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What Should I Read Next

Bookkaholic isn’t just a book review website, and we’re not just a site with articles about great books. Bookkaholic is a site that can help you answer, ‘What Should I Read Next.’

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Book Reviews are Just Below

 

What to Read? Read on my friend…

Bookkaholic isn’t just a book review website, and we’re not just a site with articles about great books. Bookkaholic is a site created by readers and writers, who can help you figure out what you should read next.

We use real people—writers and librarians—to suggest books, compile lists, and write reviews. We guarantee they can help you.

To figure out what to read next, start with some Book Reviews, at the bottom of this page. We have book reviews on both new releases and classic books, because sometimes what you want to read next was published last week, and sometimes it was published a hundred years ago. Many of our articles about books are organized by topics (Books About Dogs, Books like The Hunger Games), so that you can figure out what to read next based on your interests, your mood, or other books that you’ve enjoyed.

Then check out our Fresh Ink, which contains interesting articles about books, and even more suggestions on what you should read next. Our writers are working on all kinds of articles, from essays about Hemingway to reviews of the latest book technology. If you’re interested in reading about books, this is the place to go. We know you want to find out the answer to ‘What Should I Read Next.’

If you’re more of a visual person, check out our Book Trailers to help you figure out what to read next. We rate the book trailers, so you’ll know which ones are worth your time. Once you watch, let us know what you think of them!


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If after all that, you still can’t figure out what to read next, check out our help section and consider submitting your own book problem. Whether you hate your boss, want to break up with your boyfriend, or just had a fight with your mother, we think there are books out there to help. We’re happy to tell you which ones they are.
Once you figure out, ‘what book should I read next’, read some great book quotes, or check out our book debates, and consider adding your perspective to the conversation!

 

Book Reviews are Just Below

What Should I Read Next 5.00/5 (100.00%) 3 votes



 
What Should I Read Next
 
 
papergardencloseup
papergardencloseup
papergardencloseup

Review: The Paper Garden by Molly Peacock

I first came across Mary Delany’s intricate paper flowers at an exhibition held at one of London’s great treasure troves, the Sir John Soane’s Museum, in early 2010. Though at the time I recognized the flower mosaics as gorgeou...
The_Ocean_at_the_End_of_the_Lane_by_Neil_Gaiman
The_Ocean_at_the_End_of_the_Lane_by_Neil_Gaiman
The_Ocean_at_the_End_of_the_Lane_by_Neil_Gaiman

The Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman

Gorgeous prose from an award-winning author who has reached new heights, The Ocean at the End of the Lane is elegant, magical, while bleeding and writhing before our eyes. Don’t miss this short yet beautiful tale of a man...
underthesamestars
underthesamestars
underthesamestars

Review: Under the Same Stars by Tim Lott

Somewhere between the high culture of the Cain and Abel story (via both Genesis and John Steinbeck’s East of Eden) and the low culture of a buddy road trip flick lies Under the Same Stars by Tim Lott. Despite the cheesy title a...
s3 take two
s3 take two
s3 take two

Review: S3 by Fourat Janabi

It had to happen sometime: one of the myriad books I’m sent to review, for Bookkaholic or other web and print publications, was bound to be a turkey. I’m afraid this (dis)honor belongs to S3: Science, Statistics, and Skepticism...
summer reading
summer reading
summer reading

Summer Lovin’: 5 love(ish) stories for summer reading

Beach books have become synonymous with “Chick Lit,” an often condescending term for light-hearted books by women and about women that assumes predictability and a story about shoes, cosmos, and Mr. Right (the liter...
handfuls of bone
handfuls of bone
handfuls of bone

Review: Handfuls of Bone by Monica Kidd

Before I review the contents of this book, I need to tell you a little bit about the design of this book. Monica Kidd’s second poetry collection, Handfuls of Bone, was published by Gaspereau Press, a Canadian publishing c...
Scan-133
Scan-133
Scan-133

Book Review: No One (Personne) by Gwenaëlle Aubry

What first intrigued me about No One (Personne) was the first line of the back cover synopsis: “No One is the portrait of a man without a true self.”  I really love a book that explores and plays with layers of iden...
Bad Monkey Carl Hiaasen
Bad Monkey Carl Hiaasen
Bad Monkey Carl Hiaasen

Bad Monkey by Carl Hiaasen

Bad Monkey by Carl Hiaasen is a wacky comedy that involves the same detective from Hiaasen's other books, Yancey, but this time he's been demoted to food inspector on the island. Things go from suspicious to weird when Yancey t...
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haroldfry
haroldfry

Review: The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry (2012), Rachel Joyce’s debut novel, is the deceptively simple tale of a sixty-something-year-old man who steps out of his Devon home to mail a letter but ends up walking to Berwick-on-Tweed...
july reading
july reading
july reading

I Am America (And So Can You!): The Perfect Book For July Reading

Happy (belated) 237th Birthday, America! You don’t look a day over 150. Aside from all the fireworks and stars & stripes bikinis, I can’t think of a better way to start off this most patriotic of months than wit...
moonwalking with einstein
moonwalking with einstein
moonwalking with einstein

Review: Moonwalking with Einstein by Joshua Foer

Working in London has allowed me many a random celebrity sighting. Those have ranged from the political (the Deputy Prime Minister’s wife and Princess Anne, a more minor royal) to the clerical (former Archbishop of Canterbury R...
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final-cover-a6
final-cover-a6

Book Review: Above All Things by Tanis Rideout

Let’ get this out of the way first. I won’t lie. Part of the reason I picked up this book is that since we both have the same last name, I can read the praise on the outside back cover (“Rideout has that all-t...
 
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