Bookshelf – My Year in Reading, 2025

Two words summarize my reading in 2025: disappointment and distraction.

I abandoned only three books out of seventy-six, but many others left me wishing I’d done something else with my time. At fault, it seems to me, is the plethora of newer authors who are not only poor storytellers but equally mediocre writers. They create books made for visual streaming, heavy on dialogue, short on exposition, absent of character depth. Publishers churn out these fast-lit titles and package them in breathless blurbs hoping to gain footing on celebrity or other “best-of” lists. Too often the hype is just hyperbole.

Add to this an elevated state of personal distraction rooted in the perversions of the current occupant of the White House as well as homefront complications that resulted in shortened leisure time and shattered an already compressed attention span.

The result: fewer books (76 in 2025 vs. 100 in 2024) and less satisfaction.

Nonetheless, I managed to read to a number of wonderfully written and narrated books. Five of my favorites:

  • Wild Dark Shore (Charlotte McConaghy) – an enthralling story of nature’s ferocity and mankind’s duplicity.
  • The Impossible Thing (Belinda Bauer) – goodness and avarice clash in this tale of a treasure that survives through persistence and ingenuity.
  • The MightyRed (Louise Erdrich) – a story about the value of authenticity and acceptance disguised as a love triangle.
  • The Vegetarian (Han Kang) – a very human book that is uncomfortable to read, but rewards those who find solace amid distress.
  • America Was Hard to Find (Kathleen Alcott) – an expansive novel of the shifting cultural tectonics that ruptured America in the 1960s, part requiem, part eulogy for an epoch.

Others just as good: November Road (Lou Berney); Hotel Ukraine (Martin Cruz Smith); The Bottoms (Joe R. Lansdale); A Lesson Before Dying (Ernest Gaines); and, Leaving (Roxana Robinson).

I discovered audiobooks while taking long, solo walks during the Covid confinement. I still mostly listen while I walk. For me, the narrator is everything and when I discover one I like I tend to binge a series. Hence, this year:

  • Adrian McKinty’s tales of Northern Irish cop Sean Duffy: The Cold Cold Ground; I Hear the Sirens in the Street; In the Morning I’ll Be Gone; Rain Dogs; Police at the Station and They Don’t Look Friendly; and, The Detective Up Late.
  • Walter Mosely’s addictive story of Joe King Oliver, a railroaded NYPD detective: Down the River Unto the Sea; Every Man a King; and, Been Wrong So Long It Feels Like Right.
  • Finally, there is, to me, no finer narrator than George Guidall, who reads (among many other books), Craig Johnson’s stories of Absaroka County sheriff Walt Longmire. This year I listened: An Obvious Fact; The Western Star; and, Depth of Winter.

At my age, I set few goals (I’ve already accomplished most of what I could and hold no regrets for what I couldn’t). That said, here’s one: I will do my best to ignore the world’s noise and devote more attention to the inner tranquility I find in books.

The List:

  1. Yellowface – R.F. Kuang
  2. The Most – Jessica Anthony
  3. A Lesson Before Dying – Ernest Gaines
  4. As the Crow Flies — Craig Johnson *
  5. Don’t Believe It – Charlie Donlea
  6. Down the River Unto the Sea — Walter Mosley *
  7. Of Women and Salt – Gabriela Garcia
  8. The Friend – Sigrid Nunez
  9. Every Man a King — Walter Mosley *
  10. The Last Days of Ptolemy Gray – Walter Mosely *
  11. All Systems Red: The Murderbot Diaries – Martha Wells
  12. The Last King of California – Jordan Harper
  13. Patricide: A Novella – Joyce Carol Oates
  14. Peace Like a River – Leif Enger **
  15. All the Colors of the Dark – Chris Whitaker
  16. The Price of Salt – Patricia Highsmith
  17. The Drop – Michael Connelly *
  18. Leaving – Roxana Robinson
  19. Been Wrong So Long It Feels Like Right – Walter Mosley *
  20. Foregone – Russell Banks
  21. Lazarus Man – Richard Price **
  22. Roseanna — Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö
  23. The Martian – Andy Weir
  24. Open Season – C.J. Box *
  25. Savage Run – C.J. Box *
  26. A Drink Before the War – Dennis Lehane
  27. Original Sin – Jake Tapper and Alex Thompson
  28. The Neon Rain – James Lee Burke *
  29. The Wager – David Grann
  30. Heaven’s Prisoners – James Lee Burke *
  31. Writers & Lovers – Lily King
  32. Winterkill – C.J. Box *
  33. I Cheerfully Refuse – Leif Enger
  34. The Vegetarian – Han Kang
  35. 33 Place Brugmann – Alice Austen
  36. Never Flinch – Stephen King *
  37. We Do Not Part – Han Kang
  38. The Gray Anarchist – Jeffrey Marcus Oshins *
  39. The Cold Cold Ground – Adrian McKinty
  40. An Obvious Fact – Craig Johnson *
  41. The Last Flight – Julie Clark
  42. I Hear the Sirens in the Street – Adrian McKinty *
  43. The Bottoms – Joe R. Lansdale
  44. The Invention of Solitude – Paul Auster 
  45. In the Morning I’ll Be Gone – Adrian McKinty *
  46. We Had to Remove this Post – Hanna Bervoets
  47. Heartwood – Amity Gaige
  48. Desert Star – Michael Connelly *
  49. The Tattooist of Auschwitz – Heather Morris
  50. The Emperor’s Children – Claire Messud **
  51. King of Ashes – S.A. Cosby
  52. Antes de Ser Libres – Julia Alvarez
  53. Tides – Sara Freeman
  54. At What Cost – James L’Etoile **
  55. The 6:20 Man – David Baldacci *
  56. Rain Dogs – Adrian McKinty *
  57. The Mighty Red – Louise Erdrich
  58. Trophy Hunt – C.J. Box *
  59. And Then There Were None – Agatha Christie *
  60. The Impossible Thing – Belinda Bauer
  61. Elizabeth Finch – Julian Barnes
  62. Police at the Station and They Don’t Look Friendly – Adrian McKinty *
  63. Hotel Ukraine – Martin Cruz Smith
  64. Lilith – Eric Rickstad
  65. Wild Dark Shore – Charlotte McConaghy
  66. The Black Box – Michael Connelly *
  67. America Was Hard To Find – Kathleen Alcott
  68. The Western Star – Craig Johnson *
  69. November Road – Lou Berney
  70. Depth of Winter – Craig Johnson *
  71. After the Lights Go Out – John Vercher **
  72. The Librarianist, Patrick deWitt
  73. The Detective Up Late, Adrian McKinty **
  74. The Long and Faraway Gone, Lou Berney
  75. The Trouble Up North, Travis Mulhauser **
  76. Abscond: A Short Story, Abraham Verghese

* Audio

** Did Not Finish

Bookshelf — My Year in Reading, 2023

If you scan the list below, you will see a wide range of fiction (I only read four non-fiction works) that can be more or less divided into three parts – well-known literary-ish novels I’d never read (“The Lying Life of Adults,” “Rabbit, Run,” “The End of the Affair”); newer popular works (“Small Mercies,” “Crook Manifesto”); and audiobooks, which are exclusively crime, and mostly by Michael Connolly (background noise for the gym).
 
As I have since the pandemic (remember that?) when I told myself to take more reading risks, I reveled in the discovery of writers who fall outside my previously narrow comfort zone, among them: Elena Ferrante, (more) Rachel Cusk), Rabih Alameddine (amazing), and Eudora Welty). Their work widened my world view and heartened my belief that in reading we can find the humanity that is too often hidden amid the atrocity and hatred of our times.
 
I only dropped out of two books, of which the biggest disappointment was “Kairos” by Jenny Erpenbeck, which I’d looked forward to because I’d loved her previous work, “Go Went Gone.”
 
People ask about favorites, a list I find hard to delineate because my tastes vary so much. For me, reading is all all-you-can-eat buffet: who’s to say if the mountain of mashed potatoes is better than the thick slabs of sliced roast beef or the gurgling vat of mac and cheese? Still, one must choose, so in lieu of favorites, I offer some of the books that most delighted or surprised me: 

Non-fiction: “On the Plain of Snakes: A Mexican Journey” – Paul Theroux, a marvelously descriptive and insightful road trip by a septuagenarian explorer through our complex southern neighbor.
 
Fiction (in no order): “My Monticello” (a magnetic mirror on the world); “The Wrong End of the Telescope” (phenomenal); “Signs Preceding the End of the World” (the bizarre realities of the US-Mexico borderlands); “The Swimmers” (beautiful simplicity); “The Sentence” (I hope to read all of Erdrich); “Small Mercies” (powerful); “The Great Believers” (so real); “Train Dreams” (a tasty morsel); and “Ask the Dust” (more John Fante, please).

Finally, for me audiobooks are mostly filler, but one set of them made me realize I’ve been overlooking one of the world’s most popular authors: The “Mr. Mercedes” series by Stephen King. Good writing, great storytelling. (The trilogy also includes “Finders Keepers” and “End of Watch.”
 
The List, 2023:
 
1.     The Feral Detective – Jonathan Lethem
2.     Hell of a Book – Jason Mott
3.     The Black Echo – Michael Connelly *
4.     Ill Will – Dan Chaon
5.     The Black Ice — Michael Connelly *
6.     When the Killing’s Done – T.C. Boyle
7.     Northern Spy – Flynn Berry
8.     The Concrete Blonde – Michael Connelly *
9.     Nightmare Alley – William Lindsay Gresham
10.  The Last Coyote – Michael Connelly *
11.  The Survivors – Jane Harper
12.  Chances Are … – Richard Russo
13.  Trust the Plan, The Rise of QAnon and the Conspiracy That Unhinged America – Will Sommer
14.  My Monticello – Jocelyn Nicole Johnson
15.  The Searcher – Tana French *
16.  The Talented Mr. Ripley – Patricia Highsmith
17.  Trunk Music – Michael Connelly *
18.  On the Plain of Snakes: A Mexican Journey – Paul Theroux
19.  The Poet – Michael Connelly *
20.  The Wrong End of the Telescope – Rabih Alameddine
21.  Signs Preceding the End of the World – Yuri Herrera
22.  To Kill a Mockingbird – Harper Lee *
23.  The Swimmers – Julie Otsuka
24.  Since We Fell – Dennis Lehane
25.  Angels Flight – Michael Connelly *
26.  Telephone – Percival Everett
27.  Ladydi (Spanish) – Jennifer Clement
28.  Dead Lions (Slough House #2) – Mick Herron
29.  A Darkness More than Night – Michael Connelly
30.  Kudos – Rachel Cusk
31.  The Children Act – Ian McEwan
32.  Kindred – Octavia Butler
33.  I Will Find You – Harlan Coben *
34.  The End of the Affair – Graham Greene
35.  City on Fire – Don Winslow *
36.  City of Bones – Michael Connelly *
37.  An Unnecessary Woman – Rabih Alameddine
38.  The Big Sleep – Raymond Chandler *
39.  The Sun Also Rises – Ernest Hemingway
40.  Ask the Dust – John Fante
41.  This Dark Road to Mercy – Wiley Cash
42.  Lost Light – Michael Connelly *
43.  Real Tigers (Slough House #3) – Mick Herron *
44.  The Sentence – Louise Erdrich
45.  Giant – Edna Ferber
46.  Spook Street (Slough House #4) – Mick Herron *
47.  Murder on the Red River – Marcie R. Rendon
48.  The Narrows – Michael Connelly *
49.  Empire of Wild – Cherie Dimaline
50.  The Closers – Michael Connelly *
51.  Small Mercies – Dennis Lehane
52.  Crook Manifesto – Colson Whitehead
53.  London Rules – Mick Herron *
54.  Am I Alone Here – Peter Orner
55.  Kairos – Jenny Erpenbeck **
56.  The Optimist’s Daughter – Eudora Welty
57.  Parrot in the Oven – Victor Martinez
58.  Joe Country – Mick Herron *
59.  Mystic River – Dennis Lehane
60.  The Lost Daughter – Elena Farrante
61.  War Trash – Ha Jin
62.  Echo Park – Michael Connelly *
63.  No One Will See Me Cry – Cristina Rivera-Garza
64.  Train Dreams – Denis Johnson
65.  Their Eyes Were Watching God – Zora Neale Hurston
66.  Mr. Mercedes – Stephen King *
67.  The Lying Life of Adults – Elena Ferrante
68.  Killers of the Flower Moon – David Grann *
69.  The Dog of the South – Charles Portis
70.  If I Survive You – Jonathan Escoffery
71.  All the Sinners Bleed – S.A. Cosby
72.  Finders Keepers – Stephen King *
73.  Old God’s Time – Sebastian Barry
74.  Chain Gang All-Stars — Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah
75.  End of Watch – Stephen King *
76.  Bluebird, Bluebird – Attica Locke
77.  Fear is Just a Word – Azam Ahmed **
78.  Among the Bros – Max Marshall
79.  The Lincoln Lawyer – Michael Connelly *
80.  A Line in the Sand – Kevin Power
81.  The Lost Americans – Christopher Bollen
82.  Rabbit, Run – John Updike
83.  Heaven, My Home – Attica Locke
84.  Slough House – Mick Herron *
85.  The Power of the Dog – Don Winslow
 * Audio
** Did not finish