I've been reading a lot of collections of science fiction short stories, which I haven't posted about because I read so many of them. I also just finished reading the Wayward Children series of novellas by Seanan McGuire, on Tess's recommendation, which is unusual because they're A. fantasy and B. standalone novellas. (I read novellas, but usually in anthologies.)
I also read Kage Baker's The Anvil of the World, which is unusual because it's A. fantasy and B. an outright novel, though it's really structured like three linked novellas. I liked it enough to request the other books in the series, but there's only one copy of each, currently out, so it could take up to three weeks.
I'm also still reading some nonfiction. I'm literally currently reading Debt: the First 5,000 Years, which is interesting, despite the far-left politics of its author, but also kind of a chore to read. I realized I wasn't going to get through it out of sheer enjoyment, so I'm making myself read a chapter a day.
And weirdly, the fact that it's a chore means I'm talking about it when books I find easier to read I'm not bothering to mention. Last two non-fiction books I read before this were The Art of Not Being Governed: An Anarchist History of Upland Southeast Asia and Against the Grain: A Deep History of the Earliest States, both by James C. Scott.