Help end medical misogyny. Sign our petition.

Help end medical misogyny.
Sign our petition.

Sign the petition

Please or to access all these features

What we're reading

Find your new favourite book or recommend one on our Book forum.

50 Books Challenge 2026 Part Five

672 replies

Southeastdweller · 01/06/2026 09:26

Welcome to the fifth 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 as this makes it much easier to keep track of books or authors that may appeal (or not appeal) to everyone else.

Some of us bring over our updated lists to the new thread. Again, this is up to you.

The first thread of the year is here the second thread here, the third thread here and the fourth thread

OP posts:
Thread gallery
6
cassandre · 11/06/2026 18:08

Still catching up with comments very belatedly, as is my wont. 😳

@Piggywaspushed you said You can still get through AQA A level English Lit without doing a single text by a non white male, unbelievably. Apart from the odd poem. Bloody shocking that is!

@elkiedee interesting that you studied Comp Lit; I did a degree in Comp Lit as well. I think that one healthy message I took away from that degree was a suspicion of literary canons. I do love Comp Lit as a discipline. One problem with academia is that it can be very compartmentalised. Whereas Comp Lit encouraged reading in translation, reading across periods, reading across genres. You didn't have to be an official expert in order to jump in and say something interesting about a text, any text. I like that mindset.

@Terpsichore amazing review of When the Coffee Gets Cold 😂I'm a member of two book groups in real life: one is more highbrow and the other more geared toward popular literature. I can see Kawaguchi going down well with the latter book group! I do love both groups though and they both induce me to read books I wouldn't have picked up otherwise.

@ÚlldemoShúl I'm very envious of you attending the Sarah Moss / Wendy Erskine event. I'm glad it didn't disappoint.

@FuzzyCaoraDhubh I'm very excited about reading Land now after your glowing review! I feel a bit bad I was so underwhelmed when I heard O'Farrell speak about it last week. I suspect it's much better to attend an author event after you've read the book, rather than before; you get more out of it.

@SpunkyKhakiScroller I felt the same as you about Sonia and Sunny. I wanted to like it, but it just never engaged me. I did finish it, but it felt like more a chore than it should have done.

Speaking of DNFs, The Mercy Step was a DNF for me: another book that I wanted to like but didn't. I just didn't get on with the narratorial voice (I think someone else on the threads said this too, but I can't remember who it was). Some of the narrator's language and perceptions were very adult, while others were very childlike, and the inconsistency drove me crazy. I don't mind child narrators, but this one didn't work for me.

Am looking forward to finding out the Women's Prize winners tonight. Am hoping for Susan Choi and Arundhati Roy (though I'm not very qualified to nominate Roy as her memoir is the only book on the nonfiction shortlist I've read).

Stowickthevast · 11/06/2026 18:44

@Owlbookend Flowers

Sorry to hear things are tough. What are you on the mood for? I really enjoyed The Correspondent recently as a light but not too light read.

  1. Kin - Tayari Jones. This follows two girls who grow up motherless in a small town in Mississippi in the 40s and 50s. Vernice's mother was murdered by her father when she was a baby and she is brought up by her aunt and Annie whose mother walked out on her when she was a baby leaving her with her grandma. The book follows the paths the two cradle mates take up to their early 20s. It was ok but not one I felt particularly emotionally involved in.

  2. Look What You Made Me Do - John Lanchester. This was a quick read. Two main characters again. Kate is a West London housewife in her 50s married to an architect Jack. They're quite smug marrieds until Jack suddenly dies (very early on). While Kate is coming to terms with his death, the new must watch show premieres about a married man having an affair with a younger woman. The show has intimate knowledge of their love life and is written by the other main character Phoebe. The rest of the book is partly about why and partly about the fallout. Both Kate and Phoebe are pretty horrible people, but there are some quite amusing parts where people are theorising about ridiculous things - Jack has a tirade about Ottolenghi at one point. Again it's not bad, but not sure I agree with Marina Hyde who was raving about this.

Women's prize winner about to be announced. The favourite seems to be Flashlight.

Owlbookend · 11/06/2026 18:58

@Stowickthevast something with a plot that will get me hooked, but not mindless dross 🙂. Looking at my old lists something like Attica Locke (ive read most of hers now - modern deep south set thrillers), The God of the Woods or The Vanishing Half. I have been stingy & sticking to borrowbox. The selection unless you are patient to wait for reserves is a bit shit. Trying to labour through stuff just because it is available isnt helping. I have DNFs in double figures. I need to splash out on a kindle book i actually want to read.

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 11/06/2026 19:03

@Owlbookend I nominate The Names by Florence Knapp, though TW for DV it might not fit your mood

Owlbookend · 11/06/2026 19:06

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 11/06/2026 19:03

@Owlbookend I nominate The Names by Florence Knapp, though TW for DV it might not fit your mood

I think that is a good shout. I dont mind it being a bit heavy if I can get into it.

ÚlldemoShúl · 11/06/2026 19:20

Women’s Prize has been announced- Spoilers below…

Non-fiction- The Finest Hotel
in Kabul - Lyse Doucet (I really liked this)

Fiction- The Correspondent- Virginia Evans (not my favourite but still a good read and will be a very popular choice I reckon- may also be a good read for you Owlbookend)

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 11/06/2026 19:28

I’m very glad The Correspondent won even though its had its critics on here and elsewhere

InTheCludgie · 11/06/2026 20:01

Also glad The Correspondent won, was expecting it to be Flashlight (a DNF for me).
@Stowickthevast I'm currently reading Kin and like you, am finding it just OK.

I've started The Break by Marian Keyes on audio and have forgotten how funny her books can be. It's years since I last read anything by her.

Arran2024 · 11/06/2026 20:10

I am clearly out of touch - i am bewildered by the popularity of The Correspondent and I am here to give my review of my latest read, (27) By Your Side by Ruth Jones (Nessa from Gavin and Stacey) which has excellent reviews, but i didn't like it at all. I only kept going because my husband went to the Hay Festival and brought it back as a present (of all the books....).

It's like one of those romantic novels, only with 50 somethings rather than 30 somethings - the sort where people become best friends with multiple complete strangers in a few days and go through a complete transformation and all strings are satisfactorily tied up.

It is described as "heart warming" in lots of reviews - I clearly have a heart of stone!

It breezes on through the tbf fairly interesting plot, but with little subtlety. My previous read was a William Trevor - understated, with nothing much happening, but oh the complexity of it. By Your Side was simply not for me.

Piggywaspushed · 11/06/2026 20:10

Both those winners just came in the post for me this very day. Psychic delivery men!

cassandre · 11/06/2026 20:53

That's a coincidence Piggy!

I'm happy enough with The Correspondent winning. I thought it was original and charming. It would have been a bold for me except I thought the ending verged a little on the saccharine.

I look forward to reading The Finest Hotel in Kabul as I've heard good things about it.

elkiedee · 11/06/2026 20:56

Owlbookend · 11/06/2026 18:58

@Stowickthevast something with a plot that will get me hooked, but not mindless dross 🙂. Looking at my old lists something like Attica Locke (ive read most of hers now - modern deep south set thrillers), The God of the Woods or The Vanishing Half. I have been stingy & sticking to borrowbox. The selection unless you are patient to wait for reserves is a bit shit. Trying to labour through stuff just because it is available isnt helping. I have DNFs in double figures. I need to splash out on a kindle book i actually want to read.

I love Attica Locke's books, though they can be quite a stressful read at times. I think she comes from Texas and most of her stories are set there, or possibly in neighbouring states.

Have you tried Louise Erdrich, another part of the country and Native American not Afro-American?

Or Colson Whitehead, particularly his more recent novels?

All very readable but with a hard edged portrayal of the societies they're set in, and a mix of historical and contemporary.

cassandre · 11/06/2026 20:59

@Owlbookend if you like Attica Locke, have you tried Tana French's Cal Hooper trilogy? It's about a retired Chicago police cop who has moved to an Irish village. I just read the third volume in the trilogy, The Keeper, and loved it. Not too demanding and very engrossing. All three novels in the trilogy are excellent IMO.

Thanks to @SheilaFentiman who reviewed The Keeper recently and made me realise it existed!

SpunkyKhakiScroller · 11/06/2026 21:35

@Owlbookend Just to add my vote to @cassandre and the Cal Hooper series. I am halfway through the second book right now. I am neither a habitual crime reader nor an audiobook listener and I can't put the audiobooks of this series down. Atmospheric with excellent characterisation. The rural Irish village is a character in its own right.

FuzzyCaoraDhubh · 11/06/2026 21:47

I read the first book in the Cal Hooper series four years ago. I had no idea there were two more! That's good to find out!

I've bought The Correspondent. I might read it when I'm on holidays.

Benvenuto · 11/06/2026 21:55

I haven’t read The Correspondent yet as the waiting time for reservations for it on BorrowBox is extremely long. That might be a clue to its success - except that from the non-fiction list it’s Arundhati Roy’s book that has the long waiting list!

I liked The Finest Hotel in Kabul but found it quite a slog to read. I preferred Daughters of the Bamboo Grove but that didn’t make the shortlist.

Owlbookend · 11/06/2026 22:07

@EineReiseDurchDieZeit @elkiedee @cassandre @SpunkyKhakiScroller thanks all for the recommendations (hope I havent missed anyone out). I am going to make a concerted effort to search out something I genuinely want to read & finish it

VikingNorthUtsire · 11/06/2026 22:10

Oh gosh, I am so, so behind that it seems I have missed a whole thread. I'm not sure where to start - with my list, or reviews, or to try to comment on bits that I have missed from the last thread.

Actually I think the starting point is huge congratulations to @granniemainland as I did see news of your new arrival on the last thread.

I did manage to catch up with Les Mis, briefly, but have fallen behind on that too.

24 Mind over Money: The Psychology of Money and How to Use It Better, Claudia Hammond

Looks at the assumptions that we make about money and how unconscious biases and misunderstandings of how things work can make us behave in irrational ways. Cites many, many psychology experiments covering things like which forms of money feel more valuable or make us feel wealthier (why does spending cash always feel different to spending on a card?), how we negotiate, how we behave when we feel financially at risk etc.

Interesting but very general. I am still looking for something that might explain the weird quirks that we have as individuals around money.

25 The Last Hundred Days, Patrick Mcguinness

Well-written thriller set in the final months of the Ceaușescu regime in Romania. Fairly standard set-up - an adventurous but naive young British man arrives in Bucharest with no real idea of how things work. As he starts to make friends and fall in love, he is increasingly drawn into circles of secrecy, surveillance and corruption, with no idea of who he can trust and who is playing who.

I spent some time in Romania in the 90s and have friends there. This felt like a really vivid portrait of how it felt there at the time.

26 Christmas in Austin, Benjamin Markowits

Do you like books about wealthy white families where nothing really happens? Well, boy, do I have the book for you!

Apparently this is the second in a series about the Essinger family, the first being A Weekend in New York. I may have got more out of this if I'd read that first one. This book centres on a Christmas get-together at the home of the Essinger parents, with their adult children, spouses (and in one case, ex-girlfriend) and grandchildren. It's cosy (because Christmas, and also lots of food being described), and very human - you can understand and identify with many of the shifts in the emotional landscape as people come together in different combinations, talking about one another behind their backs - arguing, worrying about each other, forming alliances as siblings and extended families tend to do. But seriously, really NOTHING happens.

It was certainly readable but I won't rush to read his others. I seem to recall people saying that the Booker nominated one is similar - a bit of a nothing burger?

27 Reading Lolita in Tehran, Azar Nafisi (RWYO)

My bad, I thought this would be an Iranian version of the potato peel pie book - a cosy women's reading circle against a background of Big Events. It's actually a memoir covering Nafisi's years teaching literature (she mostly concentrates here on her experiences with American writers such as Nabokov and Scott Fitzgerald, as well as Austen) in pre- and post-revolutionary Iran.

There are two main strands here - her writing about day-to-day life in Tehran, which is fascinating and made the book worth reading on its own, and her thoughts about the works of literature that she is teaching, and how they land with young people in a country very far from where they were written. I think I would have appreciated the latter if I knew the works in question better -she does dig quite a bit into literary analysis and I felt at a disadvantage, not having read all of the works in question.

I also found her writing style quite distracting. She tells you both way too little about her characters (presumably because, while they are apparently based on real people, she's trying to protect identities by obfuscating, so she doesn't really explain who people are, what their situations are) but also way too much (she enters the room, she's wearing a scarf which she takes off and folds into the chair, meanwhile two of the other girls are giggling in the corner etc etc etc). I had to switch off from trying to remember who was who amongst her students and just follow the background narrative, the one about societal change and the strange courage that it takes to live in a country with such a strict, unfair and often horrifically brutal regime.

28 Heart the Lover, Lily King

Many of you have read this recently. I liked Writers and Lovers a lot but can't remember much about the plot, so I can't comment on if or how this fitted together with the earlier book.

It's a book about a love affair that ends. Then, years later, the lovers meet again under circumstances that are different and awful for them both. I couldn't understand how this second act was supposed to reflect back on the first, if indeed it was supposed to (surely, having our two protagonists meet again, older and wiser, is there to balance or redefine or connect in some way to the earlier story, right?). By putting them back together and making sure that neither of them is really very present, that there are other people there almost constantly and limited chance to say anything of meaning - I am sure all of this is deliberate on King's part but I can't quite work out why she decided to structure the story this way. Apologies, trying not to be too massively spoiler-y.

My overriding impression - please Lord, save me from clever young men who can't say sorry but instead send an obscure literary quotation then insist that they have apologised.

There are more but I am running out of steam and I want to see what everyone else has been reading!

elkiedee · 11/06/2026 22:47

On Heart the Lover, it's probably something of an advantage not to remember enough about Writers and Lovers, King's previous novel, to worry about it. I think there's a connection between the themes as well as the characters, but it doesn't matter all that much.\

I've realised that I've read or am reading another 5 or so such books by 2 other authors at the moment. Some referred to as sequels, some not. Other authors concerned are Esther Freud, who draws on her own life in many of her novels, though not all, and Buchi Emecheta, whose first two novels told the story of a young Nigerian single mum in north London whose experiences were rather lke the author's.

elkiedee · 11/06/2026 22:49

When I come back after a while away, as I have a few times on these threads, I don't try to read the whole thread, I tend to just join in with interesting conversations.

ChessieFL · 12/06/2026 06:36

Human Croquet - Kate Atkinson

I know I read this years ago but I couldn’t remember anything about it. This is Atkinson’s second novel, and it’s her at her most whimsical. People and things appear and disappear, or move through time, and you’re never really quite sure if what you’re reading is real or just a dream. I really enjoyed it. It’s about the Fairfax family, who once had a grand mansion but are now living in a house on a modern housing estate. It’s narrated by 16 year old Isobel and the main mystery is what happened to her mother Eliza. The story is told in the present (1960) with flashbacks to various events in the past. I’m glad I got round to rereading it!

Look What You Made Me Do - John Lanchester

Read by a couple of others in this thread and I don’t really have anything to add to their reviews. It was an entertaining read but ultimately hard to care about the characters as none of them are very nice.

The Delivery - Gregg Hurwitz

Novella that I got as one of my Amazon Prime First Reads freebies this month. To make their lives easier Mark and Rebecca buy an AI servant which tunes into all their thoughts to learn about what they want and then provides it for them. Inevitably things go wrong. I enjoyed this but as it was a novella it was too short for some of the events to be fully fleshed out which was a bit frustrating.

GrannieMainland · 12/06/2026 06:44

Thank you for the ongoing good wishes @VikingNorthUtsire- I’ve fallen off the thread due to newborn life chaos but finally catching up!

I have to say I didn’t love The Correspondent - it was a satisfying read but would have been stronger with fewer secrets and tidy endings. My two favourites from the longlist were The Benefactors and Wild Dark Shore, neither of which made it through.

Also loved and was fascinated by Ordinary Saints which I see others are reading!

Like everyone else, I listened to the audiobook of London Falling. Mixed feelings - it was so compelling and I was completely drawn in by the exposure of Zac’s secret life. I liked how much it felt like a big city novel with chapters on the different characters and how they got to London, but I wasn’t sure how much that contributed to the narrative as non fiction. I was a bit frustrated by all the fore shadowing about dirty Russian money and dissidents being murdered, when ultimately that didn’t have much to do with what happened. And I think like his other books, I would question where his source material is from and how subjective he is. But - as a piece of writing and storytelling, it was brilliant and I’d recommend to anyone.

I also really enjoyed Cherry Baby by Rainbow Rowell, a romance with really detailed and flawed characters and an interesting storyline about a relationship being chronicled in a successful graphic novel and how that affects the people it’s based on. I liked that the romance wasn’t straightforward or perfect and I was never sure who I wanted Cherry to end up with.

Last One Out by Jane Harper about a mother investigating the disappearance of her teenage son in a small town outside Sydney - I think someone upthread said this was too slow which I absolutely agree with, it was over half way before any clues or revelations started to emerge. It took me a full week to read which is not a great recommendation for a crime thriller.

The Long Irish Goodbye by Heather Aimee O’Neill - grown up sisters convene for Thanksgiving in their family beach house in New England, secrets are uncovered etc etc. One of my favourite micro genres but honestly quite a forgettable example.

Love by the Book by Jessica George - her follow up to Maame which I think was popular here. Remy has published a successful novel based on her four best friends and the different paths their lives have taken - think Anna Hope’s Expectation. She is struggling with her second book and the fact her friends are starting to drift in real life when she meets Simone and feels an instant platonic connection. Simone is estranged from her family and reluctant to let anyone in. The book kind of explores friendship through the beats and tropes of a romance novel which is an interesting idea, but I got frustrated with endless coincidences and inaccuracies.

I think that’s me up to date though I might have missed something!

AliasGrape · 12/06/2026 08:21

2 more books bringing my total to 25 which gives me hope I might make 50 by year end after all.

Really Good, Actually - Monica Heisey - back to trying to read what I own, I picked this up at some point last year it was probably a 99p deal, and I think I got it because Heisey is a Schitt’s Creek screenwriter so I had high hopes. At first I was a bit underwhelmed - late 20s/ early 30s woman has a breakdown in a self aware and chronically online way. It’s been done before and I’ve read lots of the times it has! There’s not a great deal of plot beyond that either really, and it did seem very surface level and cliche at first, however I think there was actually more going on than first appeared. Having been through a similar seismic breakup (not a divorce but a wedding called off in the days immediately before, the man I’d been with since school days as with the main character here) it ended up being very relatable and pretty funny in part. It also made me very glad to be my boring mid 40s self with much less spiralling and striving going on these days!

We Solve Murders - Richard Osman - I know they’re somewhat maligned and probably deservedly so but I love the Thursday Murder Club books, I just find them warm and comforting, so can forgive the nonsense. I tend to listen on audible when I’m having bouts of sleeplessness, which is exactly what I did with this one. I wasn’t all that keen to start this one, and to be fair I’m not quite sure why the need for a new series when this one could have easily fit into the Thursday world and was tonally pretty much the same. Didn’t really care who the bad guys were (and it was very easy to spot) and the plot was rather meandering, but it had that same cosy warm feel and was funny and enjoyable and absolutely served the purpose I wanted it to. It was helped massively by fantastic audio narration from Nicola Walker, I thought she did a great job and wonder if she’s narrated any other books - going to have a look out.

Terpsichore · 12/06/2026 08:38

@AliasGrape coincidentally, Nicola Walker is narrating Radio 4's current 11:45 book this week (non-fiction) - The Butterfly Season by Lea Korsgaard. I happened to hear some of it as the radio was on while I was doing something, and idly wondered who was reading - I was surprised; it didn’t sound like her!

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 12/06/2026 08:42

@AliasGrape I was in a minority that liked Really Good, Actually I found it amusing.

Nicola Walker narrates None Of This Is True by Lisa Jewell alongside another actress and it’s a really high quality audiobook as good as Ray Porter doing Project Hail Mary

She also does Geneva by and with Richard Armitage but that’s quite silly

Swipe left for the next trending thread