BOOKS READ IN 2025

I read 254 books in 2025.

  • My favorite read of the year was: The Correspondent by Virginia Evans
  • My favorite sci-fi (sortof) read of the year was: To Say Nothing of the Dog
  • My favorite Fantasy read of the year was: Aftertaste by Daria Lavelle
  • My favorite uplit read of the year was: ok not really uplit but Count the Ways by Joyce Maynard
  • My favorite nonfiction read of the year was: Memorial Days by Geraldine Brooks
  • My favorite Historical Fiction read of the year was: The Frozen River
  • My favorite Mystery read of the year was: The Death of Us
  • My favorite Magical Realism read of this year was: The Listeners
  • My favorite poetry read of this year was: Lord of the Butterflies by Andrea Gibson
  • My favorite graphic novel read of the year was: It’s Lonely at the Centre of the Earth
  • Here are some other books I liked:
    • Heart the Lover
    • How the Light Gets In
    • Sipsworth
    • Go Gentle
    • Life: A Love Story
    • Lake Effect
    • The Peculiar Gift of July
    • The Briars
    • The First Time I Saw Him
    • Like Family
    • Immaculate Conception
    • How About Now: Poems
    • Lessons in Magic and Disaster
    • The Summer War
    • A Language of Limbs
    • The Unseen World
    • Things in Nature Merely Grow
    • I Know how this Ends
    • My Friends
    • The Tell
    • Wild Dark Shore
    • The Elements
    • Room 706
    • Flashlight
    • Hazel Says No
    • Culpability
    • The Devil’s Advocate
    • The Love Haters
    • The Heart of Winter
    • Beyond Anxiety
    • The Society of Unknowable Objects

Here are all the books I’ve read this year in reverse chronological order. You can see my goodreads reviews here

  1. Enormous Wings
  2. Still Life (Chief Inspector Armand Gamache, #1)
  3. Ode to the Half-Broken
  4. Too Old for This
  5. A Guardian and a Thief
  6. Good Intentions
  7. Every Version of You
  8. King of Ashes
  9. A Good Animal
  10. The Death of Us
  11. Wild Animal
  12. Cherry Baby
  13. Sipsworth
  14. Go Gentle
  15. The Midnight Knock
  16. The Book Witch
  17. Best Offer Wins
  18. This Must Be the Place
  19. Your Knife, My Heart (Dark Forces, #1)
  20. The Buddha in the Attic
  21. Two Kinds of Stranger (Eddie Flynn #9)
  22. Good Spirits (Ghosted, #1)
  23. Dead Money
  24. Life: A Love Story
  25. To Cage a Wild Bird
  26. Lake Effect
  27. My Husband’s Wife
  28. Ghost Fish
  29. Through Gates of Garnet and Gold (Wayward Children, #11)
  30. The Road to Tender Hearts
  31. Gone Before Goodbye
  32. Life, and Death, and Giants
  33. Wreck
  34. Count My Lies
  35. The Secret of Orange Blossom Cake
  36. I See You’ve Called in Dead
  37. The Correspondent
  38. To Say Nothing of the Dog (Oxford Time Travel, #2)
  39. Departure
  40. All We Have Is Time
  41. The Peculiar Gift of July
  42. Heartwood
  43. Seduction Theory
  44. More Than Enough
  45. The Book of Guilt
  46. Discontent
  47. The Intruder
  48. The Found Object Society
  49. Deep End
  50. Mate (Bride, #2)
  51. Guilty by Definition
  52. The Doorman
  53. A Killer Motive
  54. The Briars
  55. This Is Not About Us
  56. The First Time I Saw Him (Hannah Hall, #2)
  57. What We Can Know
  58. Queen Esther
  59. Other People’s Houses (DC Morgan, #3)
  60. See How They Hide (Quinn & Costa, #6)
  61. Don’t Say a Word (Angelhart Investigations, #2)
  62. Angel Down
  63. Close Your Eyes (Joseph O’Loughlin, #8)
  64. Lie Lie Truth
  65. The Academy
  66. The Wife Stalker
  67. Pictures of You
  68. The Book of Lost Hours
  69. Nightshade (Catalina, #1)
  70. Buckeye
  71. Say You’re Sorry (Joseph O’Loughlin #6)
  72. Like Family
  73. The Kind Worth Killing (Henry Kimball/Lily Kintner, #1)
  74. Forget Me Not
  75. We Are All Guilty Here (North Falls, #1)
  76. Immaculate Conception
  77. How About Now: Poems
  78. Katabasis
  79. Heartless Hunter (The Crimson Moth, #1)
  80. Rebel Witch (The Crimson Moth, #2)
  81. Lessons in Magic and Disaster
  82. That’s Not My Name
  83. She Didn’t See It Coming
  84. Ace of Hearts: Lessons in Love from an Asexual Girl
  85. The Girl Who Was Taken
  86. The Summer War
  87. Long Time Gone
  88. The Suicide House (Rory Moore/Lane Phillips, #2)
  89. The Cross (Eddie Flynn #0.5)
  90. Some Choose Darkness (Rory Moore/Lane Phillips, #1)
  91. Don’t Believe It
  92. Twenty Years Later
  93. Those Empty Eyes
  94. Maggie; or, A Man and a Woman Walk Into a Bar
  95. Tofino
  96. When the Cranes Fly South
  97. One Golden Summer
  98. Cherry Blossoms
  99. Local Woman Missing
  100. Guess Again
  101. The Dream Job
  102. The Woman in Cabin 10 (Lo Blacklock, #1)
  103. The Quiet Ear: An Investigation of Missing Sound
  104. The Man Made of Smoke
  105. These Summer Storms
  106. Dying to Meet You
  107. Aftertaste
  108. Five Survive
  109. Not Quite Dead Yet
  110. The Reappearance of Rachel Price
  111. Lord of the Butterflies
  112. The Maid’s Diary
  113. Memorial Days
  114. A Language of Limbs
  115. The Other Sister
  116. Everyone Is Lying to You
  117. Spectacular Things
  118. The Dispossessed: An Ambiguous Utopia
  119. Glass Girls
  120. Proof
  121. Parable of the Sower (Earthseed, #1)
  122. Culpability
  123. Behind Every Good Man
  124. The Unseen World
  125. The Book Club for Troublesome Women
  126. Things in Nature Merely Grow
  127. The Compound
  128. We Don’t Talk About Carol
  129. The Unwritten Rules of Magic
  130. So Far Gone
  131. Fox
  132. The Change
  133. Little Ghosts
  134. At the Coffee Shop of Curiosities
  135. I Know How This Ends
  136. The Strawberry Patch Pancake House (Dream Harbor, #4)
  137. The Summer That Changed Everything
  138. Hazel Says No
  139. Don’t Open Your Eyes
  140. Death of the Author
  141. Kill Your Darlings
  142. It’s a Love Story
  143. Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil
  144. What Kind of Paradise
  145. Flashlight
  146. The Lucky Ride
  147. Atmosphere
  148. All the Way to the River
  149. Awake
  150. It’s Lonely at the Centre of the Earth
  151. You Better Be Lightning
  152. Room 706
  153. Problematic Summer Romance (Not in Love, #2)
  154. The Glowing Life of Leeann Wu
  155. Nobody’s Fool (Detective Sami Kierce, #2)
  156. Silver Elite (Silver Elite, #1)
  157. The Naturals (The Naturals, #1)
  158. Double Take (Lake City Heroes, #1)
  159. Heart the Lover
  160. The Bridge Kingdom (The Bridge Kingdom, #1)
  161. The Tenant
  162. All Systems Red (The Murderbot Diaries, #1)
  163. Marble Hall Murders (Susan Ryeland, #3)
  164. Atlas of Unknowable Things
  165. Careless People: A Cautionary Tale of Power, Greed, and Lost Idealism
  166. The Names
  167. Claire, Darling
  168. The Amalfi Curse
  169. Overdue
  170. Great Big Beautiful Life
  171. Of Flame and Fury
  172. Sunrise on the Reaping
  173. A Family Matter
  174. The Wasp Trap
  175. If You Love It, Let It Kill You
  176. The Wedding Vow
  177. How to Read a Book
  178. The Satisfaction Café
  179. The Devil’s Advocate (Eddie Flynn, #6)
  180. First Wife’s Shadow
  181. The Eights
  182. The Homemade God
  183. The Seven O’Clock Club
  184. The Perfect Divorce (Perfect, #2)
  185. Whale Fall
  186. The Bookshop of Hidden Dreams (Dove Pond, #4)
  187. Bring the House Down
  188. A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder (A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder, #1)
  189. Run for the Hills
  190. Woodworking
  191. The Listeners
  192. The Elements (The Elements, #1-4)
  193. The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches
  194. Rubbernecker
  195. The Ghostwriter
  196. The Other Side of Now
  197. Fifty-Fifty (Eddie Flynn, #5)
  198. Say You’ll Remember Me (Say You’ll Remember Me, #1)
  199. All That Life Can Afford
  200. Disappoint Me
  201. The Antidote
  202. The Memory Collectors
  203. The Last Ferry Out
  204. Red Dog Farm
  205. Happiness Forever
  206. The Poppy Fields
  207. The River Is Waiting
  208. Finding Grace
  209. The Love Haters
  210. Promise Me Sunshine
  211. I Leave It Up to You
  212. Michael Without Apology
  213. The Bright Years
  214. The Burden of Proof (Kindle County Legal Thriller, #2)
  215. Wild Dark Shore
  216. The Bones Beneath My Skin
  217. The Tell: A Memoir
  218. The Impossible Thing
  219. The River Has Roots
  220. The Last Trip
  221. Homeseeking
  222. Witchcraft for Wayward Girls
  223. Trust Me on This
  224. Swan Song (Nantucket, #4)
  225. All Better Now
  226. Presumed Guilty (Kindle County #13; Presumed Innocent #3)
  227. My Friends
  228. The Missing Half
  229. Penitence
  230. A Killing Cold
  231. Vantage Point
  232. The Heart of Winter
  233. We All Live Here
  234. First-Time Caller (Heartstrings, #1)
  235. Salvation of a Saint (Detective Galileo, #2)
  236. The Vanishing of Josephine Reynolds
  237. The Stolen Queen
  238. Beyond Anxiety: Curiosity, Creativity, and Finding Your Life’s Purpose
  239. Is She Really Going Out with Him?
  240. Onyx Storm (The Empyrean, #3)
  241. Code Name Hélène
  242. The Favorites
  243. The Briar Club
  244. How the Light Gets In
  245. The Society of Unknowable Objects
  246. The Three Lives of Cate Kay
  247. The Incredible Kindness of Paper
  248. The Instrumentalist
  249. The Summer that Melted Everything
  250. The Devotion of Suspect X (Detective Galileo, #1)
  251. The Frozen River
  252. Colored Television
  253. Where the Darkness Goes
  254. Count the Ways

Review: Enormous Wings

Enormous Wings
Enormous Wings by Laurie Frankel
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I started 2025 with an excellent book and I am so grateful to end it with another excellent book. Laurie Frankel’s writing is a treasure. Her characters always stay with me and this book is no exception.

She does not shy away from harder topics and I expect this one will be polarizing because there’s so much about abortion in this story. It’s about a 77-year old who gets pregnant and lives in Texas where a woman is not allowed to get an abortion. This is the kind of story I love the most, it’s not about the plot or settling, though both play a role, especially the old folk’s home where she lives, but it’s about the characters.

It’s about Pepper and Moth and her two new and good friends, her ex who lives in the same home, her three children who each process the news differently. Her grand-daughters. Even her doctor and the doctor’s team. There are a lot of unforgettable characters in this story. It’s hard not to fall in love with each of them.

Frankel’s writing is so strong. So funny. so insightful. so tender. so beautiful and so so heart wrenching all at once. A new book from her is the best gift and a perfect way to end this year.

with gratitude to Henry Holt and Co. and netgalley for an advanced copy in exchange for an honest review

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Review: Ode to the Half-Broken

Ode to the Half-Broken
Ode to the Half-Broken by Suzanne Palmer
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

It took me a while to get into this story but by the end, I loved every single character and just did not want the story to end. There’s so much goodness in this story. So much about humans and friendship and war and racism and greed. The world building is beautiful and so much attention is paid to every detail. One of the ways I gauge a book is how much time is spent building the side characters and this book does not disappoint. Every character you meet along the way, small or large, leaves something with you.

And the main characters, oh the main characters, there is so so much to love here. Every one of them is magical and multi-layered. Even though there’s a rich plot and rich setting in this novel, it’s the characters that are the most magical, in my opinion. They will stay with me for a long, long time.

Loved this one.

with gratitude to DAW and netgalley for an advanced copy in exchange for an honest review

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Review: Still Life

Still Life
Still Life by Louise Penny
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This was my first Louise Penny. Even though it was hard to follow on audio with so many characters being introduced, I really enjoyed it and think it would make a great movie. Aha! just looked it up and there is a movie. Off to watch 🙂

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Review: A Guardian and a Thief

A Guardian and a Thief
A Guardian and a Thief by Megha Majumdar
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

3.5 stars

Interesting story. I thought it had a great start and was thought provoking all the way but then the ending left me confused. It felt like it was unfinished somehow….

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Review: Too Old for This

Too Old for This
Too Old for This by Samantha Downing
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

3.5 stars

I picked this up earlier this year but wasn’t in the mood for it. This week, I kept looking for other books and finally decided to pick this up again. I’m glad I did. It was fun and entertaining.

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Review: Good Intentions

Good Intentions
Good Intentions by Marisa Walz
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This book was an experience. The whole book feels tense as Cady starts unraveling with the death of her twin sister.

The thing that’s unnerving is that the unraveling is slow and steady and feels almost like it could totally happen to anyone. She starts letting go of all the bits of her life she worked hard to build. Her business, her marriage, and becomes obsessed with this woman who experienced grief on the same day she did.

She becomes obsessed. She starts lying, she descends so far in that it becomes impossible to find her way back. And this book is narrated so well that it keeps you wondering where this can possibly go.

And then that ending. Oh the ending….you’ll have to listen to it yourself to find out.

with gratitude to Macmillan Audio and netgalley for an advanced copy in exchange for an honest review

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UNRAVELING – GOODBYE TO 2025

As always, I want to start by saying that this is going to be a long post. These reflective posts are how I make sure to live my life intentionally. They matter to me and I love being able to look back on them in future years. I know that this might not be interesting to many (if not any) of you, so please feel free to skip it. If some of you find it interesting, all the better.

This particular exercise is following Susannah Conway’s Unraveling 2026 sheet. You can download it right here. I split the reflective questions looking back on 2025 in and the questions to help clarify goals/dreams for 2026 into two posts. This is part I, part II comes next week. All questions are Susannah’s and are copyrighted to her.

Describe 2025 in three words:  unplanned, grateful, content 

Were there any unexpected plot twists this year? So many, both good and bad ones. I had not planned for this year to be as active as it was. I had intended for it to be more of a still and go inward year. But alas, plans changed and I met the moments where they came. I stepped up and did what needed to be done. And I am proud of myself. And I am grateful.

If the events of 2025 were made into a film or a book, what would it be called? Here you are. I think 2025 might be the year I finally got closest to living inside my own skin and being really proud of and grateful for who I am. Finally starting to really step into being me. 

Did you have a word, words or a phrase for 2025? home.

If you did, how have they guided and supported you through the last 12 months?  After all the work I did in 2024, it was really wonderful to have 2025 be the year where I became more and more comfortable being myself. Really living in my own skin.  Being able to go inward and trust myself and trust that I can tell what I need and want for myself has been a tremendous help this year. It has helped me really honor myself. And get closer to the peace that comes from that. It’s been a great word.

How have you evolved over the last 12 months? What feels different now?  I think what’s changed the most is that I am finally growing into myself. I feel more at peace. I feel like I own who I am. I feel less of a need to apologize for who I am. In fact,, I feel like I’m doing my work and am proud of how hard I work to be the best person I can be. 

When were you able to advocate for yourself in 2025?  Several times. Again and again. Not just me but also for my kiddos.  For my team. But also for myself. Part of stepping into my own skin has been not feeling the need to defend my choices. When I don’t feel the need to defend myself, apologize for my choices, or explain myself, it becomes much easier to advocate. 

What’s supported you most in 2025? What’s really helped?  My manager Ruth who always supports and sees me, my friend Jess who always sees the best of me and shows me how she sees me regularly. My therapist, who encourages me to advocate for myself. My kids who love me and have my back. Sadie who never tires of snuggling and is always always by my side. Having more people see me and being able to truly hear their words and let myself accept and internalize it has made all the difference. How lucky am I?  

What drained your energy in 2025? Did you notice at the time? Interestingly, I noticed that there are things that drain me in “invisible” ways in that I don’t notice them daily, or they don’t feel big enough that I do something about it. But then when I finally did resolve them, I felt a big weight lift. So in fact, it was draining me tiny bits all the time. So I am planning to pay more attention to that in 2026. Also big drains too: people taking me for granted, people unwilling to take accountability or responsibility, trying to solve all possible outcomes of something that I fear might happen, the news, living with the fear of “what if.” 

What did you let go of this year? And how do you feel about this? I let go of holding on to the past. I let go of what wasn’t working. I let go of controlling what doesn’t belong to me. I let go of having the answers. 

What new priorities have you uncovered in 2025? Big or small. My kids and Sadie continue to be my top priority. This year, I started putting myself on that list. I continued to invest at work both in people and in projects. I continued to paint. I continued with Korean. I took a class at Stanford. I continued to read. But most importantly I decided I am happy to be me. I am far from perfect but I try hard and work hard and I am proud of who I am. 

Which connections have you cherished the most in 2025? I think my list is pretty similar to last year: My kiddos. Sadie. My parents. Ruth and Ellen. Beth and Angela and Evelyn. Jess and Audrey and Michelle. My team at work. I am so grateful for everyone who cared about me and checked in on me and showed up and held space. In all ways big and small. I am so lucky.

What ambushed you in 2025? How did you deal with it? I wasn’t expecting to do some of the things I did in 2025. But not all ambush was bad. I also wasn’t expecting some of the great things that happened. I tried to move through it all with grace and speed. I took care of my mental health along the way and did what needed to be done. I am grateful to be mostly on the other side of it now. There are other areas where we’re still in the middle of the journey and I have little to no control over the outcomes but I will keep doing what needs to be done and unyieldingly protect my people.  

If your body could talk, what has it been saying this year? I know you’re paying attention now. You’ll get there.

How have you taken care of yourself physically? What’s worked? What needs work? Nope. I am Still not doing anything physically for my body. I need to do a better job. Let’s hope 2026 is the year. 

How have you taken care of yourself mentally? What’s worked? What needs work? I took a class at Stanford, and I painted a lot. I continued with Korean. I took on more at work both as a manager and as an individual contributor. I’ve learned a lot and worked hard. 

How have you taken care of yourself emotionally? What’s worked? What needs work? I did a lot of therapy and work on myself this year. I did a lot of journaling. I fell asleep to meditation often. Since Fall, I listened to Salt than Sour then Sweet on repeat because it grounded me and I sat with my feelings and let myself feel them. 

Did anything happen in 2025 that needs to be forgiven, perhaps?  I forgive myself for every time I was less generous than I wanted to be. I forgive myself for times I chose myself selfishly. I forgive myself for when I was short with my kids. I forgive myself for when I was short with Sadie. I forgive myself for when I could have done better but I didn’t. I forgive myself for all the times I didn’t reply to emails, text, check in on friends. I forgive myself for falling short. I truly forgive myself. 

Big things, little things, the profound and the everyday. What are you grateful for? I am so grateful for my kids. I am so so grateful for Sadie. For everyone who has had my back and has checked in on me. For therapy. For my pink Christmas tree. For a promotion I never anticipated.  For still being employed in this climate. For my kids having good friends who see them and love them. For giving myself the endless grace I need right now. For finally getting comfortable in my own skin. To be healthy and loved. I am grateful to be here and to get to do this with people I love so much. 

What are you proud of yourself for in 2025? I am proud of showing up for my kids and Sadie. Always growing and trying to be a better version of myself. I am proud of getting Sadie after wanting a dog for so many years. I am proud of working on doing a good job at work. I am proud of how much effort and time I am putting into painting. I am proud of how much I care and how hard I am working to be the kindest and most generous version of myself. I am proud of who I am trying to be and how much I continue to do my work and grow.

In which areas of your life do you feel you levelled up this year? I think I’ve grown more and more into being who I am and owning that it might be a good thing.

When did you feel most like yourself this year? I think I am feeling more and more like myself each day. I’ve had more days feeling most like myself this year than ever before. 

What have you healed this year (or identified needs healing)? I am healing so much of what I’ve been carrying for years now. Finding ways to forgive people and finding ways to forgive myself for carrying it all for so long. 

What questions and explorations are you taking with you into 2026? I spent 2024 exploring who I am, 2025 coming home to myself more and more so my plan for 2026 is taking more action. Designing more of what I want in my life. Let’s see what that turns out to be.

What’s deepened in your life? What’s changing in ways that delight you? I think stepping into who I am is changing my whole life in positive ways.

Who are you becoming? Does it excite or scare you? I am so excited to be more of who I am. I’m ready to let go of all that I’ve let weigh me down. I’m ready to experiment and see what I’m capable of, see what I like, see even more of who I am.

Before we finish with 2025, take a few minutes to write out anything else you want to say to the old year. You might like to say some final goodbyes and thank yous…

Dear 2025, well unfortunately you didn’t end up being as uneventful as I had hoped. This was a hard year to be alive in the world. While it wasn’t the same kind of shock and grief like 2024, you sucked in your own way. I would really like a little more hope and joy in the world in 2026. Please. Even with all that, I am so deeply grateful for where I am, where my family is and I do not take it for granted for a moment that we are so incredibly lucky and loved and here. We are still here. I promise I will continue to work hard in 2026 and do my part. Thank you 2025, you are now complete.

Review: The Death of Us

The Death of Us
The Death of Us by Abigail Dean
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

incredible on audio. truly can’t recommend enough.

this is a really hard to read and sad story about a marriage that falls apart after a truly horrible incident. the wife tells the story from the past, the husband tells the story of the present when the criminal is finally caught. It’s a character study. It’s quiet and hard to read. but really really excellent. one of the best I read this year.

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Review: Wild Animal

Wild Animal
Wild Animal by Joël Dicker
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

also took me a while to get into this one. i don’t know if it’s my attention span or these books are hard to listen to. either way loved the way it came together and kept me on my feet the whole time.

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Review: Sipsworth

Sipsworth
Sipsworth by Simon Van Booy
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

lovely, sweet, moving and just so so glad i read this one.

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Review: The Midnight Knock

The Midnight Knock
The Midnight Knock by John Fram
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

4 stars for being unlike anything I’ve read before. this one was hard to keep track of and only got crazier from there but also one of a kind.

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