Honestly, 2020 was such a brutal year on so many levels, but it forced me to seek out books that weren't just good, they were emotional life rafts. One that kept floating back up for me was 'A Psalm for the Wild-Built' by Becky Chambers—it's this quiet, gentle novella about a monk and a robot having philosophical talks in a post-factory world. It's not a big, loud, happy story, more like a deep breath after you've been crying. The way it frames purpose and rest felt like a direct response to the collective burnout.
On a completely different note, I tore through 'The House in the Cerulean Sea' by TJ Klune in one weekend. It's like being wrapped in a warm, slightly quirky blanket. The found-family vibes are so strong, and the central premise about a caseworker for magical orphanages discovering joy again… yeah, it hit different that year. I remember finishing it and just sitting there, feeling lighter for the first time in months.
I'd be remiss not to mention 'The Midnight Library' by Matt Haig too, even if it got super popular. The concept of getting to try out all your possible lives could feel heavy, but the core message about the value of the one you're actually in was genuinely reassuring when so many paths felt closed off.
My pick is 'The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue'. Sure, it's got a bittersweet core, but the sheer scope of Addie's life—centuries of making tiny, fleeting marks on the world—felt incredibly expansive when real life had shrunk so much. That relentless spark of her spirit, the idea that a life can be significant even without being remembered, gave me a real jolt of energy. I needed that kind of stubborn, artistic hope.
I’m gonna go a bit against the grain here and say the best 'uplifting' stories weren’t the ones that pretended everything was fine. For me, it was 'Hamnet' by Maggie O'Farrell. Sounds like a downer, right? A fictionalized account of Shakespeare’s son dying. But the way it’s written, with such profound love and attention to the small details of family life and art-making, it elevated grief into something beautiful and human. It didn’t cheer me up; it made me feel seen in a really deep way, which was its own kind of comfort.
Another one that worked was 'Piranesi' by Susanna Clarke. The main character is alone in a vast, mysterious House, but he’s not lonely. His wonder and meticulous care for his world is so pure. In a year of confinement, reading about someone finding sublime meaning and order in isolation was strangely, powerfully hopeful. It reframed my own four walls.
2026-06-24 05:12:52
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Vera Lee, an introverted yet lonesome bibliophile who writes for a living, meets Jackson Young, her charming yet secretive next door neighbor on an online book auction of Stephen King's The Shining. The two enter into a last minute bidding war making Vera take matters into her own hands by convincing Jackson to give up.
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Priyada
Some moments you plan for while most of the good ones, you don’t.
Sweet Surrender is a collection of stories about the moments right before everything changes. It’s a storm that leaves two strangers with nowhere to run, a work trip that blurs every line that was supposed to stay straight, a wedding where the wrong person says exactly the right thing.
These aren’t stories about perfect people making perfect choices. They’re a little guarded, a little stubborn to the point that whoever finds themselves in situations that make resisting feel pointless and surrender feel like the smartest and easiest thing they’ve ever done.
Come in and get comfortable. Don’t make plans for the rest of the evening.
Nothing gets me through a slump like stumbling on a book that feels like a warm, steady hand on your shoulder. I’d point you towards 'A Psalm for the Wild-Built' by Becky Chambers, which isn’t new-new but still feels like a fresh discovery every time. It’s about a tea monk and a robot meeting in a future that’s learned to get things right, and the whole vibe is gentle questioning instead of frantic solving. The prose has this quiet, deliberate pace that slows your breathing down. For something more recent, 'The House in the Cerulean Sea' by TJ Klune exploded for a reason—it’s a found-family fantasy about a caseworker visiting a magical orphanage that is so defiantly kind it almost hurts.
Sometimes, though, I need the uplift to come from a place that acknowledges the grit, not just offers an escape. 'Remarkably Bright Creatures' by Shelby Van Pelt did that for me last year. A grieving widow and a brilliant octopus forming a bond sounds absurd, but it’s grounded in such tangible sadness and small-town weariness that the eventual hopeful turns feel earned, not sentimental. It’s the kind of story that suggests connections can be rebuilt from the strangest fragments. I find these ‘wounded healers’ more comforting than purely cheerful tales; they feel like they’ve seen the dark and chosen to light a candle anyway.
On a totally different note, if your tough times involve feeling powerless, a riveting nonfiction book about human ingenuity can be a surprising boost. 'Endurance' by Alfred Lansing, about Shackleton’s expedition, is an old one, but a new book in a similar vein is 'The Worst Journey in the World' by Apsley Cherry-Garrard. Reading about people facing literal, physical impossibilities with grim humor and stubborn persistence reframes my own mental obstacles. It doesn’t whisper ‘it’ll be okay’; it shouts ‘look what can be endured,’ which is sometimes the more useful message.
Nothing cuts through a gray mood quite like a story where kindness refuses to be extinguished. I often reach for something like 'A Psalm for the Wild-Built' by Becky Chambers, which follows a travelling tea monk and a robot in a world that’s chosen to be gentle. The plot isn’t about defeating a villain, but about learning to ask, ‘What do people need?’ and finding quiet purpose in simply listening. It’s a book that wraps around you like a warm blanket, offering a vision of a future built on care rather than conflict, which can feel like a radical act of hope when things are difficult.
Another wonderful choice is 'The House in the Cerulean Sea' by T.J. Klune. It starts in a drab, bureaucratic office but blossoms into a vibrant tale about a caseworker sent to evaluate an orphanage for magical children. The uplift comes from its unwavering belief in found family and the transformative power of accepting people—or sprites, or wyverns—exactly as they are. The narrative is so full of heart and humor that the feeling of being welcomed into its peculiar, loving circle lingers long after the last page.
For a different flavor of solace, I love 'The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet' by Becky Chambers, too. It’s a slice-of-life story set on a tunnelling spaceship, focusing on the crew’s interpersonal dynamics and the small, daily acts that build a community. The conflicts are often about misunderstanding and reconciliation, and the overall message is one of connection across vast differences. Reading it feels like being told, repeatedly and with great conviction, that you are not alone, and that there is a place for you somewhere among the stars. That specific sensation—of being gently included—can be a powerful antidote to isolation.