Non-fiction
Dalek I Loved You, by Nick Griffiths (2009) [Doctor Who]
How to Make School Make Sense, by Clare Lawrence (2009)
A Fortunate Life: The Autobiography of Paddy Ashdown (2010)
The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Vols I & II, by Edward Gibbon (2010)
The Bloody Sunday Report, Volume V (2010)
Non-genre
Chronicle in Stone, by Ismail Kadarë (2009)
The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, by Mary Anne Shaffer and Annie Bar (2011)
SF
City of Illusions, by Ursula Le Guin (2007)
Discount Armageddon, by Seanan Maguire (2018)
Stories of the Raksura: The Dead City + The Dark Earth Below, by Martha Wells (2018)
A Natural History of Dragons, by Maire Brennan (2018)
Introduction to the Stormlight Archive for Hugo Voters, by Brandon Sanderson (2018)
City of Stairs, by Richard Jackson Bennett (2018)
In the Serpent’s Wake, by Rachel Hartman (2023)
Mercury Rising, by R.W.W. Greene (2023)
Doctor Who
Doctor Who – The Twin Dilemma, by Eric Saward (2008) [Sixth Doctor, novelisation]
Doctor Who – Attack of the Cybermen, by Eric Saward (2008) [Sixth Doctor, novelisation]
Verdigris, by Paul Magrs (2009) [Third Doctor, spinoff novel]
State of Change, by Christopher Bulis (2011) [Sixth Doctor, spinoff novel]
The Dalek Book, by David Whitaker and Terry Nation (2011) [Dalek spinoff collection, one story features Susan]
Short Trips: A Christmas Treasury, ed. Paul Cornell (2016) [First to Eighth Doctor, short stories]
Comics
Buddha, Volume 1: Kapilavastu, by Osamu Tezuka (2006)
Fables vol 5: The Mean Seasons, by Bill Willingham (2009)
Black Hole, by Charles Burns (2010)
The Malignant Truth, by Si Spurrier et al (2024)[Doctor Who: Eleventh Doctor]
The best
Unusually I have not given any of the above five stars out of five on LibraryThing. I have given three of them 4.5 out of five, and of those three I think marginally ahead is City of Stairs, the first in the fantasy Divine Cities trilogy by Robert Jackson Bennett. It was famously crowded off the Hugo ballot by the Sad Puppies; I found the worldbuilding and plotting excellent. (Review; get it here.)
Honorable mentions
In the Serpent’s Wake is the second of Rachel Hartman’s equally excellent Tess of the Road novels, about a polar expedition in a fantasy world. (Review; get it here.)
The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society is a heart-warming story of wartime occupation int he Channel Islands. (Review; get it here.)
The one you haven’t heard of
The Dalek Book, dating from 1964, is possibly the very first Doctor Who spinoff publication, and reflects a very creditable creative effort from the creatures’ creators. (Review; get it here if you are lucky.)
The one to avoid
The Twin Dilemma, Colin Baker’s debut, is by far my least favourite Doctor Who story of the 1963-89 TV era, and its novelisation is equally my least favourite Doctor Who book of all time. (Review; get it here.)