Top Ten Tuesday: Books On My Winter 2025-2026 to-Read List


Hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl

 

A sprig of holly lying on an opened hardcover book that itself is lying on some rough rocks at the beach on a sunny day. Just so you all know, I’ve been having trouble leaving comments on some WordPress blogs recently. They ask me to log in even though I’m already logged in, and then when I leave my comment it never appears on the post. If I don’t comment on your post, I am not ignoring you.

The photo I included in this post made me chuckle because the beaches in Ontario are often inaccessible in the winter.

Windy days are common here in Southern Ontario, and in the winter all of that wind can blow freezing water up the shore and onto any sidewalks or piers nearby.

So not only it is well below freezing for us then, the land next to our lakes is often coated in a thick layer of ice that can be incredibly slippery and dangerous.

I’m glad that people in some other parts of the world can take leisurely strolls next to their lakes or oceans in the winter without possibly slipping straight into the freezing water, though. It must be lovely, and I mean that sincerely if also slightly humorously.

With that mental image  firmly in place, here are some books I’m looking forward to checking out this winter.

 

Book cover for “Is This a Cry for Help?” By Emily Austin. Image on cover is a drawing of two pale legs sticking out from behind a gigantic stack of books.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1. Is This a Cry for Help? by Emily R. Austin

Publication Date: January 13

Why I’m Interested: Book bans are something I’m always curious to read about, especially from the perspective of a librarian who is fighting them.

 

Book cover for How to Lose a Goblin in Ten Days: Tales from Hawthorne Cottage by Jessie Sylva. Image on cover shows flowers growing around a golden mirror or some other similar round object.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2. How to Lose a Goblin in Ten Days: Tales from Hawthorne Cottage by Jessie Sylva

Publication Date: January 20

Why I’m Interested: Honestly, the title is what drew me to this one. I love puns and cozy speculative fiction.

 

 

Book cover for Agnes Aubert's Mystical Cat Shelter by Heather Fawcett. Image on cover shows a drawing of cats of various colours sitting in a large wooden piece of furniture that looks like it may have originally been built to hold china instead. It has little windows and recesses to put your valuables, like cats for example. Ha!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3.  Agnes Aubert’s Mystical Cat Shelter by Heather Fawcett

Publication Date: February 3

Why I’m Interested: Animal rescue is one of those topics that will draw my attention to all sorts of different books. There’s nothing like reading about an abandoned animal finding a happy new home.

 

Book cover for The Daughter Who Remains by Nnedi Okorafor. Image on cover is a drawing of a black woman being enveloped in a yellow-green mist as she holds both arms up and embraces whatever is happening to her. There also appears to be a snake writhing near her neck for reasons I do not know as I haven’t read this book yet.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

4.  The Daughter Who Remains by Nnedi Okorafor

Publication Date: February 17

Why I’m Interested: It will hopefully encourage me to finally begin this trilogy. I’m generally a fan of Ms. Okorafor’s work and the afro-futurism genre as a whole.

 

Book cover for Onward: 16 Climate Fiction Short Stories to Inspire Hope by Erin Entrada Kelly. Image on cover is a drawing of a sandglass-shaped hole in a cave that opens to show the viewer a bird sitting on a ledge in the cave looking down at a serene pool of water in the forest.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

5. Onward: 16 Climate Fiction Short Stories to Inspire Hope by Erin Entrada Kelly

Publication Date: February 24

Why I’m Interested: To be honest, climate change is not looking good at the moment. I worry about what the future may hold as the Earth continues to warm up. My fingers are crossed that this book will imagine some cleaner, cooler futures for us all.

 

70 Comments

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70 Responses to Top Ten Tuesday: Books On My Winter 2025-2026 to-Read List

  1. Some of these have cover art that draw me in… so now I have MORE books to read about and maybe add to my mental TBR. 😉 Hope you enjoy these all!

  2. Agnes Aubert’s Mystical Cat Shelter is on my TBR too. I also would like to read How to Lose a Goblin in Ten Days: Tales from Hawthorne Cottage and Is This a Cry for Help.

  3. “Is This a Cry” has an interesting title/cover juxtaposition!

  4. Not only is the title “Agnes Aubert’s Mystical Cat Shelter” completely awesome, but it’s also written by Heather Fawcett??!! I immediately put it on my TBR.

    Here is my TTT: https://thissideofstoryland.blogspot.com/2025/12/top-ten-tuesday-winter-2025-26-tbr.html

  5. How to Lose a Goblin in Ten Days caught my ear too! XD

  6. That’s a fantastic cover on Is This a Cry for Help?

  7. WordPress can be so screwy sometimes! I am also very excited to read Agnes Aubert and How to Lose a Goblin in Ten Days. In fact, I have not seen a Top Ten list today that DOESN’T have Agnes Aubert on it:-)

  8. I love it when titles like How to lose a Goblin in Ten Days draw you in.

  9. The Daughter Who Remains looks interesting! I haven’t read anything by this author beyond the Binti trilogy, and I really should try to catch up a bit. I’m looking forward to the Heather Fawcett book too. Hope you enjoy your winter reading!

  10. Nice picks. Some covers are pretty. Happy Reading. Have a great day and a great week. Here is my TTT. https://dmhoisington.wordpress.com/2025/12/16/top-ten-tuesday-14/

  11. Be safe out there in all that ice!

  12. How to lose a Goblin in ten days sounds interesting! I hope that we both enjoy the Heather Fawcett book!

    I’m 50 mins or so from the coast so we don’t get that sort of weather. We do have windy moments though and ice. I hate ice. Terrified of it 😂

    Have a great week!

  13. Ooh, Onward sounds great and exactly what I think I should pick up. Things have been feeling pretty dismal lately, so climate stories to inspire hope sounds ideal! 😍 I’m also excited for How to Lose A Goblin and Agnes Aubert—I’ve seen it on so many lists today as well. I hope you enjoy all of these reads!

    Also, glad to know I’m not the only one having these WP commenting issues. My platform is on WP and I still get asked to login sometimes—it’s so frustrating!

  14. I’m too much of a desert rat to survive a Canadian winter. Brr!

    How to Lose a Goblin in Ten Days sounds like a fun one. I just love cozy fantasy and have been looking for more. This might just fit the bill.

    Here is our Top Ten Tuesday. Thank you!

  15. I’ve seen The Mystical Cat Shelter on several lists today. I think I’d better check it out and find out what all the hype is about. Thanks.

    Don’t give up on commenting on my blog. I see your comments. I just have to go into Disqus to approve them.

  16. I can see myself buried in fluffy blankets with all three cats sleeping on me while I read Agnes Aubert’s Mystical Cat Shelter. 💚💚💚

  17. Agnes Aubert’s Mystical Cat Shelter looks intriguing. Hope you’ll love all of these!

  18. I’m looking forward to reading Is This a Cry for Help and Agnes Aubert’s Magical Cat Shelter.
    Pam @ Read! Bake! Create!
    https://readbakecreate.com/winter-2026-tbr-ten-books-i-hope-to-read/

  19. Can’t wait for the Heather Fawcett and I’m definitely curious about the Emily Austin one, after I learned what it was about.

  20. Great list! How to Lose a Goblin in 10 Days is one I also want to read. I hope you enjoy these. 🙂

  21. Such interesting choices. Enjoy your reading!

  22. I am a few pages into Agnes Aubert (I just started it last night), and I think I’m going to really like it. How to Lose a Goblin in Ten Days sounds very intriguing; I’ll have to check it out!

    Stay warm, and stay away from those icy lakeshores!

  23. The Mystical Cat Shelter seems very popular.

  24. That Agnes Auburt cover is so lovely. I am just so drawn to it. I hope you get a chance to pick up all these. And I hope your winter isn’t too brutal.

  25. Yes, it is cold, even in Windsor, Lydia. I don’t think it has been this cold at the beginning of December in many years. I am intrigued by Is This A Cry for Help. I just read That Librarian which is a nonfiction book about a school librarian and what she went through when she spoke up about censorship at the public library. You might be interested in that one.

  26. Blogging issues can be so frustrating! That is a beautiful photo even if it’s not realistic for your area. Hope you enjoy all on your list!

  27. That Heather Fawcett book is on my list this week too! 🙂

  28. The Magical Cat Shelter sounds like a great book! I’ve seen it on a lot of lists this week.

  29. Living in Michigan, your intro had me chuckling. Anyway, I hope you enjoy your winter reading. Safely, warmly inside…not on the beach.

  30. Both How to Lose a Goblin and the Mystical Cat Shelter look so good to me!!

  31. Hello Lydia, I hope you enjoy your winter reading ❄ and I hope you’re able to comment on everyone’s WordPress blogs again soon – I have had that exact problem in the past too! 🤞 Here’s my TTT post: https://thebookwormchronicles.wordpress.com/2025/12/16/%f0%9f%93%9a-top-ten-tuesday-books-on-my-winter-2025-2026-to-read-list/ Blessings, Jessica 💌

  32. I’m really looking forward to the new Heather Fawcett too, it looks fun. Hope you enjoy your winter reading!

  33. Brrrr…our winters are always warm here in the suburbs of Phoenix, Arizona. In fact, my son got in our pool last week! I wouldn’t do that, but he said it felt refreshing. Ha ha. I hope you enjoy your winter reading.

    Happy TTT (on a Wednesday)!

    Susan
    http://www.blogginboutbooks.com

  34. I hope you enjoy all the ones you get to! Have a great week!

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