Attempting a slightly higher challenge this year – aiming for 30 books this year!
Here is my beginning of the year book stash:

Book 1: You are not alone, a new way to grieve, by Cariad Lloyd
Category: A book you got for free

A kind friend got this for me, and it was incredibly helpful to read. I recommend it to anyone experiencing grief.
Book 2: Butter, by Asako Yuzuki
Category: A book with a happily single female protagonist

This book was odd… I can’t decide if I like it or not. Some of the prose flowed in an odd way and I can’t tell if it’s the way it’s translated or if it’s the japanese way of speaking.
Book 3: The National Trust Gardener’s Almanac 2025
Category: A book under 250 pages

Quick read but busy studying for my garden!
Book 4: Woman of a certain rage, by Geogrgie Hall
Category: A book that features a character going through menopause

This was ok, funny in places, and sweet, but not the best book I’ve ever read. Mediocre at best.
Book 5: The last murder at the end of the world, by Stuart Turton
Category: A book about a cult

This book was EXCELLENT and I raced through it! I must admit I didn’t love his first book, The seven deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle, so was not sure if I would like this one, but it was completely different and very gripping. It could have fit into several categories so just picked this one for now.
It’s half post-apocalyptic futuristic sci-fi and half classic whodunnit detective story, and it works really well. Would recommend.
Book 6: Sweat, by Emma Healey
Category: None

This book was also excellent however bear in mind the subject matter has a trigger warning. It brilliantly portrays how coercive control and abusive relationships can damage people irreversibly and how small controlling behaviours can spiral into something truly terrifying.
It also covers the difficulties victims can have in talking about their abuse with family and friends when an abusive partner is so charming and appears loving and kind to the rest of the world.
I raced through it and it left a sense of unease, and a bad taste in my mouth when I finished it.
Book 7: 101 poems that could save your life: An anthology of emotional first aid, by Daisy Goodwin
Category: None

This was a short re-read, but I like it, short and simple, lots of classics in here.
Book 8: The Marigold Mind Laundry, by Yun Jung-Eun
Category: A book about chosen family

This was odd, but nice. An interesting premise, and some nice characters, though I think she rather hammered the point home at the end a bit too much.
Book 9: The Big Door Prize, by M.O. Walsh
Category: A book where an adult character changes careers

This one was mainly because I had been watching the tv show, enjoying it a lot, and then realised it was cancelled after 2 seasons, so I wanted to know what happened!
Annoyingly the book and the tv show differ quite a bit in plot, so it didn’t help much in that regard, and the book was much darker than the tv show. One of the rare occasions where I prefer the tv adaptation over the book, although that may be because I watched it first.
Book 10: What you did, by Claire McGowan
Category: A book that fills your favourite prompt from the 2015 reading challenge (in my case, a mystery or thriller)

This was ok, a quick and easy read, fairly easy to guess what had happened but it was fine. Not great litereature or anything, but very quick to read.
Book 11: Mickey 7, by Edward Ashton
Category: A book about space tourism

This was good, I enjoyed it. Seem to be reading a lot of space-themed books at the moment. This was funny and strange and while not technically about space tourism (more like space colonisation) I liked the plot, and I read it pretty quickly. It’s also a movie but I watched the trailer and am not sure if I’d want to watch it or not.
Book 12: Sex Tips from 1894: The Secret to a Happy Marriage, as Told by the Victorians, by Ruth Smythers
Category: None

This was a short silly book and it was very funny.
Book 13: Anxious People, by Fredrik Backman
Category: A book that features an unlikely friendship

This was EXCELLENT. I love Fredrik Backman and this did not disappoint. Funny, sweet, thoughtful and great characters.
Book 14: The Husbands, by Holly Gramazio
Category: A book that features a married couple that don’t live together

This was a silly fun light easy read. A single woman discovers she has a magical attic which produces husbands for her to try out.
Book 15: The Unit, by Ninni Holmqvist
Category: A book set at a luxury resort

This was an interesting dystopian book, similar to Never Let Me Go, but with some interesting differences. I would have liked more background on the rules and laws around having children and families, but it was otherwise ok.
Book 16: Dad you suck, by Tim Dowling
Category: None

I’ve read this before, but needed a quick easy read and it’s funny and I like it.
Book 17: The Wee Free Men, by Terry Pratchett
Category: None

Life is busy at the moment so I wanted to re-read some easy books I could get through without too much brain power. I love the Tiffany Aching series by Terry Pratchett and haven’t read them as much so decided to re-read the whole series. They annoyingly didn’t fit well with any of the categories though!
Book 18: A hat full of sky, by Terry Pratchett
Category: None
Book 19: Wintersmith, by Terry Pratchett
Category: None
Book 20: I shall wear midnight, by Terry Pratchett
Category: None

Book 21: The Shepherd’s Crown, by Terry Pratchett
Category: None

Love these books. Sad that this one was Terry’s last book before he died. I have found a few fabulous quotes from his many books that I thought I would share:
“In the beginning there was nothing, which exploded.”
“The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.”
“Give a man a fire and he’s warm for a day, but set fire to him and he’s warm for the rest of his life.”
“It’s not worth doing something unless someone, somewhere, would much rather you weren’t doing it.”
“Some humans would do anything to see if it was possible to do it. If you put a large switch in some cave somewhere, with a sign on it saying ‘End-of-the-World Switch. PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH’, the paint wouldn’t even have time to dry.”
“Wisdom comes from experience. Experience is often a result of lack of wisdom.”
“Real stupidity beats artificial intelligence every time.”
“Coming back to where you started is not the same as never leaving.”
RIP Sir Terry.

