Book Read April and May 2026

I got a surprising amount of reading done the past two months despite being slammed at work. I think two things helped – 1) Audiobooks for my commute, and 2) getting a bedside lamp and reading first thing in the morning (non-fiction) and last thing at night (fiction). I didn’t get around to writing an April book recap, so here is April and May recap together….

The Secret Pearl by Mary Balogh – This historical romance, first published in 1991 was a re-read for me – I picked it up to read one day in April when I was under the weather and looking for a comfort read. Mary Balogh was one of the first historical romance authors that I obsessed over – I would stalk ebay for her backlist. Her literary output now is gentler, almost sedate, but she used to write angsty romance novels with genre-busting plots that often seemed bonkers at first, but would (mostly) work. This one is no different – it’s about Fleur Bradshaw (even that name is kind of par for what’s to come) has resorted to prostitution to survive (a common theme for Balogh) and her first customer is the married Duke of Ridgeway. He immediately regrets his treatment of her and secretly engages him as a governess for his daughter. Of course they fall in love. There’s all sorts of red flags here, right??? It all sounds tawdry and sensationalist, and honestly I can’t tell if it still works or not because I loved this book so much when I first read it in my 20s so am coming with strongly nostalgic bias. The book now feel so overwrought and everyone suffers and is miserable for so much of the book, but the writing and craft of the book is still really good. I do love a good suffer and redemption and that’s here – I just don’t know if this book has aged well.

Rules for Ruin by Mimi Matthews, read by Will Watt and Elizabeth Knowelden: I had read a Mimi Matthews novella and liked it, so I thought I’d try this novel, especially since one of the narrators is my audiobook boyfriend Will Watt. This romance tells the story about Esme who is out to ruin an certain Viscount and Gabriel Royce who owns a betting shop and who has an interest in said Viscount maintaining a sterling reputation. Esme and Gabriel spar and quarrel and support and rescue each other numerous times throughout the book. This book was … fine. Enemies to lovers isn’t my favorite trope. I liked Esme and Gabriel individually – they are both smart, ruthless, competent, and kind – but they didn’t have a whole lot of chemistry as a couple.

So Long a Letter by Mariama Bâ, translated by Modupé Bodé-Thomas. I read this book for my 2026 Classics Challenge. The prompt was to read a book set in Africa. Technically this book didn’t count because it was published in 1979, and the cut off for this challenge was 1975, but I really wanted to satisfy this prompt by reading a book by an African author as opposed to a white author in Africa, so I decided this book will count. Bâ was a Muslim Sengelese writer and activist. So Long a Letter is one of two books that she published and is semi-autobiographical. The book is told in the form of a letter from the recently widowed Ramatoulaye to her sister. Ramatoulaye writes about her attempts to reconcile her life as a modern women with the traditions and morals of a traditional society and her struggles with her Husband taking a second wife after they had been married for thirty years and had multiple children. Some of this book read like a soap opera and some of it read like feminist rant against polygamy and patriarchy and some of it read like a woman tired of the every day work of being a wife and mother. What I liked most about this book was seeing how Ramatoulaye decides to move forward independently after her Husband’s death. Near the end she says, “The word ‘happiness’ does indeed have meaning, doesn’t it? I shall go out in search of it.”

Last Night at the Lobster by Stewart O’Nan – This novella follows the final day, from opening to closing, of a Red Lobster. The Red Lobster next to a Connecticut strip mall has been marked for closing and some of the employees re-assigned to the Olive Garden the next town over. Manny, the manager of the Red Lobster manages surly employees, girlfriends, ex-girlfriends, demanding customers and an oncoming blizzard. This is one of those “just a slice of life” books where people go to work and try to survive the mundane and the frustrating, the kind of thing where the parking lot has to be ploughed even while your heart is breaking and confused. I really liked this book.

Felicity Cabot Sells her Soul by Aydra Richards – Continuing on my historical romance kick. I was looking for something with a good grovel ending and Reddit told me Richards writes a good grovel. This book was fine – I felt like I was missing some major plot points because it’s the third in a series. The book starts off with the hero and heroine getting married because she needs money to keep her school open, and he has money and they were sweethearts years ago even though they hadn’t talked to each other in ten years or so, like this was literally the first or second chapter. There was some serious set up and back story missing for me. There was a nice arc for the male main character, but the heroine failed to impress me, and I usually like school teacher heroines – she just seemed like she wanted to stay mad at the hero for the sake of being mad, which was annoying because I thought he was doing everything right.

This American Woman by Zarna Garg, read by the author– Garg played the mother in the movie A Nice Indian Boy, which I had loved, so when I saw that she had also written a memoir, I looked it up on Libby and borrowed it. Garg’s book tells about her childhood in India, and how she comes to American to escape an arranged marriage and how she eventually became a stand up comedian – not something that a lot of Indian women do. She faces every challenge with a determination and focus that I found impressive. This memoir was funny but it was also grim in parts. I really liked listening to this one a lot. My favorite chapter was the one where she spent an entire chapter detailing how she decided what to wear for her stand up routines.

10 to 25: The Science of Motivating Young People: A Groundbreaking Approach to Leading the Next Generation—And Making Your Own Life Easier by David S. Yeager: This title is clearly is the book version of “clickbait” – I saw this book on a list of favorite parenting books and I thought, “Hmmm … maybe this will hold the key to getting the kids to pick up around the house….” Spoiler – it does not hold any such key. Despite that, and despite some of the chapters being a bit repetitive, I felt like I got a lot out of this book. Even more than shifting my mindset about how I motivate my kids, it’s really helped me think about how I work with my interns. I’m still making my way through all the passages I marked up (this book is the reason I can’t borrow any other library books right now because it is so massively overdue), but my main takeaways were:
a) it’s important to balance high expectations with encouragement
b) when giving feedback focus on process not results, and make sure the recipient of feedback knows that you’re giving feedback because you want them to grow.
c) Giving young people a sense of belonging and ownership is important to empowering them to take charge of a situation.
All in all, one of the better parenting books I’ve read in a while.

A Thousand Naked Strangers by Kevin Hazzard, narrated by George Newbern: So years ago, I heard an interview on Fresh Air with a paramedic who had written a memoir. What I remember the most is that he said the thing about having a woman in labor in the ambulance is that no one wants her to give birth in the ambulance, but the moment the baby arrives everyone is so happy. Anyhow, I wanted to read this memoir, but lost track of the title and author until Birchie mentioned this book on her blog and I realized this was that book I had heard about on Fresh Air so many years ago. I found this book grisly and fascinating – Hazzard has some really shocking stories from his work. But also, I think Hazzard really shows the importance of connecting with the people that he’s trying to treat; EMTs and Paramedics are often the first person someone deals with in a traumatic situation. Also, it is wild to me that he EMT course was actually quite short, and how minimal the training is to be a paramedic. I’m sure it’s a pretty thorough course, but to think that paramedics often have to treat life threatening injuries, it’s kind of amazing to me that they don’t have medical degrees. I really enjoyed this book.

The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox by Maggie O’Farrell – I heard about this book on Modern Mrs. Darcy’s What Should I Read Next podcast. I had read O’Farrell’s Hamnet and loved loved loved that book so much that I was afraid to read any subsequent books by O’Farrell lest I be disappointed. I thought, though, that her back catalogue might be a good way to read more of her writing. This novel is a dual time-line novel where in the past we follow Esme Lennox as her family moves from India back to England, and in present day we have Iris who discovers that she has a heretofore unknown great aunt in an asylum. I found this book very readable – the prose was elegant and spare, the historical elements about how women’s mental health was often trampled on was interesting to me. However I found the plot a bit formulaic. I couldn’t tell if for me the elegant writing elevated the tired tropes or if the over-used tropes brought down the writing. So all in all a good read, but I found myself very annoyed by a lot of it.

Cassandra in Reverse by Holly Smale, read by Kristen Atherton – This novel tells the story of Cassandra who one day, after getting dumped and losing her job, discovers that she has the ability to rewind her life and live it again from whatever specific point she wants. This book was not the novel I thought it would be when I first started reading it. The tone started off quite comic and wry, but the real story of Cassandra turns out to be very complex and sad. I thought the book was maybe two chapters too long and could have used a trim here or there, but Cassandra has many strands in her life to unravel and reset – family, work, friends… The one thing I kept thinking throughout this book, as I listened to Cassandra constantly re-setting her life to cover for mistakes she thinks she has made, was how imperfectly perfect life is. We might want to go back and have a second chance at many moments, but the flaws in these present moments are what make them perfect for the life we are in right now.

The History of Sound by Ben Shattuck – This is a collection of of interconnected short stories, mostly set in New England, the stories spanning three centuries. Often short story collections feel disjointed to me, but Shattuck cleverly wrote these stories in pairs where a question or minor moment or object in one story is resolved or shows up in the following story, often in surprising ways. Each story felt like a little bit of an Easter egg hunt. This book reminds me that what we experience is only one tiny sliver of what someone else might experience and there are whole worlds and truths that we don’t even know exist. Highly recommend – the stories are poignant, thoughtful, and smart. I read this collection once then immediately went back and read it all again.

The No-Show by Beth O’Leary read by Evanna Lynch, Hether Long, Kathryn Drysdale, and Luke Thompson – I’ve generally liked Beth O’Leary on audio – her novels are well paced and I usually find her characters flawed but not annoyingly so. Full disclosure, I might have wanted to listen to this book because Luke Thompson of Bridgerton was one of the narrators. This novel is told from the point of view of three different women, each of whom gets stood up on Valentine’s Day by a man called Joseph Carter. It turns out that they’ve all been stood up by the same man. I found this book really frustrating for the first two thirds; I kept thinking “I don’t know how O’Leary is going to redeem Joseph Carter.” But then the last third I found really beautiful. There is a bit of a twist in the story and once the twist is unraveled, I really liked how the rest of the story unfolded. But oh boy, it was a long time getting there, and Joseph Carter remains a little less than fully formed, even in the end.

Mindset by Carol Dweck – This book was on a lot of lists of influential behavioral psychology books to read. Dweck talks about the importance of a growth mindset over a fixed mindset – the idea that people who believe change and growth are possible will have more success than those who think their personality and skillset is innate. I found this book really repetitive. Maybe the idea was pretty revolutionary when the book was first published, but I feel like the idea of a growth mindset is pretty prevalent these days, so I didn’t gain any new insights.

Life’s Too Short by Abby Jimenez – I’ve never read a Jimenez book before so when I saw it at a Little Free Library, I brought it home with me. This novel is about Vanessa, a travel vlogger with an incurable genetic disease who is suddenly left in charge of her infant niece, and Adrian, the hot lawyer/landlord next door who befriends her. I thought the first few chapters were pretty funny, and I loved the meet cute, but ultimately I found Vanessa and Adrian had only lukewarm chemistry, the main conflict a little forced, and the resolution implausible – it was oddly melodramatic and tedious at the same time. And the ending made me want to scream. So I guess all in all, entertaining and pleasant enough, but the writing and the plotting never got off the ground for me. Tell me if I should give Jimenez another chance.

On My Proverbial Night Stand:

Murder at Gulls Nest by Jess Kidd- my current audiobook for my commute

The Euatace Diamonds by Anthony Trollope- still plugging away at this serial novel. Lizzie Eustace still won’t give those diamonds back.

Joyful Anyway by Kate Bowler- reading this for my Lenten Reading group.

Sing, Unburied, Sing by Jesmyn Ward – I’ve been using my iPad a lot for work lately and I haven’t been wanting to use it for reading so I’ve been working through my TBR of books I’ve picked up at various Little Free Libraries. There are a couple of LFL in my area that have really solid literary novel collections. This was one of those books. It’s kind of sad but full of good people.

Any good re-reads lately? Do you have a lot of Little Free Libraries where you are? Recommend me more good behavioral psychology booksI’m looking for my next non-fiction read.

Books Read, June and July 2025

I’m fitting two months in this reading recap, since I didn’t get around to writing June’s run down. I managed to read a lot in June, mostly because I wanted to finish the Mandela autobiography before I went to South Africa, so I was very disciplined about it, reading 15 pages a day for two month. July has been mostly audiobooks because of having a long commute.

Stillborn by Guadalupe Nettel, translated by Roslind Harvey – This novel tells about two friends, Alina and Laura – they are independent career driven women whose have to learn to navigate their friendship when Alina decides to have a baby and her pregnancy develops complications. This is very much a character driven book – it’s one about life just happening and explores issues of friendship, motherhood, aging, and what we owe the young people in the world. Its a quiet book – just life being lived, but also profoundly touching as well. The lack of propulsive plot made the book feel a little slow at times, but I thought it was such a thoughtful, meditative book as well. I highlighted so many passages in this book, but two of my favorite:

“Dogs are low-intensity children: they give you love, joy and loyalty. They are affectionate creatures which need to be taken care of, but which in no way stop you from living your life. If you go on a trip or if they annoy you you can just send them away to boarding school. It makes me angry to think that some people even beat them without the risk of being sent to prison. Dogs do not ask questions. If they take offence, they show it timidly and it doesn’t last long. In any case, they can’t sue you, nor demand that you pay for their therapy. Instead of needing a babysitter, it’s enough to have someone take them out for a walk for a few hours. It’s true they never become independent, but it’s also true that they live for only a short time, eighteen years or so if you’re lucky. When they get ill or grow old, many owners opt for euthanasia they prefer to say they have them ‘put to sleep’ without facing legal problems or anyone questioning them about it. I know that there are also many people who treat them well and care for them as if they were a member of the family, but this does not diminish how sad their lives make me feel.”
-I’m not really a dog person, but I completely see how dogs can worm their way into one’s heart.

She doesn’t seem ill,’ I said.
The doctor assures me that this little girl, as well as being healthy, is determined to live.

‘That’s because she doesn’t read the newspapers yet. As soon as she sees the state the world’s in, she’ll change her mind.’
Alina looked up at me and said: ‘It’s so strange, don’t you think? Why would someone who has never lived want to do so?’ I recalled something I had read years ago, in the Buddhist books I had bought on my last trip to Nepal. According to those writers, who had been born many centuries before Inés and us, the emotion that most characterizes our species is desire, and it is desire, too, that makes us reincarnate as human beings.

-I often think about this instinct to live that children have. I mean I want to live because I know about music and love and chocolate. But babies? They know nothing about these things. And then, also, our instinct to nurture children, even those that we know will not survive.

Forever Your Rogue by Erin Langston, read by Justine Eyre and Will M. Watt – I tried to read this book last year, but couldn’t really get into it, but then I saw that the audiobook featured Will Watt, one of my favorite narrators, so I decided to give it another try. This is a sweet and funny fake engagement romance novel about Cora a widowed Countess who bribes her childhood friend and current wastrel Nathaniel to pose as her fiancé so that she can win custody of her children from her evil sister in law. There were some cute touches – each chapter opens with a letter, and I do love epistolatory novels – and Nathaniel’s arc of turning his life around is quite lovely to watch. But I will say the children in the story felt utterly unrealistic to me. All in all, not earth shattering in the genre, but a perfectly pleasant historical romance novel. I wasn’t crazy about Justine Eyre’s narration – it just sounded forced and strangled. Will Watt, though was perfection.

The Undocumented Americans by Karla Cornejo Villavicencio, read by the author – I picked this book up after reading about it in an interview with Jose Andres where he cited this book as one that he thinks the President should read. Villavicencio is herself an undocumented immigrant and her book is part journalism part personal essay, as she travels across the U.S. to tell the stories of the undocumented immigrants who are embedded in the very fabric of our lives here in America. Undocumented immigrants live in a permanently liminal space – here and working, but with no access to safety nets – and Villavicencio details a lot of those lack of safety nets, from those in New York who responded to 9/11, to immigrants in Flint Michigan who were unaware of the water crisis there. Intertwined with the stories of others is her own journey and feelings about being a immigrant in America. This is a hard book in a lot of ways, and it made me realize how lucky I am because my immigration story, and that of my parents’ is very different from what it could have been. I will say, I listened to this on audio because it was the only version I could find; I might have preferred reading this to listening to it – Villavicencio’s narration is a little dry.

Long Walk to Freedom by Nelson Mandela – I read Mandela’s autobiography in anticipation of my trip to South Africa. Mandela is a legendary leader, a prominent figure in modern South African history despite being in jail for almost thirty years. I found reading Mandela’s words riveting; his childhood and schooling, the injustices he suffered as a Black man in South Africa, his daring and illegal political work, the dehumanizing conditions of prison, his capacity for forgiveness and peace-making – I found all of it inspiring. Even though this is a very large book (clocks in at almost 600 pages), it is very readable, and moves quite quickly. I was very determined to finish this book before we left for South Africa so I imposed a very disciplined reading schedule for myself – 15 pages a day. I know it’s just one man’s story, but what a story he had to tell. I highlighted the heck out of this book too.

Three Bags Full: A Sheep Detective Story by Leonie Swann, translated by Anthea Bell – This is a mystery novel featuring crime solving sheep. It was hilarious – I laughed out loud many times. The sheep casually eavesdrop on conversations in search of clues, sneak into churches and pubs and other mundane village fixtures. They are delightful. Seeing the world of humans though their eyes was a lot of fun – humans are quite incomprehensible to them. I will say, the actual mystery itself wasn’t very interesting to me, but I would read the sequel just to see what the sheep get up to next.

The Woman Next Door by Yewande Omotoso – I picked up this book because it was on a list of books set in South Africa, and I like reading books set in my destination when I travel. This novel tells the story about two eighty year old widows, neighbors in Cape Town, one White and one Black, who do NOT get along. Then things happen and they are forced to put up with each other. This book also deals with the legacy of Apartheid in today’s South Africa as Hortensia and Marion are both touched by events in the past. Read this if you want a book about crochety 80 year old women with razor sharp tongues and complicated histories.

Bombshell by Sarah McClean – The first book in McLean’s Hells Belle’s historical romance series (I’d read the second one already, and decided to start with the start of the series.) The main characters Sesily Talbot and Caleb Calhoun were side characters in another McLean novel/series, so this book felt a little bit like being dropped off in the middle of a series, even though it was the firs book of this current series. Sesily and Caleb have long been attracted to each other, and this book is a lot about them fighting that attracting while Sesily tries to covertly bring about the downfall of a dastardly Duke. (I think it was a duke?) To be honest, Sesily and Caleb were the least interesting part of the novel – they fought, made out (and then some), had misunderstanding and secrets and a little bit of martyr syndrome. Pretty standard romance stuff. The best part of the book was the friendship between Sesily and her fellow female vigilantes – their honest, loyal, bantering friendship made this book sparkle. I’m sticking to this series to read more about the female friendships.

The Red Notebook by Anton Laurain, translated by Jane Aitkin and Emily Boyce read by Alex Wyndham – (Interesting… this is my third novel in translation in this post…) I got this book because I needed a new audiobook for the car and a bunch of people on Reddit recommend Alex Wyndham as an audiobook narrator. This novel tells the story of Laurent, a bookseller, who finds a purse in the street and searches for the owner. The owner, Laure, had been mugged and is in the hospital. The books kind of feels like a Hallmark movie – predictable, warm, and a full cast of family and friends to meet and meddle along the way. There are lots of fun literary references and there is also a grumpy cat that I enjoyed. All in all, a sweet, pleasant read/listen, though not terribly memorable.

Drop Dead by Lily Chiu read by Philippa Soo and John Cho – Two rival journalists compete for the chance to write a tell all about a famed reclusive author. This enemies to lovers novel is a little different in tone from Chiu’s other books I’ve read; first of all it’s in third person alternating narratives when her past novels have been in first person. I miss a little of the quirky first person voice, to be honest, and the book also felt a little unresolved in terms of the BIG SECRET that the reclusive author was hiding. I would read this book for Chiu’s witty insights and banter, the cats, and the glimpses into the newsroom, particularly obituary writing.

The Mysterious Affair at Styles by Agatha Christie, an Audible Original – Not strictly an audiobook, rather this is a dramatized audio version of Christie’s first Poirot novel. I thought this was really really well done. The voice acting was spot on (Peter Dinklage was Poirot, Phil Dunster, who plays Jamie Tartt on Ted Lasso was another character, Rob Delany from Catastrophe played the American husband), and the writer/adaptor punched up some of the WWI aspects to create more atmosphere and tension. There was an original score that was by turns creepy and nostalgic. I don’t remember if I’ve ever read this mystery, but I was for sure as invested in finding the murderer as I was in the lives of everyone in the story.

On my Proverbial nightstand:

Nelson and Willie: Portrait of a Marriage by Jonny Steinberg – This dual biography details the relationship of Nelson and Winnie Mandela. There is a lot in this book that didn’t make it into Mandela’s autobiography. Understandably so. It’s all quite scandalous.

Five Little Indians by Michelle Good – Novel about five teenagers who struggle to adapt to life in Vancouver after leaving the church-run residential school they were forced into as children. So far it’s been grim but engrossing.

Tru Biz by Sara Novic – I started reading this book a while back, but then it went on the back burner while I finished some books that were actually due back at the library. I’m really loving this book about a high school for Deaf teens trying to live their teenage lives, and the headmistress trying to keep everything together.

The Beast Takes a Bride by Julie Anne Long – the next book in the Palace of Rogue series. It’s pretty swoony so far.

Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir, read by Ray Porter – This book is a lot of fun and Porter is a great narrator.