December Staff Picks

It’s the final month of our 100 Years, 100 Books Challenge! Need a few more titles to finish strong? Look no further than this month’s staff picks.
In need of more recommendations? Check out past Staff Picks on our What We’re Reading page, or complete a short form and we’ll email you a list of personalized recommendations.
Scot says:
“I’m normally averse to holiday-themed books, but Peter Swanson’s name on the cover of this slim, read-it-one-sitting novella drew me in. In 1989, an American girl studying abroad joins a classmate for Christmas in the Cotswolds. She’s immediately smitten with the Englishness of it all, and especially by the classmate’s older brother … a charmer who is also the lead suspect in the unsolved murder of a local girl. Swanson’s expert delivery of twists pack an emotional wallop, and turns what could have been a simple Yuletime gothic into a quiet meditation on memory.”
Libby says:
“Anna Delveys of the world, rejoice! Your non-exhaustive history of cons, bamboozles, flim-flams, and fraud perpetrated by ladies is here. Having profiled several female serial killers in her first book, Lady Killers, Tori Telfer returns to mine lady criminality and the intersection of ego, greed, swagger, and cruelty in this centuries-spanning tome. My always and forever favorites are the Fox Sisters, who accidentally started a sweeping religious movement in the late 19th century, and who utilized the elements of magic, boredom, and opportunity that are essential to the livelihoods of so many of Telfer’s subjects. The scammers working society today use the same blueprints and exploit the same bureaucratic weaknesses, celebrity worship, and love of the all-mighty dollar to scrape together money, prestige, husbands, or award-winning show dogs.”
Maddie says:
“Set in 1920s Berlin, Madonna in a Fur Coat follows the life of Raif Efendi, a young Turkish man, after a chance encounter with a beautiful artist alters his world. While browsing an art gallery, Raif becomes captivated by a self-portrait depicting a young woman gazing to one side, wearing a large white coat. After meeting the painting’s subject and creator at a Berlin nightclub, Raif becomes equally enamored with her as he is with her art, and the two quickly develop an intense bond. Their sometimes tumultuous yet always passionate relationship demonstrates feelings of longing, love, and loss. Originally written in Turkish in 1943 and translated into English for the first time in 2016, Madonna in a Fur Coat demonstrates that the complexities of human emotion transcend time, language, and culture. As heartbreaking as it is beautiful, this book is perfect for anyone who likes to hurt a little (or a lot) after finishing a story.”