The best books of 2024

This list is part of the best books of 2024.

Join 1,517 readers and share your 3 favorite reads of the year.

My favorite read in 2024

Book cover of The Custom of the Country

Nina Burleigh ❤️ loved this book because...

Undine Spragg, the terminally unfulfilled social climber, is an avatar of the American type embodied by Trump and his ilk: ferociously hungry for status, material wealth, for the trappings of success without the enjoyment of it. The fact that the story takes place in Gilded Age New York reminds us that it was always thus. Deeply affecting.

  • Loved Most

    🥇 Story/Plot 🥈 Immersion
  • Writing style

    ❤️ Loved it
  • Pace

    🐕 Good, steady pace

By Edith Wharton,

Why should I read it?

5 authors picked The Custom of the Country as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

Edith Wharton’s classic story of one woman’s quest for wealth and status after the turn of the twentieth century

Beautiful, selfish, and driven, Undine Spragg arrives in New York with all of the ambition and naiveté that her midwestern, nouveau riche upbringing afforded her. As cunning as she is lovely, Undine has but one goal in life: to ascend to the upper echelons of high society. And so with a single-minded tenacity, Undine continues to maneuver through life, finding all the while that true satisfaction remains just beyond her grasp.

Hailed by Elizabeth Hardwick as “Edith Wharton’s finest achievement,” The…


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My 2nd favorite read in 2024

Book cover of Machine Dreams

Nina Burleigh ❤️ loved this book because...

Jayne Anne Phillips won a Pulitzer this year, and while I might have heard her name, the fact that she got the award intrigued me, and I downloaded this, her first big novel, from the library. It's the saga of a blue collar West Virginia family, and the way the two wars of the generations in the 1940s and 1970s, affected the characters and more broadly, how men's and women's roles were changing. This is a very dry way of describing an incredibly warm and intimate and vital - and deeply sad - story.

  • Loved Most

    🥇 Immersion 🥈 Character(s)
  • Writing style

    ❤️ Loved it
  • Pace

    🐕 Good, steady pace

By Jayne Anne Phillips,

Why should I read it?

2 authors picked Machine Dreams as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

In her highly acclaimed debut novel, the bestselling author of Shelter introduces the Hampsons, an ordinary, small-town American family profoundly affected by the extraordinary events of history. Here is a stunning chronicle that begins with the Depression and ends with the Vietnam War, revealed in the thoughts, dreams, and memories of each family member. Mitch struggles to earn a living as Jeans becomes the main breadwinner, working to complete college and raise the family. While the couple fight to keep their marriage intact, their daughter Danner and son Billy forge a sibling bond of uncommon strength. When Billy goes off…


My 3rd favorite read in 2024

Book cover of 1974: A Personal History

Nina Burleigh ❤️ loved this book because...

This is a small slice of life in the mid-1970s, a memoir of a strange quasi romance between the writer, a 20-something East Coast aspiring writer transplanted to San Francisco and an older man, Daniel Ellsberg's partner in the crime of the Pentagon Papers, Tony Russo. Prose evokes the San Francisco of that intense time, and the feeling of being in one's 20s, and the strangeness of being a young woman interacting with an older man, and her inability to understand just how damaged Rand Corporation employee Russo was by guilt over the Vietnam War.

  • Loved Most

    🥇 Immersion 🥈 Originality
  • Writing style

    ❤️ Loved it
  • Pace

    🐇 I couldn't put it down

By Francine Prose,

Why should I read it?

3 authors picked 1974 as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

“In this remarkable memoir, the qualities that have long distinguished Francine Prose’s fiction and criticism—uncompromising intelligence, a gratifying aversion to sentiment, the citrus bite of irony—give rigor and, finally, an unexpected poignancy to an emotional, artistic, and political coming-of-age tale set in the 1970s—the decade, as she memorably puts it, when American youth realized that the changes that seemed possible in the ’60s weren’t going to happen. A fascinating and ultimately wrenching book.”—Daniel Mendelsohn, author of The Lost: A Search for Six of Six Million

The first memoir from critically acclaimed, bestselling author Francine Prose, about the close relationship she…


Don‘t forget about my book 😀

Zero Visibility Possible

By Nina Burleigh,

Book cover of Zero Visibility Possible

What is my book about?

When fact is stranger than fiction, fiction can be truer than alternative facts. At the center of the worst mass shooting in US history is a black hole. Why did a wealthy, white middle-aged man who liked guns and gambling and once worked for the U.S. government cause this public tragedy? Set over three days in 2017, a small group of journalists is tasked with witnessing and making sense of senseless mass violence as the truth-telling structure collapses. They struggle with malleable facts, disinformation, and conspiracy theories; they are lured by and resist the increasingly popular notion of a hallucinatory mirror world, the sense that important truths are hidden.

A dark satire about American violence and media and the lure of conspiracy thinking, this is the first novel in a trilogy exploring the effects of our dystopian times on inner lives.

Praise for Zero Visibility Possible
“Nina Burleigh's Zero Visibility Possible is a brilliant, dark, witty and
obsessively readable mystery about one of the darkest and strangest
crimes in America's recent memory...and shows us that the more our
technology knows about us, the less we know about ourselves, and even
the narrators of our national story don't always tell us, or themselves,
the whole truth.”
– Rick Wilson, author of Everything Trump Touches Dies

“2017. A baffling, horrific event, the greatest mass shooting in US history. A public tragedy with a black hole at the center, the enigma of the wealthy white middle-aged man who liked guns and gambling and once worked for the U.S. government. A small group of journalists are tasked with making sense of it while struggling variously with PTSD, failed legacy media, debased public leadership, personal crises, sex, and lies. Zero Visibility Possible is a dark satire about people bearing witness to cruelty and violence, abject to algorithms and surveillance, and the lure of conspiracy thinking as disinformation ops flood the zone and anything seems possible and true in a society de-linked from agreed-upon fact.”
– Ian Shapira, Washington Post

“In her stick-of-dynamite of a debut novel, Nina Burleigh displays a journalist’s eye for detail, a filmmaker’s skill at world-building, a poet’s way with words, and a sibyl’s gift for unpleasant prophesy. Set in an alternate reality where Donald and Ivanka exist but Steve Bannon does not, Zero Visibility Possible is a riveting thriller about mass shooters, CIA pilots, crypto operatives, and journalists of all stripes: men and women, young and old, innocent and jaded, celibate and insatiable, corporate sellouts and those still speaking truth to power. Over the span of a few days, we witness a collision of old media and new, old money and new, old reporters and new, old spooks and new—and the resulting explosion goes all the way to Plattsburgh. It’s The Crying of Lot 49 meets Network, Slow Horses in the (virtual) newsroom: a brilliant and highly entertaining book that I’m told, and I hope, is the first in a trilogy. Zero Visibility Possible possesses the ineffable and rare quality summed up in six magic words: I can’t stop thinking about it.”
– Greg Olear, author of Fathermucker and Totally Killer

Book cover of The Custom of the Country
Book cover of Machine Dreams
Book cover of 1974: A Personal History

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