I had some very good reading in both November and December of 2025. Seven books per month. I completed two short story books, which is unusual. I usually read a few stories from a collection and take forever to finish the book. Plus two nonfiction books! And a book from my Classics Club list. I managed to complete my goal of reading six books by Elizabeth Strout in 2025.
So here are the 14 books I read...
Nonfiction
Eight Days in May (2020) by Volker Ullrich, translated by Jefferson Chase
The subtitle of this book is "The Final Collapse of the Third Reich." My husband suggested this book to me. It was a perfect nonfiction read for me and the text was very readable, not dry at all. It covers the events that took place in Germany in the eight days following Hitler's death by suicide on April 30, 1945. May 8th, 1945 was the day when Germany unconditionally surrendered to the Allied forces. I learned so much about the events in Germany at that time. The book was a good length, 271 pages of text, plus a section of notes citing the author's sources. Volker Ullrich is a German historian and journalist.
Dear California (2023), edited by David Kipen
I borrowed this book from my husband; he read it in 2024 and liked it a lot. I read it off and on throughout 2025. For the most part I found this to be a very interesting book, but it had its highs and lows. Some of the entries are over a page long, but many are only a few sentences. The entries for each day may cover several years, sometimes as early as the 1600s or the 1800s, and others as late as 2020, during the height of Covid. That can be confusing at times.
Examples of events covered: For April 18 there are two entries for 1906, immediately after the San Francisco Earthquake. The third entry is from Dylan Thomas, while in Hollywood, to his wife back in Laugharne, a town on the south coast of Carmarthenshire, Wales. The entries from various famous writers who spent some time in Hollywood were especially interesting; same for the entries from people who were interned in the American internment camps during World War II.
Fiction
The Women (2024) by Kristin Hannah
One of the author's goals in writing this book was to recognize the contribution of the women in the armed forces who went to Vietnam and worked as nurses in the hospitals which were near to the fighting. I don't think the book was perfect, but I learned so much about the Vietnam War between 1966 - 1968, and the role of the nurses in the hospitals there, that it eliminated all quibbles that I had with the book. I was born in 1948, and I felt like I should have known much more about the events that took place there. About half of the book is about the years that the protagonist was in Vietnam, and the second half is about her return to the US and the difficulties of adjusting to normal life and dealing with the traumas that she experienced in Vietnam. Not a fun book but an important one, for me.
Lucy by the Sea (2022) and Tell Me Everything (2024) by Elizabeth Strout
I read Oh, William! by Strout in early October. I read Lucy by the Sea and Tell Me Everything in November. I have loved all the books that feature Lucy Barton. But I find it almost impossible to review them. Personally, I would not have enjoyed reading them if I had known much about the books in advance. In My Name is Lucy Barton, Lucy tells of one event in her life while she is married to William, and I really disliked him in that story. In each succeeding novel about their relationship I grew to understand him and Lucy more. Lucy by the Sea takes place during the Covid-19 pandemic. In Tell Me Everything, Olive Kitteridge meets Lucy, and Bob Burgess plays a bigger part. I loved all of those books.
Goodbye to Berlin (1939) by Christopher Isherwood
This book was on my Classics Club List. I did not particularly enjoy reading it, I found it too depressing, but I think I am in the minority. Before reading it, I did not realize that it is a series of six connected short stories. "Sally Bowles" is about one of the characters in the film, Cabaret, although I did not see many similarities between the story and the film. I liked the connections between the stories, although it took me a while to pick up on some of them. "On Ruegen Island" is about three young men spending the summer on an island. "The Nowaks" is about a strange and impoverished family that Christopher lives with; Otto Nowak was one of the characters in the previous story. In "The Nowaks", they talk about the Landauer family, which is the subject of the fifth story.
Anxious People (2019) by Fredrik Backman, translated by Neil Smith
This is another book that is really impossible for me to describe. This is only the second book I read by Backman. I was very impressed by this book; it is very humorous, but it also has its sad moments and talks about some serious subjects, such as suicide, divorce, losing a spouse to an illness. A person decides to rob a bank, but they don't really know what they are doing and it ends up turning into a hostage situation. I found the book very confusing at times, but still very readable and uplifting. My favorite characters are the two policemen.
Mystery / Time Travel / Science Fiction
The Frozen People (2025) by Elly Griffiths
This is the start of a new time travel/mystery series. Ali Dawson is a detective in a Cold Case department, and the group attempts to solve crimes by going back in time for clues. I liked the premise, the characters, and the story was good. The level of tension was just right. Some of the story strains disbelief, but the story is enough fun that I was not bothered by that.
Crime Fiction
El Dorado Drive (2025) by Megan Abbott
The first book I read by Megan Abbott was Queenpin, which won an Edgar award. It was a great book, beautifully written, but also very, very tense. I knew I would like the setting of El Dorado Drive (Detroit, Grosse Point, in 2008-2009, when the economy was in such bad shape) and it was not as tense as I expected. It is a thriller; I found it to be fast-paced, a page turner. And it is about a family of three sisters, and their money problems. The family relationships pulled me in. Some reviewers talked about it being too slow but I did not see that at all. So I will be reading more by Abbott. I have three of her novels, including Turnout, Beware the Woman, and You Will Know Me.
The Guest List (2020) by Lucy Foley
I was surprised that I ended up reading two thrillers in December. They were both entertaining, but El Dorado Drive had more depth. The Guest List is set on a tiny isolated island off the coast of Ireland; the characters are on the island to attend the wedding of a TV star and the publisher of a well-known magazine. Many of the characters have baggage from their childhoods; most are unlikeable and/or superficial.
Sidney Chambers and the Shadow of Death (2012) by James Runcie
The Grantchester Mysteries is a series of short story collections by James Runcie. The stories are all connected and follow the investigations of Sidney Chambers, a vicar in Grantchester. There were only six short stories in the collection, and they are all novella length. I covered two of the short stories HERE and HERE.
The Shanghai Moon (2009) by S.J. Rozan
This was a reread of the ninth book in the Lydia Chin & Bill Smith series. I read it about 15 years ago, and I remember at the time I did not enjoy the story, even though Rozan is one of my favorite authors. I have no idea why I did not like it originally, because the subject matter is something I am currently interested in. Lydia is working on a job to help recover stolen jewels that once belonged to a Jewish refugee who fled from Austria to Shanghai in 1938, so it includes some history from that pre-WWII time. For me, the biggest attraction of this series are the characters. Not only are the main characters interesting, but Lydia's family members who have recurring roles in the books are well done, and many of the secondary characters are fully developed. After this reread, I rank this book as a favorite in the series.
The Big Four (1927) by Agatha Christie
I have read many negative comments on The Big Four, but in my opinion it is not that bad. It is sort of spy fiction and adventure. I certainly would not recommend this one as anyone's first Poirot book; it is not representative of the series. I mostly enjoyed the interplay between Captain Hastings and Poirot, and did not take the plot all that seriously. I read that the novel was a mashup of several short stories that Christie wrote earlier, and that explains why it feels disjointed and disorganized at times.
Christmas Stalkings (1991) edited by Charlotte Macleod
This was the second Christmas short story anthology edited by Charlotte MacLeod. All of the stories in the book appeared in print for the first time in this book. I covered all of the stories in this book in three posts in December. My favorite short story in the book was "A Political Necessity" by Robert Barnard (reviewed here), although all of them were good.
End of Year notes
I read 78 books in 2025, compared to 89 in 2024. The longest book I read was 800 pages: The Charm School by Nelson DeMille. The average number of pages for the books I read was 323. In 2024, that number was 302, which means I must have read more longer books in 2025.
- I read less mysteries than last year, 40 as compared to 48 in 2023. Only 6 of the mysteries published were before 1970, which is a big change from my early blogging years, but in line with last year's reading.
- I read 6 nonfiction books.
- My reading included 13 books in the science fiction or fantasy genres, which is higher than last year.
- I read 16 novels that I categorize as general fiction.
- I completed 8 short story books, and read 16 books by authors from Japan, Ireland, Canada, Denmark, Argentina, Australia, and Germany.














I see several authors here whose work I like, Tracy. Of course, there's Agatha Christie. But I was also happy to see Megan Abbott, Elly Griffiths, S.J. Rozan, and Christopher Isherwood. I like the variety here, and it does look like you had had a productive November and December when it comes to reading!
ReplyDeleteMargot, I think I have now read all of the Hercule Poirot novels by Christie except for one (Elephants Can Remember). There are a lot of Hercule Poirot short stories that I have not read yet though. I did enjoy my reading in November and December.
DeleteYou had a good two months of reading! I've just gone and added the audio version (narrated by Hugh Fraser) of the Christie to my Libby wish list. Even if not her best, I'll read any of them with Hastings in them. I've read the Hannah and the Backman, enjoying (?) both. I use to read Elly Griffiths, but haven't tried this series yet. I read another Lucy Foley novel that was pretty over the top, but good enough I might try the one you read. I hope you're starting off the year with some good ones!
ReplyDeleteKelly, The Big Four by Christie would be even better as an audio book, I am sure. I have read the first few books in Elly Griffiths' Ruth Galloway series and a couple from the Harbinder Kaur series. I like this new time travel series the best, but that is probably because I like time travel so much. The characters are likable and fun. I have read four very good books so far this year.
DeleteSounds like you had a good and varied year of reading! I find Megan Abott can be variable but You Will Know Me is one of my favourites - hope you enjoy it.
ReplyDeleteFictionFan, I did have a varied reading year and it was all good. I am not so happy at reading less vintage mysteries. We will see where my reading in 2026 takes me. I did just start reading The Death of a Busybody by George Bellairs and I checked out your review of it, which encouraged me to try it.
DeleteThanks for recommending You Will Know Me by Abbott.
Hi Tracy, Congratulations on reading 78 books in 2025! I read Fredrik Bachman's Beartown about two years ago and he is a talented writer. I need to get back to him. And EL Dorado Drive sounds interesting too. Hope you read many great books this year
ReplyDeleteKathy, There are always so many books I want to read that I cannot get to. But 78 books was a good number to read for 2025. Thanks for reminding me of Beartown, I have a copy on the Kindle. El Dorado Drive was a very good book and I am looking forward to reading more of Megan Abbott's books.
DeleteEight Days in May sounds like a fascinating read! And I enjoyed The Women and how it highlighted the roles women played during the Vietnam War; though I didn't love the second half as much as the first half.
ReplyDeleteLark, Eight Days in May was a very good read and it was about a period I knew little about. We had watched a German movie about Hitler's last days in the bunker, but nothing about the period when the surrender was negotiated. You are right about The Women, the first half was much better than the second.
DeleteI have to be in a certain frame of mind to read Christopher Isherwood, or most classic gay authors, for that matter. They have a certain outlook on life, shaped by their own experiences, that is almost always reflected in their writing, and I find it a lot to deal with at times.
ReplyDeleteRyan, I was unaware of Isherwood's books other than the Berlin stories (and not that much about those). I am looking into other books by him that I might like to read.
DeleteYou had a very good reading year and I like your recap. 78 is a high number, Congrats. I have read the Strout novels and Hannah's The Women and agree with your assessments on those. All pretty good. You seem to have a good variety here. I have not tried Lucy Foley's books ... I guess I dont read too many thrillers... a few though.
ReplyDeleteSusan, I don't read many thrillers either, I prefer vintage mysteries or police procedurals or private detective novels. But since thrillers are often very popular and get a lot of attention, I sometime wonder if I am missing books by a very good author. This year I tried The Guest List and The Woman in Cabin 10 by Ruth Ware for that reason. I am more interested in continuing with Lucy Foley than with Ruth Ware, but I will probably stay with Megan Abbott's books for the near future.
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