@bibliolater@bookstodon I'm reading Everybody – a Book about Freedom by Olivia Laing at the moment. About health, sex, Susan Sontag, Kathy Acker, all threaded through by the story of psychoanalyst Wilhelm Reich. I'm loving it.
Finally got around to reading Foundation by Isaac Asimov, one of the greatest sci-fi genre authors out there, one of the pioneers in it too. It did not disappoint.
You Can Trust Me is a suspense novel that was just released today. I enjoyed it for the strong female characters and their friendship. I kept turning pages to find out what happened next.
Anyone have other suggestions for thrillers with strong female mcs?
#BooksOf2023 #1: #KeeperOfTheLosCities #3: Everblaze. My kids have enjoyed getting into a new series after we finished the #WingsOfFire books last year. These magical adventure books are perfect for our next series together. 📚 📕
#BooksOf2023 #2: Louise Penny’s A World of Curiosities. Yet another great Gamache mystery. This series is one of my all-time favorites and the latest book (#18 in the series) doesn’t disappoint.📚 📕
#BooksOf2023 #3: David Pepper’s The Wingman. Second in a political thriller trilogy, this one was a bit slower than the first, but I’m looking forward to the third in the series. His nonfiction “Laboratories of Autocracy” is an excellent read.
@bookstadon#BookOf2023 #8: Rebecca Makkai’s I Have Some Questions For You was a great story about a New England boarding school, a 20+ year old murder, and possibly a wrongful conviction. It kept me guessing throughout the story and I really enjoyed it.
@bookstadon#BookOf2023 #9: David Pepper’s The Voter File. The third in a series of wonky political thrillers, this follows foreign actors rigging votes on the margins. The series was good, but Pepper really shines in nonfiction - especially his excellent Laboratories of Autocracy
@bookstadon#BooksOf2023#10: Francesca T. Royster’s Black Country Music. This was a great dive into the history - and present - of how Country music has a much deeper Black history than many people realize. It’s an excellent companion to Marissa R. Moss’ fabulous Her Country.
@bookstadon#BooksOf2023#11: Keeper Of The Lost Cities #6: Nightfall. This series keeps developing and my kids have really enjoyed each of the books so far. They also keep getting bigger with this book hitting 790 pages and the next hitting 845.
@bookstadon#BooksOf2023#12: The Good Enough Job by Simone Stolzoff. This was an excellent read all about modern work and how having a “good enough” job that you can do well, but also gives you space to live your life.
@bookstadon#BooksOf2023#13: American Whitelash by Wesley Lowery. This was an excellent book detailing where our country has turned over the past 15 years and relates it to America’s racist past.
@bookstadon#BooksOf2023#14: A Question of Holmes by Brittany Cavallaro. The 4th and final book in the Charlotte Holmes series, this book very nicely wraps up the story of Sherlock’s modern-day descendant. A great mystery read!
@bookstadon#BooksOf2023#15: Saving Democracy by @DavidPepper. This follow-up to his Laboratories of Autocracy, is more of a user’s manual for both small and large steps individuals can take to help save democracy in the US.
@bookstadon#BooksOf2023#16: Robert E. Lee and Me by Ty Seidule. As someone born in the south and whose extended family still lives there, this book opened my eyes to some of the ways the “lost cause” is baked into southern culture. A must-read for anyone from the south or anyone who wants to learn more about the U.S.’s (particularly the South) continual struggle against racism.