The List: “MillersTime” Readers’ 2024 Favorite Books

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A Best Friend Is Someone Who Gives Me a Book I’ve Never Read, A. Lincoln

Sixty contributors (34 female, 26 male) responded to this annual (16th!) MillersTime call for favorite reads. Readers of this site offered 172 titles identified as books they’ve particularly enjoyed over the past year. Fiction (F) led Non Fiction (NF) 60%-40%.

Unlike in previous years, there were only two titles that appeared more than twice: Percival Everett’s James (F) and Doris Kearns Goodwin’s An Unfinished Love Story: A Personal History of the 1960s (NF).

As has been the case in previous years, there is a wide range of titles, and it is particularly the readers’ comments that makes this list worth the time it will take you to get the full benefit why contributors’ made the choices they did. (NOTE/BRIBE: If you tell me you read through the entire post, that will allow you to add an extra book to the number books you will be allowed to list at the end of 2025.)

And, I am indeed thankful for the time each contributor took to write and send in their (up to five) titles. Know that others use it, as one of the first places to look for new reads, and they often return to this list in search of what to read next.

Contributors are listed alphabetically by first name. Any errors are solely my responsibility. Please feel free to let me know corrections I may need to make.

INDIVIDUALS’ FAVORITES

ALLAN LATTS:

Shantaram (F) and the sequel The Mountain Shadow (F) by Gregory David Roberts. Shantaram follows Lin, an escaped Australian convict, as he builds a new life in Mumbai. He sets up a health clinic in the slums, gets involved in the city’s underworld, and searches for redemption and identity. In The Mountain Shadow Lin continues his journey in Mumbai, dealing with new mafia leaders and personal losses. He seeks love, faith, and meaning while navigating a dangerous world.

How to Decide (NF) by Annie Duke. A practical guide to improving decision-making skills. Duke, a former professional poker player, shares strategies to help readers make better choices by understanding the role of luck, avoiding common cognitive biases, and using structured frameworks. The book emphasizes the importance of gathering information, considering multiple perspectives, and learning from past decisions to enhance future outcomes

I am listening to another book that is super interesting…It is called The Coming Wave (NF) by Mustafa Suleyman (founder of DeepMind…now owned by Google) and Michael Bhaskar. It was on Bill Gates’s reading list … best book he says about AI. It is super interesting…and scary. Worth a read.

ANITA RECHLER:

Beginner’s Mind (NF) by Yo-Yo Ma. Civility, compassion, exuberance, and, yes, also music. Listen to this reflection on life and art for 90 minutes, and you and the world will feel more connected and alive.

BARBARA FRIEDMAN:

All the Knowledge in the World: The Extraordinary History of the Encyclopedia (NF) by Simon Garfield is a very interesting history of the encyclopedia. There are 26 chapters . . . beginning with Aah, Here Comes Andrew Bell, and ending with Zeitgeist (you can guess which letters the in-between chapters start with)!  And within each chapter, the section heading begins with that same letter. . . such as Accumulation, Accurate Definitions and Action, Alphabetical order . . . you get the idea.  It is not a heavy read but a very informative and enjoyable one.

The Showman: Inside the Invasion That Shook the World and Made a Leader of Volodymyr Zelensky (NF) by Simon Shuster is an excellent book of Zelensky’s rise from being a star comedian to the President of Ukraine during the horrific (and continuing) war against Russia.  A MUST read of current history, alas.

The Commander-in-Chief Test: Public Opinion and the Politics of Image-Making in US Foreign Policy (NF) by Jeffrey A. Friedman is a very interesting and well-researched book showing that voters look for a president with leadership strength in foreign policy rather than good judgment. And he shows that voters equate hawkish foreign policies with leadership strength whether they agree with the policies or not. To support these conclusions, the author looks at presidential candidates and elections starting with JFK and continues through the Obama elections. In one example, he notes that Nixon could have ended the Vietnam War with a peace treaty in October 1972, but instead deliberately prolonged the fighting (and continuing soldier deaths!) through the November election to avoid voters’ questioning his foreign policy competence. The peace treaty instead was signed early January 1973!  The author details similar situations under other US presidents. There is a lot more to learn and understand when you read this book..

Louisa: The Extraordinary Life of Mrs. Adamas (NF) Louisa Thomas (no relation) relates the life of Louisa, who was among many things, the only First Lady who was foreign born (until Melania Trump) and illegitimate!  (Her parents eventually married when Louisa was around 11 years old.)  Her life with John Quincy was widespread – from London to St. Petersburg to Berlin to Paris to Washington DC and of course to Quincy MA.  Besides relating the remarkable story of Louisa and the many fascinating things she did, the biography also relates the very interesting time in which she lived.  This biography is well worth reading.

The Demon of Unrest (NF) by Erik Larson is an excellent history of the US from the start of the Civil War to its end .. . . beginning with the end of Buchanan’s term with the shelling of Fort Sumter and until Lincoln was shot at Ford’s theater.  Various people were highlighted – such as Mary Chestnut (wife of a prominent planter) and Major Robert Anderson (Sumter’s commander and slave owner) and William Seward which bring to life personalities, egos, and bloodthirsty radicals.  As is true with other of Larson’s books, it is a very interesting and enjoyable read.)

Elon Musk (NF) by Walter Isaacson is a very interesting biography of a very interesting man.  The book is “choppy” – the chapters are not necessarily long but contain many sub-chapters, some of which are only a few paragraphs long.  To his credit, Musk did a number of great “things” but was also a very troubled man which seriously effected his relationship with people – both employees and family. 

BEN SENTURIA:

The Briar Club (F) by Kate Quinn. I have read a number of good Kate Quinn novels focused on women during WW I and II followed by Quinn books from other eras that were disappointing. The Briar Club was her best.  Situated in D.C. during the McCarthy era, it focuses on a women’s boarding house featuring each woman’s story  and their coming together as a group. It is  typically well written and well paced. I was riveted.

BINA SHAH:

Lessons in Chemistry (F) by Bonnie Garmus.

This Ends with Us (F) by Coleen Hoover.

BILL PLITT:

I have just completed reading a rather scholarly work by Jamil Zaki, Hope For Cynics: The Surprising Science of Human Goodness (NF). I found his work over several years to be so relevant in these days we are facing. I have written a book recently that is built upon capturing people I visited who were working for justice and equality in Israel, Palestine, and our own country over a 15 year period. Because of that experience, I fundamentally believe that people desire to be good. And there is the link for me. Zaki says, “When we expect the worst in people, we often bring it out of them….  We need to adopt a “hopeful skepticism”. I n doing so,.. “we are thinking critically about people and problems while honoring and encouraging our strengths and rebalance our view of human nature and help build the world we truly want.” May it also be so.

BRIAN STEINBACH:

All fiction this year. In addition to those in the midyear list:

Crook Manifesto (F) by Colson Whitehead. A sequel to Harlem Shuffle, set this time in the Harlem of 1971, 1973, and 1976. Our furniture store owner, now with a successful middle-class life, finds himself drawn back in to “the game” against the background of a crooked cop, celebrity drug dealers, up and coming comedians, and, in the bicentennial year, a gang of arsonists for hire. Once again, many colorful and well-drawn characters, with a background of cultural history and a portrait of the meaning of family.

Swamp Story (F) by Dave Barry. A salesperson at Politics & Prose Bookstore suggested this to me for vacation reading, and as I always found Dave Barry funny, I bought it. It’s a caper story involving some Everglades residents, a failed tourist attraction, and a presidential hopeful. And of course, some buried gold. Not great literature, but a good yarn that will leave you laughing.

The Mission Song (F) by John LeCarré. With the Cold War over, this 2006 submission from LeCarré involves a Congolese half-breed who is educated at a mission school in the East Congo province of Kivu and later immigrates to England where he trains as an interpreter in the minority African languages of his youth. He becomes involved in a secret meeting between Western financiers and East Congolese warlords who plan a coup to obtain mineral resources. His decision to try to prevent it leads him down dark paths of hypocrisy and love. The background explores the political and ethnic tension of the region, the greed and amorality of local bureaucrats and Western interest, and apathy about the continuing humanitarian crisis of the Congo wars.

The Good Earth (F) by Pearl Buck. Somewhere I picked up a 1994 edition complete with a length scholarly introduction, as well as critical excerpts. I’ve always heard of this book but never had a chance to read it. I was pleased at how much I was drawn in to the saga of a Chinese peasant who gradually becomes a successful farmer and landowner while raising two successful sons who, alas, do not plan to carry on his own devotion to the land. A portrait of peasant life in the late 19th century under the last emperor and continuing with political and social upheavals of the early 20th century. A surprising amount of insight into the background of the later revolutions. The background of Buck’s life was also very interesting. Apparently a lot of Chinese in the 1930’s did not like the fact that the book portrayed rural life.

The Ink Black Heart (F) by Robert Galbraith (J.K. Rowling). The sixth in Rowling’s Cormoran Strike series (there are now seven, with three more expected), the main plot involves the attempt to determine the identity of the person called “Anomie” (pun presumably intended) who harasses online and then murders the co-creator of an online cartoon, and who also attacked and paralyzed the co-creator. A deep dive into online behavior in the late teens, somewhat difficult to read at times because the pages reproduce chats, often in as many as three columns. Many leads go nowhere, including a particularly interesting connection to a far-right quasi-Nazi group. The murderer is, of course, finally revealed as something of a surprise but not without some foreshadowing. A bit overlong and sometimes confusing, but typically of Rowling it ultimately proves well-plotted with many interesting characters. And the not-quite love affair between Strike and Robin continues, with Robin getting her name on the office door at he end.

CAROL HAILE:

The Space Between Cheslie’s Smile and Mental Illness (NF) by April Simpkins and Cheslie Kryst. I needed to know why Cheslie, a smart, successful attorney and then TV personality, a beautiful (former Miss USA), well liked, adored by her family woman would take her own life. Sadly, this is the profile of many dealing with depression and unable to find a way out of the internal darkness.  I cannot imagine the grief and yet strength of her mother as she wrote the second part and finished the book. 

You will learn about the life of pageantry from someone who chose to participate and wasn’t pushed by her parents.  

A few memorable quotes: 

-“As you grow and change, your life will show you different sides of your friends. Some will stay on the journey with you. And some won’t.” 

-“Guilt is like planting a permanent review mirror in front of you….” 

Her mother is now a mental health advocate and a list of resources is provided at the end. 

The majority of the book is about Cheslie and her vibrant life, not her depression.

Just Add Water: My Swimming Life (NF) by Katie Ledecky. There aren’t enough positive adjectives to describe my thoughts about Katie Ledecky. She is an inspiration, not only as an accomplished Olympian; but, also as a young woman who is a positive role model for all ages. Katie competes in the swimming world because she LOVES swimming.  Her parents did not push her one iota. She shares in her own voice (audio version) how she came to love the sport, how she continues to set and conquer new goals, her priorities in life and the special relationship she had with her Jewish paternal grandmother; Berta, who was a force in her own right. Katie is wiser and more mature than most 27 year olds. Loved when she won silver (not gold as was the norm) in an Olympic event and the interviewers were pushing her to say she was disappointed.  She held her ground, replying that she just won a SILVER medal at the Olympics. How can you be disappointed about that?

She is also a talented writer , and I’m sure had an equally talented editor.  

The Lion Women of Tehran (HF) by Marian Kamali. By the same author as The Stationary Shop, this coming of age story about two unlikely friends growing up in the 1950’s in Iran is filled with all the emotions of friendship, trust, betrayal, guilt and grief. The author does an excellent job of describing the political climate and women’s rights (or lack thereof) in a country that constantly seems to be in turmoil.

It is educational, emotional and eloquently written.

CHRIS BOUTOURLINE:

The Friend (F) by Sigrid Nunez. The novel explores relationships, often troubling in nature, through the musings of a writer/teacher who inherits a Great Dane after her mentor’s suicide. I loved the dark humor of the protagonist and the overall cleverness of Nunez’s yarn. I heard the movie being made of the novel was delayed because they couldn’t find the right Great Dane, which, if you read the book before the movie doubtlessly butchers it, makes little sense.

Small Things Like These (F) by Claire Keegan. I enjoyed Keegan’s book Foster so much that it was one of my MillersTime book submissions last year. While Foster was, primarily, a charming tale, this novella is much darker. Keegan’s economic writing is remarkable for the information and feeling it conveys.

Same Bed Different Dreams (F) by Ed Park. The novel explores the realities of a split Korea with a sort of “truth is stranger than fiction” approach. As the New York Times review put it, “If Park’s suitcase is stuffed, well, it’s an inspired choice for an odyssey that unpacks, in Pynchonesque fashion, Korean history and American paranoia”.

Winter in Sokcho (F) by Elisa Shua Dusapin. Another novel about the two Koreas. Where Ed Park’s novel (see above) careens about like a pinball machine this one has a stark, oddly romantic approach that leaves an impression.

CHUCK TILIS:

The Talented Mrs. Mandelbaum: The Rise and Fall of an American Organized Crime Boss (NF) by Margalit Fox. Ms. Fox, a former editor for the NYT obituary pages, found a story of truth stranger than fiction—a Jewish Mother invented the organized crime business back in the 19th century and the Mafia stole her business model. The story has everything you would expect–bribery, extortion, and corrupt politicians and policemen alike.  The one difference—no murder–just good old fashioned thievery and coverups.  Definitely worth reading—and find out how the Pinkerton’s came to be as well.

Death in Cornwall (F) by Daniel Silva. While Silva has authored 24 books, I’ve read only two which are the bookends of his distinguished career–his first and now most recent. This was my first introduction to his spy and art restorer Gabriel Allon, and I must say I couldn’t put the book down. It is more than a murder mystery as Gabriel untangles the murder of an art professor while navigating the clandestine world of billionaire greed and power.

The Three Governors Controversy: Skullduggery, Machinations, and the Decline of Goergia’s Progressive Politics (NF) by Charles S. Bullock III, Scott E. Buchanaan and Ronald Keith Gaddief. If you’re looking to see the callousness of politics in the South, read this book which in essence, lays bare the racism of Herman Talmedge and the acceptance by Georgia’s electorate. But it does go further to explain how Georgia overtly prevented African Americans from voting, used a cockamamie county system for tallying the winners, and in essence had the party apparatus determine winners before election day. All of this in addition to the cockamamie story of three governors claiming power at once.  

The End of Ambition–America’s Past, Present, and Future in the Middle East (NF) by Steven A. Cook. As Dustin Hoffman was informed—I have one word “Oil.”  Cook in less than 200 pages helps us understand the intent of our Middle East Policy from his perch at the Council on Foreign Relations. Very readable and balanced which can infuriate one at times with its honesty and timely given the events unfolding today.  

CINDY OLMSTEAD:

James (F) by Percival Everett. I have become a devoted fan of Everett’s writing. This novel is a National Book Award Winner and shortlisted for the Booker Prize. It is an absorbing re-imagining of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, told from the enslaved Jim’s point of view. It is humorous, yet tragic, poignant and a very vivid saga of the adventures of runaway slave. Everett has a special way of weaving tragedy with the drive for freedom. Well worth the read.

Quoted from a “literary” source (Amazon Books):  “When the enslaved Jim overhears that he is about to be sold to a man in New Orleans, separated from his wife and daughter forever, he decides to hide on nearby Jackson Island until he can formulate a plan. Meanwhile, Huck Finn has faked his own death to escape his violent father, recently returned to town. As all listeners of American literature know, thus begins the dangerous and transcendent journey by raft down the Mississippi River toward the elusive and too-often-unreliable promise of the Free States and beyond.”

I Am Not Sidney Poitier (F) by Percival Everett. I had no idea what or where this book was going to take the reader. The main protagonist is a black man who has come into heaps of money. His journey along with his name get him into unbelievable, comical, diabolical and heartfelt situations. Ted Turner is his “adopted father” which adds to the humor and quizzical plot of the novel. Everett is a master at sharing the plight of the black man while creating a sense of comedy, if you can believe that to be possible.

DAVID STANG:

Skating on Thin Ice: A Zen Path of Self-Realization (NF) by Ezra Bayda. The author, who lives in La Jolla, California has written eight books on life philosophy over the past 30 years. His book, Zen Heart (2009) was a life transforming influence for me. The first word of that title reveals his philosophical orientation. His intent is not to convert his readers to Zen but to induce them to evaluate their lives seeing and acting through a Zen lens. His Skating on Thin Ice can fairly be regarded as a synthesis of his prior writings. Bayda’s latest book conveys his philosophical /psychological framework for living one’s life.

One of the principal values espoused in his book is that perseverance is the key to life of fulfillment. He encourages his readers to shift their focus from a “predominant orientation toward sleep and mechanicalness – whose primary goals are comfort, security, approval, and the control – to a growing orientation toward wanting to live more awake.” Perseverance combined with curiosity establish Bayda’s pathway to personal growth and fulfillment. He emphasizes that “until we become intimate with her difficulties and cheers, until we can welcome them with curiosity, they will always limit our ability to love.” His framework for following this pursuit consists of asking oneself five questions:

“(1) What is going on right now?

 (2) Can I see this as my path?

 (3) What is my most believed thought?

 (4) What is this? and

 (5) Can I let this experience just be?

Bayda points out that the best way to undertake such an inquiry is to expand one’s curiosity while learning to become more perceptively awake. He adheres to Plato’s belief that the unexamined life is not worth living. Each of his 44 chapters Bayda presents the reader with a separate key to unlocking the doorway to Truth.

DOMINIQUE LALLEMENT:

Daughter of Fire (HF) by Sofia Robleda. Set in the 16th C. in Guatemala, this is the story of Catalina, the daughter of Don Alonso Lopez de Cerrato, appointed president by the Spanish Emperor, and his second wife, an indigenous woman who was killed by the Inquisition for continuing to practice the traditional religion of the K’iche (Maya) people. Educated secretly by her mother on the culture and language of the K’iche people, Catalina had promised to protect the Popol Vuh, a book consigning the history of the K’iche people and codices of practices to honor their gods. Catalina struggles between the power of her Spanish father and her commitment to her deceased mother to finally opt to make her life with the last king of the K’iche, although she has been disowned by her father and they live in poverty. This is an easy read but reminds us of the losses of cultures and suffering of indigenous people that result from colonization.

Pompeii (HF) by Robert Harris. It blends historical fiction with the real life eruption of Mount Vesuvius on August 24, 79 AD. I particularly enjoyed the scientific descriptions of volcanology, as well as of the hydraulic systems that had been developed by the Romans: aqueducts, reservoirs etc. I was less keen on the detailed description of a rich Roman, Ampliatus, feeding a slave to his eels (apparently a real historical case of Vedius Pollio! The subtext of comparing the preeminence of the United States and the Roman Empire over the rest of the world is also quite interesting, especially in the current context with the United States losing its preeminence as a world power.

Joseph Fouché: The Portrait of a Politician (NF) by Stefan Zweig. ‘Gambler-in-chief at the great roulette board of human destiny,’ Joseph Fouché is one of the most amazing figures in history. He is ‘the most remarkable politician the world has ever known,’ says Stefan Zweig, making his point through this brilliant biography. Fouché being from Nantes, my hometown, where he spent his youth and early career, made it all the more interesting — although ‘nothing to be proud of’. Against the flaming background of the French Revolution we see Fouché, hitherto unknown, a ‘semi-priest,’ take his seat as member of the dreaded National Convention of France. When the people cry for the blood of the aristocrats he proceeds to Lyons, which has risen against the revolutionists, and plunges into an orgy of murder and blasphemy; when the people turn to moderation he repudiates his former companions, helps to speed Robespierre to the guillotine, and becomes the most moderate of moderates. His rise is meteoric, his fall equally so. Suddenly Citizen Fouché sinks into obscure poverty, making a living from petty spying and tending to a swine farm. Then Fouché rises again to new and greater heights as Minister of Police to Napoleon. Not only does he spy out Napoleon’s enemies, he even uses Josephine to spy on the Emperor himself. Joseph Fouché, the man who killed aristocrats and tended swine, finally became Duke of Otranto, millionaire, aristocrat, master-spy, and super-blackguard. From the pages of this volume emerge not only Fouché, but some of the great figures of history: Napoleon, Robespierre, Louis XVIII, Talleyrand, Lafayette. To read it is to gain knowledge of sixty of the most volcanic years the world has known. Had President Macron taken the time to read the chapters about Napoléon, he could have avoided the mistake of dissolving the French National Assembly in July 2024, which has led to the most troubled period in French Politics of modern times, and the end is not in sight! 

Animal Farm (F) by George Orwell. A brilliant book, very witty and hopeful at the beginning, then turns into a rather tragic story of what happens to societies when a dominant group progressively takes over and comforts the installation of a dictatorship. The rebellion of the animals is reminiscent of the French and Soviet Revolutions and their aftermaths. The name of Napoleon for the pig becoming the dictator is the parody of the true Napoleon who declares himself the leader, bestows honors upon himself (allusion to his own coronation in Notre-Dame, actually mentioned in Macron speech at the reopening of Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris!!!), and surrounds himself with cronies. The dominant group cannot refrain from living in grand style, and progressively adopts the lifestyle of those they got rid of.They enslave the other groups to work more, eat less etc. and eventually abandon all principles of establishing an egalitarian socialist system. In the end, pigs look more and more like like men (walk on their hind legs, triple chins, drinking etc…) to the point that there is no difference. Animal Farm is still so relevant to our modern times: reminiscent of how Putin and the Oligarchs did away with 75 years of communist aspirations, and of the surge in the political right in a majority of European countries, let alone in the US after this last election. This is a book worth reading or rereading before the next presidential inauguration, as pre-dictatorial signs are already emerging,  and US corporate cronies stepping back on critical societal issues after decades of fighting for equal rights had been finally achieved (see: https://www.nbcnews.com/nbc-out/out-pop-culture/disney-removes-transgender-storyline-upcoming-pixar-streaming-series-rcna184664#).

Too bad I can’t share some of the literary jewels I also read:

Medelaine avant l’aube (F) by Sandrine Collette, prix Goncourt des lyceens 2025, a novel about a wild child that brings a wind of revolt in a backward community, I have never read such a poignant description of starvation among peasant communities exploited by the nobility.  

Jacaranda (F) by Gaël Faye, Prix Renaudot, 2024, a novel about  trauma left from the Genocide in Rwanda.

DONNA POLLET:

Leaving (F) by Roxana Robinson. Love is always complicated and never more so than when an unexpected late in life affair offers a lasting companionship. Insightful and beautifully written, Leaving examines in heart rendering detail the conflict between the self and the inescapable commitment made to those closest to you.

Rules of Civility (F) by Amor Towles. A novel of style, atmosphere, and lyrical language which immerses you in another time and place. It’s post depression New York City, a heady time for the young, well-heeled, and the newly arrived looking for opportunity and adventure. Like the city’s persona, the characters are vibrant and captivating but also opaque and misleading, and the reader is caught up in all the poignant high’s and low’s of a different social sensibility.

Small Mercies (F) by Dennis Lehane. It’s 1974 in Boston right before busing desegregation and tempers are running high in the Irish working class enclave of Southie. Set against this backdrop, Lehane creates a mesmerizing and violent personal story of a mother’s love and retribution in what appears to be the  unconnected events of the death of a young black man found in the subway and the disappearance of a white teenage girl. But, of course, in Lehane’s world,  it is all insidiously connected to the times we live in, racism, class injustice, criminality, and above all, power and control.

Watching the Stars (F) by Tommy Orange. It’s all about the legacy and the torturous history of Native Americans which traces the prejudice, displacement, and genocide from the very beginning through contemporary times as seen poignantly through one family in Oakland. It helps to have read Orange’s first book, There There, but it is not a precondition. The message is clear and devastating.

ED SCHOLL:

Chasing Hope: A Reporter’s Life (NF) by Nicholas Kristof. I loved this autobiography by my favorite NY Times columnist. He richly deserved his two Pulitzers (for Tiananmen Square and Darfur coverage), but since he became a columnist, I greatly admire and look forward to reading his columns. This book also describes how he met and professionally collaborated with his wife, Sheryl WuDunn.

The Kingdom, the Power and the Glory: American Evangelicals in an Age of Extremism (NF) by Tim Alberta. As a Christian and a believer in democracy and the establishment clause of the Constitution , I am aghast at the rise of Christian Nationalism in the US and in many other parts of the world. This book helped me understand the Christian nationalist movement and why it is such a perversion of the tenets of Christianity and a threat to our pluralistic democracy and freedom of, as well as freedom from, religion.

ELLEN MILLER:

The last half of 2024 was not a great time for reading for me so I looked for options that would be arresting, not too long, and a little different than my usual fare.

All Fours (F) by Miranda July was certainly one book. (Little did I know when I started it, that it would be listed as No. 1 on the NYT’s Best fiction list of the best 100 books for the year!) I suggest you read about it before you buy it because you should be for for warned. (There is a chance you might either dump the book as trash or find it as enticing as I did. (To call it sexually explicit would be underrating its content, but I think almost all of us are adults on this list.)

The Safekeep (F) by Yael van der Wouden. This is another remarkable novel though in a different way than the first one I have listed (although there is love affair which is key to the story). This book is set in 1960s in Amsterdam. The primary character, Isabel, clings to her childhood home after the death of her mother. When her brother brings his girlfriend into the house, pretty much everything changes. The writing is excellent and the story gallops along. The book was nominated for the 2024 Brooker prize.

Baumgartner (F) by Paul Auster. Auster has always been a delightful read, and we readers lost a literary giant when he died last April. After his death, I looked for his most recent book, and I will be forever grateful to have read it. When he finished writing it, he said that it was the last one he’d ever write. He was a right. He died five months later. It’s his 18th novel, and it’s the story of an older man (Sy Baumgartner) who has lost the love of his life but who goes on to live joyously, although sometimes he struggles. The book is witty, and the stories he tells us about his past are delightful. This is one of the books which grabs you from the very beginning. You won’t want to put it down, and you’ll be sorry when it’s over.

Neighbors and Other Stories (F) by Diane Oliver. This is a collection of stories from an author who died at the age of 22 in a motorcycle accident. She was still a graduate student at the University of Iowa Writer’s Workshop when she died. The stories range in topic (and in quality), but each one
tells an intimate story about families who struggled under the overt racism of the 1950s and ‘60s. They illustrate the strengths and sometimes the weaknesses of families and their children as they navigated their circumstances. I found each these stories very compelling. While I have read much about this topic, I found these short stories particularly intimate. I highly recommend them.

ELLEN SHAPIRA:

Goyhood (F) by Reuven Fenton. This was probably my favorite book of the year.  After the election, this was a perfect pick-me-upper:  entertaining, funny, with a fast moving plot and flawed characters who were likable.  Goyhood tells the story of Mayer, an Orthodox Jewish Talmudic scholar who discovers in midlife that he isn’t Jewish (thus entering a stage of “Goyhood”). Mayer reconnects with his estranged twin brother and while he tries to figure out how to deal with this new life altering  knowledge, the brothers set out on a road trip throughout the south which ultimately changes both of their lives.  Themes of religious faith, grief, and family dysfunction are explored through the various characters and experiences along the way in a thoughtful yet engaging way.  The book has been described as a cross between Chaim Potok’s The Chosen and Planes, Trains and Automobiles.

Table for Two (F) by Amor Towles. I don’t usually enjoy short stories, but this book by one of my favorite authors was an exception and was absolutely delightful. The first half was a selection of six sharp-edged satirical stories mostly based in New York City, and the second half of the book was a novella set in Golden Age Hollywood. The novella follows the heroine, Evelyn from Towel’s novel Rules of Civility as she has left New York and has traveled to Hollywood where she hob-nobs with the rich and famous and helps to solve a murder. 

Night Watch (F) by Jayne Anne Phillips.  This 2024’s Pulitzer Prize for Fiction tells the story about a mother and daughter seeking refuge in the aftermath of the Civil War. Eliza, the mother, hasn’t spoken in a year, and the twelve year old daughter ConaLee has taken charge of her. Eliza ends up as a patient in the Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum in West Virginia with her daughter pretending to be her servant so she can remain with her.  Beautifully written, Night Watch is a tale of survival through hardship and war.

The Heart’s Invisible Furies (F) by John Boyne. Set in Ireland, we are shown the history of Ireland from the 1940’s to today through the eyes of one ordinary man. The Heart’s Invisible Furies proved to be a book about relationships above all else:  the protagonist, Cyril’s relationship first with his adoptive parents, the boy he fell in love with when he was seven, and many more people who came into his life.  The story demonstrated how the harsh judgmental Catholic culture of mid twentieth century Ireland  impacted the lives of homosexuals and then finally gave way to the less rigid attitudes of today.

ELIZABETH TILIS:

While I read many great fiction mysteries over the last twelve months, the best book of the year was the non-fiction book The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness, by Jonathan Haidt. This book explores the collapse of young people’s mental health in the age of smartphones, social media, and big tech. Importantly, it gives strategies for parents to help their kids plan for a healthier and freer childhood. Also, it looks at how we as a society and parents in particular under protect kids in the digital world and overprotect them in the real world. Everyone should read this book especially if you have kids under the age of 18. Or even if you’re an adult struggling with how much you are addicted to technology.  

Brooklyn, age 7 1/2: A fiction series:

The Wild Robot, The Wild Robot Escapes, and The Wild Robot Protects all by Peter Brown.

        Samantha, age 8 3/4:

The BFG (F) by Roald Dahl, The One and Only Ivan (F) by Katherine Applegate, and Curse of the Artic Star (F) by Carol Keene…Nancy Drew and her friends must navigate a cruise ship crisis in the first book of the Nancy Drew Diaries, a fresh approach to a classic series.

ELLIOTT TROMMALD:

The Paper Menagerie and Other Stories (F) by Ken Liu. Read the first story: “State change” written 12 years earlier, pp 10-25 and “The man who ended history: a documentary” written 2011, pp 389-450. If you react even close to the way I did, then you will want conversation, and I will come east, beg a bed with Richard, and buy an old-fashioned for the group and enjoy a night of discussion with you. In the 21st-century with AI making book writing and publishing simple and people retreating into bubbles and echo chambers, I frequently read parts of books–also due to limited time as we age.

An Emancipation of the Mind: Radical Philosophy, the War over Slavery,and the Refounding of America (NF) by Matthew Stewart. Add this book to the discussion above; the book is about what we have lost and what refounding might look like. And yes, there’s a good chunk of Lincoln in it that speaks to the 21st-century.

Eve: How the Female Body Drove 200 Million Years of Human Evolution (NF) by Cat Bohannon. Beautifully written, scientifically accessible to all. I learned how little I had learned evolving in the 20th and 21st centuries. She writes that the last 20 years has seen a revolution in the science of womanhood. This book rewrites the story of what women are and how women came to be. I thought I knew something about that. Wrong. You can read selective chapters. I found a new understanding in all, but particularly in “womb,” “brain,” and “love.” End notes and bibliography fascinated me. And don’t ignore the footnotes: they will engage millennials and alphas and provide humor that is the stuff of life.

EMILY NICHOLS GROSSI:

I continue to recommend Babel (F) by R.F. Kuang which I adored at the half-year mark and still think about.

Case Histories (F) by Kate Atkinson, the first in the Jackson Brodie detective series. It is a hilarious romp through England and Scotland with some incredible characters and lots of well-written mayhem. I didn’t know Atkinson wrote such works, and this one was first published in 2004. So old, but new to me and seemingly only in used-version availability now. But I adored it.

Also recommending in very late-to-the-game fashion Demon Copperhead (F) by Barbara Kingsolver Hell of a story, incredibly sad, incredibly funny at times, and beautifully written. No need to write more due to the many MillersTime readers who’ve recommended it in past years.

I have many books in process which I so far recommend–Cacophony of Bone(NF) by Kerri Dochartaigh, The Garden Against Time (NF) by Olivia Laing, and Small Rain (NF) by Garth Greenwell (NF)–and will likely share later, but a fine ps for now.

ERIC STRAVITZ:

Last Days (F) by Alexander Sammartino, a fine prose stylist, but the subject of this novel was grim.

Lincoln in the Bardo (F) by George Saunders. Wonderful, heartwarming, and surprisingly funny.

The Intuitionist (F) by Colson Whitehead. Smart, interesting fiction with a deep dive into elevator workings.

Thunderstruck (HF) by Erik Larson. Enjoyable historical fiction.

Summit Lake (F) by Charlie Donlea. Excellent, easy reading mystery/thriller.

FRUZSINA HARSANYI:

James (F) by Percival Everett. (Audio) This was by far my favorite book this year.  Winner of the National Book Award and the Booker Shortlist, it’s the Huckleberry Finn story re-told from the perspective of his travel companion, the enslaved man James. 

You don’t have to read the classic first to appreciate this brilliant re-imagining.  It’s no longer just the beloved coming-of-age story.  Instead, the reader is dropped in the midst of all the horror and crime against humanity that was part of our history. Listening to it is a must.

The Woman Who Would Be King (NF) by Kara Cooney.  Hatshepsut was one of the few queens of Egypt  (1479 BC-1458 BC) 1400 years before Cleopatra. Great Royal Wife of a pharaoh, she married her brother at 12, gave birth to her first child at 13, and ruled Egypt as queen in her own right by the time she was 16.  According to the writer, a UCLA Egyptologist, she was enormously successful but little known in history because … well, she was a woman.  Like us, the ancients distrusted female rulers with authority, which, says Cooney, makes her achievements even more astonishing. The book stands out not only for its history of this extraordinary ruler, but also for its richness of details about everyday life.

Three other books would easily make my list: 

Prophet Song by Paul Lynch (F) won the Booker in 2023. 

Kairos (NF) by Jenny Erpenbeck (NF) won the Booker this year.  

An Unfinished Love Story: A Personal History of the 1960s (NF) by Doris Kearns Goodwin.

GARLAND STANDROD:

Where Europe Begins (F) by Yoko Tawada. Tawada is a Japanese woman living in Germany who writes both in Japanese and German. She is not a realist but writes strange and unrealistic tales. This collection was chosen as a 2005 Times Literary Supplement Book of the Year. In these stories disparate settings―Japan, Siberia, Russia, and Germany―the reader becomes as much a foreigner as the author, or the figures that fill this book: the ghost of a burned woman, a traveler on the Trans-Siberian railroad, a mechanical doll, a tongue, a monk who leaps into his own reflection. Yoko Tawada discloses the virtues of bewilderment, estrangement, and Hilaritas: the goddess of rejoicing.

Buzz Aldrin, What Happened To You In All The Confusion? (F) by Johan Harstad. This Norwegian author details the picaresque adventures of a thirty year old gardener who idolizes Buzz Aldren because he was the second man on the moon, and not the irst. He lives in Stavinger, Norway and loses his job. In his travels he meets the director of a halfway house home to a group of misfits who delight in life in second place. “Harstad combines formal play and linguistic ferocity with a searing emotional directness.” (Dedi Felman, Words Without Borders)

The Devils Candy: The Bonfire of the Vanities Goes to Hollywood (NF) by Julie Salamon. This book came out in 1991, and I found it in a used book store. The author sat in on the complete process of making a film of the Tom Wolfe book. It is simply the best book I’ve read on how movies are made, despite the fact the movie was a flop. It has vivid vignettes of Brian DePalma, Tom Wolfe, Tom Hanks, Bruce Willis, and Melanie Griffith.

Kathmandu (NF) by Thomas Bell. The author is a British journalist who knows Kathmandu quite well, unlike so many people who every year discover it for the first time. He captures the richness of its history and the complexity of Kathmandu’s current situation, including the civil war and the earthquake. I foundit of special interest as I knew some of the people who he mentions, including Pashupati Shumshere Jung Bahador Rana, my former boss when I was there.

A Terribly Serious Adventure: Philosophy and War at Oxford 1900 – 1960 (NF) by Nikhil Krishan. The two main themes of philosophy in the twentieth century were continental existentialism and English language philosophy. This book is delightful and lively for a book about philosophy and is filled with Oxford characters as it tells how this movement began and what made it influential. I was a New York Times best book of the year. I wish I had had this book before I studied philosophy at Leeds in 1960.

GEORGE INGRAM:

The Art of Diplomacy (NF) by Stuart Eizenstat – Analyzes the role of diplomacy in a dozen key foreign policy negotiations since the end of the Cold War; the final chapter is a guide to good negotiating practices. It is an interesting walk through some of the principal foreign policy issues of our lifetime – a good reminder of what we have lived through.  

Patriot Presidents (NF) by William Leuchtenburg – an easy 250 page read of the role of how each of the first five presidents (all founding fathers) influenced the nature and structure of the office of the president.

The American President (NF) by William Leuchtenburg- an 800 page tome from Teddy Rosevelt through Bill Clinton – a fascinating but heavy lift (not tedious) – a useful read given today’s politics to remind us that the country has been through questionable presidencies (maybe not as bad as the one coming) and intense partisan divides, and survived! At 101, he is working on the third volume!

HAVEN KENNEDY:

The Singing Hills Series (F) by Nghi Vo. This is a brilliant and beautiful series. The book centers around a cleric whose job it is to record stories. Each book delves into Vietnamese folklore beautifully. It’s fantasy but would appeal to anyone who enjoys a beautifully written, thought-provoking book. 

The Dictionary People (NF) by Sarah Ogilvie. This is a fascinating and in-depth book on the creation of the OED (Oxford English Dictionary) and the people who helped create it. Before picking this book up I never knew the story behind the OED’s creation. This book explains its creation, the people behind its creation, and the thousands of people – mostly volunteers- who helped make it happen. It took fifty years and thousands of slips to make the Dictionary. The book is written from A to Z, each letter highlighting s particular group of people. It’s mini history lessons throughout the book. I finished reading the book in three sittings and was left with a great respect for the work that went into creating the OED. I’m a lover of words, books, and history- and especially forgotten history. This book checked all those boxes. I ended up with a long list of people and events I wanted to know more about. 

JANE BRADLEY:

This was a year when I gravitated toward books that kept me distracted.  In addition to the new releases by Louise Erdrich, Sally Rooney, Lauren Groff, Colm Toibin, and Richard Powers, these provided a welcome escape:

How to Say Babylon (NF) by Safiya Sinclair .

Master, Slave, Husband, Wife (NF) by Ilyon Woo.

Nowhere in Africa:  An Autobiographical Novel (F) by Stephanie Zweig.

The Road to the Country (F) by Chigozie Obioma.

James (F) by Percival Everett

JEFF FRIEDMAN:

Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell (F) by Suzanna Clarke. The narrative takes place in an alternate 19th century England, where magic existed hundreds of years ago but somehow went extinct. A reclusive scholar figures out how to bring it back. The characters and their world are very absorbing, I felt completely immersed.

Playground (F) by Richard Powers. A story about humans’ relationship to the ocean and to artificial intelligence. Powers has reliably interesting views about science and nature, the book has some beautiful scenes about life in the deep sea, and the book ends with a rather mind-bending exploration of AI’s future.

JESSE MANIFF:

Everyone in My Family Has Killed Someone (F) by Benjamin Stevenson.

Everyone on This Train Is a Suspect (F) by Benjamin Stevenson.

The Demon of Unrest (NF) by Erik Larsen.

An Unfinished Love Story: A Personal History of the 1960s (NF) by Doris Kearns Goodwin.  

JUDY WHITE:

The Elephant Whisperer (NF) by Lawrence Anthony. Wonderful story of a white man raised in Africa successfully gaining the trust of a herd of elephants scheduled to be destroyed because the trauma they’d endured had left them unable to trust and dangerous. Just a great story with applications to badly hurt humans too. Mike and I read it out loud to each other after our first readings.

The Devil’s Element (NF) Dan Eagan. This is about phosphorus, and I couldn’t imagine why my book club chose it until I read it. Dan Eagan is one of those rare writers who can make unpromising topics fascinating.  His The Death and Life of the Great Lakes (NF) is good too, especially for those who live near the Great Lakes.  

All of the No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency (F) books by Alexander McCall Smith, twenty so far.  I have loved them for many years, and needing therapy after the election, I read the 3 most recent, and they were just what I needed.  Best to start with one of the first but the order you read them in isn’t critical; the first chapter of each of them establishes the characters and background.

KATE LATTS:

The God of the Woods (F) by Liz Moore was best book I read this year. For anyone who went to summer camp, you won’t be able to help picturing your own camp in this mystery set in the mid 70s when the daughter of the camp owners goes missing. The characters and twists and turns along the way make it hard to put down. Very well written too. 

Looking for Jane (F) by Heather Marshall delves into the underground abortion network that existed in Toronto long into the 80s when abortion was finally legalized. It starts off in the 60s at a home for unwed pregnant women where two young women meet and become friends. There are a few twists and turns in the women’s lives after their experience that becomes the focus of the book. I enjoyed the book but there were a few too many convenient coincidences as the story unfolds.

My two books from first half of the year were good but not amazing:

The Women (F) by Kristin Hannah is the highly anticipated next historical fiction book by the author of The Nightingale, The Great Alone and The Four Winds. Unfortunately this one did not live up to expectations. I am glad that I read it and learned a lot/was reminded about the Vietnam war and the experience of those who spent time in Vietnam. This book focused on a young woman from a well to do (likely republican) family in Southern California with a long line of military service who goes to Vietnam to serve as a nurse. The details of her time in service was well done, but the second half of the book when she returns to the US crams too many things in and seems a bit sloppy. I thought this book would be about several women who spent time in Vietnam, comparing their varying background and experiences. This book does that a smidge but largely just focuses on one woman. 

Only the Beautiful (F) by Susan Meissner also did not live up to the writer’s previous book The Nature of Fragile Things. Again this was a nice read with some twists and turns but largely a story told many times before with fairly predictable events. It is the story of a teen girl in the 1940s who is orphaned, ends up pregnant, goes to a home, and has to give the baby away. 

KATHLEEN KROOS:

The Good Lord Bird (HF) by James McBride –  Henry Shackleford is a young slave living in the Kansas Territory in 1856–a battleground between anti- and pro-slavery forces–when legendary abolitionist John Brown arrives. When an argument between Brown and Henry’s master turns violent, Henry is forced to leave town–along with Brown, who believes Henry to be a girl and his good luck charm.

The Two Family House (F) by Lynda Cohen Loigman. Moving family saga set in Brooklyn 1947.  In the midst of a blizzard two babies are born minutes apart to two women. They are sisters by marriage, but as the years progress their once deep friendship begins to unravel.

Woman on Fire (F) by Lisa Barr. A rising young journalist needs to locate a painting stolen by the Nazis 75 years earlier.

KATHY CAMICIA:

This year is an easy one for books for me.  Usually I can’t get excited about the latest fiction but this year I found two  fabulous books:  

Playground (F) by Richard Powers—The Overstory was one of my favorites when it came out, and this one is great but not quite on the same level, shorter for starters.  He uses the same style of colorful characters whose lives intersect. This is partly about the environment and partly about outrageous capitalism.

By the Sea (F) by Abdulrazak Gurney—Nobel Prize winning author who takes on immigration from different angles, including British colonialism.  Great writing.

Angle of Repose (F) by Wallace Stegner—a re-read; a reminder of what a great writer he was.  Somewhat dated but still a great novel

Best Short Stories 2024 (F) ed. by Amor Towles. These are the O.Henry winners, not the other best short stories series, and consequently more international in  scope. If you are like me and must read something before you go to sleep, these fit the bill.

Essays, Vol 5 (NF) by Virginia Woolf. I will say it again, what a genius.

Can’t and Won’t (NF) by Lydia Davis. A great essayist.

KEVIN CURTIN:

She Rides Shotgun (F) by Jordan Harper. Crime mystery; a good page turner that centers on a developing father-daughter relationship.

The North Water (F) by Ian McGuire. Crime thriller, set in the late 1800s on a whaling ship in the North Sea.

The Searcher (F) by Tana French. Mystery set in Ireland. Excellent read – ‘m planning to read more of her books including, this past year’s The Hunter.

LARRY MAKINSON:

New York Trilogy & The Brooklyn Follies by Paul Auster (F). When Paul Auster died this year, I read his most famous work – New York Trilogy – then started in on everything else he’d written over the years. The Trilogy is an excellent introduction to Auster, with some of the most bizarre characters you’ll ever encounter. The Brooklyn Follies was my favorite of all the others, though nearly all of them were deeply satisfying. 

New Cold Wars by David Sanger (NF). A scary look at what the future may hold for the US and the world in the years ahead. Even without the election of Donald Trump, the future is fraught with new kinds of danger as the world’s powers jostle for dominance using the latest innovations in technology.

The Devil’s Bargain by Stella Rimington (F). A brilliant spy novel by a brilliant spy. Remington was head of Britain’s MI-5 before she started a second career as a novelist. This one was my favorite.

Transcription by Kate Atkinson (F). Another superb spy novel, this one about a woman enlisted by British intelligence to transcribe the conversations of pro-German fascists in 1940. The book switches back and forth between 1940 and 1950, when she’s working for the BBC. The Economist rates it as one of the best spy novels ever written.

LINDA ROTHENBERG:

I did like The Painted Veil (F) by Somerset Maugham. It’s worth a read. About a couple who move to China so the microbiologist husband can find a cure for cholera which is ravaging the country while dealing with an unloving wife.

Kantika (HF) by Elizabeth Graver. Based on a true story, about the resilient Rebecca who is a Turkish/Spanish Jewish woman and how she survives whatever comes her way.

LOIS BARBER:

In May of this year, while driving across the country from Denver to Amherst, MA, we listened to and totally enjoyed This Is Happiness (F) by Niall Williams. We were sorry when the story ended and wanted it to go on and on and take us with it. It’s 1958 and electricity comes to a small village in County Clare, Ireland. It’s a deep and joyful immersion into the lives of a young boy, his grandparents, the village doctor and his daughters, and a stranger who comes to town on a mission of his own. Humor that makes the listener smile and humor that occasionally makes the listener laugh out loud. The narrator, Dermot Crowley, with his lovely Irish brogue, brought this already excellent story even more to life and into our hearts. 

LOUISE McILHENNY:

The books I am recommending are all good stories, all fiction that is more character driven. Since the election, I’ve become a bit of an ostrich up here in the Maine woods, and these will help you avoid reality!

The Whalebone Theater (F) by Joanna Quinn.

Violeta (F) by Isabel Allende.

Tell Me Everything (F) by Elizabeth Strout. 

How to Read a Book (F) Monica Wood.

The Frozen River (F) by Ariel Lawhorn. I’m reading this now, and it is very popular in Maine

LYDIA HILL SLABY:

Finding Margaret Fuller (F) by Allison Pataki (2024) — the fictionalized version of the very real and fascinating compatriot of Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne, and more in both the United States and Europe. Another wonderful book working to share women’s stories that the patriarchy chose not to elevate.

Hamnet (F) by Maggie O’Farrell (2020) — a beautifully written story of Shakespeare’s third child, who died at age 11, about four years before a play named for him was released to wide acclaim. Without using the playwright’s name once, this heart wrenching story shares the life of the Shakespeare family at home in Stratford, and how a grief-stricken father memorialized his son in the only way he knew how. (Side note — in all of the literature that I have read, this is the best ending to a book I’ve ever experienced.)

The Storyteller (F), by Jodi Picoult (2013) — carve out a few days to read this because you won’t be able to put it down. Picoult deftly weaves five stories through each other to tell the story of a Jewish grandmother’s experience in Europe before and during World War Two and her granddaughter’s experience in present day befriending one of the elderly SS officers who oversaw Auschwitz. It’s a history, moral philosophy, criminal justice, and creative writing master class all in one novel.

The entire Inspector Gamache series (F) by Louise Penney — the most recent of these, Grey Wolf (2024), is a fantastic addition to this mystery series set in Quebec.

MARY BARDONE:

The Paris Book Seller (HF) by Kerri Maher.

The Women (F) by Kristen Hanna,

Solito (NF) by Javier Zamora.

MARY L:

It’s been three years since Stephen Sondheim died, and accepting that fact remains unfinished and still unbelievable.  But, because James Lapine had only just written Putting It Together: How Stephen Sondheim and I Created Sunday in the Park With George (NF) when it happened, NOT reading it became part of the denial. Now I’ve read it, and I do recommend it, but it may not be for everyone.  If you’ve never seen the show, you’ll be lost.  But if you have and if you’ve every wondered how theatre people make stuff happen, it’s a great read and further proof that art isn’t easy.  

MELANIE LANDAU:

The Weight of Ink (F) by Rachel Kadish, 2017.

The Diamond Eye (HF) by Kate Quinn.

MIKE WEINROTH:

My best book recommendation for this year is Kantika (HF) by Elizabeth Graver. This family saga is roughly non-fiction, and it follows the migration of a Sephardic family as they navigate issues of safety and well being, beginning in the early 20th century. It is beautifully written and well documented.
We agreed with our book club facilitator that the title does not do justice to this novel. The title falls short of the vivid picture that you’ll remember well after you finish the last page.

MIKE WHITE

Autocracy, Inc.: The Dictators Who Want to Run the World (NF, unfortunately) by Anne Applebaum. Very timely as we reflect on those being selected to wield power in America now.

NICOLE CATE:

[from my midyear]:  Bright Young Women (F) by Jessica Knoll. Novel focused on women victims of serial killer Ted Bundy. The story is intense (actually gave me bad dreams while reading it), but I really loved it. Addresses dynamics around gender, violence, public perceptions, and power structures. Engaging and interesting.

The Anthropologists (F) by Aysegul Savas.  Beautiful, compassionate, wistful, wise writing. The author told a brief story about a young couple home-hunting in a foreign city, but the concepts and feelings were much larger and more broadly applicable.

Dinners with Ruth (NF) by Nina Totenberg (audiobook). The title didn’t accurately convey how much of the book was about Nina Totenberg’s really interesting and impressive life. I enjoyed this story of challenges and successes in friendship, love, and career.

You Could Make This Place Beautiful (NF) by Maggie Smith (audiobook). I thought the writing was beautiful and the subject matter — about motherhood and disintegration of a marriage — was interesting.

All the Sinners Bleed (F) by S.A. Cosby.  A well-rounded mystery about a sheriff and serial killer, with good characters and engaging plot.

NICK FELS:

Black Majority (NF) by Peter Wood is a recently updated history of slavery in colonial South Carolina, as documented in local newspapers, property records, and family journals. (The author’s real claim to fame is that he roomed with me at Harvard.)

NICK NYHART:

James (F) by Percival Everett – This award-winning retelling of Twain’s Huckleberry Finn, recounts that tale through the eyes of James, the slave known as “Jim” in the original. The difference in perspective from the story we all read as children is a well-told lesson in the impact of race and identity on narrative, a potent lesson as anti-DEI political efforts seek to suppress these viewpoints.

The Heart in Winter (F) by Kevin Barry – I switched back and forth between my Kindle version and a read-aloud one. Listening to it being read, with a pace and intonation that reflected the rollicking nature of the story and the joy of its language was the best. The story covers an illicit romance in the late 19th century as a ne’er do-well drinker and writer takes off with a wealthy man’s new bride. The husband hires ruthless trackers to chase the couple across Montana, Idaho and the Pacific Northwest during winter. The harshness of the season and the heartlessness of the pursuit contrast the heated attachment of the couple.  

Creation Lake (F) by Rachel Kushner. What I liked about this book was much less the plot than the observational writing. Kushner’s cynical lead character’s comments on the French radical environmental activists she is infiltrating on behalf of corporate interests make this an enjoyable read. 

It’s been a good year for reading! I’ve also enjoyed four of the Slough House novels, Prequel (NF) by Rachel Maddow and Cahokia Jazz (F) by Francis Pufford.

PAUL HOFF:

The New York Game, Baseball and the Rise of a New City (NF) by Kevin Baker, with the caveat that I have not by any means reached the end of this 475 page book. It is an interesting and unique mix of baseball history (no Abner Doubleday did not invent baseball) and a social history of New York City for over a 100 years. For anyone interested in baseball and the history of New York City.  Baker’s prose keeps it lively.

PENN STAPLES:

I absolutely love The World’s Wife, a poetry collection by Carol Ann Duffy!  It’s a brilliant blend of playfulness and depth, where she reimagines the voices of famous women from mythology, history, and literature, giving them vibrant new life. What stands out to me is how she takes stories we think we know and transforms them into something fresh, relatable, and powerful. Her ability to turn the ordinary into the lyrical is truly remarkable!

Each poem feels like a conversation with an old friend—one who can make you laugh while also making you think. And goodness knows, we all need a laugh right now.  It’s a collection I keep returning to, and it never fails to delight.

RANDY CANDEA:

When The Jassamine Grows (HF) by Donna Everhart. An historical novel set in the Civil War period. Centered on a woman who opens  her home and farm to soldiers on both sides of the war at a time when being neutral was extremely dangerous.

Let The Willow Weep (F) by Sherry Parnell. A heart-wrenching portrait of a humble hardscrabble rural life.

REBEKAH JACOBS:

I loved:

The Wedding People (F) by Alison Esprch. Wedding chaos, quirky characters, plenty of humor— but also tender and serious with broken relationships and family dysfunction. 

Long Island Compromise (F) by Taffy Brodesser-Akner. You’ll love or hate this book. Explore what happens when a wealthy patriarch is kidnapped outside his home and the effects on his children Nathan, Beemer, and Jenny for years to come. From the author of Fleischman’s in Trouble

Same As It Ever Was (NF) by Julia Ames looks back on her life, marriage, and special friendship.

Morning After the Revolution (NF) by Nellie Bowles. Former New York Times reporter, Nellie Bowles, starts questioning everything. I am a big fan of Nellie Bowles and her wife Bari Weiss who started Free Press. If you like the book, you’ll love her TGIF column every Friday which recaps the news of the week.

RICHARD MARGOLIES:

The Jewish World of Alexander Hamilton (NF) by Andrew Porwancher. It so happens that Hamilton was Jewish. NO!, you say. Miranda of Broadway fame did not bring that out. Nor did Chernow, although he hinted at it. This book also explains the extensive antisemitism in early America where Jews in most states could not hold office, or practice law, among other restrictions. Hamilton, understandably, hid his Jewishness. This book is a shock to what we were taught and have believed.  “Deeply researched, and uncovering new information, it should be read by all who are interested in one of the most important figures in America’s founding generation,” says Annette Gordon-Reed of Harvard. You might think this book was published by some obscure small Jewish publishing house. It was published by Princeton University Press.

RICHARD MILLER:

Table for Two (F) by Amor Towles. Short stories were good and the novella very good. Towles can spin a story that keeps the reader engaged. His characters, setting (Los Angeles), and story (novella) are not only entertaining but also refreshing. 

A Tattoo on My Brain (NF) by Daniel Gibbs. Neurologist’s personal battle against Alzheimer’s disease. Knowledgeable discussion of the importance of early detection and management for all forms of dementia, including his own. Includes his treating of patients and taking part in a variety of long studies. 

Master Slave Husband, Wife: An Epic Journey from Slavery to Freedom by IIyon Woo (NF). More “Who Knew” – Story of Ellen and William Craft and their escape from slavery. Worthy for not only for the story but also for the history surrounding the story and for the relationship of the two primary characters. A Best Book of 2023 by various outlets and a 2024 Pulitzer Prize winner for History.  This book sent me to: Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom: The Escape of William & Ellen Craft from Slavery by William & Ellen Craft and also to Love, Liberation, and Escaping Slavery in Cultural Memory by Barbara McCaskill.

On Call (NF) by Anthony Fauci, MD. Enjoyed it thoroughly even though there was a bit more science and technical details than I understood. While some might say it’s a ’self-serving’ account of his life (it is to some degree), reading what Fauci did over his lifetime and what that meant for the country and world is inspiring and leads to the conclusion of how fortunate we and the world were to have him as a leader at NIH, etc. Also, his decency comes through and his ability to write simply, clearly, and honestly make On Call a delight.

An Unfininshed Love Story: A Personal History of the 1960s(NF) by Doris Kearns Goodwin. Loved it. For a number of different reasons: Great story telling. A period (mostly the 1960s) that I remember well and was important in my life. Wonderful episodes behind the events of those period. Deeper understanding of JFK, LBJ, RFK, McCarthy and the roles that Dick Godwin played with each of them. Goodwin’s amazing ability to write speeches and convey ideas, etc. and just who he was. The relationship Doris G had with LBJ. And the relationship of Doris and Dick. I read it over just a few days and thoroughly enjoyed almost every page.

RUTH QUINET:

Creation Lake (F) by Rachel Cushner, 2024. A corporate spy is employed to gather or plant incriminating evidence against so-called eco-terrorists in France. She is unprincipled but quick on her feet. The book is original, off beat, and intelligent.

The Daughter of Time (F) by Josephine Tey, 1951. Confined to a hospital bed for weeks, Detective Grant attempts to solve the mystery of Richard III’s supposed murder of his two nephews in the Tower. With the help of an unexpected researcher, he uses facts and evidence from that era only. His theory is that history can only be truly accurate in that way — the rest is hearsay or legend.

SAM BLACK:

The 900 Days (NF) by Harrison Salisbury, a classic history of the siege of Leningrad. A many-layered, compassionate account of how good people and bad, and the psychopathic Stalinist system, merged their determination and their communist fantasies to survive the German encirclement and starvation of the city.  One survivor told me he remembered chewing shoe leather to stay alive during the siege.  Up to 2,000,000 civilians and soldiers died. Exhausting to read (appropriately), but it draws you on like a mystery, a page-turner. Notable for the use of post-Stalin disclosures through 1969. We need a more recent account to see how it will differ based on the additional post-Soviet disclosures starting a generation later.  

Breath from Salt: A Deadly Genetic Disease, a New Era in Science, and the Patients and Families Who Changed Medicine Forever (NF) by Bijal P. Trovedi – an account of the identification of cystic fibrosis, (the illness always genetic and, before the 1970s, usually fatal during childhood), then stories of families with CF children, then the history of parents uniting to support each other, demand better medical care, and raise funds for research.  Then the biomolecular engineering required to develop new drugs that moderate and treat more and more strains of CF; this is a triumph of contemporary drug research. But all these narratives are written at an intimate and personal level, child by child, family by family, researcher by researcher, day by day; the author’s skill creates from this detail a suspenseful and thrilling account that left me greedy to turn every page and skip lunch and dinner to keep reading.  

A City on Mars: Can We Settle Space, Should We Settle Space, and Have We Really Thought This Through (NF) by J. K. WeinersmithSpace colonizations a much-discussed topic, mainly by (a) billionaires and (b) people whose hair is on fire. The authors could have terrific careers as stand-up comics; this book has laughs on every page, but it’s completely serious, carefully thought out, and convincing as to what we don’t know. (I had a mini-career as a “space” lawyer, representing launch consortia, insurers of space risks, and manufacturers of the world’s largest rocket engines; I can report that the book’s chapter on space law is only introductory,  but very good.)  Wicked funny.

Far from the Tree (NF) by Andrew Solomon. Takes you to worlds where you might otherwise never go, and gives insights into the lives of people whom you might never meet. There are children – millions of children – born into families who are profoundly different from their parents or different from most of their peers. Deaf children born to hearing parents. All deaf children. Trans children. Children with a genetic makeup resulting in dwarfism. Musical prodigies. Children who become schizophrenic. Children with autism. What is life like for their parents?  (I suggest being selective as to whom you recommend this book.)  For these children?  What are the effects of “progress” in medicine, public policy, and science on these children?  What about when they become adults, or politically active?  How does the rest of society react?  

Prophet Song (F) by Paul Lynch. A quiet novel about the end of democracy in a western European nation resembling Ireland. In increments, sometimes subtle, a society collapses utterly.  Unforgettable glimpses of a mother’s love, which is the beating heart of the book. Haunting, sorrowful, and terrifying.

STEVE RADCLIFFE:

Empire of the Summer Moon (NF) by S.C. Gwynne. It is a story about Quanah Parker, the last chief of the Comanches, the most powerful tribe of American history. It recounts the last Indian wars of the west and is a story not many know of our American History. I found it a fascinating read.

SUSAN BUTLER:

The Safekeep (F) by Yael van de Wouden is a story of love and obsession in 1960s Amsterdam. This erotic tales was shortlisted for the Booker Prize this year. I can’t give much away, because the pleasure is working towards the discovery as to who is who, and what they mean to each other. (Audible)

SUSAN & DIXON BUTLER:

An Unfished Love Story: A Personal History of the 1960s (NF) by Doris Kearns Goodwin. We have been listening to books this year, and we think this book is betterlistened to than read because you hear the actual voices of JFK, LBJ, and Bobby Kennedy; Brian Cranston reads Dick Goodwin’s letters. Dixon found the book a refuge from current political furor because it describes in detail a time when Presidents did big things to benefit the country and made advances in civil rights and other areas. Susan found it to have too many details. Dick Goodwin was in the thick of JFK and LBJ policy formulation and communication. The story is well told through all the material Dick Goodwin saved, and important insights are provided into the style of the personal interactions he had with Presidents and their White House and major agency personnel.

Palestine 1939 (NF) by Oren Kessler gives you a condensed history ofthe Zionist movement, beginning in the late 19th century. There was a pivotal uprising in 1936 which echoes the troubles and issues of 2023-24. Of course, it’s a sobering commentary on how far the situation has not progressed.

A Fever in the Heartland (NF) by Timothy Egan is a fascinating tale of the rise and fall of the Ku Klux Klan in Indiana in the 1920s. Yes, Indiana!! It had the largest per capita number of members than any other state. Led by a charismatic charlatan, the KKK controlled every aspect of government from the local to the state, and, of course, the judiciary. And a woman, in her dying declaration, brought him and the KKK down. We are fans of Egan’s writing, and he’s at his best in this book.

All the Beauty in the World (NF) by Patrick Bringley. Do you ever wonder what the guards at museums are thinking? Well, here is your answer. Bringley was a guard at the Metropolitan Museum,and he shares with the reader his observations of patrons, fellow guards and the artwork. He has his favorite galleries and days of the week to be standing tall. We listened to this on our way to and from NYC. We’ll admire guards for the rest of our lives.

TIFFANY LOPEZ LEE:

King: A Life (NF) by Jonathan Eig. I found it interesting to perceive MLK more as a human while reading this book, and also extremely disappointed in J. Edgar Hoover and what he got away with in tormenting this man. Great work by the author. 

Where the Crawdads Sing (F) by Delia Owens. Such a beautiful, yet heartbreaking story written in such intricate detail that every page was a journey of the senses. I’m glad I finally took the time to read this one. 

TOM PERRAULT:

Personal History (NF) by Katharine Graham. It’s a wonderful reminder that what we’re experiencing today, in many ways has been experienced before. And we’ll get through it. Also, there are always good people of integrity that will do the right thing. Reading this has made me feel better since the election. 

*** *** ***

And if you somehow are unable to find a book of interest above, you can always check on the list(s) from a previous year.

To see previous years’ lists, click on any of these links: 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015. 2016, 2017. 2018, Mid-Year, 2018, 2019 Mid-Year. 2019. 2020, Mid-Year 2021, 20221. 3/30/22. 7/16/22, 2023 (Plus three mid-year posts: 6/1/23, 7/16/23, 6/25/24.)

Returning to Sedona, AZ

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(12/25/2024 – New Photos Added: Arizona Country & Small Towns

While we are travelers, we rarely visit the same place twice. But in early November we flew to Phoenix and drove to the Red Rocks area of Sedona, AZ, a destination we had visited 50+ years ago, when Sedona was nothing but a sleepy little town.

We wanted to see the area again with our older eyes and a better camera. Our memory served us well: the area did not disappoint.

Sedona is a desert city that sits nearly a mile high in mid- Arizona. Some millions of years ago the volcanic activity and erosion created the oxidized red rocks and Oak Creek Canyon. There is a State Park to protect one area, but it’s only small portion of what you can see. 

The Red Rocks are everywhere and daily life in the town happens around them. The town itself has become a tourist haven. Think lots of good restaurants, hotels, and guided hiking activities:

Our favorite excursion was a sunrise Hot Air Balloon ride. (I’m not sure we told our daughters about that!).

But you don’t have to get out far out of the town to enjoy the scenery on your own: the town is literally built around the rocks. The color of the rocks was sensational, the clear dry skies were dazzling (even though the sun wasn’t always in the right place for great photography!), and the trails were much harder to climb than on our last visit. 

We undertook no major hiking on this trip, but our long drives were delightful. The photos here and the dozen others are Ellen’s favorites of just the Red Rocks themselves.

To see all 14 of Ellen’s photos, go to: Arizona: Red Rocks & Sedona Environs

(PS – Because we did a lot of driving in other areas through ghost towns and areas of old mining communities, there are other pictures that Ellen will has now added to the 14 photos above: See Arizona Country and Small Towns add in a few weeks.)

2024 Year End Call for Favorite Reads

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A Best Friend Is Someone Who Gives Me a Book I’ve Never Read, A. Lincoln

As I have done for the past 15 years, I am asking for a list of books you’ve most enjoyed reading in 2024.

There is no definition of the kind of book which you might add to this list. I’m most interested in what you truly enjoyed this past year (old or new book or rereads) with the thought that others might get some ideas for their reading in 2025.

Even if you think others may recommend a particular book that you liked, please include it on your list. Some of you like to know that more than one or two MillersTime readers have enjoyed a given title.

You may send in one title or up to five.

And you may include book(s) you cited in the 2024 Mid-Year Review (link provided as many – most? – of us perhaps have forgotten what we cited six months ago).

Please take the time to include a few sentences about the book(s) you cite, particularly what made this book so enjoyable for you. From what readers have said over the years, It is the comments that are what’s most important about MillersTime Favorite Reads each year.

You have until December 20th to get your favorites to me in time for my posting of the results on Dec. 31/Jan.1. (Early submissions are greatly appreciated as it takes a good bit of time to put this annual post together.)

Send me your list (Samesty84@gmail.com) with the title, author, and whether the book is fiction (F) or non-fiction (NF).

Thanks in advance.

Richard

The Final 2024 Baseball Contest Winner

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I finally got around to sorting out the winner of the fifth 2024 MillersTime Baseball Contest:

Contest #5: Make a specific, detailed, prescient prediction about the 2024 MLB season.

I had intended to have the decision of a winner voted on by the contributors to the contests this year. But there really wasn’t much to decide as most of you were not even close to be prescient.

Ed Scholl is easily the winner with his prediction: “The Rangers and Diamondbacks (AL and NL pennant winners in 2023) will either not make it to the postseason or be eliminated in the first round.

Neither of the 2023 pennant winners made it to the postseason in 2024. This marked the first time since 2007 (17 years!) when neither team from the previous year’s World Series even appeared in the playoffs.

And Dem Bums from Brooklyn (formerly) wiped out the Bronx Yunkees, four games to one. A pox on them both. Hopefully, neither will make it to the playoffs or to the World Series in 2025.

Ed, a previous winner, will join me for a Nats’ game (of our mutual choice) in 2025. I’ll buy the tickets, and Ed will by the food and drink.

Looking for Good Films to See?

We (Ellen and Richard) have been going to this film festival for about the last 10 years. A friend from my childhood lives in Philly and was part of the founding of this festival. We enjoy seeing her, her husband, and several ‘new’ friends we’ve met over the years as we go from one film to the next. For the last three years, our good friend for more than 50 years, DP from has joined us from Atlanta.

Unlike the more well known and popular film festivals, this one has delighted us because we’ve been able to see every film of interest to us without the hassle of waiting in long lines, even for the most popular ones. For one fee, you can get a pass for the entire festival (usually about 10 days), and this pass allows you to get into each film with a minimum of waiting. We’ve never been shut out of a film here.

Sometimes we see up to four films as day – this year we saw 15/16 over a five day period (one Ellen and I separated for and saw different films).

We were unable to attend the beginning of the festival this year and so missed some of the highly recommended ones (e.g., ANORA, CONCLAVE, THE NICKEL BOYS), which we will definitely see in the commercial theaters. Also, MARIA, THE BRUTALIST, A REAL PAIN, and UNSTOPPABLE we’ll try to see if any of them come to a local theater.

Here then are the films we saw and a link to information about each one:

TIER ONE – All of these films we thoroughly enjoyed and can recommend unreservedly.

Blitz

https://www.reuters.com/lifestyle/director-steve-mcqueen-shows-war-through-childs-eyes-new-film-blitz-2024-10-30/

The Room Next Door

https://www.theguardian.com/film/2024/oct/23/the-room-next-door-review-almodovars-english-language-debut-is-extravagant-and-engrossing

The Order

https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-reviews/the-order-review-jude-law-justin-kurzel-1235988678/

The Seed of the Sacred Fig

https://www.theguardian.com/film/article/2024/may/24/the-seed-of-the-sacred-fig-review-mohammad-rasoulofs-arresting-tale-of-violence-and-paranoia-in-iran

I’m Still Here

https://www.filmlinc.org/nyff2024/films/im-still-here/

My Favorite  Cake

https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/my_favourite_cake

The Knife

https://www.thecinemen.com/2024/10/26/the-knife-austin-film-festival-review

Two Strangers Trying Not to Kill Each Other – Won Philly’s Film Festival’s Jury Award for Best Documentary

https://variety.com/2024/film/reviews/two-strangers-tryikng-not-to kill-each-other-review-1235943

TIER TWO – Not in the same top category as those above but may be worth your checking out the reviews.

Superboys of Malegaon

https://tiff.net/events/superboys-of-malegaon

All We Imagine as Light

https://www.filmlinc.org/films/all-we-imagine-as-light/


The Last Showgirl

https://variety.com/2024/film/reviews/the-last-showgirl-
review-pamela-anderson-1236159496/


Antidote

https://tribecafilm.com/films/antidote-2024


Ernest Cole: Lost and Found

https://www.festival-cannes.com/en/f/ernest-cole-lost-and- found/


The New Year that Never Came

https://variety.com/2024/film/global/in-the-new-year-that- never-came-bogdan-muresanu-trailer-1236121362/

Bound In Heaven – Won Philly Film Festival’s Award for Best Narrative Feature

https://tiff.net/events/bound-in-heaven

And the Winners Are…

Is baseball back?

The playoffs this year were certainly entertaining, even if your team wasn’t involved.

I haven’t seen any figures about TV audience numbers, but I hope you saw some of the games.

As for the winners of the MillersTime Baseball Contests, here are the results:

CONTEST # 1 – Are you a ‘Homer’ or not?

Contestants Jeff Friedman, Rob Higdon, Joe Higdon, Maurray Maniff, Jesse Maniff, Nick Nyhart, Brandt Tilis, Matt Wax-Krell, and Dawn Wilson all ‘proved’ they were not Homers. The rest of you need to sharpen up a bit on your objectivity. A few of you need a lot of work.

Dawn Wilson is the winner. Her answers about the Dodgers were spot on, except she slightly overestimated their regular season record (104-58 vs 98-64). She will get a copy of either Joe Posnanski’s The Baseball 100 or his new book, Why We love Baseball. (Let me know which you’d prefer and your mailing address, Dawn)

Contest # 2 – True / False Questions

No one got all five of the questions right, most missing the first one: One of these two teams will NOT make it to the World Series: La Bums or New York Yunkees..

Four of you got four of the five questions correct: Jeff Friedman, Mary L, Nick Nyhart, and Brandt Tilis

Jeff Friedman is the winner as he was the first one to submit that answer, two days ahead of Mary L, and three weeks ahead of last minute submissions by Nick Nyhart and Brandt Tilis.

If Jeff can make it to DC for a Nats game, I’ll get the tickets, and he’ll buy the food and drinks. If he’d rather go to a game at Fenway, we can arrange that.

Contest # 3 – Name Division winners in each league

The best anyone was able to do was to get four of the six winners correct.

Nick Fels is the winner over Elizabeth Tilis as he submitted his choices four days ahead of Elizabeth’s.

He will get a copy of either Joe Posnanski’s The Baseball 100 or his new book, Why We love Baseball. (Let me know which you’d prefer and your mailing address, Nick.)

Contest # 4 – Five questions about the 2024 playoffs

Jeff Friedman, Zach Haile and Nick Nyhart had the Dodgers winning over the Orioles in six. Brian Steinbach had the Dodgers over the Rangers in six. Dawn Wilson, Elizabeth Tilis & David Price all had the Dodgers over the Astros. Ed Scholl thought the Braves would beat the Yankees. Jesse Maniff had the Yankees beating the Braves in six. But No One had the Yankees and the Dodgers in the WS.

By the power invested in me by me, I declare NO Winner in this category this year.

Contest # 5 – Make a specific, detailed, and prescient prediction about the 2024 MLB season. I’m still working on this question and will winnow the answers down to the finalists. The actual winner will then be chosen by 2024 MillersTime contestants.

“There’s a Time to Leave the Party.”

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Of the many lessons I learned from my father, the one that he repeated often and in a variety of contexts was “There’s a time to leave the party.”

As I aged and was confronted with major decisions and as he aged and tried to make me understand that leaving the party included letting him go, I told him I understood his advice.

When I asked him “How do I know WHEN is the time to leave the party?”

He immediately said, “I can’t tell you that, but I can suggest it’s better to leave too early than too late.”

As I read the words of President Biden today, I’m reminded of what my father taught me.

And I’m thankful that President Biden has chosen to leave the Presidency.

In my view, President Biden deserves the country’s appreciation and thanks for all that he has done over his 50 plus years in service to our nation.

I hope that as difficult a decision as it must have been for President Biden to make, he leaves the “party” without regrets.

I, for one, admire him, how he has spent his life, and how fortunate our country, and the wider world, have been for what he has given us all.

2024 Readers’ Mid-Year Favorites

A Best Friend Is Someone Who Gives Me a Book I’ve Never Read.” A. Lincoln

(Updated: 6/26/24)

Forty-two MillersTime readers contributed 67 books as favorite reads for the first half of 2024.

Contributors were equally divided between female and male, with Fiction (36) slightly ahead of Nonfiction (31).

Most contributors only named one or two favorites (as I asked), and so I’m not listing or highlighting the five titles that were duplicates.

As always, I’m thankful for and appreciative of contributors taking the time to participate and particularly for your comments about the books you listed. You are the reason this list exists and can be shared with various others who enjoy reading. As always, it is the comments about the books chosen that makes this list particularly valuable.

Contributors are listed below, alphabetically by first name.

2024 Mid-Year Favorites

Barbara Friedman:

The Sisterhood: The Secret History of Women at the CIA by Liza Mundy (NF) is an excellent read. The author has done an enormous amount of research — interviewing people and quoting them in the book – often under an assumed name.  With the onset of WW II, men were sent overseas and the spy work was left to the women. The women were unlikely spies – and that is one – and only one – reason why they were so successful at their job. One amusing incident was where one woman (a CIA station chief) was in Malta along with two Arab men dealing with a hijacked plane on the tarmac . . . when she needed to speak to her secretary on the phone, she spoke pig Latin! This book is a WONDERFUL READ – and even for men!

Empress of the East: How a European Slave Girl Became Queen of the Ottoman Empire (NF) by Leslie Peirce is a very interesting biography/history of the Ottoman Empire in the 1500’s. The book, certainly, is about Roxelana, a slave from Russia who eventually came to the Imperial Harem in Istanbul, rose through the ranks, and became the first and only Ottoman queen or Empress of the East. But more broadly the book covers the Ottoman Empire under Sultan Suleyman and his wife Roxelana and about his court, his ancestors, his followers, and his succeeders. Together they built new madrasas, hospitals, public soup kitchens, and other major public buildings. The book is well worth a read.

Bina Shah:

Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus (F).  

Little Lady Who Broke All the rules by Catherine Inglemam-Sundberg (F).

Bob Thurston: I may have read some of these in 2023, but I missed the call for books at the end of last year.

The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese (F). What a wonderful adventure thisbook is! It pulled me in from the start in 1900 right through to the finish in 1977, through three generations of an amazing family in a part of southern India we now generalize as Kerela. I knew from Cutting for Stone to expect skillful writing and a lot of medical stories and detail, but I was surprised by how well Verghese pulled me into each character and every part of the culture, to the point where I felt like I really knew everyone and understood the culture. I think now I’d like to listen to Verghese’s reading of the book which has been praised by many.

Sticky: The Secret Science of Surfaces by Laure Winkless (NF). Aah, so many everyday things that we never think about—this book dives into a wide variety of everyday phenomena, taking us through the science of stickiness and smoothness. Lots of scientific research you wouldn’t have imagined—for example a centuries-long search for the secret of gecko adhesion—how do they keep their footing on glass and are upside down? It turns out they take advantage of what are called “vanderWaal forces”, which act on objects that are extremely close together. Lots of fun stuff in hereabout golf balls, race car tires, ice skating, airplanes . . . A real pleasure to read.

Medgar and Myrlie: Medgar Evers and the Love Story that Awakened America by Joy-Ann Reid (NF). This is the story of Medgar Evers and his wife Myrlie, based in part on (MSNBC host) Joy Reid’s extensive interviews with Medgar’s widow, Merlie (and many others). This is a fun read, despite our knowing “how the story will end”. Interesting to see the tension between Medgar, who boldly advocated for demonstrations and addressing injustice, and the national NAACP, which kept trying to hold him back. Medgar made a public statement that put him in increased danger, but the NAACP did not offer extra security for him. Also interesting was the bond that formed between the three widows Myrlie, Coretta Scott King, and Betty Shabazz as they became a team to support each other and continue pressing for reform. This is a short book and a fast read.

Brian Steinbach:

Heaven and Earth Grocery Store by James McBride. (F). I’ve previously read both The Good Lord Bird and Deacon King Kong by McBride, and this latest entry did not disappoint. Somehow, he weaves together the lives of both African and American and Jewish residents of a poor neighborhood ofPottstown, PA during the 20’s and 30’s to lay bare not only the bigotry, hypocrisy and deceit of the other residents of the town but also to solve the mystery behind a set of bones discovered in 1973. In particular there is the story of a deaf black child and the community’s efforts to help him. There’s a bit ofa surprise ending in addition to the bones as well. McBride was inspired by the Jewish director of a camp for handicapped children for whom he worked for four summers.

The Iliad translated by Emily Wilson (HF?).  Somehow I never got through the Richard Lattimore translation I had for freshman English, or even an abridged kid’s version I had (although I did read the kids’ Odyssey). After reading several glowing reviews of Ms. Wilson’s translation, I decided to give it a whirl. What a treat. Both translation and explanations are great! First, she provided a lengthy introduction that did much to set the scene for the book and the context in which it originally was created and its history, as well as an overview. Also a section on translation and her choices. Then she provided notes for each of the 24 “books,” very helpful as you read along. The first couple were a bit slow going as I got used to the style, but by the second half I was getting into page-turning territory. Much of the story is quite bloody, but poetic in the description. Oddly, perhaps because I read portions of the Aeneid in Latin class and had never realized that the Iliad not only does not describe the end of Troy. It also stops before Achilles is killed. Rather, it is simply to story of a warrior who gets ticked off when the leader (Agamemnon) takes away his booty (a female) and refuses to fight until his best friend gets killed – after which he kills the Trojan’s hero, Hector. Next I think I will read her earlier translation of the Odyssey!

Carol Haile::

The Little Liar by Mitch Albom (F). Once again, I learned more about the Holocaust. The story is told by the voice of truth and begins set in Greece. I don’t believe I’ve read any books about Jews in Greece during Hitler’s regime. The Nazi’s hatred and vile behavior is the same, regardless of which country the Germans are “cleansing”.  Mitch Albom has taken a period in time and offered a different approach to telling yet another despicable way in which innocent children were manipulated by Germans. The parable spans across the pond to the United States and we learn of the lifelong effects of what the characters endured as children.  I read a lot of historical fiction about The Holocaust; this book is a unique approach and had me engrossed from the beginning. I listened to the narrated version on Libby, performed by the author. One of my top two of Albom’s books. The other being Finding Chika.

Here After by Amy Lin (NF). A debut release by Amy Lin. She shares her grief journey after the unexpected death of her young husband. As if that wasn’t enough, she is diagnosed with a critical medical condition, requiring her to make live saving decisions within weeks of Kurt’s death. The scattered timeline felt right to me. It mirrored her emotions, bouncing all over while processing what happened. The chapters are incredibly short, maybe suggesting her inability to focus for long periods of time.

I hope the publication of this book gives her the confidence to continue writing. Her ability to capture emotion through words is excellent. If you are grieving deeply or know someone who is, the book will help validate whatever feelings or emotions you are having. I pray she will learn to love again.

Charlie Atherton:

Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver (F). It reminded me of the years I lived in West Virginia and the people I didn’t know. But they lived just around the corner. This story is more current – in my day the ‘drug of choice’ was alcohol, oxy didn’t exist, firearms and gangs didn’t play as large a role – but the poverty and ignorance were all there, woven together by tribalism, love, and friendship.

Chris Boutourline:

The Friend by Sigrid Nunez (F). The novel explores relationships, often troubling in nature, through the musings of a writer/teacher who inherits a Great Dane after her mentor’s suicide. I loved the dark humor of the protagonist and the overall cleverness of Nunez’s yarn.

All Systems Red by Martha Wells (F). This short novel (beach read?) is something I would never have picked up on my own as I’m not much for science fiction, but, you know, book club. It ended up charming me as it brought to mind aspects of the classics High Noon and The Terminator, along with a plausible technological threat in a Lost in Space future.

Chris McCleary:

System Collapse (The Murderbot Diaries #7) by Martha Wells (F). The latest installment in the award-winning science fiction series, The Murderbot Diaries, about the cyborg, “SecUnit.”  An engrossing page-turner for fans of science fiction but I’d recommend reading the books in order.  Soon to be an Apple TV+ television series.

Slow Horses by Mick Herron (F): I have thoroughly enjoyed the eponymous Apple TV+ british spy thriller series and was inspired to read the novels on which it is based. Herron’s writing is excellent, and I recommend the book. However, the Apple TV series is very faithful to the source material so fans of the television show will find no real surprises in the book — other than Herron’s wonderful use of descriptive language.

Chuck Tilis:

Rock Me On the Water: 1974 – The Year That Los Angeles Transformed Movies, Music, Politics and Television by Ronald Brownstein (NF). The acclaimed journalist, author and news television commentator intertwines the changing landscape of America from a social and political viewpoint with entertainment and politics all hitting a crescendo in Los Angeles in 1974. The stories he tells are part journalism and part gossip which creates for learning about the behind the scenes and the more salacious aspects of this era. Think Chinatown, Jack Nicholson, Warren Beatty, The Eagles, Linda Rondstadt, Joni Mitchell, David Crosby, Jerry Brown, Richard Nixon, All in the Family, Mary Tyler Moore and then the business of show business with David Geffen among others. He makes an intriguing case which will bring back many fond memories in a different way.

Golda Meir: Israel’s Matriarch by Deborah Lipstadt (NF). Lipstadt, who fought for the truth as depicted in the movie Denial starring Rachel Weisz, took it upon herself to write a biography of America’s own Golda Mabovitch nee Meir. Simply stated, Golda Meir rose from an impoverished immigrant as a child, settling in Milwaukee, to a world leader like no other. Her story is inspiring, but moreover, her accomplishments in what was truly a “man’s world” are heroic. This is a very readable story about a woman who has been underappreciated by many.

The Jews Should Keep Quiet: Franklin D. Roosevelt, Stephen S. Wise and the Holocaust by Rafael Medoff (NF). Why didn’t the United States do more to help save Jews from the Holocaust? Medoff explores this issue by focusing on the relationship between FDR and Stephen Wise the leader of the American Jewish community. This book exposes the anti-semitism of FDR and many within his administration, despite having a number of Jews in his circle. Simultaneously, Medoff shows FDR’s manipulation of Stephen Wise, in particular, to “keep quiet.” Maybe the most important aspect though is learning from the past—and the issues we confront around immigration/discrimination today.

Cindy Olmstead:

Oath and Honor, A Memoir and a Warning by Liz Cheney (NF)…a Republican who tells the story of the perilous moment in our history from the time of the last presidential election and those who helped Trump spread the stolen election lie, events leading up to the January 6th insurrection and those whose actions preserved our constitutional framework. Plus, she is extremely candid about the risks we still face. I listened to this account which made it most interesting as Cheney read the book plus used live taping of various instrumental Congressional members’ comments. She is a woman of amazing courage and tremendous principles and has risked her political career to fight for our Constitution and the preservation of our democracy.

A Tattoo On My Brain by Dr. Dan Gibbs (NF)…written by a practicing neurologist who has helped many patients with dementia and Alzheimer’s only to discover that he too is a victim. His advocacy is for early detection as there are many steps that can be taken to slow the progression. Too often individuals wait too long to be diagnosed until they have advanced stages of the disease. Some of the information is not new, but his straightforward and sometimes very clinical presentation makes his case for early detection very convincing.

Donna Pollet:

Trees by Percival Everett (F). How do you take the subject of lynching, one of the most horrific episodes in American history and make it laugh out loud funny? Shrouded in humor, Everett has imaginatively and creatively written a page turning mystery about bigotry, murder, and retribution in the small town of Money, Mississippi. No character type escapes his keen observation and dissection, from the white sheriff to the two MBI Black investigators to a host of white and black denizens. There are twists, turns, and suspensions of believability, but it all mirrors This American Life, our national heritage and living legacy. (Suggestion, listen to the audio, narration at its best).

Ed Scholl:

This Tender Land by William Kent Krueger (F). This is a delightful book about a life-changing odyssey by four orphans during the Great Depression. They manage to escape from the Lincoln Indian Training School and take off on a canoe to the Mississippi River in a search for freedom and self-discovery. 

Elizabeth Goodman:

Master Slave Husband Wife by Ilyon Woo (NF). This exceedingly well documented Pulitzer-prize winning history of the daring and creative escape of Harriet and William Craft from their enslavement in Georgia may be non-fiction, but its prose is so elegant that it reads like an adventure novel, even for those who know the end of the tale. Woo places the escape in a broad context from the US to Canada to England and her chapters on the Compromises of 1850 are the most clarifying history lessons one could have. 

Ellen Hoff:

The Shadow Docket: How the Supreme Court Uses Stealth Rulings to Amass Power and Undermine the Republic by Steve Vladeck (NF). Explains how unsigned and unexplained orders, in increasing use during the Trump administration, can allow the justices to act on a case while also shielding the legal analysis behind the decision and the views of each justice. This is in contrast to the court’s merits docket where a full briefing and hearing process produces formal opinions.

Ellen Miller:

Baumgartner by Paul Auster (F). Auster has always been a delightful read, and we readers lost a literary giant when he died last April. After his death I looked for his most recent book, and I will be forever grateful to have read it. When he finished writing it, he said that it was the last one he’d ever write. He was a right. He died five months later.

Baumgartner is Auster’s 18th novel, and it’s the story of an older man (Sy Baumgartner) who has lost the love of his life but who goes on to live joyously, although sometimes he struggles. The book is witty and the stories he tells us about his past are delightful. This is one of the books which grabs you from the very beginning. You won’t want to put it down, and you’ll be sorry when it’s over.

Baumgartner will certainly appeal to the older MillersTime readers. But everyone should read it.

Neighbors and Other Stories by Diane Oliver (F). This is a collection of stories from an author who died at the age of 22 in a motorcycle accident. She was still a graduate student at the University of Iowa Writer’s Workship when she died. The stories range in topic (and in quality), but each one
tells an intimate story about families who struggled under the overt racism of the 1950s and ‘60s. They illustrate the strengths and sometimes the weaknesses of families and their children, as they navigated their circumstances. I found each these stories very compelling. While I have read much about this topic, I found these short stories particularly intimate. I highly recommend them.

Ellen Shapira:

All the Broken Places by John Boyne (F).  All the Broken Places is a Holocaust story with an intriguing kind of focus. John Boyne had written the Boy with the Striped Pajamas, and this is a follow-up telling the story of Gretel, who was the young daughter of the Concentration Camp Commandant. The book alternates between a contemporary story involving Gretel as a 90-year-old woman living in London, having kept her past a secret, and showing flashback stories of what had occurred both during the war and after, shaping her life. The book has it all:  good plot development with several major plot surprises, high drama and suspense, and excellent character development while dealing with the moral dilemma of guilt and responsibility.  

James by Percival Everett (F): This is probably one of the “must” reads of the year as a Pulitzer finalist, and it lives up to its top billing.James is a re-telling of the story of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn told from the point of view of James (Jim in the original), and the results are brilliant, witty, and full of humanity. The new James is highly intelligent and compassionate, giving us a voice that gives new meaning to the contemporary term “code switching.” I found the book truly enjoyable.  

Elliott Trommold:

Two books that have rattled my head:

The Last Great Road Bum by Hector Tobar (F).

An Emancipation of the Mind: Radical Philosophy, the War Over Slavery, and the Refounding of America by Mathew Stewart (NF).

Emily Nichols Grossi:

Babel: Or the Necessity of Violence by R.F. Kuang (F). It was recommended to me by a friend who loves linguistics, etymology, and theories and principles of translation as much as I do. Historical fantasy, Babel takes place primarily at Oxford (University of) and the Royal Institute of Translation there. It concerns colonialism, the power of language, rapaciousness, and courage. Full of history, suspense, and deep knowledge of Oxford and various languages including Chinese, I adored it. Kuang obtained a MSc in Contemporary Chinese Studies from Oxford and is now pursuing a PhD in East Asian Languages and Literature at Yale.

Fruzsina Harsanyi:

Budapest, Portrait of a City between East and West by Victor Sebestyen, (NF). An Economist best book from 2023, this history of Budapest is also a history of Hungary from 896 when the Magyar tribes first entered the Carpathian Basin to September 10, 1989 when Hungarians brought down the Iron Curtain by allowing any East German who wanted to do so to leave for Austria  — “a decision that led directly, two months later to the fall of the Berlin Wall.” 

This wasn’t the first time that Hungarians fought against a despotic government. Mongol hordes, Ottoman Turks, Hapsburgs, the USSR, two world wars, and the 1956 Revolution are all in this concise (377 pp.). well-documented, thoroughly interesting book, not just for someone who was born there and recently visited, but for anyone who is interested in a country that, according to the author “punched above its weight” for most of its history.   

An Unfinished Love Story, A Personal History of the 1960s by Doris Kearns Goodwin (NF). This is not DKG’s best book, but it is one of my favorites for the year so far. With her vast knowledge of US history and her amazing ability for storytelling, she takes us through the 1960’s, a period in which I grew up and she experienced personally. With Dick Goodwin, her late husband, she participated in large and small ways in the most famous events of that era: the people, politics, failure, and legacy. And now she shares with us the backstory. I loved it.

Two other books would easily make my list.  One, Prophet Song by Paul Lynch (F) won the Booker in 2023.  The other, Kairos by Jenny Erpenbeck (NF) won the Booker this year.  

Garland Standrod:

Populus: Living and Dying in Ancient Rome by Guy de la Bédoyère (NF). Having studied Latin in high school and having visited Roman ruins in such places as Ephesus, Pompeii, Herculaneum, Rome, Leptis Magna, and Sabritha, I’ve retained an interest in Roman history. This book gives a gritty account of what daily life was like in Rome, with its baths, theatres, talking Ravens, and frenzied crowds. It seems not to have been all that nice, but beauty did flourish there in art, architecture, and poetry.

The Club: Johnson, Boswell and Friends Who Shaped an Age by Leo Damrosch (NF). Having seen Peter Ustinov play Samuel Johnson on television one Sunday afternoon many years ago, I became fascinated by him and his life. This book, many years later, brings alive a captivating group of characters (Johnson, Edmund Burke, Edward Gibbon, Adam Smith, Joshua Reynolds, and James Boswell) who gathered every Friday at the Turk’s Head Tavern in London to dine, drink, and talk about politics and philosophy and art until midnight. Begun around 1763, the group was known simply as “The Club”.

Haven Kennedy:

I haven’t read any books that stuck with me, but I did want to bring attention to Walter Mosley. I picked up his science fiction book Touched. I was talking to others about how excited I was that Mosley dipped his toes into sci-fi, only to discover many people were unfamiliar with Mosley.

Mosley is best known for his mystery novels featuring Easy Rawlins. They are brilliant books, and I recommend them, but they’re only the tip of the iceberg. He’s a prolific writer; he’s written non-fiction, plays, mysteries, graphic novels, and for film and television. He has a unique way of expressing himself. And as a gay, Jewish, African-American his experiences are varied and reflected in his work.

Mosley is an author who deserves more recognition and respect. All too often mystery and sci-fi writers don’t get the respect they deserve, and this is doubly true for authors of graphic novels. Mosley is a great start to exploring ignored and often mocked genres. And if you like Mosley, I recommend Octavia Butler; Ursula Le Guin, and Madeline L’Engle. These authors are remembered for writing sci-fi and children’s books, but their bibliography is full of books of all genres. L’Engle’s memoirs are especially beautiful. 

Note: Touched is a brilliant and well-written book, but it’s also bizarre. Its social commentary wrapped up in fantasy and sci-fi. It’s definitely an acquired taste; those not into sci-fi and fantasy wouldn’t care for it. 

Hugh Riddleberger:

The Whalebone Theater by Joanna Quinn (F). Absolutely endearing, riveting, and a must-read. Takes place in 1920’s, WWII era. Don’t believe the negative reviews. The main character, Cristabel, if you love creative and adventuresome kids, will enchant you.  

Jane Bradley:

An Unfinished Love Story:  A Personal History of the 1960’s by Doris Kearns Goodwin (NF) evoked memories of a time when I was just becoming interested in politics.

Pelosi by Molly Ball (NF) was a reminder of how much — and how little– American politics has changed since the 1960’s.

Jeff Friedman:

The Golden Mole and Other Hidden Treasure by Katherine Rundell (NF). A series of beautiful essays about some of the world’s most interesting animals. The title essay is about how the golden mole is the only mammal that is iridescent, even though it lives underground and is functionally blind. Greenland sharks live for >500 years; a spider web the thickness of a pen could stop a jumbo jet in flight; the book has a million fascinating details like this, and the writing is absolutely beautiful.

Jesse Leigh Maniff:

The Demon of Unrest: A Saga of Hubris, Heartbreak, and Heroism at the Dawn of the Civil War by Erik Larson (NF).

Everyone in My Family Has Killed Somebody by Benjamin Stephenson (F).

Joe Higdon:

The Demon of Unrest: A Saga of Hubris, Heartbreak, and Heroism at the Dawn of the Civil War by Erik Larson (NF) – the story of the run up to the Civil Was presented in vivid detail by this most engaging writer.

Table for Two by Amor Towles (F). Several short stories by one of the best story tellers around.

Heaven and Earth Grocery Store by James McBride (F). If you liked the Color of Water and Deacon King Kong, you’ll love this.

Judy White:

Hands down my favorite book since January is The Elephant Whisperer by Lawrence Anthony (NF).  Anthony grew up in Africa and now owns a large reserve in Zululand in South Africa. He took on a herd of traumatized elephants who were destined to be killed, and with enormous patience earned their trust and healed them. Mike and I read it individually and then, on a month-long camping trip, read it to one another. The insights kept coming.

Kate Latts:

I have not read anything amazing this year, (but) you can include this commentary on these books:

The Women by Kristin Hannah (F) is the highly anticipated next historical fiction book by the author of The Nightingale, The Great Alone and The Four Winds. Unfortunately this one did not live up to expectations. I am glad that I read it and learned a lot/was reminded about the Vietnam war and the experience of those who spent time in Vietnam. This book focused on a young woman from a well to do (likely republican) family in Southern California with a long line of military service who goes to Vietnam to serve as a nurse. The details of her time in service was well done, but the second half of the book when she returns to the US crams too many things in and seems a bit sloppy. I thought this book would be about several women who spent time in Vietnam, comparing their varying background and experiences. This book does that a smidge but largely just focuses on one woman. 

Only the Beautiful by Susan Meissner (HF) also did not live up to the writer’s previous book, The Nature of Fragile Things. Again this was a nice read with some twists and turns but largely a story told many times before with fairly predictable events. It is the story of a teen girl in the 1940s who is orphaned, ends up pregnant, goes to a home, and has to give the baby away. 

Kathleen Kroos:

The Girl with Seven Names: A North Korean Defector’s Story by Hyeonseo Lee & David John (NF).  An extraordinary insight into life under one of the world’s most secretive dictatorships.

The Book of Lost Names by Kristin Harmel (F). Inspired by an astonishing true story from World War II, a young woman with a talent for forgery helps hundreds of Jewish children escape the Nazis.

Song Yet Sung by James McBride (HF). In the days before the Civil War a runaway slave breaks free from her captors and escapes into the labyrinthine swamps of Maryland’s Eastern Shore.

Kathryn Camicia:

This time it’s easy.  I’ve read two books that have stayed with me:

By The Sea by Abdulrazak Gurney (F). He won the 2021 Nobel Prize of literature which is why I picked it up and suggested it for my book group. It was a hit. It’s about the complications of immigration. Fiction but close to reality.

Faith, Hope and Carnage by Nick Cave (NF). Cave is a successful musician who lost his adolescent son. Unusually religious and he speaks poignantly about grief and belief. He made me reconsider some of my skeptical ideas about religion.

Larry Makinson:

New York Trilogy by Paul Auster (F). It shouldn’t take the death of an author to make you read their books, but that’s exactly what happened to me after I read the obituary for Paul Auster, who I’d never heard of before. So, I took a look at this, his most famous book (actually a collection of three shorter interconnected stories). I suppose you could call it a novel, since it’s fiction, though not with a normal plot and definitely not with normal characters. I was quickly drawn in, and it’s been my most enjoyable reading surprise of the year. 

Matt Rechler:

Road to Surrender: Three Men and the Countdown to the End of World War II by Evan Thomas (NF). Road to Surrender revisits the final weeks of World War II. Harry Truman became President when President Roosevelt died on April 12, 1945. Germany had given up, but not Japanese military despite huge numbers of starving people wanted to continue the war. Two Americans and one Japanese person had key roles in the bombing and the debates to end the war: a) Henry Stimson,Truman’s Secretary of State and Secretary of defense; b) Carl “Tooey” Spaatz, Dwight Eisenhower’s Commander of Strategic Bombing; c) Japanese Minister Shigenori Togo, Japanese Foreign Minister.

When the US used an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan still continued fighting. Only one Japanese minister, Shigenori Togo, wanted peace. Togo finally convinced the emperor, but not until after the second atom bomb destroyed much of Nagasaki, to sue for peace. Togo’s colleagues sent him to prison, but his efforts saved thousands, perhaps millions, of Japanese lives as well as American lives..

Mary Lincer:

Thanks to all the previous readers on this listserv. The best book I’ve read so far in 2024 is Why We Love Baseball by Joe Posnaski (NF). Trained by two NY grandfathers who liked each other though one was a Yankees fan and one was a Giants fan, I learned sportsmanship and how to pass the money to the vendor and the hot dogs back to the neighbor–all more reasons to love baseball.

Michael Slaby:

Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro (F). An exceptional and quietly beautiful examination of artificial intelligence development and bridging human-AI relationships. In a moment of all kinds of breathless, extreme ranting about AI and it’s effects, this story is an invitation to a much more complex conversation about identity, humanity, and meaning. We may look back on this book as the same kind of prescient science fiction about AI (along with films like Her) and the way I shifted cultural ideas about robotics.

Mike Weinroth:

My best book recommendation for this year is Kantika. This family saga was written by Elizabeth Graver. It is roughly non-fiction, and it follows the migration of a Sephardic family as they navigate issues of safety and well being, beginning in the early 20th century. It is beautifully written and well documented. We agreed with our book club facilitator that the title does not do justice to this novel. The title falls short of the vivid picture that you’ll remember well after you finish the last page.

Mike White:

Babylon’s Ark: The Incredible Wartime Rescue of the Baghdad Zoo by Lawrence Anthony (NF). This book gives a whole different view of what was going on in Iraq and with the Iraqi people during the American invasion. It shows the determination and courage of a volunteer who comes there to rescue the wildlife and the people of Iraq. 

Nick Fels

Barbarian Days by William Finnegan (NF), a Pulitzer-Prize winning account of the author’s life-long obsession with surfing, and his experiences surfing around the globe.

Nicole Cate:

Bright Young Women by Jessica Knoll (F). Novel focused on women victims of serial killer Ted Bundy. The story is intense (actually gave me bad dreams while reading it), but I really loved it. Addresses dynamics around gender, violence, public perceptions, and power structures. My favorite and most memorable book of the year so far. 

Richard Margolies:

Democracy Awakening, Notes on the State of America by Heather Cox Richardson (NF). This engaged historian’s wide-awake assessment of the history of authoritarianism for centuries of American history, up to this moment. And the crucial choice we face in November. Clearly written, with short to-the-point chapters.  Can be worked easily into busy lives, or read in large pieces. Richardson is the I.F.Stone of our world today.

Richard Miller:

Road to Surrender: Three Men and the Countdown to the End of WWII by Evan Thomas (NF). Another ‘who knew’. Tells the story through the eyes (and diaries) of three men – Henry Stimson, US Sec. of State and Sec. of Defense; General Carl “Tooey” Spatz, US Commander of Strategic Bombing in Europe then Asia; and Shigenori Togo, Japan’s foreign minister – all central to the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and decisions about the ending of WWII. Wonderful previously unknown insights into those days and weeks of decision. Short but fascinating read, especially about the struggles within the Japanese ruling elite as well as whether America should use nuclear weapons. Our book club had the pleasure of Thomas being present as we explored various aspects of this period of time. Definitely worth a read.

Tales of the Long Bow by G.K. Chesterton (F). My grandfather gave my father books on his birthday for many years. These have been passed on to me, and I am now reading one a month. This one has to do with the ‘Lunatic Asylum Club’ and eight episodes of people doing things that seem impossible. I suspect this one was given to my father for its humor and wisdom. Simply delightful.

Ron Goodman:

Times Echo by Jeremy Eichler (NF). It’s about the Holocaust and the music of remembrance. He’s a musician at the Boston Symphony, now retired, who has explored, discovered, and performed music that was composed in the camps. The book was just named History Book of the Year by the New York Times.

Ruth Quinet:

Three of my favorite books read since the start of the year — two are Booker Prize winners and the other won the Davy Byrnes Award, amongst others (all fiction):

Davy Byrnes award 2009: Foster by Claire Keegan (F). A neglected child during the Irish hunger strikes in 1981 spends a summer with a couple who encourage and love her with great care and tenderness. The book was made into a 2022 movie called The Quiet Girl.

Booker winner 2022: Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan (F). A novella in length but powerful in impact and delivery, a delivery man runs into a sad situation at a Magdalene institution (Laundry) and, over time, comes to a quiet decision on what he must do. This has been made into a recent 2024 movie with Cillian Murphy.

Booker winner 2023: Prophet Song by Paul Lynch (F). This is an imaginative and forbidding take on the process by which a society (Northern Ireland) slips into anarchy. A mother endeavors to save her family amidst the rebellion, the vilification, and ultimate disintegration of all societal norms.

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(If you missed the deadline for submission of your 2024 mid-year favorites, I can add them to this list (send to Samesty84@gmail.com), or, hopefully, you can keep those titles for the end of the year list.

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To see previous years’ lists, click on any of these links: 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015. 2016. 2017. 2018 Mid-Year, 2018, 2019 Mid-Year. 2019. 2020, Mid-Year 2021, 20221. 3/30/22. 7/16/22. Plus two mid-year posts:6/1/23, 7/16/23. 2023

2024 MillersTime Baseball Contests

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Contest #1 – This question is always a part of these contests as most of us ‘concentrate’ on one team:

Are you a ‘homer’ or not? (a sports fan who is so blinded by their loyalty to their favorite team that they can’t be objective about the team’s prospects for the coming year):

a. Name your team

b. What will their season record be?

c. Where will they end up in their Division at the end of the season?

d. Will they make the 12 team playoffs?

e. If so, how far will they go in those playoffs?

f. What will be the reason for well or how poorly they do this year? Be as specific as possible.

Prize: A copy of Joe Posnanski’s The Baseball 100 or of his new book, Why We Love Baseball.

Contest #2 – True / False:

a. One of these two teams will NOT make it to the World Series, despite all the money they spent this off season: LA Bums or New York Yunkees.

b. Some one will hit more than 60 Home Runs this year. (2023 high was 54)

c. At least five batters will strike out 200 or more times this year. (Four did in 2023)

d. There will be no 20 game winning pitchers this year. (Only one did it in 2023)

e. Neither the Braves, Orioles, or Dodgers will (again) win 100 or more games in 2024.

Prize: Join me for a Nats’ game in DC, or I’ll try to join you, if possible, for any regular season game elsewhere. In either case, I’ll buy the tickets. You can buy the food and drinks.

Contest # 3 – Name the three teams in each league that will win their Division:

a. AL East (Orioles in 2023)

b. Al Central (Twins in 2023)

c. AL West (Astros in 2023)

d. NL East (Braves in 2023)

e NL Central (Brewers in 2023)

f. NL West (Dodgers in 2023)

Prize: A copy of Joe Posnanski’s The Baseball 100 or a copy of his new book, Why We Love Baseball.

Contest #4 – Also a recurring question:

a. Who will be the four teams making it to the League Championship series (ALCS & NLCS) in 2023?

b. What two teams will actually make it to the World Series?

c. How many games will the WS go?

d. Which team will win the WS?

e. What are the reasons that team will win?

Prize: One ticket to the 2024 All Star game or the 2024 World Series.

Contest #5 – Tie-Breaker: In the event that any of the above contests result in a tie, this question will determine the winner and runner up of that contest(s):

Make a specific, detailed, and prescient prediction about the 2024 MLB season. The winner of this contest will be chosen by the 2024 MillersTime contestants who will determine the winner.

Prize: Join me for a Nats’ game in DC, or I’ll try to join you, if possible, for any regular season game elsewhere. In either case, I’ll buy the tickets. You can buy the food and drinks.

Deadline for Submissions: Noon (EST) Opening Day, Thursday, March 28, 2024

The Book List: 2023

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A Best Friend Is Someone Who Gives Me a Book I’ve Never Read.” A. Lincoln

Sixty-four contributors (34 female, 30 male) responded to this annual (15th!) MillersTime call for favorite reads. Readers of this site offered 202 titles they identified as books they’ve particularly enjoyed over the past year. Fiction (F) was cited slightly more often than NonFiction (NF), 53%-47%

Books listed just below are titles that appeared in two/three or more submissions:

FICTION:

*All Sinners Bleed by S.A. Cosby

*Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver (Repeat from Last Year)

*Harlem Shuffle by Colson Whitehead

*Lady Tan’s Circle of Women by Lisa See

*Old God’s Time by Sebastian Barry

*Prophet Song by Paul Lynch

*Small Mercies by Dennis Lehane

*The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese

*The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store by James McBride

*The Postcard by Anne Berest

*Tom Lake by Ann Patchett

*Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin (Repeat from Last Year)

*West with Giraffes by Lynda Rutledge

NON-FICTION:

*A Fever in the Heartland by Timothy Egan

*American Prometheus by Kai Bird & Martin Sherwin

*Democracy Awakening by Heather Cox Richardson

*King: A Life by Jonathan Eig

*The Escape Artist: The Man Who Broke Out of Auschwitz to Warn the World by Jonathan Freeland

*The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny, and Murder by David Grann

INDIVIDUAL FAVORITE READS

What’s even of more more value in my mind is not the two lists above, but the list below: the personal reasons why a book was chosen as a favorite. This year it seemed as MillersTime contributors were more expansive in their comments than in previous years. There is a wider range of titles, and it will take you time to comb through the list. (Note: if you tell me you read through the entire post, that will allow you to add an extra book to the number books you will be allowed to list at the end of 2024.)

And for the time each contributor took to write and send in their (up to five) titles, I am deeply thankful. Know that others on this list use it, often as the first place to look for new reads.

Contributors are listed alphabetically by first name. Any errors are solely my responsibility. Let me know if I need to make any corrections.

And if you missed the deadline, you can still send in your favorites (to Samesty84@gmail.com), and I can easily add them to this list.

Allan Latts:

Here are tree totally different and impactful books I read this year…

Come Up for Air: How Teams Can Leverage Systems and Tools to Stop Drowning in Work by Nick Sonnerber (NF). Very impactful book explaining how to better use technology to increase your daily productivity.   

Outlive: The Science and Art of Longevity by Peter Attia (NF). Contends that mainstream medicine has failed to make much progress against the diseases of aging that kill most people: heart disease, cancer, Alzheimer’s disease, and type 2 diabetes. Explains the causes of each and makes an argument that aggressive prevention of the causes of these diseases is much more effective than treating the symptoms when they occur.  

Elon Musk by Walter Isaacso(NF). This book was especially interesting given how much Elon has been front and center in the news this year. It was interesting to draw comparisons to Steve Jobs and Jeff Bezos – to change the world you have to be a little crazy (or in Elon’s case a lot), incredibly hard charging, and maybe not that nice. He has certainly changed the world in the areas of electric cars, space travel and satellite-based internet.  

Anita Rechler:

A course on film and American political thought absorbed my reading (and watching) time this fall.  From Democracy in America by Alex de Tocqueville (NF), On Liberty by John Stuart Mills (NF) to Capitalism and Freedom by Milton Friedman (NF) plus numerous short essays my eyes are exhausted, my brain is stuffed, and I am much too aware of the foundations of our challenging national (global) state of affairs. My other reads are unworthy of sharing.  Readers of this best of list may not want to dive deep into political theory, though (re)reading the classics is illuminating! 

Some though may want to read a relatively undiscovered, contemporary, hopeful book about climate change. Not Too Late, edited by two activists, Rebecca Solnit and Thema Young Lutunatabua (NF), assembles short essays and reflections from the front lines of climate change and social activism. The essays offer hope, an all too rare point of view, for the future and ways to get there. While the focus is climate change the messages about what can be accomplished through community action and individual leadership apply to any number of social and political challenges.

Barbara Friedman:

The Six: The Untold Story of America’s First Women in Space by Loren Grush (NF) is an excellent book about NASA and the Space Station with the focus on the first women astronauts beginning with Sally Ride and Judith Resnik (who alas was on the fatal Challenger along with the first non-astronaut, Christa McAuliffe). You learn a lot about what it takes to put an individual into space from the perspective of NASA but also any astronaut – it takes a lot of time and personal commitment all surrounded by a heavy dose of uncertainty.  This is an excellent read!

Act of Oblivion by Robert Harris (F) is a wonderful historical novel about the hunt for the two of the regicides who killed Charles I.  All but two of them have either died or been killed. So the hunt is on to find Edward Whalley and his son-in-law, William Goffe. The book takes place from 1660 on and mostly in New England. An excellent read.

Flirting with Danger: The Mysterious Life of Marguerite Harrison, Socialite Spy by Janet Wallach (NF) is a fascinating story of a Baltimore socialite and debutante who after having a son and losing her husband at an early age takes off to Europe and great adventure in the post- World War I era. She spies for the US Military intelligence in Germany and Russia in her mink coat. She once entered Russia illegally, spent two stints in Lubyanka, the notorious Moscow prison. During one prison stay, she was told that the only way out was to spy for the Cheka . . . and so she became a double agent!  She also goes to Baghdad and the Far East as a spy. With two friends, she makes a documentary of her travels in the Middle East, at one time traveling across the Zardeh Kuh with Bakhtiari tribesmen. And this only captures a bit of what she did and accomplished.  A MUST read!

The Bookseller of Florence by Ross King (NF) relates the story of Vespasiano who was “an excellent bookseller, with expert knowledge of both books and scribes, to whom all of Italy and foreigners as well resort when they want elegant books for sale.”  This is a fascinating story of Vespasiano, Italy, and the creation of books by dedicated scribes. The book then details the development of the printing of books from hand written manuscripts to the inception of the printing press in the mid-1470’s. And with the advent of the printing press, hand-written manuscripts and books became history.

City of Light by Lauren Belfer (F) is a wonderful novel that takes place in Buffalo NY in its heyday in the late eighteen hundreds and early nineteen hundreds. The novel centers on Louisa Barrett, a mother, a spinster, a school principal, and a wonderful lady, and her life in Buffalo. Real life people come into play including Grover Cleveland, Mary Talbert, and a host of other remarkable (and some unremarkable) people. A moving novel.

Ben Senturia:  

The Collected Regrets of Clover by Mikki Brammer (NF). After a trip to Northeast Oklahoma (part of the old Indian territory), I became interested in reading about the 1830 Indian Relocation Act resulting in the trail of tears and many other lesser well-known stories of forced relocation from virtually every state.   It’s a terrible part of our history that got little attention in my education. 

My reading then included:

The Cherokee Nation and the Trail of Tears by Perdue and Green (NF).

The Osage in Missouri by Wolferman (NF).

The Trail of Tears across Missouri by Gilbert (NF).

The Other Trail of Tears: The Removal of the Ohio Indians by Stockwell (NF).

Unworthy Republic by Saunt (NF).

Bill Plitt:

I guess the book of the year for me, read nearly every day in some way, and in some form is Heather Cox Richardson’s Democracy Awakening: Notes on the State of America (NF). It is the culmination of many years of historical scholarship by the author which reflects images of by gone periods of American political/cultural history, and their relevancy to today’s quagmire. Having been steered to her daily writings, Letters of an American, a few years ago by our friend, the editor of this book reading project we all find so stimulating, I find Richardson’s book another chapter in helping me and perhaps many of you, understand the pending cliff we are facing as Americans and the urgency to respond to the “Hell no….” of an earlier generation, not to follow a path of a  disastrous ending of the American dream, but an opportunity to take the original idea (not the “originalists” of today ) and build a better future for our children than the one they face at the moment. A must read! 

Bina Shah:

The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese (F).

America for Beginners by Leah Franqui (F).

The Late Comer by Jean Hanif Korelitz (F).

The Reading List by Sara Nisha Adams (F).

The Personal Librarian by Marie Benedict (HF).

Brandt Tilis:

The three I submitted for the first half of the year were excellent.  Here are the five I most enjoyed in the second half of 2023:

Open by Andre Agassi (NF). This is Andre Agassi’s autobiography, which was ghost written by J.R. Moehringer. I am not a tennis fan, and I never really cared for nor followed Agassi when he was playing.  Still, this book spoke to me in a unique way because it’s a book about chasing fulfillment. When everyone else measured Agassi’s success as one thing, he measured it differently. He has incredible recall, and Moehringer gets the most out of it.

Tribe by Sebastian Junger (NF). This is a book about why people feel like they belong more to certain tribes or groups than others. It made me think a lot about belonging, psychological safety, and extrinsic rewards. Parts of it are absolutely heartbreaking.

The Dark Forest by Liu Cixin (F). This is the second book in the Three Body Problem series, which I have plugged on here before.  It’s science fiction but pretty interesting.

Loonshots by Safi Bahcall (NF). This is about how to cultivate great ideas in your organization and ecosystem. With technology increasing and looking for optimal solutions, we need to remember that to really advance, we need “Loonshots” that push us into the far right tail of any distribution. How do we look past the algorithms and AI to make those ideas possible?

Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros (F). Three series of books I have never read converge into one:  Game of Thrones, Harry Potter, and Fifty Shades of Gray.  It’s a little weird at first, but once I understood the environment and all of the suspension of disbelief, it was a very fun read, even if a little long.

Brian Steinbach:

The following is in addition to the mid-year listed books.

Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf (F). I picked this up at a friend’s house last December and was not disappointed. I’d long heard of the book but had never read it, or for that matter much of anything by Woolf. It tells the story of a single day in the title character’s life, but with many flashbacks and side stories that appear unconnected until the end. While much of the book is an obvious critique on inter-war British upper and upper-middle class culture, I found most notable its treatment of a character suffering from what we now call PTSD, which affected many in 1920s Britain. Woolf herself was bipolar and her critique of the medical profession’s handling of mental illness is spot on. The (mostly subtle) hints of homosexuality are also notable. Easy to read and a flowing narrative as well.

The Plague by Albert Camus (F). I’d been meaning to read this since the COVID pandemic and finally picked up Mary’s copy from high school, complete with her marginal notes and summary of the main characters (very helpful). We follow several characters who deal with the plague and quarantine of an entire city, mostly helpless to fight it and the isolation imposed but nonetheless compelled to do what they can to survive and to help others, despite personal loss. A subplot of a minister who blames the plague on sin eerily prefigures comments of ministers about AIDS. And when the plague ends, people quickly go back to their old habits – not unlike post-COVID.

Harlem Shuffle by Colson Whitehead (F). Set the Harlem of 1959, 1961, and 1964, this tells the story of a mostly upstanding furniture store owner who dabbles in some fencing of stolen goods but then finds himself dragged by his cousin into several more serious capers. He has to struggle between his fundamentally honest self and skirting the law to fix the results of these capers. The characters are colorful and well-drawn, and there is a nice level of satire of black bourgeoisie, reference to the end of “Radio Row” in advance of the building of the World Trade Center, and appearances of slightly corrupt police. All leavened with a dose of history, ending in a 1964 riot. I’m looking forward to reading the sequel, Crook Manifesto, published earlier this year

Empire Imagined by Giselle Donnelly (NF). This is the first volume of a trilogy that seeks to examine the origins of American strategic culture dating back to the Elizabethan era and British search for security in imperial expansion as well as a connection between security and liberty. This volume explores the internal English politics leading to the ascendency of southern England, the 16th century wars to dominate Ireland – and establish “plantations” there ruled by Englishmen – and the early efforts to counter the Spanish, first by challenging it sea power and then by efforts to establish English outposts in what is now North Carolina. I learned much about English-Irish history as well as England’s early dealing with the indigenous populations of the Outer Banks area, plus the development of the British imperial impulse combining deeply held faith and political ideology that legitimized Tudor rule – but remained willing to ally with Catholic countries when necessary. Realpolitik anyone? Giselle has a long history in foreign and defense policy and, it must be noted, was a classmate for eight years (5th-12th). Volume Two is expected early next year.

American Midnight by Adam Hochschild (NF). Hochschild writes about an often overlooked period of American history – during and after World War I and prior to the Roaring Twenties, when racism, nativism, red-baitingand contempt for the rule of law flourished and civil liberties were almost non-existent. It is shocking to read of the mistreatment of conscientious objectors in military prisons, under the leadership of a general who previously had caused the murder of Filipino rebels. Equally shocking are the many other incidents of intolerance and persecution of labor leaders, people of German heritage, and various political prisoners. Vigilante organizations were tolerated and encouraged, some of whose leaders went on to lead the rebirth of the KKK. The nativist streak led to the enactment of strict immigration restrictions as well. J. Edgar Hoover rose to power on the back of these events, particularly the Red Scare of 1919. Notably, there is much in what Hochschild describes that can be seen in current political tendencies. Note- Hochschild also wrote King Leopold’s Ghost, an important recounting of Belgian atrocities in colonizing what today is the Congo.

Carole Haile:

Between Two Kingdoms: A Memoir of a Life Interrupted by Suleika Jaouad (NF). A deeply moving memoir from a young woman diagnosed with leukemia at age 22 and a 35% chance of survival. Her openness and raw reality of what it’s like to go through brutal chemo treatments and other illnesses related to her cancer; reinforced that if you aren’t living it, you truly CAN’T understand. The depths of despair she experienced followed by her strength to ultimately move forward after her remission are both heartbreaking and triumphant. 

Fresh Water for Flowers by Valerie Perrin (F). Translated from French, it’s the story of Violette, a caretaker at a cemetery in a small town in France. How she arrives at this unusual occupation unfolds as the complex story and relationships are revealed chapter by chapter. It is  a story of love, grief, trust, betrayal, anger, hope, understanding, renewment and more . In other words,  just about every emotion you can imagine. I loved the characters and their development, even the ones that weren’t so nice. 

Lily’s Promise: How I survived Auschwitz and Found the Strength to Live by Lily Ebert and Dov Forman (NF) (Read and reviewed prior to Oct 7th). The  true story of Lily Ebert’s life from her days in the extermination camps to life after liberation (not as easy as people think), to her marriage and life in Israel and finally to her settling in London. Her refusal to give up, her absolute commitment to her family and friends and her strength in sharing her story at an older age are all testaments to the exceptional woman she is. Her great grandson Dov tackled tracking down people and mementos from her past at the ripe young age of 16 and co authored with Lily to bring her story to us. The photos at the end are priceless especially the one with all her grandchildren and 35 great grand children!

Sweetness of Forgetting by Kristen Harmel (HF). Originally published in 2012, it has been republished as a 10 year anniversary edition with this cover in 2022. The story spans the Holocaust but is more about family dynamics and relationships, finding meaning in your life, and  a beautiful love story that will touch your heart.  

Hope sets off to Europe to piece together the history of her grandmother, Mamie who is succumbing to Alzheimer’s.  What she uncovers is the opportunity to reunite a love lost 70 years ago. 

Kristen researches her books thoroughly and infuses emotion into them with her writing style. 

If you enjoy Kristen’s many NYT Bestsellers or follow her on FB, or in her shared group Friends and Fiction, you may know she released a new book in June, The Paris Daughter.  She is donating a portion of her advance to help further research for a cure to breast cancer following her diagnosis in October at age 43. Fortunately, it was found early but is more aggressive than originally thought. Please keep her and her family  in your prayers.

All the Broken Places by John Boyne (HF).  Sequel to The Boy in the Striped Pajamas, (can be read as a stand alone). It is rare to find a Holocaust book centered on the emotions and experiences of a German, particularly one who was a child during the persecution of the Jews and whose father was a high ranking official. The author did a very good job of presenting Gretel as both a despicable and  contrastingly sad and guilt laden casualty of Hitler. Very emotional and several surprises. Enjoyed the dual timelines and how they converged. 

Catherine Lynch:

Lost & Found by Kathryn Schulz (NF). It’s a (very) extended essay on losing and finding those we love, and is unexpectedly wonderful.. 

Chris Boutourline:

I’d like to thank your readers for their past suggestions which lead me to three books I probably wouldn’t have otherwise read. Those books were Myth America, An Immense World, and The Book Woman of Troublesome Creek.

Titles I can suggest include the following:

I Have Some Questions for You by Rebecca Makkai (F). An imaginative take on the “who done it” involves a decades old murder of a student at a New England boarding school. The protagonist was a roommate of the deceased and returns to the school to teach a seminar on podcasting. I found the theme of a pliable perspective, as it applies to evidence, most interesting.

Foster by Claire Keegan (F). I was charmed by this novella which follows the growth of a young girl as she begins her navigation of the world. 

Yellowface by R.F. Kuang (F). Appropriation on steroids, a wild ride about who gets to tell the story.

Three Bags Full by Leonie Swann (F). Subtitled, “A Sheep Detective Story”, need I say more? This one was in an email from Live Wire Radio, recommended by Elana Passarello of NPR fame.

Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead by Olga Tokarczuk (F). A murder mystery set in rural Poland that explores the boundaries of “acceptable” behavior.

Chris McCleary:

The Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman (F). A short, standalone fantasy novel disconnected from any series or trilogy (which makes it unusual in this genre) yet brimming with creative world building and magical realism that encapsulates a unique coming-of-age fable. It was first published a decade ago but I finally read it this past year. It was voted Book of the Year in the British National Book Awards in 2013 and was a Nebula Award nominee that year as well.

Chris Rothenberger:

Hello Beautiful  by Ann Napolitano (F) This is a story of love or the absence of it that shapes three decades of a family. Napolitano does a deep dive into the depths of a family’s love and hurt as the characters grow up and move through life. The reader comes to care for them as the tapestry of their lives unfolds and matures. William Waters experienced a loveless upbringing, and basketball becomes his love language. Young William marries into the Padavano family, comprised of four spirited and vastly different sisters, parents, and other extended family. Unique, quirky, different personalities embrace him, complete with their flaws and challenges; they are inseparable. As he enters their orbit, his own deeply rooted problems surface and evolve into a catastrophic rift that severs the relationships among the women.   

The author has a wonderful voice for storytelling and carefully crafted words that are stirring, heart rending as the reader becomes invested in the lives of this enmeshed family. I found it a fascinating story about relationships and particularly because it was a close look at generational dysfunction and how people respond to the things that happen to them (both positive and negative) in life. The story of how they become who they were was fascinating to this reader, watching what bound them together and tore them apart was riveting. I often wonder why people are the way they are, and this book traces adulting back to parenting, early experiences, choices made, and the love and losses that ultimately shape each of us. This author is deeply moving, and I will be looking forward to reading her other books.

Chuck Tilis:

The Escape Artist: The Man Who Broke Out of Auschwitz to Warn the World by Jonathan Freedland (NF). The question is what did his warning accomplish?  This book is a true page turner about an incredible individual who while imprisoned in Auschwitz escaped to warn the world about the atrocities by the Nazis. Did he succeed?

A companion book which is quite discomforting is:

The Jews Should Keep Quiet: Franklin D. Roosevelt, Rabbi Stephen S. Wise and the Holocaust by Rafael Medoff (NF). Eisenhower said take pictures after the Allies entered the concentration camps—but where was America for the years before? This history isn’t pretty. Medoff delves into difficult truths: With FDR’s consent, the administration deliberately suppressed European immigration far below the limits set by U.S. law. His administration also refused to admit Jewish refugees to the U.S. Virgin Islands, dismissed proposals to use empty Liberty ships returning from Europe to carry refugees, and rejected pleas to drop bombs on the railways leading to Auschwitz, even while American planes were bombing targets only a few miles away—actions that would not have interfered with the larger goal of winning the war. 

Impossible Takes Longer—75 Years After Its Creation, Has Israel Fulfilled Its Founders’ Dreams? by Daniel Gordis (NF). Gordis uses the Israeli Declaration of Independence as the measuring stick to answer this question. He delivers a reasoned, balanced approach to discuss his conclusions through a combination of historical perspective, political analysis, and rabbinic insight—much of which can help one understand the current environment in Israel. The paperback will be coming out, and he is rewriting some sections given the current war and political situation. (He is not afraid to express his opinions, but don’t wait).This book can help all of us in the Diaspora better understand the promise of Israel and its purpose while being concerned about her future. 

King: A Life by Jonathan Eig (NF). If you have time for one biography, read this one. Eig’s six years of research shows through as he starts with MLK’s grandparents and takes us through his assassination and the loss of an American icon. The MLK story is one of contrasts during turbulent times, and his relationship with Coretta Scott was so important to his efforts which is often overlooked. While Eig delves into his shortcomings, including plagiarism and infidelity, he does so to help us understand the complexity of MLK as a human being who was considered by the FBI to be the most dangerous man in America. 

Cindy Olmstead:

Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan (F). Keegan is an Irish author who weaves a moving story about William Furlong, a hardworking, law abiding man who owns a coal and lumber hauling business in a small Irish town. His discovery, as he delivers fuel to the local convent, reveals a needy, imprisoned young girl. How he addresses a commonly known secret reveals his inner compassion and strength. In this short novel, Keegan exposes indirectly the national scandal of selling unwed mothers’ babies. A very poignant read. 

Cutting for Stone by Abraham Verghese (F). After reading The Covenant of Water. I went back to reread this novel written in 2010. Of the two novels, both intricately written with beautiful descriptive characters, I prefer Cutting for Stone. It is the story of twin boys who, while very different emotionally and intellectually, have a deep bond that ties their lives together over the years. Verghese’s own medical knowledge as a professional doctor is clearly on display yet the reader is drawn in to the variety of plots and subplots that make this a very gripping novel. Well worth reading it again. 

The Beekeeper from Aleppo by Christy Lefteri (F). This novel is the immigrant story of a beekeeper, his wife, and their trials and triumphs in having to leave their beloved Syria due to the war. It is their journey through Turkey and Greece and ultimately Britain. I found this a very relevant read as so many people today are struggling with being uprooted from their peaceful lives and living as refugees in unknown and scary lands. 

David Stang:

Consciousness Explained Better by Allan Combs (NF).

Thinking Beyond the Brain: A Wider Science of Consciousness  ed. David Lorimer (NF).

The Search for Meaning and the Mystery of Consciousness: A Psychologists Journey Thru Gurdjieff and Jung by Stephen Aaronson (NF).

Why? The Purpose of the Universe by Philip Goff (NF).

An Immense World: How Animal Senses Reveal the Hidden Realms around Us, Ed. Yong (NF).

Dave has written an extended essay after reading these books, concluding that “if you choose to follow the directive of Socrates and do a creditable job of examining your life, these five books provide useful tools to help guide your self-examination.”

Click Here to read what he wrote.

Dominique Lallemont:

Buchmendel by Stefan Zweig (F ). It tells the tragic story of an eccentric but brilliant book peddler, Jakob Mendel, who spends his days trading in one of Vienna’s many coffee-houses. With his encyclopedic mind and devotion to literature, the Poland-born Russian-Jewish immigrant is not only tolerated but liked and admired by both the owner of his local Café Gluck and the cultured Viennese clients with whom he interacts in the pre-war period. In 1915, however, he is falsely accused of collaborating with Austria’s enemies and is dispatched to a concentration camp. On his return, towards the end of the war, everything has changed. His mind no longer remembers, his eyes can no longer read, the café undergoes new, brittle ownership, and his clientele has disappeared. Jacob Mendel finally dies, destitute, incapacitated, and forgotten.

(Bonus: two other short stories read in French: Unexpected Acquaintance with a Craft (great descriptions of the atmosphere of the streets in Paris) and The Debt Paid Late. Zweig is such a superb writer!)

The Ornament of the World. How Muslims, Jews, and Christians Created a Culture of Tolerance in Medieval Spain by Maria Rosa Menocal (NF). Extremely engaging and easy to read history of how the Arabs brought to Spain, and to a large extent as a result to Western Europe, a rich and thriving culture in which Muslims, Jews and Christians lived in an environment of tolerance for seven centuries, and dialogues on literature, science and arts. The book also highlights that when cultures start breaking up, fueled by envy and jealousies, the status quo also breaks down, wars and persecutions emerge.

Stealing from the Saracens. How Islamic Architecture Shaped Europe by Diane Darke (NF). Historical Essay. (I have not quite finished reading it.) The author persuasively documents the influence of Islamic architecture on the West, in particular on Gothic architecture. Trained in Islamic studies, not in the history of architecture, Darke documents thoroughly the Arab and Islamic roots of European heritage, including Gothic architecture. The book also highlights the significance of cultural exchanges since Medieval times, through crusaders, pilgrims, and travelers, and the artistic interactions between Ottoman and Western cultures. The book also has beautiful illustrations.

Venice and its Jews: 500 Years Since the Founding of the Ghetto by Donatella Calabi (NF). One of the best books I have read on urban development at the time of the Renaissance, and how a minority such as the Jewish minority contributes both to the development of the economic wealth of a larger city, but also to the basic development of urban management: zoning for certain activities, access to infrastructure services, transport, principles for a safe densification of a city. In addition, the book provides deep insights into the resilience of the Jewish Community until Napoleon arrived and ordered to open-up the Ghetto. (I have to confess that I read it in French after meeting the author at the Paris Book Fair, so I can’t vouch for the English translation!).

Donna Pollet:

The Postcard by Anne Berest (F). This is a rather unique Holocaust story, an ambitious autobiographical novel as seen through one French woman’s personal search for family and Jewish identity. Anne, the author and main character of the novel discovers a rich and complicated family drama beginning in Russia with various stops along the way until finding a home in France. She interweaves the family story with a well drawn description of the history, culture and antisemitism of both WWII France and the present day. The search for self identity begins and ends with a mysterious postcard received years earlier at her mother’s house, sent to her long dead grandmother including only the names of her great grandparents, great uncle and aunt who were all murdered in Auschwitz. Knowing nothing of her heritage Anne’s curiosity is piqued and then actualized by an antisemitic event at her daughter’s school. With the help of her mother, Anne, literally and figuratively, goes down the rabbit hole in search of the who, what, and why of the postcard, discovering an unimaginable family heritage inextricably connecting her identity and sense of self to the past, present, and, most importantly, the future.

There is Nothing For You Here, Finding Opportunity in the 21st Century by Fiona Hill (NF). A contemporary de Tocqueville like commentary on the state of our democracy and socioeconomic from an outsider who became the ultimate insider as a global policy advisor and critical witness in the impeachment trial of Donald J. Trump. Hill sees both our democracy and economic system on the brink of collapse. Part compelling memoir and part insightful geopolitical and domestic analysis, she interweaves her own storied struggles escaping poverty from a coal mining village in the north of England with the perceptive observations on America’s declining opportunity, what she describes as forgotten and abandoned people leading to populism and polarization. Her policy prescriptions to counteract systemic collapse include expanding opportunity which she sees as absolutely critical in restoring hope and preserving democracy.

Small Mercies by Dennis Lehane (F). Lehane is the best at describing the Irish enclave of South Boston. He has an excellent ear for working class dialogue and a keen eye for the look and feel of a working class neighborhood and its residents. Set in the tumultuous year of 1974 when school desegregation is about to be implemented in “southie”, this book is a portrait of individuals and a community on the edge. It is a thriller, a mystery, a sympathetic psychological study, and a profound social commentary, not for the squeamish or faint of heart. Two horrific crimes, one black and the other white, seemingly unconnected at first, unleash an unimaginable conflagration of violence and mother love revenge, reflecting American society’s darkest corners of criminality and race. No one can walk away untouched after reading this novel.

Ed Scholl:

Blood and Thunder by Hampton Sides (NF). A National Bestseller from 2007, it tells the story of Kit Carson and the Conquest of the American West. I enjoyed reading about this period of American history in the decades just before and after the Civil War. I particularly learned a lot about Native American leaders and the Apaches and Navajos, including the Navajo Chief, Narbona. It is ultimately a sad tale, given what the Native Americans experienced at the hands of Anglo settlers and the U.S. Army, but an essential part of our history. This book tells that history in a very readable, gripping way.

King: A Life by Jonathan Eig (NF). I thought I might have read more than enough about Martin Luther King after finishing the trilogy on MLK by Taylor Branch. However, that trilogy was written over 25 year ago, and this book, published earlier this year, presents a lot of new information from recently declassified FBI files. It is very well written and kept me fully engaged throughout.

Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver (F). This novel was the co-recipient of the 2023 Pulitzer Prize for fiction. Inspired by Dickens’ David Copperfield, the story is about a resilient boy born in poverty in Appalachia. A wonderful book that at turns is depressing and inspiring.

Elizabeth Lewis:

Klara and the Sun by Kazui Ishiguro (F – I think). I read this right after the 2022 call for books, and -truth to tell – I was mixed about it at that time. But with the news about the increasingly powerful uses of AI, I think that this book, ostensibly about an AI “friend” for an ailing child, deserves a closer look as it poses questions about attachment, loyalty, love, the nature of things – the big questions -and what it means to be human.

Elizabeth Tilis:

Outlive: The Science and Art of Longevity by Peter Attia (NF). Written by a physician who has gained a ton of popularity this year, this book focuses on living better and longer and challenges conventional media thinking on aging. It gave me a great perspective on approaches to preventing chronic diseases and extending long-term physical, mental, and emotional health. 

Hunt, Gather, Parent: What Ancient Cultures Can Teach Us About the Lost Art of Raising Happy, Helpful Little Humans by Michaeleen Doucleff (NF). I read a lot of parenting books. Probably too many. But this one stood out. Written by a correspondent for NPR’s Science Desk, it examines modern parenting guidance and finds the evidence limited and the conclusions ineffective. Curious to learn about more effective parenting approaches, she visits Maya families in Mexico, Inuit families above the Arctic Circle, and Hadzabe families in Tanzania. An absolutely fascinating book, and I’d suggest it to any parents of young kids. 

Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver (F). For some reason in my head I had it that I didn’t like Kingsolver, but this book was definitely one of my favorite fiction books of the year. So poignant. Many complained about the length, but I would have read another 300 pages of this. 

The Measure by Nikki Erlick (F): I read this one early in 2023 ,but I still think about it almost every single day. It seamlessly weaves together a wonderful cast of characters in a world where everyone 18+ gets a box that holds your fate inside by telling you the exact number of years you will live. It has incredible implications across all ideologies, faiths, religions, political spectrums, etc. I absolutely loved this book. 

All the Broken Places by John Boyne (HF). I don’t read a lot of historical fiction, but this one I really loved. The story of an elderly woman living in London who must confront her past with the horror Auschwitz. 

Ellen Miller:

American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer by Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin (NF). It is often said that if a movie (or book) leaves you wanting to know more, that’s a good thing. For me that was the case of the movie – “Oppenheimer” — which was based on this book written in 2005 by two writers who covered World War II and Hiroshima for decades. The book, over 700 pages, won the Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography in 2006.  I never read books of this length, but maybe I should more often as I couldn’t put it down. What drove the biographical material was the mix of the personal story with the politics of Oppenheimer’s times, and the larger context and implications of his work. The writing is superb and keeps you engaged and turning every page.

Prophet Song by Paul Lynch (F). This book won this year’s Booker Prize, and at first, I resisted it as it was described as “dystopian fiction”, a category of reading I generally don’t enjoy. I was right in one part: this is not a book to be enjoyed but is a book that is a must read.

The book takes place in a fictionalized Dublin and describes an Ireland under a tyrannical government. It’s not the easiest read (it’s written without paragraph breaks), but the story propelled me. It focuses on one family – the father is ‘disappeared” at a trade union rally, and his wife is left to raise their four children.  She must make impossible decisions as she tries to protect them as civil war erupts, and their lives are overturned.

It is a book for these times.The Guardian called it “crucial reading…a novel that should be placed into the hands of policymakers everywhere.”  If you are concerned about what the US or other countries might look like under right wing tyrants, this is for you.

The Pole by J.M. Coetzee (F). First up, I pretty much enjoy reading everything Coetzee writes, and The Pole is no exception. This is a short book (only 176 pages) that tells the story of older (Polish) pianist and interpreter of Chopin who becomes infatuated with a woman who is a stylish Spanish patron of the arts. They first meet after she helps organize his concert in Barcelona. Although Beatriz, a married woman, is initially unimpressed by the pianist, she soon finds herself swept into his world. A relationship develops but only on Beatriz’s terms.

This is a book about a romance — a delightful and engaging story by one of the best writers in the world. 

Olga Dies Dreaming by Xochitl Gonzalez (F). This is a delightful, thoughtful, and well written work of fiction, offering a fresh story of the personal and the political, set against the backdrop of New York and Puerto Rico. Olga is our hero, and the story revolves around her and her brother. It mixes the politics, corruption, family strife, and the notion of the American dream. It’s a delightful, engaging, and thoughtful read. 

All the Sinners Bleed: A Novel by S.A Cosby (F). I had to include this book on my list even though it’s not my typical read. Let me warn you: it falls into the category of crime fiction. (Keep reading please!) I flat out love this author for his story telling, the tension he creates, the characters, and the page turning writing. If you need a book to keep you on your treadmill, or to read on a long flight, this is it. This is a story about the first Black Sheriff in a small southern town. In the pursuit of one murder, he uncovers a web of terrible crimes, and he doesn’t stop until he reveals who and what is behind them, no matter the personal repercussions.  The Washington Post has called Cosby “one of the most muscular, distinctive, grab-you-by-both-ears voices in American crime fiction”  (PS – I’ve read all his books!)        

Ellen Shapira:

West with Giraffes by Lynda Rutledge (HF): I found this to be a very enjoyable read, an extremely well written combination Water for Elephants and Lincoln Highway, two of my all time favorites. The story is based on a true event, the arrival from Africa of two giraffes in 1938 New York City during a severe hurricane and their subsequent cross-country drive to their eventual new home at the San Diego Zoo. There are three main characters, the zoo keeper in charge of the transport, the unlikely eighteen year old Okie who becomes the main driver, and a beautiful young women who is following along the way. The plot is simple but dynamic, with lots of drama and surprises. The characters are interesting and likable though all have mysterious pasts which become revealed along the way. I had included this book in my mid-year selections but liked it so much that I wanted to include it again.

The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese (F).  Written by the writer of a classic favorite Cutting for Stone, this book set in India, follows three generations of a family plagued by an inherited disorder that causes an aversion to being in the water. This disability causes several members of the family to die tragically and the effects on various remaining family members drive the story line. The book has all the perfect elements:  an interesting  plot with several twists, multiple layered, well developed  characters, and absolutely beautiful writing.  I was compelled to re-read sentences several times.

The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store by James McBride (F). One of my favorite books of recent years was Deacon King Kong by James McBride, and this book seems to hold its own in comparison. It is set in a small town in Pennsylvania during the depression where  tight knit communities of Immigrant Jews and Blacks seem to coexist and have lives that intertwine into an intriguing plot. The humor and wonderful descriptions help move the story along as the mysteries are resolved. 

Tom Lake by Ann Patchett (F). Tom Lake refers to a fictional summer stock theater where the main characters met during the late eighties. The story develops as three grown daughters are drawn back to their parents’ farm in northern Michigan to help with the summer growing season during the 2020 summer of the Pandemic. In order to entertain the girls during their quarantine, the mother tells the story of her romance with a famous actor when they were both in Summer Stock production of Our Town. The complicated relationship between the young naive Lara is contrasted with the mature, solid marriage that Lara has with her husband. As usual Ann Patchett delivers a solid story with flawed but compelling characters.  I liked the way that COVID was the backdrop for the story while not being the main focus.  

Lady Tan’s Circle of Women by Lisa See (HF).  This is the story of a woman physician in 15th-century China which presents a wonderful description of an elite Chinese family. The story follows the life of Lady Tan, beginning when she is a very young girl her mother’s death, moving to live with her grandparents who taught her how to be a physician, her marriage, her struggles to have children, and ultimately her career as a physician and the matriarch of a large extended family. Through it all the reader learns much about Chinese medicine, family structure, the role of women in Chinese society, foot binding, and much more.  A thoroughly satisfying read.  

Ellen Sudow:

The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store by James McBride (HF) was my favorite read this year in the same way that Demon Copperfield was last year’s favorite and before that McBride’s Deacon, King Kong.  McBride, like Kingsolver, is a master of storytelling with complex characters that one falls in love with…Here you fall in love with the mix of immigrant Jews and African Americans living together on the margins in a dilapidated community in Pennsylvania. As usual with McBride, he is able to mix the tragic and comedic in a wonderful page-turner.  After finishing the book I went back and reread The Color of Water, his 1995 memoir, which provides a window into the origins of McBride’s amazing life as a musician and writer.

Loot by Tania James (HF) takes place in the late eighteenth century taking the reader from the Tipu Sultan of Mysore in India through France and England.  Again, a great read with wonderfully wrought characters.

In preparation for a trip to Vietnam I recently read The Man of Two Faces, memoir/polemic by Pulitzer winner Viet Thanh Nguyen (NF). It is a tough read, taking those of us living through the Vietnam War Era through the lives of Vietnamese immigrants as they navigate being refugees within a country with a history of colonization, racism, and violence.  

Absolution by Alice McDermott (F) provides totally different reminders of the Vietnam War period. The novel is constructed around memories shared between two American women who had lived in Vietnam during the early 60’s,a period that still included garden parties and other memories of the cloistered expat lives of wives during the fall of DIem and the self-immolations of protesting Buddhists.

Emily Nichol Grossi:

Trespasses by Louise Kennedy (F). This is a beautiful, painful love story of a Protestant man and a Catholic woman during the Troubles in Northern Ireland. It’s about religion, sure, but really about how dangerous and destructive it is to “other” people when groups and entire communities do so. The result is too often sweeping suspicion, societal breakdown, and violence. Trespasses is Kennedy’s debut novel, and wow!

The Last Thing to Burn by Will Dean (F): This gripping novel about a woman held captive by her husband is so damn intense, I simply couldn’t put it down. It’s a stark tale about the horrors some inflict on others and the psychological strengths and sheer will humans can muster to survive. 

The Future by Naomi Alderman (F). I have been a total Naomi Alderman fan since reading The Power in 2018, so I was thrilled to not only purchase and start reading her new book, The Future, last week but also to hear her in conversation about it with Kara Swisher (another boss woman) at Politics & Prose. It’s about tech billionaires who plunder the Earth and hasten the “end” all the while building survival bunkers in hopes of sparing themselves. “By turns thrilling, hilarious, tender, and always piercingly brilliant, The Future unfolds at a breakneck speed, highlighting how power corrupts the few who have it and what it means to stand up to them.”

Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus (F). After the weight of so many of the books I read this year, Lessons in Chemistry was a delightful romp, despite the regular reminders of the rampant misogyny in 1950s America. There are many wonderful characters in this novel, not least Six Thirty (a dog) and Mad (a little girl). If you want to laugh, feel some feels, and fist-pump for women, this is a great and easy read.

The Bee Sting by Paul Murray (F). Goodness, it’s an epic tale (640+ pages) that I started rationing toward the end because I knew I’d be so sad to bid it goodbye. Rooted in the late aughts following the Celtic Tiger crash, this is the story of multiple generations of the Barnes family. It takes place in Dublin, mostly at Trinity College, and in the rural hometowns of the main characters. Moving in many ways! 

Eric Stravitz:

All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr (F).

The Friends of Eddie Coyle by George V. Higgins (F).

The Sentinel by Lee and Andrew Child (F).

Night Soldiers by Alan Furst (F).

The Body Keeps the Score by Bessel van der Kolk (NF).

Fruzsina Harsanyi:

My first criterion this year for picking which books I would submit for your list was: books I can remember in vivid detail without consulting my kindle. 

Here are the five that came to mind immediately, even though I read some months ago.

American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer by Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin. (NF). I rarely read a book after seeing the movie. But this movie was so compelling that I wanted to know more and was richly rewarded by the book, which presents in massive, but very readable, detail the complex personality of this extraordinary man and the political dynamics of the mid-century America in which he lived.

Empire of the Summer Moon: Quanah Parker and the Rise and Fall of the Comanches, the Most Powerful Indian Tribe in American History by S.C. Gwynne (NF). This is a historical account of the 40 year war between the Comanche Indians and the white settlers in the mid-19the century. Their  history is told through the lives of the Comanche chief, Quanah Parker, the son of a Comanche and a white mother who was kidnapped by the Comanches in one of their raids. She lived with them — refusing to return to the settlement even though there were attempts to rescue her — and raised her son with the tribe. I have always been fascinated by the American West. This book is the most realistic portrayal of what frontier life must have been like — raw, brutal, unbelievably hard for Indians and settlers alike. The descriptions, particularly of the roles of men and women in their everyday life, are unforgettable. All this against the background of American expansionism and eventual settler domination.

Life Worth Living, Miroslav Volf et al. (NF). Inspired by a seminar he teaches at Yale, Professor Volf and colleagues explore the question of what is a life worth living. Oscar Wilde wrote that most people exist; few live. What’s the difference and how do we figure it out for ourselves. Volf et al explore answers offered by the world’s great religions, philosophers and secular writers and then offer a guide to working out one’s own answers. A book to read more than once and listen to on long meditative walks.

Fever in the Heartland: The Ku Klux Klan’s Plot to Take Over America and the Woman Who Stopped Them by Timothy Egan (NF). The rise of the KKK in 1920’s Indiana and its expansion, with the help of politicians, business, and clergy, into other states and every aspect of civic life. It’s also the story of its central figure, D.C. Stephenson and Madge Oberholtzer, the woman who brought him down. According to a NYT review, it’s more than a gripping book, it’s “a rumination on the moral obscenity of white supremacy.”

Tom Lake by Ann Patchett (F), the only book of fiction on my list. It’s a small book about a woman who opted for a family and domesticity as the wife of an orchard farmer, recalling for her three daughters her relationship long ago with a now-famous actor. In Ann Patchett’s hands, a story about what the mother tells, how she tells it, and what she chooses to leave out  makes it a book about memory, loss, choices, and gratitude. Listening to Meryl Streep read it was an additional pleasure.

Harry Siler:

A Gentleman in Moscow by Amor Towles (F) is wonderful at many levels and I’m reading it again now.

And, before I read Barbara Kingsolver’s Demon Copperfeld (F), I did read Charles Dickens’ David Copperfield (F) again. It is amazingly good, as she says.

Haven Kennedy:

One of the best books I’ve read this year is Women and Writing by Virginia Woolf (NF). One of my favorite pastimes is browsing the stacks at the library, and I came across this book. It was an excellent book not only on writing, but on women and woman authors.

Her essay on ‘killing the angel in the house” especially spoke to me.  While society has made great strides in regards to women’s role and rights, we are still expected to be angels. This is especially true with mothers. Just like Woolf, I’ll sit down to write, and a list of questions goes through my mind. Is the laundry done? Do I need to make dinner? Are all the bills paid? And then there are the incessant “Mom” and “Wife” questions. “Mom, can I have a snack?” “Honey, where is the vacuum?” Even my cats chime – one yells to go out, another jumps up and takes a lap on my keyboard. Killing the angel means I choose to put myself first, to sit and write, to say goodbye to being a dutiful wife and mom. I love the idea. Just like Woolf’s book A Room of One’s Own (NF). I have that right. 


Woolf also spoke about various female writers, how they were portrayed and what they were allowed to write about. She made an excellent point that women writers were fine as long as they stayed in their sphere -like Jane Austen, George Eliot, and the Bronte sisters. Again and again, she made the point that women could not write until they were able to support themselves. And it’s true. Once women were allowed lives outside the domestic sphere, women writers came out of the woodwork. They were free to express themselves and write. Colleges have classes on women’s writing, something they never had before. I would love for Woolf to walk into a bookstore and see the plethora of books by female authors. 

Yet. so much of what Woolf wrote is still a problem. Even with women working outside the house, up to 75% of the domestic tasks are left to women. Women are paid less, their work often ignored. A few years ago a man switched email accounts with a woman. He was appalled at the number of clients second-guessing her or talking down to her. The woman was amazed that the male colleague was treated with so much respect. Woolf worked to allow women to have a room of their own, now women are working to have a seat at table. Reading Woolf’s work reAbraham Vergheseminds me of how far we’ve come as women – and how far we still have to go. 

Hugh Riddleberger:

The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese (F).

Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin  (F).

(See Louise McElhenny below)

Jane Bradley:

The two books I submitted for the mid-year review – Finding Me by Viola Davis (NF) and The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese (F) – remain as favorites, in addition to:

The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and Murder by David Grann (NF). As the title suggests, this is a thriller, based on extensive research, turning historical events into a page-turner.

Brotherless Night by V. V. Ganeshananthan (HF). This historical novel is the moving story of a young woman’s aspirations to be a doctor during the Sri Lankan civil war, and how the war affects family relationships and loyalties. 

North Woods by Daniel Mason (F). A highly imaginative novel that follows the lives of successive residents of a Massachusetts house over 300+ years, combining several different writing styles and voices.  

Prophet Song by Paul Lynch (HF). While I’m not usually drawn to dystopian novels, I couldn’t put down this story of a family’s struggle to survive in an authoritarian regime in modern-day Ireland. It’s a reminder that sometimes the unimaginable really could happen. 

Wave: A Memoir of Life After the Tsunami by Sonali Deraniyagala (NF). The author of this memoir was vacationing with her family at a resort on the Sri Lanka coast when the devastating tsunami hit in 2004.  It’s another tale of the unimaginable, but this one, sadly, is nonfiction.

Janet Rock:

Indigenous Continent by Pekka Hamalainen (NF). A Native American perspective of the 400 year struggle that took place and continues to this day. A perspective not often presented in the history of the United States. 

Janie Radcliff::

The Piano Tuner by Daniel Mason (HF). Takes place in London and mostly in Burma in the late 1800s. Very descriptive and interesting to read about Burma…intriguing story line. Twists & turns too!

Jeff Friedman:

My three favorite books this year have each been exceptional biographies, notable for different reasons:

G-Man: J. Edgar Hoover and the Making of the American Century by Beverly Gage (NF). This deservedly won the Pulitzer Prize. It resembles a Robert Caro biography with respect to how it investigates the nature and moral ambiguity of political power. And, since Hoover was in power for so long, the biography engages an amazing breadth of political and social history.

Parting the Waters: America in the King Years, 1954-63 by Taylor Branch (NF). An exceptionally detailed and beautifully written description of Martin Luther King and the birth of the civil rights movement. The way the book melds careful research into a moving narrative is amazing; I almost felt like I was there experiencing it first-hand.

Rising Star: The Making of Barack Obama by David Garrow (NF) conducted >1000 interviews to understand Barack Obama’s life before becoming president. The book has been widely characterized as “the negative take on Obama,” and you do learn that the man has some serious flaws, but the book provides exceptional insight into his positive dimensions, too. The most interesting part of the book, in my view, is its effort to get to the bottom of every detail about who Obama is. Just seeing what the 1000 + interview treatment looks like — and how so much of the man remains opaque despite that — is fascinating stuff.

Jesse Maniff:

The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny, and Murder by David Grann (NF).

Empress of the Nile by Lynne Olson (NF).

The Three-Body Problem by Liu Cixin (F).

Jim Kilby:

Only read one book I really liked.

The Book of Charlie: Wisdom from the Remarkable American Life of a 109-Year-Old Man by David Von Drehle (NF). “The inspiring story of one man’s journey through a century of upheaval”. When the author met him, he was 102 and was in his driveway washing his girlfriends car. He is now my hero. It is kind of a story of the history of this country.

Kate Latts:

The Magnificent Lives of Marjorie Post by Allison Pataki (NF). I loved this book so much! The book spans the life of Marjorie Merriweather Post who becomes the wealthiest woman in America and one of the first American business women. The book spans from her childhood, watching her father’s founding of the Post cereal company, through her adulthood and leadership and expansion of the company. It also chronicles her four marriages, life of luxury, and travels throughout the mid 20th C as well as her role in Washington and international politics. I had the opportunity to visit her estate in Washington DC this fall and loved it.

House of Eve by Sadeqa Johsnon (HF). Set in Chicago and Washington DC in the 1950s, House of Eve is a story of two young black young women from very different backgrounds with different paths until their lives become intertwined. Eleanor is graduating college from Howard when she falls in love and marries a young doctor from a well to do black DC family. Ruby lives in Chicago and is working hard to earn a scholarship to college. I learned a lot about the classes within the African American community, and I loved the characters.

Lady Tan’s Circle of Women by Lisa See (HF). This Lisa See book is set in 16th Century China. Like many other books of this genre there are themes of being married off at a young age, having to leave one’s own family, motherhood, concubines, and lots of food binding. What made this book so interesting though was that the main character has been “trained” as a doctor for women. The role of doctors and midwives and how women’s health was thought about was fascinating. Maybe not Lisa See’s very best, but really good.

The Lost Girls of Willowbrook by Ellen Marie Wiseman (HF). A heart wrenching story set in the 1970s when horrible homes for people dealing with mental health still existed. This story is set in Staten Island and is about a teen girl who thinks her younger sister has died but finds instead she was sent to a home. She sets off to go find her but due to a mistaken identity finds herself locked in as a patient. As she tries to get free, she finds herself in the middle of uncovering the atrocities, mystery, and a murder.

Kathleen Kroos:

The Girl with Seven Names: A North Korean Defector’s Story by Hyeonseo Lee (NF). An extraordinary insight into life under one of the world’s most ruthless and secretive dictatorships – and the story of one woman’s terrifying struggle to avoid capture/repatriation and guide her family to freedom

Thirteen Steps Down by Ruth Rendell (F).  A chilling new novel about obsession, superstition, and violence, set in Rendell’s darkly atmospheric London.

Woman on Fire by Lisa Barr (F) – gripping tale of a young, ambitious journalist embroiled in an international art scandal centered around a Nazi-looted masterpiece.

Kevin Curtin:

Alone against the North by Adam Shoalts (NF). This book depicts an adventure by Canadian wilderness explorer and writer, Adam Shoalts, who travels up a difficult, sometimes dangerous river within the Hudson Bay lowlands, a river in which no other explorer has left any record of paddling.

11/22/63 by Stephen King (F). Perhaps his greatest work, this book is about a modern-day time traveler who attempts to prevent the assassination of United States President John F. Kennedy.

Making Rumours: The Inside Story of the Classic Fleetwood Mac Album by Ken Caillat (NF). This book was written by a co-producer of one of the best-selling rock and roll albums of all time, Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours. Caillat shares the inside story of this experience, including the drama among the band, substance use, song development, and the technical aspects of recording engineering.

How to Write One Song by Jeff Tweedy (NF). This book is by Wilco frontman Jeff Tweedy who (in my opinion), as a songwriter is up there with the likes of Townes Van Zandt, John Prince, and Robert Hunter. It’s a simple read that covers tips, tricks, and exercises that Tweedy himself uses in his quest to developing a decent song.

Larry Longenecker:

I just keep coming back to free digital books from the Orange County Public Library from authors John Grisham (F) and Michael Connelly (F).

Not sure if it was this year or last, but I really enjoyed  A Land Remembered by Patrick Smith (HF) about the history of Florida.

Larry Makinson:

If you’re in the mood for some good spy novels, you could hardly do better than to pick up something by Stella Rimington. I loved her first novel At Risk (F).

Her second novel, Secret Assset (F), made the Economist’s list of the best spy novels ever written, and she’s written eight others that also look to be first class page-turners. She’s the former head of Britain’s MI5, and I’ll probably read many more — especially since the local library seems to have them all.

Linda Rothenberg:

The Rose Code: by Kate Quinn (HF). Joining the elite Bletchley Park code breaking team during World War II, three women from very different walks of life uncover a spy’s dangerous agenda years later against the backdrop of the royal wedding of Elizabeth and Philip. 

Any of the other Kate Quinn novels are worth reading.

The Postman Always Rings Twice  (F) by James M Cain. Available as an anthology. The story of a young hobo who has an affair with a married woman and plots with her to murder her husband and collect his insurance, The novel is a benchmark of classic crime fiction and film noir.

How Beautiful We Were by Imbolo Mbue. (F). A fearless young woman from a small African village starts a revolution against an American oil company in this sweeping, inspiring novel

Girl at War by Sara Novici (F).  Impact of the Croatian, Bosnian 1990s war and the impact it had on a 10 year girl who is able to escape and return as a young woman.  It deals with the ramifications of having been displaced and losing family members.

Louise McIhenny:

Favorites this year:

Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin (F). It was just a fun read, and I knew absolutely nothing about creating video games before reading it. I guess I didn’t hold game makers in very high regard, but it turns out it involves enormous creativity, hard work, and determination. I thought the three main characters in the book were well done.

The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese (F). It’s a long one, but I remained interested throughout the tale and was fascinated by the leprosy thread. My grandfather was a physician who volunteered at Carville Hospital many years ago, and I learned something about his what his commitment must have been from this story. I loved the detailed medical descriptions which Verghese does so well. 

   (Ed. Hugh R. agrees.)

Lydia Hill Slaby:

This year, I discovered the magical V.E. Schwab. It started with the audio version of The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue (HF) during a long road trip this summer. It’s part historical fiction, part science fiction, poignant and beautifully written. I actually bought the physical book after listening to it because the story references numerous works of art through history, and I have now reread it while looking at the art while the story unfolded (a difficult prospect while driving).

I moved on to her Shades of Magic Trilogy, (F), which is a wonderful fantasy world based in various versions of London sometime in the early-to-mid 1800s. I don’t know if she wrote it for adults, but it’s much more subtle than most fantasy fiction these days, so it felt like she wrote it for adults. Also beautifully written and crafted.

And then I reread The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams (F) because it feels important to remember that at least the Vogon’s haven’t destroyed Earth to make way for a hyperspace express route. Yet.

Mary Bardone:

Poverty, by America by Mathew Desmond (NF).

Rough Sleepers by Tracy Kidder (NF).

Harlem Shuffle by Colson Whitehead (F).

Enjoyed Good, Night, Irene by Luis Alberto Urrea, Barrie Kreinik, et al. (F).

Anonymous:

Ten years after its publication, I finally read Robin Wall Kimmerer’s Braiding Sweetgrass (NF). Native American wisdom cannot compete with the greed and sensationalism of these times.The Amazon still burns; companies use her most important concept (gratitude) in their quarter page newspaper ads. It’s a fine book, but the trickster we’ve got is about to run again for an office for which he does not qualify. Her advice resembles trying to mop up Niagara Falls with a hand towel.

I also read Tom Stoppard’s play Leopoldstadt, (HF) which is a brilliant, fictional account of his non-fictional Jewish/Czech family in the early 20th century.

Chuck Jones is not the sole author of Looney Tunes (F), but I am grateful to have so many toons in my DVR queue so that I can laugh every day.

Matt Rechler:

Necessary Trouble: Growing Up at Midcentury by Drew Gilpin Faust (NF), a historian and 2007-2018 Harvard President, she has written events about her life and the fascinating activities that she has done. This includes critical activity about her family and the opportunity to experience programs in her international activity in college.The book is detailed, honest, and superbly written. 

Micah Sifry:

Who By Fire: Leonard Cohen in the Sinai by Matti Friedman (NF): A surprisingly beguiling reconstruction of a little-known encounter, when the young but already world-famous folk singer, the son of a line of rabbis, decided on a whim to fly to Israel during the Yom Kippur War and sing to soldiers on their way to and from the battlefields.  

Charleston: Race, Water, and the Coming Storm by Susan Crawford (NF). As the seas start to rise, Charleston, NC, is already experiencing dozens of “sunny day floods.” And as Crawford recounts in compelling detail, the city’s history of racism and its rebirth as the Confederate Disneyland is compounding its failure to gather its civic resources to face the rising tide. I learned a lot from this book and will never think of Charleston in the same way.  

Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver (F): Another masterpiece from one of my favorite novelists. A harrowing and humanizing account of how the opioid crisis has been tearing through places that were already strip-mined and abandoned by American capitalism.  

Recoding America: Why Government is Failing in the Digital Age and How We Can Do Better by Jennifer Pahlka (NF). If you are someone who works in government, or cares about how government works, Recoding America is must-reading. It fills an absolutely critical hole in what passes for mainstream media reporting on government. That is, instead of telling us who is ahead in the horserace or parsing some policy debate, it gets down into the real details of how government agencies actually implement laws and regulations. The fact that it pulls you into that story via tech is arguably incidental, or rather, it’s because enough decision-makers in government realized that they needed to open up their processes to outsiders (“techies”) who they imagined could cure what ailed their systems. (For a longer review that I wrote in my newsletter, go here: https://theconnector.substack.com/p/born-under-punchcards-when-govt-met.)  

Death Watch by Stona Fitch (F): A wicked and snarky satire of high fashion and the madness of crowds. Don’t read this if you work in marketing and don’t want to feel the whip lash your whole profession, but if you sense that social media fads are out of control, Fitch will make you laugh and wince at the same time.

Michael Weinroth:

The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store by James McBride (F). Loved the story and characters. We know these characters, both good and bad. James McBride’s early years may be reflected in this engrossing novel.

Mike White:

The Violence Project by Jillian Peterson (NF). This well-researched book uses data to explore all the various conditions that lead to mass shootings in the United States It explores the importance of mental health services, gun control, the role of news media and the internet, in promoting the gaining of fame and recognition by being a perpetrator of a mass shooting, along with many other factors. There are specific suggestions that can be taken to help change the probability of mass shootings.  

Gator Country by Rebecca Renner (NF). Interesting book that combines understanding the beauty, natural history, and people of Florida, combined with a detective story about efforts to prevent poaching of alligators. Very readable.

Democracy Awakening by Heather Cox Richardson (NF).

The Kingdom, The Power, and the Glory by Tim Alberta (NF). Extremely scary profile of evangelical churches’ bend to the radical right in the name of God, written by a believing Christian, son of an evangelical pastor. 

Molly Peter:

As a new reader in this MillersTime group, I should declare the lens of my reading…discovering/ rereading women’s important fiction. My book choices are informed by my interest in reading important novels by non contemporary women.

The Scarlet Pimpernel by Baroness Emma Orczy (F)…considered by many to have spawned the entire movement of swashbuckling novels and many movies… Such a fun read. The actual heroine of the book is Lady Blackley.

Our Nig by Harriet Wilson (F) is an autobiographical novel that stands as one of the most important first-hand accounts of the black experience in the antebellum North An important voice rediscovered.

The Country Girls by Edna O’Brien (F). Heartbreaking, honest, funny, and banned by Ireland because of its political and social content. Reviewers said, “It was not an Irish novel that broke the mold…it made the mold.”

Frankenstein by Mary Shelley (F). An instant best-seller at 18 years old. Another book that outlined a new form of story and has been replicated thousands of times, yet timeless themes of how do I become evil, what is human, what do we do to each other and are scientists dangerous? Early feminist view of males taking over the role of procreation.

Nick Fels

Barbarian Days, A Surfing Life by William Finnegan (NF). The book, which won a Pulitzer Prize, recounts Finnegan’s life-long experience as an an obsessive surfer, beginning with his childhood in California and Hawaii. (Ironically, he now lives in Manhattan and writes for the New Yorker.)

Nick Nyart:

Harlem Shuffle and Crook Manifesto by Colson Whitehead (F). These first two books of a planned trilogy by two time Pulitzer winner Whitehead are equally a portrait of Harlem in the 1960’s and ’70’s, a family story, and a crime tale, all told through the life of Ray Carney, a small businessman with illicit side hustles. He’s a striver, looking to elevate his standing and do well for his family. Like Carney, the books travel through Harlem, stopping in organized crime hangouts, partying in elite social clubs, coming home to generations of family, cruising uptown with corrupt cops, constantly navigating in and out of trouble. What I liked best was the skillful weaving of the three main narrative elements.

Small Mercies by Dennis Lehane (F) is set in Boston during the busing crisis of the early 1970’s. The story involves a tougher-than-nails, barely-making-it Mary Pat Fennessy as she searches for her missing daughter while integration roils South Boston. She comes to understand that the hardcore loyalty to her racist Irish enclave and against school desegregation is not a two-way street. In the end, there is a coming to terms with race that arrives too late and a brutal rage that circles back onto those that have betrayed her. The characters Lehane devises for us pull you through the story. 

Old God’s Time by Sebastian Barry (F). Beautifully written, It is a wonderful novel, set on Ireland’s rugged coast, that deals with aging and coming to terms with a painful past. It features a retired police detective called into a generation-old cold case that involves abuse and the church. It’s told through a lens of Tom, the detective, whose reality, in his late sixties, includes shifting memories of his absent family and a touch of present day fantasy. Tom’s view is laced with wry humor as he knows “there was almost always comedy stuck in the breast of human affairs, quivering like a knife”. 

Nicole Cate:

2023 has been an excellent year for reading. I made a conscious choice at the beginning of the year to read more and engage with the news less, and have thoroughly enjoyed re-immersing myself in books. So far I’ve read 55 books this year. And, still, most of my reads are based on Millerstime reader recommendations – your lists are such great starting points whenever I’m looking for the next book!

Of the 55, I’ve given 15 of them 5/5 stars. Soooo, choosing just five for your list is quite difficult.  But here goes….

[from my midyear list] – Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt (F). I am not one to tolerate a story featuring an octopus as one of the main characters, but I’m so glad I read this one. It’s a quick read with likable characters (even including the octopus) about family, parenthood, loss, and love.

[also in my midyear list] – Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver (F). This book hit a lot of topics of interest for me, including poverty, opioid addiction, corporate greed, and “left behind” parts of America. The characters were complex and engaging, and I loved the writing style. 

Boom Town by Sam Anderson (NF). I appreciate well-researched, well-organized, engaging nonfiction, and this book delivered. The modern NBA stories juxtaposed with the (wild!) history of Oklahoma City were super interesting. The author’s identified themes flowing throughout didn’t feel like a stretch, and I really enjoyed this book.

American Kingpin by Nick Milton (NF). Another well-researched and super intriguing nonfiction book.  This reads like a novel but tells the (presumably) real story both about the invention of the Silk Road darkweb site and law enforcement’s fraught but ultimately successful investigation into the founder. 

Pageboy by Elliott Page (NF) (audiobook). I’ve been underwhelmed by several highly-reviewed memoir audiobooks this year and had assumed that listening to memoirs (as opposed to reading them) diminishes my enjoyment for some reason. Pageboy was an excellent exception. I liked the structure, which was not chronological, and found Page’s writing honest, engaging, vulnerable, heartbreaking, and funny. He speaks with wisdom and compassion and added some interesting context (describing the Mont-Blanc explosion that happened in Halifax in 1917, for example—news to me!).

Okay, I can’t stop at just five.  One more. (Ed. Dispensation given because I thought this one would be of interest to some of the MillersTime readers)

Fourteen Talks by Age Fourteen by Michelle Icard (NF) (audiobook). I ended up re-listening to the first third to make sure I was absorbing it. Of the multiple self help-ish type books I listened to this year, I’m ranking this one at the top because I found it really helpful to hear advice on how to interact with my middle schoolers about the many challenging and consequential topics that we encounter. It’s not about following the guidance exactly, and more about having a framework and guiding principles for conversations where I’ve previously found myself floundering. Icard’s writing was easily accessible, and I agree with her overall approach.

Randy Candea:

West With Giraffes by Lynda Rutledge (HF). Part adventure. historical novel and coming of age love story, this is a tale of two giraffes traveling across depression-era America.

The Light We Carry by Michelle Obama (NF). Well written powerful strategies for staying hopeful and balanced in today’s highly uncertain world.

The Kite Runner by Kaled Hosseini (F). I greatly enjoyed re-reading this 20 year old classic of the doomed friendship of two boys who witness the tragic history of Afghanistan’s lost monarchy, war with Russia, and Talaban rule.

Rebecca LeMaitre:

L.A. Weather by María Amparo Escandón (F). I devoured this book; from start to finish. I couldn’t put it down. On the surface about a year in the life of a family living in L.A., underneath about climate change, climate justice, abuse, loyalty, and so much more. I recommend this book to everyone

The Island of Missing Trees by Shafak Elif (F). Gorgeous prose, this book is a heartbreaking survey on the ways that place and family mark us, often for generations.

True Biz by Sara Novic (F). Showed me how ignorant I was about deaf culture and began to fill some of those gaps in my knowledge. Touching, funny, and with a plot that will keep you turning the pages.

The Dictionary of Lost Words by Pip Williams (F). if you love words, you’ll love this book. Set during the creation of the Oxford English Dictionary, and told through the eyes of a young woman involved in the process, you’ll at once delight in the sentences, roll the words across your tongue, and cheer for the story’s heroine.

The Giver of Stars by Guy Gavriel Kay (HF). Historical fiction at its best. Using the true tale of female horseback librarians during the Depression, the reader is introduced to a cast of unforgettable fictional females who show the power of words and the power of friendship in equal doses.

Rebekah Jacobs:

The Many Lives of Mama Love: A Memoir of Lying, Stealing, Writing, and Healing by Lara Love Hardin (NF). This is the true story of a soccer mom turned heroin addict who ends up in jail. Upon her release, she became a ghostwriter and successful author. I finished it in one sitting. 

The Coddling of the American Mind: How Good Intentions and Bad Ideas are Setting up a Generation for Failure by Jonathan Haidt (NF). This is a book for anyone who is confused by what is happening on college campuses today. It discusses the three great untruths: What doesn’t kill you makes you weaker; always trust your feelings; and life is a battle between good people and evil people.

Never Enough: When Achievement Culture Becomes Toxic by Jennifer Breheny Wallace  (NF). Reporter Wallace investigates the deep roots of toxic achievement culture, and finds out what we must do to change it. 

Florence Adler Swims Forever by Rachel Beanland (F). A Jewish family in the 1930’s attempts to conceal one daughter’s death from the other sister who is on bedrest after a stillborn. A great book about what parents will do to protect their children and when they can’t protect them at all. 

I have to add Wellness by Nathan Hill (F). It’s amazing! It’s about Jack & Elizabeth’s 20 years marriage, but it’s also about social media, art, parenting, health, heartbreak, and happiness…It’s long but so worth it!!! 

Richard Margolies:

Pericles of Athens and the Birth of Democracy by Donald Kagan (NF). Pericles was a visionary and a brilliant strategist who helped raise Athens to a level of democratic virtues the world has yet surpassed. Though of course, Athenian democracy had its moral lacunae, like any ancient civilization, such as slavery and that democratic participation excluded those who were not men.  Nonetheless, Athenian democracy was extraordinary, and anyone who is interested in learning why it surpassed subsequent attempts will find this book eye-opening.

And the reader will also learn about Sparta, the enemy of Athens, which was a militaristic society where every male child was taken from his parents at age 7 and lived in dormitories and assigned an older male who taught the child and made him a soldier, and took liberties with him.  Boys stayed in this homosexual tutelage until the age of 30.

The book will also give a history of the ancient world of Greek city states and dynamics of the period.  It was a shortcoming of my education that I could have arrived at 80 and not known about this extraordinary history that has been a part of our democratic heritage. 

Race Amity, America’s Other Tradition by William H. Smith and Richard W. Thomas (NF). This short book gives a brief overview of how Whites and Blacks have been working together since the beginning of America to create a multi-racial, multi-gender society of equality. While it does not attempt to be complete, it presents short chapters on partners from different races and genders who worked to transcend and lead away from America’s caste system. Less than 200 pages. A good antidote to anyone who is consumed with outrage and says no progress has been made.

Richard Miller:

Why We Love Baseball by Joe Posnanski (NF, mostly). DON’T SKIP THIS! You don’t have to be a baseball fan or even know much about baseball to appreciate this book. Posnanski is the most knowledgeable baseball (and sports) writer living today. Read it. A bit at a time. If you don’t know baseball, you’ll begin to understand why others do. If you do love baseball, you’ll realize another reason why you do.

A Fever in the Heartland: the Ku Klux Klan’s Plot to Take Over the America, and the Woman Who Stopped Them by Timothy Egan (NF). In the category of “Who Knew,” Egan tells the reader so much that I believe is not widely known today about how deeply effective the KKK was in gaining the minds, hearts, and cooperation (re membership ) of much of America. Much of what I learned from this book echoes things taking place in our country today. Egan is a National Book Award Winner in 2006 for The Worst Hard Times and a number of other worthy books. 

The Escape Artist: The Man Who Broke Out of Auschwitz to Warn the World by Jonathan Freeland (NF). Simply the best I’ve ever read about what occurred in Auschwitz. It is the story of Walter Rosenberg aka Rudolp Verbold, a man with an incredibly detailed memory. In addition, what makes it different from all other Holocaust books is his recounting of what happened post escape and his attempt to let Jews, world leaders, and the world know what was occurring.

All Sinners Bleed by S.A. Cosby (F). Just one example of an ‘escapist’ book that kept me on the treadmill longer than I planned. It’s much more than just another book about crime. If you don’t know Cosby, check him out. He’s a treasure.

Heather Cox Richardson: Letters from an American (NF). Richardson’s ‘Letter’ is the first thing I read every morning, and no matter what she writes in her daily post, I always learn something. I put it here as a ‘favorite read’ because of how much time I spend reading her columns over the year. She has recently published Democracy Awakening, which others have cited and which is on my never ending ‘to read’ list.

Ruth Guillemette:

The Collector by Daniel Silva (F). The Gabriel Allen series keeps getting better and better.  Each time I read a  new one, I can’t wait until the next one comes out. The Collector is on the top of the list.  Daniel Silva – please continue the series.

Sam Black:

Breathless: The Scientific Race to Defeat a Deadly Virus by David Quammen (NF). The author has a gift for explaining scientific subjects in lay language; every account in the book is fascinating; the drama holds a mirror up to what we have all just gone through and are still going through.  In part the book is a detective approach to the recent evolutionary history of the covid-19 virus.  Completely absorbing.    

This is Happiness by Niall Williams (F). Gorgeously written in a fictional young Irishman’s contemporary English, this is a quiet, thoughtful, winsome account by the main character, a college-age student, of his growing up in rural Ireland in the 1920s.  A reader could warm right away to the descriptions of leaving university, questioning faith, family relationships, first jobs, and first romantic infatuations. 

Small Mercies by Dennis Lehane (F). Most of Lehane’s crime novels are all Boston, all the time, and they’re the best.  I haven’t read all of them, but this one, his latest, surpassed the others that I have read — it comes at you with the force of a bullet.  It’s a heart breaker on more than one level.  I can’t praise it enough.   

The Postcard by Anne Berest (F). Family history research through the fog of the Holocaust. It recounts the efforts by the author to understand what really happened, what kind of individuals her forebears really were, and who the author is and wants or feels she needs to be.  Several recent incidents caused the author to look into a family mystery.  The result is a novelized version. 

Paper Love: Searching for the Girl My Grandfather Left Behind by Sarah Wildman (NF). By an American author whose grandfather, as a young M.D., escaped from Austria in 1938.  It’s a story of Wildman’s research and writing journey, of what happened to the young woman (also an M.D.) the grandfather left behind, and of what kind of a man the grandfather really was.  Who else escaped, and who else was left behind?  Why?  History/memoir, not novelized

Benjamin Banneker and Us by Rachel Webster (NF). A White author digs into the complicated history of her and her Black cousins’ relationship as descendants of the family of Banneker, the famous African American surveyor, astronomer, almanac author and mathematician from the late 18th-century.  Especially readable on the relationships among those same cousins, and on the status of enslaved African American women as property of female American owners.

Susan Butler:

The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store by James McBride (F). What could be better than a lively written book exploring the relationship among Jews, African Americans, and Whites in Pottsdam, PA, in the 1930s? Humor and pathos intermingle in this tale of a Jewish woman who takes in a deaf African American boy and the Whites who think they are aristocracy, but who are infinitely fallible.

Old God’s Time by Sebastian Barry (F). What begins as a lovely memoir of a retired Irish police officer turns darker  as the details of his and his family’s lives are revealed.  He and his wife were Irish orphans, and their Irish Catholic upbringing reverberates throughout. Author Barry weaves a who-done-it and a haunting love story through the stream of consciousness  of the protagonist.

A Day in the Life of Abed Salama by Nathan Thrall (NF). Using an horrendous school bus accident as a jumping off point, Jewish author Thrall explores the daily lives of West Bank Palestinians.  In under 300 pages, Thrall manages to write both micro  and macro about the consequences of Israeli occupation.  Perhaps you already know all of the facts of daily life on the West Bank, but his compassionate writing about both Arabs and Jews put it into better focus for me. I wish I knew the geography of the area better, because he mentions many settlements and encampments. But in the end for me, it’s the story that enthralled me.

Tom Perrault:

Gay Bar: Why We Went Out by Jeremy Atherton Li NF). As a gay man of a certain age, I really enjoyed this book as a much younger Lin describes and reviews the history of the modern gay, male community vis-a-vis his personal and historical look at the gay bar. I’m still thinking about it….

Heartburn by Nora Ephron (F). The book was re-celebrated this year, as it’s been 40 years since publication. A fictional account of the celebrated authors marriage to Carl Bernstein, it still packs a humorous sting.

March by Geraldine Brooks (F). A novel that retells Louisa May Alcott’s novel Little Women from the point of view of Alcott’s protagonists’ absent father. I started it a few years ago and put it down but was glad I picked it back up. Hard, lovely, and a page turner.

The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese (F). I read his previous novel, Cutting for Stone, and loved that so much. Same here. He’s the rare author where I’ll probably read all of his work. SO good.

Tiffany Lopez:

Empire of Pain by Patrick Radden Keefe (NF). A shocking account of how money, power, and greed have corrupted the medical and healthcare industries for decades. Even if you think you know the story, you will learn something. 

The Year of Magical Thinking by Joan Didion (NF). A beautifully written memoir during the first year after losing a loved one. I read this while struggling with my cousin’s recent passing this year and found comfort relating to Didion’s emotional journey to the anniversary.

Endurance: Shackleton’s Incredible Voyage by Alfred Lansing (NF). This was an epic saga that was hard to escape. The detailed descriptions throughout the journey recounting their many challenges transported me to Antarctica (from Sweden). I listened to this book while running lots of dirt roads and hills this summer, and it was hard to complain about any aches or pains considering what they were going through. 

The General and the Genius: Groves and OppenheimerThe Unlikely Partnership that Built the Atom Bomb by James W. Kunetka (NF). This was a wonderful book written about both men, focused on the collaboration, planning, and execution of the Manhattan Project. I was interested in this version of the story, as it was not solely focused on one person’s life and role and had a broad scope in regards to the rationales in the different stages of the planning and research. 

*** *** *** ***

To see previous years’ lists, click on any of these links: 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015. 2016. 2017. 2018 Mid-Year, 2018, 2019 Mid-Year. 2019. 2020, Mid-Year 2021, 20221. 3/30/22. 7/16/22. Plus two mid-year posts: 6/1/23, 7/16/23.

Exploring Consciousness and Purpose

A guest essay by David Stang: Posted in conjunction with Dave’s five favorite reads for 2023

What did the ancient Greek philosopher Socrates mean when he said, “The unexamined life is not worth living.”? In that declaration, Socrates implies that those who have neglected to examine themselves end up strolling through life with blinders on and therefore experience a very limited and constrained existence. A more beneficial life examination process involves asking penetrating questions such as: Who am I beyond my physical self? How broad is my spectrum of consciousness? Do I have a passionate purpose? People who throughout their lifetime ask introspective questions such as these tend to enjoy more meaningful lives.

This review discusses five books that provide information useful for answering the above three questions. In these books, the authors discuss the function of our consciousness as the central focus of their investigations. Our individual consciousness plays a central role in both the formulation of introspective questions and the methods utilized in seeking answers to such inquiries.

At this point, it would be useful to ask what the term “consciousness” means. Allan Combs, in his book Consciousness Explained Better (2009), offers a helpful definition: “Consciousness is the background, or simply the ground, of all experience. Whatever experience you have, whether it is a highly mystical rapture, an abysmal depression, an explosive sexual ecstasy, the sight of a bright twinkling star in a dark night sky, the sound of thunder, the taste of honey, or the scent of sandalwood, it all unfolds in an already dimensionless field of perfect emptiness that is the shining ground that lurks behind and permeates all of experience. It is consciousness.”

The developmental psychologist, Jenny Wade, who wrote the foreword to Combs’ book, stated “…What makes solving the problem of consciousness so compelling is essentially personal: it would bring meaning for each one of us. It would answer those gnawing existential questions about who we are, how the world works, and what is ‘real.’ It would therefore tell us how to live and make sense of our lives.”

David Lorimer, editor of Thinking Beyond the Brain: A Wider Science of Consciousness (first published in 2001, reissued in 2023), observed in his introduction to that book that there are two different orientations related to the discussion of consciousness. The first orientation pertains to “those who follow the traditional Western method of looking from the outside in as detached observers — the third-person perspective,” and the second involves “those who look from the inside out — the first-person perspective — who are interested in exploring the nature of their own consciousness.”

Our spectrum of consciousness contains many dimensions, many of which are explained in the books discussed in this review. Lorimer’s book contains a splendid compendium of the views of various authorities on the nature of consciousness. One such contributor is Peter Fenwick, a well-known British neuropsychiatrist and author. From an academic perspective, Fenwick asserts that a comprehensive “explanation of consciousness must include three vital components: A detailed role for brain mechanisms [in contrast with the operation of the mind], an explanation for the action of the mind outside the brain, and an explanation of free will, meaning, and purpose.”

All three of Fenwick’s criteria are extensively investigated in Stephen Aronson’s book The Search for Meaning and The Mystery of Consciousness: A Psychologist’s Journey Through Gurdjieff and Jung (2022). This book is almost wholly based on the first-person perspective; it could have also been entitled Who Am I Beyond My Physical Self? (the first of the above questions of self-examination). Aronson’s book is a personal odyssey of the author’s life experiences, stretching back to his earliest years, spanning his professional career, and dipping into recent events of his life. Peppered with compelling personal encounters, psychological insights, and spiritual discoveries, the book draws a map of the invisible reality that governs our lives, shapes our nature, and perhaps determines our fate.

Aronson, a retired psychotherapist, does not regard science and spirituality as conflicting perspectives, but as complementary views of the common reality, each looking at different sides of the same equation. He does not doubt that the two can be reconciled by direct experience of a higher quality of awareness, one which can look simultaneously inward and outward. In his words, “Moving in this direction can lead to an experience of oneself as part of the Universe, and the Universe is a reflection of oneself. When this happens, there may appear a profound sense of participation in the mystery of existence through a Consciousness that seeks to know Itself and Its purpose in existing.”

While Aronson’s perspective is grounded in the teachings of psychology, it could, in philosophic parlance, also be characterized as phenomenological. The primary objective of phenomenology is the direct investigation and description of phenomena as conscious experience, without theories about their causal explanation and as free as possible from unexamined preconceptions and presuppositions. Aronson describes his continuously shifting mind states as if he were producing a phenomenological video of the kaleidoscopic shifting of his conscious attention. Coupled with this are his analytical, scientific descriptions of what is occurring in his feeling and thought processes. Aronson’s manner of talking about consciousness in such detailed experiential variations can easily result in the reader’s perception that he too has walked along similar mental pathways. In sum, Aronson’s Search for Meaning and Mystery of Consciousness contains all the necessary elements for an understanding of consciousness as prescribed by Peter Fenwick.

Returning now to David Lorimer’s Thinking Beyond the Brain, we can explore what he meant by his subtitle A Wider Science of Consciousness. He grouped into four categories his collection of 16 essays written by leading scholars in the field of consciousness studies.

The first is “The Need for a New Science of Consciousness,” whose message is that more emphasis should be placed on the look from the inside out or the first-person perspective, featuring the perceptions of those who are interested in exploring the nature of their own consciousness. Lorimer’s second grouping, entitled “Consciousness and Parapsychology,” includes essays that pertain to eyeless vision in the blind, meditation, dreams and altered states of consciousness, children’s memories of past lives, transpersonal psychology, and other parapsychological topics. The emphasis of his third grouping, “Frontiers in Consciousness and Healing,” provides examples of how psychotherapists can utilize altered states of consciousness as a means of healing mentally and emotionally stressed clients. His final selection of commentary, “Wider Perspectives on Consciousness,” is related to the development of transcendental mind states and trans-physical identity. Reflecting upon the essays contained in each of these four subject matter groupings can contribute to an expanded comprehension of what is meant by the term “spectrum of consciousness.”

Another book entitled Why? The Purpose of the Universe (2023) was authored by Philip Goff, a philosophy professor at Durham University. His research over the years has focused on consciousness and the ultimate nature of reality. He is convinced that Western thought has been dominated by the competitive juxtaposition of traditional religion and secular atheism. He contends that the time has come to move on from both long standing concepts of God and atheism and believes that there is a legitimate alternative perspective in exploring purpose in both a personal and a universal sense. Through an exploration of contemporary cosmology and cutting-edge philosophical research on consciousness, Goff argues for cosmic purpose: the idea that the universe is directed toward certain goals, such as the emergence of life. In contrast to religious thinkers, Goff argues that the orthodox God is a poor explanation of cosmic purpose. Instead, he explores a range of alternative possibilities for accounting for cosmic purpose, from the speculation that we live in a computer simulation to the hypothesis that the universe itself is a conscious mind. Goff scrutinizes these options with analytical rigor, laying the foundations for a new paradigm of philosophical inquiry in the middle ground between a common understanding of God and atheism. He outlines a way of living and a hope that cosmic purpose is still unfolding, involving political engagement and a non-literalist interpretation of traditional religion.

Goff’s diverse sources range from well-established traditional thinking to more contemporary perceptions which appeal to empirical scientists. In essence, Goff’s research explores the history of how serious, profound thinkers, ancient and modern, have regarded the notions of meaning and purpose, including cosmic purpose.

The four books discussed above pertain to human consciousness. A near synonym for the term consciousness is “awareness.” Take, for example, perception of the existence of features of the natural environment. That kind of cognizance applies not only to human consciousness but also to that of other living creatures. The brains of humans and intelligent species of animals have many similarities, both at the molecular and cellular levels.

Nevertheless, human conscious awareness has unique features based on powers of conceptual thought, aesthetic appreciation, premonitions, dreams, and other machinations of the unconscious mind, as well as the ability to design new technologies. Historically, Aristotle and later philosophers of the Judeo-Christian tradition made distinctions between the consciousness of humans and the sensory awareness of other species. With the rise of science over the past few centuries, many academics expressed the view that truly authentic, full-blown consciousness is possessed only by humans. Therefore, they contended that the cognizance of animals and other life forms has never reached the stellar levels of human consciousness. In recent years, many scholars engaged in consciousness studies have decided that although each species has its own mechanisms driving its capacity for being aware, the operating sensory mechanisms of all species can be referred to as consciousness.

Some philosophers of mind and neuroscientists strongly believe there is a continuum of consciousness that extends from bacteria to human beings. For instance, the neuroscientist Christof Koch believes that “consciousness is … probably present in most of metazoa, most animals, [and] may even be present in very simple systems like a bacterium.” Once we recognize the huge diversity of sensory mechanisms among all living species, we can easily comprehend that a bee utilizing its sensory apparatus to detect pollen is in many ways similar to renowned scholars utilizing their highly evolved sensory mechanisms, including their capacity for rational thought.

The Atlantic magazine’s principal science writer, Ed Yong, wrote a fascinating book entitled An Immense World: How Animal Senses Reveal the Hidden Realms Around Us (2022).It pertains to the consciousness of non-humans ranging from viruses, bacteria, and bugs to the consciousness of animals higher up the food chain. Our human consciousness is shaped in large part by our five senses: touch, sight, hearing, smell, and taste. The sensing organs associated with each sense send information to the brain to help us perceive and understand the world around us. However, in addition to the five basic senses, there are other human senses that you couldn’t live without, including spatial awareness and balance. These senses put us in touch with our environment. Many people believe that most non-human beings have similar senses to ours and that they function in the same or similar environment we do. However, that is a mistaken belief, because each species has its own unique set of sensory mechanisms and its perceptions of what constitutes the ambient environment also differs.

In 1909, the Baltic-German zoologist Jakob von Uexküll invented the term Umwelt (plural Umwelten), the combination of each species’ sensory faculties that empower it to be aware of and relate to its environment. That is, each species has a set of sensory capabilities that enable it to sense and experience its perceptual world. In his book, Yong explains that a multitude of creatures may occupy the same space yet have different Umwelten. For example, the Umwelt of a tick consists of a hunger for mammalian blood, an awareness of body heat, a recognition that what it touches may be hair, and a perception of the odor of butyric acid that emanates from skin. Accordingly, a tick’s consciousness or Umwelt consists of the combined functioning of these four component levels of awareness.

Yong points out that insects, butterflies, and other creatures have built-in photoreceptors which substitute for eyes. In explaining how they function, Yong provides the example of the Japanese yellow swallowtail butterfly which has photoreceptors located on its genitals. The male uses the photoreceptor cells to guide his penis over the female’s vagina, and the female uses them to position her eggs when laying them on the surface of a plant.

Another example of differing Umwelten can be found by moving up the evolutionary scale from bugs to serpents. We next consider the consciousness of a snake enabled by its own sensory mechanisms. To the human observer, a snake rapidly flicking its tongue is a fascinating sight, but Yong points out that when it darts its tongue, a snakeis smelling the world; each flick is the equivalent of a sniff. With such a highly developed capacity for smell, the snake does not need the sensation of taste. Seeing is a different matter; a snake has eyes that enable it to see. More importantly, snakes have small pits located just below their nostrils through which they can detect heat or infrared radiation. The 7000 nerve endings in these pits enable the snake to detect the slightest rise or fall in temperature. Using this faculty, a snake can detect a rodent from more than three feet away. Snakes can integrate the ability to see visually with their capability to detect heat to construct a picture of nearby objects. Using these two faculties in combination, they can sense the exact presence of their prey, including birds flying nearby.

Snakes also enjoy another powerful sensory mechanism which operates through thousands of touch-sensitive bumps on the scales of their head. This capability enables snakes to detect minuscule changes in air pressure caused by moving objects. As we have just learned, a snake’s Umwelt consists of the ability to smell with its tongue, see with its eyes, detect subtle emissions of radiation, and sense tiny changes in air pressure, thus forming mental pictures of its nearby vermin prey.

In each chapter of An Immense World, Yong concentrates on a particular component of Umwelten;he describes different sensory mechanisms for seeing, detecting color, hearing, touching, tasting, feeling pain, sensing surface vibrations, locating objects by echoes, and detecting electric and magnetic fields, and indicates how each species uses them in combination in its own Umvelt.   

Although the case has been convincingly made by Ed Yong for the existence of consciousness in various animals, there is one basic difference between animals and humans: animals apparently lack the capacity for introspective reflection. When Socrates challenged us to examine our lives, he was addressing human beings, not animals. Hence, it would be appropriate to return to the matter of how we as humans can best examine our lives. At the outset of this review, Jenny Wade was quoted as indicating that exploring individual consciousness would enhance our sense of meaning and how to live and make sense of our lives. In that same commentary, she stated that we are compelled to wonder about our lives because we are conscious.

Wade further informs us that “Consciousness is fundamentally about what’s out there as what’s in here, and what’s in here is, so far as we know, uniquely ours: the private, idiosyncratic, historical world of our own endlessly fascinating subjectivity. As we unfold to ourselves and the world unfolds to us, we experience ourselves as conscious.” She suggests that in our search for meaning as we delve into the core of our being, we need to be constantly mindful of whether what we are perceiving is “real, illusory or possibly related to the experience of any other being we perceive.” She reminds us that the quality and depth of our lifelong introspective journey will be influenced by the degree to which we are conscious. Contemplating in depth the above life-examination questions (Who am I beyond my physical self? How broad is my spectrum of consciousness? Do I have a passionate purpose?) requires a higher degree of consciousness. If you choose to follow the directive of Socrates and do a creditable job of examining your life, these five books provide useful tools to help guide your self-examination.

The 2023 Baseball Contest Winners

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Contest #1 – What effects will the new MLB rules AND the new scheduling have in 2023. The more specifics you list, assuming they are accurate, the more likely you are to make the top five submissions. Winners will be chosen by the readers of MillersTime.

Joe Higdon, Matt Wax-Krell, Nick Nyhart, and Justin Stoyer made it to the ‘finals’

While Nick Nyhart (No. 3) came in second in the voting and was also on target with his answers, Matt Wax-Krell (No. 2) was overwhelmingly voted the winner with this answer:

*New rules will work well.

*Players will adjust quickly (and already have in Spring Training), and fans will like them. It will make the game more like it was 40+ years ago when game times were short, pitchers didn’t wait 30 seconds to throw a pitch, and there4 was more action (more SBs, 2Bs, 3Bs, etc.)

*The new rules will be considered a success, but won’t address the issue of too many Ks.(True)

*Average game time gets down to 2:46 (in fact, it was 2:38 minutes in 2023).

*A player steals 50+ bases for the first time since 2017 (three in fact did).

For a good article on the effects of the rule changes, see: Whole New Ballgame: MLB’s new rules changed everything – The Athletic.

Matt has his choice of one of these two terrific books by my favorite baseball writer, Joe Posnanski – The Baseball 100 or his just published Why We Love Baseball. Plus, a MillersTime Winner T-shirt, if he doesn’t already have one. (The other three of you can get a T-shirt if you send me your size and home address)

Contest #2 – Are you a ‘homer’ or not? (a sports fan who is so blinded by their loyalty to their home team that they can’t be objective about the team’s prospects for the coming year:

a. Name your team

b. What will their season record be?

c. Where will they end up in their Division at the end of the season?

d. Will they make the 12 team playoffs?

e. If so, how far will they go in those playoffs?

f. What will be the reason for well or how poorly they do this year? Be as specific as possible.

This Contest was the closest of the three with nine fans definitely NOT HOMERS: Bill Barnwell, Jeff Friedman, Joe Higdon, Robert Higdon, Larry Longnecker, Ed Scholl, Brian Steinbach, and Dawn Wilson. The rest of you need to shape up and face reality.

Bill Barnwell and Nick Lamana tied for second. They each get copies of Joe Posnanski’s new book, Why We Love Baseball or his The Baseball 100. (Send me you home address, which book you want, and your t-shirt size.)

Jeff Friedman (Red Sox) and Joe Higdon (Nationals) are the Winners as each knew their teams were going to be hopeless and showed why. They can join me for a Nats’ game in DC, or I’ll try to join each of you for any regular season game elsewhere. In either case, I’ll pay for the tickets, and you buy the beer. (Jeff and Joe contact me about scheduling a game.)

All nine of those listed above as NOT HOMERS are welcome to a MillersTime Winners T-Shirt if you want one. (Please send me you t-shirt size and your home address.

Contest #3 –

a. Who will be the four teams playing in the League Championship series in 2023?

b What two teams will actually make it to the World Series?

c. How many games will the WS go?

d. Which team will win the WS?

e. What are the reasons that team will win?

About half of those submitting answers were only able to name ONE of the four teams in the Championship Series!

Only two of you, Ron Davis and Monica McHugh, were able to name two of the four.

And NO ONE had either of the teams in the World Series!

So I escape with not having to sponsor anyone for next year’s WS, but Ron and Monica can choose a Nats’ game to attend with me where I’ll pay for the tickets, and they can pay for peanuts and beer.

Choose the Winner of MillersTime Baseball Contest #1

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I know the baseball season ended several weeks ago, and for a variety of good and not so good reasons, I’m just getting to choosing the winners of the 2023 MillersTime Baseball Contests.

As you may or may not remember, Contest #1 involved what effects the new MLB rules and the new scheduling would have on the game and the fans in 2023. The winner would chosen by MillersTime readers from my selection of the five best submissions.

What actually happened in connection with the rules‘ changes and new scheduling in 2023:

  1. Attendance was up 9.6% to 70.7 million. (17 teams exceeded 2.5 million in attendance, three exceeded three million.)
  2. Length of game reduced by 24 minutes from 2022, 30 minutes from 2021. (Average length of game 2:39:49)
  3. Batting averages increased 5% to 2.48. (Left-handed hitters increased their batting average from .285 to .295.)
  4. Balls in play were up seven points to 2.97 & OBP up 8 points to .320.
  5. Increase in runs per game from 8.6 to 9.3.
  6. Stolen bases base success rate increased from 1.4 to 1.8 per game (75.4% to 80.2%. Acuna – 73, Ruiz – 67, Carroll – 54)
  7. Most players and others directly associated with the game ended up liking the changes. Pitchers adjusted best, hitters least (because of increased relief pitchers?)
  8. TV ratings of games didn’t change much despite shorter games and more action. (Possibly because some popular teams had disappointing seasons?)
  9. Advertising grew by 6%.

My selection of the five best submissions, with attention to accuracy and specifics:

  1. Faster games, more stolen bases, more balks, strikes called without a pitch, balls called without a pitch; it will be taken for granted by August; it limits pitcher strategy vis-a-vis base runners; fewer pick offs of runners, fewer runners caught stealing.
  2. New rules will work well; players will adjust quickly; fans will like them; it will make the game more like it was 40+ years ago when game times were shorter, pitchers didn’t wait 30 seconds to throw a pitch, and there was more action (more SBs, 2Bs, 3Bs, etc.) the new rules will be considered a success but won’t address the issue of too many Ks. Average game time gets down to 2:46. A player steals 50+ bases for the first time since 2017.
  3. Long time rivalries will seem less important, as will the benefits of familiarity we feel when a team from your own division comes to town. The rest will seem somewhat scattershot – fun to see a small group of superstars more often, but too many teams with players you’ve never heard of will bake the game a bit less engaging. On the other hand, the new rules will shorten the game but condensing the action will be the real benefit. Expect just a few more stolen bases, and the anti-shift rule will add a few hits, further enlivening the game, but not dramatically so. It’s the faster pace that will make the biggest difference. Most of the pitchers will adjust their timing as the season goes on. Craig Kimbrel will struggle more than most. One thing to expect in April and May is some well publicized battles with umps as players work the edges of the new timing rules.
  4. I think the biggest effects of the new rules will be the pitch clock affecting pitch counts and give control to pitchers. The bigger bases will see more left-handed batters have a bump in their batting averages. I see a jump of .010.
  5. For the fifth in this list, there were seven options in the running, but I couldn’t choose between them. I considered choosing Jere Smith’s, “Aw man, this is deep…I’ll just say people will still complain,” but I resisted. So you only have to choose from four.

Let me know your choice of which of the above you believe should be declared the Winner of Contest #1.

Send your choices to me at Samesty84@gmail.com by Nov. 20th.

Thanks.

Year End Call for Favorite Reads

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As I have done for the past 14 years, I am asking for a list of books you’ve most enjoyed reading in 2023.

There is no definition to the kind of book which you might add to this list. I’m most interested in what you truly enjoyed this past year (old or new books) with the thought that others might get some ideas for their reading in 2024.

Even if you think others may recommend a particular book that you liked, please include it on your list. Some of you like to know that more than one or two MillersTime readers have enjoyed a given title.

You may include book(s) you cited in the 2023 Mid-Year Review, and send as few as one title or up to five.

Please take the time to include a few sentences about the book and particularly what made this book so enjoyable for you. From what readers have said over the years, It is the comment(s) that are what’s most important about MillersTime Favorite Reads each year.\.

You have until December 20th to get your favorites to me in time for my posting of the results on Dec. 31/Jan.1. (Earlier submissions are appreciated as it takes a good bit of time to put this annual post together.)

Send me your list (Samesty84@gmail.com) with the title, author, and whether the book is fiction (F) or non-fiction (NF).

Thanks in advance.

Dispatch from The Philadelphia Film Festival

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Film festivals are not for the faint of heart. Those who hate small dark places, people who need to eat three square meals a day, those who don’t like popcorn, those who can’t imagine seeing three or four movies in one day should stay away.

The Philadelphia Film festival is the only “Film Festival” we have attended regularly. We do so in part because it’s a time to catch up with long-standing friends who live there and helped found the festival, but also because the film curation – which is broad and deep and reflects a diversity of subject matter and world view – is superb. There is an ease of access to the films you want to see, and the convenience (and necessity) of walk ability between the three theater complexes where the films are shown.

We were joined by one of our BFFs from Atlanta — Donna Pollet — for this movie marathon. And while most of the time we saw the same films, our choices sometimes diverged. Donna selected as her Top Five three films that Richard and I didn’t see.  Richard’s and my Top Five lists matched nearly identically and included three films that Donna didn’t see. Sometimes we just had to choose between several films being shown at the same time.

We saw 20 films over our 6 1/2 days in Philly. You are lucky because we’re not going to review each movie, but we will provide a brief summary of the ones we really thought were memorable. We’ve provided links so you can read more about them. Watch for these to appear in your local theaters or on one of the various TV formats.

All three of us listed the opening night feature film as a Top Film:

American Fiction. Described as a “hilariously biting satire” in the Film festival program, this is the story of a serious, but disillusioned, author who comes to terms with being ignored by the publishing industry in an outrageous and indeed, very funny commentary.

Richard and I had three foreign films as our Top Films:

Perfect Days. A Japanese film in which there is absolutely no dialogue for the first 30 minutes. The film is an homage to the ordinariness of one man’s life, a man who cleans public toilets for a living. It’s charming and enlightening.

The Taste of Things. A French commentary on love and food with exquisite sentiment, story, acting, photography, and Julliete Binoche.

Goodbye Julia. A touching and engaging Sudanese civil war story focusing on two women from different classes.

Donna had three foreign films on her Top Films list too, but they were different than ours:

Monster. A poignant story of two troubled young boys whose intense relationship is revealed in a “Rashomon-like” structure to unveil what actually transpired in a series of incidents involving their teacher and parents with distressing consequences for all.

Green Border. A dramatic and harrowing portrayal examining the refugee crisis at the Polish-Belarusian boarder viewed from several perspectives, the plight of a Syrian family, a Polish psychologist turned refugee-aid activist, and a sensitive and ambivalent Polish border guard.

The Teacher’s Lounge. A German drama of a devoted and well-intentioned teacher whose independent investigation of a series of thefts occurring in the “teacher’s lounge” immediately goes awry creating ethically dubious and disastrous, unintended consequences for the entire school. 

The fifth film on our mutual Top List was not one offered at the Film festival, but it was playing in Philadelphia. So we took the time (3.5 hours!) to see the just-released Killers of the Flower Moon. We had all read the book, and while different in some respects, we found the movie equal parts fascinating and horrifying. It provided fodder for many long discussions. You can find the mixed reviews easily.

Suffice it to say, our Top Films mentioned above have some combination of great acting and direction, powerful narratives, and terrific cinematography.

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In addition to these films, here’s a list of other films which we saw and enjoyed and would also recommend. Of course there were a few films that just didn’t work for us. but we don’t want to scare you away from something by listing them, because maybe they would work for you.

Other films worth considering:

Evil Does Not Exist. A taut Japanese film that pits countryside residents against corporate encroachment with tragic consequences.

Fancy Dance. A ‘real life’ story of a Native American woman (played beautifully by Lily Gladstone) trying to hold her family together in a very strong family drama.

La Chimera.  A funny Italian film, described as “Felliniesque,” that throws together grave robbers illegally digging for and selling priceless antiquities to gallery owners and their wealthy patrons. A highly entertaining “caper” with amusing twists and turns.

Maestro. A “big” film in which Bradley Cooper plays various stages in the life of Leonard Bernstein, celebrating his genius and his family life. See this one in a theater with a good sound system.

Rustin. A soaring biographical drama of civil rights icon Bayard Rustin, an often-overlooked leader in the Civil Right movement.  Extremely well-done and adds yet more details to the history of the Civil Rights Movement. This will be opening soon in a theater near you.

The Monk and the Gun. The film program described this as a “gently satirical comedy.” It is a story about  a village in Bhutan learning to mesh the old ways with the new.

Richland. A vivid documentary which explores a city forged by the Manhattan Project and both the pride and concerns that engendered.  Highly recommended for those who enjoyed Oppenheimer.

Upon Entry. Described as a “socio-political” film that digs deeply – and relentlessly — into a Spanish couple’s personal past as they try to enter the United States. 

Plenty of choices here for your consideration.

We can’t wait to return to Philadelphia next year!