Cozy Up With Healing Novels
By Stephanie Wallace, Library Assistant 2, Adult Services
The turkey and pumpkin pie have been consumed, the Black Friday deals stashed away, and the in-laws are returning home. No matter how you spent your Thanksgiving, it’s been a busy week. After swinging between gratitude, greed, and people-pleasing, I know I’ll need a break. And what better way to relax and recuperate than with a cozy book?
“Legends & Lattes” by Travis Baldree introduced me to the cozy fantasy genre, and its prequel, “Bookshops & Bonedust,” only reaffirmed my adoration. Baldree’s books star a beefy orc mercenary named Viv who’s learning how to take life slow. In her first adventure, Viv arrives in a new city with the dream to open a coffee shop. In the prequel, Viv’s between jobs and healing from an injury while she helps restore a local seaside bookshop. Both novels blend the vibes of Dungeons & Dragons with comfy, cute fixer-uppers.
If you prefer leaf juice over bean juice and want a little more intrigue, try Rebecca Thorne’s “Can’t Spell Treason Without Tea.” It’s the first in a trilogy starring a sapphic couple. Reyna, a queensguard who’s abandoned her post, wants nothing more than to open a tea shop in a remote mountain town and leave her bloody past behind. Her girlfriend, Kianthe is the voice and hands of the world’s magic, a heavy responsibility that only Reyna has helped lighten. But the Queen wants her wayward guard to answer for her betrayal, and the magic leaders of the world are clamoring for Kianthe’s attention. It’s a lot for two women to handle, but thankfully they have allies in their new home and each other to get through it.
Love bookshops but want more magic and the found family feeling of a Hallmark movie? Checkout “The Spellshop” by Sarah Durst. Librarian-on-the-run Kiela barely escapes the burning of her city with a boat full of magical library books and her best friend, a talking spider plant named Caz. While they bunker down in Kiela’s childhood home on a beautiful island with flying cats and mermaids, Kiela is confounded again and again by the unexpected troubles of surviving on her own and the kindness of her neighbors. It takes Kiela a while to learn to trust her new friends, but each step is as sweet as her homemade jam.
Much of cozy fantasy revolves around settling down and building up a new home, but if you’re hankering for a road trip, take “The Teller of Small Fortunes” by Julie Leong out for a spin. The eponymous fortune teller, Tao, is an immigrant traveler who goes town to town with her loyal mule, Laohu. Though Tao tries her hardest to avoid trouble, it finds her all the same when a pair of adventurers need her help to find a missing child. Before she knows it, Tao finds herself part of an amazing found family, and she needs to muster every ounce of courage she has to keep them safe.
Want cozy but don’t necessarily want fantasy? Allow me to introduce iyashikei, a Japanese subgenre related to slice-of-life. It loosely translates to “healing,” and they’re about contemplative stories that instill readers with a sense of peace or prompt them to reflect on their lives. If you’re a fan of Hayao Miyazaki’s “My Neighbor Totoro” (which also has a manga adaptation), you’ve already experienced how iyashikei can be a wonderfully quiet and quaint experience.
Miyazaki’s latest movie, “The Boy and the Heron,” includes a reference to “How Do You Live?” by Genzaburo Yoshino. Both the movie and the book star young teen boys who are figuring out how they want to live their lives. Junichi “Copper” Honda, the protagonist of “How Do You Live?” earned his nickname because of his similarity to Copernicus. Like the astronomer who disproved the sun revolved around the Earth, Copper’s acknowledgement at the start of the story that the world does not revolve around himself is a watershed moment the narrative comes back to again and again. The book switches back and forth between Copper’s experiences at school and entries from his uncle’s journal, which he is writing for his nephew in hopes that he’ll remember all of the important life lessons he’s learning. Taken together, it feels like a love letter to my younger self and a message that teens today will appreciate.
Finally, to round off my recommendations for the cold weather ahead of us, take a vacation in the mountains with Afro’s “Laid Back Camp,” a delightful iyashikei manga. Join Rin Shima and Nadeshiko Kagamihara, two high schoolers who love camping, and their friends as they travel around Japan’s beautiful, wild retreats. Each volume focuses on a different real-life campground. As the girls explore and unwind, their friendships blossom and warm my heart like their nightly campfires.
As you settle in with your favorite warm beverage and a fluffy blanket or furry friend draped over your lap, I hope one of these titles will complete your perfect, cozy day.
Manhattan Public Library is a cornerstone of free and equal access to a world of ideas and information for the Manhattan, Kansas, community. Learn more at mhklibrary.org.
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Stephanie Wallace, Library Assistant 2, Adult Services