Favourite Books in First Half of 2025

It’s always tricky to attempt an annual summary and reduce it to a manageable number of books when you’ve read over 120 books during the year. I’ve tried to organise it by genre or by seasons in the past few years but I’ll keep it really simple this time and just go by first half of the year in one post, to be followed by a second half after Christmas (just in case I get to read something astounding by then).

January has always been about Japan for me, at least since Dolce Belezza started her January in Japan reading challenge. The year did not necessarily start with the best reads in that respect: I did not really appreciate Hunchback or Snakes and Earrings, but one ‘shocking’ novella that did stay with me was Astral Season, Beastly Season by Tahi Saihate. I also enjoyed the return to modern Japanese literature classics like Mishima and Kono Taeko. Finally, a return to Murakami Ryu and the discovery of new-to-me writer Kazushige Abe provided me with more memorable reading – all of them as far removed as possible from the cosy, cat-covered books or puzzle mysteries that publishers have given us in recent years.

February brought a real bout of good reading. I’d been eagerly anticipating Han Kang’s We Do Not Part and it did not disappoint: a combination of eerie, historical, heartwarming and heartbreaking that probably shouldn’t work, but does. Another book by a Nobel Prize winner, The Empusium, I also really enjoyed, although perhaps not quite as much as others by Tokarczuk. I also reread an old favourite for my personal French February reading challenge, namely Saint-Exupery and his Vol de Nuit, which was as beautiful as I remembered, and I discovered a new poet (well, new to me, as he’s been dead for nearly 100 years now): the highly experimental, surrealist Yi Sang.

March and April were largely dedicated to the International Booker longlist, and the books were mercifully shorter and more interesting/varied than the ones from the previous year. I loved the strong narrative voice and irony of There’s a Monster Behind the Door by Gaelle Belem and my personal favourite to win was Kawakami’s Under the Eye of the Big Bird (it didn’t). I was much more impressed by Murakami Haruki’s non-fiction reportage Underground than I’ve been by his last few novels, and it seemed an appropriate time to read it, thirty years after the sarin gas attack on the Tokyo metro. Another non-Booker book which really stuck with me during April was Ex-Wife by Ursual Parrott, hard to believe that it was written a hundred years ago! Last but not least, I read my first László Krasznahorkai and was absolutely charmed with the Genji reference.

You’ll be relieved to hear that there was only one truly memorable book in May (at the distance of several months now): a collection of surreal short stories by Korean author Lee Yuri entitled Broccoli Punch.

June was another great month for reading. I reread and continued to be very impressed with Small Island by Andrea Levy. I absolutely loved Jen Calleja’s memoir and manifesto about translation Fair. For a very different change of pace, I absolutely raced through the frighteningly plausible and exciting thriller The Man with a Thousand Faces by Dutch author Lex Noteboom, and was pleased to be back in the company of Ikmen and Mehmet in Barbara Nadel’s The Wooden Library (this time featuring a trip to Romania!).

So that was the first half of my year and I think what’s remarkable is that of the seventeen books I mention here, only three were written in English. And that’s not because the number of translated books have vastly outnumbered the English language books on my reading list (the proportion is probably more like half and half), but because the translated books (and the English books I enjoyed) were mostly published by small indie presses, who are the only respite from a ‘mainstream culture of dumbing down and selling out’, as this furious but accurate and funny article by Lucy Mercer describes it.

As for my favourite book covers (for the books I read during this period)? Well, this time I have to say that although several were ok, none really blew my socks off, but I am including my three favourites in this post (they’re not necessarily the covers of the editions that I was able to find and read in the UK). Am I becoming too prone to noticing fads and copycats now that I am a publisher myself?If I had to pick a winner, it would probably be There’s a Monster Behind the Door, which does a good job of conveying the atmosphere of the book while using the currently fashionable floral design.

If I had to pick a top five from the books listed above, and remembering that Top Five does not necessarily reflect quality, but degree of obsession, I would say We Do Not Part, Fair, Vol de Nuit, Underground and Yi Sang are the ones that have haunted me for the rest of the year.

#SixDegrees of Separation: September ’25

I may not quite be in my own flat yet, but at least I’m getting settled into my new hometown, so I’m always delighted to take part in the Six Degrees of Separation meme hosted by the lovely Kate.

This month the starting point is Ghost Cities by Siang Lu, a book that I haven’t read or even heard of, but which sounds interesting potentially. My first link is going to be a bit unusual. This book was apparently inspired by the vacant, uninhabited megacities in certain parts of China, and, just coincidentally, last night I was speaking to an architect who had visited such a city in China (and got stuck there for two days). He also was keen to talk to me about his latest read, Mishima’s The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea, so that is my first link.

The book is about thirteen-year-old boys, with all of the problems that entails, so my next link is another book featuring protagonists of a similar age, and this one is a British classic The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole, aged 13 3/4 by Sue Townsend. It is such a hilarious, irreverent look at adolescence, when we blow all of our problems out of proportion.

I’ll take an easy approach to the following link, namely another diary. One of my favourite novels in diary form is I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith, a warm-hearted, endearing story with 17-year-old Cassandra as the main protagonist.

So of course my next link will have to be the book Kassandra by Christa Wolf, a fictional reimagining of the unfortunate Cassandra of Trojan War fame. The novel was initially banished in the German Democratic Republic, because of the metaphor of silencing those who speak the truth.

My fifth link is therefore to another book that was banished when it first came out, namely Cel mai iubit dintre pământeni (The Earth’s Most-Beloved Son) by Romanian author Marin Preda. Although it depicted mostly the horrors of Romania during the early 1950s and its most Stalinist Communist period, it was nevertheless deemed too critical, got heavily censored and was only available on the black market back in the 1980s.

The original edition from 1984, which my parents managed to acquire and hide at the back of their bookshelves

That was Marin Preda’s final novel, so my last link is to another famous final novel by an author, namely Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov. It may have taken me several attempts to read it, but it is undeniably a very thought-provoking and dramatic piece of work.

So my Six Degrees this month have travelled to Japan, Britain, Ancient Greece/Troy, Romania and Czarist Russia. Where will your six literary links take you?

January in Japan: Yukio Mishima

Yukio Mishima: The Temple of the Golden Pavilion, transl. Ivan Morris, Vintage Classics, 2001.

In 1950 a young Buddhist monk-in-training set fire to the temple of Kinkakuji in Kyoto. The young man was diagnosed as schizophrenic and died a few years later, but his apparently inexplicable act of destruction has captured the imagination of creators ever since, most notably in Mishima’s best-known novel, but also in numerous film, stage and even opera and dance adaptations.

Mishima was not content to just label the young man as ‘mad’; instead he tried to delve deeper into the psychology of such an individual, even visiting the arsonist in prison. Of course, this is a fictional, speculative account, but such is the beauty of Mishima’s writing and his understanding of twisted minds and feelings, that it feels truer and more interesting than perhaps the real story could have been.

This was one of those novels that changed my understanding of life when I was a 19 year old student of Japanese language and literature, but I had not reread it since. I was almost afraid to, in case it failed to live up to my memory of it. For the first half or so of the book, I struggled. I was nearly convinced that it was a mistake not to consign it to the attic of my memories: the self-absorbed, sulky teenager is not the kind of character for whom I have any patience left. Yes, he stutters and has problems communicating with others, yes, his mother has cheated on his dying father, and yes, he has no place really to call home other than this almost far too beautiful temple where he has been sent to train to become a priest… but is that really sufficient reason to be such a bastard? There is a crescendo of unpleasant scenes that the narrator Mizoguchi observes and takes part in, so the final act should really not come as a surprise, but the journey there can be quite distasteful.

However, despite the occasional pretentious philosophising (typical teenager, I suppose), there are passages of great beauty throughout. The final chapter or two, in particular, reminded me why I loved this novel so much. The part of the story which has always fascinated me was still there and still intact. It’s the eternal artist’s dilemma, which reminds me of Andrei Rublev, except that Mishima tries to answer the questions that Tarkovsky only asks (and Mizoguchi is no artist). How can actual, real-life beauty ever live up to the beauty in our imaginations? Are the creation and destruction of beauty our only possible responses to an indifferent, cruel world? Does the artist have to sacrifice everything for the sake of beauty – is that the only thing that gives art authenticity? Can we ever really understand and fully appreciate beauty until we feel its loss? And doesn’t darkness or ugliness make the beauty stand out all the more?

Like a moon that hangs in the night sky, the Golden Temple had been built as a symbol of the dark ages. Therefore it was necessary for the Golden Temple of my dreams to have darkness bearing down on it from all sides. In this darkness, the beautiful, slender pillars of the building rested quietly and steadily, emitting a faint light from inside.

Mizoguchi has two friends who almost act as the angel and devil sitting on his shoulders: Tsurukawa, the naive, idealistic friend who believes the best of everyone, and Kashiwagi, whose birth defect has turned him cynical and cruel. [There might be a lot to say here about Mishima’s aversion towards bodily defects, he who indulged in bodybuilding and modelling, but we’ll leave that aside for now.] Mizoguchi wants Tsurukawa to be his conscience but is fascinated and swayed by Kashiwagi. Tsurukawa is weak in his moral rectitude, while Kashiwagi is strong in his corruption. The narrator also feels let down by his mother and by the Superior of the temple – for they are nothing but ordinary human beings, with all sorts of flaws. Meanwhile, he wallows in his self-hatred and grows to resent anything that reminds him that he too is imperfect and weak. Does beauty not become tarnished by familiarity? So why does this temple he knows so well still exert so much fascination upon him? Why does it render him impotent (both literally and metaphorically) and how can he rid himself of the hold it has over him?

A less common picture of the Golden Temple in the snow.

Perhaps beauty was both these things. It was both the individual parts and the whole structure… the mystery of the beauty of the Golden Temple, which had tormented me so much in the past, was halfway towards being solved. If one examined the beauty of each individual detail… the beauty was never complete in any single detail… The beauty of the individual detail itself was always filled with uneasiness. It dreamed of perfection, but it knew no completion and was invariably lured on to the next beauty, the unknown beauty…. Nothingness was the very structure of this beauty.

Many have taken issue with Mishima because of his problematic life, opinions and death, and it’s true that in this particular book (and a few of his other ones) the main character is a complete knob. But the author shows his character in all his ‘knob-ness’: it’s this self-awareness of his own personal flaws, this distancing from the sentiments described, this ability to make us pity and understand even the strangest of compulsions, the worst of human nature, that make me still appreciate Mishima. This is a man who was afraid of unpredictability, of too much freedom, of lack of structure, a repressed homosexual… and this tension is clearly visible and unresolved in his books. Alas, in his real life, it manifested itself in a reverence for military discipline and authority, a tendency to see things in binary terms which is more Western than Japanese. Am I reading too much in this book in saying that Mizoguchi is incapable of seeing any other solution than either destroying the temple or allowing himself to be destroyed by it (and that this is presented as a major error of judgement)?

The book was published in 1956 and the event it depicts was still fresh in people’s memories at the time, but it can also be interpreted as a metaphor for the emptiness and self-hatred that many in Japan felt after the end of the war. This translation came out in 1959 in the US, although it wasn’t published in the UK until 1994. Ivan Morris belongs to that first generation of translators and scholars, who did so much to familiarise the Western world with Japan after the Second World War, and humanise the people we had previously demonised. I group him loosely together with Donald Keene and Edward Seidensticker (Jay Rubin, John Nathan and Michael Gallagher came a little later, thereby representing the second wave). We owe them so many of the translations of the classics: Genji, Sei Shonagon’s Pillow Book, but also the modern storytellers that really aroused our interest in Japanese literature: Kawabata, Tanizaki Junichiro, Oe Kenzaburo, Mishima, Dazai Osamu and Kobo Abe.

If you look at these two lists, what do you notice? That it was largely male translators translating male writers (with the exception of the Heian classics). Of course, that is not to say that these writers were not brilliant and did not deserve to be translated, but it’s worth bearing in mind that there was a certain element of pre-selection going on there, so our image of Japanese literature was slightly skewed until at least the 1990s, when other (ahem – female) authors and translators began to appear, and when it became possible to admit that maybe the Japanese economic miracle was not all light and beauty.

Two writers in particular stood head and shoulders above the others in the early 1990s, when I was studying Japanese – and they remain among the most translated Japanese writers, at least until Murakami Haruki came along. I am referring, of course, to Kawabata and Mishima, Kawabata because of his Nobel (this was before Oe won his), and Mishima because of his highly-publicised, dramatic death. Their literary styles were very different: Kawabata’s prose is bare, restrained, detached, full of ellipses and hidden meanings, while Mishima is ornate, intense, visceral and dramatic. The battle between the fans of the two writers was as acute as the one between Tolstoy and Dostoevsky fans. If you like Dostoevsky at all, I would encourage you to give Mishima a try, and forget about the unsavoury aspects of the man, simply succumb to the magic that is his writing style.

When I Won the Booker Prize

OK, I admit: ever so slightly misleading title, but I couldn’t resist the pun!  No, it’s not the Booker Prize I am talking about, but a blogging award that the criminally wonderful Pat Wood kindly bequeathed to me. Please visit Pat’s funny blog – you will find something there to love, of that I’m sure!

So this Booker is for those who refuse to live in the real world. Says it all, really.  But alas, these past few months I’ve had to live for far too long in the real world.

The guidelines are simple, if reductionist: I have to pick my five favourite books of all time and then say what I am currently reading.  I always struggle with picking ‘favourites’ – it’s like having to say which of my children I love most.  But here’s an attempt:

1) The Great Gatsby (and I wax on about it at length here)

2) Jane Austen’s Persuasion – it even managed to convert Savidge Reads

3) Shakespeare: ‘The Tempest’ – does that count?  Well, if it doesn’t, I would publish it in a separate volume with ‘Twelfth Night’, ‘Midsummer Night’s Dream’ and ‘Macbeth’, entitling it ‘Must Read Shakespeare’.  But ‘The Tempest’ is my favourite.

4) Mishima Yukio: The Temple of the Golden Pavilion – what not to do when beauty and perfection eludes you

5) I.L. Caragiale: Plays and Sketches – virtually unknown outside Romania, he is one of the funniest and freshest voices of the 19th century

What am I reading now?  Well, just in case you thought the above choices were a bit too ambitious, you will be relieved to hear that the book I am going to share my bedtime with is… another installment from Lemony Snicket‘s brilliant Series of Unfortunate Events.  I first discovered the series a few years ago when I was selecting a present for a young niece.  The niece has moved on to other literature since, but I still treat myself to these tongue-in-cheek adventure stories.  I am hoping that my children will share my affection for them too (although so far their response to Famous Five and Secret Seven has been somewhat disappointing, to say the least).

But enough nattering!  Who are my nominees for this worthy (and clearly wordy) award?

The all-singing, all-writing wonder Nicky Wells from Romance that Rocks Your World!

Sensitive writer and translator Michelle Bailat Jones

Translator, poet, philosopher of the everyday, the wonderful Quirina at The Mind’s Sky

Natalia Sylvester, for being so sweetly herself !

And, just in case you think I am neglecting men, I also invite Sisyphus47 to join in

The truth is, of course, I am just really nosey, curious to see what they choose as their favourite books!