This post contains affiliate links. If you click through and buy I will receive a percentage commission at no extra cost to you.
As we reach the end of another year many of us reflect on the year we’ve lived. For me 2025 has been very up and down, with a fair amount of challenges, but there’s been plenty of good too, and that’s what I’ll be focussing on here. It has been my most popular year on the blog, so a huge thank you to you, my readers, for stopping by. I hope it’s been a year of more good than bad for you and that 2026 holds good health, friendship, and excellent books.
Books

I started the year borrowing a stack of non-fiction from the local library about technology and the effect it’s having on us all. These books proved to be fascinating, anxiety inducing reads. They made me reflect on the way technology, and specifically social media, impacts human life on a much broader scale than the individual. I had previously thought mostly about the amount of time we waste scrolling, on the way it degrades relationships due to its constant pull of attention, but these books make me appreciate how much of a problem it is for humanity as a whole, and how its implications can be so much more severe than some wasted time. The Chaos Machine by Max Fisher gave this wide picture, and The Cyber Effect by Mary Aiken really focused in on the impact technology has on young people. An unsettling but important read for anyone with young people in their life. Having been convinced of the dangers of tech, I was pleased to read this recent article on The Guardian which suggests people are moving away from their digital lives in search of real connection. There’s also been a lot of talk on social media recently about how we use technology and how many are planning to shift their use in 2026 to more intentional - using technology as a tool rather than an extension of ourselves. This feels like a worthwhile, achievable aim.

This year I have also finally cracked the spine on a few books that have been patiently waiting my attention, sometimes for years. This has been a mixed experience. Most recently, I finished City of Wonders by Eduardo Mendoza which I had eagerly anticipated. It was probably my most disappointing read of the year. This is not to say it’s a terrible book, not at all. Early on I really quite enjoyed it, but the further I got into it the more I had to force myself to go back to it. When you go in with high expectations you’re more likely to be disappointed and perhaps if I had just picked it up and read it immediately it would have left a better impression. Similarly, The Mad Women’s Ball by Victoria Mas is one I’ve been looking forward to reading. It didn’t quite hit in the way I’d expected but there was more in it to enjoy. The ideas and issues in it were easy to feel connected to even if the execution wasn’t quite as smooth as I’d hoped. A more successful anticipated read was O Caledonia by Elspeth Barker, which was not quite what I expected but wonderful nonetheless. Absorbing, atmospheric, with a protagonist that feels incredibly real. Finally, and probably the book that has been on my radar for the longest of these (since I saw A.C. Grayling talk at the Hay Festival back in 2016) was a non-fiction, The Age of Genius, which I finished up in the last days of the year, and which I found fascinating.

The most fun read of the year was undoubtedly Just One Damned Thing After Another by Jodi Taylor, a lively time travel novel which happily is the start of a series. Regular readers will know that I read series incredibly slowly, so it is testament to how much I enjoyed this that I’ve already read book two. My favourite book of the year however, was probably Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin, a moving story of friendship, creativity, and ambition in a period where you didn’t have to be a huge company to create bestselling video games. I loved getting to know the characters, frustrating as they could be at times, and learning more about the work that goes in to creating video games, a topic I’m not particularly familiar with.

I’ve got a few books lined up to read in the early days of 2026, including getting back to Ferrante’s excellent Neapolitan Quartet with Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay. A non-fiction I picked up a few months back which is drawing my attention, A Life of One’s Own by Joanna Biggs should be an early finish. I’m also considering finally picking up a copy of Mantel’s epic Wolf Hall. As ever, I’d love to hear what you’ve been reading and loving recently.
Exhibitions:
It’s been a year where I’ve embraced my love of art. A reliable favourite was the Broderer’s Exhibition. They exhibit every few years and the work is always stunning. A real testament of what can be done with needle and thread. I also particularly enjoyed Dangerously Modern: Australian Women Artists in Europe 1890-1940 at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, on until 15th February 2026. The artists were almost all new to me and I loved their artwork. It was also interesting to learn about their travels and the influences they took back to Australia with them. I regret not buying the exhibition guide. Not a temporary exhibition, but an art gallery I also enjoyed on my travels was the National Gallery in Athens, well worth a visit.
Moving away from art for a moment, an exhibition at the Science Museum in London, Versailles: Science and Splendour really caught my attention. I enjoyed it so much I wrote a whole review of it. Sadly, it’s now closed.
Travel
2025 started with being stranded on a mountain road in the Cairngorms in a snow storm. A dramatic start, but a beautiful one nonetheless. Our journey back from Scotland allowed us to finally visit Whitby, somewhere that has been on the to-visit list for well over a decade now. It was every bit as lovely as I’d hoped, as well as being bitterly cold. I’d love to go back and spend a bit more time exploring.

I make no secret of finding winter a difficult season (although have tried this year to really embrace all the seasons and what they have to offer) and so visiting a sunnier country toward the end of winter is always an aim to bridge the gap to Spring. This year I was lucky to be able to visit Greece for the first time. We spent almost a week in Athens before heading over to Aegina for a few days of island life. I absolutely loved Athens. It felt relaxed during the day and vibrant in the evenings. Visiting in March meant the weather was warm and sunny during the day and cooler in the evenings. Planning your days to avoid the heat was not a consideration, and the city smelt gorgeous as the orange trees were in blossom. Outside of the city the mountains were covered in wildflowers, a truly beautiful time to visit. Aegina was fairly quiet, tourist season not having kicked in, but in Aegina Town there was plenty open and we explored the ancient ruins around the island as much as possible. A day trip to Agistri was a quiet one, with almost everything being shut, but we enjoyed a pleasant walk, and managed to find an open restaurant for a delicious lunch.

UK weather not being on our side for trips this year, we had a very rainy camping trip in Wales. Putting up your tent in torrential rain and trying to sleep in a lightning storm might not be the most appealing but we saw some beautiful places. The National Botanic Gardens of Wales were lovely despite the weather. We could definitely have spent more time there than we allowed for it. The gardens at Dyffryn were also particularly beautiful, and we enjoyed an evening stroll around the pretty seaside town of Penarth.

A trip to Gran Canaria was a nice change of pace for people whose holidays are usually pretty full on. We came back feeling more relaxed than any other holiday we’ve been on. That’s not to say we didn’t get out to see the island however. A dolphin watching tour allowed us to see a pod of dolphins in the wild, and a day in Las Palmas provided the culture hit we often seek. A beautiful city with interesting museums and galleries, and a particularly nice beach. A day trip took us into the centre of the island, showing us the variety of landscapes and an insight into the history that has changed it from the lush island it once was. The botanic gardens in Maspalomas made for a pretty stroll on a sunny afternoon. I enjoyed seeing plants that you never see in the UK, and those that you only see in greenhouses here growing outside, and thriving for being in their natural habitat.

An unexpected trip to Australia in October meant seeing the country in Spring for the first time, and with it the beautiful purple jacaranda trees in bloom. We were also incredibly lucky to see dolphins playing in the waves at Palm Beach. We enjoyed the Saturday markets around Sydney and the bookshops of Glebe (a good secondhand bookshop making the otherwise very expensive books of Australia more affordable). We were fortunate to be there during the Sculpture by the Sea trail in Bondi so checked that out, and of course, wandered round more botanic gardens.
2026 will probably be a quiet year for travel as our bank accounts recover from 2025, but as we had to shift a trip to Belgium for the Australia visit we know we’ll be going there. Any recommendations of what to see and do very welcome.
No comments:
Post a Comment