Books
Recommended reads for women navigating midlife and beyond.

A Confluence of Obsidian
The threads of the sisterhood’s magical struggle converge toward a reckoning. Book 3 of The Obsidian Sisterhood.

A Gathering of Crones
Newly-awakened Crone Claire Emerson races the clock to gather the remaining Crones and master her elemental magic as the dark Mages close in. Book 2 of The Crone Wars, an urban fantasy where a woman’s power arrives after fifty.

A Modest Trumpet Fanfare
Ted and Marina Diamond set out to build the ideal military family — disciplined, close, unbreakable — but years of upheaval, rigid rules, and quiet violence fray the bonds and breed secrets. A grandchild’s curiosity finally forces a reckoning.
Why it’s here: Matriarch Marina reckons, in her later years, with the true cost of the ‘perfect’ family she helped build — an older woman’s long view of love and damage.

A Single Swallow
On the day of Japan’s 1945 surrender, three men — an American missionary, a US gunner’s mate, and a local Chinese soldier — make a pact to return in death, each year, to the village where they survived the war. Seventy years on, their souls reconvene, still bound by the woman each of them loved: Ah Yan, called Swallow, who endured unspeakable atrocities and met them with grace and dignity. As their memories converge, the shape of her extraordinary life comes into view.
Why it’s here: Though narrated by the three men who loved her, the novel is ultimately the portrait of one woman’s lifelong endurance and dignity — her story reclaimed from the men who remember it.

A Tale for the Time Being
On a beach in British Columbia, a writer named Ruth finds a Hello Kitty lunchbox washed up from the 2011 tsunami. Inside is the diary of Nao, a Japanese teenager desperate to be understood, and each page pulls Ruth — and the reader — deeper into the mystery of Nao’s life. Weaving across continents and decades, Ruth Ozeki’s novel is a meditation on time, connection, and our shared humanity.
Why it’s here: One of the book’s two narrators is a teenage girl, but the other is Ruth, a midlife woman writer whose own reckoning with meaning and mortality anchors the story.

A Tangle of Obsidian
The Obsidian sisterhood is drawn deeper into conflict as their magical entanglements grow more dangerous. Book 2 of The Obsidian Sisterhood.

A Web of Obsidian
A sixty-nine-year-old former nun and two-time black belt is drawn into a web of dark magic and obligation. Book 1 of The Obsidian Sisterhood, an urban fantasy proving age is no barrier to power.

After Happily Ever: An Epic Novel of Midlife Rebellion
Princesses Neve, Della, and Bry have lived their happily-ever-after in the kingdom of Foreverness for thirty years — until the king’s sudden death sends each on a quest that shatters the illusion of royal perfection. A fantasy of midlife rebellion and new legends.
Why it’s here: Its three heroines are women well past the fairy-tale ending, rebelling and remaking their lives in midlife — an older-women’s story in fairy-tale dress.

Ageless Erotica
Joan Price bills herself as the “senior sexpert,” a phrase that captures her late life career as an advocate for senior sexuality and the author of several non-fiction books on the subject. In Ageless Erotica, Price has collected well-written short stories about eroticism in later life, by both men and women. These stories cover a wide range of sexual orientation, gender identification, and realism alongside magic. All of the stories share a joy in the bodies we have now: Exploring them, rediscovering them, longing to share them.
This is one of the few books I am including that also has work by men. When you read it, pay attention to how the stories differ by gender – and how much they have in common. The notes about authors at the end of the book provide many ways to explore and connect with people who celebrate sexuality throughout our lives.

Agents of Change
A companion collection in the Menopausal Superheroes series, bundling two interlude novellas and a set of short stories. It goes behind and between the novels to deepen the world of Patricia the Lizard Woman, Fuerte, Flygirl, and Dr. Cindy Liu, exploring what it means to be a hero at any age or stage of life.

All of Me
Divorced at sixty-three, Jessie Woodley inherits a Colorado cabin and a trust — but only by completing a series of cryptic tasks set by a watchful lawyer she’s dangerously drawn to. Book 1 of the Lovesong Encore later-in-life romance series.

All We Know of Pleasure
All We Know of Pleasure: Poetic Erotica by Women is a hugely satisfying collection edited by Enid Shomer and published by Carolina Wren Press.
It’s intriguing in part because the book is divided by the age of the poets and their subjects.
Part I, The Discovery of Sex, is all about first longing.
Part II, The Ordinary Day Begins, is about sex in the years of active motherhood.
Part III, When this Old Body, is of course my favorite and the part I read first.
“And suddenly, again, I want the long road of your thigh,” writes Jane Hirshfield of the desire that comes in long knowing.
“our bodies move and join / unbearably. / your face above me / is the face of all the gods / and beautiful demons,” writes Lenore Kandel, reminding us of the timelessness of lust.
“Neither of them was young. His beard was gray… But they kissed lavish kisses like the ocean in the early morning… We couldn’t look away,” writes Ellen Bass about a couple reunited at the Portland airport. These fine poems capture what it is to be a woman in love with life across its full span.

Almost Family
Dying of stage-four cancer and estranged from her grown daughter, Liz Millanova joins a hospital support group and forms a fierce chosen family with two fellow patients. A tender novel about mortality, reconciliation, and savoring what is left.

An Elderly Lady Is Up to No Good
Eighty-eight-year-old Maud is small, frail, and utterly ruthless. When inconvenient people get in her way, she handles them — with the kind of decisive efficiency that only comes with age and absolutely nothing left to lose. Helene Tursten’s darkly comic stories are a love letter to the surprising freedom of extreme old age.

As We Are Now
Seventy-six-year-old Caro Spencer, a retired schoolteacher, is placed by her family in a rundown rural nursing home, where neglect and small cruelties threaten to erase her. In a secret journal she fights to hold onto her dignity, her memory, and her sense of self. May Sarton’s spare, searing novel is one of the most honest accounts ever written of institutional aging and the will to remain fully human.

Be the Change
Springfield refuses to stay saved. A new mutation sends the women’s powers into dangerous, unstable spikes, and only Flygirl is unaffected. Racing to find a cause and a cure, she must cooperate with the very scientist who changed their lives, while romances, weddings, and divorces test whether these heroines can truly have it all.

Becoming Crone
Freshly divorced and adrift, Claire Emerson expects nothing from her sixtieth birthday — until an antique pendant from her grandson awakens a magical calling she never knew she carried. Lydia M. Hawke’s Crone Wars series is a satisfying inversion of the usual story: here the magic arrives with age, and a woman past sixty turns out to be the hero the world has been waiting for.

Brilliant Charming Bastard
Stella Fosse’s smart, sexy novel drops three accomplished women scientists — a biology professor, a chemist, and a patent-lawyer/engineer — into the San Francisco biotech scene, where they discover they’ve all been dating the same charming con man, a fraudster stealing their research along with their hearts. Comparing notes, they reach one conclusion: getting rich is the best revenge. First Wives Club meets The Witches of Eastwick, with older women firmly in charge of the story.

California Blues
A prequel to Dakota Blues, exploring Karen Grace’s earlier life and the career and marriage pressures that precede her midlife road trip.

Change of Life
With great power comes great frustration. As the newly transformed women adjust to life as superheroes, Patricia presses on alone to find the woman who changed them, while Jessica and Linda train with a covert agency known as The Department. Old threats resurface, and controlling their new abilities proves harder than any of them expected.

Chick Singer
Former 1980s rock hopeful Libby Conlin has long since buried her music — until her newly divorced daughter posts the old recordings online and the industry comes calling. As her past resurfaces, mother and daughter remake their lives in a story about second acts and redefining love.

Clitapalooza: Her flower blooms power
A spicy, satirical romp about a sixty-something woman who stumbles into a digital trap and comes out the other side owning her desire and her power. Billie Best skewers the culture’s assumptions about older women and sex, insisting with wit and nerve that a woman’s sensual life is far from over at 60.

Clock Dance
Willa Drake is 61 when a phone call upends her settled life and sends her across the country to help a near-stranger. Anne Tyler’s novel is a gentle meditation on reinvention, on the ways we close ourselves off, and on what it takes to start over in the second half of life.

Crone Unleashed
Claire ventures alone through the treacherous god realm to rescue her trapped protector before Morok finds the ancient Crone magic hidden there. Book 4 of The Crone Wars.
