Well, it's that time of the year when everyone is doing their 'best and worst of' lists, so here is mine. I'm going to list the books and movies and records I read/watched/listened to in 2025 and then pick my favourites. This isn't restricted to what was new in 2025, but what I actually watched and read and heard - some of these items might be very old indeed.
Books:
I read the following in 2025:
That's worked out at 69 books this year, which is two down from last year. However, I've also read all or part of another 27 books in my role as one of the judges for the Otherwise awards (ongoing), plus I've proofread and copyedited around another 8 novels as work (with those which were exceptional also making the above list).
Thankfully there weren't many books that I read this year that I absolutely hated, with most of the books attaining either three or four stars in my Goodreads round-up which is equivalent to 'I liked it' and above. However I really struggled with Sarah Lotz's "The Three". where in the right hands, this story of three children who inexplicably survive three separate simultaneous plane crashes might have been a good idea. Unfortunately, Lotz goes down the route of telling the story through the 'book' of a journalist, who in herself is using interviews, witness accounts, secondhand information etc, to drive the story forwards. What I found most annoying, is that despite such a multitude of characters, they all speak in the same voice (barring some thoroughly inappropriate stereotypical racial mannerisms), so - quite frankly - the story is quite numbingly boring. Moving on, whilst I normally enjoy the short stories published as chapbooks under the Nightjar imprint, there were two which only gained either one or two Goodreads stars from me this year. I won't name them, as I think the appreciation of short stories can vary from reader to reader, more so than novels, and generally those in this series are never less than interesting.
I continued ploughing through George Simenon's Maigret novels, reading sixteen of those this year and enjoying all of them (and like last year, one more than the others). If I read around the same number next year I might potentially finish the series, even if that leaves me a little bereft. Speaking of which, unfortunately, this year saw the death of Tom Robbins, a writer I absolutely adore, so I decided to re-read his first novel, "Another Roadside Attraction", however my takeaway was that it was clearly a first novel, and despite flashes of brilliance it meandered and pontificated without his usual wit (something I remember thinking when I first read it in the 90s). I'd suggest, as an alternative, "Jitterbug Perfume", one of my favourite novels which I have re-read many times. Alongside "Another Roadside Attraction", other recommended 3 star reads (which are probably all 3.5) include "Death of the Author" by Nnedi Okorafor, which plays an interesting twist with AI (with a third-quarter-drag which could be explained by the twist at the end and in fact makes rethinking about the novel much more interesting); short story collections, "Licensed Premises" by Neil Campbell (a mixed collection with disquieting appeal) and "The Dream Operator" by Mike O'Driscoll (literary, visceral speculative fiction stories with "The Spaceman" - a kind of coming of age story - being my favourite. In fact, I'd recommended this book on that basis alone); "What's With Baum?" by Woody Allen (whilst the writing could be tighter in places and it needs a better edit, the story is strong and anyone interested in Allen and his movies will find enough familiarity here to enjoy); "Serotonin" by Michel Houellebecq (a novel which started at a cracking and intriguing pace but gradually became bogged down with detail that was far less interesting and which then - apart from a couple of sequences - descended into the same navel-gazing reflections which come to befall the protagonist); and the non-fiction books "Les Vampires" by Tim Major (about the film series of the same name, which reads never less than delightful) and "Under A Rock" by Chris Stein (As an insight into 'fame' this memoir is an insightful window into what happens when the media isn't looking).
There was a large number of 4 star reads this year, including a high number of Maigret novels. Others included Ray Cluley's first collection, now ten years old, "Probably Monsters" (a great selection of stories; proper literature, not just coathangers to hang scrappy, secondhand horror from, but heartfelt examinations of the human condition); "Suspicion" by Seichō Matsumoto (Matsumoto has a knack of really getting to the bottom of his characters and the story arc of the reporter in this novel is sublime, underpinning everything else with immaculate precision); "A Short Stay in Hell" by Steven L. Peck (a short novella which posits a potentially everlasting Hell with a twist: you can get out if you can find the story of your life in a vast library); "The Exopotamia Manuscript" by Maxim Jakubowski (there's a rich warmth to the telling of a man close to the end of his years reminiscing on what was and what might have been and in fact what actually could be); "Stray Pilot" by Douglas Thompson (an excellent piece of work about a pilot who disappears whilst chasing a UFO shortly after WW2 and subsequently reappears after eighty years to reconnect with his family and to warn humanity about climate change issues. This is possibly my favourite of Thompson's novels); "The Man Who Went Up in Smoke" by Maj Sjöwall & Per Wahlöö (the second in their Martin Beck detective series, which - like Maigret - I love and intend to read in full); "Eastmouth and Other Stories" by Alison Moore (a great collection of liminal stories which often capture moments of departure for each main subsequent character, whether tentatively celebratory or edging into the unknown); and "Moon Over Brendle" by Jeff Noon which I've copyedited for the publisher and is due to come out next year (you are in for a treat!).
There were several books this year that I'd rate 4.5/5 but which were just edged out of my top three. These were "They Called Us Enemy" by George Takei (a graphic novel about the treatment of US Japanese citizens in WW2, a timely read and a reminder that only a handful of decisions stand between many of us and our safety); "Lapvona" by Ottessa Moshfegh (a literary exploration of faith and filth); "Poppy Harp" by Simon Avery (a 'wonderfully lovely' folk horror novel, affectionately riffing off 1970s childrens television shows); and especially "The Ghost" by Terry Grimwood (a distillation of a what-if scenario, the consideration of whether what makes a man who he is – a monster, a saviour – is the weight of history, an accumulation of circumstances, or a straightforward personal choice. "The Ghost" is a superlative example of how the best fiction makes us feel: uncomfortable, thoughtful, stirred. I heartily recommend this work which I am still thinking months later).
As usual, however, I default to Goodreads for those few books which I rated 5/5 during the year, and on this occasion there were only three, which makes my final selection much easier. So, without further ado, here are my third place and then my top two favourite reads of 2025:
In reverse order:
"Maigret And The Old People" by Georges Simenon
"Nameless Lake" by Chris Parker
And the winner is:
"The Islanders" by Christopher Priest
Movies:
I watched the following in 2025:
"Bird" (2024) - Andrea Arnold
"Skinamarink" (2022) - Kyle Edward Ball
And the winner is...
"Werckmeister Harmonies" (2000) - Béla Tarr
Records:
I listened to the following albums in 2025:
And the winner is...
"Doctor Dark" (2025) - The Residents
I've been listening to The Residents for years and some of my favourites are early in their back catalogue ("Not Available", "Eskimo", "Commercial Album" etc), and this three-act opera described as 'a journey into the greasy world of euthanasia, drug abuse and an unhealthy obsession with heavy metal' is definitely up there with their best. Considering this album is 76 minutes long, I've heard this repeatedly since its release. The 'plot', which merges the true story of two teenagers who entered into a suicide pact, coupled with the Doctor Dark (based on Doctor Kevorkian, an advocate of a terminal patient's right to die by physician-assisted suicide), is ably supported by a wide breadth of music, and it's an absolute stonking classic. If you've never heard The Residents before, this would be a good place to start (bearing in mind their longevity, like Sparks, for this is their 47th studio album!). It's diverse, elegaic, and dirty-beautiful.




_poster.jpg)




No comments:
Post a Comment