04 January 2025

Favorite Books of 2024

Another Baker's Dozen:

book icon  The Boys, Ron and Clint Howard (the Howard boys' breezy story of their careers)

book icon  The Personal Librarian, Marie Benedict & Victoria Christopher Murray (a novel based on the fascinating story of Belle da Costa Greene, J.P. Morgan's personal librarian, who was "passing" for white)

book icon  Getting Smarter, Barbara Feldon (Feldon's story of her career and her unusual marriage to Lucien Feldon)

book icon  Braiding Sweetgrass, Robin Will Kemmerer (Native American traditions lovingly described and the use of them to combat modern pollution)

book icon  The Kiss Quotient, Helen Hoang (the first of three novels about romance and neurodivergent characters)

book icon  The Wonderful World of James Herriot, with additions by Emma Marriot (mostly retellings from Herriot's books, but with real-life framing sequences about Alf Wight and his family)

book icon  Sophie Go's Lonely Hearts Club, Roselle Lim (a Chinese girl who failed matchmaking school comes home determined to make a go of it anyway, despite her mother's criticism)

book icon  Vesper Flights, Helen McDonald (essays by McDonald, author of H is for Hawk; I liked it better)

book icon  American Ramble, Neil King, Jr. (King walks from Washington DC to New York City via back roads to discover "real America")

book icon  Front Desk, Kelly Yang (uplifting book about a Chinese girl and her parents who take over running a motel from a conniving manager)

book icon  A Different Mirror, Ronald Talaki (the history of the United States as seen by the marginalized: enslaved persons, indentured servants, women, immigrants, Irish peasants, Asian workers, Hispanics)

book icon  Sensational: The Hidden History of America's “Girl Stunt Reporters”, Kim Todd (women break away from reporting about society events and cooking by going undercover; the history of Nellie Bly and her sister "stunt reporters")

book icon  Over My Dead Body, Greg Melville (the history of cemeteries in the U.S., from "boneyards" and hidden slave graveyards to regal parks like Mount Auburn Cemetery)