My Favorite Books of 2024
I’ve been meaning to share my favorite books of the year and I figure I better do so before we get too ridiculously deep into 2025. I read just over 80 books last year, which is low for me, but I had so many favorites and books that I just really, really enjoyed so I can hardly complain.
My caveats for this list are, 1) these are my favorite books I read in a year, not the “best” because who am I to decide what is a best book when what I love you might hate, and vice versa and 2) I don’t limit myself to any particular number because why do so when it comes to books? Also, it’s my list, and I make the rules!
I read a lot more adult books than YA books, which is a little unusual for me, so this list skews a bit older. That said, some of the YA books this year are mega favorites and will probably end up being “foundational, re-read every few years” kind of books.
I also thought I’d share my percentage breakdown of genres–this is my favorite part of tracking my reading each year! I’ve tried to go back over 6+ years of reading to get a feel for patterns, but really my genre reading shifts so much I never know where it’ll land. Mystery is always a big genre for me, but fantasy and romance are up there too!

Okay, now on to the books!
Skye Falling by Mia McKenzie
This book follows Skye, a thirty-something woman who almost forgot that she once donated her eggs to a once-close friend some years earlier and has since gone on her merry way, living life to the fullest by running a travel company and avoiding her roots. But when she’s home for a bit and a pre-teen girl crashes a party to inform Skye she is the result of the egg, Skye is suddenly faced with the reality of this long-ago decision. Meeting her offspring is a huge shock, even more so when she realizes the girl’s aunt and guardian is the woman she unsuccessfully hit on recently. This was a really tender but also bitingly hilarious book about Skye attempting, for the first time in her life, to be responsible and realizing that she has to face the parts of herself she’s been running from along the way.
The Blonde Identity by Ally Carter
I believe that as a reader of Gallagher Girls who is now grown up and someone whose father owned a DVD of The Bourne Identity that was on heavy rotation in the early aughts, I am the target audience for this book! It opens with a woman waking up in Paris with a throbbing headache and someone who is apparently trying to kill her. This little problem sends her right in the arms of a hot spy guy, who thinks she is her twin sister (who is a real spy!) and the action does not let up from there as they are pursued across Europe. Our protagonist has to try and unravel the secrets of her past while learning who to trust…and trying not to fall for the hot guy. It’s hilarious and a bit absurd, but probably the most fun I had reading in 2024.
The Silent Stars Go By by Sally Nicholls
Look, I loved this book so much that I read it twice in 2024 and I can envision this one going into regular rotation. It’s about Margot, a young woman in 1919 who has returned home to her small English village for Christmas. It’s the first proper Christmas since the war, with the boys back home, including Margot’s fiance, whom she thought dead. This should be a joyous time, but it’s not–because Margot has a secret. She was pregnant when her fiance went to the front, and she had the baby, who is now being raised by her parents as her brother. The shame and anguish of this situation is killing her, and Margot is afraid to tell him the truth…but now that everyone is home, it might be unavoidable. This book is so bittersweet and beautifully, simply written. I inhaled it, both times I read it.
Killer House Party by Lily Anderson
I’m a huge Lily Anderson fan, and this book was yet another fantastic YA novel that takes a genre or trope and challenges readers to really think while also being super fun at the same time. Mia has found out that her real estate parents, who’ve just divorced, have squandered her college savings on buying a mansion in her hometown that they intend to flip. Without a lot of options and in need of raising $15,000 quickly, she decides to throw a graduation party in said mansion and charge her fellow students to raise the funds. But things go horribly awry when the mansion doors close and Mia realizes that the house has no intention of letting them out alive.
All This & More by Peng Shepherd
This book is like what you’d get if Black Mirror and Choose Your Adventure novels had a baby! Mallow is chosen to go on a new reality TV series that allows the star to go back to pivotal moments in their lives and choose differently. But of course, things aren’t always as straightforward, especially when no one really knows who is responsible for the show or the technology it uses, nor do they understand precisely how it works. I had such a hard time choosing when it came time for the story to branch off in part because the writing was so good, I wanted to see where both directions led. (And I did end up re-reading a big chunk of the book to see where all those threads went!) Bonus, I got to do an event with Peng this summer and actually chat with her about the book, and how it blew my mind.
Slow Dance by Rainbow Rowell
This book is full of yearning and love and regret and second chances and I could not put it down! When they were teens, Shiloh and Cary were friends who always seemed to be teetering towards something more…but there was always something standing in their way. Then, they went their separate ways after high school and haven’t seen each other until now. At 33, Shiloh is a single mom who can’t help but feel like she’s backsliding in life, but reconnecting with Cary alights something inside her that can’t be denied. This book doesn’t have an explosive plot or major twists, and yet the tension is exquisite!
The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches by Sangu Mandanna
Mika is a witch, but she’s always hidden her powers and lived alone, for it’s believed that too much magic in one place can draw the wrong sort of attention. But when her online videos of simple magic attract the attention of someone who knows magic is real, Mika is surprised when she’s offered a job: tutor three young witches who haven’t yet mastered their own magic. Intrigued, Mika moves to a house by the sea where she meets the girls and their eclectic caretakers, and finds her entire life changed for the better. This is such a warm hug of a book, with a really sweet romance and a golden retriever. If you love The House in the Cerulean Sea by TJ Klune, this book is for you!
The Hunter by Tana French
This is technically a sequel to French’s previous novel, The Searcher, although I think you could dive in and not know anything about the characters. It follows a retired American detective named Cal living in the Irish countryside. His life is quiet, spent woodworking and mentoring Trey, a young teen who has her own scars. When Trey’s good-for-nothing father returns to the county, he rbings with him trouble, and it’ll take everything Cal has to keep Trey from getting drawn into a dark scheme. One of the things I love the most about French’s writing is she writes settings that you can just sink into and this book is no exception.
Come & Get It by Kiley Reid
I loved Reid’s debut, Such a Fun Age, and I thought this one was equally thought-provoking and absorbing. It follows an interesting assortment of characters on the University of Arkansas campus: a writer and visiting professor conducting some dubious research, a super-senior RA with a very specific goal, and an assortment of young women living and clashing in a suite. A series of events brings all of them in each other’s orbit, setting off a string of unstoppable events. (Be warned, if you work in higher ed this book will give you a small heart attack but it’s VERY entertaining.)
Most Ardently by Gabe Cole Novoa
Unsurprisingly, I love a good Austen retelling, especially one that offers a unique lens on the classic story. And does this one deliver–Gabe recasts Elizabeth Bennet as Oliver, a trans boy who is looking to forge his own path. Falling in love is beyond his wildest dreams, and Mr. Darcy certainly wouldn’t be his first choice, either, but the mor4e often he keeps running into him, the more Oliver begins to fall. I loved that Gabe kept the Regency setting (queer people have always existed!) and I so enjoyed seeing how he used the classic plot points to tell a truly fresh story!
Early Morning Riser by Katherine Heiny
I wanted to pick up this book forever because it’s Very Michigan–it’s set in Boyne City, which I’m familiar with. It’s about Jane, who moved to Boyne City to take a teaching job and quickly falls in love with Duncan. Duncan knows everything–and he’s had a lot of exes–but despite his charm and his adoration of Jane, he’s not interested in marriage. However, when a terrible accident alters both Jane and Duncan’s lives forever, they find that life has a funny way of leading them down paths they least expect. I really adored this book, and the shoutouts to the best ice cream place, Kilwin’s.
The Mimicking of Known Successes by Malka Older
Lesbians solving crimes in space, what more could you ask for? Mossa is an investigator searching for a missing man, and her hunt leads her to an outpost on Jupiter where no one but scientists dwell. This unlikely place is where she ends up running into Pleiti, an old girlfriend, and they team up to solve the mystery while rekindling their romance. I really enjoyed this novella and I need to grab the sequel(s)!
A House with Good Bones by T. Kingfisher
I love that T. Kingfisher writes fantastic horror novels that are also funny. (The Twisted Ones is one of my favorites!) In this book, Sam is an archeaologist on an extended visit back home, where her mom lives in their family home, inherited from Sam’s grandma. Sam is looking forward to a fun and relaxed visit but she’s not home a day before she realizes that something is really wrong with her mother, who is jumpy and ill at ease, and the house is sterile and decorated in her long-dead grandmother’s style. The more Sam digs into the past, the closer she gets to digging up some truly horrifying secrets.
Uprooted by Naomi Novik
This book has been on my TBR forever, and I loved this book so much. It follows Agnieszka, a young woman in a magical wood where every ten years, a girl is sent to live in a tower with the Dragon, a wizard of formidable power. Agnieszka is stunned when she is chosen but it’s not long after moving to her strange new home that she discovers the woods beyond her village harbors a menacing force and he has a fledgling magic within her to fight it. The best thing I can say about this book is if you love Howl’s Moving Castle, this is a grown-up book for you.
Brooms by Jasmine Walls and Teo Duvall
This is a fantastic graphic novel that follows a group of young women living in an alternate 1930’s MIssissippi, where magic exists but is outlawed for people of color and Native people. When two young Native women are at risk of being sent away for their magic, they join a broom racing team in the hopes of winning enough money to head west, where they can live and practice magic freely. But broom racing is not only dangerou–it’s illegal. I loved the colorful and energetic illustrations, and the author and illustrator do such a great job of juggling a large cast of diverse characters.
Christmas Is All Around by Martha Waters
I love Christmas, but my favorite genre of Christmas media is “Christmas is the best but also the worst, why does everyone go totally bonkers this time of year?” and this book is just perfectly that. Charlotte is a former child actor in a very famous Love Actually-esque Christmas movie, but now as an adult, Christmas is just annoying and she has no interest in starring in the rumored reboot of the movie. She flees to London to spend the holidays with her sister where she meets Graham, whose family owns an estate that was a filming location of the movie. Charlotte reluctantly agrees to help him try to get more visitors to save the floundering estate, all the while trying and failing to ignore the attraction that is shaping up to be the perfect Christmas romance.
At Her Service by Amy Spalding
This is the second Out in Hollywood romance novel (you don’t have to read them in order but I recommend For Her Consideration!) and it follows Max, a twenty-something who excels at her job but feels like she’s floundering in life. She can’t even admit she has a crush on Sadie, the bartender at her favorite dive bar. When her roommate convinces her to try a new self-actualization app, Max finds herself winning in all aspects of life and getting the girl…but when social media interferes, Max will have to stand up for what she wants and make her own moves. This was such a delightful book, and I can’t wait for the next in the series.
Rainbow Black by Maggie Thrash
Lacey is thirteen when Satanic Panic in her small New Hampshire town tears her family apart. Years later, she’s a lawyer in Canada and working for a judge when her past catches up with her, and she finds herself facing her many questionable decisions, as well as the family she hasn’t seen in years. Honestly, this book made me so uncomfortable (in a good way?) and I could not tear myself away from it.
Divine Rivals and Ruthless Vows by Rebecca Ross
I finally picked up these books in early 2024 after so many recommendations and had to dash out of my house in between a snowstorm and an actual blizzard to grab the second book because I was so hooked! In a fantasy world that draws from WWI England, Iris is missing her brother, who has gone to war. She writes him letters and when they disappear, she has no way to know they’re ending up in the hands of Roman, her wealthy rival at the newspaper they work at. When Iris, desperate for information about her brother, heads to the frontlines, Roman goes after her. There, they find the war is far more dangerous than they could have imagined and encroaching ever closer. The writing in these two books is absolutely gorgeous, and I was thoroughly enchanted by the world and the magic and romance.
Long Bright River by Liz Moore
I actually picked up this book before Liz’s new release (see below) because it’s been on my radar forever. It’s about a woman who is a single mom and police officer who, one day, finds the body of a woman and it reminds her a little too much of her estranged sister, who is struggling with addiction. When she tries to find her sister, she’s unnerved to find that no one has seen her, and sets out to try and track her down when it is becoming clear that someone is killing women on the streets. This isn’t a thriller, although it has some thrilling moments, but a really sensitive portrayal of what it’s like to have family members you love but don’t have an active relationship with at the moment, and the setting (Philadelphia) is really brilliantly rendered. If you liked Mare of Eastown, you’ll like this book.
The God of the Woods by Liz Moore
Surprise surprise, this is one of my favorite books of the year along with every other reader who picked up this brilliant novel. One thing to know about it is that it’s nearly 600 pages long and I read it in two days–I was hooked. It’s about a teenage girl who goes missing from a summer camp some years after her older brother also went missing. The ensuing investigation dredges up family secrets and a large cast of characters peels back the layers of the complicated cases that are separated by many years but are absolutely connected. Gorgeous writing, compelling characters, a riveting premise…I could easily see this becoming a limited run series.
The Phoenix Crown by Kate Quinn and Jane Chiang
I’m a huge Kate QUinn fangirl–after The Huntress, I’ll read anything she writes–so naturally I picked up this novel, co-written with Jane Chiang, whose work I was unfamiliar with. This novel follows three very different women in San Francisco in 1906–an opera singer, a scientist, and an embroidery designer who find their paths tangling with a very powerful man during the earthquake. They escape (barely) with their lives, but years later they track down this man and one of them decides she wants revenge. It’ll take call on their friendship once more if they’re to survive a second time. I enjoy Kate Quinn’s WWII and adjacent settings, but it was fun to go to a different time period here, and as always, I appreciate that some of these characters are queer. (More queer people in historical fiction, yay!)

The Briar Club by Kate Quinn
Kate Quinn was busy this year! She also released this novel, which takes place in Washington D.C., post WWII. It follows the eclectic group of women who live in a boarding house and how they exist separately, but slowly build a community with each other (some are more willing than others). But the charming and enigmatic woman who brings them all together has a secret. The structure of this book had me uncertain at first, but as soon as I gave myself over to it, I was totally sucked in! (The house has some POV chapters!) I did not guess the twist and I was delighted and fascinated when it was revealed. As always, Kate Quinn really brings history to life.
Let me know what your favorite books of the year were!


