The 2025 End-of-Year Survey of Books
- Number of books read and completed: 162
- Number of re-reads: 4
- Genre you read the most: Literary fiction, 49
- Number of books started but not finished: 1
- Number of YA books: 13
- Number of poetry books: 21
- Number of memoirs, biographies, and nonfiction books, including children's: 38
- Number of graphic or illustrated books read, not children's: 16
· Fiction: Antidote by Karen Russell
- YA: Banned Together: Our Fight for Reader's Rights by Ashley Hope Pérez
- Children's: Someone Builds the Dream by Lisa Wheeler
- Nonfiction: There's Always This Year: On Basketball and Ascension by Hanif Abdurraqib
- Poetry: Water, Water: Poems by Billy Collins
- Memoir: All My Knotted-Knotted Up Life: a Memoir by Beth Moore
2. Book(s) I thought I'd love, but didn’t:
- White Nights by Fyodor Dostoevsky
- Grimm's Fairy Tales
3. Most surprising (in a good way or bad way) book:
· Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Mayhem in Northern Ireland by Patrick Radden Keefe (Good)
4. Book(s) I "pushed" many people to read:
- Everything is Tuberculosis: The History and Persistence of the World's Deadliest Disease by John Green
5. Best series--
- Starter: How to Train Your Dragon by Cressida Cowell (How to Train Your Dragon #1)
- Sequel: Oh William! by Elizabeth Strout (Amgash #3)
- Ender: Sunrise on the Reaping by Suzanne Collins (Hunger Games #5) [Pending]
6. Favorite new author I discovered in 2025:
- Patrick Radden Keefe
7. Best book from a genre/type I don't usually read:
· Buffalo Hunter Hunter by Stephen Graham Jones -- Horror
8. Most action-packed/thrilling/unputdownable book of the year:
- How to Train Your Dragon by Cressida Cowell (Listened to with grandsons)
- James by Percival Everett
- The Frozen River by Ariel Lawhon
10. Favorite book cover:
- The Backyard Bird Chronicles by Amy Tan
11. Most memorable characters of the year:
- Good Stab -- Buffalo Hunter Hunter
- Marguerite -- Isola by Allegra Goodman
12. Most thought-provoking/ life-changing books of the year:
- Everything is Tuberculosis by John Green
- A Long Obedience in the Same Direction by Eugene Peterson
13. Most beautifully written book read in the year:
- Heart the Lover by Lily King
14. Book I've never read UNTIL 2025:
- Brothers Karamazov by Dostoyevsky
15. Shortest and longest book read in 2025, not counting children's books:
- Longest: Brothers Karamazov by Dostoevsky -- 845 pages
- Shortest: Abscond by Abraham Verghese -- 38 pages
16. Favorite passage(s) or quote(s):
- “You know how you can remember exactly when and where you read certain books? A great novel, a truly great one, not only captures a particular fictional experience, it alters and intensifies the way you experience your own life while you’re reading it. And it preserves it, like a time capsule.”
― Heart the Lover - “It is a strange miracle to be able to trace your own aging, your own mortality through someone who's living alongside you, someone who has survived eras at the same time as you have in some of the same places.”
― There's Always This Year: On Basketball and Ascension - "The Golden Rule of Dragon Training is to ... YELL AT IT! (The louder the better,)" --- Cressida Cowell, How to Train Your Dragon
- One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich by Aleksandr Solzenicyn
18. Best audiobooks of the year:
- All My Knotted Up Life: a Memoir by Beth Moore
- Audiobooks with Don: How to Not Drown in a Glass of Water by Angie Cruz
19. Favorite novella/short book:
· A River Runs Through It by Norman Maclean
20. Favorite book by an author I’ve previously read
- Heart the Lover by Lily King
21. Best book I read this past year based SOLELY on a recommendation or peer pressure:
· Martyr! by Kaveh Akbar
22. Favorite classic book read during the year:
- The Brothers Karamazov by Dostoevsky
23. Best 2025 debut:
- The Names by Florence Knapp
24. Best world-building/Most vivid setting I read this year:
- The Frozen River by Ariel Lawhon -- Colonial Massachusetts
25. Book which put a smile on my face/was FUN to read:
· How to Read a Book by Monica Wood
26. Books which made me cry:
- Heart the Lover by King
- Broken Country by Clare Leslie Hall
- Sandwich by Catherine Newman
27. Hidden Gem of the Year? There are several:
- Stay True: a Memoir by Hua Hsu
- Grace Notes: Poems About Families by Naomi Shihab Nye
- Small Rain by Garth Greenwell
- The Mighty Red by Louise Erdrich
28. Anything odd about this year's reading list:
· I read 22 memoirs. The most ever.
29. Most unique book(s):
- Invisible Cities by Italo Calvino
30. Book which made me angry (due to the topic):
· One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This by Omar El Akkad
31. Favorite short story collection --
- White Cat, Black Dog, Stories by Kelly Link (only SS Collection I read in 2025)
32. Favorite re-read of 2025:
- Persuasion by Jane Austen
33. My year in books at Goodreads. A visual of all the books I read this year and a few stats.
1. Favorite reviews written in 2025
- There's Always this Year: On Basketball and Ascension by Hanif Abdurraqib
- The Antidote by Karen Russell
2. Most popular reviews of the year based on stats:
- Sandwich by Catherine Newman -- 4671 page views, 6 comments
- The Wedding People by Alison Espach -- 3670 page views, 11 comments
- Martyr! by Kaveh Akbar -- 2656 page views, 17 comments
- The Names by Florence Knapp -- 2063 page views, 13 comments
3. Best discussion/non-review post:
- TTT: Match Yankee Candle Scents to Books -- 1540 page views, 25 comments
- TTT: Favorite National Parks Memories -- 892 page views, 50 comments
- My Year in Books, a Meme -- 876 page views, 28 comments
4. Best bookish event that you participated in?
· Our community got three new bookstores after over a ten year hiatus. We lived in a book desert and now we can drink up books again!
5. Best moment of bookish/blogging life in 2025
- Participating in "Paris in July" Challenge. I had so much fun implementing French-related events in to my life, including making Coq au Vin (delicious) and watching the Tour de France several days. Check out everything I did for this challenge here and here.
6. Most challenging thing about blogging or your reading life this year?
- Staying up for blogging. Blogging takes time and effort, and it is hard to keep going when I get few page views and even fewer comments. But I have joined some supportive on-line communities and the other book bloggers I’ve “met” keep me going.
7. Most meaningful posts for me:
- Sunday Salon -- Back to Standard Time. Nov. 2, 2025 -- Don and I spent a week in Eugene with my siblings moving Mom to a retirement community.
- Encouragement for my Daughter -- Teaching with Fire. August 15, 2025 -- My daughter, a teacher, was facing some difficult decisions about her career. I used this poetry book to encourage her.
- 50 Favorite Novels from the Last 50 Years August 5, 2025. -- After attending both of our 50-year class reunions, I felt compelled to think back to 50 of my favorite books read since high school.
8. Posts I wish got a bit more love:
- Banned Books Week. Are You Ready? October 1, 2025 -- Every year I make a post like this, encouraging my readers to read banned books and support efforts to maintain our freedom to read/ stop book banning. This post had only 105 page views, and 3 comments.
| My grandsons at church camp, playing with fire and making s'mores. Sunday Salon -- Family, Football, and Fun. September 28, 2025 |
1. Bookish goals for 2026
- Read a minimum of 100 books.
- Write reviews for all book club selections.
- Complete "My One Book" challenge: Moby-Dick
- Read two of the five National Book Award winners. (Announced in November)
- Read the Pulitzer Prize 2026 winner for literature (announced in March or April) plus read two past winners or finalists.
- Read the Booker Award winner or a finalist.
- Read two Women's Prize winners or finalists (announced in April)
- Read at least five classic books from my list. (See list here.)
- So Far Gone by Jess Walter
- Katabasis by R. F. Kuang
- Replaceable You by Mary Roach
- Wreck by Catherine Newman
- Atmosphere by Taylor Jenkins Reid
- The Correspondent by Virginia Evans
3. How did I do on my reading challenges or goals for 2025?
- Read 100 books this year. ✔ (160+ books)
- My Own Personal ‘National Book Award’ Challenge to read two of the five winners or finalists each year. ✔
- Read the Pulitzer Prize winner and past winners: ✔
- Completed all books I listed as books I wanted to read in 2025: ✔-
- Read 5+ Classics ✔
- Big Book Summer Challenge. Six completed ✔
- I completed my 2025 'One Big Book' Challenge: Brothers Karamazov ✔
- Read 4+ novellas for Novellas in November: ✔
-Gratefully turning the page on 2025.
-Anne
















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