Choosing Nonfiction – Nonfiction November 2025week 2

Week two is hosted by Frances at Volatile Rune. The subject is how you choose the NF books you read. I could almost just copy and paste my post from last year as I don’t think much has changed in the way I do this.

My favourite genres remain the same:

  • Memoirs from actors, musicians, artists, writers, journalists and others working in the arts or media that I like or are interested in their work. More often alive rather than dead too.
  • Medical books, be they memoirs, history or health-related.
  • Popular Science – virtually any topic – from astronomy to quantum physics, botany to the ocean deeps, Marie Curie to fireworks, plus the environment and ecology.
  • The 1960s and 1970s – the decades I grew up in. Anything relating to social history, rock’n’roll, TV and movies etc. esp if relating to South London.
  • Books about books – any kind!

However, is it me, or are medical and popular science titles less in vogue, or less visible, now than they were? A few years ago, I was devouring many medical memoirs – this year, just Gabriel Weston’s latest, Alive, and only The Future of Gardens by Mark Lane ticks the popular science box. Whereas the market for self-help books of all varieties has exploded – not a genre I venture into often if at all.

So it seems I’ll stick with arts and media memoirs for now – and I’m very happy with that. And next on my list is Vagabond by Tim Curry which has an amazing cover photo.

More memoirs on the pile:

  • I Shop, Therefore I Am: The ’90s, Harvey Nicks – and Me by Mary Portas
  • Homework by Geoff Dyer
  • Wish I was here by M John Harrison
  • Berserker by Adrian Edmondson
  • Doppelganger by Naomi Klein

I shall read Mary Portas next, but which of the others would you read after that?

10 thoughts on “Choosing Nonfiction – Nonfiction November 2025week 2

  1. Karen Packard Rhodes says:

    I might try Tim Curry’s autobio. He certainly is versatile! I don’t think many actors could go from Frank N. Furter to the nervous medical officer of The Hunt for Red October. Have you read Patrick Stewart’s Making It So? Delightful!

    • AnnaBookBel says:

      The Curry is brilliant. I also adored Stewart’s memoir – he’s a very generous man, simply lovely.

  2. Lisa notes... says:

    I just finished Henry Winkler’s memoir tonight. It was so interesting hearing about his start with the Fonz, and then how he struggled to get past that stereotype for years. I alternated between reading it and listening to the audiobook, which I highly recommend.

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