What Books Did You Read in 2025?

What Books Did You Read in 2025?

I always start the new year with the best of intentions. Like telling myself I’ll post last year’s reading list the moment we usher in 2026. I truly thought I’d posted this already, but I sneezed and when I looked up it was the end of May. Time just …accelerates, the older one gets, doesn’t it?

Speaking of best intentions, 2025 was supposed to be a course-correction. Because 2024 leaned so heavily on female authors, I started last year wanting to focus on books by male authors. Somewhere in there, I tripped and fell down the rabbit hole that is Regency romance and couldn’t quite get back to regular programming. I generally like a nice mix of fiction and non-fiction, but 2025 was such a flaming turd of a year for humanity in general, I think my subconscious decided it needed escape. I don’t know what to tell you, the heart wants what it wants.

The Guys
The Name of the Wind / The Wise Man’s Fear – Patrick Rothfuss
The Shadow of What Was Lost / An Echo of Things to Come – James Islington
All the Colors of the Dark – Chris Whitaker
The Master: The Long Run and Beautiful Game of Roger Federer / The Warrior: Rafael Nadal and His Kingdom of Clay – Christopher Clarey

The Gals
The Duchess Deal / The Governess Game / The Wallflower  Wager / Goddess of the Hunt / Twice Tempted by a Rogue / One Dance with a Duke/ Three Nights With a Scoundrel / Romancing the Duke / Say Yes to the Marquess / When a Scot Ties the Knot / A Night to Surrender/ A Week to be Wicked / A Lady By Midnight / Beauty and the Blacksmith / Any Duchess Will Do / Lord Dashwood Missed Out / Do You Want to Start a Scandal? – Tessa Dare
Slightly Married / Slightly Wicked / Slightly Scandalous / Slightly Tempted / Slightly Sinful / Slightly Dangerous – Mary Balogh
Much Ado About You / Kiss Me, Annabel / The Taming of the Duke / Pleasure for Pleasure / The Duke is Mine – Eloisa James
Someday I’ll Find You – Lisa Kleypas
The Lass Wore Black – Karen Ranney
The Perils of Pleasure – Julie Anne Long
The Care and Taming of a Rogue – Suzanne Enoch
The Duke – Gaelen Foley
Atalanta – Jennifer Saint
House of Glass – Sarah Pekkanen
Sunrise on the Reaping – Suzanne Collins

The Standouts

Greenteeth – Molly O’Neil
Fun! Very Arthurian legend meets Swamp Thing. Easy writing, not too much world building, just a rollicking adventure featuring friendship, sheer stubbornness, and the power of three.

Blob – Maggie Su
Listen. A book is someone’s baby. It takes guts to put yourself out there and on shelves, so trashing someone’s work can be tacky. With that said, this one stood out for how little enjoyment it had to offer, especially with such a promising premise. Unfortunately, the main character is tedious, problematic, self-absorbed and snobbish and everyone else in it is two-dimensional and really kind of boring. I finished it feeling sorry for everyone who had the bad luck to be in the main character’s orbit. Baseless victimhood and chronic ungratefulness does not an interesting character make.

Bonk: The Curious Coupling of Science and Sex – Mary Roach
Science is so much more interesting when it’s written in language that’s accessible and funny, and Mary Roach with her tongue-in-cheek approach (hey that rhymed!) more than delivers in this madcap ride about sex – and the study of it – through the ages. Want to know what a Feminine Personal Trainer is? Enjoy humorous mentions of Priapus and his threats to, err, tear you apart? Need footnotes on super-absorbent tampons or a detailed list of things mysteriously found in penises? Bonk has the answers.

What Books Did You Read in 2024?

What Books Did You Read in 2024?

It’s that time of the year again! The time where I make excuses for why this post is late, blah blah blah and crap. At any rate, we’re mid-April now so I’d better get this out before it’s too late and I end up making another one of my monster two-year reading list mashes. Reading-wise, it appears I skewed more fantasy than usual, which was a first for me! As always, you’re welcome to skip to the standouts below 🙂

Memoirs, Memories and Me
The Meaning of Mariah Carey – Mariah Carey
Crying in H-Mart – Michelle Zauner
The Widow’s Guide to Dead Bastards – Jessica Waite
Robin – Dave Itzkoff
From Here to the Great Unknown – Lisa Marie Presley and Riley Keough

Sweet, Sweet Fantasy Baby
Starling House – Alix E. Harrow
Fourth Wing / Iron Flame – Rebecca Yarros
The Hollow Places / A Sorceress Comes to Call / Nettle and Bone – T. Kingfisher
The Familiar – Leigh Bardugo
Voyage of the Damned – Frances White
The Ministry of Time – Kaliane Bradley
The Forgetting – Sharon Cameron
Once a Monster – Robert Dinsdale

Loveswept
The Beast / The Chosen / The Thief / Lassiter – J. R. Ward
Romancing Mr. Bridgerton – Julia Quinn
Swift and Saddled – Lyla Sage

Other Stuff
Argylle – Elly Conway
The Best Laid Plans – Sidney Sheldon
Snuff – Chuck Palahniuk
The Queen’s Bed: An Intimate History of Elizabeth’s Court – Anna Whitelock
Capote’s Women: A True Story of Love, Betrayal, and a Swan Song for an Era – Laurence Leamer
The Last Queen: Elizabeth II’s Seventy Year Battle to Save the House of Windsor – Clive Irving

Standouts

Shoe Dog – Phil Knight
I was in Dublin the day after a riot broke out, and was confined to my hotel as it wasn’t safe to be on the streets. I’m not in the habit of reading the memoirs of entrepreneurs, but not knowing what else to do, I hung out in the lounge and picked this up, expecting a more detailed version of Prime Video’s Air (2023). I ended up enthralled with the story of Phil Knight instead. Shoe Dog isn’t just Knight’s story, it’s the story of Nike, his “third son.” Nike’s early beginnings, and its development into the behemoth it is today is way more captivating than any old shoe deal with a burgeoning basketball star and his indomitable mother. Not that Air was bad (go watch it), it was just a pleasant surprise to pick up a book expecting one thing, and find something else even better. Knight can make even accounting sound interesting, and Shoe Dog transcends mere selling and success. It’s a rollicking good story and is compulsively readable. I was very tempted to steal the book and take it home. I didn’t, and although I do now have my own legally gotten copy, may regret not giving in to that initial impulse to this day.

The Quiet Tenant – Clémence Michallon
According to Libby, I read this book in one hour and twenty minutes, which doesn’t seem quite right. Pretty sure it took longer than that to finish. What is true is that I inhaled this book in one sitting, something I rarely do now, because my attention span has become woefully fractured. When a book grabs me by the eyeballs and refuses to let go until the last page has been turned, it’s a sign of how good the writing, the story, and the pace is. The New York Times calls The Quiet Tenant an “assured debut” and an “expertly paced psychological thriller” and I am inclined to agree. Michallon skillfully uses multiple voices to weave the narrative around a serial killer – the woman he keeps chained in a shed, the woman who loves him, and his daughter – masterfully ratcheting up the suspense and the dread, chapter by chapter as the ghosts of the serial killer’s victims chime in. It’s chilling. It’s great.

Mistborn: The Final Empire / The Well of Ascension / The Hero of Ages – Brandon Sanderson
Can Brandon Sanderson write? This guy from Wired doesn’t seem to think so. Although I am tardy to the Sanderson party, I do not agree with the guy from Wired. Brandon Sanderson is a good storyteller, even if he doesn’t seem to like using variations on the word “scream”. The Mistborn trilogy is a fun romp through a fantasyland of erupting volcanos, weird skies, ash, and magic. Read it if only to see if you agree (or don’t) with the guy from Wired.

Thornhedge – T. Kingfisher
In Toadling – ugly and unsure, with barely any powers to speak of, Kingfisher has the opposite of a traditional protagonist. You may not want to read about her story, or even care. But you won’t be able to help yourself once you’ve started, because reading Thornhedge feels like someone is simply whispering the story in your ear as you leaf through illustrations of fairies, sleeping maidens in towers, with knights errant hacking their way through the brush. Using clean, uncomplicated prose, Kingfisher absolutely deserved the Hugo Award for Best Novella. Read this if you love re-imagined fairytales.

The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and Murder – David Grann
Grann’s characters are as fully fleshed out as he can make them, and this gripping tale of castaways fighting for survival while holding on to the tenets of honor and dignity is well worth the read. The Wager may be non-fiction, but all the pulse-pounding action makes it’s easy to forget that it is. Grann has penned a veritable thriller – and the tension is so tight, you might find yourself holding your breath as you turn the page, wanting to see what happens next.