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The Los Angeles Public Library just dropped its list of most recommended books of 2025

LAPL staffers share their most recommended reads of 2025 across fiction, nonfiction, kids, teen and graphic novels.

Laura Ratliff
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Laura Ratliff
Los Angeles Public Library reading room
Photograph: Shutterstock
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Looking for your next read? The Los Angeles Public Library (LAPL) has released its staff-picked list of the most recommended books of 2025.

Compiled by LAPL staff across the system, the list highlights books that earned strong internal recommendations throughout 2025. These titles all secured a 6–7 rating or higher from people whose job description essentially includes knowing what’s worth your time. The recommendations span fiction, nonfiction, children’s books, teen picks and graphic novels, offering something for just about every kind of reader.

The fiction list alone covers a wide range of moods and genres, from buzzy contemporary novels to cozy fantasy and darker, stranger fare. Highlights include Atmosphere: A Love Story by Taylor Jenkins Reid, Ocean Vuong’s The Emperor of Gladness and Travis Baldree’s Brigands & Breadknives, alongside plenty of thrillers, speculative stories and literary heavy-hitters.

The non-fiction selects lean timely and wide-ranging without feeling like homework. Standouts include Carl Zimmer’s Air-borne: The Hidden History of the Life We Breathe, John Green’s Everything is Tuberculosis and Karen Hao’s Empire of AI: Dreams and Nightmares in Sam Altman’s OpenAI, touching on science, history, culture and the uneasy present.

For younger readers, LAPL’s children’s picks are imaginative and genuinely fun to read aloud. Titles like Dan Santat’s All the Hulk Feels, Axolotl and Axolittle by Jess Hitchman, and Claudia Said Sí!: The Story of Mexico’s First Woman President by Deborah Bodin Cohen offer a mix of comfort, curiosity and inspiration.

Teen readers get their own strong slate of page-turners and big-feelings books, including Suzanne Collins’ Sunrise on the Reaping, Jason Reynolds’ Coach and Lili Wilkinson’s moody dark-academia novel Unhallowed Halls.

Graphic novels round out the recommendations, spanning all ages and styles—from neighborhood coming-of-age stories like Brownstone to kid-friendly reads like Creaky Acres and franchise favorites such as Exceptional X-Men, Vol. 1: Duty Calls.

The list is extensive, spanning multiple genres and age groups, with complete category breakdowns published on the LAPL site.

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