Sunday, January 11, 2026

My Results for the 52 Book Club Reading Challenge 2025

 


This year I participated in the 52 Book Club’s 2025 Reading Challenge. It is a self-led challenge and how you decide to participate is up to you. 

There are 52 prompts and that is challenging, but of course each person can determine how many prompts they want to do. There is a guide that explains each prompt and there are lists on Goodreads with examples. I think I only skipped 5 of the prompts. 

I liked that the challenge added more variety and unexpected books to my reading, but I did not read any book only because it fulfilled a prompt. The prompts either led me to books on my TBR piles (which are huge) or my own reading fit into the prompts. 

So I will be doing the 52 Book Club’s 2026 Reading Challenge this year and see where that takes me.


These are the prompts for the 2025 challenge and the books I read for them:


1. A Pun In The Title

Come Death and High Water by Ann Cleeves

2. A Character With Red Hair

The Women by Kristin Hannah

3. Title Starts With Letter "M"

A Meditation on Murder by Susan Juby

4. Title Starts With Letter "N"

Ninefox Gambit by Yoon Ha Lee

5. Plot Includes A Heist

   The Little Old Lady Who Broke All the Rules by Catharina Ingelman-Sundberg 

[For Prompts 6-9, each Prompt had to be from a different genre.]

6. Genre 1: Set In Spring

Before Your Memory Fails by Tochikazu Kawaguchi [Time Travel]

7. Genre 2: Set In Summer

A Death in Summer by Benjamin Black [Mystery]

8. Genre 3: Set In Autumn

The Day the World Came to Town: 9/11 in Gander, Newfoundland by Jim DeFede [Nonfiction]

9. Genre 4: Set In Winter

A God in Ruins by Kate Atkinson [Historical Fiction]

10. Author's Last Name Is Also A First Name

The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley

11. A Prequel


12. Has A Moon On The Cover

The Shanghai Moon by S. J. Rozan

13. Title Is Ten Letters Or Less

Here by Richard McGuire

14. Climate Fiction


15. Includes Latin American History

State of Wonder by Ann Patchett

16. Author Has Won An Edgar Award

El Dorado Drive by Megan Abbott

17. Told In Verse


18. A Character Who Can Fly

Guards! Guards! by Terry Pratchett

19. Has Short Chapters

The Killing of the Tinkers by Ken Bruen

20. A Fairy Tale Retelling


21. Character's Name In The Title

Olive, Again by Elizabeth Strout

22. Found Family Trope

Anxious People by Fredrik Backman

23. A Sprayed Edge

Can't Spell Treason Without Tea by Rebecca Thorne

24. Title Is A Spoiler

Everyone in My Family Has Killed Someone by Benjamin Stevenson

25. Breaks The Fourth Wall

Everyone on This Train Is a Suspect by Benjamin Stevenson

26. More Than A Million Copies Sold


27. Features A Magician

Royal Assassin by Robin Hobb

28. A Crossover (Set In A Shared Universe)

The Burgess Boys by Elizabeth Strout

29. Shares A Universe With Prompt 28

Tell Me Everything by Elizabeth Strout

30. In The Public Domain

The Big Four by Agatha Christie

31. Audiobook Has Multiple Narrators

The Guest List by Lucy Foley

32. Includes A Diary Entry

Eight Days in May: The Final Collapse of the Third Reich by Volker Ullrich

(My husband chose the Genre: Nonfiction about World War II.)

33. A Standalone Novel

The Thursday Night Widows by Claudia Piñeiro

34. Direction In The Title

Star of the North by D. B. John

35. Written In Third Person

Death By Accident by Bill Crider

36. Final Sentence Is Less Than 6 Words Long

The Woman in Cabin 10 by Ruth Ware

37. Genre Chosen For You By Someone Else

At the Table of Wolves by Kay Kenyon

(My son chose the Genre: Alternate History, and he also suggested this Alternate History / Fantasy / Spy Fiction crossover.)

38. An Adventure Story

The Murder of Mr. Ma by S.J. Rozan and John Shen Yen Nee

39. Has An Epigraph

Oona Out of Order by Margarita Montimore

40. Stream Of Consciousness Narrative

Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf

41. Cover Font Is In A Primary Color

The Charm School by Nelson DeMille

42. Non-Human Antagonist

Exit Strategy by Martha Wells

43. Explores Social Class

Sidney Chambers and the Shadow of Death by James Runcie

44. A Celebrity On The Cover

Perplexing Plots by David Bordwell (Gene Tierney)

45. Author Releases More Than One Book A Year

At Bertram's Hotel by Agatha Christie

46. Read In A "-Ber" Month

Goodbye to Berlin by Christopher Isherwood

47. "I Think It Was Blue"

Anything is Possible by Elizabeth Strout

48. Related To The Word "Puzzle"

The Amateur by Robert Littell (Puzzle Piece on the cover.)

49. Set In A Country With An Active Volcano

Silent Parade by Keigo Higashino (Japan)

50. Set In The 1940's 

The '44 Vintage by Anthony Price

51. A Book With 300-400 Pages

A Death in Tokyo by Keigo Higashino

52. Published in 2025

The Frozen People by Elly Griffiths


9 comments:

pattinase (abbott) said...

Pretty darn ambitious challenge.

Margot Kinberg said...

What an interesting challenge, Tracy! As Patti says, it's ambitious, but it sounds as though it really does encourage a person to read more broadly and to dig into the TBR.

Todd Mason said...

You and Neeru and Jerry House get my salutes for juggling so many books so regularly...

Jerry House said...

I am underread in so many areas, Tracy. I've only read eight on your list.

TracyK said...

Patti, it does seem that way, but I never felt pressured when I was doing it. A lot of the choices were either books I wanted to read anyway or that had been read during the year and fit the guidelines. My record keeping throughout the year was haphazard so I did not know how many I had done until the end.

TracyK said...

Margot, it did seem to work that way. I read more thrillers than usual. I had planned to read Megan Abbott's new book because it seemed a good fit for me (and it was), but I read the books by Ruth Ware and Lucy Foley because they had been on the TBR a longish time (and they were not nearly as good).

TracyK said...

Thanks, Todd. My reading is slowing down every year, but I still enjoy it just as much.

TracyK said...

Jerry, I think the same thing about you when I read about all the books you are reading. One thing that happened last year was that I read a lot fewer vintage mysteries, and that was once a big part of my reading. A good number of the books on this list were newer books, which is a big change in my reading. I will have to see if that trend continues or not.

Lark said...

That's a lot of prompts! And they're fun...but I think I'd struggle keeping them all straight and matching up books to each one....probably not the challenge for me. ;D