The Best Books I Read in 2024
In 2024, I finished a total of 178 books:
And as I know you didn’t click over here to read a long introduction, I’ll jump straight into the meat of the matter.
Without further ado…
The Best Books I Read in 2024
The books I loved the best of all the books I read in 2024 are the following (in order by last name):
Red Rabbit, by Alex Grecian
The Knockout Queen, by Rufi Thorpe
Corey Fah Does Social Mobility, by Isabel Waidner
For how I came up with my list, scroll down for my decision criteria.
Click here to see my favorite books from 2023 and, from there, track back to check out my favorites from previous years..
My Runners-Up for 2024
These books (also in order by last name) met all but one of my decision criteria:
The Most, by Jessica Anthony
Martyr!, by Kaveh Akbar
Beautyland, by Marie-Helene Bertino
Havoc, by Christopher Bollen
Bitter is the Heart, by Mina Hardy
The Night Guest, by Hildur Knútsdóttir
Woodworm, by Layla Martinez
Bolded Books in 2024
Across all the books I read, these are the books I bolded as my favorites for the year:
Shark Heart: A Love Story, by Emily Habeck
Nestlings, by Nat Cassidy
Red Rabbit, by Alex Grecian
The Future, by Naomi Alderman
Your Shadow Half Remains, by Sunny Moraine
Corey Fah Does Social Mobility, by Isabel Waidner
Beautyland, by Marie-Helene Bertino
Martyr!, by Kaveh Akbar
The Parliament, by Aimee Pokwatka
Success and Luck: Good Fortune and the Myth of Meritocracy, by Robert H. Frank
Ways and Means, by Daniel Lefferts
Story, by Robert McKee
The Story Grid, by Shawn Coyne
The Emotional Craft of Fiction, by Donald Maass
Writing 21st Century Fiction, by Donald Maass
Margo’s Got Money Troubles, by Rufi Thorpe
My Sister, the Serial Killer, by Oyinkan Braithwaite
End of Active Service, by Matt Young
The God of the Woods, by Liz Moore
Annie Bot, by Sierra Greer
The Bang-Bang Sisters, by Rio Youers
Humor Me, by Cat Shook
The Plot, by Jean Hanff Korelitz
The Knockout Queen, by Rufi Thorpe
The Lesser Dead, by Christopher Buehlman
The Night Guest, by Hildur Knútsdóttir
The Sequel, by Jean Hanff Korelitz
Bitter is the Heart, by Mina Hardy
Woodworm, by Layla Martinez
Havoc, by Christopher Bollen
Sister Snake, by Amanda Lee Koh
The Most, by Jessica Anthony
Definitely Better Now, Ava Robinson
Just under 19 percent of the books I read, I bolded. Not bad! I did reasonably well, then, when it comes to finding books I loved.
I’ll be interested to see if that percentage improves or declines in the year to come.
My Decision Criteria
Out of all these bolded books, how do I select the ones I loved the most?
It isn’t easy.
One of the reasons I don’t post my list of the best books I read for the year until well into the year after is that I spend a lot of time reviewing the bolded subset and winnowing it down to the books that, over time and distance, really stuck with me.
I use the following decision criteria as a guide:
I enjoyed the writing at the line level. (This does not mean it needs to be highfalutin. Quite the contrary, in many cases. Snootiness can be a major turn-off.)
In reading the book, I gained new perspectives and chewed on new-to-me ideas.
The book generated an emotional, not just intellectual response.
The overall whole of the novel stuck with me over the long term.
If a book didn’t meet all four criteria, no matter how much I enjoyed it on other levels—and even if I would still call it a favorite read from the year—I couldn’t put it on my best-of-the-best list.
Which of the four criteria is the biggest stumbling block for the books I loved? The third one. I can give a book high marks in all categories and still find that, emotionally, it didn’t spark a response.
The 2025 Reading Year Has Begun
By the time this post goes live on my blog each year, I’ve already dug into my reading pile for the following year. There are so many books I cannot wait to read in 2025.
If you have any books you’re excited to read in 2025, let me know. Maybe we’ll be reading some of the same ones.
And if you’ve read any of the above novels, tell me what you thought. I love talking books. (What reader doesn’t?)