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50 Book Challenge 2015 Part 3

993 replies

Southeastdweller · 21/03/2015 17:46

Thread three of the 50 Book Challenge for this year.

The challenge is to read fifty books (or more!) in 2015, though reading fifty isn't mandatory. It's still not too late to join, any type of book counts, and please try to let us all know your thoughts on what you've read.

First thread of the year here, and second thread here.

OP posts:
weaselwithin · 12/05/2015 03:52

can I join?

  1. Marie Kondo - the life changing magic of tidying
  2. Nathan filter - the shock of the fall
  3. lianne Moriarty - what Alice forgot
  4. Lucy Atkins - first time parent
  5. Paula Hawkins - the girl on the train
  6. Gillian Flynn dark places
  7. Sarah ockwell smith - the gentle sleep book
  8. Neil gaiman - stardust
DuchessofMalfi · 12/05/2015 05:57

minsmum - Thanks. I hope this latest round of tests has the answer. Was quite scared of the list of illnesses the GP wants to rule out though.

southeast- Jeremy Irons has put on this rather disturbingly smooth and slightly creepy voice for the narration. I like the story though. Looking forward to the next part today.

ladydepp · 12/05/2015 12:45

I am so SLOW!

Finally finished no. 10. Do No Harm - Stories of Life, Death and Brain Surgery by Henry Marsh.

I really enjoyed this book and it was nice to read some non-fiction for a change. Some of the stories are very sad and I wouldn't recommend this to anyone about to undergo brain surgery! Marsh writes in a very simple, easy to read style about a very complex and difficult job. I recommend it, but not to the squeamish. It is a good book to dip in and out of.

I am now attempting to read 4 books at the same time, oh dear.

Just seen We are all Completely beside ourselves on Kindle daily deals. I really liked this book and would recommend it to anyone who hasn't read it.

Lammy7 · 12/05/2015 17:44

Duchess hope the MRI goes well (I know all about back trouble!)
Tessie: Congratulations....get all your reading in before the baby arrives lol
Mimsmum: hope you are better soon!

Book 30 for me is Ben Elton's Two Brothers....I love his books but this one is different. About 2 boys born in Berlin in 1920 who are twins but not by blood. I gather they end up fighting on different sides in WW2. The story is akin to what happened his father in real life I think....Only started it and hooked already. One of those books that you can't wait to go to bed to read. It is a big book so don't expect me back here too soon!

Lammy7 · 12/05/2015 17:48

For anyone who still buys paperbacks, the Book Depository are doing a big flash sale NOW :)

DuchessofMalfi · 12/05/2015 17:56

Thanks, Lammy :). How are you now?

Lammy7 · 12/05/2015 18:09

Hi Duchess: I am on the count down :) finally.....12 weeks in this brace and have x ray on Friday and hoping it can come off (fingers crossed), thanks for asking. Really hope they can help you once they do that scan on your back

whippetwoman · 12/05/2015 18:11

Duchess and minsmum hope you feel better.
My DP has just got a date for his MRI scan for his back so you are not alone in the doctor prodding annoyance Duchess.

Congrats to tessie Flowers

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 12/05/2015 18:17

Congrats to Tessie and love to all going through tests. Am part of that brigade too - more bloods and another ECG next week. At least waiting around for tests gives us some reading time, I guess.

ClashCityRocker · 12/05/2015 18:28

Have been MIA for a while due to exams, good luck to all those going through tests and shit.

  1. Rage Against the Night - Various

A fairly mediocre collection of horro stories. One or two stood out, but the bulk were very cliched and showed a lack of imagination.

  1. Pharmakon - Dirk Whittinger

The story of a family, the father of whom is almost killed when a psychology experiment goes wrong. The bulk of the tale is told from the perspective of the youngest son, who was born two years after this life-changing event. An interesting book which I enjoyed, although it got a bit dull towards the end.

  1. Allotments for Dummies - Sven Wombwell

As expected from the 'for dummies' series, a useful how-to guide for a complete novice. Very good.

  1. Love, Anthony

Hmm, not sure about this one. The parts of the book written from the perspective of Anthony, a non-verbal autistic child are really well done, but the rest of th book was clunky and a bit chick-lit for my taste.

  1. Rant - an oral history of buster Casey - chuck paulanuik

My favourite book so far this year. This is a selection of transcripts from people involved with the protagonist throughout his life. This starts off as a fairly typical rural american tale and developes into something with a scifi dystopian feel. I love CP's style of writing and the way more and more was gradually revealed about the wider world. Fantastic book.

MrsStevenPatrickMorrissey · 12/05/2015 18:41

Hi everyone, can I join you all please? I had started keeping count at the start of the year by taking the read 100 books in 2015 on Goodreads but I forgot to keep it updated, logged in today and I see I have only 1 book logged on it Sad so 50 might be more managable Confused so here's my list so far....

  1. Empty Cradles (oranges & sunshine) by Margaret Humphreys
  2. philomena by Martin Sixsmith
  3. Chapter & Verse by Bernard Sumner
  4. The Woman Upstairs by Claire Messud
  5. Against the light by Paula Yourell
  6. Fingersmith by Sarah Waters
  7. Black and Blue by Anna Quindlen
  8. The Girl on the train by Paula Hawkins
  9. The Lie by C.L Taylor (not finished it yet, have a few pages left to go)
10. Elizabeth is Missing by Emma Healey

Will read through the rest of the thread now and get some recommendations for what to read next

esiotrot2015 · 12/05/2015 19:46

Welcome to all the newbies Grin

Agree with you Lammy7 about the Undomesticated Goddess by Sophie Kinsella !
I read her shopaholic books in my twenties & loved them but this was awful !

tumbletumble · 13/05/2015 09:26
  1. The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August by Claire North. I'm not quite sure why I read this, given that it's a time-slip novel exactly like the ones some of us (including me) were moaning about a few pages ago! Luckily this one is quite good. A clever handling of the theme, and it didn't feel as disjointed as some others of the genre. It would have been much more original if written a few years ago though!

Good luck with the tests minsmum, Duchess and Remus Flowers

CoteDAzur · 13/05/2015 09:30

Good luck to all going through diagnostic tests. I've been benched for several weeks now with groin pain, recently diagnosed with a "mechanical" problem in the hip joint that means I might get early arthritis and hip replacement. Oh the joy Sad

tumbletumble · 13/05/2015 09:31

Cote Flowers for you too

DuchessofMalfi · 13/05/2015 12:22

Not you as well Cote Thanks or maybe Wine Wine. We're a bunch of old crocks now aren't we? Just had my MRI scan and having a coffee. Not nearly as bad as I thought it would be Smile

JoylessFucker · 13/05/2015 16:56

The waiting for test results is so shite isn't it. Bestest doodahs to minsmum, Duchess, Cote and Remus. Hope the release from the brace brings good news too Lammy. I've just had a chest x-ray re-done as "there's something there but can't see what as lungs aren't fully inflated" says my GP. "They won't be", says I, "'cos I was given no instructions by the trainee radiologist and the senior one was nowhere to been seen." The xray receptionist was incandescent and persuaded me to make a complaint. Not even time to read as my xray department is at a small cottage hospital with walk-in service.

Anyway, have finished books 24 & 25 after a quiet month on the reading front. "First Fifteen Lives of Harry August": tumble's review has it pretty spot on. Also read "The Girl on the Train": decent enough thriller, good sorbet read.

TBR list looms large - not sure what to choose next ...

whitewineandchocolate · 13/05/2015 17:52

Hi everyone,

Also best wishes to everyone with medical tests etc. I have been for a good few appointments lately for a variety of things. It makes you feel such an old crock, of course all the while being pleased it's nothing serious.

Finally got to no 20. The War Workers - EM Delafield mentioned up thread and on Kindle offer. I love The Diary of a Provincial Lady series so thought I would give this one a try. The story of a group of office war workers and their upper class boss and their relationship with her. It was Ok but I found it rather unexciting. I wasn't expecting a riveting storyline but just couldn't rally warm to any of the characters, even the ones you are supposed to like.

Not sure what next but I do have The Slaves of Solitude on my Kindle and just saw that recommended unthread. Don't want to get too bogged down in war stuff though!

ChillieJeanie · 13/05/2015 20:07
  1. Night After Night by Phil Rickman

One from the series featuring curmudgeonly Marcus, reporter with a taste for the mystical Grayle, and Cindy, the ageing Celtic shaman and transvestite. Grayle has been hired as a researcher for a reality TV series which is kind of like Big Brother but set in a house with a disturbed history. The seven guests, including Cindy, are split between sceptics and mystics and the producer is hoping that ghosts will put in an appearance. But as Grayle digs into the history of the house, its tragic recent past and more disturbing distant past, she and Cindy come to realise that there far more going on than even producer Leo Defford could have wished for.

Not one of Rickman's best, although it is a good tale and builds up quite nicely, especially once all the residents are in the house.

tassisssss · 13/05/2015 20:10
  1. The girl on the train LOVED it!
ApplesTheHare · 13/05/2015 20:11

Hello everyone

Is it too late to join your challenge? I just found this thread and it looks great. I'm currently on maternity leave and making the most of the time off from work (I write and edit for work, so don't read as much as I'd like for pleasure!) to get some reading done. I was struggling to read adult fiction with a young baby so read a lot of YA earlier in the year. I'm currently reading Fifteen Lives of Harry August and if you discount the tens of thousands of baby books dd and I read each day, this is book 21! I'm only about one quarter of the way through, and wondering whether all the back story will come into play later in the book, or whether the author was torn between writing two different stories. Does that make sense to those who've read it?

Anyway, I hope it's not too late to join you Smile

TheWordFactory · 14/05/2015 06:44

I am still reading The Bone Clocks.

It's interminable.

And I've read 374 pages so I feel like if I quit now ( and I never quit books, so the fact I'm even considering is Shock) I've had this much torture for nought.

ClashCityRocker · 14/05/2015 06:53

apples welcome!

I didn't enjoy the first few chapters of Harry August either and as another book arrived in the mail, I put it down and never got back into it. It's still on my kindle so might well give it another bash.

DuchessofMalfi · 14/05/2015 07:54

Welcome ApplesSmile

Suffolkelf · 14/05/2015 11:37

30 - The Silkworm - A Cormoran Strike Novel - Robert Galbraith

A novelist has gone missing, he has a habit of doing this from time to time, and his wife employs private detective Cormoran Strike to find him.

This is the second book in the series. I enjoyed it, but thought that there were too many characters and found it confusing at times.