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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?

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5
Tarahumara · 04/04/2017 14:42

I read Paul Theroux's Riding the Iron Rooster while travelling in China for five weeks when I was a student - over 20 years ago now Shock. I loved it - but it often works well to read the book when you're in the right country. I'm sure I've read one or two others of his and enjoyed them, but can't remember which ones so maybe not that memorable!

Tarahumara · 04/04/2017 14:46

PoeticLE I agree with everything you've said about A Little Life.

fatowl · 04/04/2017 15:55

A Little Life was edging towards my TBR list. I think I'll give it a miss until I'm in the mood for something really grim

HappyFlappy · 04/04/2017 16:03

her weird expanding breasts (which "grow" and "smoothen" when she meets her lover - WTF?) and her mysterious foofoo

This is the best review I have ever read.

EVER!

Grin
magimedi · 04/04/2017 17:36

I lurk here , for ideas about new books to read.

Coming out the closet to give a massive Flowers to Satsuki for making it possible for me to get rid of the ads on my Kindle.

Well worth £10.

Many, many thanks.

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 04/04/2017 18:54

Paul Theroux definitely belongs in the arrogant tosser club.

Speaking of tossers:

Book 30
Sex and Punishment: Four Thousand Years of Judging Desire - Eric Berkowitz
Does exactly what it says on the tin. An always fascinating, at times hilarious and sometimes terrifying and shocking account of ways in which different countries and times have judged sex, deciding what constitutes ‘immoral’ sexual behaviour and then how it might be punished. Suffice to say, there were an awful lot of floggings and burnings, a fair few extremely harsh prison sentences and more than a few castrations. There was rum, sodomy and the lash, the odd wanking vicar (remember that stupid bloody alien book I reviewed last year with the wanking vicar, folks?) and masturbation galore. Also I feel I must report that I have never seen the word ‘gonads’ written so many times in such quick succession. I thoroughly enjoyed this.

BestIsWest · 04/04/2017 20:21

It sounds a riot ^Remus* Wink.

Just given up halfway through Patrick Gale - The Facts of Life because I just cba to read any further. Middle class couple get given house, car and lucrative jobs post wW2 and still manage to extract as much doom and gloom from the situation as possible. Nothing remotely cheerful had happened by half time then there was some completely gratuitous and depressing sex which was the signal to me that it want going to get any better.

On to The Seven Dials Mystery which appears to be Agatha Christie does Bertie Wooster. What larks! Jolly good fun and no Poirot or Marple in sight.

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 04/04/2017 20:50

I'm half way through The Seven Dials Mystery and it's joyous so far - a complete romp. Has really made me laugh.

BestIsWest · 04/04/2017 20:58

It's great fun isn't it. I love Bundle.

SatsukiKusakabe · 04/04/2017 21:30

I've been giggling at all your Dan Brown "love" and thanks for the kind comments about my review - I think it was the renowned Oscar Wilde who said "we are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at Dan Brown".

Oh Keith, expanding breasts, so funny. There's something hysterical about the use of "smoothen" there.

whippet Really looking forward to My Week With Marilyn after your review. I've had a strange obsession with the film The Prince and the Showgirl since I was about 10, despite not thinking it especially good, there is something oddly compelling about it. I wonder if it is because of the tensions underlying the making of it.

ladydepp I read the first couple of chapters of Imperium but put it aside and haven't gone back so will interested in what you think.

Ontopofthesunset · 04/04/2017 21:35
  1. His Bloody Project: Graeme Macrae Burnet This was extremely enjoyable to read, an excellent page turner and nicely managed voices within the different types of document. Very cleverly conceived and almost entirely achieved. Two flaws for me: the self-confession which despite the authorial voice's best endeavours was too unbelievable in its literary quality, and the unsatisfactory ending. I didn't expect a massive twist or surprise but I felt I was left slightly hanging.
SatsukiKusakabe · 04/04/2017 21:51

15. A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius by Dave Eggers

A memoir of the author's life in the years after losing both parents to cancer in quick succession, leaving him as guardian of his 7 year old brother. This is a tricky one to write about. It feels impossible to separate the writing from the subject - if you feel he is being at any point tacky, arrogant, self absorbed, superficial... well he thinks it too and acknowledges it along the way as he tries to play with the hand he has been dealt, and come to terms with the painful memories of his own childhood whilst trying to create a stable one for his sibling. Any criticism feels personal and mean spirited and I think that's testament to the style of the book; it is almost stream of consciousness, all boundaries apparently down. Writing-wise, story-wise - it is sometimes brilliant, sometimes patchy, but always searingly honest, sad, and often moving. The 90s moment it captures was nostalgic to read about and I enjoyed that aspect of it, too. Not for everyone I would say, but I liked it.

I paused Red Rising halfway to finish that so back to it now.

GinSwigmore · 04/04/2017 22:09

^ aaarggh. I have tried to read AHWOSG at least four times and just end up putting it down again. When does it start getting good?! I'm mean obviously
big little lies was unputdownable. Chick lit but with a whodunnit plus some dark humour and then some serious shit very literate review there

stilllovingmysleep · 04/04/2017 22:13
  1. Bee Wilson 'this is not a diet book'
  2. Harry Potter & the chamber of secrets (read with DC)
  3. Jennifer Weiner 'all fall down' (crap)
  4. Lauren Sandler 'one and only'
  5. Rene and Goscinny the Nicholas Book (children's book)
  6. Katja Rowell fussy eating book
  7. Nicola Yoon 'everything everything' (YA book)
  8. JD Robb 'echoes in death'
  9. JD Vance 'Hillbilly elegy'
  10. Jonathan Kellerman Heartbreak Hotel

Right, here I am again, after having slowed down in my reading for a while I've picked up speed and finished no 10 on my list very quickly. This was my first Jonathan Kellerman book, number 30+ in the Alex Delaware series (as I'm on a roll currently with easy crime fiction like this or JD Robb. This wasn't bad. Psychologist and LAPD advisor Alex Delaware meets 100 year old Thalia Mars at a decrepit hotel in LA; she hands him a massive cheque, telling him she wants to talk about psychopathy, but doesn't get around to saying anymore as the next day she's murdered. Won't say more to avoid spoilers. I think Kellerman's writing is good (in this category of books) hence his work being number 1 bestsellersI found this on the NY Times bestsellers list at number 1 a couple of weeks agobut I imagine other Alex Delaware books may be much better than this. Still, I'll persist with the series.

Anyone read any other Jonathan Kellermans?

Poetic, I agree with your review of Little life. It made me too feel like a voyer, and was wondering whether the author was joking or what, taking things continuously a step further!

Currently reading various other things--and as I said have picked up speed with my reading again thanks to lurking on this thread. One of the things I'm halfway through is Hidden Figures which I think is great (and would love to see the movie too).

SatsukiKusakabe · 04/04/2017 22:30

ginswigmore It doesn't really "get good" - it is what it is, and if you don't get on with the style early on it won't change at all so maybe it's just not for you, and that's fine! I didn't love it, and found it quite hard work at times, but I was moved by it enough to see it through. It's not one I'd recommend unreservedly.

GinSwigmore · 04/04/2017 22:46

You're probably right and it says more about me than the author. It did so well, I feel I ought to like it. I read dept of speculation which was poetic but accessible. I like different styles but stream of consciousness isn't my bag. Nor magical realism. I'm a pleb, aren't I?! Blush Grin

Ontopofthesunset · 04/04/2017 22:50

The title of A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius pretty much sums ups the style of the book. I read it quite a few years ago but felt rather like Satsuki - overall I found it moving and an impressive piece of work, but at times it is exactly like the title, which of course Dave Eggers knows.

stilllovingmysleep · 04/04/2017 22:56

Last year I read Dave Eggers' The circle which I loved. Not written in a stream of consciousness way at all, quite a "standard" narrative but an impressive dystopian book about social media. I imagine many of you must have read it, wonder what you thought

SatsukiKusakabe · 05/04/2017 00:52

No gin, it's a matter of taste, that's all, de-pleb yourself Grin

ontopofthesunset yes exactly. It is as much about the difficulty of capturing life and death without reducing it. Big stuff happens but the trivial stuff marches on at the same time. I only found out once I finished it that his sister committed suicide in 2001, which made the book even more poignant.

stillloving I read and enjoyed The Circle last year, which is what made me go back and seek this out. Not the best book I've ever read, but probably one of the most significant for where we are now with social media and the commercialisation of private life. I thought it quite chillingly prescient and I've thought about it a lot since and recommended it. The film is coming out soon I think. I will read more of his if/when I can get round to them too.

SatsukiKusakabe · 05/04/2017 00:56

magimedi just catching up with thread - glad I was able to help, very sweet of you blow your cover and post; hope you will again Grin

stilllovingmysleep · 05/04/2017 05:51

satsuki yes I agree that the circle was chilling and yes very significant, taking the way we live now to its logical extreme and making a story of that.

bibliomania · 05/04/2017 10:15

Remus, I enjoyed the Berkowitz book too. It reminded me a lot of Reay Tannahill's Sex in History, although the latter was published more than 30 years before Berkowitz's book.

SatsukiKusakabe · 05/04/2017 10:46

Yes - very much enjoyed your review remus I know it's a bit out of context but loved the juxtaposition of these two sentences, made me roar:

I feel I must report that I have never seen the word ‘gonads’ written so many times in such quick succession. I thoroughly enjoyed this. GrinGrin

CoteDAzur · 05/04/2017 11:22

"The title of A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius pretty much sums ups the style of the book."

Is that style called Hyperbole?

I must admit that title put me off for that reason and I never felt like reading the book.

CoteDAzur · 05/04/2017 11:26

"There was rum, sodomy and the lash, the odd wanking vicar (remember that stupid bloody alien book I reviewed last year with the wanking vicar, folks?) and masturbation galore"

Outstanding review, Remus Grin

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