
Under the tree and now in my reading queue:
Sarah-Maria Belcastro and Carolyn Yackel, Making Mathematics with Needlework. This one's going to be fun -- mathematicians talking about sundry mathematical concepts in the needlework realm.
Debbie Parker Wayne, ed. Advanced Genetic Genealogy. This may go over my head (I'd consider myself around the beginner-intermediate cusp with genetic genealogy), but I'll enjoy figuring it out.
Mo Moulton, The Mutual Admiration Society: How Dorothy L. Sayers and Her Oxford Circle Remade the World for Women.
En route and going in the queue as soon as they arrive:
L. A. Hall, Mistress in Her Household. The latest in the Clorinda Cathcart apochrypha; Eliza Ferraby's story. This will be my relaxing reading.
Alan Smale, Eagle and Empire. Third book in an alternate history trilogy about a 13th century Roman military officer who's taken as a war captive in North America and ends up in the city of Cahokia. (I should reread the first two books in the meantime to refresh my memory.) While this series is more military-history heavy than is usually my thing, I've been hooked since the Iroquois military tech reveal at the beginning of chapter 2 of the first book Clash of Eagles (I may have uttered the words "okay, that's f***ing awesome" aloud on first reading).
Mark Vanhoenacker, How to Land a Plane. Because it sounded intriguing.