2025: The Year In Books

As 2025 comes to a close, my fifth full year of remote working, I managed to once again surpass my previous records by completing a whopping 66 books, five books more than my previous high set last year and my fifth consecutive year completing the 52 books in 52 weeks challenge.  I completed the challenge in mid-October and surpassed last year’s total in early-December.  I read 25,279 pages, by far my highest total of all time and just the third time I’ve managed to surpass 20.000 pages.

Of those books, only two were non-fiction and, of the remaining 64 novels, only six were tied to a TV show, either as the source material or as a tie-in.  None of the books came out of my dwindling “to-read” drawer, with two hard covers, three paperbacks, 61 e-books and no audiobooks.  I was forced to switch my library card from the Chicago Public Library to my local library, which slowed me down a little but still led to 55 of the books I consumed throughout the year.

Over 71% of the books I read this year were by authors I had read before. The 21 authors that I read for the first time this year were:

Coco Mellors Aisling Rawle Stephen Graham Jones
Liz Moore Natalie Sue Kaliane Bradley
Max Brooks Mary Shelley Paul Tremblay
Nathaniel Hawthorne Kelly Bishop Tanya Pearson
Liane Moriarty Benjamin Stevenson Ashley Winstead
Ashley Elston Alison Espach Alice Feeney
Ali Land Lindsay Jamieson Jeneva Rose

Karin Slaughter, Laura Lippman, Kathy Reichs, Lee Goldberg, Stephen King, Emily Henry, Elin Hilderbrand, and Rebecca Forster were the authors that I read multiple titles from during 2025, accounting for nearly 35% of my total.

22 of the books I read were released this year, while none were released during the 20th century.  Two came from the 19th century, with the oldest first published in 1818.

Finally, the breakdown by month, which was fairly consistent across the entire year. Continue reading →

Book 33 (of 52) – The Ministry Of Time

The Ministry of Time – Kaliane Bradley

In the near future, Britain has gained the power of time travel and brings a number of people close to their deaths in the past to the present, hoping to use them to study the effects of time travel and to see how well they can assimilate to their new time period.  Each one is assigned a bridge, a Ministry employee who lives with them and helps them adjust to the 21st century, answering questions along the way.  Things go sideways when a duo from the future try to kill one of the bridges and her charge.  Can they save themselves without disrupting the timeline?

Kaliane Bradley’s debut novel, The Ministry of Time, was the winner of the 2024 Goodreads Choice award for favorite science fiction while being nominated for favorite debut novel.  It poses some interesting moral questions should time travel ever become a reasonable concern wrapped around a convincing romance between the main character and her charge, the real-life Commander Graham Gore.  I look forward to reading more from her in the future.  Or the past.