2025: a good year of reading

2025 proved to be a good year of reading… as distinct from a year of good reading, if you see what I mean.

Not that there wasn’t quality to be found in my numbers, for there was, with 4 books gaining the full 5-stars and 21 with 4-stars; discovering I’d rated 30% of my total reads either very good or excellent is something I’m more than happy to be able to report. Better still, nothing merited below 3-stars (a wide group where I include everything from good enough to unquestionably good), so nothing I read felt like a waste of time, which is one of my primary aims in book selection.

What made it especially good is it felt I got to spend a lot of time with my head in a book; indeed Goodreads confirms I read over 29,000 pages last year. But more than mere statistics – it was a year in which I was able to enjoy much time getting lost in a book and so gain a vast amount comfort at a difficult transitional time, as well as at times of illness and injury throughout the year.


The best ones
Seascraper by Benjamin Wood
Playground by Richard Powers
Question 7 by Richard Flanagan
Purple Hibiscus by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

The ones which were a joy to read
Clown Town by Mick Herron
Gaudy Nights by Dorothy L Sayers

The lighthearted and fun ones
The Impossible Fortune by Richard Osman
Out of Time by Jodi Taylor

The thought-provoking ones
Stolen Focus: Why You Can’t Pay Attention— and How to Think Deeply Again by Johann Hari
In The Blood by Arabella Byrne

The comfort reads
There were many, but the Inspector Gamache series by Louise Penny was the most notable. I picked up the first in the series for my annual wintry books read in late November, and found myself wanting to keep on going. I read 15 before the year ended, finishing the remaining 5 since. Comfort was much required as, at the end of December, I completed the task of winding up the small business where I’ve worked for 25 years, during which time illness was to the forefront – minor (6 weeks of adenovirus for me), serious, long-term (requiring neurosurgery for a colleague) unexpected & suddenly terminal (for one of the directors).


As someone who’s long believed they were an extravert, it’s felt good to pull on the comfortable cardigan of my introverted self. I cannot remember a time when I didn’t read; indeed as a pre- and young teen, I was awkward and socially unskilled, far happier spending time alone reading or listening to music. But socialising was a requirement of life overseas, so I was firmly coaxed out from behind my introverted shell and learned to put on my mask of confidence and extraversion. I still get much joy from the company of friends and loved ones, but my empathic nature also means I tend to attract those who need care and support, so I increasingly need alone time to recover, and reading is my preferred way to do so.

For 2026, my aim is to continue to avoid books which I’ll either DNF or feel were a waste of my time after completion, to up the 4 & 5 star (very good and excellent) books, and to read more non-fiction because I have many excellent offerings remaining unread on my shelves. Finally, to finish the remaining Dorothy L Sayers (one & a bit) I have lurking on my Kindle – I’ve been putting it off, as I hate the idea there will be no more.

Do you read for comfort, for entertainment, for education, or for some other purpose? Do you have a preference for fiction or fact?

© Debs Carey, 2026

22 thoughts on “2025: a good year of reading

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  1. I’m glad you found escape and comfort in so many good books Debs. Honestly I don’t recognize a single book from your list but what a joy when we can individually find a story with meaning and enjoyment. I had a few that I hoped would be winners, found them not to be and chose not to finish reading. I can usually tell early on when I’ve not made a good choice. I don’t mind letting a book that doesn’t suit me just move on to another reader. 2026 is starting out slowly for me in reading but I think that I have some good prospects waiting in the wings. I hope you have a calmer, more balanced, healthier 2026.

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  2. Deb, I love that the people in the blogging community all have different tastes – in reading as much as anything else. I smiled to discover that one of my books overlapped with LA, although I know at least one other is a series she also reads. If she or I listed every book we read, the long lists would make for very poor reading.

    I’m sad to hear that you’re having trouble in consistently finding books which are worth your time. When I started to struggle with that, I put effort into working out how to eliminate the fails, although it’s taken a long while to get to the stage where I had not one single DNF or poorly rated book in the year.

    Lots of change this year, so I appreciate your good wishes for 2026 – and I return the same to you. May your new home & life continue to delight and give you joy.

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  3. Louise Penny….there’s nothing better. I eagerly await each new release. And I would move the Three Pines if it existed, and have Ruth and her duck swear at me, and others converse with me in the bistro. Ah…

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  4. You know Debs, I think my issue with many of those ‘oops, no thanks after all’ books is that I know what genres I like but I get sidetracked into WANTING to broaden out knowing underneath that concept that I’m probably picking a book that will fall into one of my no thank you genres. I just need to leave those alone and stick with the fiction and non-fiction that I know I’m happy with. I would use the term “set in my ways” I think when it comes to specific genres. 🙂

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  5. Deb, I think when you get to our time of life, you’ve tried stuff out and that’s how you know what you like. Ain’t nothing wrong with then settling in to enjoy those things we’ve spent time discovering are exactly to our taste. Too many books, too little time as the saying goes – no shame in reading what you know you like and will enjoy. It’s what I do. Occasionally I’ll take a step outside of my preferred genres. More often than not, it’s a disappointment, but just occasionally, it’s a winner. But I make sure not to push myself to do it often, or it stops feeling like a possibility of finding new joy and becomes a chore.

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  6. Yes, chore is a good descriptive. Perhaps I need a little yellow reminder note with that word on it when I go about looking at lists of new books available 😉

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  7. Unless I am reading histories or autobiographies for knowledge, I’m reading for enjoyment and escapism. Osman always fits that bill! I did like Louise Penny, and I enjoyed visiting “Three Pines” in Canada last fall. But I had issues with some of the characters/relationships not feeling true to themselves, and instead doing things that felt expedient for the author. So I stopped reading them awhile back, but I liked the first half-dozen. And I enjoyed tea at Manoir Hovey, the setting for “A Rule Against Murder,” even though it didn’t look much like its description in the book.

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  8. I’ve read some excellent books this year, but I did have a couple of disappointments. In the past, I’ve read quite a few books by Vladimir Nabokov and always enjoyed them. Then I ordered, Ada or Ardor, a book that might be excellent, but it was long, complex, and convoluted, and after a couple of chapters, I just quit. I thought it would be a good change from the mysteries I’d been reading. But I find that it’s best to read what you feel like reading at the time. So, instead of trying to break out of the mystery genre, I doubled down and read what turned out to be two excellent mysteries by Harlan Coben: Tell No One and Nobody’s Fool.

    Thanks for your list. I’ll look into some of your favorites.

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  9. I needed to be strict with myself. A couple of years ago I was struggling through a book by Salman Rushdie who has written some of my favourite books, but I just wasn’t connecting with this one. When I was about half-way through I had this sudden realisation that picking it up felt like a chore rather than a small joy, so I decided to stop. I vaguely thought I might go back to another day, but I’ve now consigned it to my small, but growing, number of DNFs. And that decision feels good.

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  10. I was so sniffy about Osman when he first published until I realised he could actually write a most enjoyable and readable story. I’m a tad concerned he’s thinking of canning the Thursday murder club series, but remain hopeful. I know what you mean about the Gamache books – I had a wobble with them about a third of the way through, but I kept craving that cafe, Myrna’s bookshop, Ruth and the duck so I went back. I did have to put my critical self onto a step to accept I needed the comfort for those few weeks. I’m disappointed to hear that Manoir Hovey isn’t as described, but glad that “Three Pines” itself was enjoyable.

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  11. You are so wise Nicki, it’s important to read what we need from a book at the time. Forcing it only leads to frustration, and we miss out on gaining emotionally from the process of process of reading itself. I’ve been toying with dipping into Nabokov after you last talked of your enjoyment, but it wasn’t quite the right time for me. I shall make sure that I don’t pick that one as an entry point!

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  12. Ada or Ardor is one of his last and said to be maybe his most difficult. I liked some of his earlier novels.

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  13. I haven’t read (or, even heard of) any of the books on your list. I read fiction almost exclusively, but enjoy a good memoir or literary non-fiction now and then. I would like to read Louise Penny, but I’m not sure where to start since I guess she mostly writes series. Best book I’ve read recently? Culpability by Bruce Holsinger. It’s a good book for a lively book club discussion.

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  14. Janis, like you I read fiction almost exclusively, but always enjoy a good memoir. I used to be a fan of auto/biogs but they’ve now become the domain of ghostwriters and that’s not why I read them. I get what you mean about Louise Penny as there’s 20 so far in the Inspector Gamache books, but they are generally standalone, although the last two (Grey Wolf & Black Wolf) are linked. I’d heard about the storyline of Culpability, but somehow managed not to find out its name – thank you, it looks interesting.

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