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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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InvisibleKittenAttack · 05/03/2017 21:08

ooh, new thread, thank you! Not read anything new for a while! Here's my list so far:

  1. Sword Song - Bernard Cornwall
  2. The Essex Serpent - Sarah Perry
  3. House of Cards - Michael Dobbs
  4. Sparkling Cyanide - Agatha Christie
  5. The Moving Toyshop - Edmund Crispin
  6. Crow Hollow - Michael Wallace
  7. Moving - Jenny Eclair
  8. The Sense of an Ending - Julian Barnes
  9. Rather be the Devil - Ian Rankin

10. The Killings at Badgers Drift - Caroline Graham
11. Cold Earth - Ann Cleeves
12. The Tenant of Wildfell Hall - Anne Bronte
13. Death of a Hollow Man - Caroline Graham

It's far too 'murder mystery' heavy really! Currently reading one of the Last Kingdom series. Finding it hard going as I got it out of the library and it's a really big hardback copy - so it doesn't fit in my bag and I'm not reading when out and about.
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Tarahumara · 05/03/2017 21:17

DrDiva that is beautiful Smile

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SatsukiKusakabe · 05/03/2017 21:22

drdiva Star

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CoteDAzur · 05/03/2017 21:23

Ooh I see today that In the Land of White Death: An Epic Story of Survival in the Siberian Arctic by Valerian Albanov is down to £0.49 on the Kindle!

I think it was recommended on a 50-Book thread (how else would it have landed on my Amazon Wish List?) so there you go Smile

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CheerfulMuddler · 05/03/2017 21:32

Smile, DrDiva. Love that, thank you.

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Murine · 05/03/2017 22:02

That is wonderful, DrDiva

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11122aa · 05/03/2017 22:27

Just marking my place. Am 17% through my current book.

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DrDiva · 05/03/2017 22:38

Glad you like the poem! I am a big Dorothy Parker fan. Such beautiful and poignant imagery of real experience.

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RiverTamFan · 06/03/2017 01:57

DrDiva That was really evocative.

Hello, new thread! I've read the first page of Passage to India 3 times but life (including toothache) has intervened. Think I'll come back to it.

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ABCFamily · 06/03/2017 02:03

Marking my place.

  1. Gang Leader for a Day: A Rogue Sociologist Takes to the Streets - Sudhir Venkatesh
  2. Cold Comfort Farm - Stella Gibbons
  3. Alice - Christina Henry
  4. The God of Small Things - Arundhati Roy
  5. Rebecca - Daphne Du Maurier (currently reading)


Going a bit slowly. I blame my 8 month old!
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slightlyglitterbrained · 06/03/2017 03:28

No idea what number, but:

x. The Big Sleep Raymond Chandler
I knew this was the "original" noir, but I hadn't realised how atmospheric the writing would be.

Cast aside with great force (or would have if it wasn't an ebook)
Be Awesome Hadley Freeman
Bought thinking "well I remember liking some columns by her". I can only imagine that her editors for the columns are supremely good at working self indulgent rambling twaddle into coherent, well argued prose. Sadly they didn't work on the book. Reads like the navel gazing of an terribly self satisfied teenager. Not counting as I couldn't bear to read any more but felt I had to vent.

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KeithLeMonde · 06/03/2017 08:59

DrDiva, beautiful poem, thank you. And Cote, that looks like 49p well spent, thank you too.

Cheerful, I'll watch out for your review of the Rumer Godden. The Diddakoi was one of my favourite books when I was a girl (wish I had a copy actually, to re-read - I'll have to see whether I can dig one up) and I read In This House of Brede a couple of years ago and enjoyed it greatly. I hadn't realised how many books she wrote for adults - I will have to get some more of them onto my TBR list.

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CheerfulMuddler · 06/03/2017 09:41

Keith You can borrow my copy of The Diddakoi if you want - though I would like it back. You can't borrow Sparrows because it's an ebook, but if you liked The Diddakoi, you'd love this. It's interesting actually, particularly in light of that Diane Wynne Jones essay - this is supposed to be an adult book, but the main character is eleven and it reads exactly like her children's books - the only difference so far, as far as I can see, is that Loveday's mother is having sex with men outside marriage - and even then all that's said is that she takes them into her room, though it's clear what's going on.

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SatsukiKusakabe · 06/03/2017 10:16

I've not read any of Rumer Godden's adult novels either but Tottie was perhaps my first favourite novel as a child. Though it involves one of the main characters sacrificing their life for another -Shock thinking about it now - and the first real villain I'd encountered. Traumatic.

Thanks for info on Name of the Wind hundred pages in and don't know whether to give it up. Started off well enough and now I've read on I'm not sure if it isn't actually deeply annoying and stupid... it's on the Kindle so might start something else in paperback and see how I go.

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KeithLeMonde · 06/03/2017 10:17

Thanks so much Cheerful for your kind offer :) I've just been checking our local library, though, and they have both Diddakoi and Sparrows so I will avail myself of their copies.

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CheerfulMuddler · 06/03/2017 10:27

Hurrah for libraries!
The only other one I've read is The Greengage Summer, which I guess would be YA nowadays - interestingly, that one felt much older than Sparrows does.

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frenchfancy · 06/03/2017 10:50

Bringing my list over.

  1. Dead Girl Walking - Chris Brookmyre
  2. Black Widow - Chris Brookmyre
  3. The Goldfinch - Donna Tartt
  4. The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry - Rachel Joyce
  5. A God in Ruins - Kate Atkinson
  6. The Handmaid's Tale Margaret Atwood
  7. Love in the Present Tense - Catherine Ryan Hyde
  8. The Accidental life of Greg Millar


  1. The life I left Behind - Colette McBeth

Psychological Thriller - Told by 2 women, one left for dead and one murdered. The story moves along nicely, has enough of a twist not to be predictable but not so big that you don't believe it. I would recommend.

10. I Let You Go - Clare Mackingtosh
Another Psychological Thiller - I really enjoyed this one. The characters are believable and the scenario compelling. The sort of book you don't want to put down. Definitely recommend.
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whippetwoman · 06/03/2017 12:41

Thank you for the new thread Smile

Here's my list so far.

  1. A Hero of Our Time – Mikhail Lermontov
  2. Brideshead Revisited – Evelyn Waugh
  3. House of Silk – Anthony Horowitz
  4. The Return – Hisham Matar

5. The Sympathizer – Viet Thanh Nguyen
  1. Ragarok – A. S Byatt

7. Fight Club – Chuck Palahniuk
  1. Stuff Matters – Mark Miodownik

9. A Woman in the Polar Night – Christiane Ritter
10. The Rover – Aphra Behn
11. Falling Awake – Alice Oswald
12. Outline – Rachel Cusk
13. Thin Air – Michelle Paver
14. The Noise of Time – Julian Barnes
15. The Master and Margarita – Mikhail Bulgakov
16. Snow Country – Yasunari Kawabata
17. Perfume – Patrick Suskind
18. The Examined Life – Stephen Grosz
19. My Heart and Other Black Holes – Jasmine Warga

Essentially I have enjoyed reading all of the above...plus the most recent two:

20. What We Talk About When We Talk About Anne Frank – Nathan Englander
A collection of short stories about what it means to be Jewish. I love short stories and some of these were very good, but others I didn’t like so much. A mixed bag. One rather disturbing story about a group of pensioners at a summer camp and what they do when they believe they have an ex-Nazi prison guard in their midst!

21. All Creatures Great and Small – James Herriot
A sweet and gentle read about the life of a young country vet in the Yorkshire Dales circa the 1930s. It’s hard not to enjoy this.
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whippetwoman · 06/03/2017 12:49

Meant to add, I very much enjoyed Greengage Summer, such a good book!

Also, I think I am going to splash out the whole 49p to buy Cote's recommendation as it looks really interesting.

Love this thread!

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StitchesInTime · 06/03/2017 12:54

My list so far:

  1. Only Daughter by Anna Snoekstra
  2. Viral by Helen Fitzgerald
  3. The Last One by Alexandra Oliva
  4. The Atlantis Gene by A.G. Riddle
  5. Good Me Bad Me by Ali Land
  6. The Rest of Us Just Live Here by Patrick Ness
  7. ADHD Nation by Alan Schwarz
  8. The World's Worst Children by David Walliams


9. Starborn by Lucy Hounsom

Fantasy novel.
When Kyndra comes of age, she accidentally disrupts her village's naming ceremony by breaking an ancient relic that shows youngsters their destinies. When an unnatural storm follows, Kyndra is saved from a near-lynching by 2 mysterious strangers who are able to wield magic powers fuelled by the sun and moon.
Kyndra is then taken to a secret stronghold of secret magic users by her rescuers, who suspect Kyndra has magical potential.
Of course, things don't go smoothly, and there's all manner of exciting goings on before Kyndra can realise her destiny.

I enjoyed reading this.
It's the first in a trilogy, but the author has wrapped up enough loose ends for it to be satisfying as a stand alone read.
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Vistaverde · 06/03/2017 14:03

Thank you:

My list to date:-

  1. The Kingsmakers Daughter - Phillipa Gregory

2. Girl with a Dragon Tattoo - Steig Larsson
  1. How to Be Both - Ali Smith
  2. The Observations - Joanne Harris
  3. The White Princess - Phillipa Gregory
  4. The Heart Goes Last - Margaret Atwood
  5. Frazzled - Ruby Wax

8. I Let You Go - Claire Mackintosh

9. The Truth about the Harry Quebert Affair - 30 years after disappearing the body of Nola Kellergan is discovered in the garden of famous author Harry Quebert. Macus Goldman, his former student and also a successful writer sets on a quest to prove his innocence and with a major publishing deadline approaching cure his own writers block. Considering the awards this book has won I was very disappointed. I thought it was over long and as it was originally written in French I wonder if it lost something in translation.

10. Our Endless Numbered Days - Claire Fuller - When Peggy Hillcoat is 8 her father takes her away from her home in London to a remote hut in a European Forest. Once there she is told that the world has disappeared and they are the last two survivors. I really enjoyed this book and especially the subtle story telling.

Now read A Boy Made of Blocks - Keith Stuart
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PhoenixRisingSlowly · 06/03/2017 14:38

Checking in, my list so far:

  1. The Year of Living Danishly by Helen Russell
  2. Exposure by Helen Dunmore
  3. Leap Year by Helen Russell
  4. Ready Player One by Ernest Cline
  5. A Place Called WInter by Patrick Gale
  6. The Gustav Sonata by Rose Tremain
  7. Three In A Bed by Jessica Benfield
  8. Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie (audible narrator was FANTASTIC)


And now I'm reading two at once, Restoration by Rose Tremain and Days Without End by Sebastian Barry. No audio books on the go, and wondering what to listen to next although I have downloaded The Help which looks promising (I've seen the film but not read the book).
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Sadik · 06/03/2017 17:35

Looking forward to hearing what you think of A Boy Made of Blocks, Vistaverde - it's on my possibles list

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RemusLupinsChristmasMovie · 06/03/2017 18:13

Glitter - Please help me to bully Cote into reading some Chandler!

I thought I'd read In the Land of White Death but if I have, it wasn't on Kindle, so have bought it.

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RemusLupinsChristmasMovie · 06/03/2017 18:18

Just checked. Read it last year and liked it, so it was probably me who recommended it. Think others might have read it too - Best, maybe?

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