Sussman. Yes, they are two of the books that were on my half year favourites list, but I really did love them and they’re two of the books that I’ve recommended the most this year. Romantic Comedy is still the only book with the quarantimes in it that I’ve enjoyed and Once More with Feeling made me so happy for some bookish revenge on a Justin Timberlake type figure.
Also in contemporary romance is Lucy Parker’s Codename Charming – this was one of my most anticipated books of the year, and it lived up to my internal hype for it when it finally arrived in the autumn. Also excellent was Christina Lauren’s True Love ExperimentandRole Playing by Cathy Yardley, the latter of which has an older pairing than you usually see which was fun.
And finally it wouldn’t be one of my end of year lists without a Rich People Problems novel, and this year it isPineapple Street, which was also on the mid year list.
I realise now that there’s no crime on this list, which is a slight surprise to me given how much mystery I have read, but a lot of it was either not new or from long running series and you know my policy on that. I wonder what 2024’s fiction list will look like?