Join me in support of WHY I LOVE HORROR (updated as events are added)

Why I Love Horror: The Book Tour-- Coming to a Library and a Computer and a Podcast Near You

RA FOR ALL...THE ROAD SHOW!

I can come to your library, book club meeting, or conference to talk about how to help your readers find their next good read. Click here for more information including RA for All's EDI Statement and info about WHY I LOVE HORROR.

Tuesday, December 23, 2025

What I'm Reading: Becky's Best Books I Read in 2025

For the ninth year in a row, I am doing my best books that I read during this calendar year in a category list rather than in some kind of ranked order, Why? Because why I loved these particular books matters more to me than the order in which I would place them. How I interacted with them, how they affected me, how they stayed with me over the course of the calendar year, this is what is most important because it is why they are my on personal "Best" list.

Some of the categories are the same from year to year, others change. This is because the books I read each year create their own experiences and categories to me personally and I want to capture that experience along with the titles. I am not a robot, I am a human reader, even if reading and suggesting titles is my job. In order to remind myself [and all of you] of the joy in what we are paid to do, I strive to create a year end best list that captures, celebrates, and acknowledges that.

By this time, lots of people have already weighed in with critically acclaimed "best" lists for weeks, but I always wait to post this until end the year here on RA for All. I am keeping that tradition both because I like traditions, but also for ease of retrieving this list and other from years' past. To find any of my year's best read lists, from any year, all you have to do is click on the year in the right gutter on the blog scroll down). It brings up every post for that year in reverse chronological order, meaning that the last post of the year is first. Always the librarian, I am sharing my favorite reads AND cataloging them in an easy to retrieve way. 

I also wait to post this because my list is about my reflections on myself as a readers over the last 12 months. It is not just another best list. This is a list that is personal to me, my tastes, and my weird quirks. I need time and quiet to really think about it. I have been sitting with the categories for a a few weeks.

You can also use this post to help other readers, but because it is so specific to me, it is actually better used by you as a conversation starter. (Click here for my post about turning conversation starters into displaysFor example, you can ask people "What is the most fun you had reading a book this year?" or "What title was the biggest surprise to you?" Those are questions readers can answer much more quickly and easily than "What was your favorite book of 2025?" And these are the types of questions that engender dialog.

The categories I have listed here provide great conversation starters to offer to your patrons. You can even use my answers to keep the conversation going by saying, "I was thinking about this question because I read another library workers list and got the idea."

The point of my "Best" list is to both offer books that I loved this year, while also presenting an example of a regular reader view of a "Best" list.

Below you will find my list of the best books I experienced in 2025 (regardless of publication year) in 17 categories created by meIt is an arbitrary amount, but so what? It's my list of what mattered to me the most this year so I get to decide how I present it.

Each title includes my three words and a link to a longer review which will explain more about the book and give you insight as to why it is a "best" book for that category for me.

Some general comments about my list this year:

  • This year I had an experience that I have never had in 25 years of being a librarian and that is the fact that I have one overall best book and it could be slotted into almost every category as such.
  • I have to say it, but this was also the first year I wrote a book for general readers. That will be captured in my list below because my book coming out was the BEST moment of my reading year.
  • I read a lot of mysteries for the second year in a row and all were on audio. I also increased my NF by reading them on audio.
  • My audio reading went up overall and I not only know why, I now share the reason in my training programs. Since I read so much print for review, for a few years I was finding it hard to turn off my reviewing brain and just enjoy a book as a fan. But, I have now realized that when I listen to a book, my brain understands that it is NOT for work and I have no problem just sitting back and enjoying it. This was a huge discovery I made into my own reading preferences and it led to me reading more books for fun this year than I have in many years.
  • And of course-- Horror is everywhere on this list (even some titles that did not make my horror best list) because for me as a reader, it fits in more categories than just the ones for its genre. While I know that is unique to me as a reader, I wonder if that is true for you and a different genre. I am sure it is for many of your readers. If they have a favorite genre, they loved the books they loved for reasons that go beyond their genre classification. This is always important to remember as we help readers.

I'll be back on January 5, 2026 with Part 1 of my Reader Resolutions-- an assessment of how I did on 2025's goals, followed by Part 2 where I will set out my goals for 2026 on January 6th. Have a safe and Happy New Year.

Now what you have been waiting for.....my list with links to my reviews and my three words!

Becky's Best Books I read in 2025


Best Overall Book: The Buffalo Hunter Hunter  by Stephen Graham Jones-- There is not a better book I read in 2025 than this novel. It is a masterpiece of American fiction, I could have been my answer to at least 6 categories below, so I gave it it's own category. (historical, revenge, riveting)

Best Feel Good Read: The entire Thursday Murder Club Series thus far-- all on audio and I binged the first 4 in the first 4 months of 2025 and then listened to the 5th right after it came out. (fun, mature main characters, cozy but still serious issues)

Book That Stayed With Me All Year: Angel Down by Daniel Kraus-- this one was an easy call. This book written as one single sentence was memorable and ambitious, but he also pulled it off! (visceral, ambitious, reads like a chant)
 
Book That I Am Recommending to Everyone I Know: Why I Love Horror: Essays on Horror Literature by Becky Siegel Spratford. I mean it is true. I don't have three words but here is the Booklist starred review.

Best Debut: Listen to Your Sister by Neena Viel-- I am excited to new reading her second book for my April 2026 LJ column and I will be conducting an interview with the author in the same issue. (family trauma, steadily building dread that burst open to all out terror, original)

The Most Fun I Had Reading a Book: Starter Villain by John Scalzi-- I needed a fun book to read on my vacation and just before I went into my book tour. This book was the PERFECT choice. (fun, thought provoking, fast paced)

Best Audio: Fair Play by Louise Hegarty-- hands down this was the book I loved BECAUSE I listened to it. If I read it in print, it would not have made this list. (Meta, Thought Provoking, Siblings)

Best One Sitting Read: Killer on the Road by Stephen Graham Jones

Best Book From 2024 Best Lists That I Read in 2025: Somewhere Beyond the Sea by TJ Klune (return to a beloved world and its characters, belonging, cozy with serious issues)

Best Surprise: The Country Under Heaven by Frederic S. Durbin (vignettes, weird western, thought-provoking)

Best Speculative Fiction: Best of All Worlds by Kenneth Oppel-- A YA books every adult should read. (Existentially Terrifying, Thought Provoking, Unique Band of Survivors story)

Best Horror [That wasn't mentioned already] TIE: When the Wolf Comes Home by Nat Cassidy (the power of fear, immersive terror, pulp homage) and A Game in Yellow by Hailey Piper (discomfort, an original retelling of a classic work, cursed book)
  • [See also this post for a more detailed discussion of my personal Best Horror of 2025]
Best Historical Fiction: The Starving Saints by Caitlin Starling-- so this is clearly historical but fantasy historical. I am fine with doing this for 2 reasons. 1. BHH was the best historical I read (see the top of the list) 2. It's my list and I loved this book; one of the reasons I loved it was the setting. (richly detailed, highly unnerving, 3 points of view)

Best Collection: The Poorly Made and Other Things by Sam Rebelein -- this is a great example of how a collection also be a great united volume. (Cursed Land, Madness, Unnerving)

Best Nonfiction: Daughter of Daring: The Trick-Riding, Train-Leaping, Road-Racing Life of Helen Gibson, Hollywood's First Stuntwoman by Mallory O'Meara-- this book reminded me why I chose to be an American Studies major. (fascinating, enlightening, fun)

Best Memoir: Raw Dog: The Naked Truth About Hot Dogs by Jamie Loftus. This book could have been put in a few categories (audio, most fun, book I am recommending to everyone I know, and surprise), but each time I made a final decision, it got dropped. But just the fact that it kept popping up in my mind meant it had to be here somewhere. So I made this category so that it could be included. (Funny, irreverent, but also sweet and charming)
 
Best Under the Radar Read: The Sofa by Sam Munson-- also the winner of best line in a Becky review of 2025. "...readers will be giving their own couches the side-eye for a while after finishing this one. (Horror in the mundane, dark humor, intensely psychological)

Monday, December 22, 2025

Libraries Year in Review 2025: Most Checked Out Titles, Top Stories and More

Today is the next to last blogging day of 2025 and I wanted to use this space to gather up the US Library "Year in Review." While you can obviously use this post to get a very solid sense of the year we are about to leave behind, remember, it will also help you figure out where we are going. More on that from me right at the start of January.

I am hoping each of you has a chance before the end of 2025 (or if you are off, early in 2026) to take a look through the links I have posted here. 

First and foremost, the aggregated list of the most checked out books from 40 US Public Libraries via Book Riot. You can see the top fiction and nonfiction here and then at the end of the post, you can click on any of the 40 libraries who lists were used to make this aggregated list.

Book Riot gathered a nice mix of libraries in terms of size and location. They also added a narrative with some observations at the start of the post here. I will be using their work (with citation) in my own Year in Review presentations coming in February.

The most checked out books in general, and more specifically, at your own library, is another kind of best lists, this one driven by library patrons, with more genre, and more backlist than 2025 titles.

Obviously censorship is still a major issue as another year wraps up. But this year, the American Library AssociationBook RiotFlorida Freedom to Read ProjectPEN America, and Texas Freedom to Read Project all came together to sound the alarm on the major censorship crisis they’ve observed in 2025. Together they put together the comprehensive-- 2025 Book Censorship Wrapped: Trends, Challenges, and Successes Over The Year. You should not go into 2026 without reading this, no matter what your role at your library happens to be.

Publishers Weekly also had an article gathering the top library stories of 2025 here with of course the shuttering of B&T as the top story. But you know it was a doozy of a year when Carla Hayden getting fired was only story #5 out of 10. Each story in the article is linked to more of their reporting on that topic. 

They also shared this year end report on Hoopla's trend and growth categories. It is interesting to compare this article to the aggregated list of the most checked out books above. 

Libby hasn't done their most borrowed report for 2025 yet. When they do I will post it. But they do a most borrowed post every single month of the year. Click here to see those titles in reverse chronological order.

There are sure to be more year in review pieces worth sharing with you, but this is all I have before I stop blogging until 1/5. 

Come back tomorrow for my annual Best Books post.





Friday, December 19, 2025

Using Awards Lists As a RA Tool: National Book Critics Circle Nominees

This is part of my ongoing series on using Awards Lists as a RA tool. Click here for all posts in the series in reverse chronological order. Click here for the first post which outlines the details how to use awards lists as a RA tool.   

The National Book Critics Circle Award Finalists were announced, one category at a time, all this week. You can see the full announcement here and the specific category announcements in the linked list below.

Since 1974, the NBCC, made up of mostly literary critics, honors outstanding writing and fosters a national conversation about reading, criticism, and literature. 

The 2025 finalists are in 8 categories are:

The separation of nonfiction, biography, and autobiography not only allows for more nonfiction to be honored, but is acknowledges the big difference between biography and autobiography both the obvious distinction of how it is written and the fact that the appeal for readers is different as well.

I always like comparing the National Book Award finalists to the NBCC. They are fairly similar, but you can see distinctions, especially if you follow reviews as I do. The NBA is chosen by a group of mostly authors, while the NBCC is driven by the critics. You can especially see trends emerging over time if you look at both. Thankfully, both awards make the backlist easy to access. [There is a box on the top right gutter of the "Awards" page for the NBCC.]

This year for example, while some of the fiction books on the longlists overlap, the National Book Award Winner is not even on the NBCC list, the other nominees are all different. This is great because it gives you many more "best" options for readers. Add in the Booker Prize and you get the big picture view of the best books published in English in any given year.

While "best" books aren't always the most popular with readers, they are the harbinger of larger movements. For example, as award finalists have gotten more diverse, the demand for more titles by marginalized voices has made it way into the conversation about all books.

So use this award list as a resource, as I note in the introduction to this post above, but also, think about grouping similar awards together, consider their backlists from the last 5 years (NBCC has easy access here), and see if you can notice a few trends or changes yourself. When we embrace trends and larger movements as they are developing, we show our patrons we understand them. Anticipating what they want is not that hard if you pay attention and it leads to more check outs.

Editor's note: The blog will return on Monday (12/22) with some library specific year in review content and then on Tuesday (12/23) I will end the year of posts with my Best Books Becky Read in 2025. After that, the blog will be on vacation, returning Monday, January 5, 2026.

Thursday, December 18, 2025

Attack of the Best Lists 2025: LitHub's Ultimate Best Books List (and more)

This post is part of my year end "Attack of the Best Lists" coverage. To see every post in my "Attack of the Best Lists 2025" coverage [and more backlist best of the year options] you can click here.  

Today I have the list I have been waiting for-- LitHub's aggregation of all the major best lists. From the landing page:

The Ultimate Best Books of 2025 List
Reading All the Lists So You Don’t Have To Since 2017
By Emily Templ

Happy List Season, children. I hope you’ve been good. Just like every year, I have arrived to present to you the Ultimate List, otherwise known as the List of Lists—in which I read all (or at least many) of the Best Of lists on the internet and count which books are recommended most. 
Is consensus the same as quality? Not always. Is this basically a popularity contest? Sure. But if you want to know which books The Critics are talking about, this is one way to do it. (Three of my own personal favorite books of the year made it to the top five below, which I can only assume means I am either a) boring or b) correct or c) both??) 
This year, I processed 58 lists from 49 outlets, which collectively recommended more than 1,300 different books (…help). 90 of those books made it onto 5 or more lists (weirdly this is the exact same number as last year, despite there being more books recommended in total this year), and I have collated these for you here, in descending order of frequency.
I know I have been doing my Attack of the Best Lists 2025 coverage since late October, but honestly, if you only have time for 1 list, this is it. Temple has done the most focused work of anyone out there. And the results, are RA gold for you. The post she has created seamlessly combines adult fiction, nonfiction, and GNs into one list. Further, she not only does the compiling for you, the sources are listed and linked (!) at the bottom of the page, so you can have DIRECT access to the most influential' best lists, and the aggregation of which titles are on the most lists, with just this one click. It is crowdsourcing, and an end of the year lists resource to dive deeper, all in one place.

And for just a moment, before going further, I need all of you to look at the books appearing on 12 lists because we have Stephen Graham Jones alongside Nobel Prize winner Han Kang! Look this year was not the best overall, but I for one am going to celebrate SGJ being on par with Kang as a win.

Back to more best books coverage on Lit Hub as they also has a few of their own best list content that is worth a look:

Multiple layer of backlist and indexing are also happening in every list, meaning you can embrace "Best" across multiple years. Reminder, "Best" titles have a longer shelf life than the current year. Last year's best titles, even 5 years ago, are great suggestions for a wide swath of readers. LitHub makes it easy, all year long, with their clear, consistent, and accessible tags at the bottom of their posts. All of these tags pull up useful information in reverse chronological order, meaning you decide how far into the backlist you want to dig.

Here are some of the tags that can help you all year long and include easy backlist access:

[Also, I wanted to remind people of the extremely useful Best of the Decade lists they made in 2019. Those are also a great "best" resource, one that truly embraces the treasure trove that is the backlist.]

But wait, there is more...

LitHub owns CrimeReads and they have their own Best of 2025 lists (but no useful tags to collection them all. Here are those best lists:

Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Via Chicago Tribune-- Chicagoan of the Year in Books: If you’re into horror, thank the librarian Becky Spratford

I mean, knew this was coming, but it still feels odd. I am the person behind the curtain always, but at the same time, all of us who hep readers in public libraries are.

I am proud to stand here to promote all of us and the work we do.

I was honored to be chosen for this and even more honored to take the pictures in the adult stacks at the La Grange Public Library-- a building a literally was a part of building in my time on the library board. I was there for 24 years, from when we passed the referendum to build the library until it opened, and now after those 20 years of binds have been paid off. 

I have an account for the Tribune and am sharing this gift link here. It will be in the print paper on 12/21.

Thank you to all of the authors who provided quotes to Chris Borelli. Thanks also to Chris who is a huge supporter of books in general and Horror specifically. We are lucky to have him on the beat here in Chicago when so many other cities just ignore books coverage. 

I will leave the article here for posterity but then, I am going back behind the curtain.

Chicagoan of the Year in Books: If you’re into horror, thank the librarian Becky Spratford

A photo of Becky standing in the stacks at the La Grange Public Library, holding a copy of her book-- WHY I LOVE HORROR
Click the image to read the article
(gift link)


Tuesday, December 16, 2025

2026 State of Reading via Everand and Fable

As the year comes to an end and well into the new year, we will be seeing reports on the biggest books and reading stories of the year. I am gathering many of them here on the blog in anticipation of my big 2025 RA Year in Review coming in February via PCI (slides will be here on the blog for free).

One of the more interesting reports I have seen in the last few days cam from Everand and Fable and used 2025 data to create a 2026 State of Reading Report. I was pleasantly surprised by some of the conclusions they drew. First a summary of the report via PW here:

Personal recommendations continue to drive book discovery more than algorithms, social media, and other digital tools, according to the 2026 State of Reading Report released today by Everand and Fable, the online reading and book club platforms owned by Scribd.

The report, based on user activity data from both platforms and a survey of more than 1,600 U.S. adults using the platforms, found that "people I know personally" ranks as the top source of book discovery, holding its position even as AI-driven recommendation tools proliferated in 2025. That human connection extends to sharing a book with a friend or family member, which proved more popular then "saving to a shelf" as the most common action readers take after finishing a book.  

"Despite rapid technological progress and a year defined by AI experimentation, readers are choosing relationships over recommendations," said Tony Grimminck, CEO of Scribd. "While word of mouth isn't novel, this shift is happening within digital reading, as people find new spaces—like Everand and Fable—where sharing can scale." 

The report draws on user activity data from Everand between Jan. 1–Oct. 31, 2025, and from Fable users between Jan. 1—November 5, 2025. 

Fable was acquired by Everand earlier this year and the company reports than 820,000 people joined a new book club on Fable the platform year. The sociability of clubs is proving popular, with 37% of all surveyed readers participating in at least one and the most active readers belonging to three or more clubs on average. In-person clubs are the most popular, followed by fully virtual and then hybrid clubs. 

The report also documents format shifts in digital reading. Audiobooks edged ahead of e-books as the most common way people read digitally, though more than half of readers report using both formats. Smartphones have become the top reading device, driven by convenience and portability, though 25% of readers still prefer print. 

More than half of surveyed readers say they're reading more than last year, with the fastest growth among 18–24-year-olds. Fable users finished an average of 20 books in 2025, while the remaining half completed between 6–15 books per year. Average reading streaks hit 29 days, up 300% year-over-year, with nearly a quarter million readers maintaining 30-day streaks. 

Those surveyed cited stress relief as a primary motivation, with 54% pointing to it as their reason for reading more this year and 83% reporting they feel relaxed when reading. Half of readers reread three or more books this year, mainly for comfort and escapism. 

Romance; mystery, thriller and crime; and science fiction and fantasy remained the most-read genres in 2025. However, 80% of readers tried a new genre this year. Rebecca Yarros's Empyrean series dominated the most-read titles, with the three books in the series taking the top three spots. Yarros's books garnered one million hours read on Everand this year.

I urge you all to click here and explore the 2026 State of Reading Report in its entirety. I will be using some of the data and conclusions in my February program as well. There is a lot here for us to parse and then use to better serve our patrons. But like I always do, I want to take all of the year end information, from best lists to best seller, from biggest news stories to trends, and more to give you the most efficient and effective consolidation of information so that you can craft your 2026 service plan without having to dig through everything yourself.

Monday, December 15, 2025

LibraryReads: January 2026

    

 It's LibraryReads day and that means four things here on RA for All

  1. I post the list and tag it “Library Reads” so that you can easily pull up every single list with one click.
  2. I can remind you that even though the newest list is always fun to see, it is the older lists where you can find AWESOME, sure bet suggestions for patrons that will be on your shelf to actually hand to them right now. The best thing about LibraryReads is the compound interest it is earning. We now have hundreds and hundreds of titles worth suggesting right at our fingertips through this archive OR the sortable master list allowing you to mix and match however you want.
  3. You have no excuse not to hand sell any LibraryReads titles because there is a book talk right there in the list in the form of the annotation one of your colleagues wrote for you. All you have to say to your patron is, “such and such library worker in blank state thought this was a great read,” and then you read what he or she said.
  4. Every upcoming book now has at least 1 readalike that is available to hand out RIGHT NOW. Book talk the upcoming book, place a hold for it, and then hand out that readalike title for while they wait. If they need more titles before their hold comes in, use the readalike title to identify more readalike titles. And then keep repeating. Seriously, it is that easy to have happy, satisfied readers.
So get out there and suggest a good read to someone today. I don’t care what list or resource you use to find the suggestion, just start suggesting books.

Please remember to click here for everything you need to know about how to participate. 

And finally, here is LibraryReads' extremely helpful Resources page.

Now let's get to the January 2026 list.... 

banner for LibraryReads

Book cover for Is This a Cry for Help? by Emily R. Austin. Click on the image for more.

Is This a Cry for Help

Emily Austin

(Atria Books)

After she learns of the death of her ex-boyfriend, librarian Darcy has a mental breakdown and takes a leave from her job at a public library. With time, therapy, and support from her wife, Darcy returns to work while coping with guilt and book-banning protests. This reflective, heartwarming, and character-driven read delves into grief and identity with care and humor.


—Kristin Skinner, Flat River Community Library, MI

NoveList read-alike: Mostly Dead Things by Kristen Arnett

Now the rest of the list...

Bell, A. D.    

The Bookbinder's Secret    

St. Martin's Press    


Lily is in limbo. She loves books and her binding trade, but her father is distant and her employer seems not to value her. Her life is turned upside down when she is given a burned book and the secrets it holds. This is truly a wonderful read full of mystery, love, and intrigue.  

 

-- Susan Willis, Chanute Public Library, KS 

NoveList read-alike: The Binding by Bridget Collins


Cobb, May    

All the Little Houses    

Sourcebooks Landmark    


Cobb’s latest gasp-out-loud read doesn’t disappoint, bringing readers back to the East Texas town of Longview, where wealth, booze, secrets, sex, and very bad—some might even say murderous—behavior abound. Readers will not be able to take their eyes off this propulsive thriller.     


-- Carol Ann Tack, Merrick Library, NY

NoveList read-alike: The Empress of Cooke County by Elizabeth Bass Parman


Elston, Ashley    

Anatomy of an Alibi: A Novel   

Pamela Dorman Books


This is a tale of two women: Wealthy Camille is living the high life, while Aubrey works as a bartender. Who is telling the truth? An unhappy marriage, skeletons in the closet, and a murdered husband make this a story worth reading!    


-- Jo Hic, Phillips Public Library, WI  

NoveList read-alike: T he Kind Worth Killing by Peter Swanson


Everhart, Donna    

Women of a Promiscuous Nature        

Kensington   


In this stunning character-driven novel set in the 1940s, Everhart introduces the inmates and staff of the Industrial Farm Colony for Women. As readers are drawn into the life of the Colony, the lofty goals as well as the terrible cruelty and injustice of the place are slowly revealed. Highly recommended.


-- Vicki Nesting, St. Charles Parish Library, LA

NoveList read-alike: T he Last Carolina Girl by Meagan Church


 Hannah, Sophie   

No One Would Do What the Lamberts Have Done    

Sourcebooks Landmark   


In this satirical book-within-a-book, the Lamberts’ dog, Champ, accused of biting the neighbor’s daughter. The eccentric pet-obsessed matriarch Sally refuses to believe this, so the family goes on the run with Champ in tow. Twisty and puzzling.


-- Magan Szwarek, LibraryReads Ambassador, IL

NoveList read-alike: Cat Fight by Kit Conway


Mara, Andrea    

It Should Have Been You: A Novel   

Pamela Dorman Books   

  

When a woman accidentally sends a private message meant for her sisters to the entire neighborhood group chat, the ensuing chain of events exposes secrets and causes deadly anguishThis book was a wild ride that will captivate readers from the first page.


-- Debbie Frizzell, Johnson County Library, KS

NoveList read-alike: You Deserve to Know by Aggie Bloom Thompson


McConigley, Nina   

How to Commit a Postcolonial Murder: A Novel    

Pantheon


When their uncle arrives from India, two sisters' adjustment to a dual culture life in small-town Wyoming in the mid-1980s becomes complicated. This debut hits on touchy subjects with grace, as the sisters choose to fight instead of being silent victims. Those of us who spent many hours at teen sleepovers will also delight in the nostalgia scattered amidst the actual crime and justice served.


-- Kimberly McGee, Lake Travis Community Library, Austin, TX

NoveList read-alike: My Sister, the Serial Killer by Oyinkan Braithewaite


Saunders, George   

Vigil: A Novel

Random House       


Saunders knows how to capture the essence of life in a story all about death. This climate story effectively hammers home that climate change affects everyone and everything irreparably, but we must also carry on. This message is wrapped in a Christmas Carol package about a ghost ushering a greedy, selfish man into the afterlife.


-- Sabrina Unrein, Mahwah Public Library, NJ

NoveList read-alike: T he Apology by Jimin Han


 Sotto Yambao, Samantha    

The Elsewhere Express: A Novel     

Del Rey


This enchanting, whimsical fantasy is a warm hug for the soul. A magical train that appears to those who are lost is absolutely charming, and creativity shines in the descriptions of the train's wondrous cars, from lily-pad picnics to jellyfish swimming through clouds. A journey not just through a magical world, but also of self-discovery, hope, and finding one's sense of purpose.


-- Lee V., New York Public Library, NY

NoveList read-alike: The Rainfall Market by Yeong Gwang You


Board Bonus picks:


The Poet Empress

Shen Tao

(Bramble) 

Notable Nonfiction: 

When Trees Testify: Science, Wisdom, History and America's Black Botanical Legacy

Beronda L. Montgom

(Henry Holt and Co)


See our social media for annotations of the bonus picks



The LibraryReads Hall of Fame designation honors authors who have had multiple titles appear on the monthly LibraryReads list since 2013. When their third title places on the list via library staff votes, the author moves into the Hall of Fame. Click here to see the Hall of Fame authors organized in alpha order. Please note, the current year's Hall of Fame lists are pulled out at the top of the page.

Butcher, Jim    

Twelve Months        

Ace    


Dave, Laura    

The First Time I Saw Him        

Scribner      

 

Feeney, Alice    

My Husband's Wife   

Flatiron Books: Pine & Cedar      


Hawkins, Rachel    

The Storm

St. Martin's Press    


McFadden, Freida    

Dear Debbie        

Poisoned Pen Press    


McGuire, Seanan    

Through Gates of Garnet and Gold        

Tordotcom    

9781250339409    

1/6/2026  


McLain, Paula    

Skylark: A Novel   

Atria   


Murphy, Julie and Sierra Simone   

Fundamentals of Being a Good Girl

Avon    


St. James, Simone    

A Box Full of Darkness        

Berkley    


Segura, Jo    

The Lust Crusade      

Berkley                


Umrigar, Thrity    

Missing Sam    

Algonquin Books    


Winstead, Ashley    

The Future Saints  

Atria Books