Fiction
Related: About this forumWhat Fiction are you reading this week, December 28, 2025?

I finished Amsterdam by Ian McEwan and wow. What an amazing piece of literature in less than 200 pages. That ending is unforgettable.
Now I'm reading The First Gentleman by Bill Clinton and James Patterson. A "twisty thriller with plenty of inside jobs, political sabotage and many, many deaths. It's like Amsterdam, with journalists and corruption in government. But without McEwan's literary finesse. I just started it, though, so I'm sure it will get better.
Listening to Hatchet Island by Paul Doiron. A Maine game warden investigator is called to an eerie, windswept island where he discovers murders and missing people and it's very intense. Doiron is a great writer, witty and intelligent, and I am quite enjoying his books.
Best wishes to us all in the new year. May sanity and democracy prevail.
MIButterfly
(1,940 posts)Next up: Drop Dead Sisters by Amelia Diane Coombs (a Shelf Awareness book from the library from last month I haven't gotten around to yet); Fatal Flaw by William Lashner (another book I haven't gotten around to yet); or The Woman in Suite 11 by Ruth Ware (a follow-up to The Woman on Cabin 10).
displacedvermoter
(4,094 posts)Francis X. Weiser, S.J.
A convenient and rich reference work...for all who wish full understanding of the feasts, customs, holydays and holidays of the Christian liturgical year
CurtEastPoint
(19,833 posts)cbabe
(6,145 posts)twists. Doiron keeps getting better.
I was thinking of making a game warden mystery list, Joe Pickett et al, and why they make good stories. American archetype?
Also read Mike Lawson/House Odds and House Rivals. Harder to enjoy political books without grinding my teeth.
Top of list is Percival Everetts Trees. Haunting. Not much to say. Except read this book.