What have you been reading this January, 2026? > Likes and Comments
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Tony
(last edited Dec 31, 2025 11:18PM)
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Dec 31, 2025 11:18PM
Happy New year and welcome to 2026. I've got 3 chapters left in War in 2080 and about 60 pages left in The High Crusade.
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Part of my Amazon Music subscription gives me one free Audible audiobook each month. I am using it to listen to The Silmarillion, this being the latest version, narrated by Andy Serkis. While I am quite familiar with The Silmarillion, I feel this version would be very accessible to people who are interested, but put off by its daunting reputation. This can also fill the Alternate Form Bingo slot.
Tony wrote: "Part of my Amazon Music subscription gives me one free Audible audiobook each month. I am using it to listen to The Silmarillion, this being the latest version, narrated by Andy Se..."That sounds cool!
I read A Grim Reaper's Guide to Cheating Death
, which is the second book in the series, although the way it ended, it seems like it will be duology. Google gives me no help as to whether the author intends to write a third. It was good and already filled in a Bingo slot!
I have finished The High Crusade. The book has a ridiculous premise that Poul Anderson makes work wonderfully well. Successfully enough, in fact, that it was nominated for the Hugo in 1961. A most enjoyable read.
Had a couple carryovers from my vampire themed year last year.Finished the second half of Sons of Destiny that wraps up the Cirque du Freak 12 book series. It was an interesting and sad end to the series. Must admit it grew on me over time.
Though I had started a bit on The Portrait of Dorian Gray, I have a library book that I must return on the 6th which seemed far away for some reason, but today is the 2nd, and I'm working the 6th so I will have to return it on the 5th, so that only gives me 3 days to read it! I can't renew it since its already at its limit. So I'm starting on The Radleys by Matt Haig
My first book of the year was an espionage novel, The Summer Guests. Retired CIA agents solving mysteries. Love this series.
I rather enjoyed The Radleys it was a fun take on urban vampires. For those familiar with British fantasy/horror dramedy TV series 'Being Human' it covers similar ground.
I am trying out some light Lit rpgs this year. Starting out with he who fights monsters. seems fun so far. Nice worldbuilding, the first few chapters needed better editing though.
Georgann wrote: "I read A Grim Reaper's Guide to Cheating Death
, which is the second book in the series, although the way it ended, it ..."I have the first one on hold.
Starting with Unruly: The Ridiculous History of England's Kings and Queens and Bastille vs. the Evil Librarians.
Robin wrote: "I rather enjoyed The Radleys it was a fun take on urban vampires. For those familiar with British fantasy/horror dramedy TV series 'Being Human' it covers similar ground."I'm enjoying it, and blazing through it pretty quick since it has those short chapters. I'm liking the father's POV the most, here he is taking out the garbage and thinking he could be flying across Europe instead :) Glad I decided to read it rather than just return to the library unread.
I really enjoyed Garden Spells
. I, too, was glad I read it and didn't return to the library unread!
I'm re-reading Dune. I haven't read all books in the series and this year I really want remedy that.
Georgann wrote: "I really enjoyed Garden Spells
. I, too, was glad I read it and didn't return to the library unread!"That was good! I was surprised.
Yrret wrote: "“Rhapsody” from the Symphony of Ages series by Elizabeth Haydon. It’s my second read."That series has been on my shelf for ages but I haven't gotten to it yet. As a musician, I'm hoping it will intrigue me.
Finished The Radleys (fun take on vampires) and now I can continue where I had intended to start in the first place, with The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde for my Gothic Reading Month and BINGO slot.
Happy New Years everyone! Currently reading Johnathan Strange and Mr Norrel by Susanna Clark. Flabbergasted that this is a modern book. The worldbuilding feels trippingly real (I might shyly look up some of the tidbits to see if anything is part of real myths or history…) the writing is very good (so far), and it feels like a very very long and oddly meandering book from another era. 200 pages in and I feel like we should be 80% done with a plot that hasn’t exactly begun yet, though it’s also very intriguing and the narration is magical. I didn’t know you could write a book like this. And a debut novel? No freaking way…
Oh. Last year I also completed The Secret Garden and The Artistic Anatomy of Trees. The secret garden was pretty good, but not substantial enough for me in takeaways. The tree art book was top tier of course, which is why such an old book would still be in print. I will not look at plants the same :)
Peony wrote: "Happy New Years everyone! Currently reading Johnathan Strange and Mr Norrel by Susanna Clark. Flabbergasted that this is a modern book. The worldbuilding feels trippingly real (I might shyly look u..."Truly, it's an amazing book for those who like it. There are those who don't like the world-building enough to stick out the opening.
Andy wrote: "The Rose Field, book 3 of the book of dust by Pullman."Oh! I didn't even know that was out yet! Nice. Does that wrap up the trilogy or is there more to the series?
continuing with the dungeon crawler carl series
its split into subsections because there are so many continuing plots and new thing specific to the 6th floor. some chapters where carl and donut met up with a group of elf NPCs from the 3rd floor were a bit slow because the show runners told them to stay out of the main quest and they added a random ware-caterpillar to that party which was weird and added nothing to the plot in my opinion. but so far the other quests are good. vampires, giant mantis things hunting crawlers, swamp creatures, and carl goes to crawl con which is funny. im trying not to read it too fast so i don't run out of books before the next one.otherwise i want to finish
finished first 3 and they were good liked plot characters and world building but i keep putting book 4 down because of a lag in the action one group of MCs is planning a battle and one MC has spent her POV chapters doing nothing but getting shitfaced in a bar away from the action and i think im a 1/4 done so i really hope it picks up again because so far i had enjoyed the series.
Kaladin wrote: "I'm re-reading Dune. I haven't read all books in the series and this year I really want remedy that."Are you planning to read just the Dune books written by Frank Herbert? Or are you planning to expand it to include all the books written by Brian Herbert / Kevin Anderson (a much bigger reading list)?
I have read The Skull, a short story by Philip K Dick. I enjoyed it, but the plot twist was pretty obvious.
Andy wrote: "That wraps up the trilogy. Andrea"Nice, was waiting for that before starting a whole re-read from the beginning :)
As for Dune, while Frank's books are the best ones (though they get progressively weirder), however the 6 book series isn't finished, the last one ends with a character flying off into space to try to find safety and you're left hanging.
His son wrote two books, based on Frank's notes, that finish series. Though to really understand what's happening in those two books, you might need to pull in a few more (but by far definitely not all) of the books that Brian wrote. *checks* It would be the Legends of Dune trilogy. It was something Frank has also intended to write but didn't get to, and the final conclusion won't make sense without this background.
I actually ended up reading all the books by the son, but there was definitely a fair amount that I felt didn't need to exist and were just milking the hype around the movies. But it was kind of nice to see where the series was supposed to end, I sorta liked the final twist :)
I have finished War in 2080. It's nicely written and Langford has sensibly kept most of his predictions very general, because on the few occasions where he did get a bit more specific, the passage of even half of his 100-year look ahead has shown his predictive abilities to be not bold enough. There are parts (although not many) that do require a modicum of scientific literacy.



