I am on hiatus. Which is why I am making book recommendations for April a week into April. I will give you this much (and a few other blogs) and then disappear again for another week or so. Life.
April is Easter, at least this year. (What’s with the lunar date thing?) I have yet to read a great Easter-y book to recommend for you, though I started Ben Hur like two years ago. Haven’t gotten past the first quarter and won’t this year, either.


But I do love to re-read Anne of Green Gables (and the series) in the springtime. I just feel it and then it happens. However, this year I am going to scootch on over to one of L. M. Montgomery’s other books and we’re starting with Emily of New Moon, the first book in the Emily series. I have read it a couple times and love it, but am usually distracted back to Anne. I have not reviewed it here, so that’s just a little part of the reason why I’m headed there this spring instead of Anne.
April is also poetry month. I have a few books of poetry (and single poems) that I have reviewed and can recommend:





“The Jabberwocky,” from
Through the Looking Glass, Lewis Caroll (with commentary, as well)
How to Eat a Poem
, The American Poetry & Literacy Project
Brand New Ancients
, Kae Tempest
Asphodel & Other Love Poems
, William Carlos Williams
Glass, Irony and God
, Ann Carson“
Aedh Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven,” William Butler Yeats
“Kingdom Animalia,” Aracelis Girmay
“A Song in the Front Yard,” Gwendolyn Brooks
“The Afterlife,” Billy Collins
“Falling,” James Dickey
“The Long Boat,” Stanley Kunitz
Spinning the Vast Fantastic
, Britton Shurley
Hell, I Love Everybody
, James Tate
So back to Easter and Poetry Month.
I helped set up the poetry display for the bookshop. Here are the books that I pulled from the shelves:
















Call Us What We Carry, Amanda Gorman
The Divine Comedy (Michael Palma trans.), Dante Alighieri
The Book of Psalms, Robert Alter
A Light in the Attic, Shel Silverstein
For There Is Always Light (journal), Amanda Gorman
The Anthology of Black Mountain College PoetryLetters to a Young Poet, Rainer Maria Rilke
If Not, Winter, Anne Carson
You Are Here: Poetry in the Natural World, Ada Limon ed.
The Odyssey (Emily Wilson transl.), Homer
Kitchen Hymns, Padraig O Tuama
New and Selected Poems, Mary Oliver
No One Is on the Line, Mohsen Mohamed
Poetry Unbound: 50 Poems to Open Your World, Padraig O Tuama ed.
Water, Water, Billy Collins
The Sonnets, William Shakespeare
Modern Poetry, Dianne Seuss
A Century of Poetry in the New YorkerA few books of poetry I am looking forward to reading sometime:















Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair, Pablo Neruda
The Complete Poems, Emily Dickinson
Howl and Other Poems, Allen Ginsberg
Mountain Interval, Robert Frost
Leaves of Grass, Walt Whitman
Autobiography of Red, Anne Carson
Metamorphoses, Ovid
100 Selected Poems, E.E. Cummings
The Essential Rumi, Rumi
Annie Allen, Gwendolyn Brooks
American Primitive, Mary Oliver
The Collected Poems of Langston Hughes, Langston Hughes
Spring and All, William Carlos Williams
Sonnets to Orpheus, Rainer Maria Rilke
Collected Poems, Wallace Stephens
Just Give Me a Cool Drink of Water ‘Fore I Diiie, Maya Angelou
As for some Easter reads that could work. (Easter books are about as common as Thanksgiving songs):


Ben-Hur, Lew Wallace
Chocolat, Joanne Harris
Miz Fannie Mae’s Fine New Easter Hat, Melissia Milich
Some of the most anticipated publications for April 2025 needs to begin with Emily Henry’s 2025 summer read, Great Big Beautiful Life. It comes out on April 15th and there will be midnight release parties so you could look into that if you are a big fan (and there are many of you). If you want a copy right away, I would suggest pre-ordering a copy ASAP, which you can probably do through your local bookstore just as easily as elsewhere.


For one reason or another, I am also really looking forward to Audition by Katie Kitamura.
Other new publications this month:




















The Bright Years, Sarah Damoff
Heartwood, Amity Guige
A Drop of Corruption, Robert Jackson Bennett
Bat Eater and Other Names for Cora Zeng, Kylie Lee Baker
Say You’ll Remember Me, Abby Jimenez
Flirting Lessons, Jasmine Guillory
My Best Friend’s Honeymoon, Meryl Wilsner
Where Shadows Meet, Patrice Caldwell
Watch Me, Tahereh Mafi
Protocols, Andrew D. Huberman
Fearless (Powerless Triology #3), Lauren Roberts
The Griffin Sisters’ Greatest Hits, Jennifer Weiner
The Geographer’s Map to Romance (Love’s Academic #2), India Holton (which I should have a review for shortly)
No More Tears: The Dark Secrets of Johnson & Johnson, Gardiner Harris
Vera Wong’s Guide to Snooping (Vera Wong #2), Jesse Q. Sutanto
How to Seal Your Own Fate (Castle Knoll Files #2), Kristen Perrin
Gifted & Talented, Olivie Blake
Don’t Sleep with the Dead, Nghi Vo
To Save and Destroy, Viet Thanh Nguyen
Vanishing World, Sayaka Murata
The Pretender, Jo Harkin
I have already read the ARC of Julie Chan Is Dead by Liann Zhang and it has hit summer book potential. To see who I recommend it for and if it’s for you, see my review HERE.


The movie, The Friend, just dropped in theaters at the tail end of March. You could hurry up and read the book, The Friend by Sigrid Nunez, first.
April 2025.





We Deserve Monuments, Jas Hammonds
Normal People
, Sally Rooney (which I’ve already read)
Senlin Ascends (Books of Babel #1), Josiah Bancroft
The Ends of the World, Peter Brannen
One Hundred Years of Solitude, Gabriel Garcia Marquez (re-read from 20 years ago)
Modern Poetry, Diane Seuss
ARCs, poetry, and other random books I hope to get to real soon:
















I Got Abducted by Aliens and Now I’m Trapped in a Rom-Com, Kimberly Lemming
What Pecan Light, Han Vanderhart
The Geographer’s Map to Romance (Love’s Academic #2), India Holton
And Yet Held, T. De Los Reyes
If We Had a Lemon We’d Throw It and Call That the Sun, Christopher Citro
A Family Matter, Claire Lynch
The Symmetry of Fish, Su Cho
Worth Fighting For, Jesse Q. Sutanto
The Phoenix Pencil Company, Allison King
The Familiar, Leigh Bardugo
We Do Not Part, Han Kang
The Fraud, Zadie Smith
The Emperor of Gladness, Ocean Vuong
Ghost Roast, Shawnelle Gibbs
Swordheart (The World of the White Rat), T. Kingfisher
The Bright Sword, Lev Grossman
The Likeness (Dublin Murder Squad #2), Tana French
March 2025. Nearly every book I read in March I would recommend. Some more emphatically than others.







And Then There Were None
, Agatha Christie
A Study in Charlotte (Charlotte Holmes#1), Brittany Cavarallo
Olga Dies Dreaming, Xochitl Gonzalez
Dear Life, Alice Munro
Big, Vashti Harrison
House of Fury, Evilio Rosero (caveats of excessive violence and sexual assault)
The First Sister (First Sister Trilogy #1), Linden A. Lewis
In the Woods (Dublin Murder Squad #1), Tana French