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50 Books Challenge 2025 Part Nine

405 replies

Southeastdweller · 22/12/2025 10:33

Welcome to the ninth and final thread of the 50 Books Challenge for this year.

The challenge was to read fifty books (or more!) in 2025, though reading fifty isn't mandatory. Any type of book can count, and please try to let us all know your thoughts on what you've read.

If possible, please can you embolden your titles or / and maybe authors as well of books you've read or going to read? It makes it much easier to keep track.
Some of us like to bring over lists to the next thread - again, this is up to you.

The first thread of the year is here, the second thread here , the third thread here, the fourth thread here , the fifth thread here , the sixth thread here , the seventh thread here and the eighth thread

OP posts:
Thread gallery
20
FuzzyCaoraDhubh · 30/12/2025 20:14

Could we see a picture of this glass, please?!

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 30/12/2025 20:16

Fuck it, I’ll end on an uneven number and start 2026 fresh!

131 . The Philosophy Of Modern Song by Bob Dylan

I’m a Dylan fan and this was on my Wishlist for ages but it was £35 and I couldn’t justify it. It recently showed as 99p and I snapped it up. It’s a bunch of essays of various length about various songs, what’s happening in the song and what was going on in music or with the artist at the time. I only knew 20-30% of the songs already, and I was lucky to find a Spotify playlist of them all. Literally this book would be pointless without the playlist, you wouldn’t know what he was referring to so it’s odd that it comes without it.

132 . Bring The House Down by Charlotte Runcie

Set at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, Alex, a critic fires off a 1 star review of a one woman show and goes about his business. When later he meets the woman, he has sex with her without telling her about the review. Consequences abound.

What’s odd about this book is it’s told from the viewpoint of Sophie, Alex’s colleague at the paper he writes for. It covers her reaction to all the drama, but also her marriage, working mother guilt and her grief over her own mother and none of this is particularly relevant to the story or interesting in any way. It just drags the narrative away from the action and seems a strange choice. Ultimately a bit forgettable? In the two days since I read it, I forgot Sophie’s name and as I was about to write this, the title.

133 . The Housemaid by Freida Mcfadden

Rich bitch Nina employs down on her luck Milly to be her housemaid but nothing is what it seems. I can’t say much for spoilers but a lot of the themes here are well worn and cliched. The advertised twist is pretty decent, I kicked myself for not spotting it. It was a decent, trashy, yarn but I won’t be reading the sequels or any further McFadden as I don’t hear good things.

134 . And He Shall Appear by Kate Van Der Borgh

An unnamed protagonist attends Cambridge. It’s the “from a working class background and feels like an outsider” cliche, and he becomes infatuated with and wishes to be part of would be magician Bryn and his set. I don’t want to shit on this book as I think it’s a debut but so much potential is squandered. If the first part of the title is “Speak of the devil” then you really want Bryn to be a devil, and for there to be real horror moments but he’s just an entitled posh boy. I empathised with the idea of idolising someone at uni who doesn’t merit your esteem, but that’s about it really. Comparisons made to The Secret History and the Dark Academia category don’t wash, it’s no Saltburn and it’s not even as good as The Kellerby Code. but it could have been so much darker and so much better.

FuzzyCaoraDhubh · 30/12/2025 20:28

Thank you @EineReiseDurchDieZeit!
Ooh, that is ... different. The reviews are terrible!

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 30/12/2025 20:28

Aren’t they? It’s put me off buying one

MamaNewtNewt · 30/12/2025 20:29

It’s that first one but it is even worse in real life. I can’t stand the way that the books don’t align, the fact that some have more than 4 sides, the clashing colours, the weird shapes on the pages. It makes me shudder.

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 30/12/2025 20:34

That is fucking hideous.

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 30/12/2025 20:35

I’m not laughing at your expense @MamaNewtNewt but I am amused. She probably thought it was an ideal gift for a bookworm!

MamaNewtNewt · 30/12/2025 20:37

I know and she’s a fabulous MIL and knows I love reading but Remus is right, it is fucking hideous.

FuzzyCaoraDhubh · 30/12/2025 20:37

I think Remus has nailed it.

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 30/12/2025 20:39

I just liked that it was a bit different, I think it’s probably very difficult to drink out of though.

FuzzyCaoraDhubh · 30/12/2025 20:44

It might have worked better as a candle holder.

TeamToeBeans · 30/12/2025 20:49

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 30/12/2025 16:45

I didn’t count and haven’t done so for the last few years. I don’t understand why people care if it’s a round number or not though. Why would it matter?

I don’t know either, but it’s the same reason I’d get out of bed at 6.30 or 6.40 but 6.37 is simply unthinkable 😂

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 30/12/2025 21:16

TeamToeBeans · 30/12/2025 20:49

I don’t know either, but it’s the same reason I’d get out of bed at 6.30 or 6.40 but 6.37 is simply unthinkable 😂

My alarm goes off at 6.07am every work day. I clearly don't have whatever gene it is that affects the rest of you! grin]

ÚlldemoShúl · 30/12/2025 21:46

Stowickthevast · 30/12/2025 21:39

oh God, that reminds me of a present someone gave me that was a stack of books as a pair of earrings. I like books but don't necessarily want to be adorned with them!

my brother did better with these socks this year

https://ebay.us/m/He5qbC

DH got me something similar to the socks- I’m open to a little book merch but the cup/ glass was too much!

elkiedee · 30/12/2025 21:56

That mug doesn't look nice. Reviews say it doesn't work to drink out of, and if it did, it would be difficult to clean properly! There is a nice conventionally shaped mug with pictures of bookshelves that comes up on the same page, But we really don't need any more mugs in this house just now. No space for them in the kitchen!

MamaNewtNewt · 30/12/2025 22:09

The thought of drinking from it makes me gip. We’ve just had to do a big clear out of the mug / cup / glasses cupboard so unfortunately there is room for this one currently. But it will be making its way to a charity shop in the very near future!

124 A Room Full Of Bones by Elly Griffiths

The 4th book in the Ruth Galloway series. I found Ruth a bit less irritating this time around, and I found the central mystery pretty interesting with an unexpected conclusion. The sections on the repatriation of stolen Aboriginal bones (or artifacts if you are a rich white dude) was interesting although the curses and the Dreaming sections were a bit too mystical for me. I would have liked a bit more archaeology too, but I did like this one overall.

125 The Measure by Nikki Erlick

Everyone on earth (as I say this I’m wondering if the people on the International Space Station were included) receives a box, which contains a piece of string showing how long they have left to live. No one knows where the boxes came from but the impact on the world is far reaching and immediate. This was an interesting idea bringing in ideas of free will, fate, discrimination, how we measure the quantity and quality of life, and how we love. It was ok but a bit twee and simplistic for me. It also had one of my pet hates of needlessly connecting everyone in the book in some way. In NYC of all places.

StrangewaysHereWeCome · 30/12/2025 22:19

That mug! It's right at the junction of amazing and terrible Grin .

Southeastdweller · 30/12/2025 22:45

Notes on a Scandal - Zoë Heller. A psychological noir type novel that the (inferior) film is based on. The story is set in late 90s north London and is narrated by Barbara, a sixty-something secondary school History teacher, who becomes obsessed with a new art teacher, Sheba. When she finds out that Sheba has begun having a sexual relationship with one of her pupils, Barbara acts as her confidante, drawing the two 'friends' closer. This was my second or third re-read and the book was as enjoyable as ever - brilliantly written, often hilarious and sometimes very disturbing. This was a perfect way to end the year and highly, highly recommended to those who haven't read it.

OP posts:
nowanearlyNicemum · 31/12/2025 07:20
  • Christmas Pudding – Nancy Mitford
  • Small things like these – Claire Keegan
  • Career of evil – Robert Galbraith

My final reads of 2025. Christmas Pudding was enjoyed but not loved. Small things were adored. Evil was put to bed but only after I stayed up far too late to finish it last night - unputdownable.

That's me on 48, which is my 2nd best year on the thread.

I'm looking forward to a quiet couple of days, hiking, eating and reading before I return to work on Friday.

DuPainDuVinDuFromage · 31/12/2025 08:17

Hiking, eating and reading sounds perfect @nowanearlyNicemum ! Sadly I’ll be doing cleaning, shopping and hosting 😭

I won’t get any more books finished this year so here’s my final list for 2025 (with mini-summaries). I’ll post this on the round-up thread too.

  1. The Girl of Ink and Stars - Kiran Millwood Hargrave (Moana-esque cartographical adventure)
  2. Once Upon a River - Diane Setterfield (storytelling on the Thames)
  3. My Perfect Friend - Sarah Clarke (stalkery thriller)
  4. One of the Good Guys - Araminta Hall (dreadful attempt at feminist manifesto)
  5. A Spy among Friends - Ben Macintyre (double agents, drinking and deception) NF
  6. The Secret Hours - Mick Herron (le Carré meets Whitehall bureaucracy)
  7. Black Rabbit Hall - Eve Chase (60s siblings in gothic Cornwall mansion)
  8. The Miniaturist - Jessie Burton (human nature in old Amsterdam)
  9. No Escape - Lucy Clarke (backpackers on a boat)
  10. The Poison Pen Letters - Fiona Walker (Cotswolds cosy crime)
  11. Instructions for a Heatwave - Maggie O’Farrell (Irish family drama)
  12. The Marches: Border Walks with my Father - Rory Stewart (nostalgia trip mixed with cultural history) NF
  13. The Sea House - Louise Douglas (missing people and unsolved mysteries)
  14. Yellowface - Rebecca Kuang (publishing industry navel-gazing)
  15. The House of Fortune - Jessie Burton (The Brandts revisited)
  16. The Muse - Jessie Burton (30s Spain; 60s London; great story)
  17. The Birdcage - Eve Chase (sisters and secrets)
  18. Butter - Asako Yuzuki (tr. Polly Barton) (food, Japan, learning to love yourself)
  19. Airhead - Emily Maitlis (behind the scenes of TV interviews)
  20. Case Histories - Kate Atkinson (awful things happen to women and girls)
  21. Our Wives under the Sea - Julia Armfield (unexplained deep-ocean weirdness)
  22. The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox - Maggie O’Farrell (tragic story of misunderstood girl)
  23. Just Another Missing Person - Gillian McAllister (detective thriller with a twist)
  24. The Wych Elm - Tana French (memory gaps and murder)
  25. The One - John Marrs (good idea, very badly executed)
  26. Raven Black - Ann Cleeves (atmospheric Shetland murder mystery)
  27. Three Sisters, Three Queens - Philippa Gregory (Tudor princess in Scotland)
  28. The Count of Monte Cristo - Alexandre Dumas, tr. Robin Buss (epic story of adventure and revenge)
  29. The Sweet Dove Died - Barbara Pym (unlikeable characters do nothing much in the 1970s)
  30. The Enchanted April - Elizabeth von Arnim (happiness and love in flowery Italy)
  31. White Nights - Ann Cleeves (summer in Shetland with lots of murders)
  32. The Dark Queens - Shelley Puhak (powerful dark ages women) NF
  33. A Sicilian Affair - Susan Lewis (Mary Sue goes to Sicily and boringly recounts her life)
  34. The Turn of the Key - Ruth Ware (seriously creepy kids and house)
  35. The Survivors - Jane Harper (small-town Tasmania with secrets and tragedy)
  36. One Perfect Couple - Ruth Ware (desert island disaster)
  37. The Long Call - Ann Cleeves (Devon community secrets)
  38. One by One - Ruth Ware (ski chalet murders)
  39. Red Bones - Ann Cleeves (secrets on an archaeological dig)
  40. Promising Young Women - Caroline O’Donoghue (creepy workplace affair)
  41. The Heron’s Cry - Ann Cleeves (death in Devon)
  42. Blue Lightning - Ann Cleeves (Fair Isle, birds and the wrong ending)
  43. The Crow Trap - Ann Cleeves (Northumberland wildlife survey)
  44. The Raging Storm - Ann Cleeves (murder on the coast)
  45. Les Cahiers d’Esther: Histoires de mes 14 ans - Riad Sattouf (Fr) (la vie en 4ème)
  46. The Peacock and the Sparrow - I S Berry (deeply unpleasant CIA officer in Bahrain’s Arab Spring)
  47. The Figurine - Victoria Hislop (cosy Greek story with interesting history)
  48. The House of Mirrors - Erin Kelly (intriguing and stylish family mystery)
  49. Zero Days - Ruth Ware (cyber crime thriller by numbers)
  50. Fall Out - M N Grenside (one-dimensional tell-not-show supposed thriller)
  51. Her Secret Service - Claire Hubbard-Hall (dense history of female spies) NF
  52. Shadow State - Luke Harding (gob-smacking network of corruption) NF
  53. Matilda: Wife of the Conqueror, First Queen of England - Tracy Borman (1066 and all that) NF
  54. The Odyssey - Homer, tr. Emily Wilson (epic)
  55. In the Woods - Tana French (police procedural with tantalising mystery)
  56. Hons and Rebels - Jessica Mitford (funny and fascinating memoir) NF
  57. Autumn Chills - Agatha Christie (seasonal short stories)
  58. The Other Valley - Scott Alexander Howard (girl grows up in a world of time travel)
  59. The Napoleon of Crime - Ben Macintyre (master thief and his duchess) NF
  60. The Disappearing Spoon - Sam Kean (wide-ranging history of the periodic table) NF
  61. Ink Blood Sister Scribe - Emma Törzs (books, magic, sisters)
  62. Strange Sally Diamond - Liz Nugent (grim story with weirdly simplistic style)
  63. Madam, will you talk? - Mary Stewart (romance and adventure in the south of France)
  64. Every Little Secret - Sarah Clarke (psychos, misdirection and melodrama)
  65. Gnomon - Nick Harkaway (onion-layered literary sci-fi)
  66. The God of the Woods - Liz Moore (70s summer camp mystery)

I’ve read 57 fiction, 9 non-fiction - but with a higher proportion of bolds among the non-fiction.

54 were by female authors, and 12 by male authors, about the same balance as last year.

Tarahumara · 31/12/2025 09:05

54 The Vital Question: Why is life the way it is? by Nick Lane. Non fiction about the origin of life on earth - how did complex life forms first arise from bacteria, what were the steps of the process and what are the chances of it happening on another planet? This is a fascinating topic and Lane writes well, but sadly much of the scientific detail was over my head. It was interesting enough that I managed to finish it, but I wouldn't be able to explain it to someone else with any degree of accuracy!

That was the last book I'll finish this year, so I'll head over to the round up thread now with my summary.

Midnightstar76 · 31/12/2025 09:10

Great socks @Stowickthevast and yes that glass is a crazy one. Just hopping on with my current reads who no idea which will be completed first. Totally branching out with both of them as not my usual go to’s at all. So the first is about an octopus 🐙 and for an online book group Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt this has grabbed my attention and will finish this a very unusual book from an octopus’s point of view. My other on the go is Welcome To The Hyunam-Dong Bookshop by Hwang Bo-Reum again not my usual type and the first of RWIO challenge as received Xmas 2024. So far so good a very gentle read. Has anyone ever done the 52 Book reading challenge where you have a list of 52 prompts? It looks fun so going to have a go I think. Any other challenges folks are doing other than this one? Have to add I will fail miserably always start off with good intentions though

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