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The Books I Read in 2023

For some reason the year 2023 hasn't been the best year for reading and it took me quite some time to get started and get into the flow. Eventually I managed, but it took some took some time. That being said I managed to finish some books at the least.

As usual the collection is as eclectic as it can be, but there is certainly some pattern there, but you can see that for yourself.

The Books I read in 2023 in reading order

  • V.E.Schwab: The Near Witch
  • David McRaney: You Are Not So Smart
  • David McRaney: You Are Now Less Dumb
  • Christopher Paolini: To Sleep in a Sea of Stars
  • Anne Rice: Interview with the Vampire
  • Adrian Tchaikovsky: Walking to Aldebaran
  • Haruki Murakami: Novelist as a Vocation
  • Cal Newport: Digital Minimalism (re-read)
  • Riley Sager: Home After Dark
  • T. Kingfisher: What Moves the Dead
  • TJ Klune: The House in the Cerulean Sea
  • Ryder Carroll: The Bullet Journal Method
  • Yuval Noah Harari: Homo Deus
  • Adam Grant: Think Again
  • Hector Garcia, F. Miralles: The Ikigai Journey
  • Grady Hendrix: How to Sell a Haunted House
  • T. Kingfisher: A House with Good Bones
  • Dan Schreiber: The Theory Of Everything Else
  • C.L Polk: Even Though I Knew The End
  • S.L. Coney: Wild Spaces
  • F.Miralles/H.Garcia: The Ikigai Journey
  • Shunmyo Masuno: Don't Worry
  • Oliver Burkeman: Four Thousand Weeks
  • Björn Natthiko Lindeblad: I May Be Wrong
  • Sequoia Nagamatsu: How High We Go In the Dark
  • Benjamin Labatut: When we cease to understand the World
  • Jay Anson: Amityville Horror
  • Andy Weir: Project Hail Mary
  • Dalai Lama: The Art Of Happiness
  • Dan Harris: Ten Percent Happier
  • Austin Kleon: Steal Like An Artist
  • Nat Segaloff: The Exorcist Legacy
  • T. Kingfisher: Thornhedge
  • Camilla Sten: The Lost Village
  • P.G. Wodehouse: The Inimitable Mr. Jeeves
  • P.G. Wodehouse: Carry On Jeeves
  • P.G. Wodehouse: Right Ho, Jeeves
  • Haruki Murakami: First Person Singular
  • Martha Wells: System Collapse

I read those books in plenty of different platforms: some on Libby, some on Audible - where I took advantage of a 3 months for 1€ each (or such) sale as I have no money to give away - and eventually I realized that my preferred and favorite service LIBRO.FM became available for subscription in Europe, so I more or less immediately switched there. Non-fiction books I figured work much better for me on paper or PDF as I can easily make notes while I'm reading.

As I am close to finishing another I will likely be able to update/start the list for 2024, but let's see how this next year will progress.

Last updated on: 2024-01-01 Mon 08:52