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The presents have been opened; leftovers are in the fridge, and we don’t have to take down the decorations quite yet. It’s time to get cozy and hibernate with some winter reads! Today, we’re offering 10 buzzed-about picks for the season, selected by  Jennifer Puryear of Bacon on the Bookshelf.

10 Winter Book Recommendations to Cozy Up With

Signal Fires by Dani Shapiro

Dani Shapiro’s new novel Signal Fires begins with the shatter and crash of an accident. The kids have taken their parents’ car out for a joy ride — a shy 14-year-old boy at the wheel, his big sister in the backseat, and a cute girl riding shotgun. When one of them ends up dead, a big lie is told. The book’s first chapter is gripping, and the rest is even better.

Shapiro moves back and forth in time, showing us what led to that moment and what happens to the survivors and their families as they bear the burden of that night. Secrets bloom into dark, poisonous flowers, and truth seeks the light. Signal Fires offers characters to care about in a compelling storyline, but the deeper, sometimes mystical questions about the nature of reality quietly suffusing the book are what set it apart.

Does each present moment somehow hold both our past and our future? Is our sense of separate identity an illusion, and is our interconnectedness the greater truth? Does anyone ever really die? Shapiro’s new novel shimmers with beauty and mystery, and sorrow is not the final answer.

Cover of "Signal Fires" by Dani Shapiro

Signal Fires by Dani Shapiro | Image: Amazon

Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin

Gabrielle Zevin’s Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow also offers an immersive reading experience — the challenge and escape of a finely built fictional world to live in for a while. Sam and Sadie meet as kids at the hospital, where Sam and Sadie’s sister receive long-term care. Sam and Sadie bond while gaming together there on one of the early generations of consoles. Later, they’ll play countless hours of Donkey Kong at his grandfather’s pizza place, and even later, they’ll build video games together. They are closer than siblings and closer than lovers.

The book considers the role of friendship in our lives; the joys of collaboration; the sting of competition; the ways we hurt those we love most; and the paths we find back to each other. The glory of this novel is the richly imagined relationship between Sadie and Sam and the in-depth exploration of gaming culture.

Cover of "Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow" by Gabrielle Zevin

Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin | Image: Amazon

The Rabbit Hutch by Tess Gunty

The Rabbit Hutch, by Tess Gunty, recently won this year’s National Book Award and also features young adults trying to find their way in the world. These kids are no Sam and Sadie, though. Blandine and the three young men at the heart of this novel have recently aged out of the foster care system and share an apartment in the burned-out former auto industry town of “Vacca Vale,” Indiana. Blandine, the smartest of the four, may also be the most damaged, and two of the three boys are vying for her affection.

In the down-and-out apartment complex known as “The Rabbit Hutch,” where they live, it wouldn’t be a shock if something violent happened. Would their neighbors even notice? Their lives are complicated, too (we get to know quite a few of them). The National Book Award citation describes the book like this:

“Told over the course of one hot summer week and through a kaleidoscope of voices, The Rabbit Hutch is beautiful, biting, darkly comic, and provocative. This novel is a snapshot of America and the many ways we struggle with loneliness, yearning, and the painful pursuit of freedom.”

Cover of "The Rabbit Hutch" by Tess Gunty

The Rabbit Hutch by Tess Gunty | Image: Amazon

Fledgling by Hannah Bourne-Taylor

For a kinder, gentler read about finding one’s way, try Fledgling by Hannah Bourne-Taylor. Published by a small press out of England earlier this year, it has mostly flown under the radar so far. It’s also one of the most wonderful books I’ve read all year. “Fledgling is set in the rural grasslands of Ghana, where I rescued, hand-raised, and released a swift and a mannikin finch back into the wild. It tells the story of how immersing myself in the birds’ care gave me hope when, after following my husband to Ghana, I struggled to adapt to a new existence in an extreme environment without a purpose of my own,” Bourne-Taylor writes.

Expecting the move from her home in England to Ghana to be a grand adventure, she found the reality far different. Instead of getting to know locals and other ex-pats, she isolated herself, feeling overwhelmed and unhinged. When a groundskeeper at a local school destroyed a swift’s nest with the chick still in it, condemning it to near-certain death, Bourne-Taylor made a choice that changed her life as well:

“It weighed hardly anything, but there was a strength to the bird as it lay soft in my palm. A velvet stone, handsome with mystery. Apart from the slightest of movements, it did not react. No kerfuffle of wings, no cry for help … But there it lay, defeated into trust through lack of option.”

Bourne-Taylor writes with exquisite care about the natural world, both the remembered world of her childhood in England and the world she comes to know so intimately in Ghana. As she becomes more attuned to the mental world of the finch, she learns a better way to move through her own.

Cover of "Fledgling" by Hannah Bourne-Taylor

Fledgling by Hannah Bourne-Taylor | Image: Amazon

Easy Beauty by Chloé Cooper Jones

Pulitzer-prize finalist and philosophy professor Chloé Cooper Jones doesn’t move through the world physically the way most of us do. Born with a rare congenital condition called sacral agenesis, she confuses people with her gait and appearance:

“My disability is obvious, but its details are unclear; to look at me is to feel information both shown and withheld. These ideas in opposition create cognitive dissonance, and this makes people uncomfortable in a way not reducible to prejudice alone.”

In her memoir Easy Beauty, Jones explores the Ancient Greek understanding of beauty, modern views, and what it means to find peace, meaning, and comfort in her own skin. Anyone who has felt ugly at any point on their life’s journey should consider picking up this book (isn’t that all of us?).

Cover of "Easy Beauty" by Chloé Cooper Jones

Easy Beauty by Chloé Cooper Jones | Image: Amazon

One Hundred Saturdays by Michael Frank

Winter, to me, seems the perfect season for reflection and memoirs. Michael Frank’s One Hundred Saturdays offers an unusual and beautiful hybrid based on a remarkable friendship. The Wall Street Journal selected it as one of the Top 10 Books of the Year:

“Attending a lecture on the history of fascism, the writer Michael Frank found himself in a conversation with a woman whose interest in the subject was more than academic — nonagenarian Stella Levi, who had been deported as a child to Auschwitz from the Mediterranean island of Rhodes. Over the years to come, their weekly meetings became a journey into her indelible memories of love, tragedy, hard-won survival — and the vanished world of a once-vibrant community.”

I’ve just begun reading it and am intrigued. As Stella Levi begins to trust Frank, so do I. Because of his curiosity and generous spirit, a whole community’s history has been saved instead of lost. And something else new and lovely has been born.

Cover of "One Hundred Saturdays" by Michael Frank

One Hundred Saturdays by Michael Frank | Image: Amazon

Activities of Daily Living by Lisa Hsiao Chen

One Hundred Saturdays, an engaging read, does require focus and attention. Activities of Daily Living, a novel by Lisa Hsiao Chen, also rewards careful reading. As the novel begins, we meet Alice, the daughter of a Taiwanese mother and an American father. She’s become obsessed with the work of “the Artist,” Tehching Hsieh (born in 1950 — you can Google him); she spends most of her non-working hours trying to understand the meaning of his performance art. His projects always take place over a set period — usually one year, exactly — and involve a distinct and regimented set of activities and constraints during that year.

From July 4, 1983, to July 3, 1984, for instance, he and another person were joined at the waist by an eight-foot rope. In addition to studying the work of the Artist, Alice spends more and more time caring for her father with Alzheimer’s. The novel sets up the contrast between the Activities of Daily Living in her father’s life — or ADLs, in Alzheimer-facility parlance — and those of the Artist. In what ways do ADLs define a life, Chen seems to be asking, for any of us. In what ways can we transcend our circumstances?

Activities of Daily Living cover

Activities of Daily Living by Lisa Hsiao Chen | Image: Amazon

Seven Steeples by Sara Baume

In Sara Baume’s new novel, Seven Steeples, a young Irish couple believes they have chosen the perfect circumstances for themselves. They have retreated from the world and its expectations to an isolated country home, bringing their dogs, essentials, and not much else. What begins as a “charming pastoral drama steadily grows, like an untended backyard, into something much more wild and unsettling. Back-to-nature fiction has rarely been so strange or so beautiful,” writes the Wall Street Journal. The Guardian can’t get enough of it:

“Bell, the female character, has a habit of ‘touching things to draw blessedness out of them,’ and this is absolutely what Baume is doing throughout. In the paraphernalia of a life, its coffee grinds and washing lines, love and meaning are hiding – because all the meaning in our lives happens around these things, our little days, so where else would it end up secreted?”

The reviewer for the New York Times suggests that Seven Steeples doesn’t have enough forward momentum or drama and that the pleasures of the novel seem closer to poetry. Still, I’m all in (it’s next on my reading list).

Cover of "Seven Steeples" by Sara Baume

Seven Steeples by Sara Baume | Image: Amazon

An Immense World: How Animal Senses Reveal The Hidden Realms Around Us by Ed Yong

The nonfiction lovers among us will surely want to check out one of the season’s biggest releases, An Immense World: How Animal Senses Reveal The Hidden Realms Around Us. Author Ed Yong invites us to join him on a deep dive into the sensory world of bees, songbirds, dogs, giant squid, beetles, turtles, and even scallops, among other creatures. Mary Roach (Fuzz: When Nature Breaks the Law) asks:

What strange … power does this man have that he can roam the vast universe of animal science, homing in on the most fascinating discoveries? Every page finds the reader mouthing quiet whoas as the world she thought she knew opens out into a hundred others, improbable, strange, and fabulous. I don’t know how to put into words the awe I felt while reading this book — for the incredible sensory diversity of our planet and Ed Yong’s talents.

Cover of "An Immense World" by Ed Yong

An Immense World by Ed Yong | Image: Amazon

The Best American Short Stories 2022 by Andrew Sean Greer

Those who prefer snack-sized pleasures might try this year’s installment of The Best American Short Stories series instead. “Again and again, I have been amazed by the power of the form – moved by how a story can consume and counsel, illuminate and inspire,” writes author Kate DiCamillo (The Tale of Desperaux, Because of Winn-Dixie). She’s been a fan of the series for more than 30 years. Pulitzer Prize winner Andrew Sean Greer (Less; Less is Lost) curates this year’s collection. I’m a huge fan of Greer (“an exceptionally lovely writer, capable of mingling humor with sharp poignancy,” says the Washington Post), and I can’t wait to settle in with this collection as a fire crackles nearby.

Cover of "The Best American Short Stories" by Andrew Sean Greer

The Best American Short Stories by Andrew Sean Greer | Image: Amazon

Happy reading!

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About the Author
Jennifer Puryear

Jennifer is a Nashvillian who writes about delicious books at her blog, Bacon on the Bookshelf.