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50 Books Challenge 2025 Part Three

994 replies

Southeastdweller · 15/02/2025 11:18

Welcome to the third thread of the 50 Book Challenge for this year.
The challenge is to read fifty books (or more!) in 2025, 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.

If possible, please can you embolden your titles and maybe authors as well of books you've read or going to read? It makes it much easier to keep track, especially when the threads move quickly at this time of the year.

The first thread of the year is here and the second thread here.

OP posts:
Thread gallery
14
PepeLePew · 22/02/2025 12:24

I have had A Bookshop of One's Own on my list for a while now. Thanks for the heads up. Have caught up - more or less - on The Count of Monte Cristo and am now going to bury myself in Good Material by Dolly Alderton. I'm not a millennial but I do enjoy her writing and it feels like just what is needed today.

inaptonym · 22/02/2025 12:28

@bettbburg I liked A Bookshop of One's Own though it was much less bookish than expected, still v engaging as social history (and made me wish I'd been - only ever saw the little corner in Foyles.)

@cassandre 💐thank you for sharing. This is woefully inadequate but in spooky thread synchronicity, I was going to ask pages ago if you'd read Despentes' Cher Connard (Dear Dickhead in Frank Wynne's translation). The English blurb really emphasised the MeToo feminist satire aspect - which it did have in spaaaaades - but I was surprised at the prominence of addiction and NA in it too, sensitively and movingly treated. TBF my only other point of reference was Baise-Moi... 😅 I'm looking forward to reading more of her work, will start with KKT.

@AgualusasLover psst Tamburlaine is Marlowe not Shakespeare unless that was deliberate Really helpful review of a book I'm now crossing off TBR - sounds too dusty scholarly. I've enjoyed Jack Weatherford's Mongol books as cracking pop history reads, though they're highly biased and apparently full of inaccuracies. Still looking for a Goldilocks option!

inaptonym · 22/02/2025 12:34

Sorry, long post-haters, I'm playing catch up with some reads of reissued books

Linden Rise - Richmal Crompton
Crompton is most famous for Just William but this from 1952 is one of her (many) more novels aimed at adults [tbf she maintained the JW stories were as well], and proved a darker/more serious take on some similar ingredients. Persephone reprints her Family Roundabout, which would make a fitting title for this too - exactly the well-written, absorbing middlebrow family saga I was in the mood for, the servant's eye view giving it an extra twist. Beginning in 1892 when young Tilly Pound is hired as maid to a genteel family taking holiday cottage Linden Rise (philandering father, manipulative mother, 4 children variously pompous, vain, irresponsible and lost) and ending with her in old age, focusing on relationships and domestic detail (so much of food and clothes! 😍) with almost nothing of wider world events.
Objectively this was pretty soapy and tropey, but the levels of Saga Drama (which can sometimes make me switch off emotionally) were tempered by the light, witty style and comic elements, including a delightful timid-spinster-breaks-bad storyline. As in the JW stories, sympathies lie firmly with the unconventional and overlooked, but I was still wrong-footed at times, and at others quite moved, especially when characters were at their youngest and oldest. Not sure it's not going to stand the test of time (in my memory, not Literary History) but I'm bolding because of how much I enjoyed the reading experience.
(Of Its Time caveats apply, the most egregious probably the baby who gets a cute nickname beginning with N to go with his tan…)

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 22/02/2025 13:02

@PepeLePew

Let me know what you think of the end of Good Material

inaptonym · 22/02/2025 13:19

Stories for Winter and Nights by the Fire ed. Simon Thomas
Latest British Library Women Writers anthology of 14 short stories presented in chronological order (all but one pre-1960). While the choice of authors was very much on brand for the series, many of the stories weren’t particularly wintry. As with all such collections, a mixed bag, but above average for me: even the duds more forgettable than annoying.
I was already familiar with half the authors, and my favourites tended to be from those: Katherine Mansfield, Elizabeth Bowen, Sylvia Townsend Warner and Elizabeth Taylor all gave bangers. Shirley Jackson’s story (set in a department store - one of my greenest flags ) was also great fun but over in about 3 pages, and I wanted MORE. From new-to-me authors, ‘The Prisoner’ by Elizabeth Berridge (1947, lonely English spinster meets young German POW) and 'The Cut Finger’ by Frances Bellerby (1948, evocative child’s view of a life-altering seaside holiday) were very good and I want to read more by both.

Winter Love - Han Suyin
OTOH this melancholy novella (pub. 1961) really did earn the season in its title. The winter being 1944-5, the love a doomed lesbian affair between two students at a women’s science college: 20 y.o. Bettina aka Red (named for her hair, ‘pure mouse’) and Mara - older, married, with an apparently endless supply of luxuries like French perfume and beautiful clothes. This was another ‘rediscovery’ by an author better known for other things - the semi-autobiographical interracial romance A Many-Splendoured Thing (1952) and, er, a lot of Maoist propaganda Confused

I enjoyed this very much as a period piece, full of student slang, stumbling home in the blackout to cabbage-smelling digs, revolting ‘yellow peril’ buns made with powdered egg and imitation caraway seeds… no doubt based on the author’s experience of studying medicine at the Royal Free in London in this period. The romance was less satisfying, mostly because the whole thing was from Red’s perspective (looking back as a married mother), with Mara remaining as much of a cipher as the other secondary characters - though at least it helped make clear that the relationship failed more because of who Red was than what, iykwim. Not that it would tick every 2025 box (hi, predatory lesbian groomer trope) but I didn’t find it too badly dated considering its age, and was interested to see how the physical and psychological aspects of a same-sex relationship were handled at a time when it was still called ‘inversion’.

Wilfred and Eileen - Jonathan Smith
Persephone books can be hit and miss for me but I really liked this: a deceptively simple story of a young couple in 1913-14, accomplished and moving, with an excellent evocation of period in characterisation and nitty-gritty details, especially of Wilfred’s experiences as trainee doctor. I was surprised to learn from the author’s afterword that this was written in the 1970s, though it was based on a ’true story’, W&E being the grandparents of one of the author's school pupils. The afterword added a lot, including ‘what happened next’ in W&E’s lives and why the author decided to stop his novelisation here.
Apparently this was a real hit in its day, with a 1980s TV adaptation that pulled in over 8 million viewers, but had been sufficiently ‘forgotten’ a generation later for Persephone to reprint - the kind of thing that always makes me wonder how many and which current bestsellers will stay the course. (In forgotten-books-Inception the characters in this read a lot of Arnold Bennett, poster boy for this phenomenon who's been on my TBR forever.)

Terpsichore · 22/02/2025 15:53

Shirley Jackson’s story set in a department store

<Leaps instantly to attention>

PepeLePew · 22/02/2025 16:06

@EineReiseDurchDieZeit - not entirely sure. I didn't really need or want the perspective shift (Andy's story would have been enough for me and it felt like a change of tack too late in the narrative to really make sense) but having been Jen in the not too distant past, I felt very seen (as the kids would say). Nothing worse than realising you're single and yet in a relationship, I would say. I really enjoy Alderton's observational style and I did find myself rooting hard for Andy but I reckon if you're going to tell both sides of the story, you probably do need to commit to telling both sides.

14 Hunted by Abir Mukherjee
Complete mystery as to why this very average thriller got a whole table of its own in Waterstones and such high praise spread all over the cover. It was deeply average and involved a lot of tedious driving around the States in the dark, without the tension ever really getting going despite being told repeatedly how tense the situation was.

13 James by Percival Everett
Late to this, because I loved Huckleberry Finn as a child and having re-read it later in life felt uncomfortable about how uncritically I accepted the portrayal of Jim when I first read it. This deserves all the praise it has had and has made me want to go back to Huckleberry Finn and read it differently.

12 The Wizard of the Kremlin by Giuliano da Empoli
An unnamed narrator is invited to a house just outside Moscow by a man who was beside Putin as he rose to power and shaped Russia as it is today. Baranov – a fictional character but surely based on a real person – tells the story of how Russia shook off its Soviet past and how Russians embraced Putin as their leader, and how he cultivated a sense that the rest of the world was against them and where that led to. There are many real people who feature here whose stories are readily available for fact checking and my memory of Nothing Is True and Everything Is Possible is fresh enough that the details are entirely plausible. This was excellent, even if the blurb suggests it to be something other than it is. It isn’t really a thriller in the usual sense of the word, and it’s more horrifying than thrilling. I’d like to know what someone who understands Russia much better than I do makes of it.

11 The Factory by Hiroko Oyamada
Recommended to me on TikTok by a reviewer who said “if you like Severance, you’ll enjoy this”. I do like Severance and I did enjoy this but I don’t think the two are related. There’s a clear “dystopian workplace” thread and the weirdness of the Factory is as creepy as Lumon Industries so there are certainly similarities but this was a spare, slightly dreamy novel where characters accept their fate and move in overlapping orbits while remaining very much unsevered. I’m still trying to work out exactly what I think of it.

10 The Memory of Animals by Claire Fuller
Neffy enters a medical facility as a trial participant. She will receive a vaccine for a novel virus sweeping the world. She’s unhappy with the life she’s left behind and aware her boyfriend and mother don’t support her choice. Days later, she wakes up after an acute illness – the virus has mutated, the world has emptied out and she is isolated in the unit with four surviving trial participants. Only Neffy had the vaccine – and the virus – so only she is immune.

There was a lot about this that was imperfect – the four other trial participants aren’t fully realised characters and feel much less substantial than Neffy. The two plot devices by which we learn about Neffy’s past are contrived and stretch credulity and I was less interested in her past than her present predicament. And then the slowness of the days in the unit speed ahead suddenly to an ending that doesn’t really do justice to what came before. But I can see this was written during (and possibly slightly prior to) Covid and perhaps that had an impact both on how the book was finished and how I approached it.

9 Lowborn by Kerry Hudson
Memoir of Hudson’s chaotic childhood spent in poverty and her account of revisiting the places she grew up to try to make sense of her childhood. It feels inappropriate to criticise this, not least because I have been fortunate enough to be insulated from the experience she writes about, and I have no bad words to say about the book itself – it was well written, I found parts of it very moving and she is compassionate and curious about her past and able to treat the people who treated her badly with understanding and empathy. And perhaps it was never intended to try to unpack the systemic challenges that keep people trapped in poverty or why we live in a society that is so unequal, but I got the distinct impression that that was what she intended or at least that that was what her publisher wanted the book to be. And yet the horror of her childhood was as much about poor choices by the adults around her as it was about poverty, and as such the book can’t pretend to be an examination of how we have ended up here.

8 Matrescence by Lucy Jones
Thank you to whoever recommended this on here. There was a lot to think about, even 16 years after the birth of my youngest. I read a lot of books about being a mother when the children were young, trying to make sense of what I was feeling and what was happening, but they were either full of misery and angst (looking at you, Rachel Cusk) or unhelpfully joyful. This – I think – would have helped me a lot at the time, and also I hope will make me a better friend to those younger friends of mine currently in the throes of early motherhood.

MrsALambert · 22/02/2025 16:24

10 Chunky - Victoria Wood
This is the omnibus of three of Victoria Wood’s scripts including most of As Seen on TV and Mens Sana in Thingummy Doodah.
I’m a huge Vic fan and knew all of these sketches off by heart but it was lovely to sit and reminisce through them all. So missed.

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 22/02/2025 16:48

I'm currently reading The Secret Hours by Mick Herron - not a Slow Horses book, but it was only 99p. It's awful - really, really boring. Do I want to carry on?

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 22/02/2025 17:13

@PepeLePew

I thought the dark ending was quite interesting, but it was the best thing about the book

PepeLePew · 22/02/2025 17:30

Sounds like between us it was a thumbs up!

AgualusasLover · 22/02/2025 17:32

@inaptonym you are of course totally correct about my Shakespeare/Marlowe mix up. I’d say the book is still worth it, but maybe just the second half. I quite like John Mann’s Mongols book, but he is less of a fact checker and more a worships them kind of historian. Weatherford’s book was always recommended by cote, but I can’t seem to find it so I think DS has taken it off to uni. The Jackson is definitely more about Timur and the Timurids, but that’s what I wanted.

TimeforaGandT · 22/02/2025 18:08

@RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie - although The Secret Hours is not part of the Slow Horses series, it's linked as becomes apparent towards the end (if you make it that far!) so may be worth persevering with from that perspective....

Arran2024 · 22/02/2025 18:19
  1. Strange Pictures by Uketsu

This is a very unusual book. A sensation in Japan, it is just out in the UK.

"Uketsu is an enigmatic you-tuber and author..he only ever appears online wearing a mask and using a voice changer" (so I don't know how they know it's a "he").

Anyway, it's a murder mystery involving a series of stories which turn out to be inter related, and a series of drawings, which form the basic clues.

I find it hard to keep track of the names in Japanes books, so I had to keep going back and checking who was who. But I enjoyed it and it's very clever. It isn't the most amazing literary read but good to try something new for a change.

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 22/02/2025 18:35

@TimeforaGandT I’ve made it far enough to meet a certain somebody and it’s picked up a tiny bit, but practically nothing has happened so far. I’ll finish it, I think, but the first 30% is unforgivably dull.

highlandcoo · 22/02/2025 18:35

@inaptonym I very much like the sound of Linden Rise. It's an expensive purchase if not read on Kindle; a beautiful cover though.

I was a big Just William fan as a child. Jennings and Derbyshire too if anyone remembers them. I read a lot of St Clare's, Malory Towers and Chalet School stories too, but found the humour in JW and J&D more appealing.

TimeforaGandT · 22/02/2025 19:14

I have an appalling memory but assume it must improve as I don't remember it being awful!

Tarahumara · 22/02/2025 20:50

I also loved the Just William books as a child.

MargotMoon · 22/02/2025 20:53

I don't know how many people need/wish to download their e-books from Amazon on to a USB but if you do you may wish to watch this video before Wednesday:

It's also very interesting re: information dystopia...

On a separate note, if I haven't read Huckleberry Finn, is there any point reading James? (Or rather, if I want to read James presumably I need to be familiar with HF first?)

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 22/02/2025 22:41

@MargotMoon

I'd already read Huck Finn and mostly forgotten it before I read James - I don't think it matters too much

Stowickthevast · 22/02/2025 22:42

@MargotMoon I read James without reading Huck Finn. I occasionally looked bits up on line to see if they happened in the original text, but a big chunk of the book is James' adventure when he is separated from Huck, so isn't in the book.

You probably get a better picture if you read Twain too but I still really enjoyed it and didn't have to wade through Twain.

MonOncle · 22/02/2025 23:17

7 Tom Lake, Ann Patchett

I’m sure a lot of you have read or are aware of this one. This is set during the pandemic but is very light touch with it. Lara and Joe’s three adult daughters have all returned home to the family fruit farm to ride it out. The usual summer season fruit pickers are not able to come to work for working distance reasons, so the family attempt to tackle this by themselves. While they pick, the girls beg Lara to tell them about the love affair she had with movie star Peter Duke before he was famous, when they were both in a production at the theatre company Tom Lake.

This is my first Ann Patchett and I loved it. I am going to have to seek out some more from her. Her writing is stunning, skilfully simple. I loved how the many, little reveals were just gently popped in. I was reminded of Little Women as a big part of the story was of the mother/daughters, sister/sister relationships and the love and tension that go with them. A lovely comfort read. And for me a bold.

MargotMoon · 22/02/2025 23:31

Thanks @EineReiseDurchDieZeit and @Stowickthevast, will pinch DF's copy when he has finished and give it a go.

Clairedebear101286 · 23/02/2025 08:17

My list so far...
(1) The Nurse by Valerie Keogh
(2) The Wrong Child by Julia Crouch and M. J. Arlidge
(3) The Perfect Parents By J.A. Baker
(4) Darkest Fear, written by Harlen Coben
(5) Old Filth by Jane Gardam
(6) The Man in the Wooden Hat by Jane Gardam

Latest book....

(7)Last Friends by Jane Gardam

(Taken from amazon)

Old Filth and The Man in the Wooden Hat told with bristling tenderness and black humour the stories of that Titan of the Hong Kong law courts, Old Filth QC, and his clever, misunderstood wife Betty. Last Friends, the final volume of this trilogy, picks up with Terence Veneering, Filth's great rival in work and - though it was never spoken of - in love.
Veneering's were not the usual beginnings of an establishment silk: the son of a Russian acrobat marooned in northeast England and a devoted local girl, he escapes the war to emerge in the Far East as a man of panache, success and fame. But, always, at the stuffy English Bar he is treated with suspicion: where did this blond, louche, brilliant Slav come from?
Veneering, Filth and their friends tell a tale of love, friendship, grace, the bittersweet experiences of a now-forgotten Empire and the disappointments and consolations of age.

I enjoyed the trilogy overall but I fear the ongoing theme/ message was lost on me...

Onto the next 👍

SheilaFentiman · 23/02/2025 08:41

29 Goodfellowe MP - Michael Dobbs

One from the front log - I bought this in 2014. Dobbs worked with Thatcher and Major and wrote the original House of Cards (which was brilliantly adapted by the BBC, with Ian Richardson as Francis Urqhart, the power hungry Whip)

Goodfellowe is a disgraced back benched who lost his ministerial role after drink driving and who has a tricky family life after the death of his son and with a lack of money meaning he may have to pull his DD out of boarding school. Mysteriously, though, young and beautiful women find him attractive despite his general scruffiness and lack of life skills.

He comes up against newspaper owner, Freddie Corsa, who wants to get a Press bill through select committee. Family loyalties and conscience war with his depleted finances.( Corsa was reminiscent of Roland Voss, for long term Brookmyre fans)

This was… OK. I considered DNFing but persisted. I remember House of Cards being very good, but I was a lot younger when I read it and it was less common for politicos to spill the beans in books (with the dishonourable exception of Jeffrey Archer). There are more in the series, but I don’t think I will read them.

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