The 2024 Releases I’ve Read So Far

I happen to have read eight pre-release books so far, all of them for paid review; mostly for Shelf Awareness, with one for Foreword. (I also have proof copies of upcoming novels by Tania James, Margot Livesey, Sigrid Nunez and Sarah Perry on the shelf, but haven’t managed to start on them yet.) I’ve given review excerpts, links where available, and ratings below to try to pique your interest. Early in January I’ll follow up with a list of my dozen Most Anticipated titles for the coming year.

 

My top recommendations so far:

(in alphabetical order)

Theophanies by Sarah Ghazal Ali [Jan. 16, Alice James Books]: In this poised debut collection by a Muslim poet, spiritual enlightenment is a female, embodied experience, mediated by matriarchs. Ali’s ambivalence towards faith is clear in alliteration-laden verse that recalls Kaveh Akbar’s. Wordplay, floral metaphors, and multiple ghazals make for dazzling language.

 

Grief Is for People by Sloane Crosley [Feb. 27, MCD]: A bereavement memoir like no other. Heart-wrenching yet witty, it bears a unique structure and offers fascinating glimpses into the New York City publishing world. Crosley’s apartment was burgled exactly a month before the suicide of her best friend and former boss. Investigating the stolen goods in parallel serves as a displacement activity for her.

 

Behind You Is the Sea by Susan Muaddi Darraj [Jan. 16, HarperVia]: Darraj’s second novel-in-stories is a sparkling composite portrait of a Palestinian American community in Baltimore. Across nine stellar linked stories, she explores the complex relationships between characters divided by—or connected despite—class, language, and traditional values. The book depicts the variety of immigrant and second-generation experience, especially women’s.

 

The Ritual Effect by Michael Norton [April 9, Scribner]: Many use the words “habit” and “ritual” interchangeably, but the Harvard Business School behavioral scientist argues convincingly that they are very different. While a habit is an automatic, routine action, rituals are “emotional catalysts that energize, inspire, and elevate us.” He presents an engaging and commonsense précis of his research, making a strong case for rituals’ importance in the personal and professional spheres as people mark milestones, form relationships, or simply “savor the experiences of everyday life.”

 

Other 2024 releases I’ve read:

(in publication date order)

House Cat by Paul Barbera [Jan. 2, Thames & Hudson]: The Australian photographer Paul Barbera’s lavish art book showcases eye-catching architecture and the pets inhabiting these stylish spaces. Whether in a Revolutionary War-era restoration or a modernist show home, these cats preside with a befitting dignity. (Shelf Awareness review forthcoming)

 

The Fox Wife by Yangsze Choo [Feb. 13, Henry Holt/Quercus]: Choo’s third novel is steeped in Chinese folklore, like her previous work, this time with a focus on tantalizing stories related to foxes, which were often worshiped at village shrines in China. Two tandem searches ramp up the level of suspense: in the winter of 1908 in Manchuria, in northeast China, a detective investigates a series of unexplained deaths; at the same time, a fox-woman masquerading as a servant plots vengeance against the man who murdered her child.

 

The Only Way Through Is Out by Suzette Mullen [Feb. 13, University of Wisconsin Press]: A candid, inspirational memoir traces the events leading to her midlife acceptance of her lesbian identity and explores the aftermath of her decision to leave her marriage and build “a life where I would choose desire over safety.” The book ends on a perfect note as Mullen attends her first Pride festival aged 56. “It’s never too late” is the triumphant final line. (Foreword review forthcoming)

 

36 Ways of Writing a Vietnamese Poem by Nam Le [March 5, Knopf]: A fearless poetry debut prioritizes language and voice to explore inherited wartime trauma and expose anti-Asian racism. Each poem is titled after a rhetorical strategy or analytical mode. Anaphora is one sonic technique used to emphasize the points. Language and race are intertwined. This is a prophet’s fervent truth-telling. High-concept and unapologetic, this collection from a Dylan Thomas Prize winner pulsates. (Shelf Awareness review forthcoming)

 

Currently reading:

(in release date order; all for Shelf Awareness review)

God Gave Rock and Roll to You: A History of Contemporary Christian Music by Leah Payne [Jan. 4, Oxford University Press]: “traces the history and trajectory of CCM in America and, in the process, demonstrates how the industry, its artists, and its fans shaped—and continue to shape—conservative, (mostly) white, evangelical Protestantism.”

 

Raised by Wolves: Fifty Poets on Fifty Poems, A Graywolf Anthology [Jan. 23, Graywolf Press]: “Graywolf poets have selected fifty poems by Graywolf poets, offering insightful prose reflections on their selections. What arises is a choral arrangement of voices and lineages across decades, languages, styles, and divergences, inspiring a shared vision for the future.”

 

The Paris Novel by Ruth Reichl [April 30, Random House]: “When her estranged mother dies, Stella is left with an unusual gift: a one-way plane ticket, and a note reading ‘Go to Paris’. But Stella is hardly cut out for adventure … When her boss encourages her to take time off, Stella resigns herself to honoring her mother’s last wishes.”

 

Will you look out for one or more of these?

Any other 2024 reads you can recommend?

 

That’s it for me until later next week when I start in on my year-end round-ups (DNFs, miscellaneous superlatives, books of the year, and final statistics). Merry Christmas!

20 responses

  1. I love the title of the Crosley memoir (so brutally revealing), and the content sounds pretty great too. Suzette Mullen’s memoir also sounds really worthwhile. I’m very keen for Sarah Perry’s newest, and though I’m trying to avoid contemporary litfic hype, I’ve been entranced by blurbs for Kelly Link’s The Book of Love, Tlotlo Tsamaase’s Womb City, Elizabeth Gonzalez James’s The Bullet Swallower, and Percival Everett’s James.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. “Grief is for people, not for things” is the sentence the title comes from, whereas the disappearance of her jewelry is much easier for her to tackle and make sense of than Russell’s death. I’d tried Crosley’s essays before and not gotten on with them, but this was fantastic.

      I am looking forward to the Perry very much. I briefly worked with Elizabeth Gonzalez James at Bookmarks magazine. So glad to know her work is on your radar!

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  2. You’ve already read so many books for 2024!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Shelf Awareness deadlines are either a month or three months ahead. Foreword deadlines are usually one season ahead. So that, rather than blogging, explains why I sometimes read early review copies.

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  3. I like the sound of Grief is for People. I am currently reading My Friends by Hisham Matar due for release next month and am enjoying it very much.

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    1. The Matar is on my radar; I’ve only read nonfiction by him so far but would be interested in trying his fiction.

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      1. I’m about a third of the way through and enjoying it so far.

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  4. Oh, what a great range! I’m immediately drawn to the Darraj and the Mullen. I only really read thrillers ahead of time, but can definitely recommend Christie Watson’s Moral Injuries – I think you’d enjoy the medical detail!

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    1. Oh, cool! That was on my radar but I wasn’t sure because I’ve liked her nonfiction a lot more than her fiction so far. I’ll give it a go.

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  5. The Crosley is the book I’m looking forward to the most. I love her writing (and her – heard her speak this year and was totally fan-girling), and combined with writing about grief – WIN.

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  6. Behind You Is the Sea piques my interest (of course!). Nothing for 2024 read here yet but I feel the weight of a million NetGalley books published in January massing!

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    1. I feel January’s review books pressing as well! It doesn’t help that two of mine are 450+ pages…

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  7. I’m really looking forward to Amy Jo Burns’ latest novel, Mercury–should be arriving soon. I really enjoyed her Shiner.

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  8. Sounds like your reading year is off to a great start! Nam Le’s book intrigues me. I’ve got a handful of 2024 books in my stack, but I am still mostly existing in 2023 for now.

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    1. There’s been some great stuff so far. I’m sure you’d enjoy the Nam Le. Have you been amassing review copies?

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      1. I’ve been very cautious over the past six months, so not as many as usual, no. And only two (three, maybe?) that aren’t Canadian. But the past couple of months I’ve been keeping up with the newspapers and reviews again, so that’s definitely whetting my appetite.

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  9. […] reading will be current-year releases. I’ve already read 10 releases from 2024 (8 are written up here), and I’m also looking forward to new work from Tracy Chevalier, Matt Gaw, Garth Risk Hallberg, […]

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  10. […] lives of three Palestinian immigrant families living in Baltimore. Timely, and I was drawn in by Rebecca’s review. NetGalley ARC, also […]

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