I would like to wish all my followers a very Happy New Year! β¨ – let the year 2024 bring only joy, happiness and the fulfilment of all your wishes! Below is my list of 7 best books I read in 2023 (the best books I tend to read happen to be classics, and I am excluding non-fiction, graphic novels and short story collections).

I. My Γntonia [1918]
by Willa Cather – β β β β β
This touching coming-of-age story by Willa Cather (Death Comes for the Archbishop, A Lost Lady) centres on Jim Burden’s friendship with one immigrant girl, free-spirited Γntonia Shimerda in Nebraska. Cather’s elegant prose simply enchants, and Jim’s distinctive voice is unforgettable, with each chapter brimming with soulfulness as it tells of immigrants’ hardships and sacrifices made through the years. It is a deeply nostalgic look at a life passed, as well as a sweeping expose of rural life in the late 19th and early 20th century America.

II. Go Tell It On The Mountain [1953]
by James Baldwin – β β β β β
James Baldwin’s debut is a staggering book that focuses largely on John Grimes, step-son of the minister at the Pentecostal church in Harlem. John tries to make sense of his upbringing, environment and above all – all the expectations placed on him by others. This is a multi-dimensional and at times multi-perspective novel which also reveals issues of sexuality, racism and attempts at fitting in while remaining true to oneself. Baldwin’s prose cuts like a knife and yet remains touchingly lyrical throughout as the story recounts the accumulated heartbreak.

III. Cancer Ward [1967]
by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn – β β β β β
This Russian classic introduces us to a cancer ward in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, USSR in 1954, and to its patients and doctors: charismatic exiled man Kostoglotov, authoritative civil servant Pavel Rusanov, young “intellectual” Demka, dutiful, but lonely doctor Vera Gangart, and bold and happy-go-lucky nurse Zoya, among many others. The book underscores the lonely, stifling nature of the horrible illness, with the touch of irony here and there about the condition, as well as says something on the doctor’s inherent guilt, and cancer treatment dilemmas. This book is a monumental work in every respect, and, like every true classic, manages to come across as both – deeply personal, and all-encompassing and far-reaching.

IV. Pnin [1957]
by Vladimir Nabokov β β β β β β
This novella reminded me of Nabokov’s The Luzhin Defense, which I read last year. Pnin is a humorous, bitter-sweet examination of a man constantly out of his depth in this world. Professor Timofey Pnin is a Russian language professor at Waindell College, USA who tries hard to be a good teacher and a good friend, all with a varying success. Nabokov penned his character relying on his own experience of teaching Russian literature at Cornell University in the 1950s, and there has never before or since been a character like Pnin in fiction. The book is a pure joy to read from the very first page until the very last.

V. The Custom of the Country [1913]
by Edith Wharton β β β β β β
“...she was not happy. She had everything she wanted, but she still felt, at times, that there were other things she might want if she knew about them” (Wharton, 1913/2003: 370).
The Custom of the Country is a more cutting, more caustic, more satirical look at New York’s elite society in the Gilded Age than Wharton’s two other famous novels – The Age of Innocence and The House of Mirth. Here, the author replaces delicacy and sympathy with her heroine’s monstrous search for glory, money and prestige – at whatever cost. Undine Spragg is a somewhat spoilt girl from a well-to-do family in Apex who sets a goal to become the crΓ¨me de la crΓ¨me of New York’s society. She marries an aristocrat whose principles and views are in stark contrast to her own, but her wants only grow from henceforth. Superficiality and mediocrity are limitless, and hunger for success is insatiable. The Custom of the Country is a perfection of a novel.

VI. The Toilers of the Sea [1866]
by Victor Hugo – β β β β 1/2
“A novel of quiet, unassuming and yet extraordinary beauty, as well as a moving tribute to the sea and its people,” was my conclusion upon finishing this book. This is Victor Hugo’s tribute to the Channel Islands archipelago, where he spent some 15 years in exile. In this novel set in Guernsey, the lives of Mess Lethierry, a pillar of society, his beautiful niece DΓ©ruchette and seaman Gilliatt cross paths and the centre of gravity is ship Durande (as was Notre-Dame de Paris in the novel of the same name). Comparisons can also be drawn with both Jack Londonβs masterpiece Martin Eden [1909] and Thomas Hardy’s classic The Woodlanders [1887].
VII. The Post-Office Girl [1982/2008]

by Stefan Zweig β β β β β 1/2
“The Heart asks Pleasure β first β/And then β Excuse from Pain β/And then β those little Anodynes
/That deaden suffering β/And then β to go to sleep β/And then β if it should be/The will of its Inquisitor
/The liberty to die β” (Emily Dickinson).
These lines from Dickinson’s poem convey the spirit of this unfinished novel by Stefan Zweig. It is an incredibly lucid account of one girl’s transformation from a poor village postal worker to the society’s “darling” at the centre of attention (the original title can be translated as The Intoxication of Transformation). The heroine’s descend will be as rapid as her ascend. The charm of the book is in its observational, deliciously suspenseful prose full of psychological insights. This is an emotional journey to the depth of one soul opening itself to the experience of a lifetime.

I’ve read all of these except ‘Cancer Ward’ and ‘Toilers of the Sea’. Willa Cather is one of my all-time favorites. ‘Pnin’ is funny Nabokov, and ‘Pale Fire’ is even better.
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It’s great to hear, and I really recommend these two you haven’t read (though cannot vouch for any Cancer Ward translation), and yes, somehow I am always a bit surprised by how good a Cather novel is, though I should not be knowing that she is so great a writer. I have two other books by her on my TBR that I am dying to read: The Song of the Lark, and O Pioneers! but would also love to prolong the sweet anticipation for as long as possible.
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I will have to find that Nabokov. It has all the elements I love. Thank you for your book recommendations this year.
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You’re welcome! And Pnin is absolutely delightful (and short)! Nabokov’s character vividness and irony are second to none.
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You are sorely tempting me to add to my groaning TBR.
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Happy New Year Diana! I’m glad to hear you liked Cancer Ward, I will be reading it next year. π Very tempted by that Zweig novel as well…
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Happy New Year to you, too! I hope you like Cancer Ward, and yes, I plan to read more Zweig next year, starting with Journey into the Past.
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Beautiful post and wonderful books, Diana! Thanks for sharing π Love Willa Cather’s writing! Loved your reviews this year and looking forward to your reviews next year! Happy New Year and Happy Reading π
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Thank you, and Happy New Year to you, too.
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Thank you, Diana π
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Lovely post. I have only read My Antonia from your selection and it is indeed brilliant. Read my first Baldwin this year and would like roas more, youβve definitely sold Go Tell Itβ¦ to me. Sounds like a great year of reading. Happy 2024!
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Go Tell It On The Mountain is indeed amazing. Thanks, and wishing you a great reading year ahead!
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I must read Go Tell It On The Mountain.
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Thank you for your congratulations. Have a wonderful new year! And we are waiting for your new reviews… May the new year be bright and bring many joyful miracles!
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Thank you! Wishing you the very best in return! π
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πͺπͺβ¨β¨π§ββοΈ
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So many classic authors, apart from Wharton and Zweig, which I’ve yet to sample, from which you’ll gather I’ve not read any of these titles! But a couple do catch my eye…
All best wishes for 2024, and may it be a lot better than 2023 has been β apart from a few personal highlights I’ll be glad to see the back of it!
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Wharton surprised me this year with the two of the books I’ve read by her – The New York Stories and The Custom of the Country, which I highly recommend, especially the former. Left Henry James far behind for me, and I still I don’t know how I lived knowing only these two books by her – The Age of Innocence and The House of Mirth. Wishing you also a great year ahead!
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You’ve had a great reading year just going by these superb books. The one I haven’t read is ‘Toilers of the Sea’ and it’s going on my wishlist immediately, especially because one of my favorite NYRB books is ‘The Book of Ebenezer Le Page’ by G.B. Edwards. Wishing you a very Happy New Year!
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Thank you, JulΓ©, and the same to you! You piques my interest with The Book of Ebenezer, and then I think you would really enjoy The Toilers of the Sea. All the best!
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Happy New Year! I haven’t read any of the books you mentioned, but I think I’d enjoy the Stefan Zweig’s book, though it’s probably not the most fun! Thanks for sharing and inspiring my tbr!
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I’ve just recommended My Antonia to an advanced English student so it looks like I’ll be rereading that one. We’ve been sampling different classics, and after reading Hemingway she wanted something different. I am always happy to recommend Cather.
The others sound great but I particularly want to read The Toilers of the Sea.
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Cather is always a great choice! I hope you enjoy The Toilers of the Sea. Hugo does employ archetype characters, but that’s why his tales become so vivid and unforgettable.
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I’m new to your blog so exploring. I agree with you on My Antonia!
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Enjoy exploring, and it’s nice to know you!
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