I’m absolutely not into booktok. I think people should just read books based on the feeling the have when the read the back 😅 I take inspo from tiktok, but if I don’t like what the back is saying I still wouldn’t read it even when everyone is saying how great it is
@@Miipmiip Same. I read We Were Liars and it was so and overhyped. I had Verity but after reading it, I cringed so hard. I don’t know if this is mentioned on booktok or not but I saw "The summer I turned pretty" on UA-cam and I couldn’t even get past chapter 5 without getting so bored. I guess romance books really aren’t my thing even though that’s all booktok recommends.
Best description of Book Lovers 😂 “one grumpy little gremlin, struggling with perfectionism meeting another grumpy little gremlin, struggling with perfectionism, and then being organized grumpy little gremlins together,” 🌧 🌧 ❤
Just a suggestion… it would be nice to put at the top corner what book you’re talking about. Sometimes one just forgets what book you just mentioned and by the time you’re almost done, I’m like “wait what was the book again?”
sometimes we gotta pause a video and continue watching later and by then one gotta backtrack a lot and perhaps miss the exact moment you mention the name of the book. There’s a lot of scenarios where tbh it’s just convenient to have a picture of the cover on screen or name of the book in a corner. Just saying
Timestamps for categories of the ranking :) 0:35 : I listened to the internet but at what cost 4:23 : It's me, hi, I'm the problem. It's me. 6:45 : Nice. Intermission - 9:34 : Did not finish 13:12 : Really great! But... 19:10 : I will never shut up about these books 23:10 : Tattoo the text on my retina (love these titles btw)
YES I love The Folk of The Air books and will never apologise for it lol I think Cardan's novella How The King Of Elfhame Learned to Hate Stories might just be my favourite. Those extra scenes of him and Jude>>> I think the only people who hate the books are the ones who wanted more romance or couldn't handle the fact that Cardan and Jude actually used to hate each other...... I don't know what they think enemies to loves is but.......
Hi! As someone who didn't enjoyed the book, I want to say that it's not because I expected more romance, but because I didn't expect it to be so YOUNG adult. I'm used to reading adult fantasy so this one seemed really silly to me, with little world building, despisable characters with teenage reactions, and predictable plot. Obviously that's only my opinion and lot's of people enjoyed it, I wish I was part of them. :)
I listened to the series on audible and I feel like I missed something. I thought the books were just fine. Fun but not that special. They are so well loved though that I feel like I should read them directly- maybe the audiobook lost something for me.
I think the book was so steeped in historical perspectives and realistic takes on deep human issues, that it got a bit too much for those who like FANTASY fantasy. I don't usually like fantasy at all, except for Narnia, so I ADORED Jude and Cardan. If Shakespeare were alive today, he'd make a play of it. The story is on that level. This is coming from an English teacher, by the way.
The Secret History is one of those books that have an atmosphere of mystery. I feel as though the pages are living, truly living. When I say they are living, I mean the story is still going on in some magical loop of realism again and again. I mean somewhere it is like entering into a new world, getting a renewed lease at life, being able to look at things through kind eyes. The way he loves that girl. The way she makes him feel. I really love how Donna Tartt describes love from a boys point of view for a girl. It is so accurate, it smarts but I also feel it somehow validates my entire life and those moments of being younger and being completely lost and oblivious so well. I mean I have never been better understood and I have found some kind of community when it comes to her writing style. **SPOILERS WARNING** and then you have goldfinch, again a master class how the central character is in falling in love with a girl while reminiscing his mother who's just passed away. A masterclass and Donna Tartt's writing its own level altogether. Easily my favourite book author of all time and also arguably the best book I have ever read. PS - You may like sense of an ending if you liked the secret history. Different author.
Personally, I don’t think what Richard feels for Camilla is love. It’s infatuation and he spends much of the book objectifying her without realizing it. But art is always up to interpretation I suppose
@@CatherineMarianne When I read the Donna tartt books, she always had this weird sort of racism that emitted off all her books, especially the goldfinch. Boris was sort of played out as a "wannabe gangster", and apparently being a gangster was to say that n word?? Not once, but twice?? And how Theo described "real gangster girls" as black and latina, which was weird and stereotypical. I'm pretty sure that Donna was writing Theo to be an unreliable narrator, but it was still a bit odd. As well as every single non white character written as some "simple, working class servant" and they always had exaggerated accents and appearances that fit into basic stereotypes, no extra character design or traits. Oh well though
@@lostavenue4819 I think it is love because despite everything he loves her. You can say infatuation is linked with an ego body. Where one's ego is satiated with need to be wanted/desired by said entity. however, i call it love because it is written so acutely, intrinsically, without any deception and defence to the reader's interpretation, lacking any form of grotesque self, i think it can be love.
I’m getting back into reading this year and I can’t tell you how much booktubers have helped me. I recently read the cruel prince series and it was so fun!! I really enjoyed it and i’m excited to read more this year ❤️❤️❤️
praise booktube honestly, I get ALL my reading plans/tbr from booktube (and try to avoid tiktok or at least only read those who have been approved by booktube)
I read bunny because of you and Jack Edwards here on UA-cam, and honestly I'm so grateful for your recommendation! It's unlike anything I ever read and I'm obsessed
it’s really interesting to me to see people loving Bunny, I read it because of Jack’s recommendation as well and really did not enjoy it - it was a total drain to me to get through and nearly DNF. I just couldn’t get on with it 😂 unlike anything I’ve ever read I would definitely agree with you though!
if you see this, i just wanted to say that i’ve binged so many of your videos lately, and you inspired me to get back to reading for the first time in way too long! i got a few books from the store yesterday and i’m already really enjoying one of them. thank you for being such a joy to watch and for recommending such great books!
I decided to read Bunny after hearing you talk about it. Let me just tell you I was hooked. I devoured it in two days and I found my long-lost hunger for books and reading. I've already put more books in my to-read list, I haven't felt so happy about books in ages! Thank you!
your opinions on beach read and people we meet on vacation was EXACTLY what i thought of those two books. these two reviews have now convinced me to pick up book lovers because i feel like i might love it
BOOKS was the theme of 2022. I read 52 books in 52 weeks. My very best year in reading that I can remember. The books I read in 2022 1) "The Way We Live Now" by Anthony Trollope 2) "Can You Forgive Her?" by Anthony Trollope 3) "Never Let Me Go" by Kazuo Ishiguro 4) "Mark Twain: A Life" by Rom Powers 5) "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court" by Mark Twain 6) "The Innocents Abroad" by Mark Twain 7) "The End of the Affair" by Graham Greene 8) "Clarissa, or, the History of a Young Lady" by Samuel Richardson 9) "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie" by Muriel Spark 10) "Breakfast at Tiffany's" by Truman Capote 11) "What We Talk About When We Talk About Love" by Raymond Carver 12) "Anna Karenina" by Leo Tolstoy 13) "Resurrection" by Leo Tolstoy 14) "Master and Man" by Leo Tolstoy 15) "A Confession" by Leo Tolstoy 16) "The Death of Ivan Ilyich" by Leo Tolstoy 17) "The Raid" by Leo Tolstoy 18) "A Princess of Mars" by Edgar Rice Burroughs 19) “In the First Circle" by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn 20) "The Hunchback of Notre-Dame" by Victor Hugo 21) "Clara Militch" by Ivan Turgenev 22) "Mumu" by Ivan Turgenev 23) "Kassyan of Fair Springs" by Ivan Turgenev 24) "The Portrait Game" Ivan Turgenev 25) " Punin and Baburin" by Ivan Turgenev 26) "The Inn" by Ivan Turgenev 27) "The Watch" by Ivan Turgenev 28) "Acia" by Ivan Turgenev 29) "Home of the Gentry" by Ivan Turgenev 30) "On the Eve" by Ivan Turgenev 31) "Rudin" by Ivan Turgenev 32) "Smoke" by Ivan Turgenev 33) "First Love" by Ivan Turgenev 34) "The Torrents of Spring" by Ivan Turgenev 35) "How Russians Meet Death" by Ivan Turgenev 36) "Sketches from a Hunter's Album" by Ivan Turgenev 37) "Volodya" by Anton Chekhov 38) "Ward No. 6" by Anton Chekhov 39) "The Lady with the Dog" by Anton Chekov 40) "The Tale of Tsar Saltan" by Alexander Pushkin 41) "The Captain's Daughter" by Alexander Pushkin 42) “Le Grand Meaulnes, or the Lost Domain” by Alain-Fournier 43) "Poor Folk" by Fyodor Dostoevsky 44) "White Nights" by Fyodor Dostoevsky 45) "Flipped" by Wendelin Van Draanen 46) "Kolyma Tales" by Varlam Shalamov 47) "An Island Hell" by S. A. Malsagoff 48) "The Return of the Native" by Thomas Hardy 49) "Jude the Obscure" by Thomas Hardy 50) “Strait is the Gate” by André Gide 51) “And Every Morning the Way Home Gets Longer and Longer” by Fredrik Backman 52) “Middlemarch” by George Eliot Twenty (20) of my top one hundred (100) books of all time I read this year. This is the year I found out Ivan Turgenev from Russia is my favorite author of all time and will never be surpassed. I plan on reading more of him next year too.
@@caIyps0, Alexander Pushkin is on my list of favorite books. 0) The Holy Bible: King James Version" copyright 1967 1) "Verbal Behavior" by Dr. B. F. Skinner 2) "Resurrection" by Leo Tolstoy 3) "The Idiot" by Fyodor Dostoevsky 4) "Fathers and Sons" by Ivan Turgenev 5) Myth Adventures - series by Robert Asprin 6) The Chronicles of Narnia - series by C. S. Lewis 7) "Vilette" by Charlotte Brontë 8) "War and Peace" by Leo Tolstoy 9) "A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich" by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn 10) "Smoke" by Ivan Turgenev 11) "Roots" by Alex Haley 12) The Silmarillion - The Hobbit, or there and back again - The Lord of the Rings - Middle Earth stories by J. R. R. Tolkien 13) Foundation Series - Isaac Asimov 14) "Eugene Onegin" by Alexander Pushkin and much lower down on the list he lands again. 105) "The Captain's Daughter" by Alexander Pushkin
@@caIyps0, my first list is merely all the books I read in a year. The second list is where they fall in regard to the best books I have ever read. FAVORITE AUTHORS 1) Ivan Turgenev (Fathers and Sons) 2) Leo Tolstoy (Resurrection) 3) Fyodor Dostoevsky (The Idiot) 4) Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn (A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich) 5) C. S. Lewis (The Magician's Nephew) 6) Charlotte Brontë (Vilette) 7) J. R. R. Tolkien (The Hobbit) 8) Isaac Asimov (Foundation and Empire) 9) Jane Austen (Pride and Prejudice) 10) Mark Twain (The Adventures of Tom Sawyer) 11) George Eliot (Silas Marner) 12) Anthony Trollope (The Warden)
I FEEL EXACTLY THE SAME WAY ABOUT PEOPLE WE MEET ON VACATION, it's defo her worst work in my opinion (and that is saying something because she is currently my favorite romance author)
Amazing ranking ♥ I would highly recommend Piranesi, I think it's right up your alley. It's very mysterious and environmental with a mythological dream like charm, and it does actually get deeper with character than I expected. Piranesi is my favorite protagonist I read all year.
I heard about Piranesi thanks to this channel, and I gave it to someone as a Christmas present this year! I haven't read it myself though, but it sounds very intriguing
There's a book being re-released in August this year, I think. It's called The Phoenix King by Aparna Verma. It's a fantasy book inspired by South Asian culture and mythology and I really loved it. I read it a while ago under the original title "The Boy With Fire". I don't know if that's something you're interested in but I do really recommend it :) PS: it has firebending (sort of), assassins, enemies to lovers, morally grey characters and badass women
For anyone who likes sally Rooney books and wants to try some Dutch literature I will now recommend Antiboy by Valentijn Hoogenkamp. Idk if it has yet been translated but it is a beautiful and modern queer memoir that I feel speaks to a lot of this generation
“Sometimes it can just be very cathartic to read about a woman doing doing everything women were taught not to do. And sometimes that includes murder” I died lol
Just discovered your channel 3 days ago and heard you go on about Book Lovers. I had read Beach Read and was a bit underwhelmed so had put off Book Lovers for months. On your recommendations bought it 2 days ago, devoured it and LOVED it!! Thank you
Your commentary on Beautiful World, Where Are You just convinced me to read it because you literally describe me PERFECTLY I felt like we were on Facetime for a sec and you were staring into my soul
You should read North and South! It's an 18th-century romance and it's so good! It's an enemies to lovers novel and it has a great movie to it as well.
IM SO GLAD SOMEONE IS TALKING ABT HOW VERY "i listened to the internet but at what cost" TSLD IS !! the book was so unnecessarily long and the plot could have been over in like 10 pages had the main characters just ??? communicated ??? AND THEN OFC the very lovely 3rd quarter crisis !! also,, im sorry but people hype aaron up so much and for what ?? his whole personality trait is being tall ???? and lina's is being short ?? sorry not sorry but they had absolutely no character depth, they were quite literally words on paper.
if you didn't like vespertine that much but still want to read a magical warrior nun book i highly highly recommend red sister by mark lawrence!! it's adult fantasy, not YA but it executes the concept so well. a little gory, but with amazing characters, worldbuilding, plot, and pacing!
I think Tartt borrowed the idea Henry never heard of moon landing from Doyle as Sherlock Holmes didn´t know if Sun revolves around Earth or vice versa because he didn´t care and thought he´s above that and it doesn´t affect him in any way. They are quite similar characters. I didn´t really see it as comedy but as another layer to his character.
Wrote down the books from the two last tiers for myself, posting here to save other people some time, if they also want to write them down: Book Lovers - Emily Henry. The Secret History - Donna Tartt I’m Glad My Mom Died - Jeanette McCurdy. Beautiful world, where are you - Sally Rooney. The Cruel Prince - Holly Black The Wicked King - Holly Black The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas - Ursula K. Le Guin The Violent Delights - Micah Nemerever Jane Eyre - Charlotte Brontë Bunny - Mona Awao
Don't know if you are a fan Leonie, but BTS have a music video called 'Spring Day' and the music video is based on 'The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas' - I was blown away on their interpretation of it. Jack Edwards did a video analysing the reference in the music video too which was really good!
As far as actually very good classics goes: I finally read Lolita by Nabokov this year and I was mind-blown. It reads like any contemporary novel and is not at all what I expected.
Ok, I haven't heard anyone talk about this book, even though I know it is a children's book, I need to tell someone about The Thirteen Clocks. I love it so much and it is very dear to my heart, and if you see this I hope you read it and enjoy it as much as I did.
'They speak the way they would if AI fed them a bunch of Blockbuster movies'...😂. I so love how you describe things. Taking all these rankings to heart when choosing my next reads.
happy new year leonie! this is not related to this video, but I just finished reading the gilded wolves trilogy and I was SOBBING through the last 50 pages! it was so heart-wrenching and I really fell in love with the characters! but I want to thank you again for recommending it, especially since it seems to be quite underrated!
I'm obsessed with angst romances (full of mutual pining) and I feel like you'd recommend the best of those, if you do have recommendations please make a video like that
THANK YOU. I rolled by eyes so much at The People We Meet on Vacation. Not to mention the main characters had no problems...like ZERO...so the fact that their had a "falling out" made no sense. I was like "THAT was what you were upset about all this time?"
I don't know why but you remind me so much of my older sister! She has the same name, she looks quite similar to you, she lived in Amsterdam for a while,... It makes your videos even more cozy than they already are :D
i belong to absolutely none of the categories that 'Beautiful World, Where Are You' should be relatable to, but there's still just something about sally rooney's writing that i think anyone can identify with. one of the best books i read this year for sure
I gave in last week and listened to the audiobook Book Lovers by Emily Henry and I was surpised that it worked so well for me so I've decided that is the only Emily Henry book I'd never going to read. I've heard it her best book by more people than not so as far as I am concerned, Emily Henry has done her job.
I feel like it made complete sense in Babel to have the characters discussing the themes - they’re academics making real life decisions based on the themes? Were they supposed to not discuss it? 😅
You have to read Defy The Night!! I cant even tell how good this is: slow burn, romance, friends to lovers, enemies to lovers, a fantasy world, medical Field ( more like pharmacy) and funny lines
I honestly think what held you back from reading Jane Eyre is what holds a lot of people back from reading a lot of Classics, honestly-even amongst people who speak English as a first or even only language!. 😅🙃😅😅 Because culture and language and all evolves so much, over time, and most people find it difficult or intimidating to try and get into the culture or language of the past. I mean, just imagine trying to read something written in your own language but an old/dated / archaic version of it, or whatever! (It might have a similar effect, especially the further back you go. ^^) Because there could be words or phrases or spellings that are rarely if even ever used anymore, or that could mean something completely different back then than it would mean to someone at first glance now without actually knowing the specific context like from back then-if that makes sense. But, for me, the only reason I haven't read a lot of classics is just because I didn't have access to many Classics when I was growing up...and by the time I grew up enough to go out and obtain them for myself totally independently, wanting to read Classics had somehow kind of just taken a bit of a backseat to other things I wanted to read or such..but I really hope to turn that back around, going forward, soon / in the future!. ^--^
Classics, in whatever language, are always quite challenging, I feel. I'm German and speaking English as a second language, studying English as a minor to History. In one of my first courses some years ago we read the first couple chapters of Jane Eyre and analized them and just this beginning was really interesting. Haven't picked up the book since (I have so many books still to revisit) but I'm always thinking about some day finally reading it. But it's the same in German. Books that I had to read in school and, at times, really loathed became some of the most interesting reads I had in a while. And then I recently read Dostoyevskys short story "White Nights" and suddenly there's this huge world of Russian literature classics which is yet to be explored. It's sometimes intimidating but, from what I gathered, often really rewarding.
I think you would love Haruki Murakami idk but there’s something about their work that is just *chefs kiss* So Definitely recommend the ‘wind up bird chronicles” ugh she is so good the ending man Edit: OH ALSO “The Dovekeepers” by Alice Hoffman
Fair warning, Haruki Murakami is a man, not a woman, and a difficult author to read for many. There is a level of creepy misogyny in his work that makes me nauseous. If you're OK with Charles Bukowski or Paul Theroux go for it.
Hi! I live in Russia and I'm leaning english. I love reading english books. Recently I bought "The Secret History" of Donna Tartt in Orenburg. This book is in the same edition as yours!!! This is interesting coincidence!!! P. S. Thank you for your channel. It is great, interesting and useful. P. P. S. Sorry if I did mistakes in sentences, my english is bad yet)
oh my god you have no idea how cathartic seeing the dispossesed on this list was. ive never seen another booktuber who's read it. it's my favorite book of all time
I have loved all of Emily Henry’s books except People We Meet on Vacation! Thank you for helping me justify my opinion 😂 all my friends love this book but I could not believe in their romance
About Babel, I actually like that it is so heavy handed in its explanations. I like that it leaves no room for doubt or misinterpretation on who is in the wrong and who isn’t. The topic of Babel is very important to me and it gives me a sense of safety that it’s not possible to twist the meaning of the book. It doesn’t give margin to excuse the villains (explorers and colonizers) or even side with them. I understand why someone would want it to be more subtle and give the reader some credit, but I like that it doesn’t give you a choice, you’re either with the characters or you’re wrong lol. It was my favorite of book of 2022.
Your description of Beautiful World Where Are You is the biggest call out ever because i am a 20 something white woman and i related so much to the character of Eileen 💀
i just found you and it seems like our book choices don't really overlap so I was so surprised to hear you say that Jane Eyre was one of your top books of 2022! Its been my favourite book for many many years. Im so glad you loved it too. I wrote down so many of you recommendations, thanks
I have read SO MUCH of Orczy and she never disappoints! My personal favourite is Leatherface, it has a different pair of protagonists though in another setting. So no Chauvelin I fear, but it is so good!
Hiii Leonie, this is such an exciting video for me, I love seeing these every year, since I've seen all your videos this year so I REALLY wanna know, luv u Leonie♡♡
read the mirror visitor! It's so good. it is written by Christelle Dabos, and people view her as the french JK Rowling. Also: Read it in eglish. Dutch translation dousn't do the job.
Interestingly enough, in the sequel to The Spanish Love Deception, The American Roommate Experiment, the male love interest mentions a lot to the female love interest that her standards in men are too low and she deserves more than the bare minimum. I don't know if he's any better though considering he does something dumb at the end lol
Ok I read it and I actually loved it cuz of the whole forbidden romance thing BUT it might be disappointing cuz book two is literally book one. The romance made up for it but still the plot could’ve been better. I hope u like it tho!!
Ive gotten back into reading after 5+ years of not picking up a book. Your channel is my favorite about books and has given me a lot to put on my reading list! I enjoy "so bad/weird its good" type books which is why Im currently reading the Crave series by Tracy Wolff (halfway through book 4). Its dumb and WILD.
If you want a crazy absurdist read inspired by Jane Eyre- I’d recommend The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde Jane Eyre is kidnapped from the pages of her book and it’s up to literary detective Thursday Next to save her. The Thursday Next series is unlike anything I’ve read before- absurd, clever, and funny. Best read physically (rather than audiobook) as there is so much written word play on the page.
if you like the idea of a personification of death being tired of their job highly recommend the parts of the Discworld series by Terry Pratchett following Death
I love how listening to TikTok is a mistake that we all made in 2022, hope we leave it behind this year 🙏🏻
I’m absolutely not into booktok. I think people should just read books based on the feeling the have when the read the back 😅 I take inspo from tiktok, but if I don’t like what the back is saying I still wouldn’t read it even when everyone is saying how great it is
@@quintym7090 omg yes, that's what I do too. I'll check the book out but the description determines everything
right? I listened to booktok and ended up getting a colleen hoover book, never making that mistake again
@@Miipmiip Same. I read We Were Liars and it was so and overhyped. I had Verity but after reading it, I cringed so hard. I don’t know if this is mentioned on booktok or not but I saw "The summer I turned pretty" on UA-cam and I couldn’t even get past chapter 5 without getting so bored. I guess romance books really aren’t my thing even though that’s all booktok recommends.
same I knew the moment I gave punk57 a chance the plot was frustrating unnecessary and predictable
nobody can even imagine how I love this woman
Cute
Aw
No, I can pretty much imagine.
Same
@@Jantonov1 🤣🤣
Best description of Book Lovers 😂 “one grumpy little gremlin, struggling with perfectionism meeting another grumpy little gremlin, struggling with perfectionism, and then being organized grumpy little gremlins together,” 🌧 🌧 ❤
If someone had described it as this sooner, I would've read it ages ago
This was my first book that properrly got me into reading lmao
Just a suggestion… it would be nice to put at the top corner what book you’re talking about. Sometimes one just forgets what book you just mentioned and by the time you’re almost done, I’m like “wait what was the book again?”
sometimes we gotta pause a video and continue watching later and by then one gotta backtrack a lot and perhaps miss the exact moment you mention the name of the book. There’s a lot of scenarios where tbh it’s just convenient to have a picture of the cover on screen or name of the book in a corner. Just saying
I actually didn't catch what the first book was
@@ivingzuniga841 No actually you're right i agree with you🤔❤️
Can we please just take a moment to appreciate Leonie's immaculate humour in her videos
Yes, I love the kind of humour she brings to these video's haha
+1
RIGHT ugh love her
Timestamps for categories of the ranking :)
0:35 : I listened to the internet but at what cost
4:23 : It's me, hi, I'm the problem. It's me.
6:45 : Nice.
Intermission - 9:34 : Did not finish
13:12 : Really great! But...
19:10 : I will never shut up about these books
23:10 : Tattoo the text on my retina
(love these titles btw)
THANK YOU
Thanks, darling
No problem 🥰
“tiktok misrepresented it and I fell for it” is such a mood I can’t
YES I love The Folk of The Air books and will never apologise for it lol I think Cardan's novella How The King Of Elfhame Learned to Hate Stories might just be my favourite. Those extra scenes of him and Jude>>>
I think the only people who hate the books are the ones who wanted more romance or couldn't handle the fact that Cardan and Jude actually used to hate each other...... I don't know what they think enemies to loves is but.......
Hi! As someone who didn't enjoyed the book, I want to say that it's not because I expected more romance, but because I didn't expect it to be so YOUNG adult. I'm used to reading adult fantasy so this one seemed really silly to me, with little world building, despisable characters with teenage reactions, and predictable plot. Obviously that's only my opinion and lot's of people enjoyed it, I wish I was part of them. :)
I listened to the series on audible and I feel like I missed something. I thought the books were just fine. Fun but not that special. They are so well loved though that I feel like I should read them directly- maybe the audiobook lost something for me.
me too!!! my favorites books from last year!! can’t wait to read the stolen heir now
I think the book was so steeped in historical perspectives and realistic takes on deep human issues, that it got a bit too much for those who like FANTASY fantasy. I don't usually like fantasy at all, except for Narnia, so I ADORED Jude and Cardan.
If Shakespeare were alive today, he'd make a play of it. The story is on that level. This is coming from an English teacher, by the way.
@@whisper_dvm5157 My exact thoughts on Six of Crows.. They're good but I must've missed something. Likely the reason for the hype..
The Secret History is one of those books that have an atmosphere of mystery. I feel as though the pages are living, truly living. When I say they are living, I mean the story is still going on in some magical loop of realism again and again. I mean somewhere it is like entering into a new world, getting a renewed lease at life, being able to look at things through kind eyes. The way he loves that girl. The way she makes him feel. I really love how Donna Tartt describes love from a boys point of view for a girl. It is so accurate, it smarts but I also feel it somehow validates my entire life and those moments of being younger and being completely lost and oblivious so well. I mean I have never been better understood and I have found some kind of community when it comes to her writing style.
**SPOILERS WARNING**
and then you have goldfinch, again a master class how the central character is in falling in love with a girl while reminiscing his mother who's just passed away. A masterclass and Donna Tartt's writing its own level altogether. Easily my favourite book author of all time and also arguably the best book I have ever read.
PS - You may like sense of an ending if you liked the secret history. Different author.
I can’t get past the racism to enjoy Donna Tartt.
Personally, I don’t think what Richard feels for Camilla is love. It’s infatuation and he spends much of the book objectifying her without realizing it. But art is always up to interpretation I suppose
@@scheherazade2291 What racism?
@@CatherineMarianne When I read the Donna tartt books, she always had this weird sort of racism that emitted off all her books, especially the goldfinch. Boris was sort of played out as a "wannabe gangster", and apparently being a gangster was to say that n word?? Not once, but twice?? And how Theo described "real gangster girls" as black and latina, which was weird and stereotypical. I'm pretty sure that Donna was writing Theo to be an unreliable narrator, but it was still a bit odd. As well as every single non white character written as some "simple, working class servant" and they always had exaggerated accents and appearances that fit into basic stereotypes, no extra character design or traits. Oh well though
@@lostavenue4819 I think it is love because despite everything he loves her. You can say infatuation is linked with an ego body. Where one's ego is satiated with need to be wanted/desired by said entity.
however, i call it love because it is written so acutely, intrinsically, without any deception and defence to the reader's interpretation, lacking any form of grotesque self, i think it can be love.
I’m getting back into reading this year and I can’t tell you how much booktubers have helped me. I recently read the cruel prince series and it was so fun!! I really enjoyed it and i’m excited to read more this year ❤️❤️❤️
praise booktube honestly, I get ALL my reading plans/tbr from booktube (and try to avoid tiktok or at least only read those who have been approved by booktube)
@@MediocreAtBesd yeah same lol, I don't trust booktok but i trust booktubers with my life
I read bunny because of you and Jack Edwards here on UA-cam, and honestly I'm so grateful for your recommendation! It's unlike anything I ever read and I'm obsessed
it’s really interesting to me to see people loving Bunny, I read it because of Jack’s recommendation as well and really did not enjoy it - it was a total drain to me to get through and nearly DNF. I just couldn’t get on with it 😂 unlike anything I’ve ever read I would definitely agree with you though!
if you see this, i just wanted to say that i’ve binged so many of your videos lately, and you inspired me to get back to reading for the first time in way too long! i got a few books from the store yesterday and i’m already really enjoying one of them. thank you for being such a joy to watch and for recommending such great books!
You are such a comfort person, It's really nice to listen to you.
Dissing My Immortal was uncalled for, it is the greatest literary work of all time
The way I have been watching her 2020 vidéos because I can't have enough of the aesthetics of this channel 🥰😍😍😍
Agree, The Secret History is incredibly funny. Donna Tartt is the queen!
I just wanna say I adore the vibes in this video, the candles matching your clothing, perfection
I decided to read Bunny after hearing you talk about it. Let me just tell you I was hooked. I devoured it in two days and I found my long-lost hunger for books and reading. I've already put more books in my to-read list, I haven't felt so happy about books in ages! Thank you!
your opinions on beach read and people we meet on vacation was EXACTLY what i thought of those two books. these two reviews have now convinced me to pick up book lovers because i feel like i might love it
I am part of the group that thinks that everything Emily writes is just perfection
The candle and tier names are so awesome. Your videos are so crisp
i found your channel last week, and my life feels much richer since then
xxx
what a beautiful thing to say to someone
Ah yes, These Violent Delights by Micah Nemerever, a beautiful story about "friendship"
history will say they were roommates 🤣🤣
@@bear.b "oh my god, and they were roommates!"
BOOKS was the theme of 2022. I read 52 books in 52 weeks.
My very best year in reading that I can remember.
The books I read in 2022
1) "The Way We Live Now" by Anthony Trollope
2) "Can You Forgive Her?" by Anthony Trollope
3) "Never Let Me Go" by Kazuo Ishiguro
4) "Mark Twain: A Life" by Rom Powers
5) "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court" by Mark Twain
6) "The Innocents Abroad" by Mark Twain
7) "The End of the Affair" by Graham Greene
8) "Clarissa, or, the History of a Young Lady" by Samuel Richardson
9) "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie" by Muriel Spark
10) "Breakfast at Tiffany's" by Truman Capote
11) "What We Talk About When We Talk About Love" by Raymond Carver
12) "Anna Karenina" by Leo Tolstoy
13) "Resurrection" by Leo Tolstoy
14) "Master and Man" by Leo Tolstoy
15) "A Confession" by Leo Tolstoy
16) "The Death of Ivan Ilyich" by Leo Tolstoy
17) "The Raid" by Leo Tolstoy
18) "A Princess of Mars" by Edgar Rice Burroughs
19) “In the First Circle" by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
20) "The Hunchback of Notre-Dame" by Victor Hugo
21) "Clara Militch" by Ivan Turgenev
22) "Mumu" by Ivan Turgenev
23) "Kassyan of Fair Springs" by Ivan Turgenev
24) "The Portrait Game" Ivan Turgenev
25) " Punin and Baburin" by Ivan Turgenev
26) "The Inn" by Ivan Turgenev
27) "The Watch" by Ivan Turgenev
28) "Acia" by Ivan Turgenev
29) "Home of the Gentry" by Ivan Turgenev
30) "On the Eve" by Ivan Turgenev
31) "Rudin" by Ivan Turgenev
32) "Smoke" by Ivan Turgenev
33) "First Love" by Ivan Turgenev
34) "The Torrents of Spring" by Ivan Turgenev
35) "How Russians Meet Death" by Ivan Turgenev
36) "Sketches from a Hunter's Album" by Ivan Turgenev
37) "Volodya" by Anton Chekhov
38) "Ward No. 6" by Anton Chekhov
39) "The Lady with the Dog" by Anton Chekov
40) "The Tale of Tsar Saltan" by Alexander Pushkin
41) "The Captain's Daughter" by Alexander Pushkin
42) “Le Grand Meaulnes, or the Lost Domain” by Alain-Fournier
43) "Poor Folk" by Fyodor Dostoevsky
44) "White Nights" by Fyodor Dostoevsky
45) "Flipped" by Wendelin Van Draanen
46) "Kolyma Tales" by Varlam Shalamov
47) "An Island Hell" by S. A. Malsagoff
48) "The Return of the Native" by Thomas Hardy
49) "Jude the Obscure" by Thomas Hardy
50) “Strait is the Gate” by André Gide
51) “And Every Morning the Way Home Gets Longer and Longer” by Fredrik Backman
52) “Middlemarch” by George Eliot
Twenty (20) of my top one hundred (100) books of all time I read this year.
This is the year I found out Ivan Turgenev from Russia is my favorite author of all time and will never be surpassed. I plan on reading more of him next year too.
alexander pushkin
@@caIyps0, Alexander Pushkin is on my list of favorite books.
0) The Holy Bible: King James Version" copyright 1967
1) "Verbal Behavior" by Dr. B. F. Skinner
2) "Resurrection" by Leo Tolstoy
3) "The Idiot" by Fyodor Dostoevsky
4) "Fathers and Sons" by Ivan Turgenev
5) Myth Adventures - series by Robert Asprin
6) The Chronicles of Narnia - series by C. S. Lewis
7) "Vilette" by Charlotte Brontë
8) "War and Peace" by Leo Tolstoy
9) "A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich" by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
10) "Smoke" by Ivan Turgenev
11) "Roots" by Alex Haley
12) The Silmarillion - The Hobbit, or there and back again - The Lord of the Rings - Middle Earth stories by J. R. R. Tolkien
13) Foundation Series - Isaac Asimov
14) "Eugene Onegin" by Alexander Pushkin
and much lower down on the list he lands again.
105) "The Captain's Daughter" by Alexander Pushkin
@@ReligionOfSacrifice i know, i read the list! that's why i commented :)
@@caIyps0, my first list is merely all the books I read in a year. The second list is where they fall in regard to the best books I have ever read.
FAVORITE AUTHORS
1) Ivan Turgenev (Fathers and Sons)
2) Leo Tolstoy (Resurrection)
3) Fyodor Dostoevsky (The Idiot)
4) Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn (A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich)
5) C. S. Lewis (The Magician's Nephew)
6) Charlotte Brontë (Vilette)
7) J. R. R. Tolkien (The Hobbit)
8) Isaac Asimov (Foundation and Empire)
9) Jane Austen (Pride and Prejudice)
10) Mark Twain (The Adventures of Tom Sawyer)
11) George Eliot (Silas Marner)
12) Anthony Trollope (The Warden)
Your favorite books video was an automatic "I'm adding all of these to my 2023 tbr". I just know I always love the books you like
The humor on this channel is unmatched 👌🏾🌟 the tier names 😂
Leonie posted and my day just got a whole lot better
I FEEL EXACTLY THE SAME WAY ABOUT PEOPLE WE MEET ON VACATION, it's defo her worst work in my opinion (and that is saying something because she is currently my favorite romance author)
It was so disgustingly boring tbh
I loved it, i like friends to lovers books😂 it’s the only one i have read so maybe my opinion will change when i read her other books!
Amazing ranking ♥ I would highly recommend Piranesi, I think it's right up your alley. It's very mysterious and environmental with a mythological dream like charm, and it does actually get deeper with character than I expected. Piranesi is my favorite protagonist I read all year.
piranesi was one of my faves of last year!
piranesi appreciation real !!
I heard about Piranesi thanks to this channel, and I gave it to someone as a Christmas present this year! I haven't read it myself though, but it sounds very intriguing
There's a book being re-released in August this year, I think. It's called The Phoenix King by Aparna Verma.
It's a fantasy book inspired by South Asian culture and mythology and I really loved it. I read it a while ago under the original title "The Boy With Fire".
I don't know if that's something you're interested in but I do really recommend it :)
PS: it has firebending (sort of), assassins, enemies to lovers, morally grey characters and badass women
Finally someone else who has read and loved These Violent Delights! Such an incredible but chilling read
girl hellbent was INCREDIBLE im so excited for you to read it!!
For anyone who likes sally Rooney books and wants to try some Dutch literature I will now recommend Antiboy by Valentijn Hoogenkamp. Idk if it has yet been translated but it is a beautiful and modern queer memoir that I feel speaks to a lot of this generation
“Sometimes it can just be very cathartic to read about a woman doing doing everything women were taught not to do. And sometimes that includes murder” I died lol
which book is this
@@skinnylegend9782 a certain hunger by chelsea g. summers
Dude.. bunny is just. I’m obsessed 😭
Just discovered your channel 3 days ago and heard you go on about Book Lovers. I had read Beach Read and was a bit underwhelmed so had put off Book Lovers for months.
On your recommendations bought it 2 days ago, devoured it and LOVED it!! Thank you
If you liked the concept of mrs death misses death, you should read death at intervals!! it is incredible, Saramago is a GREAT writer
Okay before I continue the video I just want to say your whole look is on point. That is such a nice shirt and the way you styled it is fantastic
Your commentary on Beautiful World, Where Are You just convinced me to read it because you literally describe me PERFECTLY I felt like we were on Facetime for a sec and you were staring into my soul
You should read North and South! It's an 18th-century romance and it's so good! It's an enemies to lovers novel and it has a great movie to it as well.
I love how you sum up the books so short and well
oh i understand, last january i fell into this elle kennedy fever dream and read almost all of her ice hockey romance books in a span of two weeks
IM SO GLAD SOMEONE IS TALKING ABT HOW VERY "i listened to the internet but at what cost" TSLD IS !! the book was so unnecessarily long and the plot could have been over in like 10 pages had the main characters just ??? communicated ??? AND THEN OFC the very lovely 3rd quarter crisis !! also,, im sorry but people hype aaron up so much and for what ?? his whole personality trait is being tall ???? and lina's is being short ?? sorry not sorry but they had absolutely no character depth, they were quite literally words on paper.
if you didn't like vespertine that much but still want to read a magical warrior nun book i highly highly recommend red sister by mark lawrence!! it's adult fantasy, not YA but it executes the concept so well. a little gory, but with amazing characters, worldbuilding, plot, and pacing!
I think Tartt borrowed the idea Henry never heard of moon landing from Doyle as Sherlock Holmes didn´t know if Sun revolves around Earth or vice versa because he didn´t care and thought he´s above that and it doesn´t affect him in any way. They are quite similar characters. I didn´t really see it as comedy but as another layer to his character.
“If [A Certain Hunger] is a woman’s favorite book, you need to run very far way” I’m dying 🤣
Wrote down the books from the two last tiers for myself, posting here to save other people some time, if they also want to write them down:
Book Lovers - Emily Henry.
The Secret History - Donna Tartt
I’m Glad My Mom Died - Jeanette McCurdy.
Beautiful world, where are you - Sally Rooney.
The Cruel Prince - Holly Black
The Wicked King - Holly Black
The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas - Ursula K. Le Guin
The Violent Delights - Micah Nemerever
Jane Eyre - Charlotte Brontë
Bunny - Mona Awao
Don't know if you are a fan Leonie, but BTS have a music video called 'Spring Day' and the music video is based on 'The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas' - I was blown away on their interpretation of it. Jack Edwards did a video analysing the reference in the music video too which was really good!
As far as actually very good classics goes: I finally read Lolita by Nabokov this year and I was mind-blown. It reads like any contemporary novel and is not at all what I expected.
It’s amazing, right? I’ve read it so many times and it just gets better and more devastating each time.
@@LenaTate It is and it might even be the best book I read last year. Totally not what I expected.
Ok, I haven't heard anyone talk about this book, even though I know it is a children's book, I need to tell someone about The Thirteen Clocks. I love it so much and it is very dear to my heart, and if you see this I hope you read it and enjoy it as much as I did.
'They speak the way they would if AI fed them a bunch of Blockbuster movies'...😂. I so love how you describe things. Taking all these rankings to heart when choosing my next reads.
Your video is amazing! I don't always finish watching videos like these. Adore the vibe, the atmosphere, your humor and your taste in books! xx
happy new year leonie! this is not related to this video, but I just finished reading the gilded wolves trilogy and I was SOBBING through the last 50 pages! it was so heart-wrenching and I really fell in love with the characters! but I want to thank you again for recommending it, especially since it seems to be quite underrated!
aaaa i'm so glad i convinced another person to read it and love it!!
I just picked up a copy from my library today! 💛 🐺
I'm obsessed with angst romances (full of mutual pining) and I feel like you'd recommend the best of those, if you do have recommendations please make a video like that
Your videos give me sm comfort
THANK YOU. I rolled by eyes so much at The People We Meet on Vacation. Not to mention the main characters had no problems...like ZERO...so the fact that their had a "falling out" made no sense. I was like "THAT was what you were upset about all this time?"
I don't know why but you remind me so much of my older sister! She has the same name, she looks quite similar to you, she lived in Amsterdam for a while,... It makes your videos even more cozy than they already are :D
i belong to absolutely none of the categories that 'Beautiful World, Where Are You' should be relatable to, but there's still just something about sally rooney's writing that i think anyone can identify with. one of the best books i read this year for sure
I would love to hear how you underline and mark your books, you should make a video about it!!
I gave in last week and listened to the audiobook Book Lovers by Emily Henry and I was surpised that it worked so well for me so I've decided that is the only Emily Henry book I'd never going to read. I've heard it her best book by more people than not so as far as I am concerned, Emily Henry has done her job.
I feel like it made complete sense in Babel to have the characters discussing the themes - they’re academics making real life decisions based on the themes? Were they supposed to not discuss it? 😅
the plant moving with your head is so cute tho
If u like "trial books" you should read the Prison Healer series, its so goooood!!
You have to read Defy The Night!! I cant even tell how good this is: slow burn, romance, friends to lovers, enemies to lovers, a fantasy world, medical Field ( more like pharmacy) and funny lines
I honestly think what held you back from reading Jane Eyre is what holds a lot of people back from reading a lot of Classics, honestly-even amongst people who speak English as a first or even only language!. 😅🙃😅😅 Because culture and language and all evolves so much, over time, and most people find it difficult or intimidating to try and get into the culture or language of the past. I mean, just imagine trying to read something written in your own language but an old/dated / archaic version of it, or whatever! (It might have a similar effect, especially the further back you go. ^^) Because there could be words or phrases or spellings that are rarely if even ever used anymore, or that could mean something completely different back then than it would mean to someone at first glance now without actually knowing the specific context like from back then-if that makes sense. But, for me, the only reason I haven't read a lot of classics is just because I didn't have access to many Classics when I was growing up...and by the time I grew up enough to go out and obtain them for myself totally independently, wanting to read Classics had somehow kind of just taken a bit of a backseat to other things I wanted to read or such..but I really hope to turn that back around, going forward, soon / in the future!. ^--^
Classics, in whatever language, are always quite challenging, I feel. I'm German and speaking English as a second language, studying English as a minor to History. In one of my first courses some years ago we read the first couple chapters of Jane Eyre and analized them and just this beginning was really interesting. Haven't picked up the book since (I have so many books still to revisit) but I'm always thinking about some day finally reading it. But it's the same in German. Books that I had to read in school and, at times, really loathed became some of the most interesting reads I had in a while. And then I recently read Dostoyevskys short story "White Nights" and suddenly there's this huge world of Russian literature classics which is yet to be explored. It's sometimes intimidating but, from what I gathered, often really rewarding.
I think you would love Haruki Murakami idk but there’s something about their work that is just *chefs kiss*
So Definitely recommend the ‘wind up bird chronicles” ugh she is so good the ending man
Edit: OH ALSO
“The Dovekeepers” by Alice Hoffman
Fair warning, Haruki Murakami is a man, not a woman, and a difficult author to read for many. There is a level of creepy misogyny in his work that makes me nauseous. If you're OK with Charles Bukowski or Paul Theroux go for it.
Hi! I live in Russia and I'm leaning english. I love reading english books. Recently I bought "The Secret History" of Donna Tartt in Orenburg. This book is in the same edition as yours!!! This is interesting coincidence!!!
P. S. Thank you for your channel. It is great, interesting and useful.
P. P. S. Sorry if I did mistakes in sentences, my english is bad yet)
oh my god you have no idea how cathartic seeing the dispossesed on this list was. ive never seen another booktuber who's read it. it's my favorite book of all time
I have loved all of Emily Henry’s books except People We Meet on Vacation! Thank you for helping me justify my opinion 😂 all my friends love this book but I could not believe in their romance
About Babel, I actually like that it is so heavy handed in its explanations. I like that it leaves no room for doubt or misinterpretation on who is in the wrong and who isn’t.
The topic of Babel is very important to me and it gives me a sense of safety that it’s not possible to twist the meaning of the book. It doesn’t give margin to excuse the villains (explorers and colonizers) or even side with them.
I understand why someone would want it to be more subtle and give the reader some credit, but I like that it doesn’t give you a choice, you’re either with the characters or you’re wrong lol.
It was my favorite of book of 2022.
I love this list Leonie! If you loved Jane Eyre then I recommend Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys as it tells the story from Berthas perspective!
I loved „pride and prejudice“ reference on spanish love deception 🤭🤭😁
I finished reading ninth house a few weeks ago and have been waiting for the sequel to come out. Imagine my surprise seeing this month old video
I also picked up Ghost Wall thinking it would be horror, which was disappointing it wasn't, but I ended up loving the story!
I loved Babel! Just loved it!
Ahhhhh I felt exactly the same way with People We Meet on Vacation! I wanted them to make up but I didn't really want them to be together
"Uncle Iroh would love this book" I'm sold (it's already on my shelf but still)
not all my favourite youtubers making my evening better...🥰
“because… she’s a foodie” A Certain Hunger has been on my tbr for a while and now I need it
Ahhh, Jane Eyre 😍😍😍 One of my all-time favorites.
Your description of the deal followed by “uncle iroh would love this book” subscribe lol you get me
Your description of Beautiful World Where Are You is the biggest call out ever because i am a 20 something white woman and i related so much to the character of Eileen 💀
i just found you and it seems like our book choices don't really overlap so I was so surprised to hear you say that Jane Eyre was one of your top books of 2022! Its been my favourite book for many many years. Im so glad you loved it too. I wrote down so many of you recommendations, thanks
So glad to have you back
I am looking forward to this years wrap!
Speaking of classic tales, my favorite book ever is "The Scarlet Pimpernel," by Baroness Orczy. I recommend.
I read that in 9th grade and it has remained a favorite which I have reread!
I have read SO MUCH of Orczy and she never disappoints! My personal favourite is Leatherface, it has a different pair of protagonists though in another setting. So no Chauvelin I fear, but it is so good!
@@cmm5542 I will have to look into Leatherface.
I just love listening to you talking about books. We have very different taste sometimes, sometimes not! 🤣🤣
Hiii Leonie, this is such an exciting video for me, I love seeing these every year, since I've seen all your videos this year so I REALLY wanna know, luv u Leonie♡♡
I’m so excited for Hell Bent it looks so good. Glad for the new video!!
Yay!!! I was hoping you would make this video this year, I love the way you describe books
read the mirror visitor! It's so good. it is written by Christelle Dabos, and people view her as the french JK Rowling. Also: Read it in eglish. Dutch translation dousn't do the job.
i think the same about people we meet on vacation and beach read!! you got me a lot girl
Interestingly enough, in the sequel to The Spanish Love Deception, The American Roommate Experiment, the male love interest mentions a lot to the female love interest that her standards in men are too low and she deserves more than the bare minimum. I don't know if he's any better though considering he does something dumb at the end lol
This year is the year I will read "These Violent Delights" Im looking forward to it
Ok I read it and I actually loved it cuz of the whole forbidden romance thing BUT it might be disappointing cuz book two is literally book one. The romance made up for it but still the plot could’ve been better. I hope u like it tho!!
Ive gotten back into reading after 5+ years of not picking up a book. Your channel is my favorite about books and has given me a lot to put on my reading list! I enjoy "so bad/weird its good" type books which is why Im currently reading the Crave series by Tracy Wolff (halfway through book 4). Its dumb and WILD.
Those categories are so on point, I love it 🤣
bunny was also one of my favorite reads!! As well as boy parts by Eliza Clark :)
If you want a crazy absurdist read inspired by Jane Eyre- I’d recommend The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde
Jane Eyre is kidnapped from the pages of her book and it’s up to literary detective Thursday Next to save her. The Thursday Next series is unlike anything I’ve read before- absurd, clever, and funny. Best read physically (rather than audiobook) as there is so much written word play on the page.
23:46 - 23:51 best description of These Violent Delights!!
if you like the idea of a personification of death being tired of their job highly recommend the parts of the Discworld series by Terry Pratchett following Death