7 of the Best Books I’ve Read and Loved This Year | Wit & Delight

7 of the Best Books I’ve Read and Loved This Year | Wit & Delight


A stack of the best books 2024 sits on top of a wooden dresser

Swapping favorite reads is my favorite form of social currency. I devoured some really special books this year and felt it was the right time to compile a list of the ones that stayed on my mind long after I read the last page. My criteria for what makes a read share-worthy extends beyond just liking the book. Many of these authors made me feel uncomfortable and squeamish, and that’s how I like it—but that’s not to say I don’t enjoy an escapist book.

Today I’m sharing a short and incomplete list of the books I couldn’t stop talking about this year.

Here are seven of the best books I’ve read in 2024.

1. The Perfectionist’s Guide to Losing Control by Katherine Morgan Schafler

The Perfectionist’s Guide to Losing Control by Katherine Morgan Schafler

Ever heard of a “Messy Perfectionist” before? Katherine Morgan Schafler’s The Perfectionist’s Guide to Losing Control resonated with me deeply because it delves into the origins and complexities of perfectionism, offering a 360-degree perspective on the many ways it manifests itself. I found Schafler’s insights and personal anecdotes refreshing. She suggests we discard the label “recovering perfectionist” (one I have subscribed to) and instead look at perfectionism as a superpower to be harnessed for good rather than hold us back. 

I read this book twice this year and plan to pick it up again over the holiday break.

2. Bittersweet by Susan Cain

Bittersweet by Susan Cain

In Bittersweet, Susan Cain explores the concept of bittersweetness and how embracing both positive and negative emotions can lead to a richer and more fulfilling life. Through beautiful personal stories and research, Cain argues bittersweetness is an essential part of the human experience and that it can help us appreciate the beauty and fragility of life.

This book touched parts of myself I had long shuttered away as weird, sensitive, and something I should never express in public. Yet they’re so core to who I am. Susan Cain continues to be a champion for sensitive, quiet, deep thinkers.

3. Slowing by Rachel Schwartzmann

A woman is wearing a blue sweater and holding the book Slowing by Rachel Schwartzmann



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