Books I read in 2025

I have to admit that I was really lazy this summer so I spent a lot of time reading throughout the year.

  • The Big One: How To Prepare for World-Altering Pandemics to Come – Michael T. Osterholm – I’d recommend this to everyone who lived through the COVID pandemic but I know about half of them wouldn’t believe anything in the book.
  • Watchers – Dean Koontz
  • The Funhouse – Dean Koontz – This is an adaptation of the Tobe Hooper film but it’s really more like a prequel to the events of the movie which are only covered in the last third of the book.
  • Carl’s Doomsday Scenario (Dungeon Crawler Carl, #2) – Matt Dinniman – There are a bunch of these but I had to take a break after the 2nd one because the first-person persepctive kinda makes me crazy. I’ll definitely keep going with the series in 2026, though.
  • Dungeon Crawler Carl (Dungeon Crawler Carl, #1) – Matt Dinniman – Fun story with an angle that I’ve never read before.
  • The Making of Stanley Kubrick’s ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ – Piers Bizony
  • Spacewreck: Ghostships and Derelicts of Space (Terran Trade Authority Handbook) – Stewart Cowley
  • Never Flinch (Holly Gibney, #4) – Stephen King – Is this really the end of the Holly books?
  • Pilot’s Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge: FAA-H-8083-25A (FAA Handbooks)
  • The Measure – Nikki Erlick
  • The Mountain in the Sea – Ray Nayler
  • The Road – Cormac McCarthy
  • Every Life a Story: Natalie Jacobson Reporting – The autobiography of “Channel 5” anchor Natalie Jacobson who is a major celebrity in New England.
  • Japanese Swords and Armor: Masterpieces from Thirty of Japan’s Most Famous Samurai Warriors – Paul Martin
  • Failure is Not an Option: Mission Control From Mercury to Apollo 13 and Beyond – Gene Kranz
  • Sleeping Beauties – Stephen King
  • Into the Black: The Extraordinary Untold Story of the First Flight of the Space Shuttle Columbia and the Astronauts Who Flew Her – Rowland White – I will never tire of reading well-written books about space exploration!

Books I Read in 2024

It was another big year for Stephen King – I will read pretty much whatever that man writes. His newest collection of “short” stories and “Billy Summers” were both great summer reads. It’s interesting how much what I’m doing in real life can influence my enjoyment of a book or story. Because we had such an extended spell of dry weather in the second half of the year, I spent a lot of time reading while laying in my hammock this summer.

  • Blood Meridian, or the Evening Redness in the West – Cormac McCarthy
  • The Name of the Wind (The Kingkiller Chronicle, #1) – Patrick Rothfuss
  • Fairy Tale – Stephen King
  • You Like It Darker – Stephen King
  • Billy Summers – Stephen King
  • Carrying the Fire: An Astronaut’s Journey – Michael Collins
  • Holly – Stephen King
  • A Man on the Moon – Andrew Chaikin
  • Stories of Your Life and Others – Ted Chiang
  • God Emperor of Dune (Dune #4) – Frank Herbert
  • Misfit: Growing Up Awkward in the ’80s – Gary Gulman
  • Live from New York: An Uncensored History of Saturday Night Live

Books I read in 2023

Once again, I didn’t read nearly as many books as I would have liked in 2023. At the beginning of the year, I was studying a lot of technical materials and working on gaining new skills for my job search so that took up a lot of my time in addition to really pushing to finish my Ima Ninja translation.

  • The Evening and the Morning (Kingsbridge, #0) – a fun and entertaining prequel to Ken Follett’s The Pillars of the Earth
  • Sea of Tranquility
  • Children of Dune (Dune, #3)
  • Hidden Pictures – kinda lame
  • Misquoting Jesus: The Story Behind Who Changed the Bible and Why
  • JAWS: Memories from Martha’s Vineyard – I finally bought a copy of this book after many years of having it on my wish list. You couldn’t get a more detailed look at the making of Jaws.
  • How High We Go in the Dark
  • Convenience Store Woman
  • Tamao
  • Learning React: Modern Patterns for Developing React Apps – it was just as exciting as it sounds!

Books I read in 2022

I keep track of a lot of things I do in my daily life. I’m not sure why I do it. It’s interesting because my son does that as well. We were just talking last night about how he keeps track of major events in his life along with the music he was listening to, people he was hanging out with and games he was playing at the time. I guess it’s a way to relive those events and experience those feelings again.

Anyway, here’s my list for 2022. I didn’t read as much as I would have liked. Like many people these days, I often get pulled into scrolling on my phone rather than reading the books I want to read. This year, I also spent a lot of time reading technical books and articles in order to expand my skillset for work. And, as always, I read a lot of martial arts related material as well. None of these types of materials are listed here. I started the year by following on the many WWII books that I read last year and finished that series up with “Japan at War” which was really interesting. It painted a very different picture of the Japanese experience of WWII than what I had expected.

“To Kill a Mockingbird” and “The Grapes of Wrath” are both true classics for good reason.

There were no “making of” books that piquéd my interest this year (after the death of JW Rinzler, I’m not sure that there will be many great books like that) but I did eagerly await and read “The Art of Ron Cobb”, which is a treasure trove of Cobb’s work along with interesting commentary.

I also finished the final two books in the “Matador” series that I began reading a long time ago. In order to get reacquainted with that universe, I also read the first book again. I will just say that the later books are not as great as the first couple.

  • Round the Clock: The Experience of the Allied Bomber Crews Who Flew by Day and by – Night from England in the Second World War
  • Combat Crew: A True Story of Flying and Fighting in World War II
  • Japan at War: An Oral History
  • To Kill a Mockingbird
  • Diana: Her True Story in Her Own Words
  • Dune Messiah (Dune, #2)
  • The War on the West
  • The Grapes of Wrath
  • The Man Who Never Missed (Matador, #1)
  • Black Steel (Matador, #7)
  • The Art of Ron Cobb
  • Brother Death (Matador, #8)
  • Understand, Good, Play