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50 Book Challenge 2021 Part Five

1000 replies

southeastdweller · 13/04/2021 22:56

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

The challenge is to read fifty books (or more!) in 2021, though reading fifty isn't mandatory. Any type of book can count, and please try to let us all know your thoughts on what you've read. Could everyone embolden their titles and/or authors as well, please, as it makes the books talked about easier to track?

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:
JaninaDuszejko · 02/05/2021 06:23

27 Ms Ice Sandwich by Mieko Kawakami

Very short novella (really a short story) about a young boy written in the first person. There's always an artifice in these types of books to make them readable but the child in this one is close in age to DS so the level of sophistication the boy had was continually jarring for me, e.g. his interest in art is more similar to that of my teenage daughter. But the story was charming enough and it would make a lovely dreamy art house film where not a lot was said but there were lots of meaningful glances. I think I'm just the wrong reader right now.

CluelessMama · 02/05/2021 08:21

Finished 18. The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas. Was keen to reread this after I finished Concrete Rose. I rate these novels very highly and it was great to read them together to look at how the author links the two.
Currently reading Peaches for Monsieur Le Curé. The third book in the Chocolat series and it is good to be back in Lansquenet.
Listening to Poverty Safari on audio.
Bought Year of Wonders for 99p in Kindle deals yesterday, been wanting to get my hands on it for ages.
Met up with a friend and she passed on her recent reads for me to borrow - The Vanishing Half, The Midnight Library, Dear Edward and Love After Love.
I'm reading more than ever but TBR still seems to be growing!

Midnightstar76 · 02/05/2021 08:30

Unnatural Causes by Dr Richard Shepherd
Another DNF for me. I am disappointed that I have not been gripped by this. I thought it would be right up my street and would be very interesting. However dare I say it but I found it quite boring. Just checked the reviews on goodreads and can see most reviewers have given it five stars. So I am disappointed as I thought it would be a brilliant, insightful and fascinating read. Does anyone agree with me? I know I am probably in the minority for enjoyment of this book. I acquired this for free from a work colleague last year as she thought I would like it as I enjoy watching true crime etc.

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 02/05/2021 08:34

Midnight I finished but was underwhelmed by Natural Causes. I thought it had far too much autobiographical stuff in, and I found him arrogant.

CoteDAzur · 02/05/2021 08:43

"Laurent Binet's new book Civilisations. He wrote HHhH which was much loved on here I seem to remember. Is it the one that Cote & Remus agree on?"

Absolutely not. IIRC Remus loved it for some unfathomable reason and my rather more hate-filled review was as below:

  1. HHhH by Laurent Binet

I have already talked rather extensively on my disappointment with this book following glowing reviews on this thread, so it will probably come as no surprise that I hated every page of it. Apologies to its fans.

When I started reading it, I was hoping for an Operation Mincemeat or at least a historical novel of substance. What I got was a collection of minor and often irrelevant anecdotes, written by a self-important, navel-gazing, flippant, unreliable narrator who thinks flip-flopping all around the place makes his writing speshul. Wolf Hall written by a teenager, complete with the same hateworthy present tense and bad grammar. Bad translation was just the icing on the (bitter) cake.

Despite all the "Ooh I read so much on this topic. Ooh look, I have this document and that document in front of me right now" crooning, I didn't get the impression that the author knows much about this period and the organisation behind Heydrich's assassination. The details we are told about are mostly irrelevant, stuff nobody really cares to know about - what the house was like, what kind of dresses someone liked to wear, etc. Meanwhile, the story itself is neglected and is only picked up once in a while, when the author grows tired of whining about the stuff going on in his own life.

I can hardly explain how badly this book grated with me, but perhaps some examples would help:

I tell myself that everything can be useful, that I must immerse myself in a period to understand its spirit – and the thread of knowledge, once you pull at it, continues unravelling on its own. The vastness of the information I amass ends up frightening me. >>> Don't be frightened, little boy. We'll protect you. Hmm

I’ll have to resist the temptation to flaunt my knowledge by writing too many details for this or that scene that I’ve researched too much, I must admit that in this case – regarding Heydrich’s birthplace – my knowledge is a bit sketchy. There are two towns in Germany called Halle, and I don’t even know which one I’m talking about. For the time being, I think it’s not important. We’ll see. >>> Oh yes. You sound really knowledgeable on the subject Hmm

THERE IS NOTHING more artificial in a historical narrative than this kind of dialogue >>> Why did you write it then? WHY?

But that particular day he takes a beating in the first round. Who is his opponent? I haven’t been able to find out. I imagine a left-hander: quick, clever, dark-haired. Perhaps not Jewish – that would be a bit much – but maybe a quarter Jewish. >>> Why make up ridiculous stuff like this? Who cares about the color of his opponent's hair color? Why mention Jewish heritage at all, especially if you don't know that he had any?

faithful to my long-held disgust for realistic novels, I say to myself: Yuk! >>> And you dare write historical fiction??? Shock

I’VE BEEN TALKING rubbish, the victim of both a faulty memory and an overactive imagination. In fact, the head of the British secret service at this time was called ‘C’ – not ‘M’ as in James Bond. Heydrich too called himself ‘C’, and not ‘H’. >>> The book is full of crap like this. He says one thing and then corrects himself literally on the next page. Yes, he has been talking rubbish. A lot if it. Fucking bullshit artist Angry

At 9:00 a.m., the first German tank enters the city. 84 ACTUALLY I DON’T know if it was a tank that first entered Prague. >>> Another example of the continuous flip-flopping and bullshit.

Natacha’s sister is getting married, but I’m not invited to the wedding. Natacha called me a ‘little shit’. I don’t think she can bear me anymore. My life is in ruins. >>> I'm with Natacha. I really am.

The Nazis love burning books, but not files. German efficiency? Who knows if the SA didn’t wipe their asses with some of those precious archives. >>> How did this book win an award? HOW??? I despair.

I’m all too aware that my two heroes are late making their entrance. But perhaps it’s no bad thing if they have to wait. Perhaps it will give them more substance. Perhaps the mark they’ve made in history and on my memory might imprint itself even more profoundly in these pages. Perhaps this long wait in the antechamber of my brain will restore some of their reality, and not just vulgar plausibility. Perhaps, perhaps … but nothing could be less sure! >>> For the sake of all that is literary, what on God's green Earth are you rambling about???

If anyone is in doubt, I'm not recommending this book Grin

BestIsWest · 02/05/2021 08:52

Cote you didn’t like it much then?

Midnight I was underwhelmed by Unnatural Causes too.

Lockdowntherabbithole · 02/05/2021 08:55

The Last House On Needless Street Overall this book was excellent and I’d recommend it! However, to start off with I felt a bit mixed and it felt a bit “clumpy” through the first few chapters. Initially, I really didn’t enjoy reading from the cat’s perspective but as the story progressed it worked well.

It’s really evident that the writer did a lot of research into the topics in this book. I think she portrayed the person with mental illness really well.

I really enjoyed the contrasting emotions she is able to make you feel throughout and the constant guessing at different characters. The descriptions she uses are very good. I would say it’s one of the best books I’ve read this year.

CoteDAzur · 02/05/2021 09:22
  1. Origin (Manifold #3) by Stephen Baxter

This was another fantastic book by one of the best Hard SF authors of our time, whose Flood, its sequels Ark and Landfall, as well as the earlier books of the Manifold series Time and Space I already read and reviewed.

An huge ring of metal appears in the sky, takes some people including Malenfant's wife and spews out long-extinct hominids. Meanwhile our moon is replaced by a slightly larger one that clearly has life. Malenfant and fellow astronaut Nemoto go on a mission to explore this new moon, find some answers, and rescue Malenfant's wife.

It sounds silly when I write it down like this but this book was anything but. I never thought I would want to read so much about Neanderthals, Homo Erectus, how they live, hunt, and die etc but the author has wowed a fantastic story and I was sorry that it came to an end.

I found Homo Sapiens's interactions with the other species very well done, especially after the arrival of one that is more advanced than us, whose talents and technology are as incomprehensible to us as ours are to the Neanderthals.

I recommend this book to all SF readers here.

Welshwabbit · 02/05/2021 09:31

I see Mari Hannah is on the Big Deal today. Has anyone read any of her books? There seem to be 3 series but annoyingly the first one of the Kate Daniels series isn't on the deal. But all three Stone & Oliver books are. Is she worth a look, police procedural fans?

SOLINVICTUS · 02/05/2021 09:57

@Welshwabbit

I see Mari Hannah is on the Big Deal today. Has anyone read any of her books? There seem to be 3 series but annoyingly the first one of the Kate Daniels series isn't on the deal. But all three Stone & Oliver books are. Is she worth a look, police procedural fans?
Never heard of her. I tend to avoid the whole "first in the Doreen Blenkinsop series" when they appear as a) they're rarely as good as the blurb tries to convince me b) it annoys me that the publishers assume I'm going to be impressed that Doreen has a whole series c) I need my series to be tried and trusted by either a TV series with excellent acting (Ann Cleeves) or someone on here telling me it's good!
Welshwabbit · 02/05/2021 10:05

@SOLINVICTUS that's exactly my fear! I am coming to the end of the Vera series and feel the need for something to replace it!

SOLINVICTUS · 02/05/2021 10:16

The generic covers don't help! I went through a phase of buying up all these series just because they were there, but I figure I'm an avid reader, I'm 55, I've read a lot of police procedurals, and if you've written so many books and I've never even heard of you, there may be a reason!

That makes me sound very smug! Sorry-not-sorry Grin

Have you read Ann Cleeves' Shetland?

Welshwabbit · 02/05/2021 10:40

No, not read the Shetland series. Is it as good as Vera?

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 02/05/2021 11:49

Cote Grin Grin Grin
Well, I LOVED it and was captivated from start to finish. I loved the way it played with narratives and ideas of how history is shaped by opinion and context, and I was genuinely scared and horrified by sections of it.

My OH, on the other hand, didn't finish it. But he is clearly a fool.

BestIsWest · 02/05/2021 12:10

Welsh Shetland not as good as Vera but still one of the better procedurals. Her new Two Rivers series is shaping up nicely too.

CoteDAzur · 02/05/2021 13:32

Remus - Clearly, you find whiny nonsense about fringe details nobody cares about a lot more captivating than I do Grin

Also, I guess you don't recognize this book's style as quintessentially French, and while this might be quaint or just different for you, it is the navel-gazing, fluffy, self-important rubbish I wade through every day of my life, so it is considerably less interesting for me.

SOLINVICTUS · 02/05/2021 13:53

@BestIsWest

Welsh Shetland not as good as Vera but still one of the better procedurals. Her new Two Rivers series is shaping up nicely too.
I'd agree with that. Shetland not quite as "complete" somehow as the Veras, but still always worth reading. I like the landscape description too.
RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 02/05/2021 16:55

@CoteDAzur

Remus - Clearly, you find whiny nonsense about fringe details nobody cares about a lot more captivating than I do Grin

Also, I guess you don't recognize this book's style as quintessentially French, and while this might be quaint or just different for you, it is the navel-gazing, fluffy, self-important rubbish I wade through every day of my life, so it is considerably less interesting for me.

My patience levels for navel gazing are usually very low tbh, but this must have caught me at just the right moment. I have no opinion about anything French (except pain et fromage), so that wouldn't influence me either way. Grin
Stokey · 02/05/2021 17:14

Sorry Cote, clearly the next Binet book isn't one for you!

I thought the first Shetland bill was amazing but they went off the boil a bit as the series progressed. I think I stopped after 5. Love Vera though and haven't tried her new series.

HeadNorth · 02/05/2021 17:37

Catching up on my reviews:

  1. American Dirt Jeanine Cummins

Like a previous poster, I was aware of the controversy over the author's appropriating of a Mexican woman's experience but tried to read it with an open mind. I found the story of illegal immigration to escape cartels interesting and the experiences were as harrowing as you would expect, but I am conflicted due to the controversy.

  1. Havana Year Zero Karla Suarez

I read this due to a rave review by an earlier poster. Although it was certanly original and quirky, it never really worked for me. The plot was obviously a secondary vehicle and I was fascinated by Cuba in 1993 after the collapse of the Soviet Union, but it never quite gripped. The author's voice began to irritate rather than enagage, I'm nt sure why. But it is worth a read and others may love it.

  1. Heart, You Bully, You Punk - Leah Hager Cohen.

I read this as it was a book referenced in American Dirt and I was fascinated by the title. I find it hard to review, because I adored the book, but the ending enraged me. Like Havana Year Zero the mian protagonist was a mathematician and I found them more realistic than the Cuba book, where it all seemed a bit more incidental. I found myself googling the Mandelbrot–Peano–von Koch snowflake and it worked well as a metaphor for the beautiful complexities of nature and our natures. The plot was slight and built entirely on the emotional progression of three characters: Anna, a troubled teen, her lovely father and the emotionally repressed maths teacher Esker. The writing was exquisite and I was drawn entirely into their New York lives, but the ending made everything that went before seem so hopeless and purposeless I could hardly bear it.

  1. No one Is Talking About This - Patricia Lockwood

Already much reviewed, this is the stand out book of the year for me so far. A novel of 2 halves, the first half the narrator's online life then the second half the time spent with her family when her niece is born with Proteus syndrome and lives a few scant months. This is so cleverly done, with the repressive regime in American politics and the increasing control over women's bodies as a counterpoint to the lived and loved experience, which is told in the same fragmentary way as the first half but with added depth and poignancy. This half is incredible, as a a parent who has spent time in children's high dependency units and indeed had a child die in hospital, Lockwood's style perfectly mirrors the strange, timeless, otherwordly feel of that intense period. Unlike the child death in Hamnet, which left me largely unmoved as it was so obviously written to wring the heart I stubbornly resisted, Lockwood approachs the baby's brief life and death slant ways and ambushes you. The phone malfunctioning and playing 'sail away, saily away, sail away' over and over. "'My battery is low and it is getting dark' the Mars rover said in the portal." "'There is no relief. I would have done it for all time'. Then told of a bill she hadreceived for $61,000." At the end the narrator is dancing in a club "She wondered was it worth it to show up, hear a little music and then leave?". The book seemed genuinely innovative and is one of the best I have read on child loss and grief, while not losing its political punch. I looked up the author and found out she first published a poem called Rape Joke you can read it here. Warning: it is powerful stuff. Lockwood can really write.

Sadik · 02/05/2021 18:24

I remember thinking HhHH was very French, Cote Grin (I did finish it, but wouldn't rush to read another by the same author)

cassandre · 02/05/2021 18:26

Janina, I've added Nervous Conditions to my TBR list too -- thank you!

I'm with Cote on Binet, I'm afraid. Although I wouldn't call his style typical of France in general, I would see it as typical of a particular subcategory of French culture -- male-dominated, academic, self-congratulatory, masturbatory, 'look at me I'm so clever'. I can't stand Houellebecq either (in fact my dislike of Houellebecq is so great that my feelings toward Binet are quite benign in comparison!).

I should say I've only read one of Binet's books though, The Seventh Function of Language, which is a detective novel featuring a lot of famous post-structuralist literary theorists. In theory that kind of book should be right up my street, because I like detective fiction and (in my grad school days anyway) I read (and admired!) a lot of French post-structuralist theory. And I did find the book quite witty and fun at first. A few of the historical events in it are real (Barthes dying after being hit by a laundry van, Althusser going mad and killing his wife). It was also amusing (at first at least) to read vivid accounts of Foucault having gay sex in bathhouses with various young North African men. After awhile though the narrative became impossibly hard to follow and (IMO) increasingly self-indulgent. For example, there was a secret society of rhetoricians who punished one another for losing debates by ritualistically cutting each other's limbs off. (Really.) At some point I stopped finding it witty. It took me months to finish -- I kept picking it up and putting it down (which probably didn't help me follow the intricacies of the plot, now that I think about it!). I finally finished but promised myself I would never inflict a Binet book on myself again. Grin This might be a shame because I've seen really good reviews of HHHh, but ... non. Je peux pas. La vie est trop courte. Grin

cassandre · 02/05/2021 18:30

HeadNorth, that is a gorgeous review of No One Is Talking About This.

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 02/05/2021 18:57

I was annoyed at points with HHhH for exact reasons Cote describes but interest enough in his "different approaches" to give another chance.

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 02/05/2021 19:02

I did review it at the time but not on here and I think I said that I would much rather have had a straightforward historical about the two Czech heroes Grin

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