Monday, January 5, 2026

Back to the Classics 2026

Like others, I've been lamenting the demise of Karen's Back to the Classics challenge, so I've decided to simply do it this year myself.

Half the fun of the old Back to the Classics challenge was conjuring up a list of classics to match the prompts for the year--and then proceeding to ignore all those stated intentions. (And commenting on everybody else's plans.) At first I was going to make my own list of categories, but then I saw that Deb Nance at Readerbuzz had created a set of categories and I decided to just steal hers. So here we go--and my tentative matches against each category.

The old challenge required that the books be at least fifty years old, and I'll honor that. 

19th Century Classic

George Gissing/New Grub Street 

20th Century Classic

Eudora Welty/Delta Wedding 

An Award-winning Classic

Ursula K. Le Guin/The Left Hand of Darkness (Nebula, Hugo) 

A Classic Journey or Travel Narrative, Fiction or Non-Fiction

R. L. Stevenson/An Inland Voyage 

A Classic by a Woman Author

Rebecca West/The Fountain Overflows 

Humorous or Satirical Classic

Machado de Assis/The Posthumous Memoirs of Bras Cubas 

Classic Detective or Mystery Fiction

Edgar Wallace/The Four Just Men 

Classic Children's Book

Horatio Alger/Ragged Dick 

Banned or Censored Classic

Mikhail Bulgakov/Heart of a Dog 

A Classic in Translation

Simone de Beauvoir/The Mandarins 

A Non-fiction Classic

John Ruskin/Unto This Last 

Free Choice

Nazami Ganjavi/Layli and Majnun

 

I just formalized a new Classics Club list, my second, so I had a ready list of classics to choose from.

If you've been missing this challenge & put together a Back to the Classics list, mention it in comments and I'll be thrilled to go find yours. 

Sunday, January 4, 2026

2025 Reading Year in Review

Another year of reading done & it was a good one. Some highlights:

First Time Reads 


Percival Everett/James (2024)

I hadn't read much Everett before and really the thing I knew the best about him was the film American Fiction. But I suspected I would like this, reread Huck Finn in advance to prepare, and I was not disappointed. While I had some quibbles about the reveal at the end of the book (but no spoilers!) it still sent me off to read a half dozen other Everetts this year. Assumption was probably my second favorite, but So Much Blue was also awfully good.


 

Ferdia Lennon/Glorious Exploits (2024)

Lennon's an Irish writer, but this, his debut, is a historical novel set in Sicily after the Athenian campaign to conquer Syracuse fails (413 BC) during the Peloponnesian WarThe captured survivors from the Athenian army are thrown into a quarry with the intent of enslaving them; instead they're left to starve. Lampo and Gelon, two lower-class Syracusans are thrilled that Athenians have been defeated, but they're fans of Euripides and maybe some of these Athenians know the plays? A sad, but also funny, tribute to the power of art.


Stuart Dybek/I Sailed With Magellan (2003)

I'd long known of Dybek, a Chicago writer, but had never read anything by him--I'm not sure why. A mistake. This is a collection of linked stories about Perry Katzik's coming of age on the South Side of Chicago. Think a male, urban Del Jordan (of Lives of Girls and Women). A friend from Chicago and I then drove each other on to read most of Dybek. I think he preferred The Coast of Chicago--also a very good story collection--but I stuck with this as my favorite.

 

Rudiger Safranski/Goethe: Life as a Work of Art (2017) 

A recent German biography of Goethe, superbly translated into English by David Dollenmayer. It gets the facts--of course, you would hope that--but it's also well-structured and sensitively done. 

The one on this list that actually got a post


Gerald Howard/The Insider (2025)

Subtitled "Malcolm Cowley and the Triumph of American Literature"--and that's a good overview. It's a model literary biography, and Cowley's fairly obscure these days so he needed one. Howard doesn't soft-pedal the bad things Cowley did, and there were some, but definitely reminds us how important Cowley was to the rising status of American literature during the 20th century.

The last book I read of the year, and I'm thinking it's going to get its own post soon.

First Book of the 2026

Why, as it turns out, it was a reread of Malcolm Cowley's Exile's Return, which Howard says, and I agree, is Cowley's masterpiece. Look for that post.

Some Exceptional Rereads 

Mark Twain/Huck Finn
 
Thomas Mann/The Magic Mountain - I reread this before reading Olga Tokarczuk's The Empusium. The Tokarczuk was fun--two of her books have ended up on best of year lists for me before--but not this time. The Magic Mountain is a great novel.
 
Susanna Clarke/Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell - There was a new Clarke out early last year The Wood At Midwinter. It was fine; my primary complaint is that it was too short. So, of course, I had to reread her first. My third time and just as good as the first two. 
 
Oh, yeah, and all of Charlie Chan
 
Number of Slender Mysteries
 
19 
 
Number of Chunksters
 
11. 
 
Percentage of Non-Fiction Books
 
30%. That includes three graphic non-fiction books, and seven (!) books of aphorisms, if one counts those as non-fiction... 
  
Percentage of Books Written by Women
 
16%. Hmm. Not very good.
 
Percentage of Books from the Toronto Public Library
 
47% (Hooray for the TPL!)
 
Percentage of Books in Translation
 
24% - original languages were German, French, Italian, Latin, Spanish, Portuguese, Russian and Czech.
 
Plans
 
What me plan?  I signed up for the European Reading Challenge again this year. I'm going to try to write more blog posts--to which end maybe I'll sign up for a few more challenges.
 
A good reading year. Happy New Year to you and may your new reading year be good, too! 


Friday, January 2, 2026

European Reading Challenge Signup 2026

 

Time to signup for Gilion's European Reading Challenge for the new year. Hers is one of the best challenges going as far as I'm concerned, and I won't be missing it this year. The idea is to visit unique European countries by book, and I'll sign up at the Five-Star/Deluxe Entourage level once again for five books, but suspect once again I'll go past that. I never know what my books are going to be but I'm pretty sure the first country will be France, because I'm likely to finish Malcolm Cowley's Exile's Return about the Lost Generation authors in France later this evening.

Any European books in your future?