As 2025 trickles away I'll add another entry to the heap of year-end recaps with the top ten books I've read this year. Less a recommendation list than an opportunity for me to remember them and order them semi-arbitrarily.
10. Elena Knows (Claudia Piñiero) - A mother in deteriorating health travels across the city to ask a woman she thought she knew for help investigating the death of her daughter. Very tense (especially the conversation at the end) despite the lack of any actual action.
9. Vera, or Faith (Gary Shteyngart) - I've had my fill of narrated-by-a-child and dystopian and robot-servant stories, but this one combines both and does it with poignancy and an actual story underneath. Not as "funny" as his other books, which is a positive.
8. Our Share of Night (Marian Enriquez) - Sprawling generational epic about an occult secret society, reminded me of Stephen King and Tim Powers. Excellent world-building, an entertaining page-turner.
7. Sky Daddy (Kate Folk) - Oh how I can't resist what is apparently (based on a google just now) disparagingly called "sad-girl lit". This is a stellar example and adds a wonderful element: The main character is sexually obsessed with airplanes.
6. If You Love It, Let It Kill You (Hannah Pittard) - Wrote about this one previously. Activated the Miranda July receptors.
5. Dear Dickhead (Virginie Despentes) - An epistolary exploration of online interactions and the consequences of them.
4. Stag Dance (Torrey Peters) - A collection of short stories and a novella, and it's on here because of the novella, an engaging story about lumberjacks with a main character not soon forgotten. This is not just "trans writing", it's just excellent writing, period.
3. Lapvona (Ottessa Moshfegh) - My favorite of Moshfegh's, which is crazy to me because it takes place in medieval times, which I normally hate. For the first time, for me at least, she nails the ending.
2. The First Bad Man (Miranda July) - I want to live in every one of Miranda July's stories, her characters are so appealing and weird and real.
1. El buen mal (Samanta Schweblin) - Every time I think of a Samanta Schweblin story I get goosebumps. I haven't read the English translation yet, and almost don't want to, because this was so good. Particularly "El ojo en la garganta" (The Eye in the Throat).