10 Atmospheric Books to Escape into This Winter

Zeniya Cooley Headshot
November 7 2023
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If you’re looking for books to curl up with on a cold night, you’re in for a treat. Gathered below are ten novels that pair perfectly with a warm, snuggly blanket and a steaming cup of cocoa. But don’t be fooled by the snow-laden landscapes and Dickensian charm. These books offer more than holiday cheer. They delve into the depths of the human experience, exploring love, loss, pain, and perseverance.

So settle into your comfiest reading nook and get ready to discover your next favorite winter read. These enchanting stories will warm you up—even on the chilliest of nights.

A Quiet Life
by Ethan Joella

At its heart, A QUIET LIFE is about perseverance. Not the kind portrayed in war epics or prison dramas but the kind that hums beneath the surface of everyday struggles. The book connects the grief journeys of three characters: Chuck, a widow who agonizes over an argument he had with his late wife; Kirsten, a twenty-something who lost her father in a grocery store robbery and tries to cope by volunteering at an animal shelter; and Ella, a mother who delivers newspapers and works tirelessly at a bridal shop in between waiting for news about her abducted daughter. As the characters move mechanically through their lives, balancing work, love, and loss, they begin to resemble the people we know best: ourselves. We read about Chuck’s wrenching ruminations and replay our own regrets. We read about Kirsten’s dalliances and think of our own yearnings for affection. Ethan Joella’s novel highlights the small feats and failures that comprise daily endurance. It assures us that someone sees our unsung efforts—and finds them honorable.

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A Quiet Life
Ethan Joella

From the author of A Little Hopea Read with Jenna Bonus Pick—comes an enormously powerful and life-affirming novel about three individuals whose lives intersect in unforeseen ways.

Set in a close-knit Pennsylvania suburb in the grip of winter, A Quiet Life follows three people grappling with loss and finding a tender wisdom in their grief.

Chuck Ayers used to look forward to nothing so much as his annual trip to Hilton Head with his wife, Cat—that yearly taste of relaxation they’d become accustomed to in retirement, after a lifetime of working and raising two children. Now, just months after Cat’s death, Chuck finds that he can’t let go of her things—her favorite towel, the sketchbooks in her desk drawer—as he struggles to pack for a trip he can’t imagine taking without her.

Ella Burke delivers morning newspapers and works at a bridal shop to fill her days while she anxiously awaits news—any piece of information—about her missing daughter. Ella adjusts to life in a new apartment and answers every call on her phone, hoping her daughter will reach out one day.

After the sudden death of her father, Kirsten Bonato set aside her veterinary school aspirations, finding comfort in the steady routine of working at an animal shelter. But as time passes, old dreams and new romantic interests begin to surface—and Kirsten finds herself at another crossroads.

In this beautifully crafted and profoundly moving novel, three parallel narratives converge in poignant and unexpected ways, as each character bravely presses onward, trying to recover something they have lost. Emotionally riveting and infused with hope, A Quiet Life celebrates humanity in the midst of uncertainty.

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Marley
by Jon Clinch

Jon Clinch resurrects a life in this remix of Charles Dickens’s seasonal staple A Christmas Carol. Jacob Marley, Ebenezer Scrooge’s self-serving business partner, is not a waistcoated phantom beset with chains this time around. Instead, Marley is a cunning student at Professor Drabb’s Academy for Boys, where he and the gullible Scrooge strike up a friendship. Years after introducing his unwitting classmate to the world of extortion, Marley builds a lucrative but duplicitous shipping business with Scrooge. Before long, the two men begin to plot the other’s destruction—using the same deceptive methods that once brought them together.

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Marley
Jon Clinch

The acclaimed author of Finn digs down to the bones of a classic and creates must-read modern literature” (Charles Frazier, New York Times bestselling author) with this “clever riff” (The Washington Post) on Dickens’s classic A Christmas Carol that explores of the relationship between Ebenezer Scrooge and Jacob Marley.

“Marley was dead, to begin with,” Charles Dickens tells us at the beginning of A Christmas Carol. But in Jon Clinch’s “masterly” (The New York Times Book Review) novel, Jacob Marley, business partner to Ebenezer Scrooge, is very much alive: a rapacious and cunning boy who grows up to be a forger, a scoundrel, and the man who will be both the making and the undoing of Scrooge.

They meet as youths in the gloomy confines of Professor Drabb’s Academy for Boys, where Marley begins their twisted friendship by initiating the innocent Scrooge into the art of extortion. Years later, in the dank heart of London, their shared ambition manifests itself in a fledgling shipping empire. Between Marley’s genius for deception and Scrooge’s brilliance with numbers, they amass a considerable fortune of dubious legality, all rooted in a pitiless commitment to the soon-to-be-outlawed slave trade.

As Marley toys with the affections of Scrooge’s sister, Fan, Scrooge falls under the spell of Fan’s best friend, Belle Fairchild. Now, for the first time, Scrooge and Marley find themselves at odds. With their business interests inextricably bound together and instincts for secrecy and greed bred in their very bones, the two men engage in a shadowy war of deception, forged documents, theft, and cold-blooded murder. Marley and Scrooge are destined to clash in an unforgettable reckoning that will echo into the future and set the stage for Marley’s ghostly return.

“Read through to the last page of this brilliant book, and I promise you that you will have a permanently changed view, not just of Dickens’s world, but of the world we live in today” (Elizabeth Letts, New York Times bestselling author).

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Gilded Mountain
by Kate Manning

When one thinks of the early 1900s, one might imagine satin-gloved socialites extending their hands at billionaire balls and top-hatted gentlemen bowing to press their lips to the fabric. Amid such distracting splendor, the early twentieth century’s spirited labor movement is less remembered. Fortunately, Kate Manning reminds us of the people who rallied against the evils of excess. GILDED MOUNTAIN follows the young Sylvie Pelletier, whose father works at a marble-mining company in Colorado. As a reporter, Sylvie witnesses firsthand the deplorable conditions that define life as a quarry worker. These injustices come into sharper focus when Sylvie later becomes a secretary for the wealthy Padgett family, who owns the company that employs her father and countless other mistreated miners. GILDED MOUNTAIN poses a simple question to its heroine and readers around the world: what side of history will you be on?

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Gilded Mountain
Kate Manning

“Immersive…awe-inspiring.” —The New York Times “An epic story of love, hope, and perseverance.” — #1 New York Times bestselling author Christina Baker Kline

This “stellar read” (Los Angeles Times) is an exhilarating tale of an unforgettable young woman who bravely exposes the corruption that enriched her father’s employers in early 1900s Colorado.

In a voice infused with sly humor, Sylvie Pelletier recounts leaving her family’s snowbound mountain cabin to work in a manor house for the Padgetts, owners of the marble-mining company that employs her father and dominates the town. Sharp-eyed Sylvie is awed by the luxury around her; fascinated by her employer, the charming “Countess” Inge, and confused by the erratic affections of Jasper, the bookish heir to the family fortune. Her fairy-tale ideas take a dark turn when she realizes the Padgetts’ lofty philosophical talk is at odds with the unfair labor practices that have enriched them. Their servants, the Gradys, formerly enslaved people, have long known this to be true and are making plans to form a utopian community on the Colorado prairie.

Outside the manor walls, the town of Moonstone is roiling with discontent. A handsome union organizer, along with labor leader Mary Harris “Mother” Jones, is stirring up the quarry workers. The editor of the local newspaper—a bold woman who takes Sylvie on as an apprentice—is publishing unflattering accounts of the Padgett Company. Sylvie navigates vastly different worlds and struggles to find her way amid conflicting loyalties. When the harsh winter brings tragedy, Sylvie decides to act.

Drawn from true stories of Colorado history, Gilded Mountain is a tale of a bygone American West seized by robber barons and settled by immigrants, and is a story imbued with longing—for self-expression and equality, freedom and adventure.

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The Square of Sevens
by Laura Shepherd-Robinson

Tarot cards, crystals, manifestation, and spoken affirmations dominate our zeitgeist. So why not read a book about a fortune teller who holds fate in the palm of her hand? In 1730s England, a young girl named Red travels from village to village, predicting fortunes with her father. Their method of relaying the future via playing cards is known as the Square of Sevens. After Red’s father dies, one fact becomes crystal clear: she can predict everyone’s fate but her own. On a dazzling journey that takes her from Bath to London, Red searches for answers about her dead parents, her card-shuffling inheritance, and the mysterious enemies that covet its power.

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The Square of Sevens
Laura Shepherd-Robinson

INTERNATIONAL BESTSELLER

“A big, satisfying, and clever read.” The Times (London)

An orphaned fortune teller in 18th-century England searches for answers about her long-dead mother and uncovers shocking secrets in this immersive and atmospheric saga perfect for fans of Sarah Waters and Sarah Perry.

Cornwall, 1730: A young girl known only as Red travels with her father making a living predicting fortunes using the ancient Cornish method of the Square of Sevens. Shortly before he dies, her father entrusts Red’s care to a gentleman scholar, along with a document containing the secret of the Square of Sevens technique.

Raised as a lady amidst the Georgian splendor of Bath, Red’s fortune-telling delights in high society. But she cannot ignore the questions that gnaw at her soul: who was her mother? How did she die? And who are the mysterious enemies her father was always terrified would find him?

The pursuit of these mysteries takes her from Cornwall and Bath to London and Devon, from the rough ribaldry of the Bartholomew Fair to the grand houses of two of the most powerful families in England. And while Red’s quest brings her the possibility of great reward, it also leads to grave danger.

Laura Shepherd-Robinson, “the queen of modern Georgian literature” (Susan Stokes-Chapman, author of Pandora), has written a dazzling and Dickensian story of mystery and intrigue, with audacious twists and turns.

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Boy, Snow, Bird
by Helen Oyeyemi

BOY, SNOW, BIRD takes inspiration from the classic fairy tale “Snow White,” but its piercing interrogation of the fair-haired and fair-faced beauty ideal recalls Toni Morrison’s brutal The Bluest Eye. In 1953, Boy Novak flees New York and her abusive rat-catching father and steps foot in winter wonderland Massachusetts. There, she meets and marries Arturo, a kindly jeweler and widowed father to the winsome Snow. Like everyone, Boy is charmed by Arturo’s golden-haired daughter. But when Boy gives birth to her own daughter, the dark-skinned Bird, she becomes a cruel stepmother and separates the sisters. Helen Oyeyemi’s book proves that mirrors hold something far more powerful than magic. They hold our shattered illusions.

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Boy, Snow, Bird
Helen Oyeyemi

This widely acclaimed novel brilliantly recasts the fairy tale Snow White as a story of family secrets, race, beauty, and vanity. It boldly confronts the tyranny of the mirror to ask how much power surfaces really hold.

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The Painted Bridge
by Wendy Wallace

The story of a Victorian-era woman being cruelly deceived and forcibly installed in an asylum brings to mind Wilkie Collins’s thrilling novel, The Woman in White. Unfortunately, twenty-four-year-old Anna Palmer doesn’t have a clever and intrepid sister like Marian Halcombe to come to her rescue. Actually, the only thing Anna has is her sanity, which deteriorates every second she spends in the claustrophobic confines of Lake House. Anna’s strange visions further complicate her dire position. Still, she can’t abandon these mysterious dreams entirely. They may have brought her to Lake House, but they could also hold the key to her precious freedom.

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The Painted Bridge
Wendy Wallace

Spellbinding and intricate, The Painted Bridge is a tale of secrets, lost lives, and a woman seizing her own destiny: “A chilling page-turner about the muddy line between sanity and madness” (Caroline Leavitt, author of Pictures of You).

Outside London behind a stone wall stands Lake House, a private asylum for genteel women of a delicate nature. In the winter of 1859, recently married Anna Palmer becomes its newest arrival, tricked by her husband into leaving home, incarcerated against her will, and declared hysterical and unhinged. With no doubts as to her sanity, Anna is convinced that she will be released as soon as she can tell her story. But Anna learns that liberty will not come easily. The longer she remains at Lake House, the more she realizes that—like the ethereal bridge over the asylum’s lake—nothing is as it appears. She begins to experience strange visions and memories that may lead her to the truth about her past, herself, and to freedom…or lead her so far into the recesses of her mind that she may never escape.

Set in Victorian England, as superstitions collide with a new psychological understanding, novelist Wendy Wallace “masterfully creates an atmosphere of utter claustrophobia and dread, intermingled with the ever-present horror of the reality of women’s minimal rights in the nineteenth century” (Publishers Weekly). The Painted Bridge is a tale of self-discovery, secrets, and a search for the truth in a world where the line between madness and sanity seems perilously thin.

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Beartown
by Fredrik Backman

BEARTOWN calls forth all of the emotions of watching 2000s teen dramas like One Tree Hill, another small-town sports story. You rooted for the fictional Ravens basketball team. You also felt a part of the “unkindness,” the term for a flock of ravens, as team shooting guard and series protagonist Lucas Scott nerdily explains to a friend. One Tree Hill and BEARTOWN may focus on small-town matters, but they leave you with mighty feelings that linger long after the fact. In Fredrik Backman’s book, an underdog ice hockey team finally has a chance to win big. Set to compete in the national semi-finals, star player Kevin and the rest of the crew are determined to bring gold back to Beartown—but at what cost? Right when the town’s hard-hearted locals had begun to believe again, the daughter of the hockey club’s manager accuses Kevin of rape. BEARTOWN explores what happens when heartwarming dreams become horrifying nightmares.

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Beartown
Fredrik Backman

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Strega
by Johanne Lykke Holm

STREGA’s evocation of drably dressed women chafing against the imposition of puritanical womanhood recalls Charlotte Brontë’s soul-stirring Jane Eyre. But the desolate and haunted hotel setting conjures yet another classic: Stephen King’s The Shining. Lykke Holm borrows ethos and atmosphere from both stories to create a suspenseful tale about open violence against women as well as the subtle forms of subjugation that prove just as sinister. After her mother finds the Olympic Hotel’s want ad for seasonal maids and insists on her application, Rafa leaves her seaside town for the mountain village of Strega. The first few days polishing silver are as dull as one would expect. But then weeks pass with no guests to rumble the neat bed sheets. Something is awry at Olympic Hotel, and when one of the maids vanishes at the first sign of guests, Rafa must get to the bottom of the disappearance—or suffer the same fate.

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Strega
Johanne Lykke Holm

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In the Midst of Winter
by Isabel Allende

In the dead of winter, two academics and a Guatemalan nanny concoct a plan to dispose of a corpse. Clearly, IN THE MIDST OF WINTER isn’t the fuzzy holiday tale you read across from the fireplace. It doesn’t offer a mawkish moral about choosing generosity over greed. What it does offer is the cold, bitter truth: life bites and we bear the scars. One day, amid a historic blizzard in Brooklyn, Richard Bowmaster, a sixty-year-old professor and quintessential Scrooge, crashes into the vehicle of an immigrant woman named Evelyn. At first, Richard dismisses the accident. That is, until Evelyn appears at his doorstep, speaking hysterically in her native tongue. Richard retrieves his neighbor, the Chilean academic Lucia Maraz, to help translate. Eventually, the two professors learn that the dent in Evelyn’s Lexus isn’t the problem—the dead body in the trunk is. As the characters search desperately for a solution, we learn about the massive but muted pain that each one carries—and the series of secret tragedies that have led to this moment.

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In the Midst of Winter
Isabel Allende

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The Christmas Box
by Richard Paul Evans

Amid twinkling reindeer lawn sets, perfectly wrapped presents, and Mariah Carey whistle tones ringing in every aisle, it’s easy to think that Christmas celebrations are nothing more than consumerist folly. Luckily, Richard Paul Evans reminds us that the greatest gift of all is love. Written as a heartfelt ode to his young daughters, THE CHRISTMAS BOX centers on a young family that moves into a Victorian mansion to take care of an aging widow. Businessman Richard, his wife, Keri, and their four-year-old daughter are happy to live rent-free in Mary’s spacious abode. Unbeknownst to them, the kindly old woman harbors secrets as deep and dark as the cobwebbed recesses of her mansion. Richard, obsessed with work and success, is oblivious to this and to the needs of his expanded family. When tragedy strikes, however, he begins to wonder, as we all do: what’s the point of gaining it all only to lose the ones you love?

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The Christmas Box
Richard Paul Evans

A beautifully packaged 30th anniversary edition of #1 New York Times bestselling author Richard Paul Evans’s classic tale of faith, hope, and Christmas miracles.

Thirty years ago, Richard Paul Evans wrote a small Christmas tale for his two young daughters—an expression of love celebrating the joy of fatherhood and the beauty of childhood. Evans printed a couple dozen copies of his book and shared it with family and friends, which they began sharing with their loved ones. As demand for his book grew, Evans printed up copies of his sweet tale and began selling them at local stores in Salt Lake City. Within a few years, what began as a private expression of love for his two young daughters evolved into a beloved gift whose popularity quickly spread throughout the world. Soon, his masterpiece became a global phenomenon, becoming one of the most bestselling books of the century.

Now, this special anniversary edition brings this heartwarming novel to a new generation. The moving and unforgettable story of a widow and the young family who come to live with her is a modern classic you’ll want to share with all your loved ones from the “king of Christmas fiction” (The New York Times).

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