Some of my favorite books from 2023

This was a year where I really fell behind on reviews, so I'm not going to call these anything definitive like my 10-top-books. But these were stories I loved and read this year, and can wholeheartedly recommend. I left out non-first series books, books where I didn't write a review at the time, and frankly a dozen other 5 star reads or more. But here are some good ones, in no particular order (links are AZ US):

You have to watch the headers, because this book repeatedly jumps back and forth in time, from 1917 to 1923, from 1932 to 1941, and onward. While I generally prefer a linear narrative, this alternation was an effective way to let the reader know more about these men and show the echoes of the past in the present. Both Ned and Charlie came out of their Great War damaged, and society inflicted even more trauma on them, but they both lived to rise above that. As with most books of this era, there is love and pain, hope with progress alongside deep, unfair, unforgivable oppression for loving who you love, and a well-earned HEA.

So he really has no time or energy to babysit the owner's son, sent to work for a year in the newsroom and learn the ropes. Worse, Andy catches Nick's eye in very unwanted ways. A turn of his head, a gesture with elegant hands, even the glint of light off his hair, makes Nick want in all-too-familiar ways. Ways that, even if Andy weren't straight as he clearly is, would be far too risky to pursue. This slow burn story is gorgeous, with yearning and hesitations very plausibly driven by the era and the situation. There's as much of an HEA as possible, and it helps to know that these guys didn't have too much longer to wait for legal safety, if not acceptance.

It wouldn't be so bad if Grady didn't also think Max was hot, or if there were more out gay players around, or if Grady wasn't so bad at dating that his sister made him a profile on Grindr. On which he put his NHL promo portrait. Leading to Max's anonymous profile accusing him of being a catfisher, and Grady deciding to call out this online guy and prove his honesty, and them meeting... and kissing... and finding out that they make each other as hot as they make each other furious. This was a lot of fun, with an enemies to lovers vibe that felt realistic, not contrived. It ended a moment before I'd have liked - I wanted that last game - but a definite reread.

I'd have loved a novel with these two, to see what happened next. There is a lot more coming when a famous person dives into a relationship, and I forsee some trials and conflicts that I'd adore to see on the page. But I was very satisfied with what we got. Lisa Henry is near the top of my list for pulling me into a story and making me care about her characters.

The secondary characters are great and add a lot to the moments of humor. There's no deep angst, but some poignancy here. I wasn't totally sold on how money problems were fixed - it seemed a bit easy - but as a whole the story was a lush slow read that worked well for me. If you like food, complex characters, and something far from the stereotypical M/M romance, this one might work for you.

There's also a darker internal thread, as Reese, our empath MC, finds out that not all empaths are the compassionate folk he imagined they had to be (due to feeling the emotions of others). And that his own mind might be not as inviolable as he hoped. He meets the empathy-immune Dead Man - Evan Grayson- whose role is to protect humans from corrupted empaths and who seems not to like him. Reese hopes to help solve the murder, but violence and danger are increasing, and he may be in the killer's sights.
I'm definitely onboard for book 2, not due out till next year.

This was light and a little farcical, but yet it kept pulling back to a core of genuine emotion and character development. I read it in one sitting (and I had other things I was supposed to be doing.) I didn't find the absurdities laugh-out-loud funny, but was pulled in to care about these two men and everything they did to stay sane in an insane world.

This is a slow-burn romance of two men, in a society that severely punishes same-sex relationships, both seeing the possibility of attraction, but slow to do anything about it. Their personalities are a good contrast, and the immersion of Robin into magic gives a chance to show his character. The magic is well done and interesting, with some unique elements to it. I also liked the strong female characters (and was pleased to see one of them star in the next installment.) The casual disdain of many of the men for their female counterparts needed taking down a notch.
The ending is HFN, with the romance pretty solidly established, but the over-arching plot just beginning to come together. The historical elements felt well done, a setting and often a plot driver, but not overwhelming the story. I immediately bought the other two books (which complete the trilogy) and enjoyed those as well.

The trans rep feels strong and real. There was an instant where it was Lin, the cis MC, rather than Morgan, who moved an important opinion, but that's probably realistic rather than cis savior. Sometimes people are mired in their opinions and it takes a new voice to open their eyes. The ending is sweet and although I wouldn't call this story realistic in all ways (eg. I can't imagine the absence of security for either of these MCs given their families' wealth) the charm of story made me willing to overlook those details.

Of course James, having first spent a year riding the rails, had to use the home address of a friend of his late mother's, and ditch his "tramp" belongings in storage, to appear of good character. Timothy joined up despite having family and a home, in an effort to do something acceptable that wasn't going to college, which he didn't feel smart enough to succeed at. Now at the end of a stint of work, with some money in their pockets, well fed and rested, both 19-year-olds have decided that getting up at 5 AM and the regimented life in the CCC had lost some of its shine. If slow-burn, true to life historicals are something you enjoy, and you can empathize with choices made in moments of desperation (which some might call cheating), check this one out.
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I hope you all had a great reading year. If you have a book you think I really shouldn't miss, I'd love to have you comment with it here.
I'm looking forward to 2024, with books I plan to write, and books I can't wait to read. Very best New Year wishes to you all.
Published on December 31, 2023 13:35
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Tags:
2023, best-of-the-year
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