Anonymous wrote:OP I can never relate to people like you who need to ask for recommendations. I have the opposite problem- my want to read list is like 500 books long!
There have been good suggestions here. Goodreads also does a poll for favorites at the end of the year so 2021 recently came out. I always try to read the top 2-3 from the genres I like.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Mysterious Benedict Society
Yes, I raided my tween's stack!
Some Kids and YA novels are so good!
Anonymous wrote:The Mysterious Benedict Society
Yes, I raided my tween's stack!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m get a lot of my reads from the “skip the line” section on Libby. I figure if it’s popular it must be good. I also listen to random great courses books.
Right now I’m reading the Silent Patient, It happened one summer, and listening to a great courses lecture on the cognitive science of learning.
You can also re-read the books you love. I go back to pride and prejudice frequently.
What's that? Is there a way to circumvent loooooong hold times?
I recently read Richard Powers' Bewilderment. I liked it, although the Post didn't. He won the 2018 Pulitzer for The Overstory, and he's good!
Now reading Jodi Piccoult's new novel about being stuck in the Galapagos during the pandemic, Wish You Were Here.
Anonymous wrote:I like Reese Witherspoon’s book club recommendations. Good ones lately have been Paper Palace, Island of Missing Trees (fabulous!), Northern Spy, Last Thing He Told Me, and if you are ok with short stories, Everything Inside.
Anonymous wrote:OP I can never relate to people like you who need to ask for recommendations. I have the opposite problem- my want to read list is like 500 books long!
There have been good suggestions here. Goodreads also does a poll for favorites at the end of the year so 2021 recently came out. I always try to read the top 2-3 from the genres I like.
I too have a very long TBR list. I like to continually add books to my library reserves because the wait time for ebooks can be so long. I aim to read at least 60 new books a year, plus re-reads. Anonymous wrote:I’m get a lot of my reads from the “skip the line” section on Libby. I figure if it’s popular it must be good. I also listen to random great courses books.
Right now I’m reading the Silent Patient, It happened one summer, and listening to a great courses lecture on the cognitive science of learning.
You can also re-read the books you love. I go back to pride and prejudice frequently.
Anonymous wrote:My Brilliant Friend