The Best Books I Read in 2025: My Top Fiction and Nonfiction Picks

From romantasy to Rumi: Top Reads of 2025 by K.M. Weiland — annual roundup of the year’s best fiction and nonfiction books for writers and readers.Every December, I love looking back at my year in books. My reading always ends up reflecting everything else in my life. It shows what I’m curious about, what’s inspired me, and how I’ve grown. This year, I feel like really got to fall back in love with reading so much more deeply.

For the first time in a while, I wasn’t reading for research or a challenge. I was just reading for fun, enjoying late nights turning pages, underlining favorite lines, and chasing that feeling of being completely swept away. I dove into the romantasy craze, rediscovered my love of epic fantasy, and loved more than a few fascinating reads on sociology, philosophy, and metaphysics.

It all added up to one of my most satisfying reading years ever. It was fun, thought-provoking—full of books that made me think deeply and feel everything. Here are some of my favorite reads from 2025.

Total books read: 93

Fiction to non-fiction ratio: 61:32

(Note: All links are Amazon affiliate links.)

Fiction

Iron Flame by Rebecca Yarros

OMG. I don’t know if this was actually better than the first book (which made my list last year), or it’s just that I’m well and truly hooked now, but I freaking loved this book. Best novel-reading experience I’ve had in probably ten years. I was experiencing literal anxiety toward the end as the suspense kept ramping and ramping. And the cliffhanger… no words. I was just happy I came to the series late enough that the third book was literally a week from coming out when I finished this one.

Iron Flame by Rebecca Yarros

Iron Flame by Rebecca Yarros (affiliate link)

A Court of Mist and Fury by Sarah J. Maas

I found the first book in the series intriguing (even though it totally threw me when it shifted MMCs). But this one… this one was perfection. Loved the usage of a single POV, the incredibly rich characterization across the board, the beautiful and delicious romance, the stellar worldbuilding, and the beautiful prose. Tour de force.

A Court of Wings and Ruin by Sarah J. Maas

This one wasn’t quite as electrifying as the previous one (above), but the delectable and deep characterization, the well-realized world, and the deft progression of plot and stakes makes it eminently readable and enjoyable.

Orlando by Virginia Woolf

Sublime. It’s a profound poem of magical realism that stays grounded in the never-ending charm of its humor. Amidst the taken-for-granted absurdities of Orlando’s very long life, there arises an almost ineffable perspective on the infinities that reside within us all amidst our strange relationship to time—the paradox of our short and finite lives feeling like they are somehow attached to all things and all time at once.

Orlando by Virginia Woolf

Orlando by Virginia Woolf (affiliate link)

Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West by Gregory Maguire

I started this book many years ago when I was too young to “get it.” Returning now, after watching the film adaptation and the Broadway musical, I was delighted and swept away by the story, which in many ways is as different from the musical as it is from the original Wizard of Oz. The prose is a delight, as is Elphaba, the main character. The first half of the book is by far the strongest, and the second half doesn’t pack quite the same punch as the first, especially those heady years of Elphaba as a budding radical at Shiz University. On the whole, I feel that where the musical falters, the book is better, and where the book falters, the musical is better. Particularly taken together, they are a tour de force of that rare thing: a frothy entertainment that is powerful in its thematic subversiveness.

Non-Fiction

The Simple Path to Wealth by JL Collins

One of my resolutions this year was to get clearer on financial strategy (especially as a self-employed person). This book was a favorite. It has a cult following and is as good as everyone says it is. In my experience so far, I’d say that if you’re only going to read one book on finance in your life, this is the one. Collins’s advice is simple, straightforward, and cuts to the chase. It’s a fast read, and every page is packed with solid, practical advice.

The Essential Rumi translated by Coleman Barks

If I could give this book more than five stars, I would. What can one say about Rumi that is even sufficient? Sacred transmissions and poetry of the soul. So much wisdom and pathos and cheekiness and depth beyond depth. I will read Rumi all my life.

The Essential Rumi

The Essential Rumi (affiliate link)

The Social Construction of Reality by Peter L. Berger and Thomas Luckmann

When I first picked up this book back in 2017, the first sentence blew my mind so hard I literally couldn’t keep reading: the claim that our conception of reality is a social construct, and that the sociology of knowledge must uncover how this happens. That idea stayed with me for years and in many ways completely reshaped the way I thought about my life, the world, even about writing.

Coming back to the book this year, I finally read it through—and while it’s short, it’s also extraordinarily (and, for my money, unnecessarily) dense. It’s a fascinating exploration of how so much of what we take as “given” in the world and in ourselves is actually the result of collective human construction. It’s not just about why society looks the way it does, but about why we are who we are and what that means for our sense of identity, agency, and freedom. It’s the kind of book I know I’ll need to reread, but even one pass is enough to crack open assumptions about reality in ways that never quite close again.

Becoming Supernatural by Dr. Joe Dispenza

This was the third and final book by Joe Dispenza I read this year, and each one seemed to surpass the last in impact. I found it deeply inspiring, offering insights that not only encouraged me to live a better life but also helped me bring more structure and clarity to practices I’ve already been exploring. Overall, the experience felt meaningful and valuable, leaving me with a stronger sense of direction and understanding.

My Books

And if all these goodies aren’t enough to fill your To Be Read pile next year, here are a few more! 🙂

Wayfarer 165 Weiland


Wordplayers, tell me your opinion! What were your top books of 2025? How many books did you read? Tell me in the comments!

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Author: K.M. Weiland | @KMWeiland

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Date:
  • December 15, 2025
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