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50 Book Challenge 2019 Part Four

997 replies

southeastdweller · 27/03/2019 18:36

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

The challenge is to read fifty books (or more!) in 2019, 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 one here.

How're you getting on so far?

OP posts:
SatsukiKusakabe · 07/04/2019 13:16

The point I knew she’d irretrievably overstretched my patience in the Goldfinch was when I didn’t give a beagle’s behind what happened to the dog scribbly Grin It was a good book in lots of respects but the Vegas section was inconsiderate of her readers and I could not take “Boris the Russian” seriously ever. Still waiting eagerly for her next one though ConfusedGrin

Piggywaspushed · 07/04/2019 13:17

Boris has just reappeared... Hmm

toomuchsplother · 07/04/2019 13:18

Thanks Brizzle

SatsukiKusakabe · 07/04/2019 13:20

Oh mrg your poor toddler and poor you Flowers

toomuch I’m saving the Elvis Backlisted until I can get hold of the second book - if I can bear to anyway - I know what you mean, they make you feel part of the conversation.

SatsukiKusakabe · 07/04/2019 13:21

Oh yes, he’s back to stretch your credulity even further, piggy, while insouciantly smoking a fag.

Piggywaspushed · 07/04/2019 13:25

Grin satsuki

splother have posted on your thread. Will peruse DS's shelves later.

ime reluctant boy readers devour Tom Gates and Wimpy Kid, but you may want to encourage more challenge !

HugAndRoll · 07/04/2019 13:30

Place marking.

I've fallen off these threads quite spectacularly, but I am still reading.

mynameisMrG · 07/04/2019 13:40

Thank you. Currently sleeping again so I am reaching for the kindle!

Welshwabbit · 07/04/2019 13:42

Interesting list, piggy and brizzle. I've read 28, I think, although there may be a couple I've forgotten. Nice to see Darkmans on there. I loved that book although I'd still find it impossible to say why - on paper, it's all the things I hate (long, magical realist etc etc).

toomuchsplother · 07/04/2019 13:54

Yep piggy Tom Gates and Wimpy Kid have been well and truly devoured!

Piggywaspushed · 07/04/2019 14:10

They are good fun, to be fair.

KeithLeMonde · 07/04/2019 15:32

Brizzle I thought that was you posting your 2019 list so far 😂 was a bit bemused by your terse reviews TBH

brizzlemint · 07/04/2019 15:53

I'm a woman of little words Grin

SatsukiKusakabe · 07/04/2019 15:59

Have posted too toomuchsplother. We are finding it hard to know where to go after Wimpy Kid. Ds read them himself then likes me to read them to him again I think because he likes seeing me laugh at them too.

AliasGrape · 07/04/2019 16:16

I’ve read 19 from the ST list, there’s another 10 or so languishing in my TBR pile waiting for me to summon up the enthusiasm to start them. Of the ones I’ve read, there’s only a few I really loved and a couple I actively disliked (Conversations With Friends for one). It’s reminded me of Star of the Sea though, which I remember really loving. I read it when I was visiting my aunt in Spain years ago and I think I left it for her to read after me. I’m going out there again on Friday so hopefully it’ll still be somewhere on her many bookshelves and I can reread.

Terpsichore · 07/04/2019 16:17

Keith I thought that too 😂

KeithLeMonde · 07/04/2019 16:38

I've read 44, there are some goodies there.

Grape if you don't find it, let me know. I have a copy here which I'd be happy to pass on after I've read it.

StitchesInTime · 07/04/2019 16:55

I’ve only read 8 from that ST list 🤷‍♀️

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 07/04/2019 17:09

Marking place - just started "Morgan's Run" which is enormous, so I may be some time (not loving it so far tbh) so may or may not finish it!

SatsukiKusakabe · 07/04/2019 17:27

I’ve read 24 and have a few on my shelf waiting. Quite a few others I have read and abandoned or tried and just didn’t fancy. I really enjoyed Star of the Sea too; it was a gift from my husband soon after we started dating and I remember feeling it was to his credit to make such a good choice for me early on. He’s chosen some stinkers since of course but we’re locked in now Grin Did the author go on to write anything else? I completely lost track of him after that.

AliasGrape · 07/04/2019 17:48

keith That’s really kind thank you!
I agree there are some good ones on the list, I think Conversations with Friends being at the top made me biased against it on first glance, but looking again there’s some great stuff. I’m sure the other ones in my TBR pile are good, I think when things are widely recommended/ critically acclaimed I go through a process of buying them/downloading them for kindle, then for whatever reason I put off reading them and start to think they’re going to be hard work for whatever reason. I’ve only just finished The Essex Serpent, also on that list, which has been in my kindle for about 18 months. I got it into my head it would be a slog to read, in reality I read it in 2 days.

Satsuki Just Googled and he’s written a few more. Ghost Light looks interesting. www.goodreads.com/book/show/7845977-ghost-light

DesdemonasHandkerchief · 07/04/2019 17:53

Thanks Bizzle, I've read 18 on the Sunday Times List plus one DNF, Americanah. Can't believe The Green Road made it on there (also on the Kindle Daily Deal at 99p today but I can't recommend!) Any Human Heart and Lincoln In The Bardot waiting patiently on my Kindle to get me up to the dizzy heights of 20!

DesdemonasHandkerchief · 07/04/2019 18:11

Bardo that should say, Lincoln in the Bardot would be a very different kind of novel!

ShakeItOff2000 · 07/04/2019 18:42

22. City of the Lost by Kelley Armstrong.

Fairly entertaining thriller.

23. Sincerity by Carol Ann Duffy.

I’m just starting to read poetry and bought the lovely hard back version of this book of poetry. I liked how she writes about current times and moods and laughed out loud when reading the poem about her father’s name; very enjoyable.

I’ve read 30 and enjoyed several from the list, my favourite being Elena Ferrante’s The Neapolitan Novels - I particularly loved the second and third books in that series.

FranKatzenjammer · 07/04/2019 19:11

I am both on holiday from work and ill again, so a great deal of reading has been taking place, generally pretty light:

35. Bookworm- Lucy Mangan I had really been looking forward to reading this and finally bought it on my Kindle when it went down to £4.99. It was almost as good as I expected. Like everyone, I preferred it when she wrote about my own childhood favourites such as The Tiger Who Came For Tea, Dogger, Beezus and Ramona, Danny, the Champion of the World, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, The Secret Garden, What Katy Did and Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret. I have very little interest in pony books or Sweet Valley High!

36. The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar and Six More- Roald Dahl Although this is not mentioned in Bookworm, Lucy Mangan’s book did give me a sudden urge to re-read this. It was the first book I have read on BorrowBox, which is a better app than I expected, but I have a signed paperback copy somewhere. Many years ago, I met Roald Dahl at a children's book event: I was in fancy dress as the eponymous hero of Danny, Champion of the World (despite being female), while Dahl was grumpy and gave me the distinct impression that he didn’t like children (it is so true that we should never meet our heroes!). I enjoyed the book even more this time than when I read it as a child. Back then, I was deeply affected by ’The Swan’ and it still retains much of its power now. Almost all the short stories in this volume are brilliant, however.

37. The Lady in the Van- Alan Bennett This is a charming book with an abundance of character. The writing is as excellent as you would expect; the film is also superb. I plan to read much more Alan Bennett.

38. Jacob’s Room is Full of Books- Susan Hill I have read several ‘books about books’ recently and this one was not quite what I expected. It is written in the style of a blog and Susan Hill repeats herself a fair amount. There are very many anecdotes about other authors. She has fairly strong, and often entertaining, views on subjects such as literary festivals, book prizes, second novels, WH Smith, Henry VIII and Hallowe’en. However, I’m not sure if I can trust the opinions of someone who doesn’t like Keats, Wordsworth or Jude the Obscure ! There are also many references to flora and fauna, which gives a sense of the cycle of the year in nature- these are usually charming but occasionally tedious. Very unexpectedly, I wasn’t inspired to read any of the books she wrote about.

39. A Monster Calls- Patrick Ness I saw the film recently: both the book and film are very moving. As with the film, I didn’t really enjoy the three fairy tale sequences, but these were important to the plot and children might enjoy them. The end of the novel was rather abrupt: I preferred the ending to the film.

40. The Essays of Arthur Shopenhauer: Studies in Pessimism I can’t remember why I downloaded this, by the nineteenth-century German philosopher, but I think it must have been referenced in another book, and it was free. I rarely read philosophy, so some of it went over my head, but a few sections had me either laughing out loud or incredulous. According to Shopenhauer, we shouldn’t read novels as they give us a ‘false view of things’ and ‘[arouse] expectations... which can never be fulfilled’. Women are apparently ‘childish, frivolous and short-sighted… the most distinguished intellects among the whole sex have never managed to produce a single achievement in the fine arts that is really great, genuine and original’.