sprite writes
broodings from the burrow

January 21, 2025


ten most recent additions to my book collection
posted by soe 1:04 am

This week’s Top Ten Tuesday from That Artsy Reader Girl invites us to share the books that have most recently been added to our collections. I had an excellent Jólabókaflóð, or Christmas book flood, so all eleven titles (technically 14 individual books) below arrived at the Burrow in the past month, courtesy of Karen, Rudi, my mother, and Kathleen:

  1. Haikyu!! Vol. 1 and #4-6 by Haruichi Furudate (I read the first manga back in 2018, have since devoured the anime multiple times, and now am hoping to read all 45 books before the final movie comes out (next year maybe?).)
  2. Vera Wong’s Unsolicited Advice for Murderers by Jesse Q. Sutanto
  3. Gilded Wolves by Roshani Chokshi
  4. Every Heart a Doorway by Seanan McGuire
  5. Bake Club by Christina Tosi
  6. Death Comes at Christmas edited by Marie O’Regan and Paul Kane
  7. Into the Uncut Grass by Trevor Noah
  8. Mastering the Art of French Murder by Colleen Cambridge
  9. The Lost Bookshop by Evie Woods
  10. Winter in Paradise by Elin Hilderbrand
  11. Fangirl (graphic novel Vol. 1) by Rainbow Rowell adapted by Sam Maggs and illustrated by Gabi Nam

How about you? Have new books moved into your home recently?

Category: books,christmas/holiday season. There is/are 4 Comments.

January 16, 2025


favorite books i read in 2024
posted by soe 1:34 am

As promised, here are the books I read last year that I liked best. The top ten are arranged chronologically in the order I read them (first the six five-star reads and then the best of the four-star reads), because I don’t really think one stood out above the rest. And I share my other four-star reads at the end, since I didn’t do book reviews last year. Ultimately, this is about half the books I read last year, and I recommend them all:

Five-Star Reads

  • The Door-to-Door Bookseller by Carsten Henn
    An older, lonely man who delivers books for a shop finds himself joined on his rounds by a young girl. And suddenly, his life — and those of his customers — begin to change in unexpected ways.
  • Out of the Dust by Karen Hesse
    A teen girl growing up in Dust Bowl-era Oklahoma sees no opportunities for her life to get better after her mother dies, she suffers tremendous injuries, and her father founders in grief. But, maybe, even in all the darkness, there is still light. Told in verse.
  • Shark Heart by Emily Habeck
    A heartbreaking parable about losing a loved one to a devastating illness.
  • Under the Whispering Door by T.J. Klune
    A reread, this story is about a man who only discovers his humanity after he dies.
  • Sipsworth by Simon Van Booy
    When an elderly woman inadvertently brings a mouse into her home, she finds there is a ripple effect, and her solitary and regimented days are suddenly filled with chaos and characters.
  • October, October by Katya Balen
    On her 11th birthday, a young girl who lives alone in the woods with her father finds her life upended when he is suddenly hospitalized and she must stay in London with her mother, who moved away many years ago.

Rounding Out the Top Ten

  • The Ten Thousand Doors of January by Alix E. Harrow
    A young woman must figure out how to respond when her oft-traveling father disappears, her guardian (her father’s well-off employer) curtails her freedom, and a book suddenly lands in her lap, inspiring a harrowing flight across space in pursuit of family and truth.
  • Fresh Water for Flowers by Valérie Perrin
    Translated from the French, this novel focuses on the caretaker of a graveyard. It alternates between flashbacks to how she arrived at her current profession, diary entries from a woman recently buried at the cemetery, and a more linear story about the caretaker and the woman’s son. Again, a novel about grief and awakening from it.
  • You Are Here by David Nicholls
    A post-COVID novel told in alternating points of view between a male teacher who loves hiking and is battling PTSD and a female editor who has trouble leaving her London apartment until a friend from her past won’t take no about a walking holiday with her godson and some other friends. Ultimately a story about breaking out of your comfort zone and taking chances, even when that feels like the last thing you should do.
  • Margo’s Got Money Problems by Rufi Thorpe
    A young community college student is impregnated by her English professor and then must find a way to stay afloat when she chooses to have the baby. After her ex-pro wrestler father moves in (fresh out of rehab for an addiction to pain meds) and she starts an OnlyFans account (where people will pay her for nude content), she must deal with the continued impact of people judging the decisions she makes for herself and her family.

Other Four-Star Reads 

Mystery

  • Murder Under Her Skin by Stephen Spotswood
  • The Man Who Died Twice by Richard Osman

Fantasy/Romantasy

  • A Power Unbound by Freya Marske
  • Just Like Magic by Sarah Hogle
  • Bookshops and Bonedust by Travis Baldree
  • Dreadful by Caitlin Rozakis
  • A Fate Inked in Blood by Danielle Jensen
  • The Afterlife of Mal Caldera by Nadi Reed Perez
  • The Apprentice to the Villain by Hannah Nicole Maehrer
  • Mamo by Sas Milledge

Romance

  • 10 Things That Never Happened by Alexis Hall
  • A Home for the Holidays by Taylor Hahn

The Rest

  • The Book of (More) Delights by Ross Gay (essays)
  • A Long Way from Chicago by Richard Peck (kidlit)
  • I Heard God Laughing: Poems of Hope and Joy: Renderings of Hafiz by Daniel Ladinsky (poetry)
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January 14, 2025


top ten bookish goals for 2025
posted by soe 5:06 am

This week’s Top Ten Tuesday from That Artsy Reader Girl is a traditional early January post and invites us to share our bookish goals for the year. First, let’s check in on my goals from last year:

  1. Read 52 books. Done! It took me until the last day of the year, but I did tick them all off in the end.
  2. Review books on blog. And publish my best of list(s). Ha! Pretty much I didn’t write on the blog last year other than Three Beautiful Things and the occasional Top Ten Tuesday post.
  3. Buy books in another country. One of the highlights of 2024!
  4. Read 2+ classics, including a Russian novel. Fail! Although I did buy a Russian classic to read.
  5. Finish the Top 100 Children’s Books. No, but I made progress. I’m down to eight, seven of which are currently sitting next to the couch.
  6. Read 17 of my own books including 5 I’ve owned 2+ years. Nyet. I read four, only one of which came to me pre-pandemic.
  7. Listen to 20 audiobooks. So, so close. I finished 19 and had several more that I just couldn’t get across the finish line in time. (There were also two titles that I started in audio and switched to paper.)
  8. Read 3+ books of poetry. Two.
  9. Read 5+ books in translation. Three, although to be fair, I expected both of the last books I read to have been translated, and neither was.
  10. Get all my books onto shelves. I made good progress. Although most of the books I culled are still sitting in a box in the living room waiting to go to Little Free Libraries or over to Arlington for their Friends’ book sale. I think with some serious finesse, I could maybe get the rest onto shelves this year.

Now, with that in mind what will this year’s goals look like?

  1. Read 52 books. This is a good number for me. When I get a job, I may have less time to read. Or maybe I’ll go back to listening to books on metro and reading at lunch and then it’ll go up. Either way, I’m sticking with it.
  2. Read 25 books I own, including some I don’t think I’ll want to keep. There is a post-in-progress about which books I’m hoping to include, but right now it leans heavily on books I want to keep.
  3. Read more diversely. Usually I do a better job about reading books by BIPOC and queer authors, and without meaning to, in 2024, I only read 9 books that qualify. I’m aiming for at least 15 books this year.
  4. Write at least 6 non-Top Ten Tuesday posts about books this year, including some assessment in the summer about how my reading is going.
  5. Read more backlist titles. I only read 11 books that were published before 2020 last year. Tackling some of my personal library collection should help increase that number, but let’s aim for 15 books published outside this half-decade, and at least 7 from before the year 2000.
  6. Read 3+ books of poetry or novels in verse. Again, this shouldn’t be a challenge, given how many books of poetry live in The Burrow.
  7. Read more nonfiction — at least 5, rather than the two I managed last year. Usually I squeeze in memoirs, but the only one I began, I think I want to read in print, rather than the audiobook copy I had.
  8. Read a book by an author who lives in Africa and one who lives in Central or South America.
  9. Send the books I’ve bought as gifts to the people they’re meant for. (Or donate them if the recipient has aged out of them.) Again, this shouldn’t be as hard as it is.
  10. Give every book I own a permanent home on a shelf.

So, how about you? What kind of bookish goals do you have for 2025?

Category: books. There is/are 4 Comments.

January 13, 2025


2024 #tbtbsanta gifts
posted by soe 1:11 am

Every year, Jana of That Artsy Reader Girl, generously keeps up the tradition of Secret Santa started at the now defunct The Broke and the Bookish, where she sends your info to someone and sends you an entirely different person’s info. There are different levels for participation and I’m sure it takes a lot of energy to get everyone squared away, and that’s all before people start having challenges (such as anyone sending to or from Canada this holiday season). So, every year she runs it, I and the hundreds of other people who look forward to this annual tradition are terribly grateful to her.

2024 #TBTBSanta Gifts

This year, my package arrived early (mine snuck out at the deadline and arrived, like the real Santa, on Christmas Eve). I always admire the folks who wait. And sometimes I let the box sit a couple days to get closer to Christmas, but I never make it all the way to the holiday. I’m too excited and impatient!

Kathleen, my Santa, hails from Delaware and put together a fanciful package full of books and other delights. First is a list of places I might want to visit in her home state (and nearby Pennsylvania), and since we’re just a couple hours away and since Delaware is home to my favorite beaches in the area, we will be checking them off. She also tucked in a couple rolls of pretty washi tape and a pen from her work, which, coincidentally and unbeknownst to her, is also the name of the neighborhood where I live in D.C.

#TBTBSanta Ornament

Because she knew we’d recently acquired kittens, she included this delightful ornament, which I put well out of reach of the felines (although, to be fair, Coal has challenged my understanding of what that means).

Homemade Princess Bride Ornament

Kathleen made this ornament for me. It includes quotes from The Princess Bride, one of my favorite movies and a terrific book. It is also out of reach of the cats, because I think they would love to find their way inside to take all those quotation scrolls and squirrel them away under furniture.

There is tea and a single person teapot with a cherry blossom motif (it’s required with D.C. citizenship to love cherry blossoms), perfect for putting on a tray within reach as you read on the couch. Kathleen included some delicious spicy holiday jam, a local product filled with berries and jalapeño, and which has been giving my morning toast that extra something something to help start winter mornings.

And finally, the books. She gave me the first of the manga adaptations of Rainbow Rowell’s Fangirl, which I’m very excited to see how they put that together. She also gave me Evie Woods’ The Lost Bookshop, which looks so good. And finally, she gave me Elin Hildebrand’s Winter in Paradise. I’ve read the first two books in Hildebrand’s Winter Street series, and this is the first in a newer wintry series set in the Caribbean instead of Nantucket. I love a beach read when it’s cold outside!

#TBTBSanta Gifts

Kathleen, thank you so much. I love everything and am looking forward to hours of reading and drinking tea this winter! Happy #TBTBSanta!

Category: books,christmas/holiday season. There is/are 1 Comment.

January 7, 2025


top ten new books for the first half of 2025
posted by soe 7:48 pm

This week’s Top Ten Tuesday from That Artsy Reader Girl invites us to share the ten books coming out in the first six months of the year that we’re looking forward to most. Here are mine:

  1. Back After This by Linda Holmes
  2. Deanna Raybourn’s Kills Well with Others
  3. Vanya and the Wild Hunt by Sangu Mandanna
  4. Sonali Dev’s There’s Something about Mira
  5. Fun for the Whole Family by Jennifer E. Smith
  6. Grace Lin’s The Gate, the Girl, and the Dragon
  7. The Emperor of Gladness by Ocean Vuong
  8. The Queens of Crime by Marie Benedict
  9. Water Moon by Samantha Sotto Yambao
  10. José Andrés’ Change the Recipe

How about you? Are there books coming out between now and July that you’re particularly excited to get your hands on?

Category: books. There is/are 4 Comments.

December 17, 2024


top ten titles on my winter ’25 to-be-read list
posted by soe 8:11 am

I love the seasonal Top Ten Tuesday topics That Artsy Reader Girl posts, and, in a true surprise, I find from the last time around that I’ve finished five of the ten titles I included (and started three others). Sometimes I don’t get to any of them.

So here’s hoping that I actually get to a majority of the books I’m including today of the top ten titles on my to-be-read list for this winter:

  1. The Rivals by Jane Pek
  2. Back After This by Linda Holmes
  3. Rainbow Rowell’s Slow Dance
  4. Jasper Fforde’s Red Side Story
  5. The Lost Bookshop by Evie Woods
  6. Somewhere Beyond the Sea by T.J. Klune
  7. Aliya and the Infinite City by Laila Rifaat
  8. A Winter in New York by Josie Silver
  9. Reynard the Fox by Anne Louise Avery
  10. 1000 Words by Jami Attenberg

It helps that I own five of these books already and that several are by favorite authors. No excuses about the library holds list being too long!

How about you? What are you hoping to read this winter?

Category: books. There is/are 4 Comments.