Books Read 2026

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Dr. Mephisto
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AG
Claude! said:

Completed: Macabre Stories by HP Lovecraft. A collection what I think are some of his earlier short stories, none of which really deal much with the Cthulhu mythos. It was fine - you can see the beginnings of what he eventually built - but probably not worth seeking out unless you want a full Lovecraft picture.


I love all things Lovecraft!

He's unique, and bizarre, and gloriously creepy.

Can't go wrong with Ole HP!
BenFiasco14
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Claude! said:

The Marksman said:

Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare. Never read this one before, but now it's my second favorite Shakespeare play of all time behind only Hamlet.

I couldn't really get into it, for it was Greek to me.


Cry havoc, and let slip the Corgis of war
CNN is an enemy of the state and should be treated as such.
BenFiasco14
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Had a long car ride yesterday and got through about 250 pages of Gone With the Wind, which I've never read before. About halfway through now.

The way this book just completely enveloped me yesterday on that ride, it had me borderline disoriented when I got home, and last night I had a dream about the scene of Scarlett and Rhett escaping Atlanta as it caught up in flames.

I was on the edge of my seat when the Yankee came into the house and Scarlett came down the stairs with her pistol. Scared sheetless as she later gripped Charles sword as the house gets ransacked.

The home guard being sent to the front line …

This book is unlike anything else I've ever read in the pull that it has when you give it the time it deserves. Looking forward to the back half
CNN is an enemy of the state and should be treated as such.
Absolute
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Finished Revenge Prey by John Sanford. Solidly enjoyable as always. My favorite murder mystery/thriller writer. All of his series kind of intertwine and are great. If you haven't given him a try, you should. Start with the Prey series.

Almost done with my audible listen of the Codex Alera series by Jim Butcher. Swear I read it, but really did not remember much. Has been very enjoyable. Kate Reading does a great job with the reading work.

Not sure what's up next.

jkag89
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Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone by J.K. Rowling - It was amongst the books at the cabin in which we staying at for a mini extended family vacation. First time revisiting the book since before the film series began. Fun as I remembered.

January
1) A Team For America: The Army-Navy Game That Rallied a Nation at War by Randy Roberts (B)
2) Dune Messiah by Frank Herbert (B+)
3) What Christians Believe: Understanding the Nicene Creed by Bishop Robert Barron (A)

February
4) A Gentleman in Moscow by by Amor Towles (A)
5) The Wingmen: The Unlikely, Unusual, Unbreakable Friendship Between John Glenn and Ted Williams by Adam Lazarus (C)

Audiobooks
1) The Silmarillion by J.R.R. Tolkien - A mixture of listening and reading the text in an attempt to actually finish the book after many failed attempts in the past. I think listening to the stories comes across as the telling of lore instead of a dry history.
2) Frankenstein (or, The Modern Prometheus) by Mary Shelley (B)

March (Not a good reading month of reading for me)
6) The Library at Mount Char by Scott Hawkins (B-)

Audiobooks
3a) Don Quixote Part1 by Miguel de Cervantes (A-)

April (All three of these book are rather short, so another not particularly good reading month for me)
7) Daybreaks: Daily Reflections for Lent and Easter by Amy Welborn (B)
8) The Astronaut Wives Club by Lily Koppel (C-)
9) Night by Elie Wiese (A)

Audiobooks
4) The Master and Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov (A)
5) The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway (C+)
6) All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque (A)

May
10) Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone by J.K. Rowling
Wolfpac 08
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Finished Morning Star by Pierce Brown. Mostly audio book on this one. Glad to be caught back up on the first three. Excited to dive into the next three in this series! I've had Iron Gold sitting on my nightstand for almost a year. Ready to finally dive in!

Books read in 2026:

January
The Runaway Jury - John Grisham
The Hobbit - JRR Tolkien

February


March
The Fellowship of the Ring - JRR Tolkien

April
Dungeon Crawler Carl - Matt Dinniman
Red Rising - Pierce Brown (re-read)
Golden Son - Pierce Brown (re-read)

May
Morning Star - Pierce Brown (re-read)
The Marksman
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Othello by William Shakespeare. Some particularly good Shakespeare lines in this one.
Backyard Gator
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The Marksman said:

Othello by William Shakespeare. Some particularly good Shakespeare lines in this one.

the beast with two backs!
lurker76
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Finished up Open Season by C. J. Box and started Platform Decay, book 8 of the Murderbot Diaries, by Martha Welles. It was a surprise addition to my Kindle as I had forgotten when it was due to come out when I pre-ordered it. I'm sure the new DCC book will also surprise when it drops.
Pac1698
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Finished book 4.5 of the Dark Tower series, The Wind through the keyhole. I really enjoyed 95% of the book, it's interesting in that it's a story we are reading, with the character telling a story about his past, which ends up going to another story that he tells while in his past, So a story, within a story, within a story. It ends up feeling like a couple of short stories, which I enjoyed.

I'm now about 1/3 through the book Dr. Sleep by Stephen King. It's been good so far, my wife thought it was okay but once she finished, she said the book was good overall, she just didn't like the characters from the True Knot.
Malachi Constant
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Iron Gold is typically considered the weakest of the books in the Red Rising series. But stick with it - the story widens considerably and there are huge payoffs in Dark Age and Light Bringer (and eventually Red God I hope…)

I'm currently rereading the whole series to kill time for the next DCC book. On the second read thru, Iron Gold is actually much better (and it's great already).
Eliminatus
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The Collapsing Empire Series - John Scalzi
Enjoyed this series. Touches on everything in scifi. Unknown mysteries, hard science, battles, existential questioning, etc. Easy reads I blew through.

Lesser Dead - Chris Buehlman
Been wanting to read something from this author for a while now and settled on this one. A stand alone vampire romp in the tunnels of NYC. It was good though he does largely use second person writing which I am not particularly fond of. I have another of his works I will try and if it follows the same format, might be the last tbh.
Galt
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Book: Red Storm Rising (1986)
Author: Tom Clancy

Summary (5*): You all know it. The very best late-Cold-War imagining of what WW3 would have looked like if we fought the Soviets during the Reagan era, at the end of their empire. Unparalleled set-piece narration of interrelated land, sea, and air battles. Lots of settings, and both the broadest macro and squad-level micro hit hard and seem realistic. Still an amazing read 40 years (!!??!) after publication.

Plot (5*): World War 3 circa the late 80's, told from about 10 different perspectives. The kickoff was a terrorist attack on a Soviet refinery, causing the Politburo to target the Persian Gulf for energy security, but NATO needed to be neutralized prior to their taking of the oil fields. An invasion of Germany under false pretenses, an attack on Iceland to open the door for Atlantic Ocean ops, and bomber/submarine attacks on convoys are the prime areas of conflict. It's particularly interesting to read this in 2026 in some ways it feels totally current, and in others it feels closer to WW1 than now.

Characters (2*): The Soviet side of the story is told primarily through Alekseyev, a General in the Red Army; the American side is represented mostly by more junior fighters an Air Force weatherman, a sergeant of tanks in Germany, a Naval Reserve intel specialist, and a 688-class submarine captain. All work for what the book is trying to do. This is not in any way a character driven book, but there's enough inner dialogue to sympathize with all the characters at one time or another.

Re-readability (5*): Extreme. I've read this book probably 10 times since publication. It's like clockwork. Quite a few pages, but super-fast to get through. And the story is so well told, that it doesn't really matter that I can now recite whole passages without opening it up the reading is still enjoyable and engaging for me.

Who It's For: This should be required reading (and, in effect, it pretty much is) for anyone that enjoys military fiction. It's different than Clancy's other books. For all you millennials and younger that haven't yet read this one, do yourself a favor and dive in.

Post Script: Three other things about this book. First, I think it's one of the very best time capsules of the attitude it felt like we all had around 1986. It's hard to explain exactly, but there was a mix of optimism, confidence, and a feeling of invincibility that probably peaked around then. The Soviets weren't obviously on the decline quite yet, and definitely it was a multipolar world. I can't put a finger on it, but this book (and the best of Clancy's Ryan novels in general) still wakes that feeling up in me. I love it. Second, for me this is the absolute apex of technical thriller fictional novels, regardless of era. Before its publication, classics like Run Silent, Run Deep and Fields of Fire were the standard, but they lacked the scope and the "modern" feel of this; since 1986, there hasn't really been anything that approaches it in terms of scope, quality, and story (not all the fault of the books, it's harder to imagine something like this in a unipolar world). Third, I sometimes just look at the Table of Contents of Red Storm Rising and smile to myself, because I know the stories already, and Clancy's chapter titles just bring those thoughts in waves. Maskirovka? The Frisbees of Dreamland? Polar Glory? The Race of Cripples? Come on. Those are spectacular titles, each one could have been its own techno-thriller, and they each paint a picture clear as day in my head.
 
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