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These are the books that I read (or attempted to read) during 2025 for enjoyment. I mostly read on one of several devices such as phone, tablet or dedicated e-reader rather than physical book.
I appreciate the convenience, flexibility and functionality of reading e-books over physical books. As a former bookseller (from a different century) I have a great fondness and respect for the physical book, and have amassed a modest library over the years, so I am certainly not against them at all. As for the books on this list, I have purchased several of them in physical form to add to the bookshelves.
The local library has been a truly amazing resource for providing access to all sorts of media and services and I try to take advantage of it as often as possible. That means that the majority of the books listed here were all provided via the Libby App and my library. Some books were read on the Libby app directly, but most were read via Amazon's Kindle app or on my Kindle Paperwhite directly.
The year started off with the "Monk and Robot" series from Becky Chambers.
There are two novellas in this short series: "A Psalm for the Wild-Built"
followed by "A Prayer for the Crown-Shy."
I would describe these as cozy solar-punk. A story about a robot that is as opposite from "Murderbot" as can be.
Light, easy reads; rather enjoyable and left me wanting a third story. | Rating: 9/10
I attempted to read Hank Green’s "A Beautifully Foolish Endeavor"
(the sequel to his "An Absolutely Remarkable Thing" which I really enjoyed reading last year).
The timing apparently wasn’t right and I only got through a couple of chapters before putting it down.
(Spoiler: I did pick it up later in the year and finished it. Details further down the list!) | Rating: */10
After a very long hiatus (and multiple, yearly viewings of the Peter Jackson movies) I decided to re-read J.R.R. Tolkien’s "The Lord of the Rings"
starting with "The Fellowship of the Ring".
It had been so long since I read these, there were whole plot lines that I had forgotten thanks to the movie re-writes and omissions.
After all these years, it still holds up as one of my all time favorites and this read-through was almost like reading it for the first time all over again. | Rating: 10/10
After a bit of a reading dry-spell during the summer, September found me reading Octavia Butler’s "Parable of the Sower"
A surprising post-apocalyptic story written in 1993 about life in 2024/2025. Intense in parts, there was a bit more violence than I expected.
Written with a very approachable writing style that drew me into the story almost immediately and made it hard to put down.
I can see why she is considered one of the greats among the Science Fiction elites. | Rating: 9/10
I found a Cory Doctorow novel that I hadn’t read called "The Lost Cause"
If you like Doctorow’s other writings, this is more of the same (in a good way!) Pretty heavy-handed from the social-political side of things as I've come to expect from him.
Still, a decent story but the romantic scenes were a bit uncomfortable and cringey. | Rating: 7/10
Edward Ashton’s "Mickey7"
and its sequel "Antimatter Blues" rounded out the month of October.
Good, reasonably solid sci-fi about a carving out a new life on a new planet where everyone has a job to do, including Mickey.
He gets the worst of the worst assignments, mostly because his body can be recycled and regenerated if and when things go sideways (which they usually do).
The storyline moved along well enough to keep me interested and overall, these two books were an enjoyable read. | Rating: 7/10
Finally found time to focus on reading Hank Green’s "A Beautifully Foolish Endeavor" (as mentioned above) I am quite glad I went back to this one.
Picks up just after the end of "An Absolutely Remarkable Thing" and continues the story in quite an unexpected yet compelling direction.
Fun and satisfying conclusion to the story. | Rating: 8/10
I tried reading John Green’s "The Anthropocene Reviewed" but struggled to stay interested after a few chapters.
I may try a re-read of this one in the future. | Rating: */10
Started re-reading J.R.R. Tolkien’s "The Two Towers"
I’m about a third of the way through and pick it up in between other books and hoping to finish sometime early next year so that I can finish the trilogy before next year comes to a close.
| Rating: 10/10
After a year of reading mostly fiction (fantasy/sci-fi) this past year, I thought it might be time to try something from the non-fiction side of the TBR Shelf.
Sarah Kendzior is a St. Louis based political author so I thought a home-town connection would help keep my interest with her book "The Last American Road Trip"
This one was not for me. I managed to get through a little over half of the book before putting it down.
For me, it contained way too much political / conspiracy / behind the scenes intrigue, and not nearly enough road tripping.
I mostly blame my preconceived notions and hopes for an "On the Road" style story more than the contents of this book.
Others may find it fascinating, but it didn’t do it for me. | Rating: 3/10
Travis Baldree’s "Brigands & Breadknives" follows the success of his previous two novels:
"Legends & Lattes" and "Bookshops & Bonedust"
These are pretty much the genre-defining novels for Cozy Fantasy.
Lots of fun, with great world-building and character development.
This one took off in a different and unexpected direction, filled with more action and adventure than the previous two novels.
and a bit less on the cozy side.
I would categorize this as a not-so-guilty "Guilty Pleasure" and I'm gonna need Mr. Baldree to crank out a few more books in this universe!| Rating: 8/10
It’s a wonder I hadn’t read Ursula K. LeGuin’s "A Wizard of Earthsea" until now.
This series shows up on nearly every "Great books of Epic Fantasy" list and hits on pretty much all of my "books I want to read" trigger: Wizards, Dragons, Magic.
By all accounts, I should've read this book a long time ago.
It's not like I didn't know about them; I've been aware of her novels for most of my adult life.
For some reason I never managed to actually pick any of them up and read a single one.
Definitely glad I finally decided that the time was right to pick this one up and give it a shot.
It is great coming of age kind of story that is worth the read (even if the ending is modestly predictable) | Rating: 8/10
This year, it seemed like everyone was reading Matt Dinniman’s "Dungeon Crawler Carl"
so I had to see what all the fuss was about.
Light-hearted and a bit on the crude side, its a fun read about a man and his ex’s now talking cat named Princess Donut as they become inadvertent adventurers through a series of dungeon levels complete with a heads up display of their stats. It’s sort of a “Survivor” tv series meets “Ready Player One” meets “Dungeons and Dragons”.
So of course I enjoyed it and now have book two on reserve from the library. | Rating: 7/10
In addition to Tolkien’s "The Two Towers" I’m also currently reading Adrian Tchaikovsky’s "Service Model" about a robot valet that murders its owner.
I’m only about 15% into the story… still need to see where it’s gonna go, but so far it’s piqued my curiosity.
Also, I've just started reading Daniel Quinn’s "Ishmael".
A couple of my kids have read it and have enjoyed it thoroughly, but refuse to talk about it to anyone who hasn’t read it. So I’m giving it a shot as well as we head into the new year.
If you've read this far, what would you recommend I put on the list for next year? Maybe I should publish my "To Be Read" list?
If you are so inclined, please direct discussions, comments, etc to me via Mastodon: @jpickell
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