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50 Book Challenge 2016 Part Six

999 replies

southeastdweller · 30/08/2016 08:09

Thread six 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, fourth thread here and fifth thread here.

OP posts:
Tarahumara · 30/08/2016 08:48

Place marking on new thread - thanks southeast!

(Note name changed from tumbletumble)

BestIsWest · 30/08/2016 10:09

Thanks SouthEast.

Having a blissful soothing time reading the Shellseekers interspersed with The Turing book. Sitting on my terrace in the sunshine overlooking the banks of the Wye sipping a coffee and reading. It's paradise. Could stay here forever.

CoteDAzur · 30/08/2016 10:10

Thank you for the shiny new thread, Southeast Smile

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 30/08/2016 10:56

Thanks, South.

I've resorted to beginning a re-read of The Dark Tower, in desperation at having abandoned so many books recently. I'd planned to leave it until the weather was colder and nights were darker, but needs-must.

Sadik · 30/08/2016 11:09

Thanks for the new thread South. A bit in between books at the moment -started Cote's epigenetics book but have a long train journey at the weekend so decided to save it for that. Kind of re-reading Naomi Novik's Uprooted, but not sure it's worth a second read, and then I've got Wolf Border by Sarah Hall from the library but not quite in the mood to start it.

Doing much better on audio- half way through Quicksilver by Neal Stephenson, and thoroughly enjoying it.

Tarahumara · 30/08/2016 12:48

Sounds amazing, Best. Enjoy!

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 30/08/2016 15:38

Book 94
The Drawing of the Three by Stephen King
The second in The Dark Tower series. I didn’t bother with the first, because it’s not a great read. This one, The Wolves of the Calla and the final one are my favourites. Like putting on a favourite old jumper and hunkering down with hot chocolate.

southeastdweller · 30/08/2016 20:53

Posting my updating list to help me keep track, highlights in bold:

  1. Untold Stories - Alan Bennett
  2. Levels of Life - Julian Barnes
  3. A Mindfulness Guide for the Frazzled - Ruby Wax
  4. An Awfully Big Adventure - Beryl Bainbridge
  5. Case Histories - Kate Atkinson
  6. The Life-Changing Magic of Not Giving a F**k - Sarah Knight
  7. Wolf Hall - Hilary Mantel
  8. The Good Liar - Nicholas Searle
  9. Passenger 23 - Sebastian Fitzek
10. The Women Who Went to Bed for a Year - Sue Townsend 11. The Driver's Seat - Muriel Spark 12. The Widow - Fiona Barton 13. A Man Called Ove - Fredrik Backman 14. Nice Work (If You Can Get It) - Celia Imrie 15. Mothering Sunday - Graham Swift 16. This is Me - Michelle Collins 17. Behind the Scenes at the Museum - Kate Atkinson 18. Memoirs of a Professional Cad - George Sanders 19. Eileen - Ottessa Moshfegh 20. Olivier - Philip Ziegler 21. Miss Lonelyhearts - Nathaniel West 22. Waist Disposal - Dr John Briffa 23. Tipping the Velvet - Sarah Waters 24. Not Working - Lisa Owens 25. Straight Up - Danny Dyer 26. Shop Girl - Mary Portas 27. Career of Evil - Robert Galbraith 28. The World According to Danny Dyer - Danny Dyer. 29. Man at the Helm - Nina Stibbe 30. Respectable - Lynsey Hanley 31. Gentlemen & Players - Joanne Harris 32. Love from Boy - Roald Dahl/Donald Sturrock 33. Luckiest Girl Alive - Jessica Knoll 34. Charlotte’s Web - E.B White 35. The Muse - Jessie Burton 36. Out of Time - Miranda Sawyer 37. The Swimming Pool Library - Alan Hollinghurst 38. I See You - Claire Mackintosh 39. My Name is Lucy Barton - Elizabeth Strout 40. Peter O’Toole - Robert Sellers 41. On Chesil Beach - Ian McEwan
OP posts:
ChillieJeanie · 30/08/2016 21:20
  1. The Witch's Vacuum Cleaner and other stories by Terry Pratchett

Short stories for young children - but enjoyable enough for adults too. As long as you bear in mind that they are quite silly. It includes an early tale of goblins which was one of the forebears of Truckers.

CoteDAzur · 30/08/2016 23:22

Bringing my list over:

  1. One Shot (Jack Reacher #9) by Lee Child
  2. HHhH by Laurent Binet
  3. The Epigenetics Revolution: How Modern Biology is Rewriting our Understanding of Genetics, Disease and Inheritance by Nessa Carey
  4. The Girl Who Played With Fire by Stieg Larsson
  5. Guilty Minds by Joseph Finder
  6. Nightfall by Isaac Asimov & Robert Silverberg
  7. High-Opp by Frank Herbert
  8. Under The Dome by Stephen King
  9. The City & The City by China Mieville
  10. Treatise On Harmony by Jean-Philippe Rameau
  11. Echo Burning by Lee Child
  12. Spy the Lie: Three Former CIA Officers Reveal Their Secrets to Uncloaking Deception by Philip Houston, Mike Floyd, Susan Carnicero, Don Tennant, Michael Floyd
  13. The Flicker Men by Ted Kosmatka
  14. Total Recall by Arnold Schwarzenegger
  15. Half Way Home by Hugh Howey
  16. Dark Fire by C. J. Sansom (Shardlake #2)
  17. Reaching Down The Rabbit Hole: Extraordinary Journeys Into The Human Brain by Dr Allan Ropper
  18. The Dark Forest by Cixin Liu (The Three-Body Problem #2)
  19. Daughter of the Winds by Jo Bunt
  20. Career of Evil by Robert Galbraith
  21. The Girl In The Spider's Web by David Lagercrantz
  22. Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov
  23. The Year of Living Danishly: Uncovering the Secrets of the World’s Happiest Country by Helen Russell
  24. Seveneves by Neal Stephenson
  25. Lord Of The Flies - William Golding
  26. Mother Of Eden by Chris Beckett (Dark Eden #2)
  27. The Reluctant Fundamentalist by Mohsin Hamid
  28. The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larsson
  29. The Time Machine by H G Wells
  30. The Knife Of Never Letting Go by Patrick Ness
  31. Hot Zone - The Chilling True Story of an Ebola Outbreak by Richard Preston
  32. Dissolution by C. S. Sansom
  33. Limitless (The Dark Fields) by Alan Glynn
  34. High Heat by Lee Child
  1. Authority by Jeff VanderMeer8. Rivers Of London by Ben Aaronovitch
  2. Dreamland: Adventures in the Strange Science of Sleep by David K. Randall
  3. Ancillary Justice by Ann Beckie
  4. Written In Fire by Marcus Sakey
  5. The Psychopath Inside: A Neuroscientist's Personal Journey into the Dark Side of the Brain by James Fallon
  6. The Day Of The Triffids by John Wyndham
  7. Wolves by Simon Ings
  8. Black Swan Green by David Mitchell
CoteDAzur · 30/08/2016 23:29
  1. The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat and Other Clinical Tales by Oliver Sacks

I loved this. It's a neurology book written 30 years ago so some of the "mysteries" might be solved by now, but they are utterly fascinating. It reminded me of Carl Sagan's Pulitzer-winner book Dragons of Eden, published in 1977 and talking about some fascinating stuff such as split-brain patients (with no communication between right and left brain hemispheres). I would definitely recommend this book.

CheckpointCharlie2 · 30/08/2016 23:35

Loved your 13 and 14 books cote what did you think of The Knife of never letting go? There are two more incredible books in that trilogy and I am jealous that you still have them to go!
Hot Zone was scary stuff too.

I haven't kept my list up but it's defo on track for fifty if not there. Wish I had kept a record now it would be so interesting to see it!

CoteDAzur · 30/08/2016 23:37
  1. The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest (Millennium Trilogy #3) by Stieg Larsson

I read this 7 years ago while breastfeeding newborn DS and was surprised to see that I remembered a grand total of zero about it Shock Lisbeth Salander is in hospital for most of this book while her friends & enemies circle around each other outside. This is another great book by Stieg Larsson - his last, unfortunately. I really like the meticulous investigation in each of his books, and the feminism that seeps through every page.

CoteDAzur · 30/08/2016 23:46

Checkpoint - I loved Hot Zone, too but you won't like what I had to say about The Knife Of Never Letting Go. I've been reading sci-fi for a very long time and am a bit hard to please in this genre - sorry! And I can't stand YA

CheckpointCharlie2 · 31/08/2016 09:39

Haha oh no! It's my fave book!
What about Oryx and Crake, you might like that trilogy, by Margaret Atwood. More grown up than Knife of thing but still pretty dystopian but more science fictiony!

CheckpointCharlie2 · 31/08/2016 10:00

You really didn't like it did you! I am reading a series your dd might like, it's called the Raven trilogy I think, first books is called the Raven Boys and it's quite gripping, not sure if you would like it though as it's pretty YA.

Have you read Watchers or Ghosthunters by Neil Spring, you might like them, based on truth but written as a fiction book.

SatsukiKusakabe · 31/08/2016 10:14

Just checking in, thanks for new thread southeast. Will post my list and updates shortly, enjoying everyone's reviews.

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 31/08/2016 10:21

Noooooooooooo, Cote. Don't read, Oryx and Crake. You'd absolutely hate it. I hated it too, but I'm pretty sure it's one we'd agree on!

I've been meaning to read The Man Who Mistook His Wife For A Hat for about 20 years. Must get around to it. It's one I keep thinking I might have actually read years ago,but can't remember.

SatsukiKusakabe · 31/08/2016 10:22

Sounds idyllic best I've wanted to go to the Wye valley since seeing it depicted in Shadowlands, reading your post don't know what's taken me so long!

BestIsWest · 31/08/2016 10:29

It's beautiful. Must look up Shadowlands.

tessiegirl · 31/08/2016 11:27

I'm a little embarrassed of my little list of read books compared to some of yours...getting back into reading (mostly in the bath in peace in the evenings!) alongside looking after an 8 month old! Blush
So, here goes:

  1. Our Song - Dani Atkins
  2. When She Was Bad - Tammy Cohen
  3. Blue Shoes and Happiness - Alexander McCall-Smith. Number 7 in the series, I love these books, they are my comfort read! An absolute pleasure!
  4. Up Close and Personal - Leonie Fox. Set in a quiet village this follows the lives of three friends, each of them with relationship problems. Easy to read but a bit silly in parts. Average chick lit.
  5. Eeny Meeny - M J Arlidge - finished this last night. Bit late to this series but finally got around to the first one. Amurderer who enjoys abducting pairs and giving them the choice of either living or dying by killing the other. I enjoyed it, I didn't make the connection as to the murderer (maybe a bit of baby brain!). I will read the next one in series.
SatsukiKusakabe · 31/08/2016 11:53

best do - it's a lovely film, marvellous locations and acting and as it's about C.S Lewis great for book-lovers...but have tissues handy Smile

tessiegirl I read 4 books in the year after I had dd (all in one week's holiday) so think you're doing just fine. She 2.8 now and I'm reading a lot more Flowers

LavandulaStoechas · 31/08/2016 12:04

Ohhhh, Shadowlands made me cry. Went to see it not long after my mother died. Probably not a good film to see if you're feeling a bit raw. But the scenery was stunning. I love the Golden Valley. DH and I used to go up there quite a bit before the DC came along. Hay is a favourite, and very special, place for us. We had our honeymoon there as well.

Can't believe we're heading into the final quarter of the year soon. Will be back with my list maybe tomorrow (busy day today). Thanks for starting up the new thread, Southeast :)

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 31/08/2016 12:10

Don't be embarrassed, Tessie. Even a few books is better than no books!

My list. I'm so disappointed with so many this year, and disappointed by how few stand out novels there are. I've probably started and abandoned another 30 or so too. :(

  1. The Victorian Detective
  2. Stasiland
  3. Career of Evil
  4. Bazaar of Bad Dreams
  5. The Book of Strange New Things
  6. Travel guide/history Germany
  7. Ditto
  8. Sherlock Holmes & the Yule Tide Mystery
  9. The Good Fairies of New York
  10. The Great Railway Bazaar
  11. The Daffodil Mystery
  12. In the Land of White Death
  13. The Victorian Workhouse
  14. The Lie Tree
  15. Sherlock Holmes: The Spirit Box
  16. The English at the North Pole
  17. Leaving Berlin
  18. The Worst Journey in the World
  19. Berlin – Rory Maclean
  20. Clouds of Witness (Lord Peter Wimsey)
  21. Dead Street
  22. Uglies
  23. Max Carrados
  24. The Osiris Ritual
  25. The Holy Thief
  26. The Janissary Tree
  27. The Spy who Came in from the Cold
  28. The Big Bow Mystery
  29. How to be a Victorian
  30. The Enchanted April
  31. The Mystery of the Jewelled Moth
  32. The Lady Vanishes
  33. The Lady from Nowhere
  34. The Green Mummy
  35. Fool Moon
  36. Hitchhikers’ Guide series
  37. Ditto
  38. Ditto
  39. Ditto
  40. A Very British Murder
  41. Playing to the Gallery – Grayson Perry
  42. Gone to Ground
  43. Faust’s Metropolis
  44. Sad Cypress
  45. The Secret Adversary
  46. A Colder War
  47. The Good German
  48. All Creatures Great and Small
  49. Stalin’s Nose
  50. The Ghosts of Berlin
  51. The Lord God Made them All
  52. Murder – British Crime Classic
  53. A Spy Amongst Friends
  54. Fear Stalks the Village
  55. Berlin Now
  56. My Man Jeeves
  57. The Mysterious Affair at Styles
  58. Just One Damned Thing After Another
  59. The Ice Cold Heaven
  60. A Man Lay Dead
  61. Behold, Here’s Poison
  62. Lord of the Flies
  63. Wolf of the Plains
  64. Lords of the Bow
  65. Lady Susan
  66. Facing Up
  67. The Midnight Swimmer
  68. The Loney
  69. Mary – Nabakov
  70. I Capture the Castle
  71. Lies We Tell Ourselves - would have been a stand out but I hated the ending
  72. End of Watch
  73. True Grit
  74. Whose Body?
  75. Jane Austen and Food
  76. Bird Box
  77. Until the Final Hour
  78. Every Dead Thing
  79. The Things They Carried
  80. Into Darkness
  81. Anatomy of a Soldier
  82. A Woman in Berlin
  83. All the Light we Cannot See
  84. A Walk in the Woods
  85. Harry Potter and the Cursed Child
  86. Better: A Surgeon’s Notes on Performance
  87. The Crossing of Antarctica
  88. Destination Unknown – Agatha Christie
  89. Ordeal by Innocence –Agatha Christie
  90. The Other Side of Silence
  91. Nazi Women
  92. The Man in the High Castle
  93. Revelations of a Lady Detective
  94. The Drawing of the Three
whippetwoman · 31/08/2016 12:56

Thanks for the new thread Southeast

Warning – the books mentioned below annoyed me!

68. Common Ground – Rob Cowen
Why use one simile when 20 will do? Honestly, I really wanted to like this nature writing book about the wildlife in the edge lands of the author’s home town of Harrogate, but unfortunately I didn’t. What particularly irritated me was the made-up stories around some of the animals. For example, in the chapter about hares, a homeless man becomes the narrator, Sir Hare, and talks about his life. He also does it in a particularly sexist way, judging young bottle feeding mothers (oh the horror) and a ‘vacuous housewife’ in a coffee shop. I think what the author was trying to do was good, draw attention to the diversity of life in the lands around towns, which are likely to be built on and therefore lost, and which have their own unique histories, but the style of writing was way off sometimes. Irritating.

69. All That Man Is – David Szalay
This is on the Booker Longlist and is good quality writing. As the title suggests, it’s about men; each chapter is essentially a short story about a man, somewhere in Europe at a different stage of his life, from young to old. There are no real connections between the men, except the first and last. However, what women there are, bloody hell, I found it annoying. The women were either totally up for sex with all these men (unlikely) or they were evil divorcing harpies. Sexist. And therefore annoying. Very annoying.

70. The Shadow of the Wind – Carlos Ruiz Zafon
Yes, it’s a good mystery story, yes it’s readable, yes I enjoyed it but again, what is with the women characters? They are either dead, getting pregnant or lusted over and objectified. Sort out your representations of women people. Sort it out.

71. The Shepherd’s Life – James Rebanks
The best of the books I have read recently. I know a lot more about sheep than I did before I read this and have a better idea of the difficulties, challenges and hardships fell farmers have to endure. Whilst his is not a bad thing, I did have very mixed feelings about the author. I guess farming communities are extremely insular and this comes across very strongly. Hmm.

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