Lit Chat’s Best Books of 2023: Round 1

Housekeeping note: all book links go to my Bookshop storefront, where each purchase supports independent bookstores (and this newsletter, because I get a small percentage of each sale).


Hi friends,

Happy New Year! Bet you thought you were done with end-of-year recaps in your inbox, huh? Lucky for you, the new year has done nothing to cure my pathological procrastination, so here we are a week later! Below is the start to my Best Books of 2023 bracket, courtesy of this graphic I found on Pinterest (thanks, @diariesofabibliophile, whoever you are!) and my very rudimentary Canva skills:

Bracket of book cover images for each calendar month of 2023.

In terms of rating criteria, we’re mostly going for vibes here: how I felt while reading, what’s stuck with me after I’ve finished, and overall impact (on me as a person, my tastes, my interests, my emotions, etc.). You may disagree—in fact, I hope you do and I hope you tell me about it! I love hearing from friends who have had different reading experiences than me.

This year was a particularly strong reading year, and some of my favorites didn’t even make this list by nature of coming in second to another rockstar book that month. I’d encourage you to check out the Lit Chat archives or poke around on my Bookshop storefront for other reading inspiration! I also love nothing more than giving a personal recommendation, so feel free to reach out if you’re in the mood for something specific but don’t know what that is yet.

Without further ado, let’s begin!


ROUND ONE:

Book cover images for The Sentence by Louise Erdrich and Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin

The Sentence by Louise Erdrich vs. Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin

I’m upset about this already because it feels unfair to drop one of these phenomenal books so early. The Sentence was the first book I read in 2023 and set the bar high for its unique characters, sense of community, and portrayal of resilience in the face of so many personal and political upheavals (I was wrong last month when I said Tom Lake was my first Covid book; it was The Sentence!). The Sentence left me energized and inspired for my reading year ahead, whereas Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow was so emotionally all-encompassing that it left me with one of the worst book hangovers I’ve had in a long time. To have that happen so early in the year was daunting, to say the least. Ultimately, this is why Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow is going to move forward this round, although it pains me to say goodbye to The Sentence so early in the game.

Book cover images for Homie by Danez Smith and Fruiting Bodies by Kathryn Harlan

Homie by Danez Smith vs. Fruiting Bodies by Kathryn Harlan

Another tough but very different match-up! Listening to Danez Smith narrate the audiobook for Homie was one of the highlights of my winter, eclipsed only by getting to see Danez perform live at the New York City Poetry Festival on Governors Island this summer. Likewise, Kathryn Harlan’s collection of eerily enchanting, female-centric short stories has also lingered with me this year, and I recently recommended it to a friend just last month. While Fruiting Bodies renewed my interest in short fiction and magical realism, there’s just something about listening to poems like my president, for Andrew, and waiting for you to die so i can be myself read aloud by the poet, feeling the raw emotion, joy, and vulnerability that exists in these exultations of friendship and community that feels timeless and transcendent. Homie wins this round!

Book cover images for The Hidden Oracle by Rick Riordan and Happy Place by Emily Henry

The Hidden Oracle by Rick Riordan vs. Happy Place by Emily Henry

This might be the silliest match-up of them all, but honestly, it’s still a real contest. The Hidden Oracle was top-notch mythological fun, and with the new Percy Jackson adaptation now streaming, I’m even more favorably inclined to move it along than I might have been a month ago. But to be fair, I forgot I even read this one, whereas I’ve had so many conversations with friends about Happy Place since reading that it’s stayed all too present in my mind. It’s one that I’ve found surprisingly controversial, and though I have plenty more thoughts, I’ll save them for the next round. Happy Place moves forward on the merit of being a thoroughly enjoyable read that is only slightly more relevant to my life as a late twenty-something than the book about fallen gods turned awkward teenagers. (Note to self: finish listening to the Trials of Apollo books in 2024.)

Book cover images for Les annees by Annie Ernaux and Yellowface by R.F. Kuang

Les Années (The Years) by Annie Ernaux vs. Yellowface by R.F. Kuang

You may remember that I didn’t actually finish a single book in July because of moving apartments and traveling, but I’m putting Annie Ernaux forward as the book I spent all of July reading when I had the time. While I spent almost a whole month trying to get through this one in the original French, I flew through Yellowface and its scandalously delightful satire of the publishing industry in a matter of days. I know Les Années is brilliant and I will return to it in English someday, but man, it made my brain so tired. Yellowface moves on to the next round!

Book cover images for Talking at Night by Claire Daverley and Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel

Talking at Night by Claire Daverley vs. Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel

This one is so hard!!! I love love loved Talking at Night, which had me smiling and crying and yearning my little heart out during my last international flight of the year. On the other hand, I read almost all of Sea of Tranquility in one sitting on my couch and thought about it for weeks after. Hell, I’m still thinking about it. Sea of Tranquility has buried itself in my brain in a way that was completely unexpected, and which has piqued my curiosity in terms of exploring other kinds of soft sci-fi. For this reason, I think it does ultimately beat out Talking at Night, but I will keep recommending that one to all my Sally Rooney girlies who love a slow-burn, long-game relationship story.

Book cover images for Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro and An Echo in the Bone by Diana Gabaldon

Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro vs. An Echo in the Bone by Diana Gabaldon

Finally, an easy one! There’s no contest here. I love the Outlander books, and diving into this one was a thoroughly enjoyable way to spend my December, but in terms of literary prowess and lasting impact, I have a feeling Never Let Me Go is going to go a long way in this bracket. While I will say this was one of the least stressful and most satisfying Outlander books in terms of character reunions, new relationships, and surprisingly positive outcomes to ill-fated mishaps, there is still simply no reason for these books to be as long as they are. I’ll keep reading them (and watching the show now that I’m caught up), but HOW does this woman get away with cranking out doorstopper after doorstopper!? That’s beside the point. Never Let Me Go wins, obviously.


And that’s a wrap on Round One! Come back tomorrow for Round Two as we narrow it down from the six semifinalists to the top three!

See you there,
❤ Catherine

Procrastination at Its Finest

August in Review — Lit Chat, Vol. 11

Book cover for R.F. Kuang's Yellowface centered and stacked on top of the book covers for Annie Ernaux's Les Annees, Tove Jansson's The Summer Book, and Genevieve Wheeler's Adelaide.

Housekeeping note: all links go to my Bookshop storefront, where each purchase supports independent bookstores (and this newsletter, because I get a small percentage of each sale).


Hey friends,

Happy Labor Day! This is going to be another quick & dirty Lit Chat Lite™ because I’m leaving for the airport again in approximately five hours and I haven’t finished packing or located my Kindle charger. If you see any typos, no you didn’t. Here we go!!

The Foundation:

Book covers for Annie Ernaux's Les Annees, Tove Jansson's The Summer Book, and Genevieve Wheeler's Adelaide.

Les Années — Annie Ernaux

I mentioned last time that this sucker was taking me forever because I was determined to read it in the original French, and 3 1/2 weeks later, we did it, Joe! Les Années (The Years) is a fascinating narrative memoir that chronicles Ernaux’s life via a series of described photographs, starting as a child in the post-WWII era and moving through the decades into the present moment. She speaks of her memories in the third person and contextualizes each phase of her life against the backdrop of ongoing socio-political events and pop culture, including elections, protests, songs, and the emergence of new technology. It made me wish that I had read this book as part of one of my college French classes because my unfamiliarity with the details of French socioeconomic history combined with lots of new vocab made for slow reading and not a lot of absorption. One day, I’ll come back to this in English and find out just how much I missed.

The Summer Book — Tove Jansson

Most famous for her Moomin comics, Tove Jansson also wrote novels for adults that are positively delightful. The Summer Book is a collection of vignettes following the day-to-day adventures of a young girl and her grandmother as they spend their summers on a remote Finnish island. Even though this book is for adults, it’s the kind of book I would have loved as a kid, because it conveys such a strong sense of nostalgia for slower, simpler times and long days spent outdoors searching for magic under every rock and tree root. This is the perfect book to help you gently transition out of these last couple weeks of summer.

Adelaide — Genevieve Wheeler

This book hit home for me in a lot of ways, and I think it will for many of my friends as well, even though I wish it wouldn’t. Adelaide is a twenty-five-year-old American ex-pat in London who thinks she’s found her Disney prince, but her fairytale ending escapes her when he proves to be painfully unreliable and noncommittal. I found this book frustrating at times because it was difficult to watch Adelaide continue to bend over backward for someone who so clearly did not love her back, all while she clung to the romanticized version of the relationship to the detriment of her own mental health. My frustration with Adelaide came less from her character and more from the fact that I saw in her so many of my friends’ and my own misguided experiences growing up and learning to navigate adult relationships. This is a really candid and vulnerable look at love, mental health, and what it means to feel valued and worthy in a relationship, but it’s definitely not a light-hearted love story.

THE TIPPY TOP:

Book cover for R.F. Kuang's Yellowface.

Yellowface — R. F. Kuang

You might remember that I was not a huge fan of Kuang’s fantasy novel Babel when I read it back in April, but oh man, I flew through her newest contemporary novel. Yellowface is the story of white writer June Hayward, who after witnessing the freak death of her friend, the much more successful Asian-American author Athena Liu, decides to steal Athena’s unpublished manuscript about Chinese soldiers in WWI and pass it off as her own. As someone who has been adjacent to the trade publishing world for a long time, I devoured this darkly funny satire of the industry and its trends and biases.

The part of this story that struck me as most devastating, though, was June’s loneliness. As she goes from critical acclaim as publishing’s newest darling to being canceled and becoming social media’s villain of the day for months at a time, the only friend she ever mentions is the one who dies in the first chapter—and even that relationship we know to have been fraught with envy and resentment. She has no real, honest writing community to lean on or gut-check her, which explains her extreme need for validation from the greater literary world. None of this excuses her truly horrible behavior, but for those of us who are lucky enough to know the benefits of a creative community, it does help us pity her just a little bit in her downfall.


Okay gotta go finish packing, so until next time, happy reading chat later love you bye!!
❤ Catherine