Top Five of 2024

I had a lot of books on my Top Five list this year. If I finished a book I felt was worthy I would add it to the list and figured I would have a few by the end of the year. I had nine by the end of the year. Then of course I had to choose. They were all five stars for a reason, but which ones were better?

Thankfully there are honourable mentions but I feel those books aren’t some that just missed out. If I was in a different mood I might have a different list entirely, put a different lot on my list. Considering I had a few years where I only managed four maybe I shouldn’t complain about nine.

Of course I also have five picture books which doesn’t always happen. I love discovering an amazing picture book, there’s always so much variety because they can be funny, cute, heartfelt, or incredibly profound. This lot is a mixture of all of those.

As Happy As Here by Jane Godwin

I wasn’t expecting this book to knock me over as much as it did. It is so unassuming and it packs and emotional punch that changed me forever. It’s a beautiful Australian story about three girls in a hospital room and their lives that intertwine as a result. The characters are complex and flawed but wonderful at the same time. It’s a fantastic story to read through the eyes of a young girl while also coming at it with an adult’s perspective and understanding. Godwin has truly written a phenomenal story. If I could give it ten out of five I would.

 

My Family and Other Suspects by Kate EmeryMy Family and Other Suspects by Kate Emery

What grabbed me first about this was the great narrative voice. Emery brings our teen narrator to life so well and engages you early on with this fun mystery. It is funny, openly addresses the reader in a unique way while never taking you out of the story, and the mystery element is creative and keeps you guessing. It is a book that look deceptively lighthearted but manages to still be an amazing read.

 

The Pause by John LarkinThe Pause by John Larkin

An incredible book reminiscent of Sliding Doors and the consequences of choice. How one decision can alter the world and change your life. It is a book about mental illness and suicide, which it explores realistically, but still brings the teen perspective and opinions while not making it too light or too heavy. A gorgeous book that highlights the stress of growing up and what it means to be alive.

 

I Don’t by Clementine FordI Don't by Clementine Ford

I wasn’t sure I’d be interested in this book despite my love of Ford’s other books, but I adored it. The history of marriage and the role it’s played in society, women’s lives, and how it has changed over the years was fascinating. I loved the quotes that could have been from this decade but were from centuries ago. Women have always had strong opinions and thoughts and I loved being able to see people have always been people.

 

Husband Material by Alexis HallHusband Material by Alexis Hall

I love these boys, and any chance to revisit their messy, loving lives I will jump at. Hall has written a story that draws you in immediately and is complicated, deep, loving, and familiar as we keep up with the lives of Oliver and Luc. This is the sequel to Boyfriend Material (also amazing) and I love that we get to see the next stage of their relationship. The characters are fun, so real, and reading about their lives makes you envious of their friendships.

 

 

Honourable Mentions

The Suffering Game by Clint McElroy

Straight Expectations by Calum McSwiggan

Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin

Mort by Terry Pratchett

 

 

Top Five Picture Books

The Littlest Turtle

The Littlest Turtle by Lysa Mullady

Something’s Fishy

Something's Fishy by Jean Gourounas

I am Stuck

I Am Stuck by Julia Mills, Julia Mills

Peep!

Peep! by Meg McLaren

Woo Hoo! You’re Doing Great

Woo Hoo! You're Doing Great! by Sandra Boynton

12th Blogiversary (and Int Giveaway)!

Two half dozens, the square root of 144, the cardinal number that is the sum of eleven and one, and a dirty dozen. Here we are again, twelve years deep when I still vividly recall being astounded at another blog doing ten years and being amazed they’d been at it that long. It was an amazing achievement and yet I often never think of my own time blogging like that.

Blogiversary time is always so weird, I’m celebrating but sometimes it feels weird to mark the occasion I got a wild idea and after months of talking to myself about it I finally took the plunge. But it isn’t about me really, I like this time to share the love and appreciation for all the people who comment on my posts and who share them with other people. I love finding out that someone read a book based on one of my reviews and I like rewarding people for coming to share my little corner of the internet.

The books I am offering this year were some of my favourites from the past year like always. I have yet to put up my Top Five because I forgot it would play a role here and it’s going up next week. However, it works to my advantage because I have so many to pick from making up my giveaway books was easy because I was spoilt for choice on amazing reads.

There is a lot of young adult on the list, but there are also adult fiction, nonfiction, and a graphic novel so hopefully, if you do wish to enter, there is something in there to tickle your fancy. Some of these books were absolutely phenomenal and I will link reviews when I can, but even if I haven’t got a post yet, trust me, these books were so wonderful any of them would be a great pick.

An infographic that says Lost in a Good Book's 12th Blogiversary Giveaway. There is a selection of eight book covers underneath and a small picture of an owl holding a balloon. The background is a parchment colour with an ornate black border

The Selection

As Happy As Here by Jane Godwin

My Family and Other Suspects by Kate Emery

The Pause by John Larkin

I Don’t by Clementine Ford

The Suffering Game by Clint McElroy*

Straight Expectations by Calum McSwiggan

Husband Material by Alexis Hall*

Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin

*Note: These items are sequels to other books.

To enter: For a chance to win one of the pictured books simply enter here and complete the Rafflecopter form.

Please note: This giveaway is international on the basis Blackwell’s ships to your country.

To see if you are eligible you can check their website.

Thank you for helping me celebrate twelve wonderful years of blogging and if you enter the draw I wish you the best of luck!

Giveaway runs until midnight AEDT on Thursday 20th February 2025

Aussie YA Challenge Update #1

My reading challenge is off to a great start in that I have read four books so far in my twelve book plan for reading more Aussie YA books.

Now, it’s early in the year so there is still time for the progress to fall dramatically off a cliff. It’s a problem I have seen happen time and time again. The first four months I often hit the ground running and then life seems to pick up and suddenly a couple weeks go by and then it’s September.

This is something I am trying to avoid by aiming for the one a month approach. I have so many books to choose from the main thing I need to do is the reading part. Considering I still have the two books I wanted to read most sitting beside me unread while I have picked up other books instead. Mainly chosen instead for their audiobook ability which is a habit I am trying to break. Not that I want to stop listening to audiobooks, but I need to learn how to read books again. Retrain my brain and all that. Hopefully these YA books can do that when I have a goal to meet and no other choice of format.

The books I have read so far I have enjoyed. It’s a mixed bag, none of them were terrible, some were ok, while others were incredible and had a profound impact on me. Who says Aussie YA isn’t an incredible arena where the most amazing books come to play.

The list so far:

Can’t Say It Went to Plan by Gabrielle Tozer

This is the third Tozer book I have read. I wasn’t a huge fan of her other two but gave this one a go. It is much the same. It’s ok, it’s a bit boring, but I’m glad I gave her work another chance before realising her writing might not be for me. A multiple point of view story about schoolies week, being with friends and having adventures as you celebrate being free from school. There’s Toolies, romance, friendship drama. Everything that makes young life so chaotic all in once book as we follow different groups of friends celebrating their freedom.

As Happy as Here by Jane Godwin

This review went up recently which I recommend reading because I will gush about this book nonstop if given the chance. It is the lower end of YA, the characters are young and sweet and finding their feet in life. It is a stunning story, deceptively simple from the outside but manages to punch you right in the heart.

Untidy Towns by Kate O’Donnell

This one was a fun find, a few years old but manages to capture the small town big dreams idea and discovering what a teen wants to do with the unknown of her future. Combined with family expectations, her dreams, and her heart, it is a great exploration about being lost and trying to find who you are.

My Lovely Frankie by Judith Clarke

A beautiful and heartbreaking story about 1950s Australia and the institution for training new bishops. A story about love and friendship, about societal and family expectations as well as an exploration of the practice of indoctrinating children too young to know better into things they cannot possibly understand. It’s an incredible read and one that is full of love, hope, and heartbreak.

 

I am putting pressure on myself to read the two books I have so desperately wanted to read next on my list. One thankfully only from last year, but the other one I first found in 2016 and still haven’t managed to open the cover. I will make myself finish these two books one way or another. I know once I start it will be easier, but stopping part way also risks making it hard to start again. Fingers crossed all goes to plan.

I hope your own Aussie YA Challenge goals are going along swimmingly and you have discovered some amazing reads. Feel free to shout out in the comments some you have read so far, or even those you are looking forward to reading. If you’re interested in signing up it’s not to late, head over to my info page and declare your goal.

As Happy As Here by Jane Godwin

Published: 23 July 2019Goodreads badge
Publisher:
Hachette Australia
Pages: 273
Format: Paperback
Genre: Young Adult
★   ★   ★   ★   ★ – 5 Stars

A beautiful coming-of-age story about three teenage girls from very different backgrounds who find themselves sharing a hospital ward, for fans of Kate DiCamillo and Fiona Wood

Three teenage girls from very different backgrounds find themselves sharing a hospital ward. When they witness a crime in the park below their window, they bond over trying to solve the crime and each one undergoes a profound change.

A beautiful coming-of-age story about identity, expectation, class, justice, society, fairness, and, above all, kindness.

I did not expect to still be thinking about this book weeks after I had finished it but it will not leave my mind. It isn’t even so much the story, but the characters Godwin has created are so impactful it’s hard not to remember them.

Godwin captures the three different personalities really well. Evie, Lucy, and Jemma overlap in some ways but at the same time their unique selves come through. Lucy is mature, having a lifetime of experience already at a young age, Evie is a young girl on the cusp of growing up and the world moving too fast for her, wanting to stay young but also foolishly lamenting not being older. Jemma is a chaotic force who is acting grown up but at the same time is even younger and more vulnerable than the others. Her strength is to bewilder and bullheadedly push on not worrying about what comes before.

The Jemma she puts on to others is very different to the one you can see is the truth. It’s a loose comparison but she gave me Pippi Longstockings vibes: the neglected kid making up stories and being proud of how unbalanced her life was.

I understood Evie’s frustrations so well. I have been around people like Jemma before and it’s hard to fight against their confidence and their chaotic nature. Their lies and self-assuredness make it hard when you know things aren’t true or are unjust. Trying to find the voice or the energy to do the right thing, or to stop people believing the wrong things about you is hard.

You know Jemma is a lonely little girl, you know she is covering up hurt and trying to be flippant about it, but my god it makes it hard to feel sorry for her. You find yourself hating this poor twelve year old and the irritation and wanting to shake sense into her and tell her to stop acting like that is strong.

I enjoyed the adults in this story as well as the three girls. Their roles are so different, and yet they are also the same. With minimal words Godwin gives full depth to the adults in the girls’ lives. We know the kind of people Evie’s parents are, who Lucy’s dad is, and who the adults in Jemma’s life are. The comparison and the different approaches was a great contrast and even through Evie’s eyes it is a great example of how much kids see.

This is a powerful story about the lives different people have, especially young teens. Having Evie reflect on the differences without being judgemental is incredibly important. Her empathy is wonderful but Godwin never makes her perfect. She is young, learning, timid but wants to do what’s right. She is a wonderful character and a great narrator. That is where Godwin’s story is fantastic. You can have these feelings based on surface events but as the book progresses and we see more of the bond the three girls have, how their lives interact, how each conflict changes them, your own perspective changes with theirs.

For the most part it is a story about unlikely friends and a strange mystery outside the window like Rear Window for the modern age, but then in the final chapters it changes so suddenly it really shocks you. I was not expecting to be hit in the emotional face by the last part of this book but it works so well.

This book does break your heart a little. Even when you have theories and know snippets of information, confirmation and context is still a punch to the heart. Godwin does a great job sprinkling in the heartache.  I had to remind myself that this was not a true story, but even then it is so reminiscent of the real lives kids have out there it’s hard not to think how true these scenarios could be.

I honestly could talk about these characters forever. Godwin has cemented them in my heart and I will be grateful they are not real but at the same time mourn for them for always.

You can purchase As Happy As Here via the following

QBD | Booktopia

DymocksAngus and Robinson

 Fishpond | Amazon | Amazon Aust