
This was a really great month of reading. I read seven books in total and gave two of them an A+. In my opinion, Wild, Dark, Shore, and The Lion Women of Tehran are both no-miss A+ reads and will definitely be contenders for my best books of the year. I also read some solid thrillers. All The Other Mothers Hate Me had me on the edge of my seat as a young mom tried to solve a murder case, but it was also very funny! I’ve read very few funny thrillers, so that was a fun treat.
Everything I read in march 2025
PS—Don’t forget that The Library has every book I’ve read in the past ten+ years. You can search and filter by genre!
PPS—Please tell me your recommendations in the comments section. You’ve given me so many of my favorite book recommendations.
Thrillers
A Girl Like Us, by Anna Sophia McLoughlin
This was good, not great. It was described to me as Succession meets Saltburn, but I’d say it also reminded me a bit of The Inheritance Games. It dragged a bit at times, but the ending was spectacular. Maya Miller is a former reality TV star and party girl. She’s now a bit of a mini mogul, with her makeup line and name all over the gossip mags. She’s managed to snag the most eligible bachelor, Colin Sterling. The Sterling family is equal parts aristocracy and media conglomerate. And… they are not nice. When Maya and Colin return from their wedding, they learn that their cousin Arianna (heiress to the whole fortune) has been brutally murdered.
The entire family decamps to their English countryside estate, where they are told it is a lockdown for their own safety. But Maya is beginning to think it’s actually to keep secrets in vs. out. Maya is determined to discover what happened to this mysterious cousin she’d never met. All bets are off when the family learns that Arianna has left her entire fortune to Maya, of all people. It is a wild ride. I wish it were maybe just 50 pages less, but I still enjoyed it. Overall Score: B // Order on Amazon.com or Bookshop.org
Wild Dark Shore, by Charlotte McConaghy
Classifying this as a thriller doesn’t do it proper justice. It’s a literary, slow-burn psychological thriller with the most beautiful writing. Olivia Muenter recommended it, and I pre-ordered it immediately as I love her taste in books. A small family (Dominic and his three children, Fen, Orly, and Raff) lives on a small island off the coast of Antarctica. The weather is brutal, and they’ve lost a lot of their power + connectivity to the outside world. It is their job to care for the island (and its seed bank) until they eventually leave in six weeks (the island is slowly crumbling into the sea).
When Fen finds a woman washed up on the shore, they are shocked to find her still alive. As they nurse her back to health, we realize she is keeping secrets… but so is Dominic. Like I said, this is a thriller, but it’s so much more than that. It’s a meditation on nature (especially plant life and seeds), a family story,and a redemption. There are twists and turns, but it’s one of those rare thrillers where the writing is even better than the plot. I really loved this and think it’s probably my favorite book of the year so far. Overall Score: A+ // Order on Amazon.com or Bookshop.org
All the Other Mothers Hate Me, by Sarah Harman
This was one of the funniest thrillers I’ve ever read, probably because thrillers aren’t usually very funny, but in this case, it really works. Florence Grimes is a former girl band star, thirty-one years old with a ten-year-old son (Dylan), and can’t seem to quit her reckless, party-girl ways. She’s single, she’s broke . . . she makes ends meet by creating balloon arcs for birthday parties. Due to a series of events over the years, the other mothers (at her son’s very posh private school) can’t stand her.
She’s a bit of a joke within the school community. But when Alfie Risby, who bullies her son, goes missing, Florence goes into crisis mode. Dylan becomes the prime suspect, and Florence has reason to suspect that Dylan may have done something terrible. Florence will do literally anything to keep Dylan safe. And with that, a series of misadventures takes place. This is twisty, fun, and something you’ll read in a couple of days. I’d pack it for a beach vacation! Overall Score: A- // Order on Amazon.com or Bookshop.org
Count My Lies, by Sophie Stava
This is a classic domestic thriller. A beautiful couple and their sweet daughter . . . and a new nanny who has a crush on the handsome husband. But let’s back up. Sloane has a sad little life. She lives at home with her mother, was fired from her last job . . . and on top of that, she can’t stop lying. When one of her lies leads her to a new job, Sloane is living her dream life. She’s now the nanny to Harper, Violet and Jay’s cute little daughter- seemingly the perfect little family.
As Sloane befriends Violet (and crushes on her husband Jay), she worries that her lies will catch up with her. She can’t mess this up! But Violet and Jay might not be who they say they are. Something much darker is at play. This one goes very far off the rails. It isn’t necessarily believable, but it makes for a fun and twisty read that you won’t be able to put down. I really enjoyed it. Because the plot got a little crazy, I only gave it a B+, but I still heartily recommend it! Overall Score: B+ // Order on Amazon.com or Bookshop.org
Literary Fiction
The Lion Women of Tehran, by Marjan Kamali
This was described to me as The Kite Runner meets My Brilliant Friend, which instantly grabbed my attention. The book opens in 1950s Iran, where seven-year old Ellie has lost her father. She and her mother are forced to move out of a palace and into a tiny home downtown. But when Ellie meets Homa, she finds a best friend. The two girls play together, learn to cook, and wander the Great Bazaar, with dreams of becoming “lion women.” When Ellie’s circumstances change in high school, she finds herself rich and popular. Just as her memories of Homa begin to fade, the girl reappears in her life.
The girls become as close as ever, as Ellie meets her future husband and Homa organizes for the communist party. When Ellie accidentally commits an egregious betrayal, the young women’s friendship will never be the same. They go on to lead separate lives, but later, in the eighties, Homa finds herself having to ask a huge favor of Ellie. I don’t want to say anything more about the plot so not to give you spoilers, but this was unputdownable for me. I absolutely loved it. It’s a beautiful friendship story but it’s also about feminism, political activism, and wealth. Overall Score: A+ // Order on Amazon.com or Bookshop.org
Romance
The Love We Found, by Jill Santopolo
It’s really interesting. I read The Light We Lost ten years ago when it came out and loved it so much. It was one of those love stories that made me cry. In reading the (much-awaited!) sequel, ten years later, I had to wonder: am I a coldhearted monster? Because I found the book so annoying at times. I wonder if 43 year old me would even enjoy the first book (33 year old me loved it). I am trying to explain the plot without giving spoilers from the first book away, but the whole book is written like one big love letter to her ex-boyfriend Gabe. Some might find that romantic; I guess is found it a little bit cheesy/over the top? Lucy as a character is a bit annoying and self-indulgent.
Gabe is gone now, and Lucy is now divorced from her husband Darren, co-parenting their three children in Brooklyn. One day, Lucy finds a piece of paper in an old box of Gabe’s things. An address in Rome. Soon, Lucy is on a plane, determined to learn more about Gabe’s life. Her trip leads her to Dr. Dax Armstrong, a New Yorker in Italy. They instantly have a spark, and Lucy finds herself wondering if she can love again. Meanwhile, Lucy and Darren have to decide whether they will tell their son Samuel the truth about his father. It’s all very melodramatic. It did make me tear up a little bit at the end so it still affected me, but this book was not for me. Overall Score: B // Order on Amazon.com or Bookshop.org
Non-Fiction
The Siren’s Call, by Chris Hayes
The longer title of this book is “How Attention Became the World’s Most Endangered Resource,” and that’s what the book is about: how attention has become a commodity, one that people and brands will do absolutely anything to capture. I thought it was particularly interesting as Hayes works in the trenches of the media world. Besides being a New York Times bestselling author, he’s also a podcast host. The book is ambitious. It’s very academic at times, but always interesting. It will change the way that you think, the way you view politics and media . . . it’s super interesting!
Sirens are designed to compel us, but now we have sirens everywhere we look. In our bedrooms, on our commutes. Everywhere, all doing the bidding of media empires and tech companies that are built to do exactly that: harvest our attention. I really took a lot away from this and like that the way he advises us wasn’t as simple as “put down your phone,” or “take a social media detox.” Because it’s so much more complicated than that! Overall Score: A- // Order on Amazon.com or Bookshop.org
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Great list! The Briar Club by Kate Quinn was my favorite this month.
I love her books!
In a big reading slump, but just started The Lion Women because of your rec!
AHH nothing is worse! I hope this book does the trick!
I’m about halfway through Good Dirt by Charmaine Wilkerson (author of Black Cake). It came out in Jan but I haven’t seen too much about it online. It’s another multigenerational story with lots of different threads and I would recommend, especially if you enjoyed Black Cake (I checked back at your earlier review and saw that you did indeed enjoy Black Cake!).
That is in my TBR pile! It hasn’t been calling to me but I’m really excited to read it.
I am reading Good Dirt now and am loving it! I’m enjoying it more than Black Cake.
Ooh that sounds promising. I may need to bump it up. There are so many great books out right now!
Hi Grace – I sent you a DM on Facebook but I was somehow removed from the Stripe Facebook group and don’t know why? I really enjoyed the group. I am not sure why I would be removed.
Hi Maureen,
You violated the medical advice/discussion rule for a second time with your post about perimenopause and progestin supplements when I’ve explicitly asked for these conversations not to be posted, and stated time and time again that posts like this will be removed and more than one violation will result in being removed from the group.
Oh wow. I don’t recall any initial post from me asking for medical advice and then a recent one was a curiosity about how progesterone was helping people. I wouldn’t classify that as advice seeking when I had already made the decision to take ita and I had mentioned that in the post. Anyway, I guess that is settled. Disappointed with the decision but I will survive.
It’s medical advice and discussion–I’ve said it again and again and it is spelled out very clearly in the rules. I’m sorry, I hate removing people (and deleting posts) but the rules are the rules.
Another great list — just added The Lion Women of Tehran and the Siren’s Call to my TBR!
Last month I unexpectedly loved Dick Ebersol’s memoir from a few years ago — he is the NBC exec who initially found Lorne and started SNL then created many of the major televised sports relationships/moments we all have experienced over the years including Sunday Night Football (I super do not care about football but still found the inner workings of how they built the partnership across the league and networks and how critical storytelling was in making this a successful broadcast fascinating). And of course the Olympics! Just hearing how they pitched NBC as the home for the Olympics and how they’ve grown that over the years was so interesting. There is a sad side story about his family, but overall this is a story about embracing life, giving yourself fully to your passions and having the confidence to make changes. Anyway – I had no idea I would be so passionate about this random book, haha, but I do recommend (especially as an audiobook)!
I also read and LOVED Lorne Michael’s memoir by Susan Morrison. Clearly I was on a bit of a theme this month, but it was a good listen and felt like new territory than many of the other SNL histories I’ve read.
Currently reading Wild Dark Shore and can’t wait to wrap up work to go (hopefully) finish it!
I love this — fun theme! Thanks for the rec(s)!!!!
I just started the Lion Women of Tehran yesterday, so seeing an A+ review is making me extra excited to dig in 🙂
Yay! Please keep me posted on what you think!
I just finished “Not the End of the World” by Hannah Ritchie and it was excellent. Very thought provoking.
Ooh thank you for the rec!
Your book reviews are wonderful, quick hitting and I tend to agree with your feedback and plot description every time! Have you read “The Tell,” I might be late to the game on this one, but I finished it in 3 days, I couldn’t put it down. Please keep sharing your great recommends.
I actually just started listening to it (and don’t want to stop!!!) Glad you loved it!
I totally hear you on your thoughts on “The Love We Found”! It’s so funny how opinions start to change as you get older – I used to looove the contemporary romance genre and now sometimes I flip through books on my shelf and wonder if I’d feel the same reading them 2, 3, 5, years later or if they’d feel cheesy to me. Maybe my tastes are maturing or maybe I’m jaded lol (I’m 28 so let’s hope not!). Either way always love your book recs!
I am so glad I’m not the only one! I guess it shows growth 😉
Just started The Lion Women of Tehran thanks to your rec. Been craving a book like this.
Yay! Let me know how you like it.