Summer 2025 Reading List

Soil:
By: Alfie Chadwick Date: December 31, 2025

Post-Christmas I always end up with the same happy problem: too many books to read. I do fly through them given the chance, but when work comes back around, and I keep treating myself to a little browse through the readings catalogue, I quickly end up with a pile of novels on my desk threatening to bury me if I let them grow any taller.

So my New Year’s resolution this year is pretty simple: No more books – well, maybe one or two steals I find at the 2nd hand bookshops – until I get through the backlog.

Fiction

Fantasy and Sci-Fi

An ever-decreasing part of my reading diet, there are still some authors who get me excited. I got through half of Fourth Wing on audiobook before deciding I needed to sit down and do it properly.

Fourth Wing, Fifth Wing and Sixth Wing - Rebecca Yarros

Project Hail Mary - Andy Weir

The Host - Stephenie Meyer

The Lord of the Rings - Tolkien

The Ministry for the Future - Kim Stanley Robinson

Thrillers

After trying out the peak this year, I found these in an op shop and am going to give them a try

The Predicament – William Boyd

The Cellist – Daniel Silva

The Messenger – Daniel Silva

The Black Widow – Daniel Silva

Modern Fiction

A couple of books that have been in the backlog for a while, plus a new award winner that I’m looking forward to

Trainspotting – Irvine Welsh

Bridget Jones – Helen Fielding

Ghost Cities – Siang Lu

Classics

A mix of paperbacks that I haven’t looked at since year 9 and some others that I got in a bundle on sale. I feel like if I’m ‘in to reading’ then I really should have these done

1948 - George Orwell

Brave New World - Aldous Huxley

Moby Dick - Herman Melville

Dubliners - James Joyce

The Jungle Book - Rudyard Kipling

Lady Chatterley’s Lover - D.H. Lawrence

Northanger Abbey - Jane Austen

Wuthering Heights - Emily Brontë

Jane Eyre - Charlotte Brontë

Romeo and Juliet - William Shakespeare

The Age of Innocence - Edith Wharton

The Hound of the Baskervilles - Arthur Conan Doyle

Agnes Grey - Anne Brontë

H.G. Wells Anthology - H.G. Wells

Heart of Darkness - Joseph Conrad

Huckleberry Finn - Mark Twain

Cranford - Elizabeth Gaskell

Pride and Prejudice - Jane Austen

Metamorphosis and The Trial - Franz Kafka

Non Fiction

History and Biography

Not a big part of my non-fiction library, but I do find that when the themes are bigger than just one person and their path to celebrity, I seem to like the books much more.

Too Much and Never Enough – Mary Trump

Being John Lennon – Ray Conolly

The Man with the Golden Touch – Sinclair McKay

Raise Your Soul – Yanis Varoufakis

Biology and Anthropology

A mix of gifts and cheapies I’ve found online. Big fan of all of Adam Rutherfords’ work, so I’m excited for his two entries.

The Book of Humans - Adam Rutherford

The Body - Bill Bryson

A Brief History of Everyone Who’s Ever Lived - Adam Rutherford

The Psychopath Test - Jon Ronson

Human Origins - Sarah Wild

A Devil’s Chaplain - Richard Dawkins

The Origin of Species - Charles Darwin

The Malay Archipelago - Alfred Russel Wallace

The Meat Paradox - Rob Percival

Sport

A small but growing part of the sportsbook market, moving away from the what and looking more at the why. Found all of these through podcasts, so I have a feeling I already know a lot of the theses.

Making Space – Mike Prade

The Program – David Walsh

Inverting the Pyramid – Jonathan Wilson

Social Theory and Politics

This is the section where my personal reading starts to blend with my work reading, especially some of the classic social theory books that I find myself quoting without reading in full

A Short History of the World in 50 Lies – Natasha Tidd

Who Rules the World – Noam Chomsky

Caless People – Sarah Wynn-Williams

Let’s Tax Carbon – Ross Garnaut

Upturn – Tanya Plibersek

Keating and Kellys’ Sper Legacy – Mary Easson

Divided Opinions – Eddy Jokivick and David Lewis

Why We Polarised – Ezra Klein

The Avoidable War – Kevin Rudd

The Wealth of Nations – Adam Smith

The Communist Manifesto – Karl Marx

Republic – Plato

On Liberty – John Stuart Mill

Climate Change

I always like finding optimistic and policy-based books on climate, hoping these fill that niche

How to Avoid a Climate Disaster - Bill Gates

Quarterly Essay 78 - Judith Brett

The Carbon Collision Course - Andrew Perry

Quarterly Essay 99 - Marian Wilkinson

How to Talk About Climate Change - Rebecka Huntley

Not the End of the World - Hannah Ritchie

Scorcher - Clive Hamilton

Technology and Society

With AI having such a big boom this year, we have more people thinking and talking about one of my favourite topics: How technology and society interact. Excited for some of the recommender books, especially after seeing Liz Pelly speak earlier this year.

The AI Con - Emily Bender and Alex Hanna

Bad Data - Georgina Sturge

Mega Tech - Daniel Franklin

The Coming Wave - Mustafa Suleyman

Weapons of Math Destruction - Cathy O’Neil

The Age of Surveillance Capitalism - Shoshana Zuboff

Morning After the Revolution - Nellie Boweles

Blood in the Machine - Brian Merchant

100 Things We’ve Lost to the Internet - Pamela Paul

Nexus - Yuval Noah Harari

The Mood Machine - Liz Pelly

The Future - Anton Funnel

Atlas of AI - Kate Crawford

Good Data - Sam Gilbert

You Have Not Yet Heard Your Favourite Song - Glen McDonald

Communications

Honestly, these are just books for work that I need to sit down with and interrogate

Who Needs the ABC - Matthew Ricketson and Patrick Mullins

Merchants of Doubt – Naomi Oreskes and Erik M. Conway

Trust Me I’m Lying - Ryan Holiday

Making Headlines - Chris Mitchell

Misc

Why Should All Be Feminists - Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Is a River Alive - Robert Macfarlane

What to Read and Why - Francine Prose

The One Thing You Need to Know - Marcus Chown

Deep Sea - Jon Copley

Vector – Robyn Arianrhod

The Self Delusion - Tom Oliver