The best 5 books for 2023

 2022 is an end. There are a lot of good books we have read and here are the top 5 best of  2022.Raking is based on the most recommended, best seller, 5 stars given and great content or storyline

1) It's End With Us 


By: Colleen Hoover

From beginning to end I loved this book. The plot is realistic especially what Lily experiences. I think so many people love this series (second one is "It Starts With Us") because of seeing themselves in Lily shoes, or in another character. It also gives you another point of view of domestic violence that many people are shocked by on their reaction. Also, the authors note is a MUST READ!


2) The Psychology of Money

By: Morgan Housel

From the first sentence to the last, this book provides the latest and most up-to-date evidence for financial literacy's wholesome power to enrich your entire life. The author tells stories to discover financial literacy and living a good life go hand and hand. Most financial books discuss the dominated and respected quantitative side, the sophisticated science, complicated formulas, and mind-numbing statistics. Reading the traditional personal finance genres makes people erroneously think investors need to be intelligent and aggressive to invest successfully


3) The Mountain Is You


By : Brianna Wiest

I have no words except “life changing”. Brianna Wiest is a literary genius. I learn so much every time I pick up one of her books. If you like this book I definitely recommend 101 Essays That Will Change The Way You Think. It’s one of my all time favorite books and goes hand in hand with The Mountain Is You

4) The Love Hypothesis 


By :Ali Hazelwood 

The Love Hypothesis is rom-com all the way. It starts out with a kiss, develops into a fake relationship (for all the best reasons) and graduates to something much more. Funny, charming and heartwarming, the book has everything that should be included in a rom-com.

5 ) Things We Never Got Over

By:Lucy Score


The book is a beautiful story about overcoming trauma - specifically fears about falling in love. This happens for a lot of books (I'm thinking Ugly Love as another popular romance book). But really this book has realistic trauma situations and there are so many pages that you really see the characters change and unravel from their pain points. So by the end, I really understood the two main characters (there are alternating chapter POVs!). The author explained in the note at the end that some of her friends had some tragedies happen to them while she was writing this book, and that helped her realize this book would be about choosing to love even when you know it could hurt. It's definitely the message and theme of this book so it's super good in that way. This book doubles as a therapy session tbh. In the world of mental health/relationship psychology, I would highly recommend this book. You're basically watching an anxious-avoidant relationship both become more secure (hence the title of the book: Things We Never Got Over)

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