As a mother, I sometimes find myself craving books that leave me thinking long after I’ve closed the book, not necessarily stories about saving the universe, defeating the villain, or finding one simple answer to every complicated question, but books that make room for curiosity, uncertainty, and reflection. I love stories that trust the reader to sit with difficult questions, explore different perspectives, and discover meaning along the way, rather than simply handing us a lesson with a perfectly packaged conclusion.
In a world that often seems filled with quick opinions given with absolute certainty, there is something refreshing about a book than asks: What do you think? What do you believe happened? What does this reveal about being human?
While my usual reading choices lean either toward the classics or non-fiction, over the last several years, I’ve found myself drawn toward a different kind of fiction: novels that feel imaginative and unique, while still being grounded in the quiet, complicated parts of being human. These are the books that surprised me, stayed with me, and made me look at the world a little differently.
While I enjoy an epic adventure (and often read those kinds of stories with my children), I don’t always reach for books centered on saving the world. I’m often looking for something that explores what it means to be human. The books that have lingered in my mind over the past several years all share something in common: they ask unusual questions. They are simple but beautifully written, deeply thoughtful, and somehow make ordinary moments feel profound. Here are recent novels that left me thinking long after turning the last page.
Piranesi by Susanna Clarke
At first glance, Piranesi feels like a mystery wrapped inside a dream.
The novel follows a man who lives in an endless House filled with vast halls, marble statues, and tides that flow through its lower levels. His world is both lonely and beautiful, and as the story unfolds, readers slowly uncover who he really is and how he came to live there.
What stands out most isn’t the mystery itself, it’s the sense of wonder. Piranesi approaches the world with gratitude and curiosity, finding beauty even in solitude. It’s a story about identity, memory, innocence, and the ways people can either manipulate truth or preserve it.
I’ve never read another book quite like it.
The Elegance of the Hedgehog by Muriel Barbery
This novel unfolds inside an elegant Paris apartment building, where appearances hide extraordinary inner lives.
The story alternates between Renée, the building’s concierge, who deliberately conceals her intelligence, and Paloma, a brilliant twelve-year-old who quietly observes the adults around her, while questioning whether life is worth living.
It sounds heavy, and at times it certainly is, but it’s also witty, philosophical, and surprisingly tender.
The novel explores beauty, friendship, loneliness, art, literature, and the assumptions we make about one another. It reminds us that remarkable people often exist unnoticed right beside us, and that genuine connection can arrive in the most unexpected places.
Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro
Few books have made me think as deeply about love as Klara and the Sun.
Klara is an Artificial Friend designed to be a companion for children. She observes humanity with remarkable sincerity and tries to understand emotions, relationships, sacrifice, and faith.
Because Klara sees the world from the outside looking in, familiar aspects of human life suddenly become fresh and fascinating.
The novel gently asks difficult questions: What makes someone truly human? Can love exist without self-interest? Is devotion valuable even if it isn’t fully understood?
It’s quiet, thoughtful, and surprisingly emotional.
Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel
Yes, this is technically a post-apocalyptic novel. But surprisingly, it isn’t really about the collapse of civilization.
Instead, it’s about what remains after everything familiar disappears. It asks why art matters, why stories matter, and what makes life worth living, beyond simply surviving.
Following a traveling Shakespeare troupe years after a pandemic, the novel shifts between timelines to reveal how seemingly ordinary lives become interconnected.
Rather than focusing on violence or despair, Station Eleven is filled with beauty, memory, music, theater, and hope. It reminds us that people don’t just need food and shelter, we also need purpose, creativity, and one another.
Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel
After loving Station Eleven, I picked up Sea of Tranquility, and it delivered that same sense of quiet wonder.
The novel moves across centuries, following several seemingly unrelated characters whose lives become connected through a mysterious anomaly in time. Rather than being a typical science fiction story full of gadgets and action, it’s an intimate meditation on time, memory, art, and the choices that shape our lives.
One of the things I appreciated most is how gently the story unfolds. It asks big questions without pretending to have easy answers. What makes a life meaningful? How do our actions ripple through history? What role does art play in helping us understand ourselves?
Like Station Eleven, the novel is less interested in spectacle than in humanity. Even with time travel as part of the story, the emotional heart remains centered on ordinary people navigating grief, hope, love, and uncertainty.
It’s thoughtful, beautifully written, and unlike most science fiction I’ve read. Instead of racing toward an explosive ending, it invites readers to slow down and consider how deeply connected our lives really are.
The Common Thread
Looking back, these books all have something in common. None of them depend on the familiar ‘save the universe’ storyline or the idea that ‘one extraordinary person’ is destined to change everything. Instead, they zoom in, rather than out. They explore identity instead of destiny, relationships instead of battles, and wonder instead of spectacle.
They ask more enduring questions: Who are we? What gives life meaning? How do we love well? What does it mean to remember, create, hope, or simply notice the beauty around us?
They trust readers to linger with uncertainty, rather than rushing toward easy answers, and they find wonder not in epic battles, but in ordinary moments of connection, compassion, and self-discovery.
As a parent, that may be one of the reasons these stories have resonated so deeply with me. They remind me that the most meaningful journeys often aren’t about changing the entire world, they’re about learning to see our own corner of it with greater wisdom, gratitude, and grace.
They’re stories about memory, beauty, kindness, art, purpose, and what it means to live a meaningful life. Maybe that’s why they’ve stayed with me.
As a mother, much of my day is focused on practical things, making meals, helping with homework, solving little crises before breakfast. These books reminded me that quiet stories can be just as powerful as loud ones.
Sometimes the most memorable journey isn’t across galaxies or kingdoms.
There is a little bit of magic hiding in every kitchen, a sprinkle of curiosity, a splash of discovery, and endless opportunities to wonder about the world around us. For young children, science doesn’t always need a fancy lab or complicated equipment; sometimes the most exciting experiments begin with simple ingredients sitting in your own pantry.
Not long after our first child was born, we were meeting with someone who was helping guide us in caring for him. During one of our conversations, they smiled and asked, “Is he a good baby?” At the time, I smiled and answered, “Yes,” because it seemed like the natural response. I don’t believe there was any ill intent behind the question. In fact, it’s a question most new parents have probably heard. But as the years have passed, I’ve found myself thinking about it more and more.
There is something unpretentious about a bowl of yogurt. It sits quietly in the refrigerator, waiting to be transformed into a cheerful breakfast, a satisfying snack, or even a wholesome dessert. While plain yogurt is perfectly lovely on its own, a few simple ingredients can turn it into something that feels a little more special.
Maybe it’s the longer days, the sound of sprinklers dancing across the lawn, or the way fireflies seem to turn ordinary evenings into tiny celebrations. Summer has a way of inviting us to slow down, make memories, and enjoy life’s simple pleasures.
For years, I had a picture in my mind of what journaling should look like. I imagined myself ending each day with a cup of tea, sitting in a cozy chair, carefully filling pages with reflections, memories, and observations. I loved the idea of preserving our family story through detailed journal entries, capturing not only what happened, but how it all felt. I especially wanted a record of the ordinary days, but of the special ones too, all tucked safely between the covers of a thoughtfully selected notebook.
With the whirl of a blender and a handful of colorful ingredients, smoothies transform fruits and vegetables into a creamy, delicious treat that feels like a special occasion. Whether you’re sneaking extra greens into breakfast, cooling off on a warm summer afternoon, or brightening a chilly winter morning, smoothies are a simple way to bring a little joy to the table. Best of all, they are endlessly adaptable, making them perfect for families and little taste testers who love trying new flavors.
In the summer, every backyard, driveway, and sidewalk becomes a blank canvas waiting for adventure! From treasure hunts and obstacle courses to colorful masterpieces under the blue sky, summer invites children to slow down, play, and create.
As a child, summer days seem to stretch on forever, filled with sunshine, adventures, popsicles that melt faster than you can eat them, and evenings spent catching fireflies and riding bikes. Summer has a way of slowing life down just enough to make room for simple joys and unforgettable memories. For many of us, some of our favorite childhood moments happened during those carefree summer months, whether it was swimming, visiting grandparents, camping with family, or spending long days outdoors with friends.
When summer arrives, the days seem to stretch a little longer, the pace slows down, and children trade backpacks and schedules for sunshine, adventures, and freedom. It’s a season filled with bike rides, backyard discoveries, and memories waiting to be made. While summer is an important time for rest and play, it’s also a wonderful opportunity to nurture curiosity and keep young minds growing in natural, joyful ways.