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50 Book Challenge 2020 Part Ten

999 replies

southeastdweller · 16/11/2020 15:48

Welcome to the tenth (and final?) thread of the 50 Book Challenge for this year.

The challenge is to read fifty books (or more!) in 2020, though reading fifty isn't mandatory. Any type of book can count, it's still not too late to join, and please try to let us all know your thoughts on what you've read.

The previous threads of 2020:

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9

I've just checked and these threads this year have moved more quickly than any other year since they started back in 2012! We'd never reached ten threads in any other year.

OP posts:
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6
Terpsichore · 29/11/2020 14:12

That may have been me, boiledegg - thanks for the Private Passions heads-up Smile

TheTurnOfTheScrew I agree about Case Histories ; it was very interesting in parts but I kept getting bogged down and putting it to one side so consequently took months to finish it. Also agree that it would have been good to hear more about Jeremy Hutchinson's Bloomsbury heritage.

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 29/11/2020 14:33

Ham - yes, will wait until it comes down in price. They are fun enough reads but not worth a tenner!

KeithLeMonde · 29/11/2020 15:12

84. Shuggie Bain, Douglas Stuart

Definitely going on the bold list!

We first meet Shuggie aged 16, living alone in a Glasgow bedsit. He was lucky to find it,

..none of the other landlords had wanted to rent to a fifteen-year-old boy who was pretentdng to be one day past his sixteenth birthday.

Shuggie is attending school sporadically, working in a supermarket where the manager doesn't ask many questions. His room is neat. He is frightened and cold.

He sank his face and head into the rare warmth, held himself there and dreamt about filling a bath up to the very top. He thought about lying under the hot water far away from the smells of the other lodgers. It had been a long time since he felt thawed all the way through, all of him warm at the exact same time.

Who is this boy and how did he get to where he is? To tell us this story, Douglas Stuart loops back to 1980s Glasgow, to a city stripped of its industry, where men are out of work, where women jiggle loose coins back out of the electricity meter to pay for the kids' food, where alcoholism, sectarianism and violence are rife.

Shuggie's mother Agnes is an alcoholic, and the story is about her as much as it is about the boy. Beautiful, lonely, an incorrigible romantic (or, to think of it another way, a head-in-the-clouds fantasist), she has left her reliable first husband to shack up with Shuggie's father, Big Shug - a man who is weak, cruel and persistently unfaithful. He moves Agnes and her family out to a lonely and run-down housing estate on the edge of the city, then leaves them there to move in with another woman.

She had loved him and he had needed to break her completely to leave her for good. Agnes Bain was too rare a thing to let someone else love. It wouldn't do to leave pieces of her for another man to collect and repair later.

There's no doubt that this is a bleak and heart-breaking book. Trapped doubly by poverty and by Agnes' alcoholism, the family are stuck - there's a claustrophobia here which reminds me of Milkman but also The Street, Ann Petrie's book about a mother trying to escape poverty and social injustice in 1940s Harlem.

So, it's 400 pages long and miserable. I know what you're thinking. But I would truly recommend this book (unless you're feeling particularly delicate) and, while I don't think its perfect, I can see why it won the Booker. For a start, it's funny - maybe not laugh-out-loud funny, but full of humour and vigour and spirited insults being flung around. Secondly, there's Agnes, who is terrible, and pathetic, but also magnificent. The reader sees her through the loving eyes of her son (it's worth noting that the book is semi-autobiographical) and we root for her when, after hitting rock bottom, she pulls herself together, puts on her lipstick and goes out to fight again. We cheer when she has the last word against the gossiping neighbourhood women or the smug, contemptuous Big Shug.

And finally, as the last point attests, there is real warmth in this book - it manages to be beautiful and life-affirming as well as depressing and bleak. There is love and tenderness, and somehow that shines out more brightly because of the darkness of its background. This quote from the NYT says it better than I could:

He [Stuart] shows us lots of monstrous behavior, but not a single monster — only damage. If he has a sharp eye for brokenness, he is even keener on the inextinguishable flicker of love that remains. The book is long, more than 400 pages, but its length seems crucial to its overall effect. Like Agnes, we’re all doomed to our patterns. How often we repeat the same disastrous mistakes, make the same wrong turn again and again. And yet, like Shuggie, how often we rise, against all odds, to stumble forward once more.

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 29/11/2020 16:28
  1. Before The Coffee Gets Cold : Tales From The Cafe by Toshikazu Kawaguchi

Four more stories from the Funiculi Funicular Cafe. If you liked the first set, you'll like this, if you didn't you won't.

  1. The Queen's Gambit by Walter Tevis

Beth Harmon at age 8 shows tremendous aptitude for chess, but because she is an orphan and a girl no one really cares. When she leaves the children's home she finally gets opportunities to show her talent and startles the world of chess whilst hiding a drink problem.

Read it before watching the Netflix show, for some reason I had assumed true story but it isn't. Aside from the various paragraphs of chess move choices which I found repetitive, I really enjoyed this. Found the ending too neat to be honest, but a good read all the same.

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 29/11/2020 16:31

RE : Angela Brazil @mackerella @bettbattenburg

The name doesn't ring a bell but that's part of the point it could well be

Don't you just wish you could go back in time and tell your child self to note down every book you loved and a summary for your middle aged self. Majority of my childhood reads were library ones I never owned which makes it even harder.

Indigosalt · 29/11/2020 16:41

Keith thank you for the great review of Shuggie Bain. I have ordered it from the library so who knows when I'll receive it, but good to know that when I finally do it will have been worth the wait Smile.

Piggywaspushed · 29/11/2020 16:43

Just popping on to remind OMF readalongers that it's nearly December!!

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 29/11/2020 16:48

Yes Keith I wasn't going to bother but probably will read Shuggie Bain off the back of your review.

Indigosalt · 29/11/2020 16:51

60. The New Wilderness – Diane Cook

The book imagines a dystopian near future where global warming has been allowed to seriously threaten the environment, cities are uninhabitable and the air pollution is so toxic that Bea’s young daughter Agnes is unable to breathe and has become seriously ill. Bea, her partner Glen and Agnes agree to take part in an experiment; they will join a small group of strangers in the last wilderness on earth, to live nomadically and without impacting on the natural world.

I’m not really sure what I made of this one. I found the writer’s understated, almost deadpan style engaging and undemanding. It’s very descriptive. There are long passages dedicated to the scenery and animals encountered which creates a meandering, aimless feel, which I didn’t mind too much initially. There are touches of humour present when describing the squabbling group dynamics and hierarchy within the community, which I also enjoyed.

Overall, I feel this book was over long at almost 400 pages and didn’t live up to its initial promise. After a strong start, it started to feel aimless. Sadly, the mother/daughter storyline didn’t really work for me either, and as I think this is one of the main themes of the novel, this was a bit of a disappointment. Ultimately it lacked bite for me and would have benefitted from a more ruthless edit and tighter structure.

Would I read something else by the same writer? Yes. Overall this was worth the read in spite of its flaws. I see that she has a highly rated collection of short stories which I have already added to my TBR list

  1. The Haunting of Alma Fielding: A True Ghost Story Kate Summerscale

I listened to this one on Audible and thought David Morrisey’s dry, laconic narration was very fitting. This factual account of the haunting of a Croydon housewife in the 1930’s was absorbing enough but not quite as good as I thought it was going to be.

The haunting first manifests itself as a number of genuinely quite frightening poltergeist type occurrences at Alma’s home. When Alma contacts the local paper for “help” to try and resolve the disturbances, the media attention generated by the coverage attracts the attention of Hungarian psychic phenomena investigator, Nandor Fodor. The book details at length and in detail his quest to establish whether Alma’s experiences are real or contrived.

The events described were set very effectively against a backdrop of Hitler’s ascendancy in Europe and I being a fan of surrealist art, I enjoyed these references. However, this book was simply not as sinister as I wanted it to be and there were too many repetitive descriptions of Alma producing random objects out of thin air which resulted in my mind wandering off. Quite scary, but not scary enough for me.

KeithLeMonde · 29/11/2020 17:06

I feel a bit nervous now about Shuggie Bain as it's not an easy book - poverty, misery, violence, abuse, loneliness, sickness, death. Yet I itched to get back and read a few more chapters every time I put it down.

FortunaMajor · 29/11/2020 18:01

I have done my homework Piggy. thanks for the reminder.

Fab review Keith. Shuggie Bain is pure misery, but it's beautiful as well as gritty.

Indigo I agree with what you've said about The New Wilderness. it definitely could have done with a better editor. I did quite like the descriptive passages though.

Cabin thanks for your review of the Helen Dunmore I have quite a few of hers on my bookshelf and I forget they are there. I must bump her up the list.

InMyOwnParticularIdiom · 29/11/2020 18:45

A Spell of Winter is one of my all time favourite books, Cabin - for me, it's the sense Dunmore manages to convey of what it actually feels like, on a physical level, to be in Cathy's skin.

FortunaMajor · 29/11/2020 19:19

Frankenstein in Baghdad - Ahmed Saardawi
Set in US occupied Baghdad, an eccentric local character collects body parts he finds in the street after bombings and stitches them together in the hope a whole body will get a more respectful burial. His created corpse goes missing at the same time as a spate of horrific murders takes place.

It looks at the effect of the US invasion and occupation on the lives of ordinary people and the city. Despite being well written this didn't really hit the mark for me. The characters were larger than life and quite oddball which detracted from the social and political commentary. It uses black humour to bring a bit of levity to a fairly bleak situation, but I don't think it translated very well.

ChessieFL · 29/11/2020 19:59
  1. The Whispers In The Walls by Sophie Cleverly

The second book in the Scarlet and Ivy series featuring twins investigating mysteries at their creepy boarding school in the 1930s. This was slower to start than the first in the series, but I still enjoyed it and would have loved it if I had read it aged 10ish.

TimeforaGandT · 29/11/2020 20:30

77. The Spy Who Came In From the Cold - John Le Carre

I suspect lots of you have read this. The book opens with Alec who runs the Berlin station standing at the border waiting for one of his spies in the eastern part of the city to escape. The agent is shot as he crosses the border and Alec’s career in Germany is over and he returns to London. Whilst Alec starts to disintegrate, Control plans an elaborate sting. I don’t want to give anymore away but a very clever book - although it did require some concentration for me to keep up at points!

Sadik · 29/11/2020 22:05
  1. A Guide to Coppicing by Ray Tabor Short book that does what it says on the tin. This wasn't quite as immediately useful as I'd hoped as it assumes mature or overstood coppice and quite a bit is about potential products, whereas I'm dealing with a newly establishing woods which are for our own use not sale, but still very clear and helpful regarding tool use, organisation of the work etc.
FortunaMajor · 30/11/2020 03:12

Well done on the 100 Sadik although I can't say I'll be rushing to read that one. What sort of trees are you growing?

I'm 50% on the second attempt at Lolly Willowes. Does it get any better?

BestIsWest · 30/11/2020 07:27

Bury Your Dead - Louise Penny
Grrrr. Continuing the Inspector Gamache series which I like and dislike in equal measures.
Inspector Gamache himself is very likeable and there’s always a lot of interesting detail about Canadian history and life but some of it is just too quirky/irritating for me.This had three strands, a murder in an English library in French Speaking Quebec, a terrorism plot which Gamache has survived and is traumatised by and the unresolved murder from the last book, no 5 in the series.

I commented up thread that the last one I read had a lot of unresolved clues and didn’t make sense. That annoyed me a lot - there wasn’t enough depth in this part of the story to add anything to this book and it really should have been wrapped up in the last book.

There’s quite a bit about the founding of Quebec and that was interesting but on the whole this was a bit messy. Don’t know if I’ll read another one.

bibliomania · 30/11/2020 07:46

Sorry you're not enjoying Lolly Willowes, Fortuna. [feels guilty]. It does change gear in later sections.

FortunaMajor · 30/11/2020 08:13

It's not you Biblio you were just the memory jogger. I'm blaming Backlisted for raving about it ages ago. If it picks up then great, but so far she's not quite the convention breaking independent woman I was expecting.

bibliomania · 30/11/2020 09:55

There is a bit of convention-breaking on its way...

Terpsichore · 30/11/2020 10:13

90: One, Two, Three, Four: The Beatles in Time - Craig Brown

Much-read on this thread, I think. I'm a bit of a Beatles nerd myself anyway, and one of my favourite books from a few years ago was Mark Lewisohn's epic fact-packed doorstep biography of the Fab Four (Vol 1...still impatiently awaiting Vol 2 ). This is of a different order but I hoovered it up and found a fair bit that I hadn't known before - and as ever with Brown, it's also funny. I have family connections to Liverpool too, so a lot of it felt very personal, in a good way. Loved it. Even the sadness of how it all turned out.

Lotsofsocks · 30/11/2020 10:19

Eine - I like odd books as well and loved The Vegetarian. She has also written another called Human Acts which is based on a real event in South Korea.

CabinPressure · 30/11/2020 10:47

You're welcome @FortunaMajor. I'm on the lookout for more of hers now.

Yes @InMyOwnParticularIdiom. Exactly. She makes it all feel so...real. And even when Cathy and Rob are starting to make some dubious choices, I found I was still rooting for them, despite the obvious red flags.

PepeLePew · 30/11/2020 12:54

I had some time over the weekend to read, and managed to wrap up several of the books I had on the go.

101 Troubled Blood by Robert Galbraith

I know this has been widely enjoyed on this thread. I listened to the audiobook which was a wopping 31 hours long but gave me a motivation to get out and do some more running and walking. I found the plot itself somewhat tortuous and most of the time didn't really have a good handle on who was who or what their motives may or may not have been. But I don't think that is really the point of these books, for me at least, as it's all about Robin and Strike and in that regard it was entirely satisfactory. She does character development really well, I think - they are believable and human. Clearly this could have been 25% shorter with no impact at all on the story - far too much extraneous description which doesn't add anything to the narrative - but it is what it is. I did really enjoy this, which is good as Lethal White was a slog.

102 Second Sleep by Robert Harris
This was curious. I picked it up on Overdrive from the library and had to race through it as it was on hold by someone else. I came to it cold, without any clue of what the story was and was completely bewildered by the first couple of chapters before I realised what was going on. It felt quite apt for the tail end of 2020 in many ways as it's certainly a novel about civilisation going awry (hard to say what without spoilers although the "big reveal" is early on in the book). But he could have done so much more with it than he did - it was a great idea that fell apart in the telling, and I was disappointed when it became clear I was not going to get any kind of satisfying resolution to all the questions I had about it. I'd have expected better from someone like Harris who has written some excellent and very clever books in the past.

103 A Moveable Feast by Ernest Hemingway

Short essays - threaded into a more coherent narrative - on his life in Paris as a young writer in the 1920s. He wrote it towards the end of his life and there's no doubt that his memories of poverty (such as it is when poverty involves oysters and fine wine at a cafe on the Left Bank...) are made romantic with age. There's lots to love here in terms of literary gossip (Ezra Pound, F Scott Fitzgerald and Gertrude Stein loom large, as does the proprietor of Shakespeare & Co) and reflections on the writing process. And if you know and love Paris this is a good book to read while travel is so difficult - I found it comforting and evocative.