Books and Podcasts for the New Year

The start of the new year puts many of us in the mood to reflect on ways to be better and happier. If that’s your frame of mind, here are some reading and listening suggestions for January:

 

Big Magic 

by Elizabeth Gilbert

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You may know Elizabeth Gilbert as the author of Eat, Pray, Lovebut in my eyes, Big Magic should have been her bestseller. This book shares the inspiration you’re looking for if you want to follow your passions more in 2018. This is a call to “make stuff”, whatever that means for you-writing a novel, painting, composing a song, making a movie, quilting, gardening, whatever. If you enjoy the book, a great extension is her podcast from 2016  “Magic Lessons”, in which she had various guests on who were struggling with a creative project and offered them advice. My favorites are Season 1, Episodes 1 and 2, which focus on combining creativity and motherhood. Cheryl Strayed, author of Wild, is even invited on as a guest in episode 2 to share her experience as a writer and a mother.

 

 

Better than Before 

by Gretchen Rubin

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If you are looking to start a new habit, or break an old one in 2018, Gretchen Rubin has some tips for you in Better Than Before. I was first introduced to Gretchen Rubin when I read her bestseller, The Happiness Project: Or, Why I Spent a Year Trying to Sing in the Morning, Clean My Closets, Fight Right, Read Aristotle, and Generally Have More Fun. 

 

the-happiness-project

If you haven’t read that one, the tips on making small changes to boost your happiness are definitely worth your while. However, her book Better than Before is the one that really resonated the most with me. In this book, she divides people into four tendencies (Upholder, Obliger, Rebel, and Questioner) and then offers many helpful strategies for actually sticking with the habits you want to sustain. You can take the Four Tendencies Quiz to help you determine which tendency best describes you. Gretchen Rubin also hosts a weekly Happier Podcast and I always look forward to the “happiness hacks” she shares.

The Wisdom of Sundays 

by Oprah Winfrey

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I started listening to the Super Soul Conversations Podcast recently. These are conversations with various spiritual leaders, authors, and other prominent people. Elizabeth Gilbert and Gretchen Rubin have actually both been guests, so those would be great episodes to start with. The Wisdom of Sundays book pulls out various “aha moments” from the different conversations. The selections are short, so they would be great for reading for a few minutes before bed or before you journal if those are habits you are trying to start in 2018.

Happy Reading!

Laura Szaro Kopinski

ABookishHome.com

 

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Books to Curl Up With this Winter

Here in New England it is currently a balmy -2 degrees outside. The fun and excitement of the holiday season is over and the routines of school and work are about to begin. Rather than feeling let down, the prospect of some cold, quiet months coming my way actually sounds perfect.

The past few years I’ve started to really embrace those winter hibernation months of January through March. There are less social obligations, a shorter household to-do list (no more presents to buy!), and more time to be a homebody and enjoy those indoor hobbies. If you’re a bookish introvert like me, it’s a great time to recharge your batteries. This winter I’m looking forward to doing lots of sewing, baking, and of course reading.

Here are a few books to curl up with this winter for you and the kids in your life:

 

The Inspector Gamache series

by Louise Penny

Still Life

The Inspector Gamache series by Louise Penny is a new favorite seasonal read for me. I received this recommendation from the wonderful Anne Bogel who hosts my favorite book podcast, What Should I Read Next and writes the Modern Mrs. Darcy blog. I would never have thought of murder mysteries as cozy, but these are. They take place in a tiny village in Quebec that reminds me of Stars Hollow from Gilmore Girls. There are so many scenes of villagers and Inspector Gamache warming themselves by the fire, sipping cafe au lait and eating crossaint–while trying to figure out who the murderer is of course. I’m not normally a mystery person, and certainly not murder mysteries, but these are more than plot, they’re smart and filled with observations on life and human nature you’ll want to slow down and re-read. I dove in with the newest book, Glass Houses, which I enjoyed, but it was a bit confusing keeping the characters straight. I think it’s best to start at the beginning. The first few books are good, I just finished number 3, but I’ve heard they get better and better.

 

The Hired Girl

by Laura Amy Schlitz

The Hired Girl

If re-reading Little Women or Jane Eyre is on your list this winter, add The Hired Girl by Laura Amy Schlitz to your reading pile. This Young Adult book was published in 2015, but fourteen-year-old Joan Skraggs feels like a classic heroine. It’s 1911 and Joan is facing a life of endless drudgery on a Pennsylvania farm with her brothers and cruel father who has denied her an education and even burned her beloved books. A new life begins when she decides to run away to Baltimore, changes her name, and become a “Hired Girl”. She winds up working for a wealthy Jewish family in this completely absorbing coming-of-age story. I absolutely loved this book, to the point where I was setting my alarm to 5am each day to have time to read it before school. Highly recommend.

The Long Winter

by Laura Ingalls Wilder

The Long Winter

Feeling like you have a bit of cabin fever? Look no further than The Long Winter from the Little House series. Laura Ingalls and her family are living in De Smet, in the Dakota territory when they must face seven (yes, seven!) months of blizzards from October to April during the terrible winter from 1880-1881. Snow is up to the rooftops and trains can’t reach the town to bring food or fuel. The family is houseband and has to try to band together and make the best of it. Almanzo Wilder (Laura’s future husband) decides to make a perilous journey to get wheat for the starving town. Several days trapped at home at home isn’t seeming so bad now, right? This is part of one of my all time favorite series, the Little House books by Laura Ingalls Wilder.  If you have never read these books before, go back and start at the beginning with Little House in the Big Woods. 

 

Brave Irene

by William Steig

Brave Irene

Brave Irene by William Steig would be a great picture book read aloud with your little ones this time of year. Irene’s mother is a dressmaker and has spent hours upon hours making a dress for a duchess, but catches a cold and cannot deliver it. The duchess is counting on wearing that dress to a ball tonight, what can be done? Irene decides to brave a snowstorm and sets out on a journey to deliver the dress for her mother. This is such a sweet story and little Irene is a great example of perseverance. The duchess also reminded me of Lady Grantham from Downton Abbey, which is a favorite show of mine this time of year.

 

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