The Only Short Book You Need to Squeeze In at Year’s End
⚓ Books 📅 2025-11-25 👤 surdeus 👁️ 8Who doesn’t love a great, short book? You get the satisfaction of consuming a story in a day or so and notching another book read. If the job is done right, the story will carry as much weight and potency as a longer text. Novellas, short stories, and novelettes have become a regular part of my reading diet for these reasons, and I first came across today’s recommendation during the height of my quest for really good short books. I picked up this dark satire about a pair of sisters on a whim, having heard it was good but knowing little else about it other than that the title was perfect. Once I finished the book, in short time, all I wanted was to read more by this author. This year, my wish was granted with a new release that’s already been picked up by numerous major book clubs, making it a success right out of the bag. Read the dark, wry, and petite crime thriller that preceded Oyinkan Braithwaite’s 2025 hit, Cursed Daughters. It’ll take you no time, and you won’t regret it.
![]() My Sister the Serial Killer by Oyinkan BraithwaiteIn the span of 240 pages, you learn everything you need to know about sisters Korede and Ayoola only to realize you didn’t know them as well as you thought. In sharp, sardonic prose, Braithwaite brings these two opposites to life. Ayoola is a bright, shiny, peppy young woman leaving a bloody trail of suitors behind her with Korede, her beleaguered older sister, left to clean up her little sister’s messes. But hard-working, responsible Korede has needs and desires too. I’m a sucker for books that explore relationships between sisters. Sisterhood can produce a bond both deep and divisive. Braithwaite plays this dynamic and stereotypes about the roles of older and younger sisters with dark, vicious humor and makes it fresh. I also love when a writer successfully leads me to rooting for villains, or at least villainous motivations. Perspective on why people do terrible things doesn’t come easily for most of us but it can turn a familiar trope on its head (say, that of the underappreciated older sister and the doted-upon younger sister) in some fun and interesting ways. This book gave me the kind of wicked delight I felt watching that ridiculous ’90s black comedy, So I Married an Axe Murderer, but this book is the movie’s smarter, more sophisticated sister. |
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