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50 Book Challenge 2018 Part Five

996 replies

southeastdweller · 23/04/2018 20:29

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

The challenge is to read fifty books (or more!) in 2018, 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 one here and the fourth one here.

How're you getting on so far?

OP posts:
lastqueenofscotland · 13/05/2018 14:46

It’s on my TBR list which is currently in three figures Blush

SatsukiKusakabe · 13/05/2018 16:37

Welcome dottie interesting list. Agree with you re: Pevear except I also liked their translation of W&P Grin

scribbly great review, Circe sounds good.

AliasGrape · 13/05/2018 16:45

Hope you enjoy it @dottie , brain candy is the perfect description!

Your list is so interesting, I’m jotting down a few of the titles!

BestIsWest · 13/05/2018 17:02
  1. Conclave - Richard Harris Throughly enjoyed this short book about intrigue and plotting during the papal enclave even if I did more or less guess the twist at the end. Difficult not to as it was sgnalled well in advance.
SatsukiKusakabe · 13/05/2018 17:19

best yes the twist was heavily flagged, but I found it pretty enjoyable anyway too.

Frogletmamma · 13/05/2018 17:20

I liked high castle . It was a bit crazy but the premise was fabulous.

BestIsWest · 13/05/2018 17:25

Robert Harris not Richard Grin

SatsukiKusakabe · 13/05/2018 17:27

best yes the twist was heavily flagged, but I found it pretty enjoyable anyway too.

Sadik · 13/05/2018 17:27

Anyone read 'Other Minds' by Peter Godfrey? (About octopuses / evolution.) Just bought it at 99p on Kindle as it's been on my maybe list for a while.

lastqueenofscotland · 13/05/2018 17:30

Froglet I did like the premise but not the execution.
I think I received a similar comment on my dissertation come to think of it Grin

nowanearlyNicemum · 13/05/2018 17:42

corvus I too was totally infuriated whilst reading Why Mummy Drinks but will probably succumb to the sequel as this did give me a couple of proper snort out loud moments which have been very few and far between in my recent reading matter!

I'm sorry I don't remember who was looking for South African reading matter. I haven't read a great deal of books set in SA but one of my all time fave books is The Power of One by Bryce Courtenay who is actually Australian. It's a lovely big chunky read. Don't stray far from the tissue box though.

nowanearlyNicemum · 13/05/2018 17:45

Ah, just seen it was Keith and that you're looking for modern SA books. Forget my recommendation, I think it was based in the 20s or 30s.!

noodlezoodle · 13/05/2018 17:50

Scribbly, what a beautiful cover. That sounds really interesting and I'm very tempted to get it, but I've just realised that I already have The Song of Achilles languishing on my kindle so perhaps I'd better start there!

Thirtyrock39 · 13/05/2018 18:00

I've spent most of today reading 'tin man' by Sarah Winman (when god was a rabbit author)
Really lovely book about intense friendships, growing up, growing apart, sexuality, love, loss and travel. Very easy to read with such a warmth and uplifting despite a sad story running through it (not a spoiler!)

EmGee · 13/05/2018 21:01
  1. The language of others by Clare Morall. This is a good read. Jessica is a child who doesn't quite fit in but can't work out why. She is however a gifted pianist and ends up studying music at university where she meets her future husband, a talented but disturbed violinist. The book moves deftly between her past and her present lives.

  2. The Coincidence of Coconut Cake by Amy. C Reichert. Entirely predictable. The only good bit is the recipe for coconut cake which does sounds delicious.

  3. Career of Evil by Robert Galbraith. I've seen the other two on TV so was quite keen to read this. Not so keen on the chapters written from the killer's perspective. Enough to make me check under the bed and behind the doors before I went to bed!!

  4. The Girl who fell from the Sky by Simon Mawer. Picked it up in a charity shop and remembered that I had enjoyed The Fall. It's a historical novel about Marion, a young British/French girl who is recruited as a secret agent for the 'Special Operations Executive' to carry out operations in Occupied France during WW2. I was particularly interested in how Marion is slightly disorientated by her bilingualism; as if she doesn't feel 'at home' in either France or England, and how she changes from one language to the other to express a particular emotion. I suspect that my kids may experience this as they get older - they are bilingual; from one culture but born and growing up in another.

  5. The Men and the Girls by Joanna Trollope. Enjoyed this nice, easy read which didn't require any brain power.

EmGee · 13/05/2018 21:08

Meant to add that I saw The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society at the cinema and enjoyed it. Hadn't read (or even heard of) the book prior to this.

EmGee · 13/05/2018 21:09

And on a final note from me, I have just downloaded Valley of the Dolls on Kindle's daily deal.

Tarahumara · 13/05/2018 21:14

OK thanks Scribbly, I haven’t reached the last third yet, which explains why this puzzled me.

BestIsWest · 13/05/2018 21:19

I adored Valley Of the dolls EmGee. It was one of my top reads as a teenager and I re - read it last year. The original queen of the block buster novel.

CluelessMama · 13/05/2018 21:31

Sadik I also do more tidying/cleaning/gardening when I have an audiobook on the go that I can't wait to get back to :)

PepeLePew · 13/05/2018 22:01

56 - The Roanoke Girls by Amy Engel
Girl goes to stay with grandparents in Kansas, grandparents are odd and all their daughters and granddaughters bar one have left or died. This was really tedious, with no real suspense or surprise.

57 - I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou

This was stunning and really beautiful. It tells the story of Angelou’s childhood in Arkansas and elsewhere in the 1930s. Her account of her experiences as a black child in the deep South is lyrical and almost entirely without self pity and she draws the picture of her family members with sympathy and humour. This was wonderful and easy read, and I’m delighted to find there are six more volumes.

58 - Friend Request by Laura Marshall
Must stop reading “the most gripping thriller you’ll read this year” type books, for “people who loved Girl on a Train”. Because I did not love Girl on a Train and these thrillers are never all that. Although this one was a bit better than most, and the main character was at least believable and acted in vaguely sensible and predictable ways. But not really worth the time it took to read.

exexpat · 14/05/2018 09:42

Flaneuse by Lauren Elkin

I think I wanted to like this book more than I really ended up liking it.

This is non-fiction, subtitled "Women Walk the City in Paris, New York, Tokyo, Venice and London".

I am a woman who has always loved meandering around cities, hanging out in cafes, reading books about people (particularly women) who do similar things. I have lived in or visited all the cities she writes about. I should have loved this.

Some parts I did like; the first chapter in particular, where she defines and discusses the concept of 'flaneuse' (a made-up female version of the word 'flaneur', which is a man of leisure and culture who strolls the city streets and ponders on life), and how women have not had the freedom to claim the streets as their own in the same way that men have, how women cannot be invisible on the streets and blend into the background as an observer, in the way that a male flaneur has always been able to do.

She writes quite a lot about her own experiences in the various cities, but just as much (if not more) about a number of female authors and the cities they walked in and wrote about: Virginia Woolf in London, George Sand and Jean Rhys in Paris etc. Some of this was interesting, but when it came to the chapter on Agnes Varda, a french film maker, she basically recounted an entire 1960s film about a woman walking around Paris for two hours, which made it feel like the longest chapter in the book. Maybe it would have helped if I had heard of Varda or seen the film. The chapter on Martha Gellhorn also seemed a bit shoehorned into the theme of the book, as if she wanted to write about Gellhorn so was going to fit her in no matter what.

And the chapter on Tokyo, where she lived off and on for a while with her ex-fiancee as their relationship fell apart, had me wanting to scream at her that of course Tokyo is an eminently walkable city, she was just in the wrong bit of it and obviously didn't pull herself together to go out to explore properly (some of my most enjoyable days of flanerie have been in the quirky backstreets and side streets and cafes of Tokyo).

Overall, I am glad I read this; there were parts that explored ideas in interesting ways and references to people and books I am likely to look up, but it turned out to be more of a mishmash of personal memoir, snippets of literary biographies and meditation on life in general than the book about women and cities that I had been expecting.

CoteDAzur · 14/05/2018 10:38
  1. Light by M John Harrison (Kefahuchi Tract Trilogy #1)

I can't say I'm 100% sure re wtf I just read, but it wasn't an entirely disagreeable experience Confused

This book follows three characters. One is a theoretical physicist who is also a serial killer. He is in the past and apparently ends up discovering something major that leads to space travel in the future. Another is a girl who gives up her life to be integrated into a spacefaring ship built with alien technology as its captain, never to be herself or have a body again. The third is a bit of a con artist who seems to have a knack for telling the future. Meanwhile, there's some anomaly in space called Kefahuchi Tract. Every 10 pages or so, we are told about how it shines with different colours.

I don't know whether I should recommend it. I'm a bit dissatisfied with it because nothing much was resolved and some of it was annoying & made no sense, like "shadow operators", but there were also some interesting ideas in there.

TooExtraImmatureCheddar · 14/05/2018 11:19
  1. The Changeling, Victor Lavalle.

To preface, I had a stillborn baby in 2011 and the changeling myth really resonated with me at the time. I therefore spent a lot of the first part of the book mentally withdrawing to protect myself. That said, this was actually a very clever look at modern parenting, birth, expectations, pressures etc, linked in cleverly to older mythology eg changelings, trolls, witches. As a story it had massive gaping holes (how were they meant to explain eg grave-desecration, murder, returning from the dead, the outstanding warrants for arrest, things like that) but if you ignore all that and treat it as a fairy tale in the original sense (ie, tales for adults, not children) then it works really well. The hero, Apollo, was an arse (he goes around muttering I am Apollo, the god to himself), but he had to learn that his perception was not always right, and that was the focus of the story. As a side-bar, I was outraged by the paltry 6 weeks maternity leave American women get! I knew that, but this book really brings home how inhumane it is. Apollo titting around with the baby playing New Dad while his poor wife was sent off to work while expressing milk and still at the stage of keeping sanitary towels in the freezer for her sore bits gave me the rage.

  1. Autumn, Ali Smith.

I really enjoyed this. I am stunned at Ali Smith's ability to write and publish a book dealing with the impact of Brexit so swiftly after the referendum, and done so well. I said as much to my DSis, and she said that apparently Smith is notorious in publishing circles for refusing to deliver her books until about a month before publication, which is way later than most authors would get away with. But even so, to have produced a book of this calibre so quickly is incredible, even if she had most of the Elisabeth-Daniel-Pauline Boty storyline already. Again, I'd never heard of Pauline Boty and was delighted to discover that she was actually a real person. The Christine Keeler stuff was fascinating as well - especially given the timing of her death last year (post-publication of Autumn!) and her inclusion in series 2 of The Crown. I was wondering how someone who supported Leave would find the experience of reading Autumn - how different that would be from a Remainer's point of view! This was my first Ali Smith, and I'll be borrowing Winter from DSis next time I go round.

  1. Chronicles of Avonlea, LM Montgomery.

Re-read. DM moved house recently and in her new shared hall, there's a bookcase with a whole lot of hardback LM Montgomery novels, in exactly the same sort of cover/binding as the copies my granny has. I think they're Chambers editions from the 1930s or similar - will check when I get home. I borrowed this one just for the fun of getting that same reading experience as when I was a kid reading Granny's copies of Anne of the Island or the Chalet School!

BeatriceJoanna · 14/05/2018 11:55

I just added Circe to my TBR - it seems to be receiving universal praise. I haven't seen a bad review yet.

I finished book 17 Bonnie Dundee by Rosemary Sutcliff later than intended as my family got a bit demanding. (Don't you just hate it when people insist you go out of the house and do stuff when there are books you want to read?) This is the story of a groom (who later becomes a soldier) in the service of John Graham of Claverhouse, Viscount Dundee (the 'Bonnie Dundee' of the title). Claverhouse was commisioned to root out Covenanters in the Dumfries/Galloway region in the reign of Charles II. He remained loyal to James II after the 1688 revolution and so became a 'traitor' with a price on his head and was killed at the Battle of Killiecrankie - the first 'Jacobite' battle - in 1689.
I liked the depiction of Claverhouse, and the way his relationship with his wife is developed. There was a good sense of place, particularly the descriptions of Dumfriesshire, Galloway and, later, the Highlands in the run up to the battle.
What let the book down for me was that I just could not warm to the main character/narrator and I can't quite figure out why. So, all in all, I quite liked this but didn't love it.

I was intending to read Andrew Murray Scott's biography of Claverhouse next but I've put that on hold as Katie over on is doing a Barsetshire week and it's ages since I read any Trollope so I'm going to try to read some of the Barsetshire novels over the next couple of weeks. (realistically two) starting with The Warden

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