As the clock winds down on 2023, dive into the Wednesday Wisdom edition of the 7 Best Books! Brace for fiery exposés, family dramedies, and historical epics. From Congo’s cobalt mines to post-crash Ireland, these tales spark both introspection and action. Prepare to be informed, shaken, and ultimately, transformed by the power of words. Let the reading begin!

Cobalt Red: How the Blood of the Congo Powers Our Lives by Siddharth Kara

Kara’s Cobalt Red cuts like a diamond, exposing the brutal underbelly of our tech lust. Deep in Congo’s mines, where blood stains the earth red as the mineral powering our smartphones, Kara amplifies the voices of the voiceless. Shocking testimonies paint a harrowing portrait of child labor, militia control, and environmental devastation. This unflinching exposé is a wake-up call, urging us to confront the human cost of our digital convenience and demand ethical change. Powerful and urgent, Cobalt Red leaves you both informed and shaken, forever questioning the true price of progress.

Fire Weather: A True Story from a Hotter World by John Vaillant


Vaillant’s Fire Weather isn’t just a wildfire story, it’s a searing indictment of our hotter world. Using the 2016 Fort McMurray inferno as a lens, he exposes the tangled web of climate change, oil greed, and human vulnerability. Gripping prose and vivid imagery take us to the heart of the blaze, while historical context illuminates the tinderbox we’ve built. A must-read for anyone who wants to understand the terrifying reality of our fiery future.

The Bee Sting, by Paul Murray

Murray’s “Bee Sting” plunges us into the Barnes family’s Irish meltdown. Dickie’s car empire crumbles, Imelda’s façade cracks, Cass drowns sorrows, and young PJ dreams of escape. Through their eyes, we see post-crash Ireland, a dark comedy of fractured dreams and desperate measures. The bee sting, a symbol of past trauma, casts a long shadow, hinting that their unraveling might run deeper than recession. Witty, poignant, and strangely hopeful, “Bee Sting” buzzes with the question: can family bonds survive when the world itself seems to be ending?

The Best Minds by Jonathan Rosen

In “The Best Minds,” Rosen unravels a haunting tragedy. His childhood friend, a shining intellect consumed by paranoid delusions, plunges from promising life to shocking violence. This is no mere biography; it’s a visceral exploration of friendship, mental illness, and societal failures. With unflinching honesty and tender prose, Rosen grapples with what went wrong, weaving a powerful narrative that demands understanding, not just judgment. Every sentence resonates, leaving you deeply moved and profoundly questioning the lines between genius and madness.

Loot by Tania James

Tania James’ “Loot” isn’t just plunder, it’s a treasure trove. This 18th-century epic sweeps from Mysore palaces to European seas, weaving a young woodcarver’s dreams with the bloody tang of colonialism. A mechanical tiger roars defiance, love sparks amid courtly machinations, and a heist ripples across decades. James blends adventure, coming-of-age, and historical nuance in a tapestry as richly textured as the tiger’s fur. Buckle up for a thrilling ride through empires, hearts, and time.

North Woods by Daniel Mason


In Mason’s “North Woods,” a single New England cabin echoes with centuries of whispered dreams. From runaway lovers to apple-obsessed soldiers, each inhabitant dances with history, carving their mark on both home and self. Nature roars with equal vitality, beetles sculpt destinies, and the past bleeds into the present. This time-woven tapestry celebrates our ties to land, memory, and the enduring magic of the woods. Though brief, it resonates long after the final page, a testament to Mason’s masterful storytelling.

How to Say Babylon by Safiya Sinclair

In 75 taut words, Sinclair’s “How to Say Babylon” resonates. A lyric cry against her stifling Rastafarian upbringing, it’s not just a fight for independence, but a reckoning with Jamaica’s legacy of colonialism and patriarchy. Her father’s obsession with purity becomes a cage, her burgeoning voice the defiant fire. Prepare for soaring prose, clashes with brutal honesty, and a bittersweet ache for the culture that both nurtured and sought to silence. A potent debut you won’t forget.