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50 Book Challenge 2019 Part Five

991 replies

southeastdweller · 09/05/2019 22:08

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

OP posts:
ChessieFL · 12/05/2019 06:41

Thanks for all the birthday wishes everyone! I had a lovely day.

TheTurnOfTheScrew · 12/05/2019 09:55

gawd, i am so very behind i just posted on the old thread Blush

reposting here, list to follow:

Fell off the thread, and reading slowly for the usual work/mundane unserious illness/child related reasons. Looking forward to picking up the reading pace over half-term, when we're away. Will try hard to catch up on everyone's reviews later to inspire my holiday reading.

  1. The ABC Murders by Agatha Christie
    Poirrot's knocking on a bit now, but he's still got it, and works out no just whodunnit, but why they did it, after a series of murders seemingly only linked by the victim's initials.

  2. The House on Vesper Sands by Paraic O'Donnell
    A number of impoverished young women disappear from Victorian London, and there is a very strange suicide of a seamstress at the house of an Earl.

Gideon Bliss, a Cambridge scholar, is urgently summoned to London by his normally distant uncle and patron Reverend Neuilly, but Neuilly is nowhere to be found. Instead, Bliss bumps into Inspector Cutter, investigating the strange goings-on, and becomes his right-hand man. Also looking for answers is Octavia Hillingdon, a journalist who was brought up in the mysterious Earl's circle.

This was pretty decent, although the resolution of the supernatural mystery fell a bit flat for me. Cutter is a gem of a character - a bit of a Victorian Gene Hunt - and Octavia was strong and fun as well.

TheTurnOfTheScrew · 12/05/2019 10:00
  1. Winter by Ali Smith
  2. Help the Witch by Tom Cox
3. The Silent Companions by Laura Purcell 4. The Pursuit of Love by Nancy Mitford
  1. The Woman in the Window by AJ Finn
6. The Long Shadow by Celia Fremlin
  1. The Reading Cure: How Books Restored My Appetite by Laura Freeman.
8.Warlight by Michael Ondaatje
  1. Behind the Scenes at the Museum by Kate Atkinson
10. The Ghost by Robert Harris 11. A Month in the Country by JL Carr 12. Reservoir Tapes by Jon McGregor 13. The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock by Imogen Hermes Gower 14. Paradise Lodge by Nina Stibbe 15. The ABC Murders by Agatha Christie 16. The House on Vesper Sands by Paraic O'Donnell
StitchesInTime · 12/05/2019 11:38

39. It Was Her by Mark Hill

So so crime book.
Detectives are hunting for the people behind a series of home invasions. One of the culprits was blamed for the tragic death of her adoptive brother as a child, and the question of whether she was actually responsible runs through the book.

floraloctopus · 12/05/2019 11:47

I'm reading a very light and fluffy book Rachel's pudding pantry by Caroline Roberts, not my usual type of reading really but I've got a lot of work that I really must do today but I can't get motivated to do any of it Sad so I'm reading, MN'ing and playing pointless games on my phone.

Still it's a good book and doesn't need me to exercise my brain cells.

TheCanterburyWhales · 12/05/2019 12:03

The Sophie Hannah Poirots are on the 99p deal today.

I haven't bought any, as I find Sophie Hannah a bit underdeveloped as a crime writer- (she starts off well, but then there is never a big "OMFG!" moment- she always just seems to drift off towards a largely unsatisfactory ending. Are the Poirots the same? I'm prepared to be corrected and I've only bought The Name of the Rose on 99p since Friday!

ShakeItOff2000 · 12/05/2019 12:57

Thanks for the new thread, South.

My list so far:

  1. One Good Turn by Kate Atkinson.
  2. Cassandra at the Wedding by Dorothy Baker.
  3. The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle by Stuart Turton.
4. No.More.Plastic. What you can do to make a difference. By Martin Dorey.
  1. Once upon a time in the East: A story of growing up by Xiaolu Guo.
6. Milkman by Anna Burns.
  1. When will there be Good News? by Kate Atkinson.
8. The Better Angels of our Nature by Steven Pinker.
  1. Fated by Benedict Jacka.
10. Silence by Shudaku Endo. 11. Sight by Jessie Greengrass. 12. The Wood: The Life and Times of Cockshutt Wood by John Lewis Stemple. 13. The Road to Wigan Pier by George Orwell. 14. Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut. 15. The Moon’s a Balloon by David Niven. 16. Started Early, Took My Dog by Kate Atkinson. 17. Lincoln in the Bardo by George Saunders. 18. Professor Andersen’s Night by Dag Solstad. 19. The Dark Day’s Club by Alison Goodman. 20. The Dark Day’s Pact by Alison Goodman. 21. Conversations with Friends by Sally Rooney. 22. City of the Lost by Kelley Armstrong. 23. Sincerity by Carol Ann Duffy. 24. The Shortest History of Germany by James Hawes. 25. Far from the Madding Crowd by Thomas Hardy. 26. Tenth of December by George Saunders. 27. The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller.

And my latest read:

28. The Fifth Risk by Michael Lewis.

A look at under recognised departments and employees of the American government and what they do. And a little about the disaster that is President Trump. Interesting and persuasive.

DH and I always buy books for each other for Christmas and birthdays. He has introduced me to some great books although he finds it much more of a challenge since I’ve been on this thread! I love trying to find books that I think he’ll like and has not heard of.

DecumusScotti · 12/05/2019 13:04

I think they’re worth reading, CanterburyWhales, but a bit disappointing overall. I’m always left thinking ‘Well, this is all a bit convoluted’, whereas with the best of Christie it all slots neatly into place. So probably a bit typical Sophie Hannah really, although I haven’t read much else of hers. I suspect you could find amateur fanfiction that better captures the books, but I keep reading because I’m a sucker. I’d suggest getting them from the library instead if you can.

Bit disappointed with that selection of Poirots. There’s some original Christies there too, but Murder on the Links is available for free on Project Gutenberg and The Big Four is not one of her better ones. Wah Sad

TheCanterburyWhales · 12/05/2019 13:10

Hmm. I think I'll give them a miss then. I'm enjoying rereading the three Christie omnibuses I picked up for about 40p each at the moment, and I don't want my teenage (and now 50 something) Christie memories tainting!

Piggywaspushed · 12/05/2019 14:34

Just to report as an update that my DS (15) read Murder On The Orient Express as recommended by many on here. He enjoyed it and has wired straight into The ABC Murders.

FranKatzenjammer · 12/05/2019 14:56

Thanks for the new thread southeast. Here is my list- some are rereads or audiobooks:

  1. Bird Box- Josh Malerman
  2. Film Stars Don’t Die in Liverpool- Peter Turner
  3. The Road- Cormac McCarthy
  4. The Tattooist of Auschwitz- Heather Morris
  5. Why Mummy Drinks- Gill Sims
  6. Memory Songs- James Cook
  7. Read All About It- Paul Cuddihy
  8. The Boys are Back- Simon Carr
  9. How to Make Great Radio- David Lloyd
10. The Revenant- Michael Punke 11. Every Song Ever- Ben Ratliff 12. Why Mummy Swears- Gill Sims 13. In the Days of Rain- Rebecca Stott 14. Trilby- George de Maurier 15. Not Your Average Nurse- Maggie Groff 16. The Secret Mother- Shalini Boland 17. My Year of Rest and Relaxation- Otessa Moshfegh 18. Rock Needs River- Vanessa McGrady 19. Three Weeks To Say Goodbye- C.J. Box 20. Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine- Gail Honeyman 21. Born Under A Million Shadows- Andrea Busfield 22. The Year of Reading Dangerously- Andy Miller 23. De Profundis- Oscar Wilde 24. Weird Things Customers Say in Book Shops- Jen Campbell 25. Scrublands- Chris Hammer 26. More Weird Things Customers Say in Book Shops- Jen Campbell 27. Life Skills: Stuff You Should Really Know by Now- Julia Laflin 28. The Book Shop- Penelope Fitzgerald 29. The English Patient- Michael Ondaatje 30. Brave New World- Aldous Huxley 31. The Collector- John Fowles 32. Mr Penumbra’s 24 Hour Book Store- Robin Sloan 33. A Prayer for Owen Meany- John Irving 34. The Lost Child of Philomena Lee- Martin Sixsmith 35. Bookworm- Lucy Mangan 36. The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar and Six More- Roald Dahl 37. The Lady in the Van- Alan Bennett 38. Jacob’s Room is Full of Books- Susan Hill 39. A Monster Calls- Patrick Ness 40. The Essays of Arthur Shopenhauer: Studies in Pessimism 41. The Music Shop- Rachel Joyce 42. The Last- Hanna Jameson 43. Moab is my Washpot- Stephen Fry 44. The Black Death- Hourly History 45. Boy- Roald Dahl 46. I’d Rather Be Reading- Anne Bogel 47. Anna- Niccolo Ammaniti 48. The Fry Chronicles- Stephen Fry 49. Nick Drake: Remembered for a While- John Murray 50. The Child that Books Built- Francis Spufford 51. More Fool Me- Stephen Fry 52. Atonement- Ian McEwan 53. The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas- John Boyne 54. Gone- Michael Grant 55. Adolf Hitler- Hourly History 56. Set the Boy Free- Johnny Marr 57. Home Fire- Kamila Shamsie 58. The Middle Ages- Hourly History 59. Kill ‘Em All- John Niven

and below are the books I’ve read or listened to in the last week or so. Inspired by another thread, I read several of them in one sitting (one sitting per book, that is!), not something I have normally done but it gave a different and very enjoyable experience and a sense of achievement.

60. Lord of the Flies- William Golding This was brilliant, even better than I remembered from school. I direct a boys’ choir, so I’m always interested in (and horrified by) what the choir gets up to when they (and other boys) are stranded on an island.

61. A Kestrel for a Knave- Barry Hines This is also a wonderful book, even better than I remembered. Billy Casper is academically weak, has a difficult home life and no prospects until he decides to train a kestrel. I’m also a huge fan of ‘Kes’ and possibly prefer the film's ending.

62. Fingers in the Sparkle Jar- Chris Packham I got this on the Daily Deal, but lots of you will already have read it. It is set in the 1970s world of Green Shield stamps, Avon ladies, Chopper bikes, Curly wurlys, Wagon Wheels, Airfix kits and Blue Peter: I liked all these little touches. Packham describes a childhood spent collecting tadpoles, stealing eggs, buying dried seahorses, obsessing over otters and (as in my previous book, above) rearing and training a kestrel. There are also some more general rites of passage such as discovering porn and punk rock. I preferred the sections written in the first person, but chapters told from other points of view helped to build up a fuller picture of Packham. Unlike in the television documentary, his Asperger’s Syndrome was alluded to but not specifically referred to. This was a lovely book, with some very moving bits (and some rather yucky bits!).

63. The Diary of a Bookseller- Shaun Bythell I read the whole thing on Bank Holiday Monday. It was interesting to discover what it is like to run a bookshop: I hadn’t appreciated quite how much time secondhand booksellers spending buying books as well as selling them, but it seems obvious now…

64. How Not to Be a Boy- Robert Webb I’d already read the book, but found the audiobook on BorrowBox and enjoyed hearing it read by Rob himself. It is very funny and touching. I’m delighted, of course, that he’s a feminist, but he goes on about it enough!

65. The Kite Runner- Khaled Hosseini I am probably the last person on earth to read this book but, oh my goodness, it is fantastic, certainly the best book I’ve read this year. I cried at the end. Yesterday I also watched the film (which is on Amazon Prime)- this was also very good and again I cried at the end.

66. Animal Farm- George Orwell I hadn’t read this since school and I could understand the subtext better this time (but there are probably still parts that went over my head). I think I enjoyed it more this time around.

67. Station Eleven- Emily St John Mandel I got the book in the Monthly Deal for 99p, but the audiobook was only an extra £1.79 so I ended up listening to it. It wasn’t as good as I expected. I’d been told by Remus and others that it was a Marmite book but, to be honest, I didn’t have strong feelings other than being a bit underwhelmed. I did enjoy some parts- Arthur, the travelling symphony, the airport, and I always enjoy a bit of looting!- and liked the narrator. But I think some of the other post-apocalyptic novels are better.

InMyOwnParticularIdiom · 12/05/2019 15:10
  1. Warriors of the Storm - Bernard Cornwell (Uhtred #9)

When Lady Aethelflaed's Kingdom of Mercia is threatened by invasion by Viking Ragnall Iverson, her maverick warrior Uhtred of Bebbanburg is there to save the day... Hits the spot if you want the standard Cornwell formula (this is comfort reading for me since I fell in love with Richard Sharpe aged 12). This isn't the best of the series - it focuses on a single campaign and I prefer the earlier ones that are more epic in scope, covering years of Uhtred's life.

CoteDAzur · 12/05/2019 15:32

Hello everyone. Marking my place Smile

Indigosalt · 12/05/2019 16:38

Afternoon All! Haven't posted for ages and completely fallen off the thread. Despite this, have continued with my reading, and just caught up with the thread. Here's a very quick run down of what I've got through in the last couple of weeks.

16. Notes to Self – Emilie Pine

A refreshingly honest collection of essays about the challenges of being a woman in the 21st century. I really enjoyed this. Brave and no holds barred. The chapter about coping with her alcoholic Father was particularly poignant.

17. Transcription – Kate Atkinson
I enjoyed this far more than I expected to. This was quite different to Life After Life and A God in Ruins, so fans of these books might be disappointed. Transcription lacked the emotional punch of these works, but had a lightness of touch and a playful intrigue the others lacked. A much lighter read, but none the worse for it. A solid thriller.

18. The Summer Without Men – Siri Hustvedt

What She Loved was a highlight for me last year, sadly this wasn’t in the same class but good nonetheless. The middle aged protagonist leaves her fashionable New York existence to spend the summer living in her remote Minnesota childhood home when her husband has an affair with a much younger colleague. She teaches summer school to a group of pre-teen girls, makes friends with her next door neighbour who has just had a baby, and re-connects with her elderly Mother. A well executed story of self discovery.

19. Go Went Gone – Jenny Erpenbeck

One of my favourite books of the year so far, I thought this was a very accomplished and affecting piece of writing. Translated from German, this writer has a beautiful, economic style which I thought was just brilliant. The story of a retired university professor living in present day Berlin, who becomes involved with a group of migrants seeking asylum in Germany. I have read a few books about the European migrant crisis recently (From a Low and Quiet Sea, see below and Exit West spring to mind) and this is by far the best. Erpenbeck puts the crisis in the context of the division and re-unification of Germany drawing startling parallels, and for me, throwing a new light on Merkel’s response to the situation. Recommended to anyone who has an interest in this subject.

20. Memories of the Future – Siri Hustvedt

This was good but quite mad, with way too much going on. A middle aged protagonist looks back at her years in New York in the seventies when she was trying to establish herself young writer. Embedded within the coming of age tale is the unfinished novel the protagonist was writing at the time. I think only Siri Hustvedt could have got away with this. Some great characterisation and as always, written beautifully. Quite hard work, but ultimately worth sticking with the mind blowing plot within a plot, within a plot.

21. Ordinary People – Diana Evans

Shortlisted for the Women’s Prize. In my view, a worthy contender. Set in South East London, this meant I knew all the locations she describes well and this enhanced my reading pleasure. She captures a sense of time and place which was completely authentic. I had that weird experience of her writing about a certain place, and I happened to be reading the book sat in that exact place.

22. The Tenderness of Wolves – Stef Penney

I liked this, but unlike Ordinary People I don’t think the writer transported me to the wilds of Canada convincingly and it all felt a bit fake. Sometimes felt like she was describing a film setting, a made up location. Was therefore unsurprised to discover after finishing the book, that Stef Penney used to be a screenwriter. A pleasant enough read, but would I read another book by this writer? Probably not.

23. The Closed Circle – Jonathan Coe

I read and enjoyed The Rotters Club earlier this year, and this was equally enjoyable. The Rotters and their friends (and enemies!) encouner the 1990's and Blair's Britain. Am now eagerly awaiting the paper back release of Middle England to hear what happens to The Rotters in middle age, Brexit and beyond.

24. From a Low and Quiet Sea – Donal Ryan
Good, but paled a little in comparison to Go Went Gone, which covers a similar subject matter.

25. An American Marriage – Tayari Jones

Another Women’s Prize contender. Not what I expected, and in a good way. This purports to be a story about the wrongful arrest of a man and the impact this event has on the relationship between him and his wife. It’s actually much more than that, an exploration of what love is, what keeps us together and why we sometimes can’t be together anymore. Clever, thoughtful and well written – my favourite of the shortlist so far.

26. West – Carys Davies

I liked this one very much. My only criticism would be that this was only 149 pages long and I wanted it to be much longer! A Father leaves his young daughter more or less to her own devices as he sets off on an epic quest to investigate the discovery of enormous bones buried in unchartered territory thousands of miles away. A story about learning what is important in life. Not one single word is wasted, but I wanted many more of them. An epic in miniature.

27. My Sister the Serial Killer – Oyinkan Braithwaite

Another Women’s Prize contender, Korede’s beautiful and charismatic sister Ayoola wages a one woman war against the patriarchy in present day Lagos. Really quite unlike anything I’ve ever read before and very enjoyable. Uncompromising.

Indigosalt · 12/05/2019 16:51

And my list so far, highlights in bold

  1. Everything Under – Daisy Johnson
  2. A God in Ruins – Kate Atkinson
  3. Asymmetry – Lisa Halliday
  4. Poverty Safari – Darren McGarvey
  5. The Travelling Cat Chronicles – Hiro Arikawa
  6. The Rotters’ Club – Jonathan Coe
  7. Kindred – Octavia E. Butler
  8. We Were the Mulvaneys – Joyce Carol Oates
  9. Milkman – Anna Burns
  10. The Amateur Marriage – Anne Tyler
  11. Things Bright and Beautiful – Anbara Salam
  12. A Woman in the Polar Night – Christiane Ritter
  13. Barbara Hepworth – Penelope Curtis
  14. Shrill: Notes From a Loud Woman – Lindy West
  15. The Western Wind – Samantha Harvey
  16. Notes to Self – Emilie Pine
  17. Transcription – Kate Atkinson
  18. The Summer Without Men – Siri Hustvedt
  19. Go Went Gone – Jenny Erpenbeck
  20. Memories of the Future – Siri Hustvedt
  21. Ordinary People – Diana Evans .
  22. The Tenderness of Wolves – Stef Penney
  23. The Closed Circle – Jonathan Coe
  24. From a Low and Quiet Sea – Donal Ryan
  25. An American Marriage – Tayari Jones
  26. West – Carys Davies
  27. My Sister the Serial Killer – Oyinkan Braithwaite
Boiledeggandtoast · 12/05/2019 21:40

Indigosalt I was interested to read your review of Go Went Gone. I loved Jenny Erpenbeck's The End of Days, but it seems to have been overtaken by Kate Atkinson's Life after Life. I have Visitiation on my TBR pile - have you read it?

TemporaryPermanent · 12/05/2019 21:44

Many thanks for the [not very] new thread!!

My list:

  1. The Girls by Emma Cline
  2. Coming Home by Rosamunde Pilcher
  3. Becoming by Michelle Obama
✶4. Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahnemann✶ ✶5. Chernobyl by Sergio Plokhy✶
  1. Smut by Alan Bennett
✶7. The body keeps the score by Bessel van der kolk✶
  1. Convenience store woman by Sayata Murata
  2. Calypso by David Sedaris
✶10. Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez✶ 11. Broadsword calling Danny Boy by Geoff Dyer. ✶12. The Handmaids Tale by Margaret Attwood✶ 13. In the Days of Rain by Rebecca Stott 14. Us by David Nicholls 15. Five Days by Douglas Kennedy

16 Will You Love Me? by Cathy Glass
17 Breaking the Silence by Casey Watson
If you know what these sorts of books are like, you know what these sorts of books are like. I can't defend reading them as I think the act of writing them is quite dodgy, though at least I feel more sure that the child described in book 16 has consented. They are rather like thrillers in that the world they describe is oddly reassuring despite the 'misery lit' elements - there are always at least some 'good' social workers and teachers, the foster carers always have great insight and get at least some results. I was trying to watch Norsemen on Netflix but had to give up and I read these instead. Telly just tends to be too extreme for me now, whereas with books, whatever they describe, I can cope with it better.

Indigosalt · 12/05/2019 22:09

Boiledegg I also have Visitation on my wish list - had a scout round at the library on my last visit only to discover they had a copy, but it was out...I feel quite excited to have discovered her so I can seek out her other novels. Thanks for the recommendation re The End of Days - will check it out.

Boiledeggandtoast · 13/05/2019 07:40

Indigosalt I hope you enjoy it, I'd be interested to know how you find it compares to Life after Life. I have now moved Visitation to the top of my TBR pile!

whippetwoman · 13/05/2019 09:20

@Boiledeggandtoast I read Visitation earlier this year and enjoyed it. It's quite a powerful, if short, read. I am also looking to seek out more of her writing this year.

Welshwabbit · 13/05/2019 12:20

Finally get round to joining the new thread and you're nearly 100 posts in! Bringing my list over:

1. Dark Tower IV: Wizard and Glass – Stephen King
2. Normal People – Sally Rooney
3. The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle – Stuart 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. Commonwealth – Ann Patchett
9. A Gentleman in Moscow – Amor Towles
10. The Wife – Meg Wolitzer
11. Guns Germs and Steel – Jared Diamond
12. Homegoing – Yaa Gyasi
13. Dark Tower V: Wolves of the Calla – Stephen King
14. Reservoir 13 – Jon 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 Sympathizer – Viet Thanh Ngyuyen
20. Stuart: a life backwards – Alexander Masters
21. Misogynies – Joan Smith
22. The Song of Achilles – Madeline Miller
23. The Rotters’ Club – Jonathan Coe
24. The Closed Circle – Jonathan Coe
25. Middle England – Jonathan Coe
26. Cold Comfort Farm – Stella Gibbons
27. When God was a Rabbit – Sarah Winman
28. Our House – Louise Candlish
29. Bel Canto – Ann Patchett
30. The Darkness – Ragnar Jonasson
31. Educated – Tara Westover
32. The Wych Elm – Tana French
33. If Beale Street Could Talk – James Baldwin
34. Their Eyes Were Watching God – Zora Neale Hurston
35. The Door – Magda Szabo
36. The Comforts of Home – Susan Hill

And my most recent:

37. Loitering With Intent – Muriel Spark

Muriel Spark wrote my favourite book ever (The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie) and this was Booker shortlisted so I'm not quite sure why I've not read it before. It is pure, vintage Spark - written in the early 80s, it draws on her own experiences as a young female author in the late 40s/early 50s. Fleur Talbot gets a job as a sort of editor to a group of high-society potential autobiographers, brought together by the (it emerges) somewhat sinister Sir Quentin Oliver. Does he have an ulterior motive for this enterprise (of course! it's Muriel Spark!)? Sparkian capers ensue, with the usual dark undertow. As with all of Spark's books, the joy is in the light yet caustic tone, the uneasy tensions within her universe, and the absolutely perfect, inimitable prose. No-one writes with more economy than Spark. A dark, glimmering gem of a book.

Boiledeggandtoast · 13/05/2019 13:56

Thanks whippetwoman. Definitely my next read!

grimupnorthLondon · 13/05/2019 14:50

Thanks for the new thread southeast and I also echo PepelePew that this thread has improved the range and variety of my reading. And Splother well done on the blog! It’s a real time-stealer and beautifully done! Bringing over my list plus some catching up on reviews below:

1 - An Infamous Army - Georgette Heyer
2 - Zero Zero Zero - Roberto Saviano
3 - Milkman - Anna Burns
4 - The Bounty - Caroline Alexander
5 - The Sleep of Reason - David James Smith
6 - Moby Dick - Herman Melville
7 - Mike at Wrykyn - P.G.Wodehouse
8 - At Freddie’s - Penelope Fitzgerald
9 - Winter - Ali Smith
10 - Village of Secrets - Caroline Moorhead
11 - Back Story - David Mitchell
12 - Anthills of the Savannah - Chinua Achebe
13 - How not to be a Boy - Robert Webb
14 - Waterloo - Victor Hugo
15 - A Murder is Announced - Agatha Christie
16 - The Cranes Dance - Meg Howrey
17 - Astonish Me - Maggie Shipstead
18 - Witnessing Waterloo - David Crane
19 - The Girls of Slender Means - Muriel Spark
20 - The Things I Would Tell You - edited by Sabrina Mahfouz
Think I’m in line with the general thread reaction to this compilation of writing by British Muslim women. It was patchy in quality but did contain some very interesting stuff. I thought some of the poetry and Shaista Aziz’s essay on ‘honour killings’ in Pakistan were the strongest contributions.

21 - Mani: Travels in the Southern Peloponnese - Patrick Leigh Fermor
One of my favourites of the year so far. I read this while (and because) we were on holiday in the Mani, mainland Greece, over Easter weekend and it is a lively account of Fermor (and his future wife) travelling on foot and by boat through the Mani peninsula in the late 1940s, staying with fishing and peasant families in the remote villages and describing the history, folklore and mythology of the region. He tells the sometimes bleak and violent history in a way that is often very funny (e.g. how the Maniots were always engaging in feuds, each family building taller and taller towers so that they could drop rocks from them to smash the marble roofs of their enemies) and captures the life and culture of what was probably one of the last true ‘backwaters’ in Europe in its final days before the arrival of roads and radios opened it up to outside influence. Fermor is one of those posh, eccentric Englishman (he was expelled from public school, was one of the earliest members of what became the SAS and fought with the Cretan resistance during the war) who is somehow extremely knowledgeable about lots of things - he spoke perfect Greek and could write at length on Byzantine art. A really interesting read.

22 - An American Princess: Many Lives of Allene Tew - Annejet van der Zijl
Picked this up as a free Kindle offer in translation from Dutch. Description of Tew’s early life in what was then a frontier town in Michigan is interesting but after that there was not much that I thought made her worth a biography. She was very rich and married 5 times. It seemed that she ‘sponsored’ a protégé of hers to marry into the Dutch royal family and I imagine that is why the book is of interest in the Netherlands, but didn’t really do it for me.

23 - Winter Men - Jesper Bugge Koke
Another free Kindle offer in translation. Easy to read novel about two brothers from Hamburg who end up joining the SS. Not particularly gripping and a rather surface treatment of what could have been a very interesting subject.

24 - The Silence of the Girls - Pat Barker
I am a massive Pat Barker fan (Regeneration trilogy has to be up there with my all-time favourites) but this didn’t really do it for me. She is a totally competent writer as always and the evocation of time and place in the early chapters was very vivid, but I suppose I just don’t ‘get’ the trend for re-writing classic stories from the perspective of the women involved. They are by definition bit-players, and so Barker is constrained by the existing narrative framework from having her heroine take any real agency. Spoiler alert I thought the bit where Briseis hid on the cart next to Hector’s dead body when they were taking him back to Troy was an interesting attempt to deal with this but then of course she couldn’t go through with is as it wasn’t 'true'. I came away thinking Barker actually would have been happier writing (and I might have been happier reading) her own account of Achilles story.

25 - Arabella - Georgette Heyer
Heyer is my go-to for comfort reading and this is one of her best. I love the conversations between Mr Beaumaris and the mongrel dog Arabella makes him adopt.

26 - Breakfast at Tiffany’s - Truman Capote
A re-read for book group. If you can looks past the racist language/attitudes of the era this is such a beautiful encapsulation of story, character and description into a tiny novella that it should be prescribed to every novelist with a tendency to exceed 400 pages.

27 - Swear Down - Russ Litten
A sort-of-mystery about a London policeman of Nigerian descent investigating a stabbing in Hackney. Not life-changing as a novel but an interesting angle on the lives of some of the kids involved in that kind of awful violence we are seeing so much of at the moment. I read it on the recommendation of a friend who is a youth worker in London and thought it was quite a realistic portrayal but would be interested in any other more in-depth recommendations of novels on the subject?

28 - The Beast - Alexander Starritt
This was very entertaining. Consciously following in the footsteps of Scoop, it’s a darkly comic novel centring mainly around the sub-desk of a newspaper which is incredibly obviously the Daily Mail. A quick read and managed to be both funny and terrifyingly plausible at the same time. It doesn't say so in his biography (probably for legal reasons) but I would be gobsmacked if the writer didn't at some point do a shift or two in the Mail's newsroom.

29 - The Secret Olympian - Anonymous
Had this on my Kindle for ages and just finished it off. Mildly interesting insight into being an Olympic athlete (probably a rower) but nothing amazing.

30 - A Question of Upbringing - Anthony Powell
This has catapulted me firmly onto the Dance to the Music of Time bandwagon. Loved the writing, got through the whole thing in a day and now half way through the next one. Is there any better feeling than ‘discovering’ a series that you like with loads more books to go? Although I am now also sharing in Fortuna’s concerns that I may be the Widmerpool of my group.

If you don’t know who the Widmerpool is, it must be you, right?

HugAndRoll · 13/05/2019 18:32

Place marking. I'll post my list soon.

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 13/05/2019 19:20

GrimUpNorth - Agree re Breakfast at Tiffany's. Horribly racist and homophobic in places but, beyond that, it's exquisite. Much darker than the film and some really lovely writing.