Books & Reading Thread 2026

Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes
I read this over the last few days. I've pretty much just closed the book after reading the last page about half an hour ago and it feels like the book is nowhere near finished yet... as in, the meaning of it and certain passages of the book are just starting to hit me. What a fucking read.
 
Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes
I read this over the last few days. I've pretty much just closed the book after reading the last page about half an hour ago and it feels like the book is nowhere near finished yet... as in, the meaning of it and certain passages of the book are just starting to hit me. What a fucking read.
IIRC we had this as a group read on here a few years ago. It is a brilliant book.
 
Top man! Thank you!
Just read my own review, I gave it 7/10 so maybe “brilliant” was overstating it. But I remember it being a fascinating (and different) read and as I noted, the ending was poignant.
 
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Got 20 books on the TBR shelf. Two of them are from the Iain M. Banks Culture series; Use of Weapons and Excession.
Never read any of his stuff before and wondering which one to dive in to first.

His Culture books are so ahead of their time. A real glimpse of what AI can be. The ships minds are brilliant (with great names). I'm sure you'll enjoy them.

Player of Games is perhaps the easiest.

Sorry, Excession.
 
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Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes
I read this over the last few days. I've pretty much just closed the book after reading the last page about half an hour ago and it feels like the book is nowhere near finished yet... as in, the meaning of it and certain passages of the book are just starting to hit me. What a fucking read.
Fits in my top 10 books of all time list. Glad you enjoyed it.
 
I read The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman. Enjoyed it. Easy to read, clever, and surprisingly warm, perfect when you want something entertaining without it being heavy.
 
I read The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman. Enjoyed it. Easy to read, clever, and surprisingly warm, perfect when you want something entertaining without it being heavy.
I got shouted at on here the last time I said this but I was really disappointed by this book. I like Richard Osman as a TV personality but boy was this book dull. The first half was full of sentences that were no longer than 10 words and it had no flow to it. I can’t believe that the book didn’t get a decent editor to get him to rewrite the first half. It was a good idea and the second half improved but IMO it’s only the cult of TV personality that has made this series so successful.
 
2025 Books
  1. A Lesson in Violence – Jordan Harper - 7/10
  2. The Silverblood Promise – James Logan 9/10
  3. Exiles – Jane Harper 9/10
  4. Palace of Shadows – Ray Celestine 6/10
  5. The Wager – David Grann 8/10
  6. Grimdark Magazine Issue #40 – 6/10
  7. Grimdark Magazine Issue #41 – 6/10
  8. The Trials of Empire – Richard Swan – 7/10
  9. George Harrison - Philip Norman – 8/10
  10. Go to War: Football on the Brink in the 80s – Jon Spurling – 8/10
  11. Chasing the Light - Oliver Stone – 8/10
  12. The Narrows – Ronald Malfi – 7/10
  13. The Siege – BenMacintyre – 9/10
  14. The Devils – Joe Abercrombie – 9/10
  15. The Goldfinch – Donna Tartt – 8/10
  16. The Great Glorious Goddamn of It All – Josh Ritter – 7/10
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Josh Ritter is my favourite singer-songwriter of the past two decades, his songs unfolding like mini novels brought to life and set to music. So when I saw that his second book was available on Kindle, it seemed a good way to finish off the reading year.

The Great Glorious Goddamn of It All features Weldon Applegate, a 99-year-old former lumberjack dying in his hospital bed, who is telling us both the tale of his life and how he came to be in his current predicament.

Much of the story flashes back to when Weldon was a 13 year-old and inherited his father’s cursed lot, a treacherous forest in the cold, bleak north of Idaho, where many lumberjacks had perished. Despite the unwanted attention of famed lumberjack, Linden Laughlin, who seeks to force the boy off his land, Weldon is determined to make a success of his life by working the Lost Lot.

It's a well put together tale full that unspools much like one of Ritter’s epic songs, and you definitely feel the harsh reality of a lumberjack working out in a freezing forest in the 1930s.
I like the list and it's especially nice to have your rating, thanks.
 
I like the list and it's especially nice to have your rating, thanks.
There's no hard and fast rule on here. It's something that some of us started doing when the thread started a few years ago. Of course, all scores are subjective and will have an inherent bias :) But I suppose if you are familiar with some of the titles and genres, it's a good guide going forward.

The list will be reset with the new year, of course.
 
2026 reads so far:

The Brass Verdict 6/10. Michael Connelly. I'm not a fan of legal thrillers but the Lincoln Lawyer books are decent.

Denied Access 8/10 Mitch Rapp series prequel by Don Bentley. Sharp novel with a heavier emphasis on the character Irene Kennedy.

A Foreign Field 7/10 Ben Macintyre paces through lesser known stories from the Great War.

The Black Box 7/10. By Michael Connelly. Edgy Harry Bosch novel. I'd recommend almost every one of the series and the spin off characters.
 
2026

1. Sanctuary - Garry Disher - 8/10


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Sanctuary is a standalone crime thriller about Grace, a highly skilled thief who has spent years on the run after a life of stealing valuable collectibles like stamps and watches. After a chance encounter with an old associate at a collectors’ event, she realises she must flee yet again. Grace heads to a quiet rural town in the Adelaide Hills and takes a job at a local antiques shop owned by Erin Mandel, hoping for a fresh start and maybe a normal life. But both women have pasts catching up with them, and dangerous men soon begin closing in.
The story follows Grace as she navigates the tension between her criminal instincts and the possibility of finding sanctuary.

Disher is one of Australia’s top crime writers; the story telling is unusual for a thriller in that the principal character is a criminal but you find yourself hoping that she does indeed find sanctuary.

2. Why Are You Here, Mrs Hamilton?: The Post Office Scandal and My Extraordinary Fight for Justice - Jo Hamilton - 9/10

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After the ITV drama of a couple of years ago, there can hardly be anyone in the UK who hasn’t heard about the Post Office / Horizon scandal.

This book is the personal account/ordeal of Jo Hamilton, one of the UK sub-postmasters caught up in the scandal. Hamilton recounts how the Post Office’s faulty Horizon accounting system revealed unexplained shortfalls in her branch accounts, leading to her being wrongly accused, prosecuted (and convicted), and financially ruined despite never taking any money.

She describes remortgaging her home, borrowing to try to cover false deficits, and questioning her own sanity under pressure. Beyond her personal ordeal, the memoir explores the wider impact of the scandal on hundreds of sub-postmasters, the fight to clear their names, and the strength of community and resilience in seeking justice.

Although I had been aware of the scandal for a numbers of years, largely through Private Eye, I don’t think that I truly appreciated the scale of the issue until the TV programme; the TV drama is necessarily a broad brush telling of the story, but this book is a comprehensive telling of one person’s story and brilliantly describes the anxiety, despair, and powerlessness she felt over many years, when the discrepancies kept coming and fear of the inevitable exposure. I was amazed at how many years the story covered and it's only recently that she has settled her case.

I listened to the Audiobook, read by Monica Dolan, who played Jo Hamilton in the TV drama and I think that it was all the more powerful because of this.
 
My wife and I watched the TV show over a couple of evenings last week and really enjoyed it, so I would be interested in your views on the book.
Finished It today. Kind of enjoyed it but think more so as grew up in Northern Ireland so could relate to characters and situations more than if it been set somewhere else (if that makes sense). I've drunk in pubs like that, been stopped by police, good friends been shot and also good friends who shot people etc etc.

Although I say I enjoyed it not sure I'm in a rush to watch TV programme now and I usually love watching programmes about Northern Ireland

Got bought 5 book set by Louise Penny (who I've never heard of) for Christmas so next read will be number 1 in the set called Still Life
 

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