Favorite Books of 2024

Happy New Year, Friends!

I chose the painting above to illustrate this post because it perfectly captures the sort of reading year 2024 was for me; in a word, distracted. While I read roughly as many books as usual (about 30, give or take), most of those were concentrated in the early months of the year. In August, I went back to work teaching full time at a school an hour’s drive away, and my reading dropped off precipitously. Nevertheless, I wanted to share some of my favorites here.

Favorite Fiction

Laurus by Eugene Vodolazkin

This is a novel so sweeping that I can’t begin to summarize it. It’s the story of a remarkable life, in the spirit of, say David Copperfield, Kristin Lavransdatter, or Les Miserables, but it’s particular in its medieval Russian setting. Love, grace, and atonement are all themes. I definitely want to read more by Vodolazkin.

Tom Lake by Ann Patchett

I inhaled this book at a lake in New Hampshire at the end of the summer, which was just about the perfect time and place to read it. A much easier read than Laurus, but no less stirring in its themes of motherhood, regret, and the stories we tell our children.

Favorite Nonfiction

The Comfort of Crows by Margaret Renkl

A friend from Nashville sent me this book from Ann Patchett’s Parnassus Books, so I was bound to love it from the start! I’d recommend reading Renkl’s reflections on the life she observes in her backyard throughout the seasons slowly; I read one chapter a week for the entire year so that I was actually living each season Renkl describes in such loving and beautiful detail.

The Anxious Generation by Jonathan Haidt

This book is an unflinching look at what we already know but would prefer to ignore: That the advent of smartphones and social media is rewiring our children’s minds and leading to increased anxiety and isolation. It’s such an important read for any parent or educator, but it’s also hopeful and practical.

Favorite Religious/Spiritual Books

Reasons to Believe by Scott Hahn

One of the most important (and unexpected!) things that happened in our family this year was that we joined the Catholic Church. That’s a long and complicated story that deserves its own post at some point. But it involved a LOT of reading, and this clear and cogent book by Scott Hahn played a major role in my own journey. (Thank you, Chelsey!)

The Reed of God by Caryll Houselander

The sleeper hit of my year! The Reed of God showed up in the blog of an Anglican author I follow, as a recommended Advent read. I thought I’d read all the Advent books there were, so I was intrigued. It turned out to be classic reflection on the attributes of Mary, and what they have to tell us about our relation to God. Now I hope to read it annually at Advent.

Favorite Children’s/Young Adult Books

As a parent of five and now as a 4th grade language/literature teacher, most of the books I read fall into this category — and they’re usually my favorites. This year was no exception.

Everything Sad Is Untrue by Daniel Nayeri

This was a favorite for me and for the two teenagers in our house who also read it this year. Nayeri’s gorgeously written memoir of his family, their flight from Iran, and his early years in the United States continues to provide some helpful perspective for our privileged children (as in, “Okay, but did you have to flee home with only one stuffed animal, which you then had to leave behind anyway??”)

The Eyes and the Impossible by Dave Eggers

If you have seen me this fall, you have heard about this remarkable book! To say that it’s a story of love, courage, and perseverance told from the viewpoint of a stray dog in Golden Gate Park doesn’t even begin to capture its power and beauty. My daughter and I listened to the audiobook version, performed impeccably by Ethan Hawke, which I’d recommend over reading the physical book — a first for me, but I can’t imagine experiencing it any other way.

That concludes this year’s list! What have YOU been reading and loving lately?

Favorite Books of 2023

Hello, friends!

It has been…a while. In early September, I took a sabbatical from my regular column — and, by extension, this blog. So much has happened since then, and so much is brewing for the coming year, but for now, I’m going to kick off the New Year with my traditional list of favorite books from the past year.

I’ve been reading less each year. This is partly due to how busy life is, as the kids get older and are heading in so many different directions. But I’ve also been reading longer, more difficult books; the type of books that used to intimidate me. In recent years, I’ve figured, “If not now, when?” and dived into some books that are, to say the least, a commitment. This year, a friend started a book group specifically for reading the classics. As part of that group, I read two 1,000-page novels that took months apiece: Kristin Lavransdatter, by Norwegian author Sigrid Undset, and The Brothers Karamazov, by Fyodor Dostoyevsky. Both are books that I’ve long wanted to read; neither will appear on this list. I’m glad to have read them, but there is just SO MUCH happening in each book that it’s going to take me another year of processing to figure out if I actually LIKE them.

So, without further ado, my picks for the year!

Favorite Fiction

Foster by Claire Keegan

This was such a lovely, quiet, heartrending book. It reminded me a bit of The Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro, in that what isn’t said is actually louder than what is. I listened to Foster on audiobook, and would recommend that as the best medium because you’ll get the lovely, lilting voice of Aoife McMahon bringing the Irish characters to life.

Piranesi by Susanna Clarke

Last year I read — and loved — Clarke’s epic Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell. This book is slim where that book was a doorstop, and modern where that book was rooted in Napoleonic England, but Piranesi is just as strangely compelling. It’s like a little mystery that the reader solves along with the narrator, and is probably best read along with someone with whom you can discuss the questions it raises.

Till We Have Faces by C.S. Lewis

This is Lewis’s last work of fiction, a re-telling of the myth of Cupid and Psyche, and it’s as far from Narnia as one can imagine! It’s a gut-punch look at how we often wound the people we are trying to love, with the best of intentions. I’d recommend it especially for parents of teenagers.

Favorite Non-Fiction

Falling Upward by Richard Rohr

I felt both seen and challenged by Rohr’s vision of the second half of life. This should be required reading for anyone entering middle age.

You Could Make This Place Beautiful by Maggie Smith

Poet Maggie Smith writes in the most gorgeous prose to tell the most awful story of how her marriage fell apart on the eve of the COVID pandemic. It’s filled with incisive insights about womanhood and relationships. Warning: It will likely make you take a VERY close look at your own marriage!

Favorite Book on Christian/Spiritual Topics

Good Enough by Kate Bowler

I absolutely love Kate Bowler: I have loved her previous books, I listen to her podcast episodes as soon as they’re released, and I adore how she bursts out with her infectious laugh in the midst of discussing brutally difficult topics. This book of devotions was a delight.

Favorite Young Adult Book

Looking for Alaska by John Green

Although my children will never totally outgrow some picture books and children’s titles, many of them are gravitating more towards Young Adult (YA) literature these days. I’m not going to lie: This makes me nervous. But it’s also had some particular delights, and John Green is on the top of that list. I have now read all of his books, with the encouragement of my teens. Of the three I read this year, Looking for Alaska was my favorite. Like all of Green’s books, it’s able to hold in tension the beauty, brutality, and humor of life, seen through the eyes of teenagers. (NOTE: The Fault in Our Stars and Turtles All the Way Down are tied for my top favorite Green books, but I didn’t read them this year.)

Favorite Poetry Book

How to Love the World by James Crews

I read one of the poems in this anthology each morning throughout what was a very challenging fall, and that felt like exactly the right thing to do.

So, there you have it! I’m already into some great books in 2024 (now that I’m finally finished with The Brothers Karamazov and feel like I have my reading life back!) Wishing you all a wonderful year, filled with books that stir your hearts towards all that is beautiful and true.