I have a stack of books that I forgot to post for August-November! My December book might not get done by end of December, though.
August was weirdly Ireland themed (I swear it was not intentional - I just had a big stack of books from a box that I had never unpacked since we moved a couple years ago and I started at the top until I got through it). The first was The Gathering by Anne Enright, which I really thought was a depressing slog, honestly. I finished it, I didn't hate it, but there was nothing that really made it worth reading. 2/5 for this one. And the second was Whitethorn Woods by Maeve Binchy. I had read a few of her books years ago, some of which I liked and others I thought were kind of meh, and this one fell into the meh category, too. Easy, quick read, but just wasn't that interesting, ultimately. 3/5.
In September I read A Long Way Down by Nick Hornby. If I had been paying attention and realized what this book was actually about before I started it (a bunch of actively suicidal people), I probably would not have started it. But it's a Nick Hornby novel, so it's primarily a comedy, so at least I don't have to say this one was a depressing slog like The Gathering. Unfortunately I didn't really find it all that funny or enlightening or anything, really. So another 3/5.
My October book was The Night Tiger by Yangsze Choo (I see some updates for The Fox Wife upthread! Will get to that one at some point, for sure). Again, as in The Ghost Bride, the fantasy/mythology was the bright spot here. Unfortunately, the plot was (for me) too focused on the (pointless) romance, and then the end didn't really adequately explain some things. This one was fun to read, though. 3.5/5.
In November I read Prodigal Summer by Barbara Kingsolver.
This is my first Kingsolver novel, and based on this one, should not be my last! I had a ton of fun with this book, even though the scientist in me was annoyed by the super oversimplification of some sciency stuff, haha. I loved how female character driven this was, with multiple complex, independent female characters. This is one of those "everything is connected" types of books, which can sometimes feel forced, but this had more subtle connections that were fun to discover while reading. 4/5 for this one.