2025: A horrible year! Except for reading.

I see that I got increasingly too busy to actually write reviews, and also that the better a book is, the harder and more time-consuming it is to review. I will try to review at least some of these this year, and also to be more diligent about reviewing books soon after I actually read them.

The Tainted Cup & A Drop of Corruption, by Robert Jackson Bennett. Very, very enjoyable fantasy mysteries set in a very, very odd world whose technology and science is biology-based magic and kaiju attack every monsoon. The detectives are a very likable odd couple thinker/doer in the tradition of Nero Wolfe/Archie Goodwin or Hercule Poirot/Hastings, except that the eccentric thinker is a cantankerous old woman.

The Daughter's War, by Christopher Buehlman. This is a prequel to Blacktongue Thief; I liked that but I loved this. A dark fantasy novel in the form of a war memoir by a woman who enlisted into the experimental WAR CORVID battalion after so many men got killed in the battle against the goblins that they started drafting women. War is hell and the tone is much more somber than the first book as Galva isn't a wisecracker, but her own distinct voice and the WAR CORVIDS carry you through. You can read the books in either order; either way, the ending of each will hit harder emotionally if you've read the other first.

Arboreality, by Rebecca Campbell. I like to sell this in my bookshop as a mystery parcel labeled, in green Sharpie, "A green book. A mossy, woodsy, leafy book. A hopeful post-apocalyptic novel of the forest."

The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi, by Shannon Chakraborty. The heroine is a middle-aged, single mom pirate dragged out of retirement for one last adventure, the setting is a fantasy Middle East, and it's just as fun as the description sounds.

The Bog Wife, by Kay Chronister. When the patriarch dies, the oldest son summons a wife from the bog to bear his children. Only the family is now in modern Appalachia rather than ancient Scotland, they're living in miserable conditions, and the last bog wife vanished under mysterious circumstances. Is there even a bog wife, or is this just a very small cult? (Or is there a bog wife and it's a very small cult?) A haunting, ambiguous, atmospheric novel.

The Everlasting, by Alix Harrow. This is probably my favorite book of the year. It's a time travel novel that's also an alternate version of the King Arthur story where most of the main characters are women, and it's also about living under and resisting fascism, and it's also a really fantastic love story with such hot sex scenes that it made me remember that sex scenes are hottest when they're based in character. (If you like loyalty/fealty kink, you will love this book.) It's got a lot going on but it all works together; the prose is sometimes very beautiful; it's got enough interesting gender themes that I'd nominate it for the Otherwise (Tiptree) award if I was a nominator. An excellent, excellent book.

King Sorrow, by Joe Hill. I've had mixed experiences reading Joe Hill but this book was fantastic. It's a big blockbuster dark fantasy novel that reads a bit like Stephen King in his prime, and I'm not saying that just because of Hill's parentage. Five college kids (and a non-college friend) summon an ancient, evil dragon to get rid of some truly terrible blackmailers. King Sorrow obliges, but they then need to give him another name every year. It's an enormous brick of a book and I'd probably only cut a couple chapters if I was the editor; it's long because there's a lot going on. Each section is written in the style of a different genre, so it starts off as a gritty crime thriller, then moves to Tolkien-esque fantasy, then Firestarter-esque psychic thriller, etc. This is just a blast to read.

Buffalo Hunter Hunter, by Stephen Graham Jones. Another outstanding horror novel by Jones. This one is mostly historical, borrowing from Interview with the Vampire for part of its frame story, in which a Blackfeet vampire named Good Stab tells his life story to a white priest. It's got a great voice, it's very inventive, it has outstanding set pieces, and it's extremely heartbreaking and enraging due to engaging with colonialist genocide, massacres, and the slaughter of the buffalo.

Hemlock & Silver , by T. Kingfisher. A very enjoyable fantasy with interesting horror and science fiction elements.

What Moves the Dead, What Feasts at Night, What Stalks the Deep, by T. Kingfisher. A set of novellas, the first two horror and the third mostly not, with a main character I really liked who's nonbinary in a very unique, culturally bound way. I particularly liked that this is lived and discussed in a way that does not feel like 2023 Tumblr. They're also just quick, fun, engrossing reads.

Lone Women, by Victor LaValle. An excellent historical fantasy with elements of horror, based on Montana's unique homesteading law which did not specify the race or gender of homesteaders, allowing black women to homestead. So Adelaide flees California for Montana, dragging with her an enormous locked steamer trunk, too heavy for anyone but her to lift, which she never, ever opens...

We Live Here Now, by Sarah Pinborough. What can I say? I really enjoy a good twist, and this has a doozy. Also, a great ending.

Pranksters vs. Autocrats: Why Dilemma Actions Advance Nonviolent Activism, by Srđa Popović. How to fight fascism with targeted mockery and other forms of nonviolent actions designed to put your opposition in an unwinnable situation. This costs five bucks, you can read it in less than two hours, and it was written by the leader of one of the student movements that helped overthrow Slobodan Milošević. This is not a naive book and it is very much worth reading.

Under One Banner, by Graydon Saunders. Commonweal # 4. Don't start here. I liked this a lot, hope to write about it in pieces when I re-read it, and was surprised and pleased to discover that it is largely about the ethics of magical neurosurgery and other forms of magical mental/neurological care/alteration.

Troubled Waters, by Sharon Shinn. A lovely, character-driven, small-scale fantasy. I wish this book had been the model for cozy fantasy, because it actually is one, only it has stakes and stuff happens. Also, one of the most original magic systems I've come across in a while.

Shroud, by Adrian Tchaikovsky. An outstanding first-contact novel with REALLY alien aliens.

Project Hail Mary, by Andy Weir. I guess the premise is spoilery? An outstanding first-contact novel with aliens with REALLY alien physiology, and not that alien otherwise. That's not a criticism, I loved the book. Funny, moving, exciting, and a perfect last line. This is probably duking it out with The Everlasting for my favorite of the year.

I also very much enjoyed American Elsewhere by Robert Jackson Bennett, The Blacktongue Thief by Christopher Buehlman, Dinotopia by James Gurney, Open Throat by Henry Hoke, When the Angels Left the Old Country, by Sacha Lamb, Elatsoe by Darcy Little Badger, The Bewitching & Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia, Convenience Store Woman by Sayaka Murata, Sisters of the Vast Black, by Lina Rather, Ministry for the Future by Kim Stanley Robinson, Liberated: The Radical Art and Life of Claude Cahun, by Kaz Rowe, Into the Raging Sea, by Rachel Slade, The Haar by David Sodergren, The Journey by Joyce Carol Thomas, Strange Pictures/Strange Houses by Uketsu, Black River Orchard by Chuck Wendig, and An Immense World, by Ed Yong.

I'm probably forgetting some books. Sorry, forgotten books!

Did you read any of these? What did you think?
sixbeforelunch: An illustrated image of a woman holding a towering stack of books. No text. (Default)

From: [personal profile] sixbeforelunch


Project Hail Mary is great. I read it a few years ago, and should really re-read it, especially now that they're making a movie. (No idea if the movie is going to be able to pull it off, but the trailer looks intriguing.)

I have not read The Everlasting, but I read a ton of Alix E. Harrow last year and enjoyed all of it, so I definitely want to check it out.

skygiants: the aunts from Pushing Daisies reading and sipping wine on a couch (wine and books)

From: [personal profile] skygiants


I liked the beginning of Sisters of the Vast Black so much -- and did enjoy the book as a whole too! but the bigger the stakes got the more I was like 'okay but too bad because but I thought this was doing such a good job at being Not about universe-threatening peril'

When the Angels Left the Old Country really is an all-timer.
ambyr: a dark-winged man standing in a doorway over water; his reflection has white wings (watercolor by Stephanie Pui-Mun Law) (Default)

From: [personal profile] ambyr


Will I like The Everlasting if I bounced (hard) off other Harrow, do you think? I like Arthuriana a lot, but I was deeply frustrated by The Ten Thousand Doors of January; I thought the foreshadowing was laid on with a trowel, and the book kept treating as Grand Reveals things that had been obvious since page 2.
adrian_turtle: (Default)

From: [personal profile] adrian_turtle


I wondered the exact same thing! But The Everlasting seems tempting despite how irritating I found The Ten Thousand Doors of January. It's on the To Be Sampled list, at least.

BTW, it turns out that Rachel can nominate The Everlasting for the Otherwise award!
https://otherwiseaward.org/award/2026-otherwise-awards/2026-otherwise-awards-recommendations
greenwoodside: (Default)

From: [personal profile] greenwoodside


I was inspired by your post to check to see if A Drop of Corruption is available any more cheaply, and it is. Hooray! Looks like it's going to be opening my reading year.

I read The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi not long after it came out, and I've been looking forward to the sequel ever since. It's due out in May 2026.

Thanks so much for this post. I know I'm going to keep referring back to it in the months to come.
larryhammer: floral print origami penguin, facing left (Default)

From: [personal profile] larryhammer


I loved Troubled Waters enough that I raced through the next book in the series only to bog down in the third due to very annoying protagonist, which was very annoying to run into.

I also liked Project Hail Mary a lot, though not enough to call it a favorite. And of course I've reread Under One Banner a few times by now. The Commonweal books are comfort reading at this point.
Edited (meant to also say) Date: 2026-01-01 08:15 pm (UTC)
larryhammer: floral print origami penguin, facing left (Default)

From: [personal profile] larryhammer


There is definite continuity there -- the five main characters all know each other (some are family), and primaries of later books were all secondaries of previous ones.

wearing_tearing: black and white icon of a person holding a wolf mask to their face. (Default)

From: [personal profile] wearing_tearing


The Tainted Cup & A Drop of Corruption were such good reads! The worldbuilding was probably my favorite part of it. Not many things worked as I thought they would.

I was thinking of reading The Bog Wife and you've just convinced me! I'm going over to read your review, but the premise as you tell it sounds right up my alley.
aelfgyfu_mead: Shaun the Sheep with a book and Gromit (Shaun the Sheep)

From: [personal profile] aelfgyfu_mead


I bought The Martian at an airport when I'd finished all the books I'd bought, and it was perfect for reading in airports and on flights, but not a favorite.

I think Project Hail Mary is a better book.

Mexican Gothic rocks!
dolorosa_12: (le guin)

From: [personal profile] dolorosa_12


I loved Amina Al-Sirafi! Do you know that there will be a sequel published soon?
affreca: Cat Under Blankets (Default)

From: [personal profile] affreca


I'm another enjoyer of Amina Al-Sirafi. Ottoman History Podcast did a really interesting series of essays by various historians on aspects of the world building of Amina Al-Sirafi. I haven't listened to all of them, but I love the idea of using it as a starting point for historians to riff on their niches of history.
isis: (tea and book)

From: [personal profile] isis


My opinions were reversed from yours on the two Christopher Buehlman books, but I did like them both. Everything else I've read, I agree on!

I've made notes to find Shroud, The Everlasting, and Troubled Waters.

I have avoided Project Hail Mary because I hated The Martian (and DNFed it), but hmm, maybe his writing has improved? (I liked the movie! I just felt the characters were so very boring and trite.)


From: [personal profile] thomasyan


I immensely enjoyed a whole bunch of books I read because of your reviews:

The Tainted Cup & A Drop of Corruption

The Bog Wife

Troubled Waters

Shroud

Elatsoe

I saw a trailer for the movie adaptation of Project Hail Mary and thought it looked promising.
kay_brooke: A stack of old books (books)

From: [personal profile] kay_brooke


I've read almost none of those, but many of them are on my list!

American Elsewhere was how I discovered Robert Jackson Bennett, and it still remains one of my favorites of his.
.

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