Best Books of 2025

Without further ado, I present my 15 favourite releases from 2025. (With the 15 runners-up I chose yesterday, these represent about the top 9.5% of my current-year reading.) Pictured below are the ones I read in print; all the others were e-copies or library books I couldn’t get my hands on for a photo shoot. Links are to my full reviews where available.

Fiction

Spent: A Comic Novel by Alison Bechdel: Alison has writer’s block and is consumed with anxiety about the state of the world. “Who can draw when the world is burning?” Then she has an idea for a book – or a reality TV series ­– called $UM to wean people off of capitalism. That creative journey is mirrored here. Through Alison’s ageing hippie friends and their kids, Bechdel showcases alternative ways of living. Even the throwaway phrases are hilarious. It’s a gleeful and zeitgeist-y satire, yet draws to a touching close. So great, I read it twice.

 

The Boy from the Sea by Garrett Carr: I was entranced by this story of an Irish family in the 1970s–80s: Ambrose, a fisherman left behind by technology; his wife Christine, walked all over by her belligerent father and sister; their son Declan, a budding foodie; and the title character, Brendan, a foundling they adopt and raise. Narrated by a chorus of village voices, this debut has the heart of Claire Keegan and the humour of Paul Murray. It reimagines biblical narratives, too: Cain and Abel, Jacob and Esau (brotherly rivalry!); Job and more.

 

The Homemade God by Rachel Joyce: The story of four siblings initially drawn together (in Italy) and then dramatically blown apart by their father’s remarriage and death. Despite weighty themes including alcoholism and depression, there is an overall lightness of tone and style that made this a pleasure to read. Joyce has really upped her game: it’s more expansive, elegant and empathetic than her previous seven books. You can tell she got her start in theatre, too: she’s so good at scenes, dialogue, and moving groups of people around.

 

A Family Matter by Claire Lynch: In her research into UK divorce cases in the 1980s, Lynch learned that 90% of lesbian mothers lost custody of their children. Her earnest, delicate debut novel, which bounces between 2022 and 1982, imagines such a situation through close portraits of three family members. Maggie knew only that her mother, Dawn, abandoned her when she was little. Lynch’s compassion is equal for all three characters. This confident, tender story of changing mores and steadfast love is the new Carol for our times.

 

Are You Happy? by Lori Ostlund: Nine short fictions form a stunning investigation into how violence and family dysfunction reverberate. “The Peeping Toms” and “The Stalker” are a knockout pair featuring Albuquerque lesbian couples under threat by male acquaintances. Characters are haunted by loss and grapple with moral dilemmas. Each story has the complexity and emotional depth of a novel. Freedom versus safety for queer people is a resonant theme in an engrossing collection ideal for Alice Munro and Edward St. Aubyn fans.

 

Dream State by Eric Puchner: It starts as a glistening romantic comedy about t Charlie and Cece’s chaotic wedding at a Montana lake house in summer 2004. First half the wedding party falls ill with norovirus, then the best man, Garrett, falls in love with the bride. The rest examines the fallout of this uneasy love triangle as it stretches towards 2050 and imagines a Western USA smothered in smoke from near-constant forest fires. Still, there are funny set-pieces and warm family interactions. Jonathan Franzen meets Maggie Shipstead.

 

Palaver by Bryan Washington: Washington’s emotionally complex third novel explores the strained bond between a mother and her queer son – and their support systems of friends and lovers – when she visits him in Tokyo. The low-key plot builds through memories and interactions: the son’s with his students or hook-ups; the mother’s with restaurateurs as she gains confidence exploring Japan. Through words and black-and-white photographs, the author brings settings to life vibrantly. This is his best and most moving work yet.

 

Nonfiction

Book of Lives: A Memoir of Sorts by Margaret Atwood: For diehard fans, this companion to her oeuvre is a trove of stories and photographs. The context on each book is illuminating and made me want to reread lots of her work. I was reminded how often she’s been ahead of her time. The title feels literal in that Atwood has been wilderness kid, literary ingénue, family and career woman, philanthropist and elder stateswoman. She doesn’t try to pull all her incarnations into one, instead leaving the threads trailing into the beyond.

 

Poets Square: A Memoir in 30 Cats by Courtney Gustafson: Working for a food bank, trapped in a cycle of dead-end jobs and rising rents: Gustafson saw first hand how broken systems and poverty wear people down. She’d recently started feeding and getting veterinary care for a feral cat colony in her Tucson, Arizona neighbourhood. With its radiant portraits of individual cats and its realistic perspective on personal and collective problems, this is a cathartic memoir and a probing study of building communities of care in times of hardship.

 

Immemorial by Lauren Markham: An outstanding book-length essay that compares language, memorials, and rituals as strategies for coping with climate anxiety and grief. The dichotomies of the physical versus the abstract and the permanent versus the ephemeral are explored. Forthright, wistful, and determined, the book treats grief as a positive, as “fuel” or a “portal.” Hope is not theoretical in this setup, but solidified in action. This is an elegant meditation on memory and impermanence in an age of climate crisis.

 

Death of an Ordinary Man by Sarah Perry: Perry recognises what a sacred privilege it was to witness her father-in-law’s death nine days after his diagnosis with oesophageal cancer. David’s end was as peaceful as could be hoped: in his late seventies, at home and looked after by his son and daughter-in-law, with mental capacity and minimal pain or distress. The beauty of this direct but tender memoir is its patient, clear-eyed unfolding of every stage of dying, a natural and inexorable process that in other centuries would have been familiar to all.

 

Ginseng Roots by Craig Thompson: A book about everything, by way of ginseng. It begins with Thompson’s childhood summers working on American ginseng farms with his siblings in Marathon, Wisconsin. As an adult, he travels first to Midwest ginseng farms and festivals and then through China and Korea to learn about the plant’s history, cultivation, lore, and medicinal uses. Roots are symbolic of a family story that unfolds in parallel. Both expansive and intimate, this is a surprising gem from one of the best long-form graphic storytellers.

 

Poetry

Is This My Final Form? by Amy Gerstler: This delightfully odd collection amazes with its range of voices and techniques. It leaps from surrealism to elegy as it ponders life’s randomness. The language of transformation is integrated throughout. Aging and the seasons are examples of everyday changes. Elsewhere, speakers fall in love with the bride of Frankenstein or turn to dinosaur urine for a wellness regimen. Monologues and sonnets recur. Alliteration plus internal and end rhymes create satisfying resonance.

 

The Unreliable Tree by Margot Kahn: Kahn’s radiant first collection ponders how traumatic events interrupt everyday life. Poles of loss and abundance structure delicate poems infused with family history and food imagery. The title phrase describes literal harvests but is also a metaphor for the vicissitudes of long relationships. California’s wildfires, Covid-19, a mass shooting, and health crises – an emergency surgery and a friend’s cancer – serve as reminders of life’s unpredictability. Disaster is random and inescapable.

 

Terminal Surreal by Martha Silano: Silano’s posthumous collection (her eighth) focuses on nature and relationships as she commemorates the joys and ironies of her last years with ALS. The shock of a terminal diagnosis was eased by the quotidian pleasures of observing Pacific Northwest nature, especially birds. Fascination with science recurs, too. Most pieces are free form and alliteration and wordplay enliven the register. Her winsome philosophical work is a gift. “What doesn’t die? / The closest I’ve come to an answer / is poetry.”


If I had to pick one from each genre? Well, like last year, I find that the books that have stuck with me most are the ones that play around with the telling of life stories. This time, all by women. So it’s Spent, Book of Lives and Is This My Final Form?

What 2025 releases should I catch up on?

29 responses

  1. kaggsysbookishramblings's avatar

    Interesting choices! I’m looking forward to getting to the Atwood! 😀

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      It’s a Tome, but well worth the time! No doubt you’ll be tempted to reread multiple of her novels and other books alongside it or afterwards.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Annabel (AnnaBookBel)'s avatar

    I’ve not encountered any of your picks except the Joyce which I’ve yet to read. Atwood is not for me, but any of your other fiction picks sound great.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I’m surprised you’ve not found an Atwood that’s to your taste — her spec fic stuff seems the best bet?

      Like

      1. Annabel (AnnaBookBel)'s avatar

        I do like her spec fic, but can’t get on with the others.

        Liked by 1 person

  3. lauratfrey's avatar

    I may have commented this on another post, but to reiterate (to myself) – I gotta read the cat memoir!!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      It’s a good’un — in the meantime, you can follow her and the kittehs on Instagram.

      Like

  4. Karen's avatar

    I just bought The Boy from the Sea recently and have put it on my list of books I’d like to get to in 2026. I’m quite excited to read it! 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      It was such a delight to read. Hope you enjoy!

      Liked by 1 person

  5. Elle's avatar

    Dream State, Palaver, and A Family Matter are very much on my radar for next year. Bechdel’s Spent sounds delightful, too; I’ve been following the reposts of the original Dykes to Watch Out For strips on Instagram and enjoying her work so much. I’m less of a nonfiction person but: Craig Thompson proved his chops with Blankets, so Ginseng Roots is of interest; Poets Square really does sound perfectly executed; and I can easily believe how well Sarah Perry writes about death.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Oh cool, I should follow Bechdel on Instagram, then. There’s only one of her books that I haven’t read now, the one on exercise.

      I’m glad so many of these appeal 🙂

      Like

  6. Laila@BigReadingLife's avatar

    I don’t know if you’ve read this, but my favorite 2025 book was The Road to Tender Hearts by Annie Hartnett. I think you’d like it.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I’ve not read any Hartnett but I would really like to read that one. I did see one of her previous books (Unlikely Animals) in a charity shop the other day. Maybe I should go back for it, though it wasn’t in great condition for the price.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Laila@BigReadingLife's avatar

        They are both among my favorite books.

        Liked by 1 person

  7. Kate W's avatar

    I haven’t read ANY of these (so expect this post to be the starting point for a few of my Sample Saturday posts in the new year!).

    Happy reading in 2026.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Yay, hope you find some winners that way 🙂

      Like

  8. Davida Chazan's avatar

    Interesting list. Home Made God also made my best of list.

    Liked by 1 person

  9. kimbofo's avatar

    Interesting choices! I like the sound of the Bryan Washington book.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      His books are all pretty similar to each other (the same sorts of themes, locations and characters) but this is probably the novel I’d most recommend; or his short stories, Lot.

      Like

  10. Jenna @ Falling Letters's avatar

    Palaver has caught my eye, particularly with the Japan setting. I didn’t read too many 2025 releases but two ended up being my favourite reads of the year: The Other Valley by Scott Alexander Howard and Wild Dark Shore by Charlotte McConaughy.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      His first novel, Memorial, is also set in Japan. I’ve never been there but I like reading about the sights and the food.

      I like the look of The Other Valley; thanks for letting me know about it!

      Liked by 1 person

  11. Liz Dexter's avatar

    Ooh, The Boy from the Sea – I loved that so much, I think everyone should read it immediately! A very nice, varied list. I hope you read as many good books in 2026!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I think you and Susan are the only bloggers I know who’ve read it. I agree many more should!

      Like

  12. Laura's avatar

    Dream State didn’t make my top reads, but I did find it beautifully immersive. I’d read more by him. I’d somehow completely missed that A Family Matter is about lesbian motherhood (thought it was a standard adoption story) so am now much keener to read it!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      As was her memoir, Small — both well worth reading!

      Liked by 1 person

  13. Marcie McCauley's avatar

    Spent, I forgot about Spent (I should have bought it after all): such an absolutely wonderful book. I would reread it in a second. I’d also like to read Ginseng. (And, BTW, speaking of graphic narratives, I read through the Heartstopper books this year — my only start-to-stop series this year, thanks to your saying you’d reread some of them. A very cute story: thank you!) Of the 2025s on my list, I’m not sure I’d say any are ones I think you should catch up on, but if the sound of this one appeals to you, you might appreciate, at the very least, how much she admires other memoirists (she added a few titles to my TBR too): Elissa Altman’s Permission. You might also enjoy it with your mother’s diaries in mind, how family stories are told/not told.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Glad you enjoyed Heartstopper!

      I reviewed the Altman early for Shelf Awareness but found it quite repetitive and not particularly enlightening.

      Like

      1. Marcie McCauley's avatar

        Well, then I won’t recommend that one to you after all. heheh (My experience was different, although having read so many books on the topic, I wouldn’t say enlightening either, but I’ve heard others say they found it to be so.)

        Like

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