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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:
BasiliskStare · 29/03/2019 21:17

I've read a huge number of detective/ modern novel type books this year ( more than 50 already ) but but if I had to say I would recommend the best novel I have ever read The Sun also Rises - also known as Fiesta - Ernest Hemingway - sorry not to give a list but honestly if I had to choose this would be the one novel I would choose above all others. Also - as a short story - The Snows of Killimanjaro also Ernest Hemingway I would say amongst my desert island books - so poignant.
I quite enjoyed Owen Meany but not Hemingway. Brave New World I had recommended to my son - Most people know the first half but not the 2nd.

Sorry to bung up here but a lovely thread thank you & I shall take some recommendations Flowers

Matilda2013 · 29/03/2019 21:22
  1. The Perfect Child - Lucinda Berry Christopher and Hannah are a surgeon and nurse with perfect lives. The only thing missing is a child. So when a six year old girl is admitted to the hospital having suffered abuse and takes a shine to Christopher they decide to adopt her. But are her problems too big for them to deal with? And when she takes a dislike to Hannah what will happen next?

Another kindle unlimited venture. I actually really liked the style of this one although it is even darker and twister than my usual kind. Have downloaded another book by the same author too.

MegBusset · 29/03/2019 22:57

Hi all and thanks South for the new thread :)

My year of rereading continues with one of my oldest favourites:

  1. The Talisman - Stephen King and Peter Straub

Ah, I love this book so much - I've enjoyed a fair few King books since first reading this as a teenager, especially the Dark Tower series, but none has ever got me like this one. 12-year-old Jack Sawyer's mother is dying of cancer; his father died in mysterious circumstances; and it all has to do with the Territories, an alternative world which Jack used to think was a daydream but finds out is real after all. He has to travel West over the USA and the Territories to find the Talisman which can cure his mother, but the forces of evil are lined up to stop him. A beautifully written, fantastic story for all lovers of fantasy or horror.

mynameisMrG · 29/03/2019 23:04

28. Last Lullaby by Carol Wyer

This is the second in the DI Natalie Ward series. I really enjoyed the first though felt the eventual murderer was a bit removed from the plot. This one was more convincing. It’s about Natalie and her team investigating the murders of young mothers who are killed in front of or near their children. I like Carol’s writing. Her pace is very good and the characters are interesting, we learn more about their home lives in this novel.
My only gripe with it would be that some of the descriptions seem too over the top. It reminded me a bit of when you would write a descriptive piece for gcse English and felt that every detail needed included. The first chapter in particular felt like that but it was only a minor thing and after that chapter I really enjoyed it. Just got to wait until 25th April for the nextvin the series now.

FranKatzenjammer · 30/03/2019 07:24

I'm relieved I'm not the last person on earth to read Owen Meany after all! I would review it, but I'm worried I couldn't do it justice and that it would be difficult to avoid spoilers. It is fantastic though: you just have to persevere through the waffly bits, and it's all worth it in the end.

TheTurnOfTheScrew · 30/03/2019 07:49

12. Reservoir Tapes by Jon McGregor
A prequel to Reservoir 13 which I ADORED. Apparently originally comissioned for radio, this is a series of vignettes, each focusing on a single character from 13, before or in the days after the disappearance of the young teen with which 13 opens.

I didn't enjoy this as much as 13, but then vey little is that good. Far more character/plot driven, it does give more of a sense of what might have happened to the missing girl, which is a plot line not pursued in 13, but i liked that it ultimately remained ambiguous. definitely a companion piece where you'll need to have read the original.

ritzbiscuits · 30/03/2019 08:13

The Cut Out Girl is 99p on Kindle today. Do not hesitate to get this bargain - it's my book of the year so far.

FranKatzenjammer · 30/03/2019 08:25

Yes ritz, I snapped up that deal at 6.30am (obviously they can't sell out, but so I wouldn't forget...)!

ritzbiscuits · 30/03/2019 08:31

Haha - Great!
I've download the Unnatural Causes sample as I may get that today.

Terpsichore · 30/03/2019 08:39

Thank you, ritz ! I was just about to check the daily deals (second important job of the morning, after a cup of tea Smile). The Cut-Out Girl has been on my wish list since publication and I've got it waiting on loan from the library....I can cancel that now.

I also bought Dr Richard Sheppard's memoir of his experiences as a pathologist - bit gruesome perhaps but I like that kind of thing Hmm

southeastdweller · 30/03/2019 09:50
  1. Mentors - Russell Brand. This is a short non-fiction book about the benefits of mentor figures in our lives, and it felt a bit self-serving and obvious. I didn't like the frequent flowery style of his writing, which also irritated me in My Booky Wook.

Bringing over my updated list:

  1. The Woman in the Window - A.J Finn
  2. The Fast 800 - Dr. Michael Mosley
  3. This is Going to Hurt - Adam Kay
  4. Home Truths - David Lodge
  5. Reading Allowed - Chris Paling
  6. Lullaby - Leila Slimani
  7. A Ladder to the Sky - John Boyne
  8. Never Mind - Edward St. Aubyn
  9. Another Planet - Tracey Thorn
10. Ghost Wall - Sarah Moss 11. Mentors - Russell Brand

Currently reading The Only Story by Julian Barnes but I'm going to take a break from it to read The World I Fell Out Of by Melanie Reid which I think I'm going to enjoy.

OP posts:
brizzlemint · 30/03/2019 09:57
  1. Martin Luther
  2. Learning Theories
  3. Florence Nightingale

46 and 48 are from the Hourly HIstories series (a lot of them are free on the KIndle) so I often read some of those as they are short and informative, Learning Theories is a book for work.

DesdemonasHandkerchief · 30/03/2019 12:09

Followed orders Ritz and bought The Cutout Girl along with £2.99 Audible narration, sounds good 👍

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 30/03/2019 12:57

I've bought Unnatural Causes and also texted eldest to tell her to buy it - she shares a lot of my reading tastes!

Welshwabbit · 30/03/2019 13:01

Bringing my list over:

1. Dark Tower IV: Wizard and GlassStephen King
2. Normal People – Sally Rooney
3. The Seven Deaths of Evelyn HardcastleStuart Turton
4. Mornings in Jenin – Susan Abulhawa
5. Convenience Store Woman – Sayaka Murata
6. Behind Closed Doors – B.A. Paris
7. Elizabeth is Missing – Emma Healey
8. CommonwealthAnn Patchett
9. A Gentleman in MoscowAmor Towles
10. The WifeMeg Wolitzer
11. Guns Germs and Steel – Jared Diamond
12. Homegoing – Yaa Gyasi
13. Dark Tower V: Wolves of the Calla – Stephen King
14. Reservoir 13Jon McGregor
15. Love Your Enemies – Nicola Barker
16. Crazy Rich Asians – Kevin Kwan
17. The Hunting Party – Lucy Foley
18. After the Crash – Michel Bussi
19. The SympathizerViet Thanh Ngyuyen
20. Stuart: a life backwards – Alexander Masters

And the most recent:

21. MisogyniesJoan Smith - bolded to be easy to see, not as a standout. I did find parts of this book really interesting, but as a whole it feels somewhat dated (it was written in 1989 and this edition had a couple of additional chapters from 1992). I can see that a lot of the analysis would have seemed fresh and new when it was published, but reading it now, it suffered from the inevitable fate of timely polemics. As an example, the consideration of films such as Fatal Attraction felt like something I've read many times before (although still not something we've fully got to grips with as a society). However, I found the section on the Yorkshire Ripper crimes, and in particular the police's poor handling of the investigation, fascinating. The author is a journalist who wrote extensively about the investigation at the time and the book was worth picking up in the Kindle sale for that section alone.

Now reading The Song of Achilles and enjoying the flashbacks to reading an abridged version of the Iliad as a child!

AliasGrape · 30/03/2019 14:39

Also bought The Cutout Girl as recommended by Ritz

I was a huge Owen Meany fan when I read it forever ago, as I loved most John Irving but I’ve gone off him quite a bit and really not got on with his more recent books, so I wonder how I’d feel on a reread. I adored The World According to Garp too but imagine I’d see it differently now.

  1. Callander Square Anne Perry BakewellTarts inspired me, so I read the second in Anne Perry’s Thomas and Charlotte Pitt series, flew through it today and, despite being a bit snipey about the first one, I’m now very much on board and will be continuing with the series :)
Tarahumara · 30/03/2019 15:46

Just bought The Cut Out Girl and The Things I Would Tell You: British Muslim Women Write - thanks for the recommendations.

I hated Owen Meany. All the CAPITALS drove me up the wall.

Piggywaspushed · 30/03/2019 15:47

Bringing my list over:

  1. One Hot Summer : Dickens, Darwin, Disraeli and the Great Stink of 1858 – Rosemary Ashton
  2. The Shadow of the Wind – Carlos Ruiz Zafon
  3. Making Kids Cleverer- David Didau
  4. Becoming – Michelle Obama
  5. The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle – Stuart Turton
  6. The Beat of the Pendulum – Catherine Chidgey
  7. A Suitable Boy – Vikram Seth
  8. The Observations – Jane Harris
  9. Mad Blood Stirring – Simon Mayo
  10. The Cone Gatherers – Robin Jenkins
  11. The Beauty of the Wolf – Wray Delaney
  12. Whistle In The Dark – Emma Healey
  13. Open- Andre Agassi

I finished Open today which is Andre Agassi's autobiography. I skimmed the bits about tennis matches but, overall, it was a very interesting read. I actually saw Agassi play Edberg at The US Open . I was looking forward to a description of that match but it wasn't in the book. Bah!

BestIsWest · 30/03/2019 16:50

I loved Owen Meany. I was just musing earlier and remember reading it on a pre- kindle holiday in Puerto Pollensa. I took 10 books and read nearly all of them - my case weighed a ton. I was desperate not to run out of reading material. How different things are when you can just download something new with a few clicks.

15 Kate Atkinson- Transcription. I thought this was a poor effort from her, nowhere near her usual standard and frankly trying too hard to be amusing.

HaventGotAllDay · 30/03/2019 16:50

Here's my list so far.

  1. The Woman in the Window- AJ He who shall probably no longer be named Flynn
  2. Good Friday- Lynda La Plante
  3. I invited her in- Adele Parks
  4. A Very British Christmas Rhodri Marsden
  5. The Darkest Secret- Alex Manford
  6. You Let Me In Lucy Clarke
  7. Things Can Only Get Worse Jon O'Farrell
  8. A Fatal Inversion- Barbara Vine
  9. A Single Breath- Lucy Clarke (returned for refund)
10 Take Me With You When You Go- Stephanie Allen Early 11. Always a Pilgrim -can't remember author, some gung ho ex-army type 12 Watching You- Lisa Jewell 13. The Angel's Game- Carlos Ruiz Zafon 14. The Rumour- Lesley Kara 15. When Christ and his Saints Slept Sharon Penman 16. The Best Friend- Shalini Bolland

Am about to finish Close to Home Cara Hunter- bought after recommendations on last thread- it's a very good first-in-a-series cop hope-someone-buys-it-for-telly novel. Good storyline, and well written unlike some of the tripe on my list there! My only minor irritation is that the main character cop DI Adam Fawley seems very one dimensional typical dysfunctional police officer (family tragedy rather than booze though) and he reads like a woman....that might sound bonkers, but I keep having to remind myself that the narrator is a man. Still v good though.

Also almost finished Bookworm which will definitely go on my top reads/listens of the year, despite me not totally believing that the writer has really read all of them. I actually think that, bookworm though she is, some of them she has included because they're on some list in the Guardian of Children's classics and she's put them in because she thinks she should. I can't put my finger on it, and it's no crime, I just find her a bit unreliable at times. The oft mentioned WRONG bit in tLtWatW for a start, and also her going on about refusing to read books where animals talk and then waxing lyrical about Alice in Wonderland, The Wombles and the 101 Dalmations etc.

I have just bought an ancient copy of the Railway Children on the back of her though, and my next read will be In This House of Brede by Rumer Godden which arrived yesterday from the Bay of E.

SatsukiKusakabe · 30/03/2019 18:58

Owen Meany has been on my kindle for some time, however I never feel like I want to read it and keep getting put off by the premise. I think I downloaded it more for the fact it is well liked than because it was my sort of thing, standard 99p mistake.

I’ve just got All Among the Barley and Last Train to Memphis from the library and hoping to kickstart a better spell of reading, going well so far. I read for escapism but I feel like someone’s moved the ladder recently.

toomuchsplother · 30/03/2019 19:04

Satsuki I really liked The last train to Memphis. It is quite dense but really well researched. The follow up Careless love is heartbreaking.

EmGee · 30/03/2019 20:07

Here is my list so far. No stand outs yet but no stinkers and I've enjoyed them all:

  1. The Immortalists - Chloe Benjamin
  2. Becoming - Michelle Obama
  3. Eleanor Oliphant is completely fine - Gail Honeyman
  4. Mrs Bird - AJ Pearce
  5. Prince Philip his turbulent childhood -
Philip Eade
  1. Bookworm - Lucy Mangan
  2. Highland Fling - Nancy Mitford
  3. Watching you - Lisa Jewell
  4. My thoughts exactly - Lily Allen
10. The hidden life of trees - Peter Wohlleben 11. The Sympathizer - Viet Than Nuygen 12. The Gown - Jennifer Robson 13. Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets 14. The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox - Maggie O'Farrell 15. A Very short history of France - Bob Fowey 16. Christmas Pudding - Nancy Mitford 17. Song of Achilles - Madeleine Miller 18-20 'A discovery of witches' trilogy - Deborah Harkness 21. The road to Little Dribbling - Bill Bryson 22. Conversations with normal people - Sally Rooney 23. The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock - Imogen Gower Hermes 24. All that remains - Sue Black

Currently half way through Circe.

brizzlemint · 30/03/2019 20:09

I have just read A thousand paper birds by Tor Udall. It is the exquisitely written story of Audrey, Jonah, Milly, Harry and Chloe but it made me cry.
It's probably the most beautifully written book I've read for a long time but I am now so sad and lonely. Books don't make me cry.

CluelessMama · 30/03/2019 20:24

My recent reads...
9. The Gentle Art of Swedish Death Cleaning by Margareta Magnusson
A short, slightly odd book that I listened to on Audible. I feel bad saying this as the author seemed like an interesting elderly lady, but this felt like a bit of a vanity project. The key message of 'clean out your clutter or you are leaving someone else a huge job after you've gone' is a good one though. I'm on a clutter clearing mission at the moment so this theme will appear again in my future reading!
10. Surgically Enhanced by Pam Ayres
One of my resolutions for this year is to read some poetry. I ventured to the poetry section of my local library, found it to be very small, wasn't sure what to start with but recognised Pam Ayres name and knew she would be a light, enjoyable read. I kept thinking my parents would like it as they are closer in age to the writer and many of the poems in this collections are about her stage of life. Witty and easy reading.
11. Wonder by R. J Palacio
Many of you will be familiar with this, the story of Auggie who is starting school in New York aged 10 having been home schooled and received a number of medical procedures. Auggie has cranial facial differences which affect his appearance and the way others react and behave towards him. I felt at first that this was a younger YA book than others I have read - a friend uses it as a topic when teaching 11/12 year olds and I can see it suiting that age group. It really grew on me and I thought it was incredibly well done, the characters will stay with me and I'd love to read it with my son when he is a little older. Recommended.
12. Auggie & Me by R. J. Palacio
This collection of three short stories is a spin off from Wonder, focusing on three characters who cross paths with Auggie but with the emphasis on what was going on in their lives while the novel Wonder is Auggie's story. I enjoyed the first, 'The Julian Chapter' the most...I have met parents like Julian's who make never ending excuses for their child, striving to remove any challenge from their path and absolving them of all responsibility for their actions, but this is the first time I have come across them in literature! The moral of the story is not delivered in a subtle way, but I really enjoyed it. 'Pluto' also has very clear message, and again I can forgive it being a bit heavy handed in it's delivery as it is aimed at a young audience I feel. Something about the third story 'Shingaling' reminded me of Little Women, but that might have been the narrator on Audible rather than anything about the story itself.
A rare non-finish for me - I've given up on Why Mummy Drinks after about 80 pages as it just wasn't holding my interest.

Two weeks off work now, will have lots of time for audiobooks and hoping my concentration for reading improves over the break.

Thank you ritz, The Cut Out Girl has been on my wish list since I heard a fascinating interview with the author earlier in the year. Bought on Daily Deal and looking forward to getting into it.

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