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1 | 1 | --- |
2 | 2 | layout: post |
3 | 3 | title: "2025 reading recap" |
4 | | -date: 2025-12-21 |
| 4 | +date: 2025-12-31 |
5 | 5 | tags: recaps books |
6 | 6 | --- |
7 | 7 |
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8 | | -I finished **72 books** this year, my highest year since I started tracking back in 2020. (And by a substantial amount––in 2024 I read 52 books and that was my highest year at the time as well), I wasn’t working Jan-June, but my reading was actually consistent the entire year (no spike for those months). I have a toddler and a slightly-more-than-half-time job, so I’m really proud I was able to carve out time for reading despite more non-negotiable obligations than I’ve ever had. |
| 8 | +I finished **76 books** this year, my highest year since I started tracking back in 2020. (And by a substantial amount––in 2024 I read 52 books and that was my highest year at the time as well), I wasn’t working Jan-June, but my reading was actually consistent the entire year (no spike for those months). I have a toddler and a slightly-more-than-half-time job, so I’m really proud I was able to carve out time for reading despite more non-negotiable obligations than I’ve ever had. |
9 | 9 |
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10 | 10 | Now for some stats: |
11 | 11 | - 8 books from the 1800s. Last year it was 9. It’s usually around this amount, but less percentage-wise this year. |
12 | 12 | - 31 books published in the 1900s (up from 15 last year). Of those 31, 15 were published before 1950. |
13 | 13 | - 3 nonfiction books. That's typical for me, as I really have to gear up for a nonfiction book. I finally read *Lakota America: A New History of Indigenous Power* and loved it. It sat on my shelf for almost five years. |
14 | 14 | - The oldest book I read this year was *Pride and Prejudice* (1813), a reread. Close behind that was *Ivanhoe* (1819). |
15 | | -- The newest book I read this year was *Palaver*, published in November. I read 4 other books published in 2025. |
16 | | -- 5 rereads this year |
| 15 | +- The newest book I read this year was *Palaver*, published in November 2025. I read 4 other books published in 2025. |
| 16 | +- 4 rereads this year (compared to 6 last year): *The Jump-Off Creek*, *Pride and Prejudice*, *Tom Lake*, and *Behind the Scenes at the Museum*. |
17 | 17 | - March, May, and November are a three-way tie for most books read in a month (8) |
18 | 18 | - No 1-star books, three 2-star books: *Wineburg, Ohio*, *The Turmoil*, and *City of Night Birds*. |
19 | 19 |
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20 | | -25 5-star (not counting rereads). It was a good year for good books! Of those 25, the five I loved the most were: |
| 20 | +26 5-star (not counting rereads). It was a good year for good books! Of those 26, the five I loved the most were: |
21 | 21 | - *Cold Comfort Farm* (1932)––girl moves in with cousins she's never met after her parents die. She proceeds to meddle in everyone's lives. Written in 1932 but set around a decade in the future, a future where there is no WWII (wild to read now). Tone and characters remind me somewhat of *I Capture the Castle*, one of my favorite books of all time (I'm due for a reread). |
22 | 22 | - *Heart the Lover* (2025)/*Writers and Lovers* (2020)––impossible not to discuss these together. I read *Writers and Lovers* first, an excellent love triangle set in 1990s Boston. *Heart the Lover* is fascinatingly both a prequel and a sequel to *Writers and Lovers*. The titles are bad. The books are great. |
23 | 23 | - *Prairie Fires: The American Dreams of Laura Ingalls Wilder* (2017)––I was full-on obsessed with the Laura Ingalls Wilder books as a kid. As an adult, I've read a lot of Western and indigenous fiction. This book pulled together those things, providing the historical and family context behind the novels. |
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