Best Reads of 2025

Book Review, Books, Climate Fiction, Creative Non Fiction, Crime Fiction, Eco-criticism, Fantasy, Graphic Novels, Historical Fiction, Horror, Literary Fiction, Queer Literature, Science-Fiction, Speculative Fiction, Speculative historical fiction, Thrutopia, Weird Fiction

This was a hard year for me – I was ill for a lot of it which impacted on my reading speed. During the second half of December, however, I decided to consciously stop checking social media and make my life much more analogue. Surprising no one, this was the month I read the most – and also when I mentally felt the healthiest I’ve been in a long while. So this is something I’m hoping to embrace in 2026 – less time in the digital sphere and more time with a book in my hands…

Books that blew my mind:

The Tombs of Atuan by Ursula K Le Guin

Very late to the party with this one, I know, but it’s one of the best books I’ve ever read. Cosmic horror, philosophy and religion. Fantasy at its best. We follow a teenager who has been hailed as the high-priestess of an ancient religion. Who has been educated to believe she’s one of the most important humans on Earth – but actually, does she have any power at all to decide her own fate? The descriptions of the maze of caves under the tombs of Atuan had be dizzy with fear and wonder.

Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky

A premise that is so ridiculous that shouldn’t work: in their quest to restart the human race to terraform another planet (since humans have destroyed planet Earth) a scientist develops a virus that will drastically accelerate the evolutionary process of a group of monkeys. However, the virus ends up landing in a planet without its monkeys. The planet does have some form of life, though: spiders… Hear me out. This book is absolutely brilliant. I’m not a fan of spiders – actually, I’m really scared of the bigger ones – but this book had me in tears at the end rooting for the spider civilisation.

Most heartbreaking and beautiful non-fiction:

Hijab Butch Blues by Lama H

One of the best books I’ve read about the non-binary experience. It touches many interesting topics as well such as migration and religion. Plus I felt so inspired by the author’s experiences to embrace complicated truths in all its hardships and glories. Truly remarkable: it needs to be translated into many languages.

This Part is Silent by S J Kim

A gorgeous and heartbreaking book about being an immigrant, living in the in between of cultures and languages. And also, a compassionate and brave collection of essays about being a writer and an academic in the United Kingdom today. I’m in awe of the author who has so generously shared very complex and painful experiences.

Most ground-breaking graphic novels:

Feeding Ghosts by Tessa Hulls

This is the second graphic novel to earn a Pulitzer Prize (after Maus) and the recognition it is getting thanks to it is truly well-deserving. A complex and chilling overview of China’s recent history (specially its cultural revolution and the society that followed). A book also about generational trauma and complex family relationships. Also, a book about migration and multilingualism. As of this day, its author maintains she won’t ever create another graphic novel – this makes me sad, but also I think I understand as this is such a masterpiece!

It’s Lonely at the Centre of the Earth by Zoe Thorogood

Experimental, ambitious, one of the best books about depression and the artist experience I’ve ever read. It’s so playful and dark and nuanced. I know I will re-read it many times.

A book I enjoyed as a child and I still love today:

The Lottie Project by Jacqueline Wilson

One of the books that made me want to become a writer – I enjoyed going back to it as an adult as I could then read it in English, its original language. It was as good as I remembered.

Horror insights into the darkest parts of the human experience:

Old Soul by Susan Barker

A cosmic horror novel camouflaged as a literary thriller. Lyrical and experimental – and no less terrifying because of that. It asks a really interesting set of questions: why are we all so obsessed with being seen? And who are those bearing witness or observing, and what are their true intentions? A very original novel that combined settings all over the world with very distinctive narrators.

The Reformatory by Tananarive Due

One of the best horror books I’ve ever read which combines historical fiction with the speculative to create a gothic tale that won’t leave you indifferent. Books like this reaffirm to me how important it is to preserve our historical memory through fiction to remind us all of the atrocities of the past, but also, of the strength of people that survived them. Masterful and touching. I was shaking reading the last twenty pages or so – I haven’t been so moved by a book and its characters in a long time.

Books about gender I couldn’t stop thinking about:

Butter by Asako Yuzuki

This was a very hyped book – and I wasn’t sure was my thing at all until several good friends (and excellent readers) recommended it to me. Even though the blurb makes you think this is going to be a thriller, it goes way beyond the premise. An interesting meditation about the ways gender, fatphobia, food and care connect to each other. The main character is a journalist in her early thirties, more interested in her career than having a community, more interested in being thin (the society she lives in tells her a woman must be thin to be a good woman) than in enjoying delicious food and other visceral life pleasures. The ending still stays with me.

The Vegetarian by Kang

Very late to the party with this one too. A book that horrified me and yet I’m in awe of it. It was hard to read because it reminded me that sometimes being socialised as a woman comes with the understanding (from you, or imposed by others) that you a) are nothing but a piece of flesh others can enjoy or utilise as they see fit b) you don’t have any control over your own body, who may belong to a man, to the state or your family.

Looking back at these two books together (Butter and The Vegetarian) makes me see that they use genre (horror, crime) in very interesting ways to force us to question gender rules in society. Both books have women in them who take ownership over their bodies (and lives) by deciding what they want to consume even if this angers others. The difference in tone comes with the access their main characters have (or not) to a supportive community – in Butter, the main character has a very close friend who is also her supporter; she’s also financially independent (which gains her some basic freedom) and she’s able to form healthy bonds with others as she enters a period of intense change. In The Vegetarian the main character is irrevocably tied to her husband (she depends financially on him) and her family. This second book ends on a dark note that is quite difficult to digest.

Books that celebrate community and challenge our ideas about it:

Any Human Power by Manda Scott

This is an interesting one, because I don’t think it’s a perfect book by any means. In fact, at times I thought the characters seemed a bit too much like concepts the author wanted get across her audience. And yet, this was a fascinating read because it discussed the current sociopolitical situation of the place where I live (England) and used the speculative to imagine different ways into a more positive future. Despite of it not being a happy book at all, it was inspiring in a year when I felt like I had to work really hard to be hopeful. It also discovered me other interesting resources on how humans can co-exist with with the environment and with each other.

The Emperor of Gladness by Ocean Vuong

The characters felt so lost in their own complicated circumstances – and I said complicated because almost every character here has a background that means they are facing at least one form of discrimination – being an immigrant, being gay, being Black and so on. Like Hai, the main character of this novel, I’ve also worked in retail and found a very strong community through a job whose sole purpose seemed to dehumanise me. So this is why the story of Hai, who works in HomeMarket, a fast food outlet part of a national chain with a manager who actually cares about every single employer in this job that many would dismiss rang true to me. I was also very interested in the intergenerational friendship between nineteen-year-old Hai and eighty-two-year-old Grazina.

Families are complicated: December 2025 Reading Log

Book Review, Books, Climate Fiction, Creative Non Fiction, Crime Fiction, Eco-criticism, Fantasy, Historical Fiction, Horror, Literary Fiction, Nature Writing

Motherhood by Sheila Heti

I’ve wanted to read this book for a long time, so I jumped in glee when I discovered my library had the audiobook. It is narrated by the author (which is always enjoyable) so I borrowed it as quickly as I could. I listened to it in a few days (it’s a short one) through the darkness and rain of early December in the north.

I loved it and hated it – this was one book to inspire lots of feelings in me, often contradictory. I found the author’s voice annoying yet compelling. She narrates this book using, partly, the I-ching – she asks questions to it as if she was speaking to a god of sorts, or the universe, or a superior intelligence. This is amusing and strange – because, of course, she always tries to make sense of the answers she gets, which sound serene, loving, rarely random.

Provocateurs, agitators and change-makers: March 2025 Reading Long

Book Review, Books, Creative Non Fiction, Crime Fiction, Graphic Novels, Horror, Literary Fiction, Queer Literature, Science-Fiction, Speculative Fiction

Overwork by Brigid Schulte

I found this book in the ‘highlights’ section of my local library, and it came at the right time. Since suffering from academic burnout (and depression and anxiety) during my PhD (while having six other part-time jobs to make a living, because my studentships weren’t really enough), I became interested in work and all the social and legal implications around it. I consider myself an artist first (a writer, primarily). Still, I’ve also had a series of jobs to make a living because the money I make from my writing is pitiful and doesn’t even remotely get close to minimum wage. I know this is the case for many of my writer friends (actually, all of them). I’m pretty fine with it. I mean, I know writing as a profession is extremely devalued, and I’d like to fight to change things in that regard. But I also enjoy having other occupations – I’m a social creature by nature and an extrovert. When I was working in retail, for example, I really thrived by serving other people and aiming to make their days better through our short interactions. It not only made me feel useful, but it also made me feel closer to my community. (For context, I worked as a bookseller for a few years.) Now, I despise some jobs I’ve done (ahem, marketing is pretty up on the list, it was too soul crushing) and loved others (being an academic, teaching and researching Creative Writing). But the constant of my job life has been marked by overwork, uncertainty, precariousness, and generally feeling dehumanised by the businesses I have been part of as an employee. Sometimes I’ve wondered if that’s my fault (am I too sensitive, like my grandmother used to say? Am I just weak? Am I just too much of an idealist?) But also, slowly but surely, I come to realise that a lot of systems we are part of are not designed to make us feel cherished, or to make us feel like our development matters or that we are important. On the contrary, we are treated as liabilities, as highly disposable parts.

Mouthwatering food, time-travelling and the craft: January 2025 Reading Log

Book Review, Books, Creative Non Fiction, Crime Fiction, Fantasy, French, Graphic Novels, Horror, Literary Fiction, Science-Fiction

Butter by Asako Yuzuki

I read this while on holiday and loved every page. Not only is this an engaging thriller, but also an interesting social critique of the relationship many women and femmes have with food and their own bodies. Even though the story is set in Japan, I could still relate to it even from my European experience. The obsession with eating as little as possible to fit into the smallest clothing sizes, for example, rang very true for me, especially as someone born and raised in Spain. (I may be wrong here, but I find the female beauty standards in the UK a tad more relaxed, which I appreciate.)

An interesting thing about this story is that it is based on a real criminal case in Japan where a woman was accused of killing (probably by poisoning them) her much older lovers. Apparently, this was a case that shocked the nation because the woman in question turned out to be ‘not beautiful’ (meaning, she was seen as fat by others) – so everyone wondered, how could she have been desirable for those men who ended up being her victims?

Best Reads of 2024

Book Review, Climate Fiction, Creative Non Fiction, Crime Fiction, Eco-criticism, Fantasy, Graphic Novels, Horror, Literary Fiction, Queer Literature, Science-Fiction, Speculative Fiction, Thrutopia

2024 was another good year for reading – even better than 2023, it turned out. I feel I have successfully developed a good reading habit again and nothing makes me happier these days than sitting down with a coffee and a book to lose myself in it. This year I did a lot of international adventures – including two transatlantic trips (California and NYC), long car journeys into the far north (the Highlands) and the far south (Cornwall) and crossing Europe by train – and books kept me company all along. 

I’ve also realised that many books in this year’s list (almost half) are written by trans and non-binary authors and almostall books are queer in some degree or another – something that I wasn’t necessarily actively pursuing but I suppose reflects some (internal) journey I may have gone through in 2024!

Here is a selection of what I enjoyed the most this past year.

Indigenous horror and a certain French flavour: November 2024 Reading Log

Book Review, Books, Climate Fiction, Crime Fiction, Eco-criticism, French, Horror, Indigenous, Literary Fiction, Queer Literature

Never Whistle At Night edited by Shane Hawk and Theodore C. Van Alst Jr.

Version 1.0.0

This was a highly anticipated collection for me – as soon as I knew it existed I went to get a copy.

In this book, indigenous authors use elements of their own cultural background to revisit and reinvent many tropes and archetypes commonly found in horror fiction.

As this is an anthology by many authors, the tones, approaches and styles vary enormously from story to story. In fact, one of the best things about this collection is that it’s allowed me to discover writers I’m now very curious about and would love to read more from in the future. Here there is a short list of the stories I enjoyed the most:

Some dark retellings: October 2024 Reading Log

Book Review, Books, Climate Fiction, Creative Non Fiction, Crime Fiction, Eco-criticism, Graphic Novels, Horror, Queer Literature, Speculative Fiction

Diaries of War by Nora Krug

I love Krug’s graphic novel memoir Heimat, which is a fascinating meditation on the value of historical fiction, not only for the descendants of those who have been treated unfairly but also for the descendants of those who perpetrated violent acts or allowed them to happen because they benefited them in some way or another.

It is clear that Krug is interested in the consequences of war and conflict – and how people deal with them. So Diaries of War is a bit of an experiment (and an interesting one at that). Right after Russia attacked Ukraine and a war between these two countries started (an ongoing conflict) she contacted two people she knew from the arts and literary industries. One was a journalist in Ukraine, and the other one was an illustrator in Russia. She proposed them she’d get in touch once a week to ask for updates on their daily lives as the conflict progressed – she’d then illustrate these to create a book that captured perspectives from both sides.

Parents, Families and Trouble: February 2024 Reading Log

Book Review, Books, Crime Fiction, Fantasy, Horror, Literary Fiction, Queer Literature, Weird Fiction

Nettle and Bone by T Kingfisher

I really enjoyed T Kingfisher’s writing style when I read The Twisted Ones, so when I got this book for my birthday I was really looking forward to it – especially as some of my friends said they thought I’d love this one even more. They were right.

First of all, this is a revenge quest, and I have a thing for revenge quests. I adore them, there’s something about getting what you are owed in the end that I just– yeah, I know life is not often like this, which is perhaps why I really like characters to get some retribution in fiction.

Defying form and conventions: September 2023 Reading Log

Book Review, Books, Crime Fiction, Fantasy, Horror, Literary Fiction, Queer Literature, Science-Fiction

The Gathering by Anne Enright

I’m always intrigued by books that whin the Booker prize. To be honest, I wasn’t really aware of the Booker and its significance in the literary world until I started working in a bookshop. There, the day of the launch of the long-list would always be a big event, and we would display all the chosen books in a special table. There would be people who came to buy them all read them and draw their own conclusions about which book deserved to win the final prize and why. Things would get even more interesting with the announcement of the shortlist and, finally, the winner (which was always controversial, some customers would come saying how the winning book was actually not that good and such and such other book should have won instead…) Which really tells you a lot about prizes and how subjectivity plays an essential part when judging their value.

I had no idea what The Gathering was about when I started reading, and it’s also my first piece by this particular author – who I’d heard from before. The first thing that became evident was the quality of the writing: superb. I was immediately drawn into the story by its unreliable narrator, a woman trying to make sense of a memory she has from childhood (or that she think she has, things are not completely clear in that regard). She’s convinced that, if she manages to remember it all, she’ll finally understand why her older brother Liam died by suicide.

Genders and genres: June 2023 Reading Log

Book Review, Books, Crime Fiction, Horror, Literary Fiction, Queer Literature, Science-Fiction, Speculative Fiction

One Last Stop by Casey McQuiston

This is not at all the kind of book I’d normally gravitate towards since romance is one of the genres I read less of (to put it generously). But because this was one my book club’s pick of the month and I decided to go with it. And, spoiler alert, I was pleasantly surprised. 

This is the book I would have loved to read when I was a teenager. Honestly. It would have saved me lots of heartache to see more positive queer relationships portrayed in stories back then. You have to understand that during my teenage years in Spain the only queer couple I read about was Louis and Lestat in Interview with the Vampire (a novel that I loved at the time, but that’s another story) or the turbulent gay relationships in Lost Souls and Drawing Blood by Billy Martin. I still remember the first time I realised I was queer – and I thought, fuck. I had a lot of internalised homophobia. I could find some books abut gay men, but women? It was almost as if we didn’t really exist.

So I think it’s very important that young adults can read fiction like this, where the main character, August, can fall in love with a charismatic older girl, Jane, she meets in the New York’s underground, and it’s natural, and it’s fine, and is not even the point of the story. The point of the story, actually, is to show August’s coming of age journey in New York (while she tries to finish university an decide what she wants to do with her life, hello being twenty-three years old). The point of the story is also a bizarre sci-fi twist that includes some time-travelling theory and which definitely didn’t make sense (even for someone like me who doesn’t always get all of the science). But you go with it because by the time this comes up in the plot you’re already invested in the characters.