January 2026
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    I have read between 25 – 45 books per year since the 90s, and have been pretty active on this sub for a couple of years, often recommending books for others. I have not yet asked for recs for myself so I thought I would try for 2026.

    Here are my top reads from last year, 5/5:

    Sense of an Ending – Julian Barnes (re-read): so much space for my own conclusions. Was the £500 money Tony had sent Veronica's mother for an abortion?

    Notes On a Scandal – Zoe Heller: narrator's caustic wit made me laugh out loud.

    The Safekeep – Yael VanDer Wouden: did Eva prostitute herself just to get her family home back?

    Nutshell – Ian McEwan: such a funny and unique narrator, laughed so much. "Claude, as in Debussy?"

    London Fields – Martin Amis: weird, strange, laugh-out-loud. Darts!

    My Friends – Hisham Matar: beautiful meditation on friendship and life's path.

    Here are a couple I was less impressed with, but still 2.5-3/5:

    Affinity – Sarah Waters: Atmosphere 10/10 but the plot matured a little too slowly for me.

    The Secret History – Donna Tartt: Part 2 was so boring and repetitive and it got to the stage where I really couldn't care less about any of the characters.

    And one I hated:

    Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead – Olga Tokarczuk: Only DNF from the past couple of years

    I read a lot, and I'd like to think my reading is quite varied, though I do tend to steer clear of a lot of genre fiction. I absolutely love books where I get to make up my own mind about what the characters are actually thinking, why they are doing things, etc. and I hate books that try to enforce their morals on me.

    Just now, while typing this post, I realised that many of the books I have rated highly this year have first person narrators, often unreliable.

    Looking for suggestions – with a short one liner on why you think it is a good fit for me.

    Thanks.

    by YerManOnTheMac

    3 Comments

    1. BoringTrouble11 on

      The Heart Goes Last, Margaret Atwood – multiple unreliable narrators 

      Never Let Me Go, Kazuo Ishiguro- plot twist and sci fi 

    2. The Outline Trilogy by Rachel Cusk. Quick reads where the first person narration and musings are the main attraction. 

    3. WonderingWhy767 on

      Migrations by Charlotte McConaghy

      The Girl Who Wrote Loneliness by Kyung-sook Shin

      Olive Kitteridge, and Olive Again, by Elizabeth Strout

      The Island of Missing Trees by Elif Shafak

      Don’t Cry For Me by Daniel Black

      The Book of Harlan by Bernice McFadden

      Plus two that are lit fic with a twist on reality, just in case you want a bit of literary adventure:

      She Would Be King by Wayétu Moore

      Smoke City by Keith Rosson

      Happy 2026 🙂

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