The best books of 2023

This list is part of the best books of 2023.

Join 1,707 readers and share your 3 favorite reads of the year.

My favorite read in 2023

Book cover of Small Things Like These

Robert Pinsky Why did I love this book?

Keegan tells the story in a way that reminded me of my first discoveries in fiction, the captivating worlds created by Charles Dickens or Mark Twain.

Back then I was young enough to be amazed that words on a page could become more real, more magnetic, than anything else; unlike those books I fell in love with as a teenager, Small Things Like These has a quiet, nearly invisible magic. The world of a small Irish town becomes the world.

The friend who recommended the book is a Jamaican sociologist—like me, from a world unlike this book, with the added amazement of recognition across distance.

By Claire Keegan,

Why should I read it?

22 authors picked Small Things Like These as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

Shortlisted for the 2022 Booker Prize

"A hypnotic and electrifying Irish tale that transcends country, transcends time." —Lily King, New York Times bestselling author of Writers & Lovers

Small Things Like These is award-winning author Claire Keegan's landmark new novel, a tale of one man's courage and a remarkable portrait of love and family

It is 1985 in a small Irish town. During the weeks leading up to Christmas, Bill Furlong, a coal merchant and family man faces into his busiest season. Early one morning, while delivering an order to the local convent, Bill makes a discovery which forces him…


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My 2nd favorite read in 2023

Book cover of We Don't Know Ourselves: A Personal History of Modern Ireland

Robert Pinsky Why did I love this book?

Fintan O’Toole’s We Don’t Know Ourselves has the rowdy elegance of an insider who lovingly, hilariously, can detail the contradictions, plights, hypocrisies, sanctities, and denials of a family he knows intimately.

He tells the truth, any reader can feel, about Irish ways of double-think regarding all sorts of political, cultural, and personal shadows. 

His Ireland made me know again, anew, my New Jersey.

By Fintan O'Toole,

Why should I read it?

4 authors picked We Don't Know Ourselves as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

Fintan O'Toole was born in the year the revolution began. It was 1958, and the Irish government-in despair, because all the young people were leaving-opened the country to foreign investment and popular culture. So began a decades-long, ongoing experiment with Irish national identity. In We Don't Know Ourselves, O'Toole, one of the Anglophone world's most consummate stylists, weaves his own experiences into Irish social, cultural, and economic change, showing how Ireland, in just one lifetime, has gone from a reactionary "backwater" to an almost totally open society-perhaps the most astonishing national transformation in modern history.

Born to a working-class family…


My 3rd favorite read in 2023

Book cover of By and By: Poems

Robert Pinsky Why did I love this book?

At first, Alan Shapiro’s brilliant book By And By scared me a little with its persistent subject, the varieties of woe — from minor to major, from ludicrous inconvenience to mortality itself.

But in fact, the book cheered me up and engaged me in its actual, central emotion, not woe but wonder: astonishment that this, too, whatever it is, can be a part of a poem, part of life.

He loves understanding: the transforming, unquenchable work of imagination.

By Alan Shapiro,

Why should I read it?

1 author picked By and By as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

The latest collection from prize-winning poet, Alan Shapiro--his best yet.

The poems in BY AND BY are both painfully intimate and otherworldly, enmeshed in contemporary culture and personal life, even while they view that life, that culture with an outraged, affectionate detachment born of a big picture sense of political and literary history. By turns funny and broken hearted, ironic and troubled, with idiomatic exactness and formal range, Shapiro explores the vagaries of a globalized world that complicates, if not destroys, the connections that it claims to serve.

"Alan Shapiro has written some of the most piercing anti-elegiac elegies of…


Don‘t forget about my book 😀

Jersey Breaks: Becoming an American Poet

By Robert Pinsky,

Book cover of Jersey Breaks: Becoming an American Poet

What is my book about?

In the late 1940s, Long Branch, a historic but run-down Jersey Shore resort town in a neighborhood of Italian, Black, and Jewish families, Robert Pinsky began his unlikely journey to becoming a poet.

Descended from a bootlegger grandfather, an athletic father, and a rebellious tomboy mother, Pinsky was an unruly but articulate high school C student whose obsession with the rhythms and melodies of speech inspired him to write.

Pinsky traces the roots of his poetry, with its vast and fearless range, back to the voices of his neighborhood, to music and a distinctly American tradition of improvisation, with influences including Mark Twain and Ray Charles, Marianne Moore and Mel Brooks, Emily Dickinson and Sid Caesar, Dante Alighieri, and the Orthodox Jewish liturgy. 

My book recommendation list

Book cover of Small Things Like These
Book cover of We Don't Know Ourselves: A Personal History of Modern Ireland
Book cover of By and By: Poems

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