Shepherd-10 amazing book lists for September

What's new for September?

  1. My 10 favorite book lists for September

  2. Traffic + top 2 business updates...

  3. What am I reading & doing? 

đŸ„ł Mark Huntley-James and his partner Caroline are generously matching any member signups we get in September! đŸ„ł

Please consider joining as a founding member to support our quest to build a better book website for readers and authors. For $49 dollars a year, you keep us independent and help us toward our goal of hiring a full-time developer. 

My 10 favorite book lists for September!

I am a fantasy and science-fiction author with a soft spot for books cut with a sharp sense of humour, impaled on the absurd, or littered with the brutal slaughter of conventions and tropes. I love crisp one-liners and surreal worlds, awkward anti-heroes, and kick-ass heroines who bring their own ruthless horde to the fight. If I were to pick out one feature of a book, film, or television show that really catches my attention it would be “Wow. Didn’t see that one coming.”

- Mark Huntley-James

Growing up in the ‘80s, I discovered cyberpunk just when the subgenre acquired its name and was instantly hooked. While its style and action were certainly engaging, it was cyberpunk’s message about the surveillance state, corporate power, fascism, and corruption, which contrasted so violently from mainstream science fiction, that kept me turning pages. 40 years later, after writing novels for 25 years, completing 12 books, I’m still fascinated by what cyberpunk can do. In an age where Humanity is mortally threatened by climate change and inequality, we need cyberpunk now more than ever, with its action and adventure and a little something for us to think about, too.

- Seth W. James

Since I was introduced to many authors published by Grove Press, I have been intrigued by transgressive literary fiction, especially stories and novels that feature narrators and protagonists whose unreliability and moral culpability fuel plots to surprising yet inevitable climaxes. Lesser writers of such works use the shocking and revolting as crutches for vapid prose, failing to lead readers to revelations that can be found in the darkest places and in the unlikeliest of people. What better accomplishment can any writer ask for except getting readers, in some way, to identify with characters whom they would avoid in real life?

- Michael Kiggins

I've been fascinated by city life since I studied Geography at high school. After twenty five years of teaching and researching urban geography, I am Professor of Urban Futures at a UK university. I now have a better sense of the challenges we face and what we can do about them. I spend my time supporting activists, campaigners, students, policymakers, and politicians about the urgency for change and what kind of ideas and examples they can use to tackle what I call the triple emergencies of climate breakdown, social inequality, and nature loss.

- Paul Chatterton

It was while on the job as an investment banker that I first heard about this new thing called Bitcoin, before the word "web3" entered the vernacular. Initially I was skeptical but curious. But I became convinced the underlying technology of blockchains was ushering in nothing short of a new internet. My father Don Tapscott and I agreed to collaborate on a major research initiative that became the international best-seller, Blockchain Revolution. Since then, I have traveled to 40 countries and seen first-hand how blockchain and now Web3 is changing the world, setting the stage for a new digital age. My new book charts a course for this coming transformation.

- Alex Tapscott

I love big books with strong thematic cores, sprawling casts, and curious timelines (from books that take place over four seconds to several decades) that explore what it means to be human on the most primal, unfiltered, and unflinching level. These books feature characters who are trying to reconcile the expectations they had for their lives, with their complicated realties. And yet, they simmer with warmth and hope, all of them reminders that there’s nobility in the struggle, and that there’s still plenty of room for joy, even when things don’t go as planned. Especially if they don’t. Ballsy, wise, and funny, these books speak to my existential comedic heart.    

- Ali Bryan

I’m a theologian who started out as a computer scientist. Teaching classes on AI got me wondering, not just whether we’d ever be able to create a human-like AI, but why we wanted to do so in the first place. It seemed to me that computers were the most helpful when they did the things we are not very good at—crunching big calculations, or exploring Mars—stuff we can’t do. That got me thinking that there might be something spiritual going on, that in a world where we increasingly no longer believed in God or angels, we were lonely. That we didn’t want a tool but a companion.  

- Noreen Herzfeld

I have always been fascinated by strange and “forbidden” states of consciousness. My first taste of psychedelia came in the form of cannabis—more potent and otherworldly than it gets credit for—and quickly graduated to MDMA, which blew me away. I dove head first into this new world, experimenting with psychedelics new and ancient while reading about all things psychedelic: their history, emerging science, and therapeutic and spiritual possibilities. My other great passion is books, so it was only natural that I would try to encapsulate all that I had learned in book form.

- Cody Johnson

I’ve always been intrigued by the way night transforms familiar landscapes, creates a sense of loosened boundaries, and seems to be rich with almost magical potential. One of my most beloved books as a kid was The BFG, partly because of its magnificent passage about the witching hour, “the special moment
when all the dark things came out from hiding and had the world to themselves.” Later, I discovered Hamlet’s take on it and was equally charmed. It’s no surprise that many of the key moments in my debut collection, Here in the Night, take place after dark. Here are my five favorite books that capture the beguiling power of nighttime. 

- Rebecca Turkewitz

Our obsessions with food and history mean that recipes are not the end of the journey, but the beginning. Recipes are an answer to a whole host of questions, challenges, and opportunities, and those are the stories that interest us. A recipe with no history is like the punch line with no preceding joke, incomplete at best.   

- Andrew T. Huse, BĂĄrbara Cruz, and Jeff Houck

As a computer science professor and educator, my teaching motto is Rigor and Vigor. I believe that the only way to learn something deeply, whether it's an abstract mathematical argument or a complex computer system – is building the thing from the ground up, from first principles. That's the rigor. The second requirement – vigor – comes from the need to make this learning experience captivating, rewarding, empowering. I spent much of my career developing books, courses, and games that help learn computer science and mathematics with gusto. I am pleased that this work has had an impact, and that it resonates with many students and self-learners around the world.

- Shimon Schocken

And here are 3 random bookshelves you might be interested in! 

  1. Technology - Use filters to explore by genre and Wikipedia topic. 

  2. Civilization

  3. Counterculture

Traffic...

For August, we had 421,000+ visitors and 552,000+ pageviews. That is up 175% over the previous year. 

Traffic from Google was flat again. That is part of the process, but it is always frustrating (as search traffic has been flat since January). This will improve as I improve the website and add new features. 

For a big-picture perspective:

  • In 2022, we had 1.8 million visitors.

  • In 2023, we've already had 3.3 million visitors (through August)! Woohoo! 

My goal for 2023 is to reach one million monthly visitors. That is looking tough, but I am keeping my fingers crossed!

Top 2 business updates

#1 - Getting ready to launch our "best books of 2023" program!

Check out my fake picks for the best books of 2023 here. We are using this to test the frontend as we build this page.

Next, we will create the frontend design for the category pages (which you can see here at the bottom of this page). This will show the most read books in 2023 and the most read books in 2023 that are also published in 2023. 

Here is the timeline:

  • October 1st - Email authors & interesting people the template to fill out.

  • November 1st - Publish their individual page and the total results for their favorite reads in 2023.

Do you want to take part?

If so, hit reply, as I am taking a small number of readers this year. 

This is the first new format I have created since we launched, and I am super excited!!! This will be an excellent way to find amazing books!

#2 - What comes next?

September & October

We will add the new "best books of the year" program to the website. 

And we will launch a "new book launch program" for authors. 

November & December

We will revamp the front page to improve it drastically. 

We will revamp the search to improve it drastically (genre integration). With search, we are moving from Algolia (too expensive) and most likely moving it in-house to PostgreSQL. I am also looking at Typesense and pricing. 

What about 2024?

We are going to launch user accounts + a personalized book recommendation newsletter. I'll share more on the ETA as we dig in. 

What am I reading?

  • I am reading Finder by Suzanne Palmer. This is a Hugo award-winning book, and I am about 20% in. The story is solid so far, and very curious where it goes. It is about someone working to reclaim a stolen spacecraft in a remote part of space. 

What have I been up to?

I am back from my August biking trip through France. 

I rode 1,269 kilometers from Bordeaux to Paris to Mont Saint-Michel. I had fantastic weather and a wonderful time. I can't wait for my next bike tour.

Have a great week,
Ben

P.S. Some pictures from my trip. 

 

Can you help me create a better book website for readers?

For $49 dollars a year, you keep us independent and creating the book website that readers and authors deserve. 

This is hugely important as I am currently funding this with my savings, and I need your financial support (if able). 

  • We have special perks for readers who join (and more coming). Add free browsing is coming with user accounts soon! Plus you can take part in the upcoming "best 3 reads of the year" alongside authors!

  • 100% of your membership goes toward new features (Ben works for free).

  • Ben will work incredibly hard for you and echo your name through the ages! 

Hit reply and ask me anything. 

Reply

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