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50 Books Challenge 2026 Part Five

992 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
25
TheDonsDingleberries · 30/06/2026 08:31

SheilaFentiman · 30/06/2026 00:15

I thought We Need to Talk About Kevin was an extraordinary book, but I haven’t liked the other Shrivers I have read.

I ended up loving WNTTAK after initially finding it tricky to get into, but that's the only book of hers I'd read until now.

I picked up The Post-Birthday World from our local Little Free Library a while back, so I'll read that at some point, but probably not push through if I'm not enjoying it after the first few chapters.

SheilaFentiman · 30/06/2026 08:35

Just avoid So Much for That if you are in any way squeamish 🤢

TheDonsDingleberries · 30/06/2026 08:44

SheilaFentiman · 30/06/2026 08:35

Just avoid So Much for That if you are in any way squeamish 🤢

Thanks for the tip!

FuzzyCaoraDhubh · 30/06/2026 11:19

Honour: Elif Shafak

This was a gift from Elkiedee from last year's 50-Bookers' meet-up that I finally got round to reading.

Set between a small village in Euphrates and London, Honour is the story of a Turkish/Kurdish* *family that has moved to London and how they adapt to a new city and culture.

At the heart of the story are the twins Pembe and Jamila, one who leaves and the other who stays behind. The story begins in their childhood and continues into their adulthood and into the lives of Pembe's three children. When Pembe's marriage breaks down and she begins a relationship, Iksander, her eldest son, takes it upon himself to avenge his family's honour and restore their good name with disastrous consequences.

I thought this was an excellent exploration of honour, culture, pride, marriage and family. It's an immigration story that recounts the struggles of fitting into another way of life, particularly highlighting the vulnerability of women who should adhere to a strict code of behaviour and how they are punished when they don't.

Thus is a compelling story told from the perspective of different characters.The narration switches between people, place and time and by the end it feels like many shards of broken glass that have been set together to make a beautiful mosaic. This was a sad and thought-provoking book and one that leaves a lasting impression. Recommended if you haven't read it already.

Below is a photo of my two furry boys.
They are brothers, though not alike.

50 Books Challenge 2026 Part Five
SheilaFentiman · 30/06/2026 15:53

Lovely cats, @FuzzyCaoraDhubh

Enjoyed your review and went to add Honour to my wishlist, but apparently I already own it Grin

ChessieFL · 30/06/2026 16:14

I’ve had mixed results with Shriver. I loved Kevin (although have not attempted to reread yet) and also really enjoyed Should We Stay Or Should We Go, and a collection of short stories I can’t remember the name of right now (maybe Property). However her most recent book and So Much For This were DNFs. I’ve got a couple of others of hers on my TBR which I will get to eventually!

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 30/06/2026 17:25

@MaterMoribund I read Art of a Lie when I was missing in action, and didn't review it. I really enjoyed it to begin with, and, as you say, loved all the descriptions of the confectionary/icecream etc. However, I found it ultimately disappointing because I thought all the twists just got a bit too stupid and required too much willing suspension of disbelief to be sufficiently credible.

MaterMoribund · 30/06/2026 17:49

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 30/06/2026 17:25

@MaterMoribund I read Art of a Lie when I was missing in action, and didn't review it. I really enjoyed it to begin with, and, as you say, loved all the descriptions of the confectionary/icecream etc. However, I found it ultimately disappointing because I thought all the twists just got a bit too stupid and required too much willing suspension of disbelief to be sufficiently credible.

I got a picture of William in my head as a young Bertie Carvel and so was willing to suspend disbelief all the way Grin

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 30/06/2026 19:26

MaterMoribund · 30/06/2026 17:49

I got a picture of William in my head as a young Bertie Carvel and so was willing to suspend disbelief all the way Grin

I had to google him, but yes, I think that's a good casting choice!

VikingNorthUtsire · 30/06/2026 19:31

36 Albion, Anna Hope

I do love a country house novel and this is a corker - with reservations.

Philip Brooke - landowner, sixties counterculture playboy and general shit husband and father - has died. His children gather at the family home, "twenty bedrooms of Sussex sandstone", to bury him.

Frannie, the eldest and Philip's heir, is a grown-up eco warrior (as a young woman she lived in trees at the Newbury protest) who has spent the last decade working with her father to re-wild the thousand acre estate. Passionate about nature and famous in her own way for the success she has had in re-introducing native species, she's also the only one who understands that the inheritance tax bill may mean the family losing the estate altogether. Milo, a recovering addict, still bears the scars of being sent off to boarding school at 8 while his sisters stayed at home. He believes that his father offered him, in his final days, part of the estate to develop as a wellness retreat for the One Percent ("heal the leaders and you heal the world"). And finally |sa, the youngest, who has stayed as far away as she can from her family for a long time, and therefore hasn't had even the partial reconciliation with her difficult father than her two siblings managed before he died.

It's all set up for a fantastic Succession-style family inheritance row, but that's not really where Hope is going with this. There are others in the story, outside the family (or sort of - discussions over who gets to attend a small family-only funeral raise the question of who, actually, is family) - Ned, their father's old friend, who lives on the land in an old van growing his own dope and making herbal tinctures; Jack, handsome son of one of the estate families, and Isa's childhood love, and Clara, flying over from America to attend the funeral for reasons that aren't quite clear. Yet.

And the animals, and the trees, and the ghosts. Hope writes beautifully about the southern English countryside, invoking Kipling, and pastoral poetry, and folk songs - if New York City is the star of When Harry Met Sally, then the countryside of the Sussex-Kent border is undoubtedly the star of this book. She also summons the human history embedded in the landscape: the family's own younger selves, the memories still living vividly in the familiar places; the ancestors, looking down from photographs and paintings; the villagers, removed from their land when the park was enclosed in the eighteenth century; and others, whose story is bound up with that of the family and its privilege.

I loved the first 3/4 of this book. It's maybe a little slow but Hope draws her characters and setting skilfully, heightening the tension as the day of the funeral approaches until you feel that any one of them could be the one to pull the trigger and bring down chaos. I was disappointed, then, by what happens when it actually hits (and being a bit vague here to avoid spoilers). The last section, to me, felt rushed and weak - having asked some fundamental questions about ecology, about privilege, about how we treat our world and our fellow humans - she kind of drops it and allows it all to stumble to an unsatisfying conclusion.

SheilaFentiman · 30/06/2026 19:32

Did you watch him in the Dalgleish adaptations?

Pigtailsandall · 30/06/2026 20:06

I love all the pets here, I'm fairly equally divided between cats and dogs - I currently have a cat but have had both before. I'd love a bunny!

Behind the Scenes at the Museum is also one of my favourites, and Atkinson's best IMHO. I also like the Jackson Brodie ones (there might be one I haven't read?) I have God in Ruins on my tbr too, but it didn't grip me the same way as Life After Life.

I finished book 31. The Last Devil to Die by Richard Osman. This is not at all my genre, but I was given one of the Thursday murder club series book by someone on holiday (hello Clare from York if you are here!) who finished hers. Since then, Ive read several as a bit of a palate-cleanser after reading lots of heavy novels on serious topics. They flow nicely, feel quintessentially English and are easy to read. This took me just three days and usually a book will take me a week. It's also funny as Kate Atkinson is referrenced in the book.
Not quite sure what to read next now

Stowickthevast · 30/06/2026 22:05

@VikingNorthUtsire I read Albion last year. I agree that it lost momentum in the last part and wasn't quite sure what she was trying to do. Good characters but a bit lacking in plot.

I think after reading Big Brother and The Mandibles, I've been put off Lionel Shriver. I feel like I read another one of hers that was a romance about tennis but it sounds quite unlikely. And of course Kevin which I did think was good at the time. I also have quite strong issues with her politics, she seems like a Katie Hopkins type figure these days.

2 more here:

  1. The Things We Never Say - Elizabeth Strout. Her latest books moves away from Olive and Lucy, but stays in the same area, with Artie Dam, a history teacher, who's musing about what life's about and whether he actually wants to continue it. He's been married for 30 years to Evie and they have a grown up son Rob. As we move through the book various secrets are revealed that make Dam question what he knew. There's also an undercurrent of fear with the Trump administration and the divisive nature of the country, which impacts Artie's teaching. It's slight but I'm a fan.

  2. After Annie - Anna Quindlen. The Annie of the title is the mother of 4 children, wife of Bill and best friend of Annemarie who dies suddenly in her late 30s. The book is about how the family cope with the aftermath of her death, particularly from the view of her 14 year old daughter Ali, and Annemarie, with a bit of Bill thrown it. It's a good look at grief and how people deal or don't deal with it, but was a bit slow moving for me.

ChessieFL · 30/06/2026 22:39

@Stowickthevast you didn’t imagine the Shriver tennis book. It’s called Double Fault.

MamaNewtNewt · 30/06/2026 23:17

With Stowick mentioning Lionel Shriver’s politics (I also dislike her politics) that reminded me of something I was wondering about and meant to ask you all. Are you able to separate the art from the artist and enjoy a book, even if the author is guilty of something / accused of something / has political views you find abhorrent? I was doing a bit of stocktake of my books recently, and there were some I was definitely thinking I cannot read due to the author, others where I was borderline, and others where I was thinking, hmm it might just be ok. I appreciate it is probably a sliding scale based on personal views and severity of the crime / accusation / view, but am curious about how much this influences people or if they can put that aside and just read the book as a thing separate from the author.

DuPainDuVinDuFromage · 30/06/2026 23:37

36 Bad Actors - Mick Herron More Slough House, taking place shortly after Covid lockdown and with some interesting new characters such as Andrew Sparrow, close adviser to the PM and bearing an uncanny resemblance to a certain D. Cummings (there is a passing reference to eye tests at one point 😄). Some excellent lines and plenty of satire, as usual, and a fun ride through Diana Taverner’s machinations and Shirley Dander’s unique world view. Like Terry Pratchett crossed with John le Carré, and totally brilliant.

DuPainDuVinDuFromage · 30/06/2026 23:45

I’m loving all the pet pictures! As a lurker on the politics threads I thoroughly approve of cute animals adorning the thread 😊 I don’t have any to add - DD2 is desperate for a dog (probably DH too) but we’ve got more than enough on our plates without adding pets into the mix.

@MamaNewtNewt I think I’m probably put off some writers due to their views / actions, but if I have loved a book and then found something out about the author it won’t necessarily spoil the reading experience retrospectively. Struggling to think of specific examples…maybe I end up reading books by people whose politics etc I broadly agree with? I’ve never read any Lionel Shriver and have no inclination to do so based on what I’ve read / heard about her…

MaterMoribund · 01/07/2026 06:20

SheilaFentiman · 30/06/2026 19:32

Did you watch him in the Dalgleish adaptations?

Yes, he was wonderfully Brooding in that. My favourite character he has played is Jonathan Strange, although I would have loved to see him as Miss Trunchbull!

Stowickthevast · 01/07/2026 07:34

It's an interesting question @MamaNewtNewt . I think some authors I read and can tell they probably have quite different political views to me - Chimanda Ngozi Adichie and Natasha Brown were a couple recently - but it doesn't bother me as it's just like reading The Times alongside The Guardian if that makes sense. But Shriver deliberately comes out with outrageous populist statements which makes me think less of her as a writer.
I read a book last year, Theory & Practice, where the Asian narrator is doing a thesis on Virgina Woolf and finds some racist comments she made. It has an interesting debate about how it makes the narrator feel even though those comments are of Woolf's time.

Stowickthevast · 01/07/2026 07:41

Early deals trawl. I've picked up:

The Eights
Lost Lambs
The Palm House

There are quite a few other recent ones on there including Ripeness, Audition and Katabasis.

Has anyone read Natalie Haynes No Friend To This House, the retelling of Medea? I'm toying with it for dd2 as she liked Stone Blind but not sure.

And that reminds me @Owlbookend the Percy Jackson films are terrible.. The recent Disney series sticks closely to the books though so if she liked that, I think she'd like the books.

SheilaFentiman · 01/07/2026 08:04

Parlabane fans - Quite Ugly One Evening is £1.99 in the daily deals, and the third Cal Hooper book (The Keeper by Tana French) is also there.

ÚlldemoShúl · 01/07/2026 08:16

I’m in the middle of The Keeper right now- it’s great! I picked up the same 3 as Stowick plus The Testament of Mary by Colm Toibin

SheilaFentiman · 01/07/2026 08:46

I have (from July deals)

Wilderness - Samantha Harvey
The Rose and the Yew Tree - Mary Westmacott/Agatha Christie

Mulling over The Prime Ministers we Never Had, The Kindness of Strangers and Cuddy.

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 01/07/2026 08:54

Got a veritable bonanza from my Wish List in the Deals :

Flesh by David Szalay
Alive by Piers Paul Read
The South by Colm Toibin
The Night We Met by Abby Jimenez
All The Beauty In The World by Patrick Bringley
The Original by Nell Stevens
The Lives And Deaths Of The Princesses Of Hesse by Frances Welch
Other People’s Fun by Harriet Lane
The Emperor Of Gladness by Ocean Vuong
American Kingpin by Nick Bilton
Pies And Prejudice by Stuart Maconie

Hopefully one of these will awake me from my slump

RazorstormUnicorn · 01/07/2026 08:58

I picked up Once There Were Wolves by Charlotte McConaghy.

I am inconsistent on separating art from artist. I loved Kevin and thought about reading more Shriver but am certain her politics coming into play will just make me angry, especially as I was diagnosed with ADHD this year. However I also quite strongly believe retreating into our little bubbles and only looking at media that fits our narratives is Not A Good Thing. So I don't know how to reconcile this!

It also depends how much I like the media which has embarrassing to admit. For instance I am a huge Buffy The Vampire Slayer fan and continue to re watch on and off despite accusations against Joss Whedon. As far as I can tell, they mostly suggest he isnt a nice person, I don't think he assaulted anyone. Is that drawing the line in the right place? I don't know.