Biblio File

Winter Books to Get You Through the Season

The winter solstice marked the beginning of a new season, one perfect for staying indoors with the companionship of a good book. The wind may bite. The snow may fall. And your stoop may be a treacherous ziggurat of ice. But there's no reason to get cabin fever this year. Instead, pick up one of these books with "winter" in the title and read until you don't remember you're cold anymore.

If on a Winter's Night a Traveler by Italo Calvino
If on a Winter's Night a Traveler tells the story of a reader trying to read a book of the same title. Yet every chapter is "interrupted" by a new book. Have too many books you want to read? Here's looking at you.

The Winter's Tale by William Shakespeare
Before there was Hermione Granger, there was Queen Hermione, and in this Shakespearean plot-twister, her adventures include sexual scandal, conquering death, and even forgiving one deranged husband.

Love Begins in Winter: Five Stories by Simon Van Booy
As the title implies, Love Begins in Winter brims with heart enough to charm even the coolest customers. And in Van Booy's short fiction, love doesn't just begin; it surprises.

Winter's Tales by Isak Dinesen
In Dinesen's hand, seasons may change but stories comprise the bedrock of human experience. As she writes, "The world itself, like a big old book, fell open, and slowly, on its own, turned one leaf after another."

The Winter of Our Discontent by John Steinbeck
Steinbeck may have titled The Winter of Our Discontent  in reference to the first line of Richard III, but it was to be the author's last novel. The story of a Long Islander trying to make a buck, this moral drama about the pitfalls of greed and ambition is as timely now as it was at its time of publication over fifty years ago.

Comments

Patron-generated content represents the views and interpretations of the patron, not necessarily those of The New York Public Library. For more information see NYPL's Website Terms and Conditions.

Love this image!

Love this image!

Winter reading

Laura Ingalls Wilder's _The Long Winter_ is by no means just for children. Approaching age seventy, I still reread this beloved classic from my youth (always my favorite "Little House" book) at least once a decade and with each reading still find it just as riveting, just as moving, as the first time I suffered, endured, adapted, and prevailed with the Ingalls family on the blizzard-swept prairie. It's especially timely this winter, in light of the recent publication of Wilder's annotated autobiography by the North Dakota Historical Society.

Blood & Beauty

Sarah Dunant's latest masterpiece of historical fiction brings us into the world of the Borgia family, just as Rodrigo Borgia is becoming Pope Alexander VI. I devoured this book, and so will you. If you're not familiar with Ms. Dunant, read The Birth of Venus (which is book one of a trilogy), and fall in love.

Winter's Tale by Mark Helprin

It's NYC in the past and the present, but not exactly NYC. There are scenes in Grand Central Terminal and actual streets are mentioned, so you can decide. But there's no need to because It doesn't really matter. It's quite indescribable and beautifully written. It's also a love story. If you strongly prefer your reading to not have any element of fantasy at all, I guess this book is not for you. Do not, under any circumstances, see the movie. I will not repeat that. I can't praise it enough.

Winter's Tale, by Mark Helprin

Read it a long time ago, but when i opened this email, I immediately looked for it on this list. And here it is. Gone is the story and historical details of New York from my memory, but what remains are images, misty as foggy winter nights, of early settlers at the base of the Palisades and the frozen Hudson, with ice boats and other activities, and twinkling lights in the dark.

Winter Book List

How about books that take place in tropical or warm climates. I love beach locations. I want to forget that I'm in cold, dreary New York in the Winter.