The Best Books of 2025: Round One

Well, well, well, if it isn’t 2026 already.

If Goodreads is to be believed, I read 62 books in 2025. I smashed the goals I set for myself to read more short story collections and books in translation (7/6 and 16/4, respectively), read exactly six stellar poetry collections, and fell just short of my goal for craft books (5/6). Can’t win em all!

I also finally finished Emily Wilson’s translation of The Iliad in December, and successfully led a cute little Proust book club over the summer to read Volume One of In Search of Lost Time. All in all, it was another fabulous year for books, and I’m proud of the way I challenged myself to broaden my regular reading horizons.

But we’re not done yet.

Welcome, friends, to Round One of the Best Books of 2025 bracket! 2025 may be over, but we can’t put it to bed entirely without first crowning a winner.

2025 Book Bracket with book cover images filling the first round of spots

This is my third year running this bracket, and I’m amped to dive into these match-ups. Not only were there some absolute bangers in the top spots this year, but a lot of these books also explored many of the same themes in surprisingly complementary ways.

I think this year’s bracket is going to be a really cool reflection/accumulation of a lot of the thoughts I’ve had this year about time, space, and art, so it’s going to be interesting to see what comes out on top as a marker of my final takeaways for the year.

But enough preamble, let’s dive in! You can also read this directly on my Substack here:


ROUND ONE:

Book cover images of Orbital by Samantha Harvey vs. Bird by Bird by Anna Lamott

Orbital by Samantha Harvey vs. Bird by Bird by Anne Lamott

A tough one to start us off with! Two books in totally different genres that I loved for totally different reasons. As much as I enjoyed and feel that I have made good use of the wisdom that is Bird by Bird, I feel like Orbital set the tone for much of the reading I did for the rest of the year. The explorations of time and (literal) space, and how we navigate the physical and temporal spaces we have and the people inside of them, feel like defining themes for 2025. Plus, the kid version of me who wanted to be an astronaut still gets goosebumps thinking about Harvey’s descriptions of seeing Earth from space. For these reasons, Orbital advances.

The Queen of the Night by Alexander Chee vs. The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley

I’m already upset because I loved both of these books so much. The Queen of the Night was hands-down the best audiobook I listened to all year, and scores points for hitting many of my favorite elements of historical fiction: eighteenth-century Paris, theatre, the circus, romance, self re-invention. But The Ministry of Time also ticked a bunch of my boxes (namely, time travel and hot Victorian love interests).

I think what it comes down to is that The Ministry of Time took an angle I haven’t seen explored in time travel fiction before, making both its characters and readers answer the same questions about the state of our current world, how we choose to share it with those we love, and the lengths we’d go to protect our version of events. For novelty and long-term thought provocation, The Ministry of Time advances, but I will forever be recommending The Queen of the Night as one of my new all-time favorite historical fiction novels.

Book cover images for Good Morning, Midnight by Jean Rhys vs. Stories from the Tenants Downstairs by Sidik Fofana

Good Morning, Midnight by Jean Rhys vs. Stories from the Tenants Downstairs by Sidik Fofana

What I admire most about Stories from the Tenants Downstairs is how vividly Fofana captured all of the individual voices in a way that clearly distinguished them but also thematically united them. And yet, Good Morning, Midnight was the one that somehow stuck with me longer.

This may just be the nature of the format—I felt more emotionally connected to Rhys’s protagonist and her corner of Paris in a way that there wasn’t time to do with the individual characters in Fofana’s story collection. In a quieter, subtler sense, Good Morning, Midnight also feels on theme for the year with its exploration of how time changes people and places, rendering them unreliable at best and unrecognizable at worst. Highly recommend both again, but Good Morning, Midnight advances here!

Book cover images for Agua Viva by Clarice Lispector vs. Swann's Way by Marcel Proust

Água Viva by Clarice Lispector vs. Swann’s Way by Marcel Proust

This is such a funny match-up to me, because even though on the surface these could not seem more different, there’s a weird thematic similarity between these two books. One is bite-sized and I read it twice in one weekend, and the other I read slowly over the course of eight weeks. One expressed itself in immediacy, in short bursts of thought and feeling, and the other had long, meandering sentences that went on for entire pages.

Yet both focus on a driving sense of interiority, with the aim of rendering that interiority into something consumable, of capturing the immediate moment as thoroughly as possible with the limited means available to the artists: that is, words. Honestly, if I were a professor, I would pair these books together in the same syllabus because I think they make a surprisingly effective companion read, but for the sake of the bracket, I’m going with Água Viva because its brevity was such a relief after a summer of Proust.

Book cover images for I Who Have Never Known Men by Jacqueline Harpman and Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel

I Who Have Never Known Men by Jacqueline Harpman vs. Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel

Another devastating match-up, because I remain deeply obsessed with both of these books. Wolf Hall tapped into my formerly forgotten obsession with Tudor England with prose so freaking lovely and intimate you almost forget you’re witnessing the making of not one, but two notorious tyrants. It’s the best kind of historical fiction, and I’m so looking forward to finishing the trilogy in 2026. And yet I Who Have Never Known Men wasn’t just one of the best books I read this year, but maybe the past decade? It’s one I continue to think about months after reading, and that feels somehow uniquely tailored to the anxieties of our current society, despite being thirty years old. For sheer staying power, I Who Have Never Known Men advances.

Book cover images for Red Bird by Mary Oliver vs. On the Calculation of Volume III by Solvej Balle

Red Bird by Mary Oliver vs. On the Calculation of Volume III by Solvej Balle

A tough one for sweet Mary Oliver, because as delightful as this collection of poems is, Red Bird is woefully outmatched here. The third and most recent installment of On the Calculation of Volume (and frankly, the entire series) consumed so much of my reading and thinking brain in the back half of 2025 that little else seems to stand a chance.

I loved this third installment in particular for the way it somehow managed to introduce a plot into this otherwise meditative, introspective series, and for how it continued to expand the world in a way that still left you with more questions than you started with. I’m excited to see OTCOVIII face some of the other advancing books; competition seems STIFF for book of the year, but this one is definitely one to watch.


2025 Book Bracket with book cover images filling the first and second round spots

And then there were six! Stay tuned for Round 2 coming at you later this week. Would love to hear your thoughts on the results of the first round in the meantime, especially if you’ve read any of these too!

Until next time, happy reading!
❤ Catherine


Housekeeping note: all book links go to my Bookshop storefront, where each purchase supports independent bookstores (and this newsletter, because I get a small percentage of each sale).

Beneath every history, another history

Lit Chat Vol. 31 — October in Review

Pyramid of book cover images. On the bottom: Sour Cherry by Natalia Theodoridou, (Th)ings and (Th)oughts by Alla Gorbunova, and Empire of Storms by Sarah J. Maas; In the middle: How to Break Up with Your Phone by Catherine Price and The Secret History by Donna Tartt; On the top, Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel

Hi friends,

Does anyone else feel like time has been moving suspiciously fast and loose this year? Like I blinked, and suddenly, it’s November.

I’m trying to be really intentional about my reading for the rest of the year, keeping in mind the original reading goals I set for myself, but my library holds keep delivering all at once! This is, unfortunately, the Way of the Library.

I have nine books currently checked out and one on hold to be picked up, which puts me in a bit of a reading pickle, actually. Which highly anticipated new release from six months ago will get to skip the TBR line so it can get returned in time to check out the highly anticipated new release from three months ago?? It’s getting pretty high-stakes over here.

Speaking of high stakes, I’m also starting to think about my Best Books of 2025 bracket, because there have been some absolute bangers in the top spot lately (this month, especially!!!) and I’m excited to see them duke it out.

But before I get too far ahead of myself, let’s get into October’s books! Per usual, if you prefer to get this post delivered right to your inbox, you can subscribe to my Substack here:


THE FOUNDATION:

Book cover images for Sour Cherry by Natalia Theodoridou, (Th)ings and (Th)oughts by Alla Gorbunova, and Empire of Storms by Sarah J. Maas

Sour Cherry — Natalia Theodoridou

This one seemed like it would check all my boxes: fairy tales, Gothic mansions, dark curses—yes, please! Sadly, I didn’t feel this book lived up to its potential. It’s essentially a retelling of the Bluebeard fairytale, but in this version, the cursed lord doesn’t kill his wives outright, but leaches life from his surroundings until everything he touches eventually turns to rot. The prose is beautiful and dream-like, but I wanted the story to go deeper beneath the fairytale, to explore more of the characters’ interiority and the mechanics of its world. Instead, it jumps perspective too often to feel settled in one character, and the modern-day narrative throughline felt underdeveloped. I get what it was trying to do in terms of allegorizing toxic masculinity, but it felt like this was at the expense of the actual story. A miss for me, unfortunately!

(Th)ings and (Th)oughts — Alla Gorbunova, tr. Elina Alter

Shoutout to Sarah McEachern for slipping me this galley from the Deep Vellum tent at the Brooklyn Book Festival in September! These absurdist shorts were the perfect kick-off to my month, vignettes that span the weird and the tender and somehow felt both universal and definitively Russian. Often just a few pages long, each short prose piece contains an entire mini universe, filled with bumbling and bewildered characters who search for meaning in religion, nature, train stations, municipal cemeteries, folk tales, and of course, the many frustrations and fulfillments of love. I’ll admit I’m not as well-versed in Russian literature as I am in other literary traditions, but I was reminded of Gogol in the surrealism overlaid onto even the most mundane settings, transforming something as banal as a trip to the gynecologist into a profound and revelatory experience.

Empire of Storms — Sarah J. Maas

That’s right, #5 in the series! These are getting harder to write about without spoilers. However! I’ll say that what I enjoyed most from this installment was seeing all the different characters’ storylines finally intersect as Aelin begins to consolidate her allies, and I’m always just as surprised and delighted as the rest of her team to discover how her scheming ultimately pays off. I’m also perpetually interested in the mechanics of power in fiction (both magical and political/interpersonal), so the chess game that is building an army, fighting battles, and strategizing for a war is something that’s keeping and holding my interest in these later books. Onwards, to book #6, I guess!


SOLID SUPPORTS:

Book cover images for How to Break Up with Your Phone by Catherine Price and The Secret History by Donna Tartt

How to Break Up with Your Phone — Catherine Price

If you’ve seen me in the past month, then you’ve probably already heard me preach about this book and/or my journey to be on my phone less (and likely more than once, sorry!). Spoiler alert: we’re all addicted to our phones. Like, clinically. And it’s not okay! We’ve normalized it because we’re all doing the same thing, but if we swapped our phones out for cigarettes or alcohol in terms of our obsessive usage and the anxiety we feel around having/not having them, it’d be pretty obvious that we all have a problem.

This book does an incredible job of first opening our eyes to the fact that our time and attention are being intentionally manipulated away from us and sold to the highest bidder (aka advertisers on social media), then provides an accessible, mindfulness-based 30-day plan for reclaiming our time/memories/attention spans/lives in general. If you (like me!) are noticing a spike in tiredness, boredom, or general dissatisfaction—especially with the recent time change—or if you often catch yourself thinking you could do so much more with your day if you only had a couple extra hours: put down your phone. That’s where your extra time is. Read this book and take back your life!!!

The Secret History — Donna Tartt

This was such a funny reading experience for two main reasons. The first is that I listened to this on audio, narrated by Donna Tartt herself, and was shocked to discover that she has a little southern twang! This unfortunately meant that her voice for Bunny veered dangerously into Bugs Bunny territory, which I wasn’t sure I was going to be able to get used to, but now I can’t separate Donna’s dulcet tones from the internal monologue of Richard Papin.

The second reason this was funny is that this was technically a re-read. I first read this book in high school (on a recommendation from Kate, if I recall correctly!), but I remembered almost nothing except Bunny’s death and the bacchanal (not spoilers, trust me). The things my impressionable young brain held onto!

Reading this as an adult is a comparatively wild experience. I remember thinking the college-aged characters were such glamorous adults when I read this as a teenager, with their seemingly extensive knowledge of ancient Greek and casual alcoholism. As an adult, you realize that even the most intelligent and collected of them is just a kid in over his head. This book is an absolute master class in atmosphere and tension, and there’s something weirdly nostalgic about the pre-Internet of it all. You simply can’t kill your friends and get away with it like you used to, these days!


THE TIPPY TOP:

Book cover image for Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel

Wolf Hall — Hilary Mantel

Who would have expected that my second obsession this month (next to reducing my screen time) would be the court of Henry VIII? Actually, this is likely not a surprise to anyone who knows me. I’ve been obsessed with this kind of fictional biography deep-dive, and this era in particular, since reading Margaret George’s Autobiography of Henry VIII back in high school. Returning to the Tudor court via the eyes of Thomas Cromwell was exactly what my newfound attention span was begging for.

I mentioned earlier that I’m interested in fictional explorations of power, and what better example than this book? Thomas Cromwell, the son of an abusive blacksmith, rises through the ranks of Henry VIII’s court by spreading influence throughout Europe and cultivating a network of allies and informers until he is one of the king’s most trusted advisors. He is personally responsible for many of the machinations that ultimately enable Henry to divorce Katherine of Aragon, proclaim himself head of the Church of England, and put Anne Boleyn on the throne. And that’s just book one.

I’m grateful I read this book when I did, at a time when I was putting special emphasis on retraining my brain and my attention span, because there’s a quietness and a delicacy to the language that requires you to slow down and let it all soak in. Mantel brings these notorious characters to life with such gorgeous intimacy and interiority, while at the same time fostering an atmosphere of intrigue that makes one of history’s oldest and most famous stories feel like a truly novel page turner. This is definitely going to be another contender for my top book of the year, and I can’t wait to read the rest of the trilogy.


And that’s October done! What are you trying to squeeze in before the year’s over? Personally, I will be going home to binge Patricia Lockwood’s (overdue from the library) Will There Ever Be Another You so I can return it this weekend and check out R.F. Kuang’s Katabasis, which also came in this week.

The end is in sight, folks! And there’s still so much reading time left. As always, thanks for being here, and until next time, happy reading!

❤ Catherine


Housekeeping note: all book links go to my Bookshop storefront, where each purchase supports independent bookstores (and this newsletter, because I get a small percentage of each sale).