2024 Reading

Back in July I shared my reading list from the first half of 2023. As we launch into a new year, I’ll share what I read during the second half. Looking back over the past six months, I notice my reading focused primarily on history, including a hefty trilogy of historical fiction.

One note of explanation: The book about Hitler was written in 1941 by Stephanie’s maternal grandfather’s first cousin, a Pulitzer Prize winning foreign correspondent. My mother-in-law passed along a first edition printing of the book. It’s a fascinating read since it was written before Pearl Harbor and the entrance of the United States in World War II. It offers a glimpse of how history could have turned out differently.

Memoir

  • Chita: A Memoir by Chita Rivera

  • All the Beauty in the World by Patrick Bringley

  • Dirt by Bill Buford  

  • Not My Father’s Son by Alan Cumming

  • Pageboy by Elliot Page

Biography

  • Catching the Wind: Edward Kennedy and the Liberal Hour 1932-1975 by Neal Gabler

  • The Wright Brothers by David McCullough

  • Benjamin Harrison (The American Presidents Series) by Charles W. Calhoun

Nonfiction

  • Is Tomorrow Hitler’s? by H.R. Knickerbocker

  • Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind by Yoval Noah Haran

Essays

  • These Precious Days by Ann Patchett 

Fiction

  • Fall of Giants (book one of The Century Trilogy) by Ken Follett

  • Winter of the World (book 2 of The Century Trilogy) by Ken Follett 

  • Edge of Eternity (book 3 of The Century Trilogy) by Ken Follett

  • Tom Lake by Ann Patchett

  • A World of Curiosities by Louise Penny

Full confession: I have not finished Edge of Eternity. The Century Trilogy totals about 3,000 pages. I put the book down with 500 pages to go several weeks ago and haven’t returned to it, which tells me I may be done with the 20th century! I’m inclined (by putting it on this list) to call it complete.

I’m always interested in book recommendations, so feel free to share books you’ve enjoyed. I added several of your recommendations from July to my book list for 2024. There’s so much to read!

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