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50 Book Challenge 2017 Part Four

984 replies

southeastdweller · 05/03/2017 13:59

Welcome to the fourth 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, the second one here, and the third thread here.

What are you reading?

OP posts:
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5
InvisibleKittenAttack · 22/03/2017 14:29

I made the mistake of asking for book recommendations on Facebook at the start of the year, some of my dearest friends like some frankly shit books.

I've just abandoned a couple of books so no update. Managed to blag my way through a book club meeting for a book I'd throw back on the book shelf a third of the way through due to it's total crapness this week.

stokey - someone in real life has recommended "the Passage" - might give it a go...

InvisibleKittenAttack · 22/03/2017 14:38

oh and I can't find the kindle spring sale - is there a link?

InvisibleKittenAttack · 22/03/2017 14:41

Wait - found it!

Tarahumara · 22/03/2017 14:52

Murine Grin at your cave bear / cave baby confusion!

Composteleana I enjoyed your review too Smile

RMC123 · 22/03/2017 15:05

30. Where my heart used to Beat - Sebastian Faulks. I haven't read much Faulks. I read Charlotte Gray years ago and to be honest don't remember much about it at all. This one was a strange beast. It took me quite a long time to read considering it's not a really long book. There were points when I felt like I was forcing myself to read on but I rarely abandon a book. It's hard to review with out giving a major spoiler but within the last 50 pages all the things I found jarring and odd about the book started to make sense and I finished it with a sense I had actually enjoyed. A strange one but actually one that will stay with me for a long time.

wiltingfast · 22/03/2017 17:37

Just realized I have not brought my list over Shock

  1. The Life Project by Helen Pearson
  2. Gone to Ground by Marie Jalowicz Simon
  3. The Dreaming Void by Peter F Hamilton
  4. Mother of Eden by Chris Beckett;
  5. The Churchill Factor by Boris Johnson;
  6. Notes from a Small Island by Bill Bryson;
  7. The Bone Clocks by David Mitchell;

new:
8) The Pure Gold Baby by Margaret Drabble; Hmm. Hmm. HMM. This was supposedly about a single mother in the 60s whose baby turns out to have serious developmental issues. Didn't really seem to be about the baby though. Or even the mother. It is told from the perspective of one of her friends. I thought at first it was going to be an unreliable narrator type device, but no. Nothing particularly seems to turn on using the voice of the friend to tell the story except to remind us that stories are fundamentally neither objective nor reliable. But the impact of that is v distancing. You have no visceral sense of their day to day lives, what Anna's limitations really are, how her mother copes or makes life decisions. There's clearly a contrast between her friends' children and Anna, but it's not really played upon very much. There's a bit of a tour around different types of intervention in mental health and management of people like Anna, over the years but the book doesn't really seem to be focused on that either. Lots of tangents but there isn't the emotional engagement that you would expect from a book that says it is about a pure gold baby. Some of the writing is great, incredibly observant and on point, there is a wry humour here about people, the way they go on, their flakiness, selfishness, vulnerablity. It is overall a quiet book, a collage of impressions, fleeting, a sense of life also pouring through our fingers, a sense of inevitability and sadness of aging, leaving your children behind. Not sure I'd really recommend as I was constantly a bit puzzled by where it was going and in the end there is no great conclusion. If you saw it at 99p, it might be worth it.

Have also read

  1. Measuring the World by Daniel Kehlmann; which I liked! V enjoyable reader's digest type book, capturing 2 great scientists and bringing them to life very well. Not academic at all, I enjoyed the exploratory half more than the other, but a good read for £1.29 I think it was Grin

Am currently reading Reamde by Neal Stephenson which is enormous and I am hoping to finish up tonight.

ps cote did you hear Eleanor Catton is apparently writing a sci fi book!

RemusLupinsChristmasMovie · 22/03/2017 18:03

Popping in the report, reeling from the news today and not really feeling like starting a new book.

Book 28
Black Out by John Lawton
The first Sergeant Troy novel, of a series set in the closing days of WW2 Britain. I’d never heard of this series and only bought this because it was on a Kindle Daily Deal. It began pretty well but unfortunately then went downhill pretty horribly. Sex was the first stupid thing to rear its ugly head (pages and pages and pages of it, with several women throwing themselves on Sergeant Troy, ripping their clothes off, smothering themselves in mayonnaise and screaming yes, yes, yes at him) and then the writer decided to try to pack in more ‘twists’ than Chubby Checker, making the plot increasingly preposterous and incredible. By the end I couldn’t wait for the damn thing to finish and suffice to say, I won’t be reading any more of these. A shame – because the setting is exactly my thing.

And...and...erm...whisper...shuffle...I read the free sample of Day of the Jackal and erm...I really didn't like it. Is it supposed to be fiction? I'm finding the relentless abbreviations and backstory pretty uninspiring, and really don't feel like a world has been created and is drawing me in - it's more like a rather dull news report. Perhaps it doesn't help that it's a period/place of history that I have no particular interest in. I don't think I'm going to bother with it. Sorry - shuffles off again.

MegBusset · 22/03/2017 18:47
  1. Stone of Farewell - Tad Williams

Second part of the Memory, Sorrow And Thorn fantasy series and even better than the first - that took a little while to get into its stride, but this gets straight into the action. Really good writing and providing some much-needed escapism from the real world :(

KeithLeMonde · 22/03/2017 18:49

Fatowl, sorry to hear of your losses Flowers

Have been eyeing up Nothing Is True so may snap it up now after several recommendations here. It will go to the bottom of the TBR pile though so I won't be reviewing any time soon (sorry).

17. Our Endless Numbered Days
Read and reviewed everywhere so I won't say much. Really enjoyed this, it was a bit underwhelming at first but grew on me a lot. Reminded me of Laura Ingalls Wilder, but so dark.

18. The Likes of Us: A Biography of the White Working Class, Michael Collins
Have wanted to read this for ages but finding it a disappointment so far. Will finish it before I write a review.

StitchesInTime · 22/03/2017 20:22

several women throwing themselves on Sergeant Troy, ripping their clothes off, smothering themselves in mayonnaise

Mayonnaise as some sort of sexy body paint? In WW2 Britain? Whatever happened to rationing?

RemusLupinsChristmasMovie · 22/03/2017 20:26

Said mayo belongs to the Yanks, at least until Troy gets to lick it all off.

Passmethecrisps · 22/03/2017 20:35

If I was going to smother myself in anything I am not sure I would choose mayonnaise. Unless I was a nice fat chip.

RemusLupinsChristmasMovie · 22/03/2017 20:48

I've been looking through the fridge. I have salad cream, rhubarb jam, chipotle paste or mango chutney. Deliberates...

CoteDAzur · 22/03/2017 21:07

Remus - "I read the free sample of Day of the Jackal and erm... I'm finding the relentless abbreviations and backstory pretty uninspiring, and really don't feel like a world has been created and is drawing me in - it's more like a rather dull news report."

I actually remembered what you thought about The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo and thought you might say something like this about The Day Of The Jackal, too Grin

It is the very detail and backstory that makes both books brilliant and exceptional, imho.

"Is it supposed to be fiction?"

It is supposed to be fiction so closely knit, so detailed, and tied to real events in every detail as to be indistinguishable from reality.

SatsukiKusakabe · 22/03/2017 21:13

Didn't they used to draw their stockings on with gravy in the War? Was she going for some "saucy" underwear too? Grin (you've no idea how funny I found my own joke)

Sadik · 22/03/2017 22:10

27 Emergency Admissions: memoirs of an ambulance driver by Kit Wharton
Does what it says on the tin - not a literary masterpiece, but an interesting if quite surface look at an ambulance driver's life, interspersed with stories from the author's chaotic upbringing.

JoylessFucker · 23/03/2017 09:27

giggled at first mention of mayonaise
snorted out loud at gravy and saucy underwear

I love you lot Grin

KeithLeMonde · 23/03/2017 13:43

18. The Likes of Us: A Biography of the White Working Class, Michael Collins

This book is a few years old now and would probably have been more impressive if I'd read it when it first came out. There has been more attention paid to the disenfranchisement of the white working class (both in the UK and the USA) following Brexit, Trump etc, so the polemic contained in this book probably reads as rather less original than it was at the time. I remember Michael Collins writing about these issues when it seemed that nobody else was, and many of his points have turned out to be central to what has happened to UK politics in recent years.

Parts of this were excellent - the descriptions of working class London life in the 60s were vivid, and Collins has many original things to say. Unfortunately, it suffered from both lack of clarity in its focus, and wooliness in the writing.

This is not in any way a "biography of the white working class". It's the story of the London white working class, concentrating for the most part on a small area at the back of the Elephant and Castle (an area that I know well). In some ways, this narrowness of focus works; Collins chooses to write about what he knows, and the personal recollections of his grandmother bring vivid detail to the descriptions. However, there's a double standard here, where Collins asks us to see the experiences of his own family and their near neighbours as representative of the experiences of an entire class, while at the same time constantly telling us how unique Southwark is. Even other London working class communities, such as those in the East End are rarely mentioned , let alone the experiences of urban working class people elsewhere in the UK. In the words of my Geordie friend, who hated the book: "F*cking cockneys, think they are the centre of the universe" Grin

While there are many citations and footnotes, there is also a lot of opinion presented as fact - or possibly fact presented as fact but without evidence. Here's Collins writing about race relations:

Statistics revealed that street crime in which a robbery was carried out on an individual and involved violence or the threat of violence was almost exclusively committed by young black males on white victims, who were largely female and frequently elderly

This assertion is one of the foundations of an interesting and valuable examination of race relations in traditionally white working class neighbours but seriously - no citation? no reference of where these "statistics" came from and who collected them?

Well worth a read, this one, but ultimately frustrating.

19. Wolf Hollow, Lauren Wolk

This is YA or possibly even a children's book. We're reading the Carnegie shortlist at work (I work in a secondary school) and this was my first allocated book.

"Annabelle has lived in Wolf Hollow all her life: a quiet place, still scarred by two world wars. But when cruel, manipulative Betty arrives in town, Annabelle's calm world is shattered, along with everything she's ever known about right and wrong.

When Betty disappears, suspicion falls on strange, gentle loner Toby. As Wolf Hollow turns against him, and tensions quickly mount, Annabelle must do everything in her power to protect Toby - and to find Betty, before it is too late."

Definite shades of Harper Lee in this one, and some beautiful writing about rural life in 1940s Pennsylvania. I will be buying this for my goddaughters :)

Ladydepp · 23/03/2017 14:46

Just reporting in that Operation Mincemeat is £1.29 today on kindle. I've bought for ds but also for myself as I enjoyed Agent Zigzag.

PoeticLE · 23/03/2017 14:59

Returning to the book fold after quite an absence, hope that's ok! Work peaks and troughs and if I have projects on site, I spend so much on the road I find it hard to catch up on the thread.

Last night I finished reading The Power by Naomi Alderman. I don't know if anyone else on the thread has read it, but I loved it. There was a bit in the middle where I thought the plot was turning very predictable, but Alderman threw a completely unexpected curveball.

I don't want to give away too many spoilers, but the last chapter turned all my pre-conceptions on its head. It left me thinking about the gender structures today. I think the take-home message was that it's power that corrupts, not physical strength or historical privileges that any group enjoys. I say "think" because I'm still gathering my impressions and trying to put it into something coherent Grin

MuseumOfHam · 23/03/2017 18:42

PoeticLE - I've got The Power (not literally, on my TBR pile) and that's exactly what I was hoping from it - thanks for your review.

I'm another one who hasn't posted for ages - a fortnight into a new job - but I'll come back with my meagre updates soon.

RemusLupinsChristmasMovie · 23/03/2017 18:49

Cote and I both rate Operation Mincemeat so that could be a good sign, for anybody considering it.

CoteDAzur · 23/03/2017 19:00

Yes our tastes in non-fiction seem to overlap pretty well.

CoteDAzur · 23/03/2017 19:00

Fiction, on the other hand.... Shock Grin

RemusLupinsChristmasMovie · 23/03/2017 19:44

MuseumofHam I've now got as an ear worm. Thanks for that!