I just realised that I haven’t made one of these posts – my TRB list – since 2022. So, this is a new and short list for 2026. I highlighted the name of the books so they are easier to spot. This is an unusual mix, with comic books and non-fiction. I will see if I will share another list once I finish with these books. There are more books I am keen to read, which is very likely that I will read before of these, so it might take about 6 months to finish this lot.

The first book is Beyond Supervet: How Animals Make Us The Best We Can Be by Noel Fitzpatrick, which I received for my birthday a couple of years ago. It was a book I wanted to read, but kept postponing. He was abused as a child and this made me move the book further and further on the reading list. I will read it.
He is Irish, so this will count on my Read the World challenge.
How Good It Is I Have No Fear of Dying: Lieutenant Yulia Mykytenko’s Fight for Ukraine by Lara Marlowe is a book I found at my library and got it. I am looking forward to reading it. Picking up random books from the library might sound like a good idea, but one, about Ukraine, was written by a russian who was comparing their “hardship” and “pain” to that the Ukrainians suffer. It was a DNF, of course. I don’t understand why the library bought the book in the first place, very poor choice.
Recommended by a friend, The Body Keeps the Score: Mind, Brain and Body in the Transformation of Trauma by Bessel van der Kolk, is one of the books I will read sooner rather than later.
I read a few similar books and I am looking forward to reading A Dark History of Whisky by Gary Dobbs.
Bakhmut by Myroslav Laiuk is the last book, of 3, I got from Ukraine back in November. I’ve read the first two, by other authors, but from the same publisher and I am loving this one. I am looking forward to reading this and getting more books from them.
For my Read the World challenge I asked for recommendations. Kelly suggested a Mexican writer. I looked at the horror book and it’s not a genre I enjoyed. But this recommendation of a Mexican writer pushed me to look around. Luckily, I found this one: Jungle Laboratories: Mexican Peasants, National Projects, and the Making of the Pill by Gabriela Soto Laveaga. I am so excited about this book. I don’t know how the contraceptive pill was created and its links to Mexico, so this should be an interesting book to read.
Last 2 books in the list, and most likely between the first I will read are: Tintin in the Land of the soviets by Hergé and Tintin in America by Hergé. These were written by a Belgian author and that ticks another country in the world challenge. I found these on an auction marketplace and I won. The one about the soviet union was published in 1929, so I am very curious, considering this is a period I know.




You have a great pile. Is Tin Tin the little white dog (or maybe his person) that is so popular in France? I can see why that one book was a DNF.
I haven’t read any of these, this is the list of books I will read. Tintin is a person with a white dog, I am very keen to reading that. It was written by a Belgian, but I think his mother tongue was French.
I love the sound of the Noel Fitzpatrick book. I used to watch Supervet and loved him. What a great pile of books you have to get through!
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This looks like an interesting mix of books. I’m currently reading the latest, long awaited, Dresden Files book by Jim Butcher, and my last one was Michael J. Fox’s Future Boy.
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There are several here that sound quite interesting, so I look forward to your reviews of them. Ugh. They’ll probably end up on my toppling TBR.
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I’m glad you found some that interest you. Also, I’m happy you suggested a Mexican author, as I wouldn’t have searched now and I’m very excited about that book. I did consider your recommendation, but I don’t like horror at all.