Tammy posted this book tag over on Books, Bones & Buffy and I couldn’t resist joining in… what are your “firsts” for 2026?
First book read in 2026: vol 4 of Solo Leveling (Chugong)
It’s definitely the first book finished anyway — I suppose in theory I might’ve read a bit of something else before that, because I tend to dual-wield… or triple-wield… or — well, ahem, you get the picture.

First review of 2026:Â Fabulous Frocks (Jane Eastoe & Sarah Gristwood)

This wasn’t the first review I wrote in 2026, since that almost certainly hasn’t been published on my blog yet — I have somewhere around 60 reviews written and not yet posted, since I read more than a book a day on average, and try to space out reviews to give a variety (while frontloading reviews of ARCs). This was the first review posted, though, and you can find it here.
The first review I wrote for the year is hard to guess, since I read a lot of books at the end of 2025 and wrote reviews for them at the start of 2026. At a guess, though, it might’ve been for volume one of Mone Sorai’s Our Not-So-Lonely Planet Travel Guide, a romance manga.

First debut read in 2026:Â The Iron Bridge (Rebecca Hurst)
It took me a bit to figure this out, because I don’t pay a lot of attention to stuff like debuts (and publication history for non-fiction writers can be weird), but I remembered I picked up this poetry collection because it in one of the prize categories at my library… and as far as I recall now, it was a prize for being an outstanding first poetry collection. My review is up already here!

The first book I was conscious of being a debut was Amy Coombe’s Stay for a Spell, which I received to review and is a fun and cosy romantasy. My review is coming up soon!

First “new-to-me” author of 2026: Adam Aleksic
This may well also have been a debut, but I deliberately skipped the non-fiction writers in the last question because it’s often harder to find out. I had caveats, but found it interesting all the same. My review is here!

First book of 2026 that slayed me:Â Guardian vol 1 (Priest)
The yearning, my goodness. My review isn’t up yet, but here’s an excerpt:
Shen Wei had been restraining himself for too long. In the perfect silence, he couldn’t help letting go for once. Lying there with Zhao Yunlan so tantalisingly near, his thoughts spun out of control. He imagined gathering that warm body close, pressing kisses to those eyes, that hair, those lips… tasting and partaking of every part.
He imagined possessing Zhao Yunlan utterly.
The fantasy alone was enough to make Shen Wei’s breathing unsteady. He yearned with the desperate fervour of someone dreaming of hot soup as they froze to death.
But he didn’t move a muscle. Just looking at Zhao Yunlan and thinking about him was seemingly enough.
I have my complaints about Guardian, but whatever’s going on between Shen Wei and Zhao Yunlan has me hooked.

First book of 2026 that I wish I could get back the time I spent reading it: Longer (Michael Blumlein)
It was a book I’d received ages ago as an ARC and bounced off, so I gave it another shot. I did skim to the end because I don’t like reviewing ARCs without at least a solid feel for the whole book, but I regret every moment. My review is here.

I did rate a book as 1-star before that, but while I didn’t think it was very good (and I think it wasted the reader’s time a fair bit), I still thought it had some worthwhile bits. Still, it’s a runner-up: Megan C. Reynolds’Â Like: A History of the World’s Most Hated (And Misunderstood) Word. My review is here!

First 5-star book of 2026: A History of England in 25 Poems (Catherine Clarke)
I had no 5-star reads in January, but February was a bit stronger. This was the first, though, and is in the running to be one of my favourite reads of the year. Obviously the year is young, though! I’ll be posting my review sometime in the next couple of weeks, probably, but the gist is that I found the selection of poems to discuss really interesting, and it engaged better with England’s colonialism than I’d feared, including understanding that Wales, Scotland and Ireland were also subject to England’s bad behaviour.

(It’ll be quick, I said. I’ll just knock it out and post it right away, I said. And then I got wordy. Oh well!)
What were your firsts of the year? Feel free to steal this tag just as I did, and drop the link in the comments so I can take a look. You don’t need to be as chatty as me, ahaha.