Shepherd -Best books of 2023 is live!

What's new for November?

  1. What are the best books of 2023?

  2. My 10 favorite book lists for November!

  3. Project updates...

  4. What am I reading/doing? 

I asked 1,200+ authors for their 3 favorite reads of 2023... here are the best books of 2023.

Check out the most-read books in 2023 and the most-read books that were also published in 2023 -> https://shepherd.com/bboy/2023

I have more votes coming and ~250 authors I am still working to publish. 

We also broke down the results by fictionnonfictionaudiobooks, and book club books. Plus, genres like mysterythrillerfantasysci-firomancehistorical fictionhistorybusinesstrue crimehorror, and more! 

As well as ages like babychildrenmiddle gradeteenyoung adult, and adult.

Just a few examples...

My 10 favorite book lists for November!

Ever since childhood, I’ve been dazzled by the idea of virtual worlds described by pixels, first in ancient computer games, and then in novels that gave the rudimentary graphics of decades past a vivid new life—from the hallucinatory realities in Philip K. Dick’s novels to William Gibson’s Neuromancer to most of all, Neal Stephenson’s Snow Crash. As a young writer, I stepped sideways into a dream assignment: Helping make the Metaverse real. After writing about it for two decades, however, I’m still learning about it now.

- Wagner James Au

I write fiction and poetry in English and translate literary works from Kannada, a South Indian language. I was shortlisted for the Lucien Stryk Asian Translation Prize, and twice in a row for the Montreal International Poetry Prize. I had the Charles Wallace India Trust Fellowship in writing and translation at LAF and UWTSD in 2022. As a reader, I admire original and clever use of language, writing that portrays with humour the profundity in the absurdity of life, that which makes the quotidian quotable – writing that strikes while the ‘irony’ is hot. These are qualities that I think are intuitive in my own writing. I've enjoyed the following books for these reasons. 

- Maithreyi Karnoor

I was the type of kid who tossed a coin in a fountain and wished that every day could be Valentine’s Day. So, it’s no surprise that my younger years were dominated by dating, love, and heartbreak. I learned enough about the matter to even have my own dating advice column for a few years. Mostly what I’ve learned is how important it is to have compassion for yourself and to know you’re not the only one having a hard time finding your forever love. I hope these book picks bring you some comfort.

- Minda Honey

I’m a storyteller writing on business and technology. I specialize in clear views of complex systems. When Juliette showed me her research on tech companies and AI responsibility, I saw the power of a book – the book that ultimately became The AI Dilemma. The core dilemma is that in the right hands the technology is needed, and in the wrong hands it’s dangerous. When Juliette asked me to coauthor it, I jumped at the chance. As we worked, I realized that the topic brought into focus all the research and thinking I’d ever done about human, organizational, and machine behavior. 

- Art Kleiner

Hello, I am Jennifer Cramer-Miller—an author, speaker, and joy seeker. Thirty-some years ago, at 22, I had a cozy apartment with my best friend and a promising PR position. Then I was diagnosed with an incurable autoimmune kidney disease, and suddenly, doctors discussed my “quality of life.” At a very young age, life’s uncertainty fueled my will to survive. And I’ve learned that life is a mix of beauty and bummers. So as long as we’re alive, we should appreciate all of it. That’s why I’m drawn to books that illuminate what it means to be a human managing uncertainty, holding onto hope, and finding joy. 

- Jennifer Cramer-Miller

I am fascinated with the relationship between our individual behaviors and the social structures and institutions in which we live—and how these influence each over time. I think this sort of understanding is important if we want to consider the kind of world we want to live in, and how we might get there from where we are. I take insights from many disciplines, from physics and biology to the cognitive and social sciences, from philosophy and art to mathematics and engineering. I am currently a professor of cognitive and information sciences at the University of California, Merced, and an external professor at the Santa Fe Institute. 

- Paul E. Smaldino

I have always been fascinated with bodies: the meaning we make of them; the suffering, joy, and indignities we receive through them; the outer limits of what we can do to and with them. I’ve worked in careers that have asked a lot of my own body, and I write about the brutalities humans inflict upon our own and other bodies. My work is obsessed with questions of how and why we endure suffering. Also, I’ve done a lot of dumb shit to and with my own body that has given me (in addition to a lifetime of medical problems) a highly specific perspective about intensity, hazard, and pain.

- Margo Steines

I’m a professor of economics based in Warsaw, Poland. As a researcher I was always drawn to most fundamental questions about the long run and the big picture. I study long-run economic growth at the global scale, concentrating in particular on the role of technological progress, technology choice and the accumulation of productive factors such as physical and human capital. Recently I have put forward a novel hardware-software framework, based on first principles from physics and generalizing previous economic frameworks to include any era in the human history, from simple hunting and gathering to automated multi-step production processes of the digital era. 

- Jakub Growiec

I'm a Professor of Sensory and Behavioural Ecology at Queen Mary College of the University of London and also the founder of the Research Centre for Psychology at Queen Mary. I've been fascinated by the strange world of insects since childhood and after taking the first glance into a beehive, I was hooked – I instantly knew that I was looking into a form of alien civilization. Since becoming a scientist, I have explored their strange perceptual worlds as well as their intelligence, and most recently the question of their consciousness. I hope you find wonderful insights in the books that I have suggested and a new respect for the animal minds that surround us. 

- Lars Chittka

I was never going to hack it as a scientist. So I became a journalist instead. After all, both careers stem from a sense of wonder about the world and asking questions, looking for answers, and accepting that there might not be any. In 2018, I started my narrative podcast Wild Thing, which let me explore some of our weirder collective fascinations (like aliens) using science, history, psychology, and humor. I’d never aimed the podcast at kids, but I realized that all those big open-ended questions that I had about everything were the same kinds of questions that kids had - which really set me up to write the Wild Thing book series. 

- Laura Krantz

Three bookshelves that might interest you! 

Project updates

I am running very late on this email, and that is primarily because October kicked my butt. We processed 1,000 favorite-3-read submissions from authors, but it might have stripped me of my sanity 😜.

I then left for 2 weeks to visit family back home in the USA and didn't get as much work done as I thought I would (which is good). Now, I am back in Portugal and working to catch up. It has been a hectic 6 weeks.

Highlights from the build blog:

What am I reading?

  • M: Son of the Century - About Mussolini, just started.

  • Smaller and Smaller Circles - Crime books based in the Philippines that I found through an author’s favorite 3 reads picks for 2023.

What have I been up to?

Crazy amounts of work to get the big best books of the year feature launched, and a few team members have been on vacation, which adds a bit to my queue. 

P.S. I hope all the Americans had a great Thanksgiving. We kept it low-key this year with a delicious sushi lunch, pumpkin pie, and fun with our little family.

 

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

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

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