lycomayflower is here, quietly reading in the corner, in 2023

Talk75 Books Challenge for 2023

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lycomayflower is here, quietly reading in the corner, in 2023

1lycomayflower
Edited: Dec 31, 2023, 10:20 pm



Welcome to my 2023 reading thread! Click here to go to my introduction post.

This first post contains an on-going list of the books I've read this year, with the most recent reads at the top. I am planning on pulling back from reviewing everything I read this year, so the list is simply that--a list of what I've read. Numbers in parentheses are page counts for each book. Click here to visit my 2022 thread.

Total Pages: 12,710

50.) The Mimicking of Known Successes (169)
49.) An Uncommon Reader (audio)
48.) North Woods (372)
47.) Christmas with L.M. Montgomery (52)
46.) Bright Winter Night
45.) Mice Skating
44.) The Bear and the Nightingale (319)

43.) Over Sea, Under Stone (279)
42.) Let Us Descend (305)
41.) A Series of Unfortunate Events: The Bad Beginning (162)
40.) The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo (391)

39.) A Trick of the Light (368)
38.) Counting the Cost (271)

37.) Camp Damascus (246)
36.) The Haunting of Hill House (233)
35.) Bloom (353)
34.) The Greatest Thing (343)

33.) The House Across the Lake (349)
32.) Every Heart a Doorway (audio)

31.) Grandma Gatewood's Walk (268)
30.) Our Wives Under the Sea (228)
29.) A Polar Expedition (296)

28.) Pageboy (268)
27.) Wolfsong (554)
26.) Everyone in My Family Has Killed Someone (371)
25.) Passing Strange (217)
24.) Northranger (233)
23.) While Justice Sleeps (518)

22.) Crumbs (383)
21.) Weather Together
20.) The Princess and the Grilled Cheese Sandwich (239)
19.) The Making of Another Major Motion Picture Masterpiece (428)
18.) Home Field Advantage (296)

17.) Frog and Toad: The Complete Collection
16.) Letters to Alice on First Reading Jane Austen (149)
15.) Memorial Drive (223)
14.) Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret. (149)
13.) Open Season (289)
12.) Ella Minnow Pea (208)
11.) All Systems Red (audio)

10.) For the Love of April French (335)
9.) Margaret's Unicorn
8.) The Cat Who Saved Books (198)
7.) A Gentleman's Guide to Vice and Virtue (513)

6.) I Have Some Questions for You (438)
5.) A Court of Thorns and Roses (416)
4.) The Invisible Husband of Frick Island (337)

3.) Spoiler Alert (400)
2.) Death in Paradise (294)
1.) Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing (250)

2lycomayflower
Edited: Jan 16, 2023, 2:40 pm

Hello! My name is Laura, and this is the sixteenth year I've kept an LT thread tracking my reading. That's a long time to publicly review everything you've read, and I've been growing weary lately of feeling like I have to have something to say about every book I read. So this year I will only be tracking my reading here, as a matter of course. Should I read something I really want to say something about, I will review it on my thread. But for the most part, expect to see just the titles of what I've read plus a star rating (and maybe occasionally a word or few--like "recommended" or "hard but worth it." Please feel free to talk to me though! About what you're reading, what I'm reading, or just to check in. And who knows? I may miss the reviewing and jump back in before the year is out. And I will decide about what I'll do next year and beyond... next year.

I read pretty widely, but I'm most likely to read romance, memoir, mysteries, YA, sci-fi, fantasy, and literary fiction. I'm in my early-forties, work as an editor, am married to a fellow reader, and carry on living in the south (it's been the majority of my adult life now) despite constantly missing winter and wanting to move back north (I grew up in north-east Pennsylvania). When I'm not reading, I like to do photography, write, crochet, swim, and watch TV. I also keep a bookish blog at https://wonderatsix.blogspot.com/ (currently on indefinite hiatus). Please feel free to talk to me here on LT. I love a good bookish conversation!

Fav Reads in 2022

The Boy with a Bird in His Chest
I'm Looking Through You
Miss Memory Lane
Boyfriend Material
I Kissed Shara Wheeler

Reads That Were Not My Cuppa in 2022

The Anomaly
The Cartographers
The Naturalist
Monster and the Beast vol. 1
The Apothecary's Garden

3lycomayflower
Edited: Jan 16, 2023, 2:45 pm

Sometimes a reading companion, always on alert.



5scaifea
Jan 16, 2023, 2:50 pm

>4 lycomayflower: Ooooh, how was this one? I love him.

6lycomayflower
Jan 16, 2023, 2:55 pm

>5 scaifea: I love him too! Which made this a hard, HARD read, because he has basically been addicted to one thing or another (and pretty much always in a life-altering/ruining way) since he was a teenager. It's a good read, but it's really an addiction memoir. Sooo, very little really about Friends or anything else except in how it is directly related to his addiction struggles at the time. Worth it, I think, but definitely not, like, a fun celebrity memoir.

7scaifea
Jan 16, 2023, 3:02 pm

Oooof. Still, I'm adding it to my list because I believe you when you say it's worth it.

8MickyFine
Edited: Jan 16, 2023, 3:29 pm

Yay, Laura's back! Delighted to see you, friend.

Also, I'd somehow missed up until now that you are a fellow crocheter. Any projects currently on the go?

9laytonwoman3rd
Edited: Jan 16, 2023, 3:30 pm

>3 lycomayflower: Marauders...you definitely have 'em.
>8 MickyFine: Pssst....don't let on that I told you, but she does it upside down.

10lycomayflower
Jan 16, 2023, 3:34 pm

>8 MickyFine: Hi, Micky! I'm completely self-taught, and have done various pants-ed blankets and hats over the years. I'm trying to learn to follow a pattern right now, in the hopes I can find a granny square pattern I like/can make not look wonky and make a blanket out of them. To keep. As I've realized that I literally have never crocheted anything for myself.

11lycomayflower
Edited: Jan 16, 2023, 3:35 pm

>9 laytonwoman3rd: Definitely.

You HUSH. And it's more... backwards, I think, than upside down, really. *squints*

12lycomayflower
Jan 16, 2023, 3:36 pm

>7 scaifea: I am *mostly* trustworthy.

13scaifea
Jan 16, 2023, 3:44 pm

>3 lycomayflower: Thursday!! She wasn't there yet when I was here before. She really does look like she's sus about something there.

>9 laytonwoman3rd: >11 lycomayflower: Upside down and/or backwards sounds pretty impressive to me...

>12 lycomayflower:



14MickyFine
Jan 16, 2023, 3:45 pm

>10 lycomayflower: That sounds awesome. I'm impressed at your self-teaching - if I hadn't had my Mom teach me, I'm not sure I'd ever have managed getting the hang of it.

As for the backwards of it all, are you left-handed? That might be the reason...

15lycomayflower
Edited: Jan 16, 2023, 4:04 pm

>13 scaifea: M had just gotten home form his trip, come in, then GONE BACK OUT and was futzing with the truck in the driveway. It was hardly to be borne.

Yes. I am VERY impressive. *nods*

16lycomayflower
Jan 16, 2023, 4:04 pm

>14 MickyFine: Nope. I just hold the hook... funny? And I've been told I yarn over in the "wrong" direction?

17scaifea
Jan 16, 2023, 4:07 pm

>15 lycomayflower: Oh how DARE HE?!


18lycomayflower
Jan 16, 2023, 4:15 pm

>17 scaifea: RIGHT?! Poor bear.

19MickyFine
Jan 16, 2023, 4:28 pm

>16 lycomayflower: Interesting. I know I had an amigurumi pattern recently that suggested yarning over "under," which gives the stitches a different look. Possibly what you're getting up to.

Ultimately, as long as you're happy with your results, your "weird" method doesn't matter. :)

And because it's a SPN gif fest, apparently:

20lycomayflower
Jan 16, 2023, 4:36 pm

>19 MickyFine: That's what I've always been told by other crocheters too. If it works (it's not falling apart) and you're happy, it's fine. But whenever I see videos of others crocheting I make *such* squinty headtilty faces.

21PaulCranswick
Jan 16, 2023, 8:59 pm

A sigh of relief as you ride over the brow of the hill, better slightly late than not at all. xx

Happy reading year, Laura.

22foggidawn
Jan 16, 2023, 9:09 pm

Happy new thread!

23WhiteRaven.17
Jan 17, 2023, 1:28 am

Happy new thread for the new year Laura!

24FAMeulstee
Jan 17, 2023, 5:36 am

Happy reading in 2023, Laura!

25scaifea
Jan 17, 2023, 6:48 am

>20 lycomayflower: I don't hold my hook properly, either, I think. You're supposed to hold it like you hold a pencil? Like...how does that even work?!

26drneutron
Jan 17, 2023, 8:32 am

Welcome back, Laura!

27norabelle414
Jan 17, 2023, 2:56 pm

Happy new year Laura!

28MickyFine
Jan 17, 2023, 3:41 pm

>20 lycomayflower: That's fair. I learn new (to me) stitches mostly through videos so I can imagine if you're doing things differently that would make it trickier.

>25 scaifea: Interesting. I hold my hook "normal" (or at least the same way as most crocheters on YouTube), but I hold my pencils weird compared to most people.

29laytonwoman3rd
Jan 18, 2023, 10:02 pm

If only this lady were around to set y'all straight...she knew how to wield a crochet hook.

30lycomayflower
Jan 22, 2023, 9:45 pm

>29 laytonwoman3rd: I'd have loved to have learned from her!

31lycomayflower
Jan 22, 2023, 9:45 pm

32lycomayflower
Jan 22, 2023, 9:46 pm

33MickyFine
Jan 23, 2023, 1:20 pm

>32 lycomayflower: Yay for Spoiler Alert! I just read the follow-up, All the Feels, last week and enjoyed it just as much.

34scaifea
Jan 24, 2023, 4:46 pm

>31 lycomayflower: I've never read any of Parker's stuff, but I know he's really popular with the patrons at my library. I keep thinking I should give him a go.

35laytonwoman3rd
Jan 25, 2023, 11:32 am

I dunno why, but this seems like the place for this:

36PaulCranswick
Feb 4, 2023, 7:46 pm

>35 laytonwoman3rd: I hope that kitty let you know, Laura, when she had finished reading!

37figsfromthistle
Feb 4, 2023, 7:50 pm

>35 laytonwoman3rd: Ha! Love it.

38lycomayflower
Edited: Feb 6, 2023, 1:51 pm

>33 MickyFine: oh yay! I'm especially curious to read All the Feels because we got so many glimpses into that couple's story already in Spoiler Alert. I'm excited to see how she weaves around what we already know.

39lycomayflower
Feb 6, 2023, 1:53 pm

>34 scaifea: Iiiinteresting. I'm trying to decide if I think I'd rec him to you or not. And where I'd say to start. I feel like his two main series are gonna be either you don't like them OR you've got new couch boyfriends. No inbetween.

41lycomayflower
Feb 6, 2023, 1:55 pm

42scaifea
Feb 6, 2023, 2:57 pm

43MickyFine
Feb 6, 2023, 3:12 pm

>38 lycomayflower: It was super rewarding on that front. :)

44laytonwoman3rd
Edited: Feb 6, 2023, 9:37 pm

>34 scaifea:, >39 lycomayflower:, >42 scaifea: If I may...I think if you're going to fall for Spenser, it will happen in Early Autumn. You can't have Jesse Stone, 'cause I claimed him a long time ago. You can read the books, but do so at your own risk, because you just can't have him.

45scaifea
Feb 7, 2023, 6:52 am

>44 laytonwoman3rd: It's difficult not to read that as a challenge.

46laytonwoman3rd
Feb 7, 2023, 9:50 am

47scaifea
Feb 7, 2023, 12:47 pm

48lycomayflower
Feb 17, 2023, 11:33 pm

49scaifea
Feb 18, 2023, 6:49 am

50lycomayflower
Feb 18, 2023, 10:52 am

51scaifea
Feb 19, 2023, 8:47 am



52lycomayflower
Edited: Mar 1, 2023, 9:16 pm

6.) I Have Some Questions for You, Rebecca Makkai ****

Topical but character-driven. A literary fiction page-turner that ultimately succeeds more in its literary bent than its mystery bent. The kind of mix of literary fiction and genre fiction I wish I could find more of.

53lycomayflower
Edited: Mar 24, 2023, 2:16 pm

7.) The Gentleman's Guide to Vice and Virtue, MacKenzi Lee****1/2

A reread in prep for reading the rest of the series. I enjoyed this thoroughly this time, more so than the first read.

54lycomayflower
Edited: Mar 24, 2023, 10:02 pm

55lycomayflower
Edited: Mar 24, 2023, 2:38 pm

9.) Margaret's Unicorn, Briony May Smith *****

If you have any inclination toward picture books whatsoever, give this one a go. The illustrations are an absolute comfort and delight. I wanted to crawl right into every one of them.

56scaifea
Mar 24, 2023, 5:12 pm

>53 lycomayflower: WOOT!

>54 lycomayflower: Uh oh. You hated it, didn't you.

57lycomayflower
Mar 24, 2023, 7:39 pm

>56 scaifea: It... wasn't my favorite. *sliiiides you a cookie*

58scaifea
Mar 24, 2023, 8:13 pm

>57 lycomayflower: *processes rejection while munching on cookie*

60kitpup
Apr 6, 2023, 9:01 am

Hello

61lycomayflower
Edited: Apr 21, 2023, 2:50 pm

62lycomayflower
Apr 21, 2023, 2:50 pm

12.) Ella Minnow Pea, Mark Dunn ***1/2

Glad I read it. Felt more relevant to me now than I think it would have when it was written (2001). Was a bit done with the experiment before he was, but I read it in one sitting, so it didn't frustrate me much.

63lycomayflower
Edited: Apr 21, 2023, 2:52 pm

13.) Open Season, C.J. Box ****

Scratched perfectly the itch I was trying to scratch--procedural elements with a rural/outdoors setting with a main character I can like. Will read more of these.

64MickyFine
Apr 21, 2023, 7:55 pm

>61 lycomayflower: Yay for Murderbot!

Kevin R. Free is a great narrator but ultimately audio isn't my favourite format for the series as I heard Murderbot's voice as feminine when I read them in print.

65scaifea
Apr 22, 2023, 9:38 am

I really need to get round to the murderbot franchise. Someday.

I felt exactly the same about the Dunn. Because of course I did.

I also feel like Box is one of those I should read since so many of our patrons read 'em. So this is encouraging. (I refuse to read Patterson, though. Just NOPE.)

66lycomayflower
Edited: Apr 22, 2023, 11:12 am

>64 MickyFine: Oh, interesting! I started Murderbot in print and was slightly lukewarm. Then my husband was reading them in audio and said how much he enjoyed them, so I tried that and was much happier. But when I was reading in print I was hearing Murderbot as masculine!

>65 scaifea: I think you would like Murderbot. I was not quite as blown away by it as I think some are, but I did quite enjoy it.

Of COURSE you did. ♥

I'll be very curious to see what you think of Box if you get to him. I'll warn you that this first one had a fairly decent helping of child peril and animal (not pet) death. I didn't think any of it was terribly excessive or graphic, but it's there for sure.

67scaifea
Apr 22, 2023, 12:41 pm

>66 lycomayflower: Thanks for the warning about Box's first one. Ooof. Also, I may have to try Murderbot on audio, too...

68lycomayflower
Apr 23, 2023, 12:21 pm

14.) Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret., Judy Blume **1/2

A reread. I know I read this as a kid (and from the state of my childhood copy, probably more than once), and I remember having sort of lukewarm feelings about it. Others of Judy Bloom's (particularly Starring Sally J. Freedman as Herself) were absolute favorites, but this one I don't think I liked as much. I mostly remembered the stuff the book is known for (frank discussion of periods and of the adolescent girl characters' desire for their breasts to grow), though there are other things here the book gives equal weight (the difficulties of being "no religion" for an eleven-year-old girl in 1970s New Jersey; family dynamics). I think as a pre-pubescent kid I didn't warm to the book because I looked on the looming changes of puberty with a kind of resigned dread. I might have wanted to grow up in order to have more autonomy and control over my life, but I had no interest in the physical changes that would come with it (and I *certainly* wasn't doing any dubious exercises to get my breasts to grow. Pain in the ass, breasts.) I was a kid who would have been thrilled if puberty had just held it's horses for a couple of years until I would have been more ready for it. Alas. So it was probably hard for me to relate to these girls who seemed solely focused on "getting it," and while as a kid I loved reading books about experiences that were not my own, this one just fed my suspicion (common, I'm sure) that I wasn't doing growing up and being a girl "right." Upon this reread, while I love the fact that the book talks about periods and developing bodies openly (and provides, through the experiences of the several girls in the book, a few different illustrations of what getting a period for the first time might be like), it struck me starkly how none of the girls in the book cares about anything else aside from puberty and boys. They have no interests. They don't talk about anything else. Then there's the other thing the book is about: Margaret's struggle growing up with parents who want her to choose her own religion (or continue having no religion) when she's older. This scenario came about because her mother was Christian and her father Jewish and there was a schism in her mother's family when she married a Jewish man. Margaret talks to God about this struggle and takes it upon herself to go to different churches and temple with her friends and paternal grandmother. But the examination of religion is completely surface-level. There's nothing about what anyone believes or what it means to anyone to have a religion. The closest we get is Margaret's maternal grandmother, in an ill-fated reunion with her daughter's family, declaring that you don't choose religion, you're born into it. But the hollow religious experimentation just sort of comes to nothing. It's a big question to deal with, especially in a short middle grade book, and I think it's appropriate for the age range the book is aimed at for there to be some ambiguity and sense that there may not be a right answer, but that isn't the feeling I was left with. It feels more like a null conclusion than an ambiguous one. I know this book has achieved classic status, and I think in some ways that is deserved. It's important for girls (and boys) to know about female puberty, and the implicit lesson here that periods are thing that you can talk about is vital. But ultimately, for me, it still felt slightly alienating and hollow.

69foggidawn
Apr 24, 2023, 9:58 am

>68 lycomayflower: I felt the same way about this book, I think, both as a kid and as an adult. "I think as a pre-pubescent kid I didn't warm to the book because I looked on the looming changes of puberty with a kind of resigned dread." - Exactly.

70laytonwoman3rd
Apr 24, 2023, 3:16 pm

>68 lycomayflower: Your review is not only good, it's HOT!

71scaifea
Edited: Apr 24, 2023, 3:29 pm

72lycomayflower
Edited: Apr 24, 2023, 4:43 pm

73lauralkeet
Apr 25, 2023, 6:53 am

>68 lycomayflower: I read *Margaret* in sixth grade, when it "went viral" (in a 70s sort of way) in my elementary school. I felt like it really spoke to me, especially since my mother preferred pamphlets to dialogue. And yet ... I can seen your points. I'm sure if I read it today I'd have a similar reaction. Excellent review!

74lycomayflower
Apr 27, 2023, 9:56 pm

>73 lauralkeet: Thanks! I'm sure there are many girls for whom it does and has worked wonderfully! Glad you are one of them.

75lycomayflower
Apr 27, 2023, 9:56 pm

78scaifea
Apr 29, 2023, 7:33 am

>77 lycomayflower: I *adore* Frog and Toad.

79lycomayflower
Apr 29, 2023, 10:56 am

>78 scaifea: YES. Lovely and gently quirky and SOFT.

80scaifea
Apr 29, 2023, 11:59 am

81lycomayflower
May 11, 2023, 6:01 pm

83lycomayflower
May 22, 2023, 2:44 pm

20.) The Princess and the Grilled Cheese Sandwich, Deya Muniz *****

A just slightly silly, absolutely heartwarming delight of a sapphic graphic novel.

84norabelle414
May 23, 2023, 9:42 am

>83 lycomayflower: Ooh, putting that one on hold at the library! I love cheese puns.

85lycomayflower
May 23, 2023, 2:22 pm

>84 norabelle414: Ooo, you should enjoy then. I did a lot of delighted snickering at the cheese puns.

86lycomayflower
Jun 3, 2023, 10:38 am

87lycomayflower
Jun 3, 2023, 10:38 am

22.) Crumbs, Danie Stirling ***1/2

88lycomayflower
Jun 6, 2023, 11:16 pm

23.) While Justice Sleeps, Stacey Abrams ***1/2

I think this is probably a better thriller than a 3.5, but for me personally, for whom this kind of thing is usually not really my cuppa, it didn't rise above my mehness toward the genre. Book club read, or I might have bailed about halfway. As it was, I largely skimmed the last thirdish.

89lycomayflower
Jun 8, 2023, 2:40 pm

24.) Northranger, Rey Terciero and Bre Indigo ****1/2

Lovely and compelling graphic novel about two teenage boys falling in love for the first time, coming out, navigating homophobia, and learning about what secrets can do to people. Takes the premise of Northanger Abbey and resets it on a present-day ranch in Texas to really neat effect.

90scaifea
Jun 8, 2023, 3:21 pm

>89 lycomayflower: OH yay! I put this one on the library order list, so I'm glad to see that it's good!

91laytonwoman3rd
Jun 8, 2023, 4:21 pm

>89 lycomayflower: What if one has never read Northanger Abbey?

92lycomayflower
Jun 8, 2023, 5:21 pm

>90 scaifea: It was SO GOOD.

>91 laytonwoman3rd: Shouldn't matter. It's a nice layer if you know, but you won't miss anything if not. Course, you could just read Northanger Abbey. ;-p

93lycomayflower
Edited: Jun 14, 2023, 11:11 am

25.) Passing Strange, Ellen Klages ****

Lovely evocation of sapphic life in 1940s San Francisco with a little twist at the end that is a delight of queer affirmation.

94lycomayflower
Jun 14, 2023, 11:10 am

26.) Everyone in My Family Has Killed Someone, Benjamin Stevenson ****1/2

Australian murder mystery that is wonderfully meta in the telling, enjoyably voicey, and a good mystery to boot. This is the most pure fun I've had with a book in a minute.

95foggidawn
Jun 14, 2023, 12:07 pm

>94 lycomayflower: Okay, that's officially going on my list. I've been seeing it here and there, but your review was the tipping point.

96lycomayflower
Jun 14, 2023, 10:33 pm

>95 foggidawn: *pats my book bullet flinger* Hope you enjoy it!

97lycomayflower
Edited: Jun 16, 2023, 11:22 am

27.) Wolfsong, TJ Klune ****1/2

I have some minor quibbles (I feel the book could be pared down just a smidge), but other than that this was an amazing read. Wonderful (and wonderfully drawn) characters, excellent found family stuff, good worldbuilding, nice plot, queer love story, told in a compelling voice. A "clutch it to my chest" read.

98scaifea
Jun 16, 2023, 12:12 pm

99lycomayflower
Jun 17, 2023, 5:22 pm

>98 scaifea: YAAAAAAAS

100lycomayflower
Jun 17, 2023, 5:23 pm

101scaifea
Jun 17, 2023, 5:42 pm

>100 lycomayflower: OoooOOOOOoooo how was that one?

102lycomayflower
Edited: Jul 5, 2023, 12:46 pm

29.) A Polar Expedition: And Other Stimulating Research Opportunities, Kass O'Shire ****

A little light on plot but stuffed full of fun characterization and cozy fantasy romance. And fun footnotes! I thought it was delightful.

103lycomayflower
Jul 30, 2023, 8:15 pm

30.) Our Wives Under the Sea, Julia Armfield ***1/2

Some very nice passages and often beautiful sentences, but it felt hazy when I wanted clarity, and I can't decide what it's trying to do. Ultimately the science fictional elements don't feel like they're adding much or pointing to anything or standing in for anything, and absent that I would either want them to work more like SF (rather than lit fic) OR for the book to be a more straight forward exploration of grief and loss and a relationship's end. I wish I'd loved it, but it's a shrug from me, I guess. A quite nicely written shrug, but.

104lycomayflower
Jul 30, 2023, 10:11 pm

31.) Grandma Gatewood's Walk, Ben Montgomery ****

Delightful biography of Emma Gatewood, the woman who became famous in in the 1950s for through-hiking the Appalachian Trail. Biographical elements are interspersed with a detailed account of Gatewood's first through-hike. A fun, informative, and kind of comforting read--especially for me, who is familiar with many of the areas mentioned in the book, both on and off the AT.

105lycomayflower
Aug 31, 2023, 4:32 pm

106lycomayflower
Edited: Aug 31, 2023, 10:59 pm

33.) The House Across the Lake, Riley Sager ****

Twisty, page-turner thriller that kept me thoroughly engaged and let me figure out just enough to feel a little clever while still zinging me a few times with the turns. A quick poke of the internet tells me that readers are pretty divided about one development (if you've read it, you probably know the one), but I thought it worked--and I enjoyed the way it echoed common horror/thriller/urban-legend tropes.

107scaifea
Sep 1, 2023, 7:58 am

>106 lycomayflower: Welp. Adding that one to the list.

108laytonwoman3rd
Sep 1, 2023, 10:41 am

>106 lycomayflower: Got me too. Of course, there was coercion.

109lycomayflower
Sep 19, 2023, 1:45 pm

34.) The Greatest Thing, Sarah Winifred Searle ****1/2

CW: self-harm, disordered eating, suicidal ideation

Wonderful YA graphic novel about a sophomore girl dealing with body image and self-esteem while trying to develop her art and navigate new friendships and identity issues. I loved it, especially the focus on developing the bravery to be vulnerable with friends.

110lycomayflower
Edited: Sep 23, 2023, 10:46 am

111lycomayflower
Sep 25, 2023, 5:40 pm

36.) The Haunting of Hill House, Shirley Jackson ****

I was expecting this to be a good deal *scarier* and, I dunno, horrific? than it was. And the fact that it wasn't isn't a criticism. There's a creeping sense that things at Hill House are perhaps even more sinister than its visitor-investigators think it is, and it all comes to a slightly oblique, tantilizingly ambiguous ending that is still satisfying and terror-tinged. I also greatly enjoyed the sentence-level writing here, as well as the humor Jackson infused her characters with (the sort LW3 and I call "our sort").

112scaifea
Sep 26, 2023, 8:54 am

>111 lycomayflower: Ooooh, one of my absolute favorites! I do, however, think it's absolutely terrifying, but I always think it's scariest when nothing actually happens. Now, if you're up for it, we should watch the 1960's movie version. Hands down the most frightening movie I've ever seen.

113lycomayflower
Sep 26, 2023, 9:28 am

>112 scaifea: Only if we are actually in the same place so you can hold my hand!

I will say that I was extremely careful not to read it after dark.

114laytonwoman3rd
Sep 26, 2023, 10:12 am

>112 scaifea: Warning! See >113 lycomayflower:. She squeezes VERY hard.

115lycomayflower
Sep 29, 2023, 2:03 pm

>114 laytonwoman3rd: I am a delicate blossom with the tender grip of baby field mouse holding a dandelion stem.

116lycomayflower
Sep 29, 2023, 11:00 pm

37.) Camp Damascus, Chuck Tingle ****

CA: homophobia, conversion therapy, abuse of adult children by parents, teens in peril, abuse by religious figures, gaslighting, cults, fundamental Christianity, religious abuse, gore, body horror, violence

Tingle's horror novel about young adult victims of a supernaturally successful conversion therapy camp who find a way to fight back is maybe a little on the nose, but honestly in a "saying the quiet part out loud" way more than anything else. An entertaining read, and one that was sometimes very hard and sometimes very affirming. Mind the content advisory (and be aware that I might have missed some--it's a horror novel about a homophobic Christian cult doing conversion therapy, so), but know that ultimately the book is about healing, love, and fighting back.

117lycomayflower
Oct 5, 2023, 8:19 pm

38.) Counting the Cost, Jill Duggar, Derick Dillard, and Craig Borlase ***1/2

118lycomayflower
Edited: Oct 20, 2023, 12:15 pm

39.) A Trick of the Light, Louise Penny ****1/2

My favorite Gamache so far. Good mystery and really great character stuff.

119lycomayflower
Nov 6, 2023, 9:04 pm

40.) The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo, Taylor Jenkins Reid ****

A little bit slow to grab me, but once it got going I was really invested. At first I thought the frame story was kind of in the way, but ultimately it took up little space (and thus didn't distract much from the more compelling bits about Evelyn herself) and did work to further illustrate Evelyn's character. Fun and page-turnery. I gather some readers took issue with Reid, an apparently cishet woman, writing so many queer characters, but it neither bothered me nor rang untrue.

120lycomayflower
Nov 15, 2023, 9:59 pm

41.) A Series of Unfortunate Events: The Bad Beginning, Lemony Snicket ***1/2

Charmingly off-kilter; unfortunate but not mean. Enjoyable despite its strange disregard for speech act theory in the climax.

121lycomayflower
Edited: Nov 18, 2023, 6:47 pm

42.) Let Us Descend, Jesmyn Ward ***1/2

Beautiful prose, sometimes stunningly so. The writing about the experiences of enslaved people in the American south is harrowing but bearable, in a way that allows for imagining the circumstances and engaging with them. The writing about nature is lovely. The main character's struggle with her goddess is interesting to a point and comes to a fairly satisfying conclusion. But that special whatever it is that makes a book come together, hold together, and sing just isn't quite there. Someone said in an amazon review that the writing is great, the beginning is great, and the end is great, but everything in between is kind of a slog that doesn't feel purposeful. That's pretty much it. So much going for it, but it doesn't quite work.

122laytonwoman3rd
Nov 18, 2023, 10:43 pm

>121 lycomayflower: Well, see, now I have to finish it.

123lauralkeet
Nov 19, 2023, 7:39 am

>121 lycomayflower: I requested this from my library so I'll get to it eventually. I'm intrigued by your comments.

124mahsdad
Nov 20, 2023, 11:34 am

Hi Laura, I got your message about joining the Christmas Swap. I'm glad I messaged you.

Here's the thread... https://www.librarything.com/topic/354938#n8288136

125lycomayflower
Edited: Dec 1, 2023, 12:54 pm

43.) Over Sea, Under Stone, Susan Cooper ****

Perhaps a touch slow in its reveals (or maybe I'm just reading a book as an adult written for children) and a smidge anticlimactic--not in the climax of the events but rather in the sense that we don't actually learn a lot about all the secrets that have been bandied about throughout the book. It's an adventure story, not a discover the truth about a bunch of mythology story, so I reckon I ought not grumble that there were in fact Cheerios in the Cheerios box. But despite these minor quibbles, I thoroughly enjoyed my time with this book (Cooper does an excellent job creating place (Cornwall) and atmosphere, and her ability to ratchet suspense is quite nice).

ETA: I thought I had probably read this before as I was going, and I see that I did. I reviewed it in 2011. I had much the same reaction and reported getting the rest of the books out of the library. I'm sure I didn't actually read any more of them then, but I still intend to. (And apparently have for a while because I *own* the whole sequence now.)

126scaifea
Dec 1, 2023, 12:55 pm

>125 lycomayflower: Oh, do keep going - I think they get way better as the series goes along.

127lycomayflower
Dec 1, 2023, 12:57 pm

>126 scaifea: Oh, excellent! Because I really did enjoy the writing and the feel of the whole thing.

128lycomayflower
Edited: Dec 1, 2023, 5:18 pm

Heigh-o! Holly M. Wendt, most excellent friend and past colleague, has copies of their debut novel Heading North in Earlier Reviewers, here. If you are a lover of literary fiction and/or astonishingly lovely prose, you may want to check it out.

129norabelle414
Dec 2, 2023, 10:19 am

>125 lycomayflower: The Dark Is Rising is a bit of a weird series. The second book is more of a traditional adventure and some people recommend starting there instead of Over Sea, Under Stone (not me, though, I would never). I do hope you'll keep going because it is very satisfying by the end.

130lycomayflower
Edited: Dec 6, 2023, 2:02 pm

131lycomayflower
Dec 10, 2023, 12:28 pm

45.) Mice Skating, Annie Silvestro and Teagan White ****

46.) Bright Winter Night, Alli Brydon and Ashling Lindsay ****

Some wintery picture books I'll be sending off to my youngest niece. Really nice art in both, though very different styles. I particularly liked Mice Skating.

132lycomayflower
Dec 10, 2023, 12:30 pm

>129 norabelle414: Oh, excellent. More reason to keep on with it!

133PaulCranswick
Dec 25, 2023, 7:12 am



Thinking about you during the festive season, Laura

134lycomayflower
Dec 27, 2023, 7:48 pm

>133 PaulCranswick: Thanks, Paul. Hope you had a nice holiday.

135lycomayflower
Dec 27, 2023, 7:53 pm

47.) Christmas with L.M. Montgomery ****

A little chapbook they were giving away as part of a promotion this year at Barnes and Noble. Contains "A Christmas Inspiration," "A Christmas Miracle," and "Christmas at Red Butte." There's no info about where or when each of these was originally published, which I find pretty annoying. Otherwise, this is a pleasant little book, and the three stories were agreeable little diversions of simple Christmas niceness, with the usual "giving and kindness is the spirit of the season" stuff written in a way that is warming enough, if not wildly memorable.

136lycomayflower
Dec 30, 2023, 12:35 pm

48.) North Woods, Daniel Mason *****

Almost certainly the best book I read this year. Just stunningly well done and delightfully surprises in its gentle turns. Recommended.

137lycomayflower
Edited: Dec 30, 2023, 12:40 pm

49.) An Uncommon Reader, Alan Bennett, read by Alan Bennett ****

Reread. I always think Bennet is probably a little ungenerous in his portrayal of EII, but the book is still a delight about reading and a fun speculation of what effect reading might have had on the monarch.

138foggidawn
Dec 31, 2023, 7:37 pm

>136 lycomayflower: You got me with that one.

140lycomayflower
Dec 31, 2023, 10:20 pm

That's all for 2023. In addition to the fifty published works, I once again read a lot of fanfic--roughly 120 separate works, which ranged in length from less than 1000 words to well over 250,000.

Fav Reads in 2023

North Woods
Grandma Gatewood's Walk
Wolfsong
Everyone in My Family Has Killed Someone
The Princess and the Grilled Cheese Sandwich

Reads That Did Not Float My Canoe in 2023

Our Wives Under the Sea
The Cat Who Saved Books
The Invisible Husband of Frick Island

141lycomayflower
Dec 31, 2023, 10:22 pm

I'm here for 2024.

142lycomayflower
Dec 31, 2023, 10:32 pm

>138 foggidawn: Excellent! I hope you enjoy it!