Monday, 29 December 2025

The Best Books of 2025

 I read a total of  108  books in 2025. Almost all were library books - what would I do without them!
 As usual mostly crime fiction written in the last 60 years  but also 14 older crime fiction written before that, 17 ordinary fiction and 12 non-fiction plus just 2 children's books.

Some of my favourites were .............

Kristin Hannah - The Nightingale. This is such a well written story about what it was like to be a woman in France during WWII.  Vianne and Isabelle Mauriac are two sisters, separated by years and experiences, each on their own path to survival through their occupied Nation......    The film of this book  will be released in this country in February....Hope it shows locally.

Evie Woods - The Story Collector. Fiction (Published 2024) In 1911 Ireland, Anna, a young farm girl, volunteers to help an intriguing American visitor translate the old stories of the fairy world for his university studies. In 2011 Sarah Harper boards a plane for the west coast of Ireland, she was supposed to be heading to her parents home in Boston - running away from sadness and a failed marriage.

Rory Clements - A Cold Wind From Moscow. Crime Fiction ( Published 2025) MI5 has a mole, who is it. The boss Freya Bentall can't trust anyone except Tom Wilde to find out. He was hoping to return to his quiet life as a Professor of History in Cambridge but when a man is murdered in his university rooms he is soon draw back to help find the person spreading the secrets of Atomic Bomb making to Russia. 8th in this series. 
PLUS Evil in High Places. Crime Fiction. (Published 2025). Second book about Chief of Police Seb Wolff  in pre-war Munich. This one is set during the winter Olympics of 1936. When a famous actress disappears Wolff is ordered to find her but she happens to be the mistress of Goebbels, Hitler's right-hand man. In a country full of corruption Wolff has to tread the line between justice and jeopardy, High Society and dark corners.

Robert Peston - The Whistle BlowerCrime Fiction/Thriller  (Published 2021) It is 1997 and a desperate government clings to power in the run-up to the General Election. The opposition are just as desperate to win and political journalist Gil Peck watches. He is a respected commentator on politics and thinks he knows all the rules. But when his estranged older sister dies in a hit in run  he begins to believe it was no accident because Clare knew some of the more sensitive secrets in government and one of them might have got her killed.

Tracy Chevalier- The Glass Maker. Fiction (Published 2024) Venice 1486, Across the lagoon lies Murano. Time flows differently here - like the glass the islands maestros spend their lives learning to handle. Women are not meant to work with glass, but Orsola Rosso flouts convention to save her family from ruin. She works in secret, knowing her creations must be perfect to be accepted by men. But perfection may take a lifetime. Skimming like a stone over water through the centuries, we follow Orsola as she hones her craft through war and plague, tragedy and triumph, love and loss. Very unusual book - difficult to explain as the people stay the same through 600 years - but it works beautifully.

Elif Shafak - There are Rivers in the Sky. Fiction (Published 2024) A magical story that brings together different times in history all linked by water. In ancient Ninevah hidden in the sand are fragments of a long lost poem. In Victorian London, an extraordinary child is born on the mud banks of the Thames. In Turkey in 2014 Narin, a Yazidi girl living by the Tigris and her grandmother travel through war torn lands to reach the sacred valley of their people. In London in 2018,  Zaleekhah, a hydrologist, moves to a houseboat on the Thames after the break up of her marriage.

Nevil Shute - The Far Country. Fiction. (Published 1952)  Out in Australia the Dorman family have had an excellent pay check for the years wool production. Jane Dorman had moved away from England several years previously when she met her Australian husband-to-be after the war. Jane writes regularly to her Aunt, the only person who had supported her move. When she realises her Aunt is very poor she sends money.   The money arrives too late to help, but Aunt Ethel gives the money to her granddaughter Jennifer . When Jennifer is left the money specifically to visit Australia she has the chance to leave drab post-war London. The comparisons between dull England and bright new Australia are so interesting to read about.

Susie Dent - Guilty by Definition. Crime Fiction (Published 2024) This is such a clever and well written story set in the offices of the Clarendon English Dictionary offices in Oxford, ( No doubt based on her work at the Oxford English Dictionary).In this story, her first novel, a cryptic anonymous coded letter arrives at the offices and seems to have a connection to Dictionary compiler Martha's sister Charlie who disappeared from Oxford 10 years earlier. Martha has just returned to Oxford after working in Berlin. More letters and postcards arrive sent to anyone who knew Charlie and even some who didn't. The team use their knowledge of the history of words to decipher the letters to find out exactly what happened.The book mentions all sorts of unusual and unknown words and their origins and makes for a really good story.

Christina Koning. - Murder at Bletchley Park. Crime Fiction (Published 2023). This is the 8th in a series about a man blinded in the Great War who goes on to help his police friend solve mysteries. He uses the other senses and a remarkable memory to spot what sighted  people don't notice.
PLUS all the other books in this series.

Evelyn Shillington - Eve's war. Non Fiction. (Published 2017) In 1935 Evelyn Shillington started a diary which she continued for the next 12 years. Eve was an army wife and with no children was able to accompany her husband Rex where ever he was posted. He was a career soldier working in army ordnance, and retiring eventually as a Brigadier. The diaries were left to a cousin, passed to the cousin's daughter and then ultimately bought at auction and recognised as worth publishing. They are a really good insight into army life in barracks, at home and abroad through the abdication crisis and right through the war and in Italy just after war ended.

Val McDermid - Out of Bounds. Crime Fiction. (Published 2016) A teenage joyrider crashes a car, killing his three companions. When his DNA test links to a twenty year old crime Karen Pirie and her team in the cold Case Unit think this will be an easy one to solve. But it's not so clear and then another death also links back to another unsolved crime  and soon she is stepping on the toes of another investigation.
PLUS others in the Karen Pirie series.

Everything I've read this year is on the Books Read 2025 page. 

I still have most of December's Mobile Library heap to read, the books I had for Christmas to browse or put on the shelf for reading whenever I run out of library books and the mobile is round again in less than two weeks time where there are already 10 available for pick-up. 

It really is a case of too many books, so little time!


Saturday, 27 December 2025

Lovely Books For Christmas

 These are the books that I bought myself (as a gift from BiL- he gave me some money). I can't remember where I saw them mentioned but I liked the look of both .



I came across details of this soft cover, large size book below  when finding out about the Radio Times nostalgia for a blog post earlier this month. I looked on abebooks and amazon where it was a selling for crazy prices - over £20- but on the Radio Times Shop direct it was £9.99 - so that found it's way to me before Christmas. It's absolutely fascinating and a lovely addition to my WWII Home Front book collection.


And then I had even more books from my wish list from the children!

Might be needing a bit of a shelf sort out to make room for everything............. 

After 11 of us all together on Christmas Day, Yesterday- Boxing Day was quieter, just me and BiL. In the evening I 'forced' him to watch  the special festive  quizzes/panel games which started with 'Would I lie to You', then 'Richard Osman's House of Games' and 'Celebrity Mastermind' . By the time it got to 8.30 he said he couldn't cope with anymore quizzes! which made me laugh, so he went home to avoid 'Only Connect' and 'Christmas University Challenge'!


Friday, 26 December 2025

A Sofa Load of Mischief

 I don't share photos of the grandchildren very often. It doesn't seem like a good idea in the scary world we live in nowadays. 

Just once or twice a year when they are all together. This is Christmas Eve when  all three families descended on me to sort out what was happening on Christmas Day and who needed to take what to the holiday cottage where the Surrey family are staying.




Getting five to sit still, look at the camera and smile all at the same time is impossible!

What a lucky Nanna I am.


Thank you to everyone for Happy Christmas wishes yesterday.