
The best books I read in 2025, fiction and non-fiction … plus the other stuff as well
I'm not a very fast reader at all, but still I managed to read 48 books in 2025 (my original aim target 30, so maybe low-balling it a bit, eh). Below are my favourites, in both fiction and non-fiction … plus the others as well.
I keep track of my reading on The StoryGraph — a very nice independent alternative to GoodReads. You can find me over there at @joesb.
StoryGraph's summary of my reading year for 2025:
You lingered over quieter, thoughtful moments, felt every heartbeat on the page, and wandered through tales tinged with shadow.
A steady rhythm of stories kept the year moving along nicely.
How poetic.
The Best Fiction of 2025
Seascraper
by Benjamin Wood

A wonderfully quiet novel, with an deep and intimate focus on Thomas, a shanker who trawls the gloomy beach for shrimp in north-west England, all the while holding onto a powerful and personal dream as a folk musician and liberty from what seems like an inevitable future.
The Riders
by Tim Winton

My first Tim Winton novel, and an excellent place to start. A propulsive, tormenting premise keeps the deep characters and emotional starkness moving forward. Confusion escalates from bewilderment through despair to its final resting place, compounded by utter exhaustion. A great, great story.
Brave New World
by Aldous Huxley

A powerfully prescient novel for the times we're living in, a vision of a dystopia where we're 'amusing ourselves to death' (to quote the title of Neil Postman's seminal book on society in the age of mass media, which I also read this year). The story is maybe showing its age a little, but it's still profound and incredibly potent. I'm very glad to have read it, slightly ashamed I haven't previously.
The Great Gatsby
by F. Scott Fitzgerald

Another incredibly timely read. Fitzgerald was only 28 when he wrote Gatsby, his exquisite story of the 'careless people' of America in the Jazz Age — the echoes for the techbros and oligarchs of our modern times are deep and challenging.
James
by Percival Everett

I've not read Huckleberry Finn (I know!), but this retelling of the story from the point of view of enslaved Jim is excellent, following his quest for self-liberation and the irony of the many things and ways he hides.
The Best Non-Fiction of 2025
Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945
by Tony Judt

Truly life-changing. Judt paints a huge view of the currents and counter-currents that have shaped Europe since the end of World War 2 — and it's brilliant. My understanding of the current place and time in history on this continent (and the wider world) will never be the same.

Cory Doctorow is a superb tech journalist and communicator, but with the term 'enshittification' he has put his finger on a pungent force shaping our modern life. But it's more than that — it's also a hopeful view of what to do now that everything is so quickly going to shit.
On Friendship
by Andrew O'Hagan

A beautiful book of lyrical essays on the many forms of friendship. One of my favourite authors and a master of the essay form gives us a collection of deep reflections and meditations on the yearning for companionship and our need to come together, and how much richer we are because we do.
The Rest of 2025
Loads of the other books I read in 2025 were great, too (though not all!).
The Road to Freedom
— Economics and the Good Society
How Big Things Get Done
— The Surprising Factors That Determine the Fate of Every Project, from Home Renovations to Space Exploration and Everything in Between
Amusing Ourselves to Death
— Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business
Humankind
— A Hopeful History
Killing Eve
— Codename Villanelle
Going Nuclear
— How the Atom Will Save the World and Build a Sustainable Future
The Fire of Joy
— Roughly 80 Poems to Get by Heart and Say Aloud
The Wager
— A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and Murder






































