Favorite Essays, Short Stories, Novels, Short Story Collections, and Memoirs I Read In 2024
Curated reads.
Favorite Essays:
My unraveling. I had my health. I had a job. And then, abruptly, I didn’t. (The unraveling of our bodies can happen to any one of us, at any time. I remember the haunting images in this haunting essay.)
Ghost dogs (I want to read this one again but I’m scared because the dog scenes are heartbreaking. A moving essay on the love of a human for a dog and a dog for a human.)
My name is a mountain
We were being boys
The shapes of silence
Does my love for a straight man change my queer identity?
What happens when we stop remembering
My body remembers the story you want to erase
Why A.I. isn’t going to make art (the best critical essay I read on A.I. this year)
The bullet in my mother’s head
The butterfly redemption, Brian Payton (best memorable ending scene in a reported essay)
Favorite Short Stories:
Presence, Gina Chung
On the Origin of an Ending, Electric Literature
Elbow in Zulu, Dara Kell
An account of the land of witches, Sofia Samatar
Among the remains, The Forge Literary
Favorite Novels:
Prophet Song by Paul Lynch
All the Colors of the Dark, Chris Whitaker (Oh, my goodness, the pacing in this novel is breathtaking. And the prose made me wish I could write that way. )
The White Book, Han Kang
The Book of Love, Kelly Link
The Language of Dying, Sarah Pinborough (This is a novelette. Detailed emotions and beautiful prose.)
Favorite Short Story Collections:
I learned something important about short story collections this year. While I was studying how to arrange my short stories for my debut short story collection, I came across On Writing Fiction by David Jauss. There’s a chapter called Stacking Stones: Building a Unified Short Story Collection. Before reading this chapter, I used to think, and even told friends, that I read the stories in a short story collection in any order I like. I’ve done this for years. I learned, after reading this chapter, that this was wrong. There’s an art to the arrangement of stories in a short story collection. By reading the stories in any order I like, I was losing meaning. I was treating a story collection—not as a book. A story collection is a book. Would you read a novel beginning from the middle or the last chapter? I wouldn’t. A short story collection should be read the same way, unless you’re okay with losing the meaning of the whole book.
“If the collection is well constructed, reading the stories out of sequence is like listening to the movements of a symphony out of order—we do violence both to the parts and the whole.” –On Writing Fiction by David Jauss
These story collections, I read them in the order in which the writer arranged them:
In This Ravishing World, Nina Schuyler (My review of this remarkable book)
A Kind of Madness, Uche Okonkwo
Green Frog, Gina Chung
Ghostroots, Pemi Aguda
Roman Stories, Jhumpa Lahiri
Favorite Memoirs:
Here After, Amy Lin
Frighten The Horses, Oliver Radclyffe
We’re Alone, Edwidge Danticat (I devoured the essays in this book. Essential.)
Somehow, Anne Lamott
Favorite Books on the Craft of Writing I Read in 2024:
Truth Is The Arrow, Mercy Is The Bow, Steve Almond (Writer friends have been nudging me to read this book for almost a year, and I finally picked this book last month that’s been sitting in my TBR list. I’m so glad I did. I especially like the chapter titled The Price of Entitlement & The Wisdom of Failure. That last phrase, the wisdom of failure, I can’t stop thinking about it. Wisdom and failure, together, making up a phrase. If you’re a writer and you’ve ever felt like giving up, because of rejections, read this book.)
Blueprint for a Book, Jennie Nash (There are 14 fundamental questions in this book as an exercise to make the stories you write better. This book is so good that I’ve made notes of these questions—to answer them for every story I write.)
Favorite Books on Prose I Read in 2024:
This year, I read more books on writing good prose than any other year. I researched on the best books on writing good sentences. The following are good books for writing good sentences, sentences that sing.
The Anatomy of Prose, Sacha Black
Building Great Sentences, Brooks Landon (I like that there are examples of great sentences in this comprehensive book. I especially liked the chapter on cumulative sentences, those sentences that seem to go on and on, that take your breath away. I like reading sentences that just run, stealing my breath. There’s a whole chapter on how to write these kinds of cumulative sentences.)
Spellbinding Sentences, Barbara Baig