The Coziest Winter Reads for Grown-Up Book Lovers

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I love seasonal reading!  It is just so cozy to curl up with a good book that takes place in the season I’m currently living in.  Winter can be one of the best for reading because it is a time to get cozy.  Grab your coffee, tea, or hot chocolate, find your comfy chair and get into a fun thrilling novel!  There is nothing like it!

I also feel like winter is the perfect time for a good mystery, who-dun it or thriller.  So you will see many of those on this list!

I hope you enjoy this winter list!

Winter Books for Adults

The Snow Child by Eowyn Ivey

Fantasy

Many people read The Snow Child during Christmas and that is great!  However, it is not a Christmas book so if you are looking for something that you could read in January and beyond this is a good one.  I enjoyed this book-it is very different from anything I have read!

Set in the unforgiving Alaskan wilderness of the 1920s, this enchanting debut follows Jack and Mabel, a young couple struggling to survive both the land and their growing distance from one another. New to homesteading and grieving the child they never had, Jack is worn down by the endless labor, while Mabel is slowly unraveling from isolation and sorrow.

During the first snowfall of the season, a rare moment of joy leads them to build a little girl out of snow. By morning, the figure has vanished—but soon after, they spot a real child darting through the trees, golden-haired and untamed. She calls herself Faina.

Faina lives as if she belongs to the wild itself, moving effortlessly across the snow, hunting alongside a red fox, and surviving alone in the harsh landscape. To Jack and Mabel, she feels like something out of a fairy tale, yet they grow to love her deeply, welcoming her into their hearts as the daughter they always longed for.

But Alaska is a place where beauty and danger exist side by side, and not everything is what it seems. As the truth about Faina slowly comes to light, it changes Jack, Mabel, and the fragile life they have built in ways they never could have imagined.

Once Upon a Wardrobe by Patti Callahan

Historical Fiction

I’m a big C.S. Lewis fan so this was a must read!  This was an interesting read for me.  It doesn’t have a strong Christmas vibe (does take place at that time)  but still is a wonderful story at this time of year.

In 1950, seventeen-year-old Margaret “Megs” Devonshire is studying math and physics at Oxford University. Her younger brother George, who is eight and very ill, is obsessed with The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. When he asks Megs if Narnia is real, she tells him it’s just a children’s story. Still curious, George urges her to find out where Narnia came from.

Even though she’s nervous about talking to a famous author, Megs gathers her courage and visits C.S. Lewis, who teaches at her university. Over tea with Lewis and his brother Warnie, she asks the question that’s been weighing on George’s heart.

Winter Solstice by Rosamunde Pilcher

Fiction

I cannot tell you how much I loved this book!  People have been telling me for years to read it and I finally did.  I read this in January, and I still am thinking about it time to time.  It is about second chances, friendship and family, and one beautiful Christmas.  I know I will be reading it again in the future!  This made my top 10 of 2025

Elfrida Phipps, once an actress in London, has moved to the quiet village of Dibton hoping for a fresh start. She’s grown used to the cozy rhythm of village life—shopkeepers who know her preferences and neighbors who greet her by name—but even with all that, she can’t shake a feeling of loneliness.

Oscar Blundell left behind his music career when he married Gloria. They now have a daughter, Francesca, and loving her is the one thing that makes his sacrifice feel worthwhile.A single unexpected tragedy sets off a chain of events that pulls very different people together in a large, run-down estate house near the fishing village of Creagan.

Rock Paper Scissors by Alice Feeney

Thriller

My husband and I started listening to this one on a road trip and we were so sucked in.   You can picture yourself in a blizzard in a town that doesn’t seem quite ride in a cabin getaway.  What could possibly go wrong?

Just about everything!  Alice Feeney knows how to write a great thriller, and this one does not disappoint.   My husband LOVED this book and still talks about it.  The main characters are a married couple going through some difficulties, so it makes a great couples read!  There are so many twists and turns.

Something has been off between Mr. and Mrs. Wright for a long time. When Adam and Amelia are offered a weekend getaway in a remote part of Scotland, it feels like a last chance to fix what’s broken in their marriage.

Adam is a successful screenwriter—and a lifelong workaholic—who also lives with face blindness, a condition that prevents him from recognizing the people closest to him, including his own wife. Each year on their anniversary, the couple follows the tradition of exchanging themed gifts. And each year, Amelia writes Adam a letter she never allows him to read.

Until this anniversary.

Frozen River by Ariel Lawhon

Historical Fiction

Several of these books made the best 15 books my readers read in 2025.  This was one of them!

Maine, 1789. When the Kennebec River freezes solid, a man is discovered trapped beneath the ice. Martha Ballard is called in to examine the body and determine how he died. As a midwife and healer, Martha knows the secrets of Hallowell better than most. Her daily diary records every birth and death, every scandal and misstep in the tight-knit town.

Months earlier, Martha documented the details of a brutal assault involving two of the town’s most respected men—one of whom is now the man found frozen in the river. When a local doctor dismisses her findings and rules the death an accident, Martha refuses to let the truth be buried.

As winter drags on and the trial approaches, rumors spread and long-held prejudices rise to the surface. Martha continues her quiet but relentless pursuit of justice, even as her diary becomes central to the scandal and threatens to expose people she cares deeply about. Soon, she must decide where her loyalties truly lie.

Both gripping and deeply moving, The Frozen River tells the story of a determined woman who demanded truth and accountability in a time when women’s voices were often ignored. It’s a suspenseful, richly layered novel about courage, conscience, and a legacy history nearly erased.

Winter Garden by Kristen Hannah

Historical Fiction

Meredith and Nina Whitson couldn’t be more different. Meredith remained close to home, raising her children and caring for the family’s apple orchard, while Nina chased adventure, leaving everything behind to become a renowned photojournalist. When their father becomes gravely ill, the sisters are brought back together under the same roof, once again facing their distant and unyielding mother, Anya, who has never been able to offer warmth or reassurance.

Growing up, the one thing that ever truly connected the sisters was a Russian fairy tale Anya would sometimes share before bed. Now, as their father’s life draws to a close, he asks for one final promise from the women he loves: that the story will be told again—this time from beginning to end.

That promise opens the door to a past long buried. Through a story that moves between present day and decades earlier, Meredith and Nina uncover the truth about their mother’s life as a young woman surviving the horrors of war-ravaged Leningrad. What they discover is devastating and profound—a secret so powerful it reshapes their understanding of their mother, their family, and themselves forever.

One by One by Ruth Ware

Thriller

I love a good Ruth Ware book!

Being stranded by a snowstorm in a stunning ski chalet in the French Alps might sound like a dream—crackling fires, sweeping mountain views, a private chef, and every modern comfort. That is, until you realize you’re trapped with eight coworkers, each carrying secrets, rivalries, and motives of their own.

What begins as a routine corporate retreat for a fashionable London tech startup quickly turns volatile. Meetings and team-building exercises give way to open conflict when a surprise buyout proposal divides the group, putting careers, money, and loyalty on the line. Tempers flare, alliances fracture, and unease settles in.

Then disaster strikes. A massive avalanche cuts the chalet off from the outside world entirely. Phones are useless. Roads are gone. And one member of the group never made it back from the slopes.

As hours stretch into days with no hope of rescue, fear takes hold. The cold deepens, trust erodes, and the group begins to shrink—one person at a time. What started as an inconvenient delay becomes a fight for survival, where no one knows who will be next.

In the Pines by Kendra Elliot

Mystery

A nationwide treasure hunt promising a $2 million reward has turned the quiet town of Eagle’s Nest, Oregon, into chaos. Obsessed seekers swarm the area, following riddles through the forest—and their greed brings theft, violence, and dangerous trespassing in its wake. Police chief Truman Daly wants nothing more than to restore calm, but instead he’s faced with murder. The prize isn’t the only thing hidden among the pines. A killer is, too.

When a young boy wanders into a local café and says his mother and infant sister vanished weeks ago, FBI special agent Mercy Kilpatrick is drawn into the case. As she digs deeper, she uncovers unsettling truths—and a story tangled with lies, secrets, and a family history stretching back sixty years.

As Mercy and Truman follow separate threads of investigation, they uncover two mysteries bound together by revenge, long-buried secrets, and murder—dark truths lurking as deep and dangerous as the Oregon woods themselves.

The Sanatorium by Sarah Pearse

Mystery

Partially concealed by dense forest and looming beneath jagged mountain peaks, Le Sommet has long carried a dark reputation. Once an abandoned sanatorium whispered about in unsettling rumors, it has been transformed into a sleek, five-star hotel—though its past still seems to linger in the shadows.

High in the Swiss Alps, the remote retreat is the last place Elin Warner wants to visit. On leave from her job as a detective and trying to distance herself from old wounds, she reluctantly agrees to attend her estranged brother Isaac’s engagement celebration with his fiancée, Laure. With nothing tying her elsewhere, Elin convinces herself to go.

From the moment she arrives—amid a violent storm that cuts the hotel off from the outside world—Elin feels uneasy. Something about Le Sommet doesn’t feel right. When morning comes and Laure has vanished without a trace, Elin’s instincts kick in. As the storm traps the guests inside, fear spreads and tensions rise with every passing hour.

Desperate to find Laure before it’s too late, Elin soon realizes the situation is even more dangerous than it appears. Another woman has disappeared—one who might have been able to warn them all. And now, isolated and surrounded by secrets, everyone at the hotel may already be in grave danger.

Wintering by Katherine May

Non-Fiction

This book has stayed with me throughout the years.  If winter is hard on you and you suffer from seasonal depression you have to check out this book!  I love how she gives real and practical tips on getting through the winter seasons.  Not just the weather of winter but also the trial periods of life!

Sometimes life knocks us off course. Sudden illness, grief, heartbreak, or job loss can leave us unmoored, caught in a season of uncertainty and isolation. For Katherine May, everything seemed to unravel at once: her husband became ill, her son stopped going to school, and her own health struggles forced her to step away from a high-pressure career. Wintering traces how she not only survived this painful period, but learned to see it as a time with its own quiet gifts.

Blending memoir with insights from literature, mythology, and the natural world, May reflects on the restorative power of rest, withdrawal, and stillness. She draws meaning from a wide range of sources—ancient seasonal rituals, hibernating animals, beloved writers, cold-water swims, and journeys through Arctic landscapes—showing how wisdom often reveals itself in moments of pause.

At its heart, Wintering asks us to rethink how we respond to life’s dormant seasons. May demonstrates a gentle acceptance of sorrow, finding strength in retreat, beauty in winter’s silence, and comfort in viewing life as cyclical rather than endlessly forward-moving. With a quietly spiritual sensibility, she offers a compassionate framework for transforming hardship into preparation for renewal and growth.

The Little Book of Hygge: Danish Secrets to Happy Living by Meik Wiking

Non-Fiction

 I have always loved cozy and comfy and I didn’t even realize it was a thing!  HYGGE!  You want happy living?  Live like the Danish do!

Why do Danes consistently rank among the happiest people in the world? According to Meik Wiking, CEO of Copenhagen’s Happiness Research Institute, the answer lies in hygge. Pronounced “hoo-gah,” hygge is a Danish concept centered on comfort, connection, and a deep sense of well-being. It’s less about things and more about how a moment feels—being surrounded by people you love, feeling at ease, and knowing you’re safe and content.

Hygge is curling up on the couch in soft socks with a warm blanket while the weather rages outside. It’s lingering over simple, comforting food by candlelight, sharing laughter and unhurried conversation. It’s the quiet joy of sunlight streaming through the window on a clear, chilly morning. In its simplest form, hygge is about savoring life’s small, cozy moments—and letting them bring warmth to everyday life.

The Shining by Stephen King

Horror

I don’t do horror but my husband has read this book and he enjoyed it.  I saw the movie when I was a teen (accidently) because it wouldn’t be for me, LOL. -Too CREEPY!  But, if that is your thing this is perfect.

Taking a winter job at the remote Overlook Hotel feels like a second chance for Jack Torrance. As the hotel’s off-season caretaker, he plans to focus on his writing and rebuild his strained relationship with his wife and young son. With the vast, empty hotel all to themselves, it seems like the perfect opportunity for a fresh beginning.

But as winter tightens its grip and snow cuts them off from the outside world, the isolation becomes unsettling. The Overlook begins to reveal a darker presence—one that feeds on fear and weakness. While the adults struggle to understand what’s happening, Jack’s five-year-old son Danny senses the danger first. Gifted with an unusual ability, Danny sees the hotel for what it truly is—and knows that something inside is watching them all.

Dreamcatcher by Stephen King

Horror

Twenty-five years earlier, in their eerie hometown of Derry, Maine, four young boys stood up to cruelty and saved a vulnerable child from a group of brutal bullies. The moment forged an unbreakable bond between them—one that shaped their lives in ways they never fully understood. Now grown, carrying different burdens and living separate lives, they honor that bond with an annual hunting trip in the frozen wilderness of Maine.

This year, the tradition takes a terrifying turn when a stranger staggers into their remote camp, half-frozen and rambling about strange lights in the sky. What begins as confusion quickly spirals into horror as the four friends find themselves facing a nightmare far beyond anything human. Cut off from help and hunted by an unimaginable force, they are thrust into a fight for survival.

To make it through, they must confront the truth of what connects them—and draw on the mysterious power born from the long-buried events of their shared past. What once saved a life may be the only thing that can save their own.

The Life We Bury by Allen Eskens

Mystery

College student Joe Talbert expects his writing assignment to be simple: interview a stranger and turn their story into a short biography. Pressed for time, he visits a nearby nursing home—and meets Carl Iverson, a man who will change everything.

Carl is a dying Vietnam veteran who has been granted compassionate release after spending thirty years in prison for rape and murder. As Joe begins recording Carl’s life story, he’s struck by a troubling contradiction. The man before him is a decorated soldier who showed courage and honor in war—yet he’s also a convicted criminal responsible for horrific acts. Joe can’t reconcile the two.

Driven to uncover the truth, Joe enlists the help of his skeptical neighbor, Lila. But his search is complicated by his own fractured life: a dangerously unstable mother, the guilt of leaving his autistic brother behind, and memories from childhood that refuse to stay buried. As Joe carefully pulls apart the threads of Carl’s conviction, the picture grows darker—and more unsettling.

The deeper Joe and Lila dig, the greater the risk becomes. Secrets surface, tensions rise, and the consequences of uncovering the truth grow more dangerous by the day. Joe must decide how far he’s willing to go—and whether he can face what he discovers before it’s too late.

Five Tuesdays in Winter by Lily King

Short Stories/Fiction

This has been on my TBR list for a long time.  I need to just read it!

Celebrated author Lily King returns with Five Tuesdays in Winter, her first collection of short fiction, following a run of acclaimed and bestselling novels. The book showcases the same emotional precision and depth that have made her one of today’s most admired literary voices.

Through intimate, finely drawn perspectives, these stories quietly overturn expectations as they explore longing, grief, sudden violence, and the powerful pull of love—even when it comes at a cost. A solitary bookseller finds himself vulnerable to love once more. Former college roommates reunite with devastating consequences. An elderly man grapples with helpless rage beside his granddaughter’s hospital bed. A writer is confronted by the men who once tried to silence her.

By turns romantic, hopeful, unflinching, and deeply honest, this collection of ten stories captures the fragile moments that define our inner lives. Five Tuesdays in Winter is a striking and compassionate addition to King’s body of work, reaffirming her gift for illuminating the complexities of the human heart.

The Night we Lost Him by Laura Dave

Mystery

I absolutely loved Laura Dave’s book The Last Thing He Told Me.  They even did a mini-series on that book with Jennifer Garner, and I loved that too.  They did a great job with it. The Last Thing He Told Me had me turning every page quickly, so I knew I wanted to read her new one The Night We Lost Him and I was not disappointed.  Some of the reviews are not as good on this one and although I will admit it didn’t have quite the excitement of the other book, I still enjoyed this thoroughly.

The thing I love about this author the most is her brilliant way in making you feel like you are exactly where she is describing.  I could literally feel myself in the car with her and her brother. and all the places they went searching for answers about their father’s death.  I think of winter when I read this book because it is very cold in places they travel to.

The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe by C.S Lewis

Fantasy

I am a big fan of Narnia and you can’t help but think of winter with the witch and the winter scenes in the first book of the series.  A great series to spend the winter days and nights with!

Four siblings—Peter, Susan, Edmund, and Lucy Pevensie—discover a hidden world when they step through a wardrobe and enter Narnia. The land is trapped in an endless winter under the rule of the White Witch. Just when hope seems gone, the arrival of the Great Lion, Aslan, brings the promise of change—along with a powerful sacrifice.

The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe is the second book in C. S. Lewis’s beloved fantasy series that has enchanted readers of all ages for more than sixty years. It can be enjoyed on its own, but readers who want to continue their journey through Narnia can move on to The Horse and His Boy, the third book in The Chronicles of Narnia.

Harry Potter Series by J.K Rowling

Fantasy

The Harry Potter has so. many winter scenes in each book.  If you are wanting to start a series this would make the best winter reading, this is it!

I don’t know what I could say about the Harry Potter Series that most don’t know about already.  I am not a fantasy girl and had zero interest in this UNTIL I did.  I decided to listen along with my son one day and oh my word, did I ever get hooked!   We listened to the Jim Dale narration.

Audible now has the Stephen Fry version and the multi casted one. (I hear it is fabulous) It is hard for me to imagine because I love Jim Dale but someday, I’m going to list to the all the version eventually.  This is a series that just gets better and better as it goes.  Honestly, to me, there is nothing quite like it.  What an extraordinary writer J.K Rowling is.  If you feel like fantasy isn’t for you, you must give it a try.  You are never too old for Harry Potter.

Bear Town by Frederick Backman

Beside the lake in Beartown sits an aging ice rink. Inside it, Kevin, Amat, Benji, and the rest of the town’s junior hockey team are preparing to play in the national semifinals — and for the first time, winning feels possible. An entire town’s pride, hope, and future seem to rest on the shoulders of a few teenage boys.

But the pressure surrounding the game leads to a violent incident that changes everything. A young girl is left deeply shaken, and Beartown is thrown into chaos. Accusations spread quickly, echoing through the town like ripples across the water.

At its heart, this is a story about hockey and a small town — but even more about loyalty, friendship, and responsibility. It explores how we hurt the people we care about, the choices we face, and how those choices shape who we become. In telling the story of this quiet forest town, Fredrik Backman captures something universal about the world we all live in.

Atmosphere by Taylor Jenkins Reid

Historical Fiction

This is another one that made my readers top 15 books of 2025 list.  This takes place in the winter!

Joan Goodwin has looked to the stars for as long as she can remember. Quiet and introspective, she’s content with her life teaching physics and astronomy at Rice University and spending time with her bright, curious niece, Frances—until she spots a call for the first group of women scientists to join NASA’s space shuttle program. Suddenly, the life she’s accepted no longer feels big enough.

Chosen from thousands of applicants in 1980, Joan begins training at Houston’s Johnson Space Center alongside a remarkable and unexpected group. There’s Hank Redmond, a skilled test pilot with nerves of steel, and John Griffin, a steady, good-natured scientist. Lydia Danes is fiercely driven and unapologetically demanding, while Donna Fitzgerald brings warmth even as she carries secrets of her own. And then there’s Vanessa Ford—brilliant, fearless, and endlessly intriguing—an aeronautical engineer who can fly anything and fix everything.

As the group pushes themselves toward their first missions, deep bonds form, and Joan discovers both a passion and a love she never anticipated. With her world expanding in ways she never imagined, she begins to rethink who she is and where she belongs in the vastness of the universe.

But in December 1984, during mission STS-LR9, everything changes in a single, devastating moment.

Small Things Like These by Claire Keegen

Fiction

In 1985, in a small Irish town on the edge of Christmas, coal merchant Bill Furlong enters the busiest stretch of his year. A devoted husband and father, Bill moves through his days focused on work and family—until an early morning delivery to the local convent leads to a discovery he cannot ignore.

What Bill encounters forces him to reckon with his own memories and with the unspoken truths of a community shaped—and silenced—by the authority of the church. As the holiday season approaches, he must decide whether to look away like so many before him, or risk everything to do what is right.

An international bestseller, Small Things Like These is a restrained yet deeply moving story of moral courage, compassion, and the quiet acts that can illuminate even the darkest moments. Written by acclaimed author Claire Keegan, it is a powerful reminder that small choices can carry enormous weight.

Agatha Christie Novels that are perfect for winter!

Murder on the Orient Express by Agatha Christie

Mystery

“The killer is here—on this train.”

Shortly after midnight, the legendary Orient Express is brought to a halt by a massive snowdrift. When morning comes, wealthy American Samuel Edward Ratchett is discovered dead in his locked compartment, stabbed multiple times. The evidence makes one thing clear: the murderer is one of the passengers on board.

Stranded by the storm, detective Hercule Poirot must unravel the truth by questioning a train full of suspects—each with a reason to want Ratchett dead—before the killer has a chance to strike again.

“What more could a lover of mysteries ask for?”

The Sittaford Mystery by Agatha Christie

Mystery

The story takes place on the edge of Dartmoor, a wild and foreboding stretch of countryside in southwestern England. The small village of Sittaford—described as being “always cut off from the rest of the world”—becomes even more isolated after a fierce snowstorm.

There, Mrs. Willett, a recent arrival, has rented the home of retired naval officer Captain Trevelyan and is living there with her daughter, Violet. One evening, Mrs. Willett hosts a séance and invites several local residents, including John Burnaby, the captain’s closest friend.

During the séance, mysterious messages claim that Captain Trevelyan has died. Determined to learn the truth, Burnaby sets out on a six-mile trek through the snow to the nearby town of Exhampton, where the captain is staying. When he arrives, he makes a shocking discovery: Captain Trevelyan has indeed been murdered.

And so, the mystery begins.

4.50 from Paddington by Agatha Christie

Mystery

Elspeth McGillicuddy is not the sort of person who imagines things—until she believes she sees a murder take place at Paddington Station. But was it real? There is no body, no suspect, and no one else who witnessed the crime. With no evidence, everyone dismisses the incident as a mistake.

Everyone, that is, except her friend Miss Jane Marple. Convinced something terrible has occurred, Miss Marple returns to the scene to uncover the truth and determine exactly what Mrs. McGillicuddy witnessed.

Sparkling Cynanide by Agatha Christie

Mystery

Six guests gather for an elegant dinner at a table set for seven. The empty seat is marked by a sprig of rosemary—“rosemary for remembrance”—a chilling tribute, given that no one present could ever forget what happened exactly one year earlier. It was at this very table that Rosemary Barton died, her once-beautiful face twisted in agony and terror.

Rosemary had always been unforgettable, stirring intense emotions in everyone she encountered. For at least one person, those feelings ran deep enough to turn deadly.

A Winter by the Sea by Julie Klassen

Regency Romance

I enjoy some Regency Romance once in a while and I started this book series at the end of 2025.   I really am enjoying book one so Winter by the Sea sounds wonderful and cozy.  It is book 2, you can find book one here!

When the Duke and Duchess of Kent come to Sidmouth for the winter with their young daughter—the future Queen Victoria—and settle into nearby Woolbrook Cottage, the Summers sisters are unexpectedly asked to host three members of the royal household in their seaside home. What seems like a simple favor soon pulls them into a world of secrets and subtle intrigue they never expected.

Meanwhile, Emily Summers dreams of becoming a published writer. A local publisher agrees to review her novel if she will first write a guidebook to Sidmouth, and Emily gladly accepts the opportunity. As she researches the town, she grows closer to the Duke of Kent’s handsome private secretary. But when an unexpected figure from her past arrives at Sea View, Emily finds herself torn between the dreams she has always held and the new possibilities beginning to take shape.

The Long Winter by Laura Ingalls Wilder

Children’s Literature/Fiction

You are never too old for Laura Ingalls Wilder.  I have heard many people who have read the series say this is their favorite book of the series, so of course I had to add it.

During the fierce winter of 1880–1881, the small town of De Smet in the Dakota Territory is nearly brought to its knees. Laura and her family—Pa, Ma, Mary, Carrie, and baby Grace—do everything they can to endure the relentless storms. Blizzard after blizzard buries the town beneath towering snowdrifts, cutting it off from supplies and leaving families with less and less food. As starvation becomes a real threat, Almanzo Wilder and a companion risk their lives by traveling across the frozen prairie in search of wheat. Their dangerous journey succeeds, bringing hope and relief to the town just in time. That year’s Christmas, though unlike any other, is filled with gratitude and joy.

The beloved Little House books share the true story of Laura Ingalls’s childhood growing up on the American frontier. Treasured by generations of readers, these stories offer a vivid look at pioneer life and celebrate the strength, love, and resilience of family.

IN CONCLUSION

This is the perfect time to read some beautiful books that take place in the winter time.  Winter can be a difficult season for many and it can be brutal cold!  A great book list is the perfect medicine

I hope you enjoyed the list! I would love to hear some of your favorite winter reads. I may just add to this list.  Leave them in the comments!

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