Posted January 6, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 4 Comments
The official topic is “Best Books I Read in 2025”, but I’m being a bit more precise and saying this is a list of my favourite books — because some of them are not objectively as good as others, but I had more fun with them and they did more to shape my year, regardless of quality. Besides, markers of quality are pretty subjective anyway, so this phrasing just pedantically reveals what I think I’d really be doing anyway.
I did a favourite 12 books of 2025 over on Litsy, picking out my favourite book for each month for #12BooksOf2025, but this list is a bit different because some of my favourite books came from the same months.

- The Disabled Tyrant’s Beloved Pet Fish, by Xue Shan Fei Hu. These books were so ridiculous and so cute: what if a guy gets transmigrated into a novel he’s been reading… as the tyrant’s pet fish? And then has to mitigate the tyrant’s character and turn him into a good emperor? Their relationship ends up genuinely lovely, as Li Yu completes quests that allow him to turn into a human form. But I wasn’t kidding about it being silly too, since Li Yu ends up giving birth to four fishy babies (and later a human baby). It doesn’t really go into the mechanics of that, fortunately. Anyway, I can see myself rereading these books in future years, and eagerly consuming any adaptations that come out, so this has to get a place in my top ten.
- Solo Leveling, by Chugong (+ the manhwa adaptation by Dubu). I’m bundling both the novels and the manhwa into this one slot, because why not? I wasn’t sure what I’d think of this series, but I ended up loving it and reading it in both formats. Jinwoo is ridiculously overpowered, and that’s the fun of it: you know he’s safe, and the majority of the people around him are going to be safe. But how is he going to do it? What neat monsters is he going to face? What’s behind it all? I had enormous fun reading the manhwa, which is what I started with, and have now dug into the light novels as well.
- Dinosaur Sanctuary, by Itaru Kinoshita. This manga series is so much fun. Basically, what if dinosaurs were resurrected and kept in zoos, and handled by keepers who have to become expert in their healthcare, nutrition and enrichment needs? It follows a new keeper who’s learning how to handle the various dinos, and the series had a dinosaur consultant keeping the science pretty accurate, with neat fact files between chapters explaining more about the relevant science. I definitely know kids who’d enjoy this, but as a forever-lover of dinosaurs, so did I. It’s relatively low stakes, and a lot of fun.
- Tied to You, by WHAT (adapting a novel by Chelliace). This manhwa ends up being both creepy and romantic: what if someone didn’t trust the concept of fated partners, and was willing to do anything to manipulate his fated partner into being sure to stay with him? It’s not even clear that Jigeon needs to act the way he does, but he’s so determined not to let Wooseo go, no matter what. In the end, he has to put his cards on the table and show Wooseo exactly what he’s been up to in order for them to bond fully, and Wooseo does choose him eyes-open, but it still ends up having a twisted sort of feel. It’s lived in my head rent-free since I read it, despite me knowing nothing about the series and just encountering it randomly on Library Pass/Comics Plus.
- Everything is Tuberculosis, by John Green. This is my new go-to as a recommendation for people curious about tuberculosis, which is my “favourite” infectious disease, and still a really important cause of mortality worldwide. I wrote my BSc dissertation on tuberculosis and studied it again during my MSc: it’s still so important, and people know so tragically little about it (sometimes believing it’s no longer a disease of importance, when in reality it’s the #1 cause of death from infectious disease worldwide). Green’s books is well-written and excellent for a general audience, and even I learned a couple of things (mostly about the experience of being a TB patient: I wasn’t aware that the treatment process makes you really hungry, which is a huge problem for people who don’t have a lot of food available).
- You Should Be So Lucky, by Cat Sebastian. This romance is really good. The process of the two of them falling for each other feels so realistic, their connection makes sense, the setting and the other characters are really good… I expected to enjoy it, because I like Cat Sebastian’s work and I liked the other book in this series (We Could Be So Good), but it really had a stranglehold on me for a while there. I swear her work gets better with each book.
- A Case of Mice and Murder, by Sally Smith. I loved this and the second book in the series, A Case of Life and Limb. The setting (the Inner Temple, one of the Inns of Court in London) didn’t necessarily sound fascinating, and the main character sounded like he might be kind of stuffy… and then he won me over completely with his gentle courtesy and considered kindnesses. The setting is surprisingly cool, as well: not a setting I’d thought much about, but shaped by unique traditions and history. I can’t wait for more books in this series.
- The Teller of Small Fortunes, by Julie Leong. This was an early favourite for me. It steers away from world-changing stuff for the most part, instead following someone who wants to use her powers quietly, travel safely, and avoid world politics — despite having the power to foretell more or less anything. I loved the way it played with the idea of seeing these small fortunes and how even those could be important, and I really liked the cast. I’m looking forward to The Keeper of Small Magics.
- Hemlock & Silver, by T. Kingfisher. This has been a year for reading T. Kingfisher’s work for me, but Hemlock & Silver is really lodged in my head because it felt like such a wild (and fun) take on the Snow White story. The mirror monsters were particularly inspired — there’s often a touch of horror to Kingfisher’s fantasy, and they were definitely a freaky and fascinating inclusion. Honourable mention to Clockwork Boys, though, which I also absolutely inhaled… and the Saint of Steel books too, really. I liked that this one stood alone, though.
- A Drop of Corruption, by Robert Jackson Bennett. I love that this is an earnest attempt to write a classic mystery story (very Holmesian) in a fantasy world. We’re given a lot of detail about the world to help us draw our own conclusions, and there’s so much of it to sink your teeth into. I found this as compulsive as the first book, and it has some satisfying weirdness too.

If I started getting further into honourable mentions than I have already we’d be here all night, but hopefully that’s a nice taster! Curious to see what other people’s picks have been.
Tags: books, Top Ten Tuesday
Posted January 5, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Still Waters
Genres: Crime,
Mystery Pages: 237
Series: British Library Crime Classics Rating:
Synopsis: Trouble is brewing once more for the Hoggetts and their friend Chief Inspector Macdonald in Lunesdale, deep in the Lancashire fell country. The treacherous slopes and still waters of a quarry pool have become the backdrop for strange happenings by night, and after an architect surveying the area is nearly hoisted into the cold waters by an unseen assailant, the suspicions of local farmers become a matter for the CID. Lorac’s authentic writing of the Lunesdale countryside is paired with a twisting plot in this classic of Lake District crime fiction, first published in 1949.
E.C.R. Lorac’s Still Waters is another return to Lunesdale for Macdonald. It’s a bit surprising that there are several books sharing the same setting and characters, because a lot of the other books are pretty disconnected, with just Macdonald and Reeves recurring. In this one, the Hoggetts are almost the stars, particularly Giles.
It’s pretty suspenseful actually; there are a couple of tense chapters at the end where Macdonald, Reeves and several others are staking out an area to figure out what’s going on and (hopefully) catch the criminals. I’d figured out what was going on already (it’s a fair-play mystery, pretty much) but it was still really tense because it wasn’t clear whether something would go wrong, whether they’d get their guy, etc. I don’t mind having figured things out anyway, but that definitely didn’t defuse any of the tension here.
It makes fun use of the setting, which Lorac knows well because she eventually settled in the area she based the story on, and apparently it was checked by a police officer as well, which shows she did her research.
One note: one of the characters is deeply anti-Welsh. He’s corrected/ignored by other characters, but the Welshman is still very much viewed as a “foreigner” and with automatic suspicion, which is a bit uncomfortable, if not surprising.
Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)
Tags: book reviews, books, British Library Crime Classics, crime, mystery
Posted January 4, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

The Disabled Tyrant's Beloved Pet Fish
Genres: Fantasy,
Light Novels,
Romance Pages: 404
Series: The Disabled Tyrant's Beloved Pet Fish #3 Rating:
Synopsis: A FINE KETTLE OF FISH
When Prince Jing is sent to quell the disturbance at the western border, there’s no question that Li Yu will accompany him—as his boyfriend and as his pet fish! Li Yu’s mission is to help Prince Jing secure his position as heir to the throne. However, the new couple is in for a surprise when Li Yu makes a much bigger splash in the imperial line of succession: even male fish can lay eggs now!
With four bouncing baby fish in tow, Li Yu and Prince Jing must work extra hard to dam the trouble brewing at the border. Despite the challenges, Prince Jing is determined to make Li Yu his official consort. Will the emperor approve of this unusual union? And how will Li Yu and Prince Jing protect their new family from the treacherous machinations of the imperial court?
Volume three of Xue Shan Fei Hu’s The Disabled Tyrant’s Beloved Pet Fish gives us Li Yu and Prince Jing’s trip to the borders — ostensibly out of the emperor’s favour, but ready to prove themselves and (in Prince Jing’s case, anyway) ready to make a good case that they should be given official sanction to marry. Plus, the system’s tricked Li Yu, and now there are babies on the way!
How this volume hits depends on how you feel about Li Yu and Prince Jing having kids, basically. There’s some other politicking, and some development in their relationship (including their marriage), but the babies are a pretty major feature, especially in the second half of the book.
For me, I thought it was adorable. I love the emperor’s reaction to them, I love Li Yu and Prince Jing’s growing excitement about and love for the babies, and I had so much fun with the babies’ silly hijinks as well. And I loved that Prince Jing and Li Yu are growing into themselves and maturing as a couple as well (though Li Yi remains a precious cinnamon roll).
I know a little about how the story ends, and I’m looking forward to volume four very much. It’s silly and a ridiculous concept and satisfying as heck.
Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)
Tags: book reviews, books, danmei, light novels, romance, SF/F, Xue Shan Fei Hu
Posted January 3, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Love in the Palm of His Hand
Genres: Manga,
Romance Pages: 224
Series: Love in the Palm of His Hand #2 Rating:
Synopsis: Through sign language and acting, two young men seeking their places in the world discover a connection that transcends the spoken word.
"I could only return to acting because there's someone who believes in me."
Fujinaga is determined to give acting one last try as he performs in a stage play adaptation of a manga series, but his nerves get the better of him when he realizes that Keito will be there in the audience. While Fujinaga's talent is finally garnering him some public recognition, his worries and loneliness begin to eat him up from the inside. Can the special language he and Keito share form a bridge between them and help him resolve his frustrations?
For Keito and Fujinaga, sign language will light the way along their journey of self-discovery and bind them together as nothing else can.
Like the first volume, the second volume of Rinteku’s Love in the Palm of His Hand is really cute, though it focuses a bit less on the relationship between Keito and Fujinaga, and a bit less on sign language as a result, and spotlights Fujinaga’s acting career.
Fujinaga has a pretty amazing opportunity, and he spends a lot of it figuring out how to bring across the play for the whole audience, but his relationship with Keito isn’t forgotten — even if they don’t seem to be 100% on the same page about it (there’s a weird mismatch in expectations about kissing, for instance).
I actually liked the art better in this volume, or maybe I was just used to it? And I still love the way sign language is portrayed, and the various ways Keito manages to communicate.
I’d love to see them get a bit more comfortable with being in a relationship in the next volume, but I was glad to spend more time with them in this one, too!
Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)
Tags: book reviews, books, manga, Rinteku, romance
Posted January 3, 2026 by Nicky in General / 26 Comments
Happy New Year! And happy weekend, too.
Books acquired this week
Time for more of my Christmas haul! Part one (with the light novels and some non-fiction) was last week’s post here. I’ll go for the fiction now — and there’s a lot of that too!



So that’s really exciting… and that’s still not all! I also got some more miscellaneous non-fiction:


Aaaaand as if all that wasn’t enough, I’ve used my trade-in credits to get myself the remainder of the Solo Leveling series (light novel version) and the first two volumes of the Omniscient Reader’s Viewpoint manhwa.


Right! That’s everything caught up, so my posts will be back to a more usual number of books, ahaha.
Posts from this week
As usual, let’s do a bit of a roundup of reviews:
Plus these non-review posts:
What I’m reading
I was a busy reader this last week, making sure to reach my goal of reading 400 books in 2025! Here’s a sneak peek at what I’ve been reading and plan to review on the blog sometime soon (eventually):



For this weekend, I’m planning to read more of the Solo Leveling light novel, get a bit further with Adam Aleksic’s Algospeak and… who knows what else!?
Linking up with Reading Reality’s Stacking the Shelves, Caffeinated Reviewer’s The Sunday Post, and the Sunday Salon over at Readerbuzz.
Tags: books, Stacking the Shelves, weekly roundup
Posted January 2, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Finding My Elegy: New and Selected Poems
Genres: Poetry Pages: 196
Rating:
Synopsis: Though internationally known and honored for her imaginative fiction, Ursula K. Le Guin started out as a poet, and since 1959 has never ceased to publish poems. Finding My Elegy distills her life's work, offering a selection of the best from her six earlier volumes of poetry and introducing a powerful group of poems, at once earthy and transcendent, written in the first decade of the twenty-first century.
The fruit of over a half century of writing, the seventy selected and seventy-seven new poems consider war and creativity, motherhood and the natural world, and glint with humor and vivid beauty. These moving works of art are a reckoning with a whole life.
Because it’s a collection containing both selected older poems and newer poems, Ursula Le Guin’s Finding My Elegy is kind of difficult to evaluate. It’s not quite simply an overview of her poetry over the decades, nor a new collection; themes and evolution of style are all mingled.
So I’ll stick with my gut reaction, which was that I wouldn’t always have chosen those particular poems over others of hers, but they all have an essential “Le Guin”-ness in the choice of themes and images. I’m not sure I’d identify them all as Le Guin’s work if unlabelled, but being told they’re Le Guin’s makes absolute sense. Her concerns in her poetry are similar to her concerns in her writing, and I wonder if you can match them up, poetry-to-fiction, watching her think through the same things at the same time in two different media…
Anyway, I don’t love Le Guin as a poet, compared to how I feel about her fiction; not all of the poems really speak to me. Sometimes it’s just three lines here or there, a stanza, more rarely a whole poem (and often the shortish ones).
Rating: 3/5 (“liked it”)
Tags: book reviews, books, poetry, Ursula Le Guin
Posted January 1, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Fabulous Frocks
Genres: Fashion,
History,
Non-fiction Pages: 200
Rating:
Synopsis: No item of clothing has endured for longer than the dress. Yet the last century alone has seen the most radical changes of style—hemlines swinging from ankle to thigh, outlines alternating between the body-hugging and the bell—and our fascination with the frock has not gone away. From Gres’ draping to Dior’s New Look, from Mary Quant’s mini to Hussein Chalayan’s mechanical marvels, this book looks at the dress in 20th-century fashion. Thematic chapters—Changes, Feminine, Sex, Must-Haves, Fantasy, Classical, and Art—set out the inspirations and implications for each new change alongside the stunning photography. It has been more than 80 years since Coco Chanel invented the little black dress, but most women still have one in their wardrobes today. It’s been decades since women discovered trousers and separates, but many women dream of wearing a glorious, glamorous gown at least once, whether it’s on a Hollywood red carpet, or on her wedding day.
Jane Eastoe and Sarah Gristwood’s Fabulous Frocks is lovely, covering roughly 100 years of famous and fabulous dresses. Photos of many of them are included, and the text explains their significance well… though it also mentions many dresses that aren’t pictured, which I sometimes found frustrating because I don’t have an encyclopaedic knowledge of what dresses look like. It also doesn’t signpost which dresses are pictured, so sometimes I found myself turning back a few pages to reread what they said about a specific dress, to give it a bit more context.
Still, that’s quibbling. I found it an accessible and interesting history of the dress, touching on different themes and inspirations, and highlighting the cyclical nature of some fashions (“classical” inspirations come back again and again). The photos are great, usually not of the dresses on their own but the dresses as they were worn, e.g. by Marilyn Monroe, Jackie Kennedy, etc, etc. I find that a bit more helpful than the same dresses preserved and posed on a mannequin.
Those who are fans of the Great British Sewing Bee might enjoy this to fill in some of the gaps, and learn a bit more about some of the designers that get mentioned (such as the perennial favourite when discussing bias-cut gowns, Madeleine Vionnet).
Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)
Tags: book reviews, books, fashion, history, Jane Eastoe, non-fiction, Sarah Gristwood
Posted December 31, 2025 by Nicky in General / 0 Comments
What have you recently finished reading?
I’ve been reading some graphic novels/manga to close out the year: the last thing I finished was Our Not-So-Lonely Planet Travel Guide vol 1, by Mone Sorai, which was okay. I didn’t absolutely love the style, and Asahi’s internalised homophobia makes it a bit less quirky and fun than it might be, but the bond between the two leads is cute.
What are you currently reading?
I’m most of the way through the third volume of the Solo Leveling light novel, which is such a fun, fast read. I’m having a whale of a time with the series. It’s kinda lacking in tension since you know that Jinwoo is gonna be able to beat anything (especially since I’ve read the manhwa), and that’s fiiiine. It’s just fun to be along for the ride.
I’m also partway through Algospeak (Adam Aleksic), which is interesting. I try not to be prescriptivist about language, and just approach it with curiosity, so steam isn’t coming out of my ears at the way words are being used “improperly”. (I do dislike “unalive”, though, which is the subject of the first chapter.)
What are you going to read next?
To meet my reading goal of 400 books in 2025, I’m going to finish out the year with the first two volumes of the Omniscient Reader’s Viewpoint manhwa. I’ve enjoyed the two volumes of the light novel I’ve read, so I’m looking forward to digging in. Hopefully my parents and sister will be chill and let me read a bit in the run-up to midnight, once dinner (and the lemon drizzle cake baked today by my wife) have been consumed.
Tags: books, WWW Wednesday
Posted December 30, 2025 by Nicky in General / 15 Comments
This week’s Top Ten Tuesday theme is all about new books added to your bookshelf. Obviously I talk about those in my Stacking the Shelves post, but I thought I’d highlight some of the ones I’m most excited to get round to — some of which I didn’t showcase yet in my last post, since I split my Christmas haul into two posts!
Without further ado and in no special order, let’s go…

- Solo Leveling (light novel), by Chugong. I’ve actually got all eight volumes, between Christmas presents and using my trade-in credit at Bookshop.org. I’ve started on these already (I’m onto volume three today), and I’m tearing through them. I know the story from reading the manhwa, but it’s fun to see it fleshed out a bit and presented in a different format.
- The Wolf and His King, by Finn Longman. This is a retelling of the lai ‘Bisclaveret’, by Marie de France. I studied it during my first undergraduate degree, so I’m really excited to see someone playing with it. Maybe I’ll even try to email the lecturer who introduced me to Marie de France’s work and ask if he’s checked it out! It sounds like it should be great fun for fantasy fans in general, as well.
- Craft Land: In Search of Lost Crafts and Disappearing Trades, by James Fox. I happened across this and was curious about it, and then saw someone else’s review on Litsy, so I ended up adding it to my wishlist, and someone got me it for Christmas. I’m pretty eager to dig in, it looks like fun.
- The Isle in the Silver Sea, by Tasha Suri. This is getting great reviews, and promises a Sapphic Arthurian story? I’m in, in, in. Funnily enough, I bought this for my sister for Christmas, while my wife bought it for me. We even unwrapped them at pretty much the same time.
- After Hours at Dooryard Books, by Cat Sebastian. I love Cat Sebastian’s work in general, and seeing the enthusiasm of several friends about this one makes me think I should jump in sooner rather than later.
- Like: A History of te World’s Most Hated (and Misunderstood) Word, by Megan C. Reynolds. Linguistics isn’t necessarily my thing, but I’ve enjoyed books like Because Internet, and this one sounds interesting. I try not to be prescriptivist about it, even while I find some of our verbal tics pretty lazy.
- Enshittification: Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What To Do About It, by Cory Doctorow. It’s been a while since I read anything by Doctorow, but this seems like an important one right now, with enshittification hitting so many of the apps and services people use.
- The Keeper of Magical Things, by Julie Leong. I loved the other book in this world — it was one of my highest rated books of last year — so I’m eager to get to this soon as well. I hope it’s magical in just the same small sort of ways…
- Brigands & Breadknives, by Travis Baldree. I could’ve got a review copy, but I knew I wouldn’t get round to it in time. Now I can hopefully dig in guilt-free when the right moment arrives! I’ve loved the other two in this series, though Legends & Lattes was the favourite.
- Cat Tales: a History, by Jerry D. Moore. Digging into the history of the relationships between cats and humans sounds like a lot of fun. It was a bit of an impulse add to my wishlist, but I’m glad I got a copy, I’m really curious now!

That’s just a taster, of course — I was really spoiled this Christmas. Looking forward to see what other people have been snagging for their shelves!
Tags: books, Top Ten Tuesday
Posted December 29, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Death in Ambush
Genres: Crime,
Mystery Pages: 288
Series: British Library Crime Classics Rating:
Synopsis: In a tranquil Kentish village, Dr Sandys and his wife are preparing for Christmas with their guest, Liane ‘Lee’ Crauford. Festivities start badly when their party is spoiled by an enigmatic widow new to the village, and the atmosphere hits rock bottom when the pompous local nobleman and ceramic-collector Sir Henry Metcalfe unexpectedly dies. Sensing potential villains among Metcalfe’s circle, Lee teams up with Detective-Inspector Hugh Gordon to discover the killer playing merry hell with her holiday in this lost vintage mystery, republished for the first time since 1952.
Susan Gilruth is a new-to-me author not previously published in the British Library Crime Classics series, and Death in Ambush is their Christmas-themed entry for the year. It’s set at Christmas, and there’s some Christmas presents and such at the end, but it doesn’t feel that festive, really; it’s mostly a mystery that happens to be set at Christmas.
Overall, I didn’t fall in love with it, especially because I found it kind of obvious after a certain point, but it was fun enough. The introduction notes a rather weird aspect of it: a fair bit of flirting and romantic tension between the police detective and the POV character, who is married (and whose husband does not appear). Not an element I’ve seen a lot!
It was fun enough, but reminded me more of modern stuff like the Daisy Dalrymple books somehow. I’d read more of Gilruth’s books if they get reissued in this series, but probably not seek them out otherwise.
Rating: 3/5 (“liked it”)
Tags: book reviews, books, British Library Crime Classics, crime, mystery, Susan Gilruth