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50 Books Challenge 2026 Part Three

997 replies

Southeastdweller · 04/03/2026 19:56

Welcome to the third thread of the 50 Books Challenge for this year.

The challenge is to read fifty books (or more!) in 2026, 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
6
Welshwabbit · 12/04/2026 18:36

28 After the Fire by Jane Casey

I have been very good, keeping this til mid-month! Number 6 in the Maeve Kerrigan series and not my favourite, although others seem to have liked it. It started off really well, with the disparate stories of different families in a tower block which, shortly afterwards, goes up in flames. I liked the initial delving into their stories, but one of them assumed prominence only to be left frustratingly unresolved (although it had Derwent sniffing around, so maybe it'll return later). There was also a return for a previous storyline, which I was glad to see reach a resolution, but I didn't much like the way it was resolved. Casey's writing remains sharp, engaging and pulled me along despite it not being my favourite set of plotlines. Next one in May!

SheilaFentiman · 12/04/2026 18:45

Arran2024 · 12/04/2026 17:51

Oops Booker!!

There should be a prize called the Nooker. Best book for devouring in one sitting, curled up in a cosy nook with tea and scones!

BeaAndBen · 12/04/2026 19:09

@Tarahumara - I agree about Project Hail Mary, I laughed a lot.

@CornishLizard, I didn't like James at all either. I'm glad it's not representative of Percival's work overall.

@Arran2024 , I loved Arthur And George. It's unexpected and fun.

I couldn't get on with Ferrante either. Everyone told me I'd love her but I just didn't click with it at all.

noodlezoodle · 12/04/2026 23:04

Terpsichore · 07/04/2026 23:25

27. The Private Life of the Diary - Sally Bayley

Started this months ago, put it down for some reason, then just picked it up a couple of days ago and it suddenly clicked in that funny way that happens sometimes. Bayley is an Oxford academic but with a difference - lives on a narrowboat, grew up in a strange and dysfunctional household of 12 children run by women - her grandmother, mother, and dominating aunt. Bayley was a bookish child who loved writing but her neglectful upbringing led her to put herself in care aged 14. We learn a lot of this through snippets about her own life, interwoven with the diaries she quotes from - everyone from Pepys to Alan Clark. She has a special affinity with Virginia Woolf, who features prominently.
I enjoyed this, although it’s not a conventional study of the form of diary-writing; more a slightly dream-like blend of history and memoir. I wasn’t totally surprised to discover that Bayley has actually written a memoir about her upbringing, Girl with Dove, which I'd be quite interested to read.

Terpsichore this sounds absolutely up my alley, thank you for posting.

I also recently acquired (RWYO fail) a book called Our Diairies, Ourselves which looks similarly intriguing.

Terpsichore · 12/04/2026 23:21

I also recently acquired (RWYO fail) a book called Our Diairies, Ourselves which looks similarly intriguing

I do like the sound of that, @noodlezoodle!

SheilaFentiman · 12/04/2026 23:58
  1. The Hanging Shed - Gordon Ferris

A KUL bold; first in a series.

Set in 1946, our investigator is Douglas Brodie, former policeman turned army captain, now aspiring reporter. His plans for the rest of his life are put on hold when he is called back to Glasgow to help an old school friend/love rival, Hugh, formerly presumed dead in an air battle. But Hugh is in jail, shortly to hang for the brutal murder of several adolescent boys, unless Brodie can help his lawyer win on appeal.

I liked Brodie and his derring-do, and will be happy to read more.

FuzzyCaoraDhubh · 13/04/2026 09:18

Slow Horses: Mick Herron.

Slough House #1. A short review as the series is well known. Slough House is where former M15 agents go to while away the time after they screw up their careers. They are given mundane tasks, they hate their jobs and they can't stand each other. However, when a young man is abducted and his kidnappers threaten to broadcast his beheading live on the internet, the 'Slow Horses' seize the chance to redeem themselves.

I liked this very much. It was a good pacey read with lots of twists and turns and interesting characters, particularly Jackson Lamb who is a complete nut job.

Typo

bibliomania · 13/04/2026 10:58

@SheilaFentiman The Hanging Shed sounds like my kind of thing. I've signed up for a 30 day free trial of KU to read that plus the new Eva St John time travel book set in Norwich.

41. 12 Birds to Save your Life, Charlie Corbett
I've suddenly started listening to birds this year, after fifty years of vaguely registering them squawking in the background. Downloaded a bird id app and I feel as if a whole new dimension has opened up to me. This book describes the author doing much the same thing, although in his case it's to cope with grieving over his mother's terminal illness. He writes very well - I particularly enjoyed the chapter about his eccentric relatives living on the Isle of Mull. Worth a read if you have even a passing interest in the birdies.

42. Claire Clairmont and the Shelleys, Robert Gittings and Jo Manton
This book has been sitting on my shelf for eight years, so I am extremely pleased to have finally read it. And it was well worth waiting for. What a life - running away to the Continent with Shelley and her stepsister at 16, setting her cap at Byron aged 19 and bearing him a child, then after Shelley's death off to St Petersburg and Moscow as a governess. Living as a Romantic who survived in a the much staider Victorian era, her final days inspired Henry James' The Aspern Papers, although she was a much livelier character than James portrayed. Flawed, intensely human, and definitely worthy of her own biography. Loved this.

43. Killing me Softly, Christie Watson
I loved her nursing memoir, The Language of Kindness. This is a fictional account of three nurses in a hellish London ER. Is a nurse deliberately killing people? How can you even tell in the chaos? It doesn't sit very neatly in the conventions of crime fiction, but it certainly evokes the overwhelming environment. I was interested although not entirely satisfied.

SheilaFentiman · 13/04/2026 12:10

@bibliomania all four Brodie books are on KUL (refreshing, as often there's only the first in a series to tempt you!) so I have downloaded.

SheilaFentiman · 13/04/2026 12:16

70. Memorial Days - Geraldine Brooks

This was a wonderful book. Much better (IMO) than A Year of Magical Thinking, which it references.

Written by the author of Horse and March, this alternates between the sudden death of her husband Tony in May 2019, and the trip that Brooks took post-pandemic to an isolated shack on Flinders Island off the coast of Tasmania to revisit and properly live through her grief, which was clouded at the time by both the admin of death and the impact of the pandemic just as she and her sons were coming through the first wave.

Short, sparse, beautiful.

bibliomania · 13/04/2026 13:02

Even better, thanks @SheilaFentiman !

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 13/04/2026 13:06

26 . The Savage Noble Death Of Babs Dionne by Ron Currie

Babs Dionne is a teenager when she murders a cop who has raped her. Many years later she is the matriarch of the rundown seedy town in which she lives, controlling the supply of OxyContin; when a Man appears from nowhere with questions and threats.

I don’t know how this ended up on my Wish List I don’t remember putting it there but it came up for 99p.

I was half in and half out of this, I didn’t like the overall tone and found it dialogue heavy but the plot interested me well enough.

However it was only ok to my mind, there was evidence to show that the writer was capable of better and wasn’t being consistent and there was only one character Lori, well drawn enough to care about.

Not for me.

TheDonsDingleberries · 13/04/2026 13:54

16) I'm a Fan by Sheena Patel. A chaotic unnamed narrator writes about her 'situationship' with a married philanderer, and her obsession with one of his other affair partners.

The woman she's obsessed with is everything the narrator is not; a privileged, white, nepo-baby and professional lifestyle influencer/author. The man she wants to be with is also successful and charismatic. And a habitual cheat who seems to delight in pitting our narrator against the woman she's obsessed with.

This book was a bit of a fever dream. Our narrator acknowledges that the man she wants to be with is toxic in the extreme, and flits between infatuation and hatred for him in the blink of an eye. A walking contradiction, she's simultaneously self aware of her delusions and indulgent of them. To add to this she physically abuses her unwitting boyfriend, and admits that she's sometimes unpleasant for her friends to be around. In short, she's bloody awful and nothing really gets resolved. Yet somehow I kept coming back and thinking about this book.

I'm not sure exactly what to make of this one, so I'll give it a solid 2.5 of of 5.

RazorstormUnicorn · 13/04/2026 14:50

Despite only finishing one book (or maybe two?) since the first of the month, I just picked up some more deals 🤣

Ann Patchett - State of Wonder & Commonwealth £1.99 each
Susan Choi - Flashlight 99p

Flashlight is long listed for a prize, and it was the one I couldn't justify buying in Waterstones with my vouchers but the hand written note by a staff member made me think I'd want to read it. I forgot to add it to my list, but it's popped up today somehow!

ChessieFL · 13/04/2026 16:27

The Adventures of Portly The Otter: Untold Tales from The Wind in the Willows - M G Leonard

This is a children’s book, but it’s beautifully illustrated so it was a joy to read. Portly is a minor character mentioned in TWITW and here he’s given a whole book and several different adventures which feature Ratty, Mole, Badger and Mr Toad. Lovely.

The Bookstore Diaries - Susan Mallery

The blurb makes this sound as if it will be an interesting story about a town all finding out each others’ secrets and dealing with the fallout. It’s not about that at all. The diaries are a very minor subplot and only one person reads some of the diaries. This is actually just about the love life of the bookshop owner and her sister. Apart from the stupid names (who names a child Gentry?!) it was an ok read. And there was a parrot.

Not Quite Dead Yet - Holly Jackson

Jackson usually writes YA and this is her first adult book. It still felt quite YA though, just with lots of swearing. Jet is hit over the head one night, and ends up with an aneurysm that’s going to burst and kill her in a week, so during that time she tries to solve her own murder. If you can suspend disbelief (would someone in that condition be allowed to leave hospital? And even if they are I don’t think they would be capable of some of the things Jet gets up to!) it’s an entertaining enough read.

A Tale of Two Cities - Charles Dickens

From the ridiculous to the sublime - a long coach journey yesterday helped me finish off this readalong book. I’ll save comments for that thread in due course but will just say here that I loved it.

bibliomania · 13/04/2026 16:32

@ChessieFL , I totally pictured that "long coach journey" as you jouncing along in a stagecoach.

myislandhome · 13/04/2026 17:41

I got

The Complete Novels of Jane Austen: Emma, Pride and Prejudice, Sense and Sensibility, Northanger Abbey, Mansfield Park, Persuasion, and Lady Susan (The Heirloom Collection)

for my kindle today - amazon 99p

Stowickthevast · 13/04/2026 18:09

There was a book on my wishlist today in the deals Good People. I think this was one of the Observer's debut books of the year, and one quite a few book tubers picked as a possible Woman's Prize book.

I've just finished Paradiso 17 by Hannah Lilith Assadi. Reviwed up thread by @ÚlldemoShúl, this follows a Palestinian man Sofian from being forced to leave his home aged 5 in Palestine in the Nabka, through his life in the middle East, Italy and New York. I liked this at first, the language was lyrical and thought it was an interesting premise but as the book progresses, Sofian becomes more self destructive and unlikeable. No women have any real character in this book and are generally treated terribly. Apparently the author based it on her father, which makes me feel quite bad for her. Not one for me.

ChessieFL · 13/04/2026 19:00

@bibliomania that would have been more atmospheric but probably a lot less comfortable!

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 13/04/2026 19:18

Like @ChessieFL I’ve also finished A Tale Of Two Cities well ahead of the Readalong deadline.
Not sure why it’s taken me quite so many decades to get round to reading it, but it’s a rollicking adventure, memorable characters, very fast paced - particularly in the final third - and quite different to other Dickens I have read. Looking forward to the end of month discussion and the new BBC adaptation. I hope they do it justice.
Now back to Naples for the fourth book in the Neopolitan Quartet!

InTheCludgie · 14/04/2026 06:14

ChessieFL · 13/04/2026 19:00

@bibliomania that would have been more atmospheric but probably a lot less comfortable!

I've got Paradiso 17 sitting as a suspended hold on Libby. I'm holding out to see if it makes the WP shortlist but I think I may just give it a miss completely

InTheCludgie · 14/04/2026 06:37

Sorry was meant to quote @Stowickthevast there! Am still half asleep here

RomanMum · 14/04/2026 06:52

@BestIsWest I know what you mean - this is why I’m tackling the Peter Sellers in sections with other books in between. @Stowickthevast I quite like going down those rabbit holes but it does hold up reading the book.

@Arran2024 I also loved Arthur and George.

RazorstormUnicorn · 14/04/2026 08:39

The Book of Trespass by Nick Hayes

This book has sat on my shelves for years and then took weeks to read. Inspired by the read-a-longs, I read it in small chunks each morning.

Hayes writes about fascinating topics, but never quite draws me in. It's easy to put down and I sigh before picking it up.

He explains concepts that I maybe should have known but didn't, that the vast estates owned by titled families were largely built off the back of compensation of releasing slaves. Many in those families then go on to be MPs to continue to create laws for their own benefit. A surprising amount of these super rich even get subsidies or perhaps we should call them benefits.

There's so much more than I have already forgotten but in general I am pissed off all over again that almost no one in power is actually working for equality or to make a better world in general, everyone is just out for themselves.

My next career move might be to become a full time hippy and go and live at protest sites and try and stop trees from being cut down.

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 14/04/2026 20:20

27 . Everything Is Tuberculosis by John Green

John Green is primarily known as a YA writer and is also a prolific YouTuber. Here he takes the opportunity to illuminate all the various complexities around the illness tuberculosis and its treatment.

I have read a few John Green works and particularly rated Looking For Alaska.

This was <200 pages and I thought I would absolutely fly through it and I didn’t.

Whilst I was very moved by the plight of Sierra Leone’s Henry…I found this book very hard work and very dull and I regretted deferring another book for it

I feel almost guilty saying that

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