My Year in Books – 2025

I failed. Miserably. For only the second time since I started keeping track, in 2007, I did not read fifty books last year. In 2018 I read forty-five. For some reason, this year I only read forty. And I really have no explanation for why. Looking back over my last and seeing which months I read a lot and which I did not, I cannot identify any particular reasons. Regardless, I shall have to be more diligent in the year ahead.

Now for what I did read, though.

The first book I read in 2025 was one given to me by my father, Ted Leavengood’s Ted Williams and the 1969 Washington Senators. My father grew up a Senators fan and he told me that this book would help me to understand his frustration when the team moved to Texas. Ted Williams, the Hall of Famer and hitter extraordinaire, was hired to manage the Senators and he led them to their only winning season. They had never won more than 76 games in a season before, but he led them to a record of 86-76. It was a fluke, though, as they won only 70 games the next season and 63 the year after that. But the book explains the maneuvering of the team’s owner, who wanted to relocate the club. Williams would manage the team during its first season in Texas too, where they went just 54-100. Between 1973 and 1985, the club would have thirteen different managers before Bobby Valentine took the helm for the better part of eight seasons.

That was not the only baseball book I read in 2025. One Tough Out, by Rod Carew and Jaime Aron, tells the story of Carew’s childhood, his incredibly baseball career, the loss of his daughter to leukemia at age 18 and the resulting toll that took on his family and his own health struggles, including kidney and heart transplants. I Was Right On Time, by Buck O’Neill with Steven Conrad and David Wulfs, tells the story of Owens, who had a tremendous career in Negro League Baseball and became the first African American coach in the MLB. He became an untiring ambassador for the history of the Negro Leagues and a driving force behind the Negro League Museum in Kansas City. Robert Peterson’s Only the Ball Was White is a history of African-American players and teams. My son gave my Robert Whiting’s The Meaning of Ichiro, which seems to also have been published as The Samurai Way of Baseball in softcover. It recounts the absolute single-minded focus of Ichiro’s father in raising Ichiro to be a baseball superstar—which both explains Ichiro’s incredibly skill as a player but also leaves one wondering how he did not learn to hate baseball rather than to love it. The book also explores the Japanese approach to baseball—vastly different than the US style—and the success, or lack thereof, among Japanese players coming to the US and American players going to Japan. Averell Smith’s The Pitcher and the Dictator tells the intertwining stories of Satchell Paige and Rafael Trujillo, dictator of the Dominican Republic, as well as other players who played in the Dominican. It’s quite possible that the 1937 series in the Dominican included the best collection of baseball players ever assembled. But the book also includes insightful accounts of racism and politics.

Nikki Haley’s If You Want Something Done… is a short book with interesting overviews of ten women who played important roles in history—some well-known and others I had never heard of before. Lisa Rogak’s Propaganda Girls is a fascinating look at women who served in the OSS, the Office of Strategic Services, during WWII.

Alexei Navalny’s Patriot is an autobiography that managed to escape the Russian government even though Navalny did not. Much of the book was written while Navalny was in prison and it grows increasingly snarky as it goes along, but that is not surprising given the way that he was treated by the Russian government. Eventually, of course, he was killed by poison, though the Kremlin denies involvement. He was probably the most prominent and visible opponent of Putin in Russia in recent years.

Timothy Snyder’s On Freedom draws from the work of a number of philosophers, activists and thinkers to describe what freedom is and how we are in danger of losing it. He has spent considerable time in Ukraine and that features prominently in the book. I definitely do not agree with Snyder on everything but he offers thought provoking insights that need to be taken seriously. Kaitlyn Schiess’s The Ballot and the Bible is subtitled “How Scripture Has Been Used and Abused in American Politics and Where We Go from Here”and she addressed the way in which Bible verses are pulled into political debate—sometimes accurately, but often not—and what should be done about that. Anne Applebaum’s Twilight of Democracy examines changes that have taken place in Poland, Great Britain and the United States, with considerable discussion of Hungary as well. Like Applebaum, I could recount examples of people that used to be my friends, who agreed with most of the time politically, but who have embraced politicians and political positions that I never would have imagined—resulting sometimes, unfortunately, in a loss of friendship.

I read a variety of history books. Dean Jobb’s A Gentleman and a Thief tells the incredible story of Arthur Barry, an audacious thief during the Jazz Age who stole the equivalent of tens of millions of dollars worth of jewelry from some of the country’s richest families—not uncommonly while they were in the house or even sleeping in the room he was robbing. David Von Drehle’s Triangle tells the story of the shirtwaist industry, the efforts of those who fought for safe and fair employment practices and the details of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire in 1911.

Barbara Tuchman’s The First Salute offers a look at the Revolutionary War from a unique perspective, blending the conflicts between England, France and Holland with the Revolution and emphasizing the role of the navies in the conflict. David Hackett Fischer’s Washington’ Crossing is a sizable book (nearly 600 pages) that recounts how the titular event, as well as the determination of Washington and others, kept the American fight alive in the first year of the Revolutionary War when it seemed that the British were going to win easily.

History Matters is a collection of speeches and writings by David McCullough, assembled by his daughter and long-time assistant after his passing. Anyone who really cares about history should read everything McCullough ever wrote, I think, but this book in particular shares why it is so important that we study and seek to learn from it.

David Waldstreicher’s The Odyssey of Phillis Wheatley is an excellent biography of a too-often-ignored figure in American history. (I actually had someone tell me a few years ago that Paul Laurence Dunbar was the first African-American poet in the US because Wheatley didn’t count. Not only does she count, she died almost a century before Dunbar was born). Richard Brookhiser’s John Marshall is an outstanding biography of the man who is perhaps the most well-known and most influential Chief Justice of the Supreme Court in the nation’s history. Linda Hirschman’s The Color of Abolition capably tells the story of the fight for abolition, including the leading figures in that fight.

Larry Tye’s The Jazzmen is an outstanding joint biography of Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington and Count Basie. Elizabeth Varon’s Longstreet is a solid biography of the general who became Lee’s most trusted commander after Jackson died but who spent the rest of his life wresting with the realities of the Confederate defeat at Gettysburg, including his own failure to protest more strongly to Lee about his plan for what’s most commonly known as Pickett’s Charge. McKay Coppins was given virtually unlimited access to Mitt Romney and his personal writings, resulting in what will surely be the definitive biography of a man who has been far more involved in recent American history than is often recognized. Anyone who wants to understand him should read Romney. It made me both like and dislike him at times and Coppins writes fairly about him, I think. Amy Coney Barrett’s Listening to the Law explains her position on the responsibility of judges, at all levels, when it comes to deciding cases. I was reading it at the same time I was reading Brookhiser’s biography of John Marshall, which was particularly interesting. I still dislike the way that Coney Barrett became a justice of the Supreme Court but I do appreciate her thoughts on the way judges should do their job.

Jason Hundley’s first book, Beyond the Shallows, is a book about spiritual maturity and the importance of taking seriously the condition of our hearts. John Piper’s What is Saving Faith? Is Piper’ argument that true, saving faith will result in treasuring Christ above all else. It is consistent with Piper’s Christian Hedonism and the bottom line is that affection for Christ is a necessary element of true faith.

Alan Bandstra’s Beyond Control is a terrific book about the importance of effective classroom management, which includes more than simply controlling student behavior. I would recommend it for any teacher.

As per usual, I read the latest offerings from the fiction writers that I enjoy: James Patterson’s The House of Cross and Return of the Spider (Alex Cross series), Paranoia, with James Born (Michael Bennett series) and The Picasso Heist (a stand-alone book that says it is all true except for the parts that aren’t—which really leaves you wondering), Daniel Silva’s An Inside Job, End Game by Jeffrey Archer (the end of the William Warwick series), John Grisham’s The Widow, and David Baldacci’s Strangers in Time. I enjoyed the Grisham book and the Baldacci book was unlike any of his other books I have read. I thoroughly enjoyed it and hope he writes more like it.

I read Brad Meltzer’s The First Counsel, the first Meltzer book I’ve read, and Elizabeth George’s A Slowly Dying Cause, the first George book I’ve read in a while. Colson Whitehead’s The Underground Railroad is an interesting book. As always with Whitehead, it is well written. It weaves together some realities of the Underground Railroad with some fictional aspects of it—such as it being an actual railroad that traveled underground. And for a classic, I read Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World. While I wouldn’t necessarily say that I enjoyed it, it is alarming how much of what it describes can be seen happening in the real world today.

One more—Air Castles, by my friend David Paul, who is, I believe, in his eighties now. It is a collection of stories about his life, many of which are humorous and a number of which also include valuable life lessons.

So, that’s my 2025 in books. I certainly hope to reach or exceed fifty again in 2026. Given how rarely I post here any more I have considered ending this blog, but I hope you enjoyed this quick overview of my year in books. Happy reading!

My Year in Books – 2024

Another year has arrived, meaning it is time for another review of my year in books. I read fifty of them in 2024. So, here we go.

The first book I read was 24: Life Stories and Lessons from the Say Hey Kid by Willie Mays and John Shea. It was an enjoyable read, providing an interesting look at what baseball was life when Mays played but also his life outside of baseball. It was a Christmas gift from my son and proved timely since Mays passed away in June. Another Christmas present was Joe Posnanski’s The Baseball 100. Anyone who reads the book will take issue with some of the players Posnanski included, or the order in which he placed them, but it is an excellent book providing fascinating details about one hundred incredible ballplayers as well as personal anecdotes from Posnanski, who is a fine writer.

Katie Ledecky’s Just Add Water tells her life story, so much of which is centered around swimming. It is an enjoyable read and it is encouraging to see just how much fun she has swimming. Even as perhaps the best female swimmer in the world, with innumerable records to her name, she truly enjoys swimming. Misty Copeland’s The Wind at My Back is sort of an autobiography and a biography of Raven Wilkinson, who became a mentor to Copeland.

Woody Holton’s Liberty Is Sweet is a good book. He overreaches with his subtitle, though; “The Hidden History of the American Revolution” clearly implies that Holton uncovered some fascinating details that had somehow gone unnoticed—but he didn’t. While the book is voluminous—some 560 pages of text and another two hundred of notes and sources—I don’t think he revealed anything I had never heard or read before. He may be the first person to put it all in one book, and I would recommend it to anyone looking for a one-volume exhaustive history of the Revolutionary War, but honestly, his short overview of the ten years following the war that he included at the end of the book was perhaps the most insightful.

Allen Guelzo’s Robert E. Lee: A Life is a notable addition to the already numerous books on Lee. Guelzo is probably most recognized as an expert on Gettysburg, but he writes a well-researched and balanced account of Lee’s life. Erik Larson took his gifted approach to writing history to the story of the battle of Fort Sumter in The Demon of Unrest. Anyone wanting to understand everything that was involved in that conflict would do well to read this book. Andrew Delbanco’s The War Before the War capably traces the fight of enslaved Africans seeking freedom from the time of the American Revolution to the Civil War. But Samuel W. Mitchum Jr.’s It Wasn’t About Slavery is a pitiful attempt at showing that the South was motivated by things other than slavery when eleven states seceded from the Union, but his arguments fail, badly. Anyone with the desire to do so can discredit what he thinks are his strongest arguments within a matter of minutes if they are willing to search online for the full text of the documents he likes to cite. And anyone doing so will find that it actually was about slavery. The Crooked Path to Abolition by James Oakes, on the other hand, capably shows that while Lincoln’s position on slavery changed over time in terms of his strategies, his position as an opponent of slavery itself was much more consistent than he is often given credit for.

Solomon Northup’s Twelve Years a Slave is his autobiographical account of being tricked in New York, kidnapped in Washington, D.C., and sold into slavery for twelve years. The story gained significant attention a number of years ago when a movie of the same title was made.

Rachel Devlin’s A Girl Stands at the Door: The Generation of Young Women Who Desegregated America’s Schools, recounts the incredible bravery and fortitude of the girls who integrated American schools in the 1950s. While boys were involved in desegregation efforts as well, it fell disproportionately to girls, as Devlin explains. She interviewed many of the women who fought that fight and this is a book I would recommend to anyone wanting to learn more about that part of America’s history. Anne Gardiner Perkins wrote Yale Needs Women, and that was an eye-opener for me. I had no idea that Yale had not admitted female students until 1969. The book recounts the challenges they faced, the reluctance of so many to allow them to attend the school and the determination with which so many pressed on.

T. Martin Bennett’s Wounded Tiger is a sizable but fascinating book that intertwines the stories of Jacob DeShazer, Mitsuo Fuchida and a missionary family. Highly recommend.

Liz Cheney’s Oath and Honor is her accounting of the events of January 6 and her stand against Donald Trump, especially following his role in those events. She defends her service on the January 6 Select Committee. No one who despises Cheney will be swayed by the book—especially those who agree with Donald Trump and his recent claims that she should be put in prison—but as one of very few Republicans who was willing to stand up to Trump publicly, her side of the story deserves to be read. And Michael Wolff’s Landslide will also be dismissed by the MAGA crew, but the story he paints of the end of the first Trump administration shows why so many are concerned about what the Trump Presidency 2.0 is going to look like. Going back to his breakout period following Watergate, one wonders where Bob Woodward gets all of his information—and whether or not it is all accurate. If it is, Peril, which he co-wrote with Robert Costa, is, if anything, even scarier than Landslide. Tulsi Gabbard’s For Love of Country was shallower than I expected. I was disappointed at how dismissive of Gabbard the Democrats were in 2016. I do not think she is a Russian agent or even a Russian defender but I am not sure I want her as the head of national intelligence, either.

Elijah Cummings, with James Dale, wrote We’re Better Than This. Cummings represented the congressional district that includes Baltimore for twenty-four years. There is probably more that I would disagree with him on politically than agree but his commitment to finding ways to get along with people and be respectful even when he disagreed is something sorely missing in politics today.

Andrew Whitehead’s American Idolatry examines the dangers of Christian nationalism and shows how anyone who is not careful can easily go from nationalism to other dangerous -isms, like racism. Paul Miller’s The Religion of American Greatness: What’s Wrong with Christian Nationalism was the better book, I thought, but both are thought-provoking. The beginning of Russell Moore’s Losing Our Religion probably comes closer than anything else I have read to describing how I have felt over the past few years as so many people I thought highly of and often agreed with have become lockstep adherents of Donald Trump, even to the point of ignoring when and how he clearly acts inconsistently with what the Bible teaches.

Timothy Keller’s Jesus the King, which was previously published in hardcover as King’s Cross, explains the life of Christ, based on the account provided by Mark, with unique insights and reminders. R.C. Sproul’s A Taste of Heaven is a short book that puts proper worship into perspective. Even shorter, Bob Kauflin’s True Worshipers gives keen perspective on what it means to worship God. Steven Lawson’s The Daring Mission of William Tyndale is a short biography of the man who was cruelly executed for translating the Bible into English.

Karen Swallow Pryor’s The Evangelical Imagination looks at the term “evangelical” and at how one’s understanding of it has been shaped by art and popular culture. The subtitle, “How Stories, Images, and Metaphors Created a Culture in Crisis,” gives you an idea of the argument that she makes. Rosaria Butterfield’s Five Lies of Our Anti-Christian Age is a good book, but there were a few times when I thought she went too far in her position. Nancy Pearcey’s The Toxic War on Masculinity does a capable job of outlining the concern she has about the culture’s attitude toward masculinity but I thought it was longer than it needed to be. Richard Alan Fuhr, Jr. and Andreas Kӧstenberger wrote Inductive Bible Study, which is essentially a guide on how to do that. Alisa Childers and Tim Barnett, in The Deconstruction of Christianity, do an excellent job of defining deconstruction, explaining what it is and explaining how to come alongside those who are “deconstructing.” And Christopher Ash, in Zeal Without Burnout, provides a short book with important insight into the very real issue of burnout.

Christopher Knowlton’s Bubble in the Sun is fascinating look at the original development of Florida real estate—the people involved, the money involved and the fabulous crashes involved. Tecumseh and the Prophet, by Peter Cozzens, is a well-written book about a part of American history that I did not know much about before beyond the battle of Tippecanoe. And The Curse of Beauty by James Bone was an intriguing read about someone I had never heard of—Audrey Munson—but whose face and even figure I have probably seen. Bone calls her America’s first supermodel, and she posed for an incredible number of statues during the Gilded Age but then spent the last 64 years of her life in an asylum.

The Outer Banks of North Carolina is perhaps my favorite place on the planet and I read a few books about that area this year. David Stick’s Graveyard of the Atlantic is an overview of the hundreds of ships that sunk off of the Outer Banks of North Carolina, as well as stories of incredible rescues of the passengers and crew on board some of those ships. John Railey’s A Murder in Manteo is not as well-written as his The Lost Colony Murder on the Outer Banks, but it is an interesting read and is different from the earlier book in that someone was convicted of the murder—though Railey thinks it was the wrong man. His Andy Griffith’s Manteo was the better of his two books I read this year and it was fun to get a look into the relaxed Griffith in his adopted hometown, but I am not sure Railey successfully made his case that Manteo was the real Mayberry. Scott Dawson’s The Lost Colony and Hatteras Island contributes to the discussion about what happened to the Roanoke colonists and lends some credence to his suggestion that they never really left the Outer Banks.

Mark Pryor’s The Dark Edge of Night is the second book in his Henri Lefort series. It has what readers of Pryor have come to expect but he weaves in some Nazi experiments being done on children that have their foundation in reality. Alex Cross Must Die, by James Patterson, is exactly like every other Alex Cross book in tempo and excitement and Crosshairs, the latest Michael Bennett book co-written by Patterson and James O. Born is, too. John Grisham’s Camino Ghosts is the third book in his Camino Island series and, for my money, probably the best of the three. Jeffrey Archer’s An Eye for an Eye is the penultimate book in his William Warwick series and, as he always does, he has Warwick, his family and the police department constantly battling Miles Faulkner. Daniel Silva’s A Death in Cornwall is the latest Gabriel Allon book. It was an enjoyable read, but one really does have to suspend reason when considering everything that Allon is able to get away with as the retired head of Mossad. I think David Baldacci’s A Calamity of Souls may be my favorite fiction book by a bestselling author that I read this year. In many ways I found it reminiscent of Grisham’s A Time to Kill, but it was certainly no copycat story. Colson Whitehead’s Crook Manifesto continues the saga of Ray Carney’s life in 1970s Harlem that began in Harlem Shuffle. Whitehead is an excellent writer, period. Sarah Crouch’s Middletide is her debut novel but will not, I am sure, be her last. Set in the Pacific Northwest, it creatively intertwines a couple of storylines and ends with an unexpected twist.

I’m halfway through my next book—another baseball book that I received for Christmas. Perhaps you’ll find a title in the overview above that you would like to read. Whether it’s something here or something else, happy reading.

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