Easter Lily EP

It’s been nine years since new U2 music, and then we get two EPs only 40 days apart, with Days of Ash and now Easter Lily.

I’m not going to go song by song, but it is quintessentially U2, from Bono’s soaring lyrics to that signature guitar. There’s even a song with Edge on vocals that sounds so much like Bono you might not notice at first. It’s unabashedly religious (I mean, with that title, duh).

“In a Life,” “Scars,” and “Resurrection Song” jump out at me as the best songs, though “COEXIST (I Will Bless The Lord at All Times?) is a beautifully eerie dirge.

But my fear is they all sound like U2 songs we’ve heard before, and not the great ones. I love to be wrong when I write these initial reactions. But that’s my sense. Even in my half a dozen listens, I have trouble distinguishing those three songs I said might be the best. Even on Days of Ash the songs had more variation. (Don’t get me wrong, I like it—they just sound the same.)

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Days of Ash by U2

U2 surprised everyone with new music this week. They released a six-track EP (five songs and one poem) called Days of Ash on Ash Wednesday.

The Discovery

I didn’t even hear about it until Thursday morning.

And even then, I didn’t believe it. I saw a photo post on social media set to music, with the name “American Obituary” by U2. I thought, that’s odd, I don’t know of any U2 song by that name. Often social media sites license music so people can add it to their posts, so I thought this must be some relic U2 song, maybe a Joshua Tree outtake? I unmuted the post so I could hear the song, listened to a bit of it, and moved on.

It wasn’t until another friend posted about actual new U2 music that I realized what it was.

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What It’s Like in Minnesota Right Now

I hesitate to post this, but I want to give people around the country a glimpse of what Minnesota is going through right now in the midst of an ICE surge and after the killing of Renee Good. I’m a middle-aged white guy who lives in a first-ring suburb of 20,000 people. Minneapolis is miles away and we don’t go there often. My family is not suffering like some are, but it’s far from normal.

Here’s what I’ve experienced:

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2025 Reading Stats & Goals

So I already ran my total books in 2025, top 10 fiction, and top 10 nonfiction. Time to talk stats.

Total Reads

As noted before, I hit 211 total books this year. That’s my second highest all time.

How is that possible? I wrote a whole book about it, so it gets tiring answering that question. You have to love it and then make time for it. It’s not that hard. Put your phone down, shut off the TV.

Audio: And yes, listening to books is reading. This is a silly thing to fight over. Audiobooks accounted for almost 40% of my reading. That’s more than double since 2023. I now listen to audiobooks while doing chores. It started when I got sucked in to a good book and had to see how it ended, and now I do it all the time.

Not a flex: And I say this every year, but I’ll repeat it—I’m not bragging about reading 211 books. It’s just a number. I know people who read more. The point is just to read. However many books you can read, that’s awesome. Readers are a rare breed, and I want to celebrate any reading achievement, whether you read two books or 200. So don’t fall into the trap of comparison.

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Top 10 Nonfiction of 2025

While I read a lot in 2025, nonfiction only accounted for 23% of my reads. Not as many to pick from, but still some good ones.

You can also check out my top 10 fiction and my reading stats/goals.

  1. Everybody Writes: Your New and Improved Go-To Guide to Creating Ridiculously Good Content by Ann Handley – Really solid and meaty writing advice. Used it with my intern this summer.
  2. A Well-Trained Wife: My Escape from Christian Patriarchy by Tia Levings – I thought this would be one of those windows into extremism, but it felt way too close too home.
  3. Who Is Government?: The Untold Story of Public Service by Michael Lewis – Essential reading for a time when government workers are under attack.
  4. You’re Not Fooling Anyone When You Take Your Laptop to a Coffee Shop: Scalzi on Writing by John Scalzi – Another incredibly practical book for writers. Longer than it needs to be (reprinted blog posts), but still good stuff.
  5. Nuclear War: A Scenario by Annie Jacobsen – In-depth and frightening.
  6. Star-Spangled Jesus: Leaving Christian Nationalism and Finding A True Faith by April Ajoy – More of the church/politics embrace that hits too close to home.
  7. Beyond the Big Lie: The Epidemic of Political Lying, Why Republicans Do It More, and How It Could Burn Down Our Democracy by Bill Adair – Intriguing and depressing.
  8. The Sirens’ Call: How Attention Became the World’s Most Endangered Resource by Christopher Hayes – Really interesting take, though the author goes a little too far down the rabbit hole on some of his tangents.
  9. Mountains Beyond Mountains: The Quest of Dr. Paul Farmer, a Man Who Would Cure the World by Tracy Kidder – Inspiring stories and narrative flow. Pretty much anything Tracy Kidder writes is worth a read.
  10. Never Say You Can’t Survive: How to Get Through Hard Times by Making Up Stories by Charlie Jane Anders – More writing advice, though this one is very specific nuts and bolts for fiction writers, so less appealing for me. But I hadn’t read anything this practical before.

Honorable Mentions

  • Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City by Matthew Desmond – Really detailed investigative reporting about landlords and renters and poverty. It’s pretty depressing, but gives real insight.
  • How to Resist Amazon and Why: The Fight for Local Economics, Data Privacy, Fair Labor, Independent Bookstores, and a People-Powered Future! by Danny Caine – Not the best written book—the arguments often feel too hyperbolic. But I mention it because I think it’s time we wrestle with mega-corporate greed. Danny Caine’s other book highlighting independent bookstores is more positive and better, but this gives some of the foundation about why Amazon is a problem.

More Reading

If you want to read more, check out my booklet 137 Books in One Year: How to Fall in Love With Reading Again.

And how about previous top non-fiction lists: 202420232022202120202019201820172016201520142013, and 2012.

Top 10 Fiction of 2025

Another big reading year in 2025 (211 total books!), which makes it hard to compile a best-of list, but here we go.

You can also check out my top 10 nonfiction and my reading stats/goals.

  1. Deep Cuts by Holly Brickley – Sort of a romance with song-writing thrown in. Best example I’ve seen of a book about a writer where they show you their writing and it’s good.
  2. Death of the Author by Nnedi Okorafor – I’ve soured on Nnedi Okorafor’s stuff lately, but this is her best yet. Really fascinating and a bit meta.
  3. The Reason You’re Alive by Michael Quick – I love a strong voice, and this book has it. Doesn’t matter that the character is gruff and mean, it’s all part of the charm. Matthew Quick is good at that.
  4. Just for the Summer by Abby Jimenez – This author single handedly got me into romance, and this was a fun read. I love the guy’s goofy but committed focus. It’s endearing.
  5. Mal Goes to War by Edward Ashton – I’m a sucker for deadpan AI narrators.
  6. King of Ashes by S.A. Cosby – This was dark, disturbingly so, but Crosby tells a good story.
  7. Along Came Amor by Alexis Daria – I enjoyed reading this romance, but part of why it worked so well was the build up of the previous two in the series.
  8. The Return of Ellie Black by Emiko Jean – Oof, this was a dark thriller. Really sucked me in.
  9. Leave No Trace by Mindy Mijea – Really interesting mystery and setup, enjoyed the Minnesota angle.
  10. Coyote by Allen M. Steele – An old school sci-fi colonizing story that had some fun and unique takes.
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