My Top 10 Books of 2023

I plowed my way through 75 books in 2023. The thought of drafting a comprehensive roundup of all of those titles like I’d done in past years felt overwhelming, so I thought a good alternative would be to decide on a top 10 list.

I chose my top 5 fiction books, and top 5 non-fiction books. They are presented in no particular order in terms of ranking.


Non-fiction

  • To Dye For: How Toxic Fashion Is Making Us Sick and How We Can Fight Back by Alden Wicker

  • Uncanny Valley: A Memoir by Anna Wiener

  • Robert E. Lee and Me: A Southerner's Reckoning with the Myth of the Lost Cause by Ty Seidule

  • The Feather Thief: Beauty, Obsession, and the Natural History Heist of the Century by Kirk Wallace Johnson

  • Zeitoun by Dave Eggers


To Dye For: How Toxic Fashion Is Making Us Sick and How We Can Fight Back by Alden Wicker

I’ve had a decades-long interest in historical fashion and textiles, so I occasionally like to get really deep in the weeds with texts on fibers. When an acquaintance I’m in a sewing group with recommended To Dye For to me, I instantly put it at the top of my TBR. It broke my brain in the best way. It’s a must-read, really. I’ve been recommending it to people like crazy, particularly all of my fellow fibromyalgia sufferers with multiple chemical sensitivities. Only truly top tier non-fiction leaves a lasting impact on my daily habits, and this one did. I have fully stopped buying synthetic fabrics for my son to wear after reading this and am feeling quite smug about my dedication to this specific brand of organic cotton dresses. This was very well organized nonfiction that presented cutting edge research and included the voices of many industry experts who you aren’t likely to have heard from anywhere else. The way the case study of the Alaska Airlines flight crews experience with their new uniforms bookends the chapters in this makes it a really satisfying read even when there are still so many open questions the science has yet to provide answers to.

Uncanny Valley: A Memoir by Anna Wiener

I picked up Uncanny Valley as research for a new fiction project I’m working on. I was expecting it to be a bit of a chore I had to get through, but I ended up enjoying it far more than I thought I would. I’ve been finding a lot of schadenfreude in the recent spate of documentaries about things like the founding of Über, the downfall of WeWork, the Fyre Festival, etc, and this tale of a young woman being an early hire at GitHub (which I’m familiar with due to my husband’s contributions to open-source code repositories) was such an intriguing window into a world that feels simultaneously far removed from my life and yet all-too-familiar. I liked the way the light, tongue-in-cheek tone ground up against the serious topics like sexism that Weiner engages with, and I especially connected with the treatment of the setting as its own character. This one is full of witty observations and fully relatable scenarios. The way that Weiner chose not to pin down the corporate entities that populate the story by naming them lent a universality to her ultimately very personal tale.

Robert E. Lee and Me: A Southerner's Reckoning with the Myth of the Lost Cause by Ty Seidule

I had some great conversations about this book with my friend who is a professor in the Humanities. It was an interesting perspective that I appreciated more and more the further I got into the text. I learned a lot about both US military history and the politics of the contemporary US military that I hadn’t been aware of previously. I’d never had much insight into how and why things like ships and military bases were named, and this book had so much to say about how mediocre Confederate service members were so honored while many other deserving historical figures have been neglected. This book does not pull any punches when addressing the universal truths it lays bare, and the personal stories the author relates from his own life are no less unflinching.

The Feather Thief: Beauty, Obsession, and the Natural History Heist of the Century by Kirk Wallace Johnson

This is the “true crime” book we deserve! It’s got all the elements of a blockbuster true crime podcast without the glorification of murderers and re-victimization of families that make that genre so unpalatable to me. It’s got money, an obsessive subculture, shady backroom deals, a heist, a young classical musician who breaks bad, a globe-spanning manhunt… it is wild and riveting! And I want more!

Zeitoun by Dave Eggers

This book made me furious in the best way. I picked it up expecting a first-hand account of the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and got that and so, so much more. I’d never made the connection before between the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the ways in which we instituted martial law in Gulf states after Katrina. I knew there had been multiple breakdowns and failures, but this book took on the difficult task of drawing connections between the complicated societal and historical contexts and what actually happened on the ground to one family in the days before, during, and immediately after the disaster. The things that happened were appalling and should be so much more well known. This book makes you feel the very personal heartbreak and trauma of the Zeitoun family as if it were your own. I don’t think I can adequately praise how well it’s reported and how delicately it is structured to carry the reader through heavy topics with a light touch. I don’t care how much time and effort went into the creation of this book. Whatever the cost, it was worth it. We need to do whatever we can to make sure there will be dozens more just like it. Stick David Eggers into a cloning machine right now. I will take 20 more books like Zeitoun and 20 less profiles on Elon Musk, please.


fiction

  • Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir

  • Yellowface by R.F. Kuang

  • The Flatshare by Beth O’Leary

  • Crazy Rich Asians by Kevin Kwan

  • Nothing Sung and Nothing Spoken by Nita Tyndall


Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir

Project Hail Mary had been on my TBR since it released. I had enjoyed The Martian by the same author, despite not preferring first person point of view, so I thought I’d give this newer title of his a chance as well. I’m glad I did. It was inventive hard science fiction with a similar tone and structure as Weir’s previous work without feeling like there were any regurgitated themes. It takes similar themes and finds something fresh to explore in them. I felt like what The Martian did for biology, Project Hail Mary did for materials science. And Weir’s habit of limiting the cast of characters allows him to do so much exploration of the rich interior life of the narrator which I enjoy. I think I can confidently say now that Weird is one of those authors I will instantly buy when I see they have a new title out.

Yellowface by R.F. Kuang

Yellowface. Where do I even start to unpack the complicated feelings I had on this one? When an acquaintance asked my opinion on it recently, I simply said, “It’s a lot.”

I work in a publishing-adjacent space and found myself nodding along at a lot of the criticisms, but some of the more pointed criticisms felt so overwhelming that I had to take a break from the book midway through. It was challenging in ways I both expected given the thematic elements and in ways that totally blindsided me.

I went into this one with no expectations. I’d just heard there was a lot of buzz and some people whose opinions I really respect and trust were holding it up in stunned silence which got me curious. And of course the story took several turns I was not prepared for, but that’s not what I liked best about it. It rides the line of being unreadable with unlikeable protagonists and exploration of problematic themes, but the prose is so beautiful that it kept me turning the pages. I did have to dust off my Triple Constrain Rule for Books, though, because this book had two of the three criteria checked, and it was a tough read!

The Flatshare by Beth O’Leary

This was the February ‘23 read for Fat Girls in Fiction Book Club discussion group, and it kept my mind churning on all the layers for weeks. I wrote two full pages of notes to take to the club meeting and I think we talked for something like 4 hours that night about the book!

I remember when I read the back cover copy thinking that the concept of two people hot-bunking in a flat in London sounded cheesy and that it could either be terribly contrived and not really work… OR it was going to be brilliant because it would have to be in order to pull off that concept.

It was brilliant. There were several individual lines that I bookmarked because of the gorgeous language and insight into the human condition. Like this one:

There are a few people out here. Mainly smokers. They have that hunched look that smokers get, like the world is against them.” –Beth O’Leary in The Flatshare

It felt like a really solid story both structurally, and in terms of the concept being something I’ve never seen done before. Everything clicks together so nicely, the pacing and character arcs were brilliantly handled. And the writing style felt fresh. There are two POV characters, and each voice is very distinct. The way that the male main character uses unconventional sentence structure in his internal dialog makes it really apparent whose POV you’re reading.

This is definitely not one of those contemporary novels where the entire conflict could have been resolved if the main characters had had a simple conversation, and the queer subplot is a rare one that actually cannot be removed and have the story still work in any way, which is refreshing. So often with subplots added in as a diversity checkbox, if you take them away, nothing in the story actually changes. This subplot doesn’t need to justify its existence in the book, and I really liked that.

I liked how Tiffy discovered a lot about herself and her past relationships over the course of the book. We weren’t introduced to her as “damaged and traumatized from being emotionally abused”. She’s just someone who had gone through a breakup and slowly discovers how toxic and damaging that relationship was, and I’ve both seen friends come to that slow realization and come upon that slow realization myself.

On first reading, I thought the part where Leo climbed the balcony was abrupt, seemed out-of-character, was maybe just another way to emphasize his physicality, and felt a bit melodramatic, but I the more I thought about it, I eventually how symbolic the scene was. Putting himself at physical risk was a concrete way of showing his growth as a character, becoming willing to risk himself emotionally by opening tup to Tiffy. Looking at it from a symbolic perspective made a lot more sense than just viewing the scene literally. It’s actually a brilliant piece of writing to allow the reader to infer all of that internal growth through external action. 

Crazy Rich Asians by Kevin Kwan

I’m often a movie-before-book person (gasp!) so I knew I would eventually get around to reading Crazy Rich Asians before the China Rich Girlfriend movie comes out. I also knew I would love it. And I did. Having re-watched the movie at least half a dozen times already, there weren’t any huge surprises, and I don’t want to spend too much time doing a book-vs-movie comparison as there were things I liked about each storytelling approach.

But learning that there are chapters in the book that developed from a poem inspired by the author’s fathers’ deathbed reminiscences that was then adapted into a short story years later for a creative writing class which was ultimately included as a chapter in the novel, I will say you can feel all of it on the page - all of the development, and craft, and the literal years of work, and generations of experience that went into the story. It’s a story with depth that doesn’t feel like it drowns you in too much detail. You get just enough to deepen your appreciate of a scene and you get it at just the right moment. You’re not bogged down in backstory, but it’s all there. I will definitely be reading the rest of the trilogy

Nothing Sung and Nothing Spoken by Nita Tyndall

Whenever I can, I try to read books written by the clients of the agency I do contract work for. This one happened to be on my library’s streaming service, happened to be set in Berlin, and I happened to be traveling to Berlin last spring, so of course I had to grab it! A quick read of the back cover copy made me anxious that this story might fall into that WWII narrative tradition of “Nazi apologists” tales, but I know and trust the agent who represents this author enough to know he wouldn’t have anything to do with a story that didn’t deal with history in a balanced and factual way, so I went ahead and jumped into it. It was fascinating to be able to be rooted in the locations while reading, and I felt like it treated what could be some tricky historical topics delicately while keeping the very personal story of the characters moving forward. The sapphic subplot and ongoing concerns about the political climate the characters were growing up in were central to the story without overwhelming it, and the ending was so unsatisfying, but in the best way.

I really wish I had posted my thoughts on this as I was reading because I can’t remember now all the nuances I enjoyed about this book, but I don’t post public reviews much anymore and I only take notes on what I’m reading for book club picks.

Perhaps for next years’ top 10 list, I’ll keep better notes throughout the year so I can do a better job at my year-end roundup post!

2020 Reading Review

  1. Shelter Mountain by Robyn Carr

  2. Pont Neuf by Max Byrd

  3. The Martian by Andy Weir

  4. The Proposal by Mary Balogh

  5. The Disappearing Spoon by Sam Kean

  6. Forward Collection: Stories of Tomorrow by Blake Crouch

  7. The Sentient Machine: The Coming Age of Artificial Intelligence by Amir Husain

  8. The Ten Thousand Doors of January by Alix E. Harrow

  9. When Women Ruled the World: Six Queens of Egypt by Kara Cooney

  10. Someone to Love (Westcott #1) by Mary Balogh

  11. The Murder of Roger Ackroyd by Agatha Christie

  12. Eye of the Beholder: Johannes Vermeer, Antoni van Leeuwenhoek, & the Reinvention of Seeing by Laura J. Snyder

  13. A History of the World in Six Glasses by Tom Standage

  14. Napoleon's Buttons: How 17 Molecules Changed History by Penny Le Couteur

  15. The Radium Girls: The Dark Story of America's Shining Women by Kate Moore

  16. Rosalind (The Four Sisters Series, Book 1) by Audrey Harrison

  17. Annabelle (The Four Sisters Series, Book 2) by Audrey Harrison

  18. The Captain’s Wallflower by Audrey Harrison

  19. The Work of Art by Mimi Matthews

  20. The Real Sherlock by Lucinda Hawksley

  21. Half a Soul (Regency Faerie Tales, Book 1) by Olivia Atwater

  22. A Discovery of Witches by Deborah Harkness

  23. The Golden Thread: How Fabric Changed History by Kassia St Clair

  24. The Drunken Botanist: The Plants That Create the World's Great Drinks by Amy Stewart

  25. The Genius of Birds by Jennifer Ackerman

  26. The Matrimonial Advertisement (Parish Orphans of Devon, Book 1 ) by Mimi Matthews

  27. An Arrangement of Sorts (Arrangements, Book 1) by Rebecca Connolly

  28. Married to the Marquess (Arrangements, Book 2) by Rebecca Connolly

  29. Secrets of a Spinster (Arrangements, Book 3) by Rebecca Connolly

  30. Frankenstein by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley

  31. Someone to Watch Over Me (Bow Street Runners #1) by Lisa Kleypas

  32. The Jamestown Brides by Jennifer Potter

  33. 1984 by George Orwell

  34. A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens

  35. The Christmas Hirelings by Mary Elizabeth Braddon

  36. Stealing the Show: A History of Art and Crime in Six Thefts by John Barelli and Zachary Schisgal

  37. Wild Swan: A Story of Florence Nightingale by Patti Callahan

  38. Blitzed: Drugs in the Third Reich by Normal Ohler

  39. Fentanyl, Inc: How Rogue Chemists Are Creating the Deadliest Wave of the Opioid Epidemic by Ben Westhoff


Goals? What Goals?

I set a goal last year to read more fantasy in 2020 and largely failed. Spurred on by my exploration of the romance genre, I wanted to explore other genres I hadn’t had much exposure to and chose fantasy as my target. I did read three fantasy titles this year, and they were among my favorite titles I read, though three is a very small percentage of my overall book consumption this year. I’ll be deferring this goal to 2021 . But I was able to meet my Goodreads goal of reading 24 books!

Focus Issues

For a significant span of this year, I found focusing enough to read to be a challenge. Pandemic stress was definitely a contributing factor, but I also have some issues with my thyroid that impacts focus and cognition, chronic cognitive symptoms from an autoimmune condition, tinnitus that makes focus difficult, and I contacted COVID-19 in October and that can carry cognitive impairment symptoms as well. So, you know, my brain is not performing optimally. Audiobooks help, and I read several titles this year by listening to the audiobook and following along in the physical text with a highlighter to pick out critical sections as a tool to improve my focus and recall.

Fun With Friends

Early in the year (pre-pandemic even!) I participated in a virtual book club with some Twitter friends. We read The Murder of Roger Ackroyd by Agatha Christie together and discussed it in a mass DM thread. For many of us, it was the first time we’d read any Agatha Christie at all, so it was an interesting experience. I enjoyed getting an insight into the OG cozy mystery writer. I don’t read many mysteries, but I totally get their appeal. Many in our group weren’t surprised by the twist ending in the book, but I have to admit that I did not see the twist coming! I may read some more Agatha Christie in the future. Maybe I’ll start at the first Poirot book and read through the series since I have just read #4 randomly now!

Books I Read in 2020.jpg

A Different Mix

Changes in my reading habits will likely be impacted by the shift in Audible’s package offerings. The “Escapes Package” that offered a large library of romance titles is no longer available, but it’s been replaced by the Audible Plus catalog which offers unlimited titles in multiple genres. I did enjoy reading romance novels as a balm to pandemic stress because there of the promise of having guaranteed happy endings, though I found I couldn’t really get into a series and read it straight through. I started a few series that I thought I’d like, and ended up not continuing in them.

Podcasting

2020 was the year that I finally launched a literary podcast! I have been interested in podcasting for a number of years, but even though I’ve attended conference sessions that laid out the basics of how to get started podcasting, I hadn’t ever landed on a concept that I was excited about to sustain the level of effort it takes to bring a podcast to live and continue the grind. Podcasting is a LOT of work! In 2020, I landed on that magical concept that I felt uniquely qualified to bring to life. That’s ProbLITmatic focuses on discussing problematic relationships and themes in literature. It’s been driving my reading habits a lot this year. Because of the podcast, I’ve picked up some classics like 1984 by Orson Welles and The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner that I’ve always wanted to read, but never got around to making myself do it. I’m glad now to have an excuse to finally check some of these “required reading” titles off of my TBR list.

I recorded a preview episode for the podcast and recorded the first episode on the book Frankenstein…then that very day started feeling under the weather. Turns out I had Covid-19! I was sick for weeks and am still having some cognitive function disruption that keeps me from being able to concentrate on complicated tasks, so that pushed back my timeline for launching that episode and subsequent ones. I took time over the holidays to regroup and recover, and I’ve been reading and making notes and communicating with people who I’m having as guests in the future, so 2021 is poised to be an exciting year for this project.

Much Needed Humor

This year I keenly felt the need for a little levity, so I ended up buying books from two different humorous Twitter accounts I follow. The first is Men to Avoid in Art and Life that was born as a twitter thread wherein Nicole Tersigni combines witty feminist captions with images of Renaissance paintings featuring women looking supremely unimpressed by the men around them. It is the perfect summation of my humor and I immediately ordered it when I first learned it was published, unfortunately it was so popular that the first printing was sold out and I had to wait for AGES for my copy to arrive in the mail. Totally worth it. If your humor aligns in any way with the tweet embedded below, I recommend you pick up a copy of the book ASAP.

Men to Avoid in Art and Life by Nicole Tersigni

This is the book of my heart. Not only does it combined two of my chief joys in life - European paintings and gender equality - but it is beautifully designed. And Tersigni's humor, of course, is sharp and all-too-familiar to every woman. We've all dealt with mansplainers, concern trolls, patronizers, and those who get mortally offended when we don't find their sad attempts at humor funny in the least. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

The second humor book I picked up this year to have as a handy reference for when I need a laugh is A Field Guide to Identification of Effin’ Birds which pairs gorgeously detailed illustrations of birds with profane captions. It’s the type of subversive humor I enjoy most and I find myself regularly re-tweeting my favorite Effin’ Birds images at people who piss me off on Twitter. My favorites are below:

The Year in Non-Fiction

It was another memorable year for reading in non-fiction. This year I went on a bit of a history of science kick, which isn’t surprising considering that on of my best friends is a medievalist specializing in the history of science. I like to keep up with the headlines that relate to his research just so I can hold my own in conversations with him, and when a book written for laypeople comes on the market, I like to make sure it gets slipped into my TBR pile.

I had the best discussions about Eye of the Beholder with the aforementioned friend! It was the perfect conjunction of our two areas of interest - early modern science for him and 16th century Baroque art for me. This is one that I will probably end up re-reading at some point because it was so interesting and went into great depth that I’m sure I didn’t fully absorb the first time around.

Eye of the Beholder: Johannes Vermeer, Antoni van Leeuwenhoek, and the Reinvention of Seeing by Laura J. Snyder

I cannot say enough good things about how well-researched and engaging this book is. It was everything I hoped it would be and more. It's definitely going to be a contender for my favorite non-fiction read this year.

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

The Disappearing Spoon definitely gave me a taste for Sam Kean’s writing and I was thrilled to learn he has several history and science non-fiction titles on the market. I’m sure I’ll be reading more of his work in future.

The Disappearing Spoon: And Other True Tales of Madness, Love, and the History of the World from the Periodic Table of the Elements by Sam Kean

Accessible for someone who not only is not a scientist, but also came close to failing chemistry when I studied it over two decades ago. The stories are engaging and memorable. I was entertained on a human level and fascinated by the science, even as a layperson.

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

After The Disappearing Spoon re-ignited my thirst for chemistry and materials science knowledge, I picked up Napoleon’s Buttons right away. Le Couteur and Burreson’s work wasn’t quite as engrossing as Sam Kean’s, but I’m not entirely sure I can lay the blame squarely at their feet as I read this right as the early stages of the pandemic were dominating the headlines, though I remember it being a bit dryer and academic than Kean’s more informal and almost conversational style.

Napoleon's Buttons: How 17 Molecules Changed History by Penny Le Couteur and Jay Burreson

Very well researched. I did find my attention wondering a bit, which doesn't always happen in non-fiction. I don't necessarily attribute this as a condemnation of the quality of writing. It's a pandemic read, and I find my focus is impacted in direct relation to my level of anxiety.

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

The all-knowing algorithm, seeing my interest in science non-fiction, then led me directly to my pick for the best non-fiction book I read in 2020. I recommended The Radium Girls to many people this year, and I found it particularly salient to be reading it during a public health crisis because it contains so many parallels between the misinformation and mismanagement of COVID-19 by the Trump Administration and the lies and cover-ups that occurred in the 1920s and 30s that cost the lives of so many workers who were told that the radium paint they handled was safe and would even improve their health.

While I was reading the text, I remember having so many conversations with friends about it and looking up a few podcasts that covered the topic. I also made sure to watch Radioactive, the dramatization of Marie Curie’s life starring Rosamund Pike, that came out in 2019. There’s also a film adaptation of a stage play that shares a name with the book, but I haven’t seen it yet.

The Radium Girls: The Dark Story of America's Shining Women by Kate Moore

Very well-researched nonfiction with excellent storytelling and pacing. It never drags and strikes just the right balance between cold, hard facts and the personal details that give the story its heart.

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

A History fo the World is 6 Glasses was just the type of accessible and fun non-fiction that I needed during the pandemic. I thoroughly enjoyed it’s well-laid out structure and the balance that it struck between presenting scholarship and archaeological evidence with engaging anecdotes and plenty of historical context. It wasn’t too heavy, and that’s precisely what I liked about it. Dare I say I found 6 Glasses refreshing?

A History of the World in 6 Glasses by Tom Standage

Shorter than I wanted it to be. This book goes into just enough detail without getting too far into the academic weeds, but it was so fascinating, that I could have definitely read an entire book that was a deep dive into each of the beverages covered.

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Next I’ll cover two non-fiction history reads of 2020 that took me completely by surprise. First, The Jamestown Brides was shocking to me for imparting so much of my own country’s history that I’d never known about before. I’ve had a patchy formal education in history, but I considered myself unusually well-read in this area. I may have to reassess whether I truly am well read in history or not, though, because I learned so much through reading The Jamestown Brides and subsequently viewing the fantastic series America’s Untold Story from Secrets of the Dead on PBS that I’m certain I’ll be reading a lot more early American history in 2021 if only to fill in the gaps of my knowledge.

The Jamestown Brides: The untold story of England's 'maids for Virginia' by Jennifer Potter

Solid research, which must have been difficult given the geographic spread and dearth of historical records. I wish there would have been more personal stories, but it's good that the author didn't try to invent too much and shoehorn it in. The few inclusions of historical fiction excerpts were intriguing, though. I don't see that done often in non-fiction. A fascinating topic that has whet my appetite to queue up more reading on America during the colonization period.

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

The second book that really surprised me a lot was Blitzed. I was absolutely shocked to learn that the Nazis war machine was run on methamphetamines during WWII and that Hitler was being injected with meth and testosterone. Hitler’s private physician injected him with so many vitamin cocktails and an opioid cousin of heroine called Eukadol that he soon couldn’t function without several injections in a day. Also shocking was the fact that Hitler received dozens of untested hormone treatments that were produced in unsanitary facilities that processed slaughterhouse offal and likely developed serious complications due to this practice. This was all new information to me, which accounts for part of why I found it so fascinating, but also I was again able to draw parallels with current events. The suspicion that Donald Trump abuses cocaine and Adderall is fueled by his often erratic behavior and movements and the frequency of his public appearance with extremely dilated pupils and instances where a hard white substance has sprayed from his mouth and nasal passages as he was giving public addresses. I found the descriptions of Hitler’s stimulant abuse and behavior in his final days startlingly similar to accounts of Trump’s reported relationship to stimulants and the behavior I’ve witnessed him display in public.

Blitzed: Drugs in Nazi Germany by Norman Ohler, translated by Shaun Whiteside

Very well organized with excellent writing and research. I didn't know the extent of the Nazi regime's use of stimulants and the chapters on Hitler's drug abuse were fascinating.

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Now, from my top two sleeper hits of the year to my two biggest disappointments, though I hesitate to put The Golden Thread into the same category with When Women Rules the World because it deserves better.

I didn’t write a GoodReads review of The Golden Thread: How Fabric Changed History by Kassia St Clair. I do intend to re-read it eventually to give it a fair shot at impressing me when I’m not out of my mind with worry about the global pandemic, so perhaps I’ll write a review then. I really enjoyed St Clair’s The Secret Lives of Color. It’s one of the books I like to dip in and out of on occasion just to reference as I write. So when I heard she had a book about textile history coming out in 2020, I was really looking forward to it as textile history aligns with my interested in fashion history. I have to say, though, perhaps because of this high level of anticipation, I was left feeling let down by the actual book. I had a hard time staying engrossed in it, and didn’t find it very memorable. I do recall being enthralled by one section, so perhaps my biggest reason for not giving the book a starred review is that the sections were uneven.

This next one, though… I have to say that I rarely give one star reviews. I’m a fairly regular consumer of Egyptology media, not because I’m particularly interested in Egyptian history, but I am deeply interested in archaeology and a lot of popular media gets made about Egyptology because the pyramids and mummies and tombs are “sexy science”. So I went into this decidedly feminist take on Egyptian history with high hopes only to have them dashed. This is just a very poorly researched and very poorly written book by Kara Cooney.

When Women Ruled the World: Six Queens of Egypt by Kara Cooney

So. Much. Conjecture.

Here's how this book plays out: It asks a leading questions, then answers it without bothering to support the position with research. I expect better from non-fiction written by an academic and presumed expert in her field.

I'm strongly feminist, but this book leans hard into some gender issues that aren't strongly supported by the historical record. Sometimes I want to applaud when the author pulls no punches discussing the roll that Hillary Clinton played in her husband's administration and the roll that Ivanka Trump is currently playing, but the text never actually accurately draws the comparison between modern times and the historical figures being discussed adequately. I see the parallels with the ancient Egyptian queens she's trying to draw, but I don't think the writing and research quite got to the point it needed to be at. Perhaps it was rushed to press?

In any event, it was frustrating to read and I almost "DNF"-ed several times. The author did admirable narration on the audio version, though.

⭐️

Random Review Roundup

Sometimes I’ll write a review on Goodreads just because I know I’ll be writing this year-end retrospective and I want to record my thoughts on a book while they’re still fresh. This is the case with these few straggler reviews. I was pretty critical of romances this year. I don’t know if it’s because I’d exhausted my supply of excellent titles in the free library and was now down to the mediocre or average examples of the genre, or wether I’ve just had enough exposure to the genre now that its novelty has worn off for me. In any event, this year was an excellent year to indulge in reading romance. Having a guaranteed happy ending and fairly predictably structured conflict was a balm to frazzled nerves.

Secrets of a Spinster (Arrangements, #3) by Rebecca Connolly

Thoughts on the Arrangements series up to book 3: They're fine. There's not much to elevate them above others of their kind, but they will give you all the right feels. They're very chaste, if that's your thing. And they're not too heavy on research or period correctness. That's not to say they're incorrect. There's nothing to pull you out of the story screaming "that wasn't a THING then", but it also is nebulously framed in a wide swath of the period of horses and candlelight and quills and ink. The setting could float around in time by half a dozen decades and still not offend nitpickers. So if you're into specificity, there's not much here for you. The one thing that all three thus far have shared that had me sheer off a star on my rating is a propensity to cover the same emotional terrain too often. The stories could do with quite a bit less internal dialog about how dreamy/loathsome one character finds another. To me, it feels like the author doesn't respect my intelligence when they reiterate the same emotional guidepost thrice in as many pages. I'm not sure if I'll continue to read on until the rest of the cast get paired off. Collin might be worth sticking around for, but I'm still on the fence. ⭐️⭐️⭐️

Annabelle (The Four Sisters, #2) by Audrey Harrison

This series is the worst offender of "head hopping" I've ever read. The abrupt shifts in POV take a lot away from the misunderstandings that provide the conflict in the story. ⭐️⭐️⭐️

This final review comes from the only historical fiction book I read this year. I remember very little about it, and I’m sure that is saying a lot.

Pont Neuf by Max Byrd

I can't imagine why this doesn't have a higher rating. I suppose because it is genre bending. People who love historical romance will dislike the literary quality of the description and management of the timeline, I suppose. I, for one, very much appreciated the complexity and subtlety.

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

2019 Reading List

  1. Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë

  2. Venetia by Georgette Heyer

  3. Provenance: How a Con Man and a Forger Rewrote the History of Modern Art by Laney Salisbury & Aly Sujo

  4. The Man on the Mountaintop by Susan Trott & Libby Spurrier

  5. From Scotland with Love by Kelli Ireland

  6. The Art of the Con: The Most Notorious Fakes, Frauds, and Forgeries in the Art World by Anthony M. Amore

  7. Power Moves: Lessons from Davos by Adam Grant

  8. A Mind of Her Own by Paula McLean

  9. The Billionaire’s Vinegar: The Mystery of the World’s Most Expensive Bottle of Wine by Benjamin Wallace

  10. Cotillion by Georgette Heyer

  11. In Vino Duplicitas: The Rise and Fall of a Wine Forger Extraordinaire by Peter Hellman, Charles Constant

  12. Cousin Kate by Georgette Heyer

  13. The Rescue Artist by Edward Dolnick

  14. Master Thieves: The Boston Gangsters Who Pulled Off the World’s Greatest Art Heist by Stephen Kurkjian

  15. Elizabeth II: Life of a Monarch by Ruth Cowen

  16. International Player by Louise Bay

  17. Sotheby's: Bidding for Class by Robert Lacey

  18. The Auctioneer: Adventures in the Art Trade by Simon de Pury

  19. Persuasion by Jane Austen

  20. Babylon’s Ashes by James S. A. Corey

  21. The Huntress by Kate Quinn

  22. The Alice Network by Kate Quinn

  23. The Art Forger by B.A. Shapiro

  24. The Girl in the Gatehouse by Julie Klassen

  25. The Secret of Pembrooke Park by Julie Klassen

  26. How to Dance with a Duke (Ugly Ducklings, #1) by Manda Collins

  27. Priceless: How I Went Undercover to Rescue the World's Stolen Treasures by Robert K. Wittman and John Shiffman

  28. The Heir (Windham, #1) by Grace Burrowes

  29. The Soldier (Windham, # 2) by Grace Burrowes

  30. The Virtuoso (Windham, #3) by Grace Burrowes

  31. Lady Sophie's Christmas Wish (Windham, #4) by Grace Burrowes

  32. Lady Maggie's Secret Scandal (Windham, #5) by Grace Burrowes

  33. Lady Louisa's Christmas Knight (Windham, #6) by Grace Burrowes

  34. Lady Eve's Indiscretion (Windham, #7) by Grace Burrowes

  35. The Man Who Knew The Way to the Moon by Todd Zwillich

  36. A Grown-Up Guide to Dinosaurs by Ben Garrod

  37. Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë

  38. It Burns: The Scandal-Plagued Race to Breed the World’s Hottest Chili by Marc Fennell

  39. To All the Boys I've Loved Before by Jenny Han

  40. P. S. I still Love You by Jenny Han 

  41. Always and Forever, Lara Jean by Jenny Han

  42. After You by JoJo Moyes

  43. The Sisters by Dervla McTiernan

  44. One Night with Her Bodyguard by Noelle Adams

  45. Indianapolis: The True Story of the Worst Sea Disaster in U.S. Naval History by Lynn Vincent and Sara Vladic

  46. Wanderlust by Lauren Blakely

  47. No Stone Unturned: The True Story of the World's Premier Forensic Investigators by Steve Jackson

  48. The Art of Looking Up by Catherine McCormack

  49. Carnival Row: Tangle in the Dark by Stephanie K. Smith

  50. Remedial Rocket Science (Chemistry Lessons #1) by Susannah Nix

  51. His Wicked Reputation (The Wicked Trilogy #1) by Madeline Hunter

  52. Tall, Dark, and Wicked (The Wicked Trilogy #2) by Madeline Hunter

  53. The Wicked Duke (The Wicked Trilogy #3) by Madeline Hunter

  54. The Next Pandemic: On the Front Lines Against Humankind's Gravest Dangers by Ali Khan, William Patrick

  55. The Quantum Spy by David Ignatius

  56. Minerva (The Six Sisters #1) by M.C. Beaton

  57. The Taming of Anabelle (The Six Sisters #2) by M.C. Beaton

  58. Deirdre and Desire (The Six Sisters #3) by M.C. Beaton

  59. Daphne (The Six Sisters #4) by M.C. Beaton

  60. Diana the Huntress (The Six Sisters #5) by M.C. Beaton

  61. Frederica in Fashion (The Six Sisters #3) by M.C. Beaton

  62. Climbing with Mollie by William Finnegan

  63. Mansfield Park by Jane Austen 

  64. Medieval Bodies by Jack Hartnell 

  65. The Monuments Men by Robert Edsel

  66. The Half-Life of Marie Currie by Lauren Gunderson

  67. Virgin River by Robyn Carr

A Record Year

2019 was a banner year! 67 titles is a record for one year!  I started keeping a book log in 2002 and my previous best was 43 titles in 2003. Considering that just a few years ago, I read only two books in total, I’d say I’m doing quite well with my goal to do more reading.

Books-I-Read-in-2019.jpg

The Year of Audiobooks

There are a few reasons why I’ve been gravitating to audiobooks over reading a paper book or downloading something on my e-paper reader. One is that I have severe tinnitus and my world is never truly silent anymore.  This affects my ability to focus on reading, an issue that was compounded by hypothyroidism which has negative impacts on cognition.  Having audio on in the background helps me ignore the constant screech of the tinnitus. And I find that I can extend the length of time I can focus on a story by doing simple mechanical tasks while listening, so I can put my headphones in and crochet or cook or do some other hobby while enjoying fiction.

More Romance in 2019

There’s a lot more romance in the mix than in years past.  I recognized that I was being quite snobby about romance books, but I’ve made so many friends in the Twitter Writing Community who are romance authors that I wanted to re-evaluate my perspective on the genre.  I hadn’t read any romance books in 15 plus years since I picked up some cheap paperbacks to fill the time when I only had over-the-air TV and streaming wasn’t really a thing yet.  And, again as in the past, I find that what drew me most to the category was the sheer availability of titles.  They’re easy reads that fill time, and I find the predictability to be comforting when there is so much uncertainty in real life.  I signed up for the Audible Escapes Package which gives access to unlimited downloads of select titles in the romance genres and I discovered some quite good writing through this pipeline.  There are some stellar recordings of Jane Austen’s works that I really enjoyed, and just about any narrator with an English accent appeals to me.  I also tried out some contemporary romance stories with American narrators, but I found I enjoyed the historicals more and enjoyed a couple of multi-book series including the Windham series by Grace Burrowes, the Wicked trilogy by Madeline Hunter, and the Six Sisters series by M.C. Beaton. Of these, Grace Burrowes was superior. She is a gifted writer.

If I had to pick a top romance title of the year, it would have to be Wanderlust by Lauren Blakely. The alternating perspectives were well done, and I really loved the descriptions of Paris and the challenge the main female character was having learning a new language. Also, Richard Armitage does the male narration and…it’s very good. I recommend giving it a listen. I gave it four stars and called it the best contemporary romance I’d ever read on GoodReads. I stand by that assessment.

Read More Fantasy in 2020

Next on my “read more in this genre” hit list is fantasy.  I’ve never enjoyed fantasy in literature.  I liked reading Tolkien, but I didn’t become a huge fan of Lord of the Rings until the movies came out.  I tend to only enjoy high fantasy as movies or television.  I find them tedious to read.  But this is probably me being a bit snobbish, so I’m going to load my TBR pile with fantasy titles to get a taste of what the trends in the genre are.

I like to set reading goals for the year, which is usually 12 books per year, but since I fly through audio so fast, I figured I could up the count to 20 this year. But I do intend to read some more text-based works this year. There are a few books written by Twitter friends I want to take a peak into and they’re not available as audio, so I need to make sure I follow through on this goal and not slack off and only read 3 text books in 12 months like 2019!

Revisiting Old Favorites

Of course I revisited a few old favorites this year.  I’m always up for a re-read of Jane Eyre and the works of Austen, but I went deeper into Victorian writer Elizabeth Gaskell’s catalog than I ever had before. I discovered Georgette Heyer last year and revisited some of my favorites this year.  She wrote in the 40s through 70s, pretty much pioneering the historical romance genre.  I find her works to be quite Austen-esque in that they are largely set in the Regency period (or thereabouts) and feature slow burn romances or marriage farce plot lines.  She did a ton of research into Regency England and I enjoyed learning all of the little things about that time that Austen may have assumed her contemporary audience already knew or that lay outside of her limited experience. Venetia is my favorites, and there is an abridged audio recording read by Richard Armitage that is a quick listen and so much fun. Someone needs to adapt it into a movie and cast him as Lord Damarel, like, yesterday.

Multi-Media Overlap

I very often read a book after I’ve watched a movie or series adaptation, which is why you’ll see To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before by Jenny Han on this years’ list.  I found the movie adaptation on Netflix to be charming. It overcame a huge hurdle in the form of me being pretty over the teen YA rom-com genre in all forms to the extend that Jane Austen has been wearing a bit thin for me.  As an old married lady, I am having a harder time connecting with virginal husband hunters and first loves that feature in a lot of books written for younger audiences.  But the series’ main protagonist Lara Jean was endlessly endearing and I saw a lot of myself in her.  

Always and Forever, Lara Jean by Jenny Han

I haven't read YA in awhile, so I decided to read the "To All the Boys I've Loved Before" trilogy after seeing the first movie and in anticipation of the sequel’s release on Netflix. They were charming, but made me remember why I don't usually read YA” ⭐️⭐️⭐️

I can’t wait for the sequel movie adaptation to come out on Netflix in a few weeks!

In non-fiction reads that I was inspired to pick up because of a movie, I had been meaning to read The Monuments Men by Robert Edsel for ages and finally got around to it this year. It did such a good job of creating a coherent narrative out of a period in WWII that was so confusing to those who lived through it. Hearing about the heroism that saved so many of the world’s priceless masterpieces is inspiring, but my heart breaks for the works that were never recovered and the millions of lives lost during the conflict.

I’ve just started in on the Virgin River series by Robyn Carr because it was adapted by Netflix into a series with superb casting. I really connected with the main character and enjoyed the descriptions of her career in nursing and midwifery.

Virgin River by Robyn Carr

Head and shoulders above some works that it shares a category with, especially in terms of character development and providing motivation that drives behavior, but this book still suffers some of the same drawbacks as many romances. Mainly, everyone stands around and talks about their feelings for the last three chapters and much of the same territory is covered twice or more, which gets exhausting to read. The recent Netflix adaptation gives its audience like two lines of dialog expertly delivered by a fine actor and it makes the declaration of feelings so much more impactful for its brevity.

I wish the author would have had the capacity to expand on how "beautiful" the setting is. There are so many mentions of how "beautiful" the rivers and pines and mountains are without much more description than that. I'd have liked it if the author could have explained WHY things were so beautiful or what was so beautiful about them.

Much of the tension is built around wondering when the shoe will drop that reveals the characters' secret trauma, which sometimes feels a bit cheap, but it is refreshing to see older protagonists who have lived complicated lives get the spotlight here ⭐️⭐️⭐️

I also gave a listen to a Carnival Row novelization based on the Amazon Prime television series. It’s a gritty faerie fantasy that explores class differences and racism. The show is gorgeous and the world-building is interesting, but the story-telling is a bit eyeroll worthy at times. The book was true to form. It gave some useful backstory, but was ultimately unsubstantial. I felt like it wasn’t quite enough to make a meal out of, if that makes sense.

The Half-Life of Marie Currie by Lauren Gunderson was a theater crossover. Audible made a recording adapted from the Broadway play starring Kate Mulgrew and Hertha Ayrton. It was a heart-rending audio drama, expertly performed. I highly recommend it. I bet it was even more spectacular as a play.

My Heart Belongs to Non-Fiction

I read more non-fiction than ever before in 2019.  Some of this stems from being a habitual listener of NPR news radio, but not being able to stomach listening to current political discussions without becoming too anxious. But some of my non-fiction intake this year was research for my current fiction projects.

  • Sotheby's: Bidding for Class by Robert Lacey

  • The Auctioneer: Adventures in the Art Trade by Simon de Pury

  • Provenance: How a Con Man and a Forger Rewrote the History of Modern Art by Laney Salisbury & Aly Sujo

  • The Art of the Con: The Most Notorious Fakes, Frauds, and Forgeries in the Art World by Anthony M. Amore

  • The Bilionaire’s Vinegar: The Mystery of the World’s Most Expensive Bottle of Wine by Benjamin Wallace

  • In Vino Duplicitas: The Rise and Fall of a Wine Forger Extraordinaire by Peter Hellman and Charles Constant

  • The Rescue Artist by Edward Dolnick

  • Master Thieves: The Boston Gangsters Who Pulled Off the World’s Greatest Art Heist by Stephen Kurkjian

I found Provenance and The Billionaire’s Vinegar to be particularly eye-opening as they gave me a window into worlds I hadn’t previously known existed. The heist books weren’t strictly research, more like falling down an artworld non-fic rabbit hole. And the two books I read about the rival auction houses were strikingly opposite in terms of quality. The Robert Lacey book on Sotheby’s is fantastic and I really need to buy a hard copy so I can reference it quickly. But the Simon de Pury? Well…

The Auctioneer: Adventures in the Art Trade by Simon de Pury

Some fascinating details of the auction houses at work, but mostly just self-indulgent (and self-important) tosh and tattle. ⭐️⭐️

A good portion of the non-fiction I read this year was born out of my insatiable curiosity about the world.  I particularly enjoy history and science non-fiction, so you’ll see a lot of science titles in the mix, but pretty much anything that I saw come across the Audible picks of the month that featured a subject I found fascination was worth a listen. There’s a broad spectrum of reads here:

  • No Stone Unturned: The True Story of the World's Premier Forensic Investigators by Steve Jackson

  • It Burns: The Scandal-Plagued Race to Breed the World’s Hottest Chili by Marc Fennell

  • The Man Who Knew The Way to the Moon by Todd Zwillich

  • A Grown-Up Guide to Dinosaurs by Ben Garrod

  • Elizabeth II: Life of a Monarch by Ruth Cowen

  • Medieval Bodies: Life and Death in the Middle Ages by Jack Hartnell 

  • Climbing with Mollie by William Finnegan

  • The Next Pandemic: On the Front Lines Against Humankind's Gravest Dangers by Ali Khan, William Patrick

  • The Art of Looking Up by Catherine McCormack

The book Indianapolis: The True Story of the Worst Sea Disaster in U.S. Naval History and the Fifty-Year Fight to Exonerate an Innocent Man by Lynn Vincent & Sara Vladic holds a special place in my heart. My pepaw, Bill Fouts, served aboard the USS Ringness in WWII, one of the ships who recovered sailors during the rescue operations after the USS Indianapolis disaster. 321 men survived of the 880 who were aboard when the ship went down. My Pepaw’s ship saved 39 of the 321 survivors, including the ship’s captain. He was a gunner’s mate and was on deck during the rescue operation. I took him to the 70th reunion of Indianapolis survivors in 2014 where we met up with decedents of those who were rescued by the Ringness, men and women who wouldn’t be alive if not for the efforts of the rescuers. While we were at the reunion, we were introduced to the author Sara Vladic who was working on a documentary film collecting first-hand accounts from the veterans on hand. Because of this, he was featured briefly in the film and is also in this book, sharing his account of watching the Indy captain come aboard the rescue vessel.

A very well-researched and readable account of the sinking of the USS Indianapolis with coverage of the aftermath and trial of its captain. Also, my pepaw is in it.⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

No Stone Unturned should be required reading for every author who is trying to make sure their bodies stay buried or who likes to write about cold cases. I also found The Next Pandemic to be really useful in terms of giving a much better view of the actual science of epidemiology and not the bastardized and sensationalized version that is seen in movies, television, and novels.

Medieval Bodies was brilliant. It actually made me laugh out loud in a couple of places. And since one of my best friends is a medievalist, I had a great time chatting with him about it. The different sections were a bit uneven, as in the writing/research was superior in some chapters and others felt a little more flat, but this may have been a byproduct of my wandering attention or just not being as interested in some topics over others. The book covers a breadth of different aspects of medieval life.

Medieval Bodies: Life and Death in the Middle Ages by Jack Hartnell 

This is excellently researched and well written. No qualms in recommending it. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Historical Fiction

I used to read a lot in the HistFic genre, but I find I don’t read as much of it anymore. I think, mostly, I got tired of reading the actual history and finding the holes in the HistFic research, or the license taken with the fictionalization and getting kind of steamed about that, so I just switched to reading non-fiction history books. I did read two of Kate Quinn’s recent novels and enjoyed them quite a bit.

The Huntress by Kate Quinn

Read on recommendation of the A Mighty Girl social media presence. Based on the subject matter, I thought I was in for a more serious story, but it was quite a bit lighter than I thought it would be. The woven narratives are deftly handled, even if there is enough of a clear trajectory to the story to prevent there being any true mystery about how things will end up. The romance subplot is a bit frothy, but not unpleasantly so. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

I liked The Huntress enough to pick up Quinn's other novel set in the same time period, The Alice Network, which I thought was superior in terms of how lyrical and beautiful the writing is, which is odd since The Alice Network was a debut. I would have thought that the writing would have become better over time.

To marry Histfic with my research in the art world, I read The Art Forger by B.A. Shapiro. it was good, but not terribly memorable. I enjoyed the process descriptions of the main character painting, but the subplot tying in with a shady gallery owner and the Gardner Museum heist of the 90s was a bit overcooked for my taste.

Surprises

David Ignatius is a familiar name to me as he often appears on NPR discussions of current events in his capacity as a Washington Post reporter. I was so surprised by the quality of what I thought was going to be a forgettable spy thriller. I thoroughly enjoyed the portrayal of CIA agents who weren’t constantly shooting and blowing things up, who were just making deals and filing the paperwork and looking after their departmental budgets. I’m a sucker for realism these days, and this book had it. And I think Ignatius might have pulled off the best female characters I’ve yet seen a man write…aside from perhaps James S.A. Corey.

The Quantum Spy by David Ignatius

Hats off to David Ignatius for The Quantum Spy. It neatly sidesteps all the idiotic Hollywood tropes that make spy thrillers obnoxious. The science is right. The portrayal of actual intelligence work is (as far as I know) right, and his portrayal of female characters is spot on. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

I am a huge fan of James S.A. Corey (actually a team of writers named Ty Franck and Daniel Abraham) and The Expanse books are some of the best hard sci fi around these days. The show based on the books is the best sci fi show, hands down, and I could go on for a long time about what I love about the series in both forms, but I only read one of them this year and I had a very hard time getting into it. For one thing, the previous book in the series Nemesis Games blew my socks off with how good it was, but where the plot picks up in Babylon’s Ashes is a really dark place, and I just wasn’t up for inhabiting that headspace this year. Also, one thing that James S.A. Corey does particularly well is alternating point of views. There are frequently four POV characters in each of the Expanse novels. But one of the POV characters in Babylon’s Ashes has been newly introduced and I had a hard time connecting with her for some reason. I’ll have to give it a second read to see if I was just in a period of burnout when I tried to pick it up, because I fully expected to be in love with it and I just wasn’t. My husband is peeved at me for not being caught up with the latest book, so I should really move this to the top of my TBR list.

I’d say the most memorable author I “discovered” recently was JoJo Moyes.  Yes, I know, she’s BEEN hot for years, but I hadn’t ever read anything by her until last year and she wrecked me in the best possible way.  I had seen the Me Before You movie, of course.  I watched it a few times because it was good for a nice cry, but the as much as the movie is a tear-jerker, the book ripped my heart out of my chest and pureed it. When I found out there were sequels I couldn’t believe they would be half as good as the original.  So when After You wrecked me just as thoroughly as the first book in the series, I knew I’d be reading a lot more JoJo Moyes in the future. She’s the perfect example of an author whose voice I adore but cannot in a million years imitate in my own writing.  She makes writing about grief seem effortless and balances on the comedy-tragedy knife edge. I’ll definitely be finishing the series sometime soon, but it’s the type of thing that I have to be in the mood for and a few days in my calendar that I can just clear completely.

17 years of Book Log

Soon, I’ll have kept a book log for 20 years. I have had such fun looking back into the past and sharing my reading life through this Reading Log series of posts. I’ve exercised my memory and relived some times I don’t often think back on. 2019 certainly has been one of the best reading years of my life, though.