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50 Book Challenge 2017 Part Six

993 replies

southeastdweller · 05/06/2017 21:26

Welcome to the sixth 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, the third thread here, the fourth one here, and the fifth one here.

What are you reading?

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MuseumOfHam · 20/07/2017 21:42

Ha ha Remus Grin . Just back from yomping up a mountain in full battle dress bristling with an assortment of weaponry (sorry, I meant jogging slowly on the gym treadmill while half watching the golf on their telly). I am at that post holiday, pre going back to work phase where I am weighing up options like going to live off grid, in the wild, up a mountain, rather than going back to the office. In the meantime I have finished:

  1. My Ántonia by Willa Cather Such a beautiful book. Thank you whoever on this thread first mentioned it. Follows the life of Ántonia from her arrival to the farmlands of Nebraska as a 14 year old immigrant, through to adulthood. We see her through the eyes of others, as she embodies the pioneer spirit. Plot-wise, on a small scale, not much happens, but viewed across the wider piece, you see how ways of life change in that beautifully depicted pioneer country, how the characters slowly grow and change, how fortunes change. Lovely. Potentially a good beach read for those seeking such.
RMC123 · 20/07/2017 22:41

78. A Street Cat Named Bob a simple tail about a young man addicted man who's live is turned around when he takes responsibility for a stray cat who he names Bob.
Quite 'heart warming' but , and I do feel strangely mean criticising it, there wasn't an awful lot to the story. I was really surprised when my Kindle suggested I might like to read other books by the same author on the same subject.

SatsukiKusakabe · 20/07/2017 23:31

Yes fortuna the only thing I have down from that commando list is keeping my feet dry, but most days I have to say I'm not being challenged on it.

museum I'm so glad you liked My Antonia it's one of my favourites.

SatsukiKusakabe · 20/07/2017 23:32

Let me know if you change your mind remus. It's no trouble. They love me at the post office (they don't)

ShakeItOff2000 · 21/07/2017 05:45

40. Deadlock (VI Warshawski Book 2) by Sara Paretsky

Second in this female private investigator series. Started off a bit slow and the ending wasn't a massive surprise but, overall, an okay light read.

41. The Summer Book by Tove Jansson.

This has been sitting on my Kindle for ages and I've started it a couple of times before and not finished it. But here I am on holiday in Sweden and it felt appropriate and I was also inspired by someone else (sorry can't remember who) on this thread who recently read and reviewed it. I really liked these gentle musings on the relationship between Sophia and her grandmother and on quiet island living. I think the translation was a bit clunky in places but sometimes I don't think there is an exact English equivalent for some Scandinavian words and sayings. A nice read.

KeithLeMonde · 21/07/2017 06:39

I HATED that cat book. So so very much. I don't hate cats, or homeless people turning their lives around, but my God the book was awful.

Just came on to give a heads-up that Poisonwood Bible is on the Kindle Daily Deal today and well worth a read.

SatsukiKusakabe · 21/07/2017 07:54

I don't hate cats, or homeless people turning their lives around, but my God the book was awful. Grin

You're among friends here keith

Passmethecrisps · 21/07/2017 08:58

I love cats and have sympathy for the homeless and dispossessed. But when my dh came gone with that book for me I may have pulled a face. And have never even opened it

RMC123 · 21/07/2017 09:34

I don't hate cats, or homeless people turning their lives around, but my God the book was awful.

Thank the Lord I wasn't the only one!! I actually felt so guilty being critical but I was actually feeling 'where's the story?'. Descriptions of the cat being sick, hurting, mice, smacking a dog on the nose etc. I just kept thinking "And..? That's just what Cats do."

bibliomania · 21/07/2017 09:38

69. When Breath Becomes Air, by Paul Kalanthini
Oft-reviewed book about young doctor diagnosed with terminal cancer. Well-written. Some of it treads fairly familiar ground but poses an interesting question about how you live while preparing to die. If you knew you had 10 years left, you might make one set of choices, and if you knew if would be 10 months, you might make others - what do you do when you don't know? It's the kind of book that feels like heresy to criticise, and I liked it, although I felt a bit less rapturous than some reviewers.

70. The Hungry Years, by William Leith
Memoirs of a problematic relationship with food are common by female writers; this is more unusual in being by a male writer. He feels fat, he looks, horrified, at fatter people in the street, he low-carbs, he reflects on when and why he turned to food for comfort. Very readable if you're in the mood for that kind of thing.

71. Walking through Spring, by Graham Hoyland
Another book about walking through the English countryside. I read quite a few of these accounts of long walks because I want to be out there doing it, not fused to my office chair . I am going to be doing some longish walks this weekend, so hurrah. This one is fine, again if you like this sort of thing; more politics than poetry in this particular example.

72. How to Stop Time, by Matt Haig
I can imagine it will be very popular. Man who is hundreds of years old mopes about grieving the past - but hist, is that new love on the horizon? Took up some of the themes from Reasons to Stay Alive - what makes life worth living? I enjoyed the read, but for a would-be profound read, it was pretty superficial,, especially the resolution, whether things are all neatly tied up over the course of a few paragraphs. Orlando it ain't.

alteredimages · 21/07/2017 09:51

I am now intrigued by the cat book and the fact that the author has managed more than one book on the subject.

KeithLeMonde · 21/07/2017 11:36

I am now intrigued by the cat book and the fact that the author has managed more than one book on the subject.

Please don't buy it. It will only encourage him.

alteredimages · 21/07/2017 11:49

Grin Keith.

On this evidence we all have what it takes to become best-selling authors. We should look on the bright side.

Ontopofthesunset · 21/07/2017 12:06

At least I know one book not to put on my 'to be read pile'.

I've copied across a few of my recent reads with the numbering for my benefit:
42) Keeping On Keeping On: Alan Bennett - well, very Alan Bennett. Could have been substantially edited for my taste.
43) Call for the dead: John Le Carré. I always enjoy a good Smiley book and it was interesting to see the relationship with Anne first introduced. Not one of the finer Smiley books but still good.
44) The Eustace Diamonds (audiobook): I really liked this one. Lizzie Eustace is marvellously amoral and there was more plot than usual. On to Phineas Redux.
45) A Little History of the World: Ernst Gombrich. A book originally written in German for children in 1935 when Gombrich was 26. Quite charming and a very good Uberblick. I suspect most modern children wouldn't manage it as I found it hard going at times.
46) Nostromo by Joseph Conrad. This has taken me ages which is why I haven't read anything else for such a long time. It is very long. It is, to my mind, rather boring. It is very confusingly narrated in terms of the timeline. It is full of the names of different presidents and generals and towns. Because English was only Conrad's third language, it is often stilted and very linguistically clunky. There is a rather unconvincing romance tagged on at the end. Perhaps it is A Great Book but I'm not sure why, and it certainly isn't on my Great Books List.

I've downloaded a few things on Kindle so will read something shorter and easier now.

BestIsWest · 21/07/2017 12:16

I watched the Cat film last week. It was quite sweet. The cat played a brilliant part.

Sadik · 21/07/2017 14:33

Ontopofthesunset I studied Nostromo for A level English. Despite this I can't actually remember anything about the book other than that it somehow involved silver mines. (Whereas I can still quote swathes of Dr Faustus, Volpone, and John Donne's poetry)

The fact I love JL Carr's books as much as I do may have something to do with his description of Conrad as 'that boring, repetitive Pole' Grin

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 21/07/2017 15:27

Book 66
Mort Terry Pratchett
Some very much needed light relief in what has been a difficult couple of weeks at work. Mort goes to work as an apprentice to Death (geddit?) and all hell breaks out as a result. One of TP's better ones, imho.

Ontopofthesunset · 21/07/2017 15:35

Sadik, one of the things I did get was that there was definitely a silver mine in Nostromo. In fact the silver mine was the cause of Absolute Corruption and Decay, in that it became the guiding passion of Charles Gould and its silver ultimately caused all sorts of bad things. My older son read this last year for his A-level English and that's why it was lying around.

Matilda2013 · 21/07/2017 23:07

44. Pretty Girls - Karin Slaughter

Claire's sister went missing and was never found. 25 years later her husband is violently murdered and everything starts to unravel.

This was my first ever Karin Slaughter book and I really enjoyed it if that's the right word to be using about this book. Welcome any suggestions for any more good books by this author!

SchadenfreudePersonified · 22/07/2017 13:16

The Eustace Diamonds (audiobook): I really liked this one. Lizzie Eustace is marvellously amoral and there was more plot than usual

The Eustace Diamonds is my second favourite Trollope! My favourite is The Small House at Allington, but Framley Parsonage is fighting for joint top place so I'm counting them as one)

SchadenfreudePersonified · 22/07/2017 13:19

I HATED that cat book

That's because it is shite, Keith.

SchadenfreudePersonified · 22/07/2017 13:21

Cider with Roadies by Stuart Maconie

And may I recommend his "Pies and Prejudice"?

BestIsWest · 22/07/2017 13:30

Anything by Stuart Maconie is usually excellent. I'm a fan.

His People's Songs and Hope and Glory are worth reading.

He has a new book due out about the Jarrow March that I'm looking forward to.

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 22/07/2017 14:06

I didn't think much of Pies and Prejudice (the only one of his I've read). I enjoyed the title far more than the contents.

StitchesInTime · 22/07/2017 14:42

43. NOS4R2 by Joe Hill

The vampiric Charles Manx has spent decades cruising around in his classic Rolls Royce, abducting children, using their energy to keep himself young, and taking them off to Christmasland, an imaginary world, or inscape, that's real for anyone he lets into it.

Until he runs into young Victoria McQueen, who can make an inscape of her own to take her from here to wherever she wants.

And now, Manx is back and looking for vengeance, and Vic has a young son who's just the right age to be a target for Manx....

Quite good reading. I enjoyed this more than The Fireman by the same author. I also spotted a couple of Stephen King references in there.

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