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50 Book Challenge 2017 Part Three

993 replies

southeastdweller · 06/02/2017 08:00

Welcome to the third thread of the 50 Book Challenge for this year.

The challenge is to read fifty books (or more!) in 2017, 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 the year is here and the second one here.

OP posts:
EmGee · 18/02/2017 14:24

I've just finished 12. A Casual Vacancy by JK Rowling. As Melvyn Bragg says on the book cover 'This is a wonderful book'. I loved it although I did wonder if I would, a few chapters in. By the end, I felt bereft and wanted the book to keep going. Pretty bleak outlook on human nature though.

Having scoured the charity shops while back in the Uk for the half term break, I picked up the following books Cloud Atlas (well, it's been mentioned on this thread so much, how could I not?), Plainsong Kent Haruf, The Magician's Assistant Ann Patchett, The Girls Emma Cline, Hurrah for Gin Kathy Kirby and a brand new, unread copy of The History of the World by Andrew Marr.

I have started the latter in a bid to educate myself but I suspect I will only manage a chapter a night so it'll take me the rest of the year to finish it!

For book 13 I fancied an easy read, so am opting for Daughter by Jane Schmeldt (sp?) as book 14 will be Sapiens - A brief history of humankind by Yuval Noah Harari for Book Club.

HappyFlappy · 18/02/2017 14:41

Just finished Death of a Nurse (A Hamish Macbeth "mystery"). I wanted some chewing gum for my brain after the heavier stuff I'd been reading. Read it in less than half a day - no content at all and every cliche going, but it washed out my "little grey cells". (I've also got an Agatha Raisin waiting in the wings).

Have now started The Paying Guests (Sarah Waters) as it was commented on earlier in one of the three threads and sounded good. Only read the first chapter but the writing is excellent and the story has begun well, so I am anticipating much joy!

RiverTamFan · 18/02/2017 17:10

ChillieJeanie and other (potential) Pratchett fans, Nightwatch is rather brilliant but I'll admit that it's Jingo and Monstrous Regiment that I keep finding myself returning to. I still haven't read Snuff or Raising Steam but I'm saving them because once I've read them then I'm out of Discworld. Sad

5 Starship Troopers by Robert Heinlein. Not what I was expecting, having seen the film, but I read some of his short stories as a teenager so I probably should have had a fair idea! A lot less fighting and human drama and a lot more examination of responsibility to society and the morality of that. Slightly disconcerted by mentions of the last big war before the Terran Federation being between the, "Russo-Anglo-American Alliance and the Chinese Hegemony," given current political events.

I enjoyed it and am glad I've read it but don't bother if you can't tolerate this kind of thing. "No attempt was made to determine whether a voter was socially responsible to the extent of his literally unlimited authority. If he voted the impossible, the disastrous possible happened instead - and responsibility was then forced on him willy-nilly and destroyed both him and his foundationless temple. " Smile

RMC123 · 18/02/2017 17:20

EmGee I read Plainsong back in January. It was a Xmas Present from my MIL and it wasn't a book I would have chosen myself but I really enjoyed it. History of the World also on my wish list. Off to Northumberland tomorrow and just know we will end up in Barter Books in Alnwick - my favourite 2nd hand bookshop. Really don't need any more books - huge stash by my bed already but...
My book 19. The tales of Beedle and the Bard. - JK Rowling . Found it while clearing out child's room and was a welcome distraction from packing to go away! Clever little book.

RMC123 · 18/02/2017 17:21

Should be The tales of Beedle the Bard! Sorry too much Lemsip!

BestIsWest · 18/02/2017 18:48
  1. His Bloody Project - Graeme Macrae Burnett. Universally loved on here I think so I'll just add my name to the list of fans.

Now on to the Ghosts of Everest courtesy of Remus. I'm a couple of chapters in and loving it so far. Suffering from a really bad hangover today though so my concentration is shot.

ChessieFL · 18/02/2017 19:19
  1. The Mistletoe Murder and other stories by PD James

4 short stories, all involving a murder and all originally written at Christmas time. Didn't take long to read. The stories were ok but as they are short there's not much build up!

EmGee · 18/02/2017 19:55

RMC ooh I know Barter books well (I come from Northumberland) but haven't been for ages!! Enjoy browsing :) I enjoyed Our souls at night by Kent Haruf so am looking forward to reading Plainsong!

InvisibleKittenAttack · 18/02/2017 21:45

11. Cold Earth - Ann Cleeves - The most recent in the Shetland series. Unusually heavy rain causes a landslide - a believed empty croft house is distroyed in process, and the body of a woman discovered in it's ruins. A good police drama, lots of red herrings and back stories.

12. The Tenant of Wildfell Hall - Anne Bronte. Thank you Ladydepp for recomendation. Agree the first part is slow, but the move to the woman's narrative is very powerful.

FortunaMajor · 18/02/2017 22:19

22 Even Dogs In The Wild by Ian Rankin. Recently mentioned upthread so I will just add that I liked it.

I don't think it hit me when binge reading the bulk of the series in the early to mid-2000s how up to date his settings and issues are, recently adding in the independence referendum, historical paedophile rings etc as backdrops to what is going on. It makes them interesting although also dates them.

EmGee I also really enjoyed A Casual Vacancy. I wasn't expecting much and yet thought it was very well done.

I haven't read the Robert Galbraith books and don't know if I fancy them. I think she just needs to get on with writing some more proper HP world based books. Cursed Child in book form was a terrible disappointment. I don't care if she is bored, she needs to milk it!

Sadik · 18/02/2017 22:54

18 The Raven King by Maggie Stiefvater. Fourth and final book in YA fantasy series.
I only started this series because dd had it out of the library, and I didn't have anything to read, but actually I liked it a lot - good worldbuilding, convincing characters, and a nice storyline.

Ladydepp · 18/02/2017 22:56

Invisiblekitten- pleased to hear you've enjoyed Tenant of Wildfell Hall as well. I'm going to aim for some more Bronte type classics once I've made some inroads into my TBR pile

I'm surprising myself by being absolutely gripped by the first in the Conqueror series by Conn Iggulden. The descriptions of Mongolia and tribal warfare are fantastic and the action fairly rips along..

CoteDAzur · 18/02/2017 23:27

Sadik - "Raven King" got me all excited for a second. I thought Susanna Clarke wrote a sequel to Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell!

CoteDAzur · 18/02/2017 23:39

"I did enjoy the "Poly"Anna typo"

I read that book +35 years ago, as a child. Which I believe is the time to read books written for small children Wink And her name was Polianna in my copy of the book, because it wasn't in English.

I also read about Pippi Uzunçorap around that time. Maybe I should recommend that for you, Remus, since I'm sadly concluding that it was then that our taste in fiction overlapped for the last time Grin

SatsukiKusakabe · 19/02/2017 00:18

Ok. I was making a joke on the different spelling having a different meaning. I wasn't suggesting that you didn't know it; there's no need to explain Smile

I find it nice sometimes to go back and revisit books I liked as a child - you see things in a different way as a adult, and when things become commonly used idioms, as in the case of Pollyanna, it's interesting to go back to the original story. I'm thinking of rereading a few classics before my children get to them. I'm having a horrible week and Pollyanna might be just what I need, though I think she irritated me when I was ten Grin

CoteDAzur · 19/02/2017 00:57

I've been travelling these past few days so could not give Remus's review of Measuring The World the attention it deserves Grin

I have understood (no, really, this time) that while our taste in non-fiction overlaps fairly well, I should never ever try to recommend you a fiction book. Horses for courses and all that, but it's quite surprising that uninspiring, pretty damn boring nonsense is all you got out of it imho.

In a light and humorous way, Measuring The World compares the parallel-but-vastly-different lives of Gauss (arguably the greatest mathematician who has ever lived) and Humboldt (geographer). One was a singular genius, a child prodigy of very low socioeconomic origins although he turns out to be rigid and intolerant, and the other was an aristocrat with all the means who was modest and forgiving of lesser intellects. One never travelled far from home so never really learned about the world but explored the universe in his mind, while the other travelled the world and learned more about it than most other people. "One likes sex, the other is pretty much asexual... one likes running around measuring hills and stuff, and the other one does sums" is a shockingly inaccurate and unfair description of how these men's lives play out in this book.

And the book is about so much more than these two men and their discoveries. The undercurrent of the book is the political tide of revolutions that is about to sweep over Europe in 1848. Humboldt, who has travelled extensively and seen the horrors when nations are conquered & exploited, talks about slavery & "the burden of despotism and the exploitation of earth's riches, which produce and sterile form of wealth from which the economy could never profit" while Gauss says "Princes were poor pigs too, they lived and struggled and died like everyone else. The real tyrants were the laws of nature".

The book is also about the struggle towards knowledge and understanding, in a world that was (and still is, really) staunchly ignorant and populated mostly by superstitious, irrational people of limited curiosity and intellect.

"Gauss's conversation turned to chance, the enemy of all knowledge and the thing he had always wished to overcome. Viewed form up close, one could detect the infinite fineness of the web of causality behind every event. Step back and the larger patterns appeared : Freedom and Chance were a question of distance, a point of view." "The world could be calculated after a fashion, but that was a very long way from understanding it"

If anyone knows of a book that talks about such "uninspiring boring nonsense", please do let me know because I live for this stuff Smile

CoteDAzur · 19/02/2017 01:02

" Pollyanna might be just what I need, though I think she irritated me when I was ten Grin"

Gawd, yes, me too. I was younger than 10 and still remember thinking she was an idiot. There was something about her being in bed, horribly sick and waiting to die (?) yet getting all happy re something about that situation. I might be making it up.

CoteDAzur · 19/02/2017 01:10
  1. The Schirmer Inheritance by Eric Ambler

I very much enjoyed this author's The Mask Of Demitrios (which was my book #6) but was not as impressed by this one. Nevertheless, his trademark ambiguous morality and complex politics was there. My chief gripe is that it is incredibly slow and eventless in the first 60% or so. I wasn't a fan of the outdated sexism, either.

Still not a waste of time. I will read more books by this author and recommend him to fans of pensive, "old style" spy books like vintage Le Carré.

Tarahumara · 19/02/2017 07:53
  1. The Dark Net by Jamie Bartlett. Mentioned several times already on this thread, this is a fascinating read. It is well researched and very well balanced between different viewpoints. I found the chapter on pro-ana (and other forms of self harm) websites particularly interesting (I have a 9yo DD so I'm hoping not to find this relevant in the next few years Confused).
CinnamonSweet73 · 19/02/2017 08:22

I like the sound of the Ann Cleeves series, thanks Invisiblekitten, will add to the kindle wishlist!

RMC123 · 19/02/2017 08:43

EmGee Barter books is one of my happy places! Smile Heading off for a few days in Wooler today ( once I have finished packing, dropped off last night's sleepover guests, shouted at teenagers , sorted Pets etc etc)

Sadik · 19/02/2017 08:52

Cote, I definitely wouldn't recommend you The Raven King - but your daughter might like the series!

CoteDAzur · 19/02/2017 09:43

You got me at YA, Sadik Grin What is the series about? DD might be interested, as you say.

InvisibleKittenAttack · 19/02/2017 09:52

Cinnamon - the Shetland series are good, the first was set in the midwinter when it doesn't really get light, it was one of those books that managed to make the environment part of the story. Remember mentioning it on a discussion about enjoying books more in the correct season, so I'd start it soon before the weather improves!

boldlygoingsomewhere · 19/02/2017 10:00

Biblio, thanks for the recommendation for another Joanne Russ. That one looks very interesting and I'll pop it on my list.

Cote, I also had a flutter when I saw Raven King! Would love there to be another book set in that world.