Twenty twenty four was a wild ride of a year for me. I started off the year with a desire to re-launch my YouTube channel and a fire inside me to experience great books. All these lofty plans were of course put to rest when on the last Saturday in February I found out I was pregnant and was hit with a tsunami of hormones soon after. My desire and capacity for anything book related went out the window as I channeled what little energy I had towards my day job and trying very hard not to vomit every minute of every day.
The wonderful thing about being pregnant though, other than the fact that I have the most perfect little boy on earth, was that my reading had to be focused as I could only read books that I was genuinely interested in. So when my reading finally resumed in July every book that did not relate to pregnancy, birth or breastfeeding felt like a breath of fresh air.

With that being said however there were some recurring themes and some standout books. The biggest theme me was “motherhood” , somehow even the books I didn’t think would have anything to do with motherhood touched on it as a topic one way or another. I’ve decided that these were subconscious choices I was making and somehow reading about parenting even when I didn’t intend to because you can never be too prepared!

Now that I’ve beat about the bush appropriately let’s get into my top 5 books for 2024:
Book 5: Minor Detail by Adana Shibli
In this book we are split between two timelines set in Palestine with two women. One woman who is subjected to a traumatic death and another woman many years later who seeks to investigate the death.

This is the sort of book that stays with you. We follow two events that are in two different time periods in Palestine.
I appreciated the writers ability to pack so much story into such a short book. It’s very rare that a book can be neither character or plot driven and still manage to make me as a reader heavily invested in the story.
Book 4: Annie John by Jamaica Kincaid

Witty and precise, this book is an unraveling of a mother and daughter relationship. Annie John was my second Jamaica Kincaid book and we follow a young girl, Annie John, as she goes from being the apple of her mothers eye to something on the opposite of the spectrum as expectations of what it is to be a “young woman” start to become the focal point of their relationship.
I appreciated Kincaid’s ability to give you a character that is so young yet is able to feel the full magnitude of love and loss when that love is lost.
Book 3: The Bee Sting by Paul Murray

A fantastically told family saga detailing the fall of a great family built on shaky ground. We meet a few characters in this book including; a teenage daughter on cusp of beginning her adulthood and a young son who is lonely amidst a family of people all dealing with their own failings.
I really appreciated that the characters in this book were all fully fleshed out and each of their stories felt real, as though if you were had pulled up a chair and were listening to someone tell you their life story.
Book 2: Rootless by Krystle Zara Appiah

A love story following the lives of a Ghanaian-British couple who veer into parenthood despite one of them being uninterested in parenthood. We follow the challenges that occur between two people who love each other, with opposing views on parenthood and their families.
I loved the writers crafting of characters and storyline. At every point I felt truly engaged in what would happen next and found myself rooting for this young couple despite finding myself on opposite sides of each of them.
Book 1: Soldier Sailor by Claire Kilroy

This book is a book on love between mother and child. It details the many challenges this mother faces in mothering her very young son (a toddler), the friction this causes between her and her husband and the depth of her love for her son.
I loved the writing his book. I think it perfectly captures what it is to be a mother in love. There are so many challenges and moments of self doubt in this book but in all of it there is a thick layer that is the love a mother has for her child.
Those are all the books I’ve loved this year. On my YouTube channel Best Books of 2024 I discuss two other books which make my top seven but not my top five reads. Overall I think my enjoyment of books was very much coloured by the phase in life I am in. Ig would be interesting to me whether by top five books would strike the same chord with me if I were to read them in the future.
All in all good reading year all things considered.
I’m looking forward to more great reads in 2025 and wishing you the same.







