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50 Book Challenge 2016 Part Five

996 replies

southeastdweller · 31/05/2016 08:00

Thread five of the 50 Book Challenge for this year.

The challenge is to read fifty books (or more!) in 2016, though reading fifty isn't mandatory. Any type of book can count, it's not too late to join, and please try to let us all know your thoughts on what you've read.

The first thread of 2016 is here, second thread here, third thread here and fourth thread here.

How're you getting on so far?

OP posts:
Tanaqui · 15/07/2016 20:37

Oh dear Remus! I've seen them when I've picked up a Michael Connelly, and wondered- I will stay away.

💐Joyless, how horrid.

We should definitely have a book emoticon, like this: 📚

  1. Just One Dammed Thing After Another by Jodi Taylor. I think this was reviewed a fair bit on one of the earlier threads, which is why I read it- it just took a while for me to be first in the download queue! I did enjoy this as an unusual take on the time travel romp, it moved a long at a good pace, and covered lots of ground- I read it all in one sitting as I kept wanting to see what happened next. The downside of that for me is that I think the characterisation suffered- only a couple of the characters really came to life for me, and by the end it really bugged me when she kept saying "this is the real st Mary's/ this is what we're like", when in my head she was still the new girl, and I hadn't really seen her become part of the tea drinking, wild haired, eccentric "team". I did like how Sussman escalated slowly though, and Mrs Partridge was great. I'll read the next.
Sadik · 15/07/2016 21:49

66 Curtsies and Conspiracies by Gail Carriger

Still working my way through Carriger''s steampunk books in between (slightly) more serious reading. This one is book 2 in her Finishing School series, set in the same universe as the Parasol Protectorate series, but aimed at a younger readership (tween rather than YA, I'd say).

They're set in what purports to be a finishing school for young ladies - which happens to be based on a large dirigible - but which in fact is a school for aspiring high society spies. The plots are pretty slight, but they're fun, with lots of boarding school jolliness and so forth, and the heroine is lovely. I'd recommend to tween to young teen dc as well as to anyone wanting a lightweight fantasy read.

MegBusset · 16/07/2016 09:37
  1. The Voyage Of The Dawn Treader - CS Lewis.

One of my favourite Narnia books, in which Lucy, Edmund and their tiresome cousin Eustace sail East in the Dawn Treader in search of the end of the world.

FiveGoMadInDorset · 16/07/2016 18:17

I have abandoned reading slightly as I have been struggling to focus on the writing, but I have a knew pair of glasses turning up next week and I am so excited about being able to read again.

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 16/07/2016 18:49

Currently half way through The Things They Carried - absolutely superb so far.

CoteDAzur · 16/07/2016 19:18

I have also abandoned reading slightly because I left the Southe of France as it became the scene of a nightmarish massacre and now I'm in the middle of a coup d'état in Turkey Shock

I've been staying up pretty much the whole night the last two days, to make sure friends & family are OK. FFS this is fast becoming the worst summer holiday in living memory!

FiveGoMadInDorset · 16/07/2016 19:22

Blimey Cote, stay safe

BestIsWest · 16/07/2016 19:33

Have been thinking of you Cote. Glad you are safe Flowers.

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 16/07/2016 20:09

Bloody hell, Cote.

MuseumOfHam · 16/07/2016 21:29

Cote Shock What's that curse - may you live in interesting times? I think we would all appreciate some less interesting times right now.

  1. Our Endless Numbered Days by Claire Fuller A girl is effectively abducted by her survivalist father, held in a remote cabin for 9 years and told that the rest of the world has disappeared. The narrative jumps back and forward between the times in the forest and after her return to civilisation, dropping enough clunky hints about what really happened to have a fairly good idea before the final twist. I found it difficult to suspend my disbelief that this could happen anywhere in mainland central Europe for the length of time it did in the 70s/80s. That niggled me throughout, though I read plenty of other books with nonsense plots. The author is very good though at building a sense of threat / foreboding, particularly in the scenes involving the volatile and unstable father. Good for a quick read, but not one that will particularly stay with me I think.
CoteDAzur · 16/07/2016 21:33

Thank you, all. Yes, I'd like my life to get a bit less interesting about now.

Tanaqui · 16/07/2016 21:50

Cote- how awful.Flowers

perfectlyfine · 16/07/2016 22:20

Sorry to hear you've been caught in the midst of these awful events, Cote. Beyond comprehension.

I've had a bit of a hiatus on the reading front... quite a few upheavals and massive changes in personal circumstances have rather thrown me, so I have not picked up a book since February until just last week. Things are now beginning to settle somewhat, so I'm back and my list so far is:

  1. Never Let Me Go - Kazio Ishiguro
2.The Poisonwood Bible - Barbara Kingsolver
  1. Flowers for Algernon - Daniel Keys
  2. Bike Snob
  3. The Accidental Tourist - Anne Tyler
  4. Cannery Row - John Steinbeck
  5. SLammerkin - Emma Donahue
  6. The Shadow Wife - Diane Chamberlain
  7. Rivers of London - Ben Aaronovitch
10. A Man Called Ove - Frederick Backman

And I've just finished No.11 The Mango Season - Amulya Malalladi which I found an enjoyable read and an insight into the nuances of life in India.

Not sure if this has been reviewed upstream, but it is the story of a young indian woman, Priya, who has spent 7 years living and working in America, during which time she begins a secret relationship with an American man. She plans to marry him and returns to India with the intention of telling her family who she knows will be horrified and see this as the ultimate shame.

Unbeknown to her, her family have arranged a meeting with a potential husband for Priya when she gets home.

Priya is shocked when many of her fondly cherished memories of growing up in India are seen through her now westernised eyes. I found myself identifying with the juxtaposition of the sense of obligation to please/appease family with a sometimes conflicting set of personal interests and how difficult it can be to challenge long-held traditions. A good read and now I'm back in my game! Next up, Death at la Fenice - Donna Leon which is the first of a series of books mentioned by Bibliomania which might just provide a bit more of the escapism I need right now!

MermaidofZennor · 16/07/2016 22:24

2016 seems to be turning into one hellishly awful year. Hope you manage to stay safe and you and your friends and family are all ok, Cote Flowers

tumbletumble · 17/07/2016 11:23

Hope you're OK, Cote Flowers

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 17/07/2016 15:07

Book 79
The Things They Carried by Tim O' Brien
Based on his experiences in Vietnam, I thought that the first half of this was stunningly good. What I hadn’t realised in advance is that it isn’t actually a novel but a collection of pieces which merge fact and fiction, sometimes novelistic and sometimes more journalistic. Because of this, it began to feel increasingly disjointed and I found the second half far less successful than the first. Still worth a read though.

boldlygoingsomewhere · 17/07/2016 15:08

Is it too late to join you all? Not sure I'll make it to 50 this year as I don't get much quality reading time with toddler around but I have managed a reasonable amount so far. Of course, if take into account all the picture books, I'd be much closer to 50! Smile

Hope you are ok, Cote- worrying times.

ChillieJeanie · 17/07/2016 15:31

Goodness, Cote, I hope you and your friends/family are alright.

  1. Temeraire by Naomi Novik

I really liked this. Set during the Napoleonic Wars in an alternative history featuring dragons, Captain Will Laurence of the Royal Navy leads a successful attack on a French ship in the Atlantic. On board the French vessel was a dragon's egg close to hatching. To his horror, the dragonet imprints on Laurence rather than the young midshipman chosen by lot to be Temeraire's handler, and so Laurence has to leave his beloved navy and join the ranks of the aviators, who live somewhat outside of society.

VanderlyleGeek · 17/07/2016 16:18

Cote, how're you holding up? What an awful few days for you.

  1. Half A Crown, by Jo Walton. Half A Crown is the final book in the Farthing Triology, which is set in a 1960s Britain that negotiated a separate peace with Hitler about 20 years earlier (Hitler has since conquered Europe). The country has become increasingly fascist, the result of the events set in motion in 1941 (during the first book). By the time the third book begins, a conference is being held in London so that Germany, Britain, and Japan can partition the world into three spheres of influence. At the same time, personal and moral obligations cause major conflict for Carmichael, a man who's been forced into a terrible position but uses it to disrupt the system as much as he can. I don't want to give away too much, but the series is fantastic! I highly recommend it.
MermaidofZennor · 17/07/2016 21:58

Welcome to the thread, boldly :)

CoteDAzur · 17/07/2016 22:43

We are OK. Thank you all for thinking of us.

bibliomania · 18/07/2016 09:41

Bloody hell, Cote (quite literally). Thinking of you and yours. The whole coup response looks like a massive hammer blow to secular Turkey. It feels like the world has gone insane.

It feels like an awkward segue into "what I am reading", but holding fast to the spirit of the thread:

71. Summer Knight, Jim Butcher

More urban fantasy, with our wizard hero having to stop an all-out war between the faerie. More of the same - not the most memorable instalment in the series. Will take a break from the series but will probably come back to it later.

boldlygoingsomewhere · 18/07/2016 11:07

So far this year I have read:

  1. The Health Delusion
  2. War and Peace
  3. 8 Week Blood Sugar Diet
  4. A Court of Mist and Fury - Sarah Maas
  5. Rebecca - Daphne du Maurier
  6. Jamaica Inn - Daphne du Maurier
  7. The Paying Guests - Sarah Waters
  8. Far From the Madding Crowd - Thomas Hardy
  9. Sense and Sensibility - Jane Austen
10. The Handmaid's Tale - Margaret Atwood 11. Queen of Shadows - Sarah Maas 12. The Girl in the Red Coat - Kate Hamer 13. The Lie Tree - Frances Hardinge 14. The Versions of Us - Laura Barnett 15. A Cuckoo's Calling - Robert Galbraith 16. The Obesity Code - Jason Fung 17. Awakening Through Dreams - Nigel Hamilton 18. The Muse - Jessie Burton 19. Fairies in Tradition and Literature - Katherine Briggs

Some of these were re-reads of old favourites but Rebecca was new to me and I really enjoyed it. Glad I slogged my way through War and Peace which I enjoyed even though I found some of the war bits tedious!
It was also my first read of Sarah Waters which I liked and am keen to try some of her others.

BestIsWest · 18/07/2016 12:04

45 This Thing Of Darkness - Harry Thompson

This epic book has already been reviewed on here a number of times so I won't write a long review other than to say it really is an excellent read.

Just reading the end notes and noting that the author based General Rosas self justification on Tony Blair's words in justifying his actions in the Middle East.

wiltingfast · 18/07/2016 16:00

Omg cote Shock what a horrible stressful time. Bring back boring politics I say! The news seems permanently hideous these days Sad

On a brighter note I am LOVING Sevenses ....am 62% in.....am reading it every spare minute I have and terribly cranky when interrupted Grin have EVEN been ignoring this thread!!!!