2024 Year in Review

2024 was a busy reading year, but I was pleased to see in the end that my top 10 were a nice mix of books. (You can read past Year in Review posts here.)

I want to remember that 2024 was the year I discovered Lucy Score – both the Riley Thorn series and the Knockemout series were fantastic and made for fun vacation reading for the year. 2024 was also the year I discovered John Walton’s books on scripture which led to the Bible for Normal People podcast, more books by Pete Enns, and other books on Biblical studies. When I think of 2024, these are some of the things I think of.

In my top ten, there’s one picture book, two middle grade books, and one nonfiction adult book to accompany the usual adult fiction. As an honorable mention to the top ten, I would list Dating and Dragons by Kristy Boyce as my favorite YA read from 2024, since there’s no YA option in the top ten. This is a companion book to Dungeons and Drama. I will have a full review of Dating and Dragons later this month.

Here are my top 10 favorite books from 2024:

10. The Frindle Files – This sequel to the beloved Frindle, and the last book written by the author, was everything I hoped it would be. You can read my full review here.

 

 

 

9. The Imposter – We lived this story of having a second beloved critter in case of an unfixable loss, so I hoped this would be cute and capture that experience from when my son was small. And this exceeded my expectations. This is the only picture book to make the list this year. You can read my full review here.

 

 

8. Big Witch Energy – I have thoroughly enjoyed both of the books so far in the Starfall Point series about a trio of “witches” with ghostly powers, but this book has been my favorite because of the teen characters who were an absolute treat. You can read my full review here.

 

 

 

7. No One Leaves the Castle – I have loved Christopher Healy’s middle grade novels since I first read The Hero’s Guide to Saving Your Kingdom. You will be able to read my full review of this delight later this month.

 

 

 

6. Wisdom for Faithful Reading – 2024 was a great nonfiction year for me. I still read them SOOOOO slowly, but the quality has been top notch. And this book really kicked off a year of memorable study and learning. You can read my full review here.

 

 

 

5, The Rom-Commers – Another Katherine Center book makes my Year in Review list – The Bodyguard made the list in 2022. You can read my full review of the 2024 entry here.

 

 

 

4. The Corpse in the Closet – The Riley Thorn series was EVERYTHING I needed this year from my reading – funny, flirty, and clever. I loved the characters and the mysteries in this paranormal romance/mystery series, and this book (second in the series) has been my favorite. You can read my full review here.

 

 

3. Apprentice to the Villain – Book 1 in this delightful series, Assistant to the Villain, was at the top of my 2023 favorites list. For good reason. This series is a delight. I didn’t post a full review of book 2, but I loved it just as much as book 1. I can’t wait for book 3 which will release later this year!

 

 

2. Lula Dean’s Little Library of Banned Books – This was the surprise of my reading year in 2024. I saw this in the bookstore and found the premise intriguing, but not enough to pay full price for a hardcover book. So I picked this up from the library – and was stunned by how fantastic this was. I immediately shelled out the money for my own copy because I will definitely read this one again. There are several content warnings on this one, so check out my full review here, but you won’t want to miss this one.

 

 

1. The Most Wonderful Crime of the Year – And the best of the best. I tried to describe in my full review how reading this felt in my body – all the ways I knew this book was special and would definitely be in my top 10 for the year. I don’t know that I did it justice. But this book was perfection for me – the humor and banter, the swoony romance, the book-related and writing-related content, and the top notch mystery. I re-read this before Christmas, and it was just as perfect as the first time I read it. I can’t recommend this one highly enough.

 

 

And those are my top 10 favorites for 2024! What did you read – and love – in 2024?

REVIEW: Lula Dean’s Little Library of Banned Books by Kirsten Miller

Summary


Lula Dean is on a crusade to rid the town libraries of “pornography.” It doesn’t matter that the erotic cookbook was put on a shelf as a prank. Lula has found her calling.

Beverly Underwood has been Lula Dean’s long-time nemesis. And as the head of the school board, Beverly has a front row seat as Lula and her “Concerned Parents Committee” attack the various school and public libraries with their “righteous” intensions. And the townsfolks are ready to watch the “filth” burn. Beverly is blindsided by the whole thing. But her college-aged daughter, Lindsay, is inspired to action.

In the dark of night, Lindsay swaps out the prim books in Lula’s Little Free Library for the banned titles confiscated from Lula’s crusade, setting them inside the jackets of Lula’s “approved” titles.

And then people in the town start reading those banned books – without Lula noticing.

Review


What a brilliant story! Once the premise is set up, most of the chapters focus on one person and one book from Lula’s library – and how reading that book changes something for them. It’s a series of fascinating short stories from a variety of perspectives.

Positioned around those vignettes is the larger story of Lula, Beverly, and the town. It’s stunning – like watching something get woven together. In the end as the threads are finally pulled taut, you see the whole picture come together in a way that is nothing short of brilliant. It’s a creative structure that elevates an excellent story to a whole other level. (I feel the same way about The Candymakers for kids.)

This is thought-provoking – and funny. But it’s also grim at times. I was captivated by the folks in this town and the way books influenced families and kids and siblings and spouses. The ending is supremely satisfying – including an epilogue from 2034 that was more than I even hoped for.

This will definitely be one of the top reads for me in 2024!

(Language, some sexual content. TW: racism, homophobia, rape, gun violence, suicide, white supremacy/Christian nationalism)

Rating: ♥♥♥♥♥*

*♥♥♥♥♥ – Outstanding!