What I Read in January 2024

This year I decided that the reading challenge that I would set for myself would be… no challenge. Life is challenging enough, I absolutely will not be engaging in “challenge” for fun in 2024 and that’s my one resolution.

Anyway! Here’s everything I read this month (all five stars in my book). Reminder, any purchases made from the links on this page go to support our bookstore, Twice Told Tales in McPherson KS!


Come & Get It by Kiley Reid
Download the audiobook here.
Get the hardcover here or stop in to Twice Told Tales

This book took me back to my college days—in a really good way. Early adulthood is such a special time of life where we are stressing about the decisions that we need to make that will affect us for the rest of our lives—but sometimes it’s the decisions we don’t know we’re even making that stick with us the longest.

This story primarily takes place in a dorm on the University of Arkansas campus where Millie is an RA. We get to know Millie and the students who live on her floor—particularly a group of suite-mates who live next door to her.

I really like Kiley Reid’s storytelling style (if you read her last book, Such a Fun Age, you know what I’m talking about) and the way that this book got me thinking about who I was when I was younger.

Family Family by Laurie Frankel
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Buy the hardcover here or stop into Twice Told Tales.

I have loved every single one of Laurie Frankel’s books that I’ve read. In that way that when you finish the last page, you close the book and hug it to your chest. The same way I feel when I finish a Barbara Kingsolver book. The families in Laurie Frankel’s stories are so real. And sometimes when people use words like “honest” and “real” when they’re talking about books they mean “trauma filled” and “mean”. But that’s not what I’m talking about here. There’s trauma in this book in the same way that there’s no family out there that hasn’t experienced it–but what makes it honest is the way that Frankel shows her characters putting one foot in front of another to get through it and when you’re trying your best sometimes you fuck up in such a stupid way and on your very best day you’re able to laugh about it.

In this book, India is a famous actor who has two kids and just put out a movie about adoption. This movie focuses on the traumas of adoption and, as can be expected, the public isn’t wild about it. So when she’s asked for a comment, she’s honest that she thinks her movie missed the mark. Now the studios are mad at her, people on the internet are mad at her (because people on the internet are always mad). Her past life is becoming very public very fast and as she’s trying to mitigate this disaster her family gets even more complicated. We get to see India and her two kids juggle a public life, a private life, a past life, and what’s coming tomorrow all against the backdrop of “crisis mode”. In my opinion, they all flail their way through it with grit and grace and colossal fuckups.

The Fury by Alex Michaelides
Listen to the audiobook here.
Get the hardcover here or at Twice Told Tales.

This is the second book by Alex Michaelides that I’ve read and I’m starting to sense that writing from an unreliable narrator’s perspective is his sweet spot. Though I’m still not 100% sure that this narrator was unreliable. It’s been a week and I’m still thinking about this book.

It’s a quick mystery taking place on a tiny, private Greek island. A former movie star (big time–like, Marilyn Monroe but in 2024) grabs her friends and family and whisks them off to her island for an impromptu weekend away. Someone dies. That’s literally all I can tell you.

I love the locked-room, Agatha Christie vibes of this story. I also just realized that I read two books about movie stars this month.

A Love Song for Ricki Wilde by Tia Williams
Listen to the audiobook here.
Order the book here or stop in to Twice Told Tales next week to pick it up on Pub Day.

I have been so excited to write about how much I loved this book. I’ll try not to spoil anything.

Ricki Wilde has extricated herself from her very rich, very controlling family in Atlanta and has moved to Harlem to open her dream floral shop. She found the perfect spot in a building that hasn’t been touched since the 1920’s–the height of the Harlem Renaissance. She meets a very sexy stranger and for reasons she can’t understand she is drawn to him like a magnet.

Now, I love a romance because sometimes I just want a predictable fluffy book to read. That’s not what this is! It’s sweet but it’s got some salt too and I didn’t find it predictable in that genre-reading kind of way. In general I had no idea where we were going with this book and I loved that. While most of this book takes place in 2024 (February of 2024 to be exact–the leap day plays a part in this story!), there are some flashbacks to the Harlem Renaissance so we get to catch glimpses of folks like Langston Hughes, Countee Cullen, Josaphine Baker, etc. This book was excellent. And now I’m going to be on the hunt for Seven Days in June and every other book that Tia Williams will ever write.

Every Book (and it’s rating) That I Read in 2023

January

How to Sell A Haunted House by Grady Hendrix 4/5

Weyward by Emilia Hart 5/5

One Last Stop by Casey McQuiston (re-read) 5/5

The Golden Spoon by Jessa Maxwell 4.50/5

February

I Have Some Questions For You by Rebecca Makkai 4.50/5

March

Pineapple Street by Jenny Jackson 4.75/5

Four Winds by Kristin Hannah 5/5

City of Girls by Elizabeth Gilbert 3.75/5

April

The True Love Experiment by Christina Lauren 4/5

A Likely Story by Leigh McMullan Abramson 4/5

Broken Horses by Brandi Carlile 4/5

Happy Place by Emily Henry 4.5/5

May

You Were Always Mine by Christine Pride and Jo Piazza 4.5/5

Romantic Comedy by Curtis Sittenfeld 5/5

The Collected Regrets of Clover by Mikki Brammer 4.75/5

The Bean Trees by Barbara Kingsolver 5/5

Gender Queer by Maia Kobabe 5/5

June

The Museum of Ordinary People by Mike Gayle 4.5/5

The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins Reid 4/5

The Whispers by Ashley Audrain 3.75/5

My Murder by Katie Williams 3/5

July

In Cold Blood by Truman Capote 5/5

Lucky Red by Claudia Cravens 5/5

A Wizard’s Guide to Defensive Baking by T. Kingfisher 4.50/5

Bright Young Women by Jessica Knoll 5.5/5

August

The Seven Year Slip by Ashley Poston 4/5

Firebirdy by Sunmi 4/5

Everyone Here is Lying by Shari Lapena 4.75/5

My Name is Iris by Brando Skyhorse 4/5

None of This is True by Lisa Jewell 5/5

On Our Best Behavior: The Seven Deadly Sins and the Price Women Pay to be Good by Elise Loennen 4/5

September

The Couple at No. 9 by Claire Douglas 5/5

Then She Was Gone by Lisa Jewell 3.75/5

Not Like the Movies by Kerry Winfrey 4.5/5

October

The Invisible Hour by Alice Hoffman 3/5

All The Feels by Olivia Dade 5/5

The Unmaking of June Farrow by Adrienne Young 5.5/5

The Silent Patient by Alex Michaelides 4/5

Leave the World Behind by Rumaan Alam 2/5

November

Curves for Days by Laura Moher 5/5

The Only One Left by Riley Sager 3.75/5

The Ex Talk by Rachel Lynn Solomon 4/5

The Mystery Guest by Nita Prose 4.5/5

O Pioneers by Willa Cather 4/5

For Never and Always by Helena Greer 5/5

December

The Berry Pickers by Amanda Peters 4/5

Late Bloomer by Mazey Eddings 3.75/5

Here in the Dark by Alexis Soloski 3.5/5

Season of Love by Helena Greer 5/5

What I Read in December 2023

This month I challenged myself to read a Christmas book (I’ve never read one before! Unless you count The Greatest Christmas Pagant Ever which I read in the 3rd grade and nothing can top it). And I finally finished it two days after Christmas. Also it wasn’t even that Christmassy. You can read more about that later but I will say I think I kinda failed on that challenge. But that’s fine.
I set a goal for reading 50 books this year and I nailed it! By that I mean I read only and exactly 50 books. No more, no less. Here are the rest of my reading stats!

As usual, all the links in this post go to support our shop, Twice Told Tales in McPherson KS.

The Berry Pickers by Amanda Peters
Download the audiobook here.
Order the hardcover copy here (or stop into Twice Told Tales).

I will admit that the pacing of this book is a little on the slower side but the story was incredible. It follows two main characters–one, a Mi’kmaq man named Joe whose sister, Ruthie, went missing as a toddler. Joe is on his deathbed and taking his eyes off his little sister on that fateful day is just one of the many regrets he lives with. The other main character, a woman named Norma is looking back on her life–trying to piece together the strange childhood she had and the secrets held by everyone who was close to her.

My only real complaint about this story is that I do wish it were longer. I wanted to know more about Joe’s life. I wanted to learn more about what happened with Norma. I fell in love with these folks and my heart ached for each of them.

Here in the Dark by Alexis Soloski
Download the audiobook here.
Order the hardcover here (or snag the last one from Twice Told Tales).

This is a psychological thriller that I struggle to describe to folks! It was really intense but also, at the same time, the characters were very theatrical and campy (which makes sense, this book takes place in the theater scene of NYC). It centers around a theater critic who struggles to connect with people one-on-one but seems to come alive in the dark seats of the theater.

The storytelling in this was spot on. I loved the way the author was not terribly heavy handed with the foreshadowing and traps laid long ago come back into the storyline.
That being said, I did guess the big reveal very very early on and that kind of bummed me out. I wish the reveal had been more exciting for me. But I want you to read it and tell me at what point you realized what the big “ta-da” was.

Late Bloomer by Mazey Eddings
Pre-Order the audiobook here.
Pre-Order the physical copy here.

You know I’m deep in my romance era. I’ve been getting really tired of reading about thin, white straight people. So when a box of ARCs arrived on my desk at work, I grabbed the Sapphic one and immediately started reading away (who could resist that cover anyway?)! So, now I’m reading about thin, white, bisexual people. Bisexual and autistic (written by a bisexual, autistic author).

This book was an adorably cute, cottage core romance! There are several open-door scenes in this book (including one three-chapter long sex scene. Sheesh!) so it’s not for those of you who blush when things get steamy. I think that if I was still early in my romance reading journey, I would have said this book was soooooo good! But now that I’ve read several and am starting to get a feel for what I really like to read about, this one wasn’t my most favorite. They just seem so… young. And maybe they could use some therapy. I LOVE a romance with characters who have been to therapy. They just kinda fight a lot and then get back together without actually addressing what actually happened between them. Which I know is very hot and romantic to a lot of folks. If that’s you–place that pre-order!

Season of Love by Helena Greer
Download the audiobook here.
Order the book here.

Now this is what I’m talking about! This book is my ideal romance. It’s got queer characters (in this one, a hot fat butch lesbian and a bi girl who is described as “elfish”). They’ve got issues but they handle their shit before it becomes someone else’s problem–honestly a great example for healthy relationships. It’s pretty steamy but nothing all that explicit. It’s certainly closed door when it comes to the naked stuff. Like, I can recommend this book to folks without giving disclaimers that make me want to blush.

This was my technically-Christmas book. It takes place on a Christmas tree farm/ inn run by Jewish people. I love it! Last month (was it just last month?) I read the newest book in this series, For Never and Always, and I loved it for alllllll the same reasons I mentioned above. I liked how I could read the books out of order and not feel like I was missing something–but it was more like, “Oh I can’t WAIT to read more about these people!” Another thing I love is how the characters are absolutely Jewish and their faith is super important to them! I’ve never read a book where the character’s faith is a key component to their identity without being. like, full-on religious propaganda. ANYWAY I really hope the next book centers on Cole. I’m going to read everything Helena Greer writes.

That’s what I read in December 2023! Soon I’ll post a roundup of ALL 50 books I read this year!

What I Read in November 2023

Every year I set a goal to read 50 books a year and every year I miss the mark by a mile*. As of the last day in November, I have read 46 books and I feel like I might make it this year!

*This is why I laugh bitterly every time (once every few days) someone comes into my bookstore and says, “I wish I could read books all day at my job!” Yeah. Let me know when you find one.

Anyway–despite not reading at work, I’m so close to my goal and I’m actually gonna try in December. I can read 4 books, surely! I’m halfway done with one right now as-is. But here’s what I read in November!

Curves for Days by Laura Moher
Order the paperback version here.
Download the audiobook here

This one starts like any given Hallmark story: sweet woman looking for a better life wins the lottery and just drives until she finds a place she wants to live.
She gets snowed in to a small town in North Carolina and falls in love with the place. She gets involved in the community and decides to buy a house that needs a lot of work so she hires the town grumpy contractor with a heart of gold and you can imagine what happens next.
This book is adorable and thoughtful and it is hot. This is your warning/ recommendation.

The Only One Left by Riley Sager
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Download the audiobook here.

This was an excellent, gothic, atmospheric mystery. I loved the time period, the whodunnit elements and the way that just when you think you’ve gotten the plot twist you get hit with the actual plot twist. This book definitely kept me guessing and I didn’t see the ending coming at all.

That being said, even though everyone who’s opinion I trust loved this book there’s just something about it that wasn’t for me and I’m struggling to put my finger on it. So I’d love it if you’d pick it up and tell me what you think.

The Ex Talk by Rachel Lynn Solomon
Order the paperback copy here (or we do currently have a used copy at Twice Told Tales).
Download the audiobook here.

This was a cute, pretty traditional enemies-to-lovers, workplace romance that takes place at an NPR station in the Seattle area that needs to make some serious changes or they need to start laying people off.

Yadda yadda yadda, Shay Goldstein finally gets her dream job as the host of her own show but the catch is that it’s not traditionally news–it’s a dating show where she’ll be hosting with her colleague/ enemy, Dominic.

For Never & Always by Helena Greer
Order the paperback here (or we have a few copies at Twice Told Tales).
Download the audiobook here.

This book was such a dream! As I was reading, I could tell it was part of a series because there were a few characters that I felt like the author assumed I knew about already. So I can’t wait to go back and read the first book in that series (I need more Queers in my romance reading!).

Yes. Another romance (and friends I don’t see it changing until the sun comes back out in a few months). This one was definitely hot. There are sexy moments but it certainly isn’t as explicit as the other books on this list. So if you’re interested in dipping your toe in the genre without blushing too much, this would be a great starting point.

After a lonely, transient childhood, Hannah has officially planted her roots at the Christmas Tree Farm/ Inn that she inherited and is running like a boss businesswoman. Her thoughts keep coming back to Levi Matthews: her first love, worst heartbreak, and now, thanks to her great-aunt’s meddling will, absentee business partner. Now that he’s a celebrity chef, he’s ready to come home and make amends. Only his return goes nothing like he planned: his family’s angry with him, his best friend is dating his nemesis, and Hannah just wants him to leave. Again.

I loved this one so, so much.

O Pioneers! by Willa Cather
Order the paperback here.
Download the audiobook here.

I’ve been reading my grandmother Doris’ journals where she reminisces on her childhood on the prairie (she was born in 1920), lately. Between that and my reading of The Four Winds recently, I’ve been really in love with reading about women working this earth.

O Pioneers! has been sitting on my shelf for a bit and it’s a tiny little thing, so I figured I’d help get to my reading goal by blowing through this one. I finished it pretty quickly but I wouldn’t say I blew through it. This book was full of so much atmosphere, heartbreak, magic, badassery, and hope in such a tiny tome.

The Mystery Guest by Nita Prose
Buy the hardcover here (or at Twice Told Tales).
Download the audiobook here.

I didn’t read The Maid (because I am so allergic to hype–to my own detriment sometimes) but I was in the mood for The Mystery Guest when it was presented to me.

Now, cozy mysteries are not generally my go-to but I adored this! The mystery was fantastic. The characters were so damn charming and some of them even quite hilarious. But along with all of that, we also get a trip down memory lane and learn a little bit about the history of Molly the Maid and her Gran.

It was fun to be reminded that a book doesn’t have to be a thriller to have exquisite plot twists.

What did you read this past month? Favorite books of the year?

What I read in October 2023

October was great. Busy. So much going on. But great.
I turned 40. Spent a long weekend in the Rocky Mountains. Saw my bestie. And did a lot of other things. And I read books! In October I read my favorite book I’ve read all year AND a couple of my least favorite books I’ve read this year.


The Invisible Hour by Alice Hoffman

Buy the hardcover copy here.
Download the audiobook here.

To begin with, I’ve only ever read one other Alice Hoffman book and I wasn’t really wild about that one. So if you like Alice Hoffman, this may be exactly what you’re looking for. But for me it was… not so great.

The Invisible Hour has a really interesting premise! Mia Jacobs was born into a cult where she wasn’t allowed to read or think for herself. Her mother thought she was doing right by her by choosing this family for her but after her death (and after Mia discovers the library), she doesn’t see a way she can live this way any longer. This book fits in magically with Banned Books Week which was the first week in October, this year. Also there’s a time travel element that I can’t even begin to understand, let alone explain it to you. It felt very out of the blue to me.

I was so intrigued through the first half of the book. Hanging on every word! And then abruptly, in the middle of the book it switches to a completely different time in history. Which I’m usually fine with except I found this side of the story infinitely boring. It could have just been the mood I was in, but I just never really got back into things after that.

The Unmaking of June Farrow by Adrienne Young

Buy the hardcover here.
Download the audiobook here.

This book! THIS BOOK! I loved this. I’d never read a book by Adrienne Young before but now I want to go back and read everything by her. This book has moved Bright Young Women into the 2nd place spot for Best Book I’ve Read This Year.

The Farrow Women are all subject to a curse that causes them to, at some point in their life, lose all their memories. Doctors are baffled because it doesn’t present in the way that any known form of dementia presents. But regardless–it happens to them. Just a few days after burying the grandmother who raised her, June learns that there’s a lot more to the curse and a lot more to her family than she’s ever known.

This. Book. Has. Everything. There’s complicated family dynamics (a personal favorite of mine). There’s a murder mystery. There’s a love story (or two? are there two?). There’s time travel. There’s a big reveal that will make you text your friends in the middle of the night. I read this one before it came out so on it’s publication day, I had several copies at the shop and I sold out of them all on the first day because I couldn’t shut up about it. And everyone who has gotten back to me about it has said they loved it!!

All The Feels by Olivia Dade

Buy the paperback here.
Download the audiobook here.

My friend Jes brought this book in to the shop and I decided that I should read it before I put it on the shelf at the store. I discovered a new romance trope that I love: cutie, fat main characters!

This book was excellent for my brain just because this very traditionally hot dude (he’s an actor that plays a Greek god in a Game-of-Thrones-style television show), is sooooo into this fattie! Also this book was way hotter than I expected. These books always have adorably illustrated covers and yet I am constantly surprised at the things these characters will do in a hot tub. For example.

Another thing I loved about this book is that this guy has been in therapy for a long time. He has his faults like anyone but toxic masculinity isn’t it. OH! And she is a therapist, too! This relationship doesn’t go into toxic territory at all. There are complications, of course. That’s how stories progress. But they weren’t the complications that annoy me in romance books. I can’t wait to read more by Olivia Dade!

Leave the World Behind by Rumaan Alam
Listen to the audiobook here.
Buy the paperback copy here.

I don’t have much to say about this book because I’m still livid about it. I downloaded the audiobook a looong time ago and then I saw a preview for the movie that’s coming to Netflix soon. The preview got me so excited! And, honestly, I still can’t wait to watch the film. I just hope they change things a little.

I will leave you with the entirety of the review I wrote of this book on my StoryGraph: This book was like a song that builds and builds and builds and then! The whole orchestra gets up and walks away.

The Silent Patient by Alex Michaelides

Download the audiobook here.
Buy the paperback copy here.

I finished this book a few days ago and I’m still not sure how I feel about it. It’s got an incredible premise: Alicia Berenson killed her husband six years ago and hasn’t said a word since. Theo Faber is a criminal psychotherapist who has waited a long time for the opportunity to work with Alicia. Once he starts working at her care facility, he’s determined to get Alicia to communicate.

I can see why people are going wild over this book. I liked the structure of the story a lot. We learn a lot about Alicia’s version of events and state of mind through glimpses into her diary. There’s also a massively impressive and satisfying plot twist near the end. But there were just a few minor things that I didn’t particularly care for. Mainly, the way that Theo and his colleagues in the hospital approach therapy. It just kind of gave me the ick. But in a way that, it felt to me, was unintentional on the part of the author.

I’m starting November with two books that I’m loving so far! I hope the rest of this month follows suit. With The Holidays ™ upon us, I need really good escapism.