Top 20 Books In 2023

Top 20 Books in 2023

Every year I set a reading goal and hope to beat it, and every year I wish I had a list of books that would suck me in or teach me something or leave me feeling excited for the next read. And every year I read the “Best of” lists and hope for the best. So here’s one more!

These were my top 20 favorite books read in 2023 (not necessarily published in 2023!). Enjoy!

  • Tom Lake — Ann Patchett
  • A Wolf at the Table — Augusten Burroughs
  • Tiny Beautiful Things: Advice on Love and Life from Dear Sugar — Cheryl Strayed
  • Descended from a Travel-worn Satchel — Chris LaTray
  • One-Sentence Journal: Short Poems and Essays From the World At Large — Chris LaTray
  • Foster — Claire Keegan
  • This Time Tomorrow — Emma Straub
  • Blow Your House Down: A Story of Family, Feminism, and Treason — Gina Frangello
  • Breath: The New Science of a Lost Art — James Nestor
  • Braided Creek — Jim Harrison, Ted Kooser
  • Girl in Pieces — Kathleen Glasgow
  • Body Work — Melissa Febos
  • This Is Happiness — Niall Williams
  • A Little More about Me — Pam Houston
  • Contents May Have Shifted — Pam Houston
  • My Grandmother’s Hands: Racialized Trauma and the Pathway to Mending Our Hearts and Bodies — Resmaa Menakem
  • The Thursday Murder Club (Series) — Richard Osman
  • The Creative Act: A Way of Being — Rick Rubin
  • When Women Were Birds: Fifty-four Variations on Voice — Terry Tempest Williams
  • The Rabbit Hutch — Tess Gunty

I’ve also created a Bookshop account to make finding these easier (although some of them were not available there) and to (hopefully) get a small kickback if you decide to purchase any of these there. As always, thanks for reading and cheers to 2024!

As a quick – how’d you come to these twenty? – well, I took my list of everything I read in 2023, deleted anything I didn’t rate 5 stars, then deleted anything that was specific to writing (I read quite a few craft books this year) and then I cheated and made The Thursday Murder Club Series a selection when it’s really four books LOL. Then I listed them in alphabetical order by author first name because that was the easiest way to order them with the info I had to work with (an export from The StoryGraph).

2023 Year in Review

Frozen
Frozen

2023 came on stunningly beautifully cold. The river was so frozen the deer were walking across it. The ice fishing, I’m told, was fantastic. And I watched a webinar with Author’s Publish in which Emily Harstone essentially said, it takes ten rejections to get one acceptance, which birthed my #100RejectionsChallenge

I began furiously writing, editing, and creating short stories and essays I could submit for publication. (As it stands currently, I have thirty-eight pieces out for submission, I’ve received fifty-three rejections, and I’ve had four acceptances).

Meeting Artists
Meeting Artists

In May I created a Patreon account and attended my first writing retreat with Laura Munson and Haven. It wouldn’t be long before I’d begin the Montana Arts Council Montana Artrepreneur Program (MAP), attend the Authors of the Flathead Writers Conference, and Writing By Writers Manuscript Boot-Camp, rounding out a year of meeting other writers and artists and encouraging me in this audacious undertaking.

Publications in 2023
Publications in 2023

I sent my first piece for publication in June, nearly six months after I started my Challenge. I got my first rejection in July and my first acceptance in September. In the six months I’ve been submitting I’ve had four pieces published in three outlets.

Writing Presentation
Writing Presentation

October was insanely busy, marking one year I’ve been writing a monthly column for The Sanders County Ledger called Whatcha Readin’. I gave my first writing presentation and was asked by multiple people to turn it into a series of talks (the best feedback ever!). And I started recording monthly 2-minute book talk videos for my local Thompson Falls Public Library.

Unexpected Moose
Unexpected Moose

I saw a Facebook meme today where the poster was asking people to sum up 2023 with one word. My word would have to be “Unexpected.” If you’d told me in January of 2023 that by December I’d be an internationally published writer, that I’d have met famous writers like Laura Munson, Chris La Tray, Mark T. Sullivan, Gina Frangello, Pam Houston, Antonya Nelson, and Antoine Wilson I would have smiled, laughed, thanked you for lying to me. I still can’t believe it. It’s like this young bull moose that sauntered onto our property in May: Unexpected. Surprising? Yes. Wonderful? Absolutely. And mostly, thoroughly, unexpected.

SundayDutro
SundayDutro

I’m closing out 2023 by finishing edits on my memoir so that I can begin querying agents in the New Year. It has been an insane year and I’m so grateful to you all for joining me. I hope/suspect it’s only the very beginning of a fabulous ride….

Introduction Video

As part of my work with the Montana Arts Council’s MAP Certification, I needed to create a short video about myself and my art. It’s not too late for me to make additions/changes/edits, so please let me know what you think.

Writing Prompt Winner: Janet Muirhead Hill

November 2023: Janet Muirhead Hill

“Pretty Good Odds for Living”

I’m totally and uncomfortably aware that my odds for living several more years outweigh those of people of all ages in some other parts of the world. If I were in Gaza, for example. I would be preparing to die. If I were in Syria, the same. How about an Argentine mother, fleeing north in an effort to save her babies from horrendous suffering and starvation? Every step of the journey is hazardous, and perhaps the most threatening is when almost there, at the border crossing into the United States with the opposite of a welcoming asylum? No here I am in the middle of a free country, living the dream, with no one bothering me, my husband or children. I’d be free if not for the compassion I feel for the earthquake victims, the victims of war, the downtrodden, starving, children around the world, some without even clean water to drink. I don’t feel free. I feel that if I can’t help, what is the use of my odds for living?

Hill writes from her rural Montana home which she shares with her husband, two cats, and two ponies. She writes for the joy of writing as she learns about life and herself through the characters in her novels and in the random poetry she occasionally pens. www.janetmuirheadhill.com