I Continue To Be a Book Drunkard

by admin | January 2, 2026 8:49 am

A new year has arrived, meaning it is time for me to look back on what books struck my fancy in 2025. I will provide some recommendations for anyone interested. But first, some personal statistics:

The shortest book completed in 2025 was What the Chicken Knows, by Sy Montgomery. It’s a mere 91 pages in length but proved invaluable to two newbies at caring for chickens. We have had four Cinnamon Queen laying hens since April. They provide eggs and enjoyment in equal measure daily. That is no eggageration.

Sorry. I have a weakness for egg puns.

Here is a sampling of the books that stood out from last year:

Non-fiction

Original Sin: President Biden’s Decline, Its Cover-Up, and His Disastrous Choice to Run Again, by Jake Tapper and Alex Thompson (332 pages). The title sums up the book’s contents. It was depressing to read. Biden’s hubris in insisting on running for re-election, with ample assistance from his enablers, has left our country in the hands of a despotic grifter. This account is well-reported by Tapper, a CNN veteran, and Thompson, the national political correspondent for Axios and also a CNN contributor. Reading it was bitter medicine, but necessary, at least for me.

Fiction

Sound familiar? As Penny notes: I wrote this book over the course of 2024, and turned in the final draft to my publisher in September 2024. Imagine my surprise in January 2025 when I started spotting headlines that could have been ripped from the book…

Oh, Canada!

If you are interested in what else hit my shelves last year, go to goodreads.com and search for me by name. Here’s to a book-filled 2026!

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://garyborders.com/pages/i-continue-to-be-a-book-drunkard/2025-books/

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