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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:
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VikingNorthUtsire · 04/07/2026 18:50

Oh no Eine. I hope you feel better soon.

Arran2024 · 04/07/2026 19:09

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 04/07/2026 08:32

Yeah I didn’t want to comment on your comment because you’re still reading.

My review is only one opinion and lots of people have absolutely loved it.

Didn’t we also disagree on The Correspondent?

I wasn't sold in The Correspondent. I didn't hatevit - I just didn't get the huge love for it or think it was prize worthy. I was the same with Lessons in Chemistry.

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 04/07/2026 19:20

@Arran2024 Oh! I agree on Lessons In Chemistry - nothing special

Arran2024 · 04/07/2026 19:29

32 Yesteryear by Caro Claire Burke

Finished it.

I didn't love it or think it's particularly well written. But I did think the author was making some interesting points about feminism, child rearing, conspiracy theorists, "Christian" values, what women want ...

I think it probably hits more of a nerve in America, where the trad wife movement is strong.

It satirises the whole genre, made most famous by Ballerina Farm, the ex Julliard ballet dancer who lives a very similar life (on the surface at least) to the protagonist Natalie in Yesteryear, also Ruby Franke, who ended up in jail for abusing her children.

I read the book by one of Ruby Franke's daughters last year and learned a lot about these trad wife influencers and the way they serve up a constant diet of what many American women want.

The book takes us through Natalie's life and the development of her insta account, which has 5 million followers by the end.

That part of the story is fairly formulaic and, like I said, it follows the stories of real life trad wives pretty faithfully.

The more interesting part for me was the chapters where Natalie is living a more realistic life as a frontier wife from the 1850s. This is all a bit strange as you read it, but I must admit I was hooked on understanding what on earth was going on and how it would end.

The ending is completely daft, but it is relatively coherent and fits the overall satire and the reality of what has happened to some of these trad wife accounts.

Btw my brother in law is SO like the husband - obsessed with conspiracy theories and I recognised a few of his favourites.

I think it is a book more for a US audience but it had enough to keep me intrigued.

Benvenuto · 04/07/2026 19:31

@EineReiseDurchDieZeit- really sorry to hear that & hope you get better soon.

Also wanted to join in with the appreciation for A Place of Greater Safety.

AliasGrape · 04/07/2026 19:35

I followed the author of Yesteryear on TikTok for ages (most of her videos seem to have gone now!) and found what she had to say about tradwives interesting, but I can’t bring myself to want to read the book! I’ll probably get round to it when the kindle version goes closer to 99p - I don’t know what I’m finding off putting really, but I am really interested in the reviews like yours @Arran2024

nowanearlyNicemum · 04/07/2026 19:45

sorry to hear that @EineReiseDurchDieZeit

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 04/07/2026 19:55

@Arran2024 I agree that the 1850 part was the most interesting, but I think the conclusion for one character was meant to have been profound and it absolutely wasn’t because we simply didn’t get enough time with them because there was too much time spent on Natalie’s backstory.

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 04/07/2026 19:59

I’m ok guys. I am awaiting a diagnosis but the consultant doesn’t have any appointments right now. Just a bit fed up.

Arran2024 · 04/07/2026 20:09

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 04/07/2026 19:55

@Arran2024 I agree that the 1850 part was the most interesting, but I think the conclusion for one character was meant to have been profound and it absolutely wasn’t because we simply didn’t get enough time with them because there was too much time spent on Natalie’s backstory.

I think Clementine is based on the Ruby Franke daughter who wrote the book about her experience growing up. Caleb sounds more like Ballerina Farm's husband. I guess the book was already pretty big.

Btw I did chuckle at finding out what Abel's big adult initiation consisted of!

Hope you get your diagnosis ASAP.

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 04/07/2026 20:14

@Arran2024 Thanks. I was thinking more of Mary than Clementine. I don’t want to accidentally spoil it for the many who are waiting for it to come down in price.

StrangewaysHereWeCome · 04/07/2026 20:16

@EineReiseDurchDieZeit all the best, hope things improve for you soon Flowers
@MaterMoribund I'm with you on The List of Suspicious Things. I really expected to love this, but it fell quite flat. I thought that the attempt to balance the lighter tone of the young narrator with the troubling subject matter of racism, violence and mental illness wasn’t successful.

I admired A Place of Greater Safety, but I really, really loved Wolf Hall trilogy. I thought Mantel got under the skin of the characters more in the latter.

I'm on the BorrowBox waiting list for Yesteryear which appealed to me a lot from the blurb. It won't reach me until 2027 though, so I imagine it will have been discussed to death by then!

This evening I'm have a bookshelf clear out while I watch the World Cup games. We have quite a little house, and I LOVE doing this every now and again, as I can make room for lots of lovely new books Smile.

ÚlldemoShúl · 04/07/2026 20:17

I hope you get your diagnosis soon @EineReiseDurchDieZeitit’s hard to focus on anything else when you’re waiting for something, I think that can sometimes be the hardest part 💐

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 04/07/2026 20:19

Thank you. That’s exactly it..

BestIsWest · 04/07/2026 20:31

@EineReiseDurchDieZeit Flowers

AgualusasL0ver · 04/07/2026 20:36

Hope you get some news soon Eine. I was just reading my list of things I plan to do whilst ob hunting and realised I totally forgot a book I finished (it is relevant I think that I am reading, finishing books and largely out of my slump once I dumped this job). The Japanese Lover Isabel Allende, trans by Nick Caistor and Amanda HopkinsonI will say, I remember Allende being a better writer (or translated better), based solely on Eva Luna which I can barely remember, so I am probably being unfair. This is set in San Francisco in a slightly quirky old people's home. We get flashbacks to Alma's life being sent from Europe by her parents to escape the Nazis. She lives with wealthy distant relatives and from a young age loves Ichi, the Japanese gardener's son. There is a broad scope and we get some insight into the Japanese internment camps which I found interesting and would be keen to read more. Irina, a worker at the home and a migrant along with Seth, Alma's grandson help Alma to tell her life story with their own slow burn romance in the background. I really like the ending, I predicted it but it was still satisfying. Overall, it is a reasonably forgettable book, none of the characters were very memorable and it wasn't epic in the way it sort of felt it should have been - and the blurb promised. I will read more of her work though, as it was decent, well plotted and I wanted to know what happened.

FuzzyCaoraDhubh · 04/07/2026 20:40

Best wishes @EineReiseDurchDieZeit 🌻 The waiting game is hard.

I've finished The Correspondent by Virginia Evans.

I liked it. I liked the epistolary style and I enjoyed piecing together Sybil's story and the way it was gradually revealed. I particularly liked Sybil's voice; it sounded authentic to me. I heard echoes of my female relatives in her. Now that I think of it, my mother used to write so many letters years ago, particularly to anyone she had a grievance with. Luckily, she only fires off the occasional email now, usually to me!

I don't think I'd give it a bold. It was good but it didn't blow me away. I looked through the comments that others made on the thread and I agree with cassandre when she said that it verges towards being saccharine. It was a touch too neat. It was still an enjoyable read. * *

StitchesInTime · 04/07/2026 20:54

@EineReiseDurchDieZeit Flowers

I hope you get your diagnosis soon. All the waiting can be very wearing .

VikingNorthUtsire · 04/07/2026 21:09

37 Wild Dark Shore, Charlotte McConaghy

I didn't particularly like the sound of this from the blurb - I think it made me think of the book with the lighthouse keeper and the abandoned baby which I read a few years ago and didn't specially like.

But this was available through Borrowbox so I started on it and for the first 2/3, I liked it a lot. I liked the setting, I liked the mysteries, I liked the threads of science and ecology. I liked the ballsy main female character, and the writing of the youngest child and the moving way that the author writes about parenting.

But I hated the last bit. Just bish bash bosh, emotionally overwrought, with overcooked reveals to all of the mysteries (where it can't just be that x happened, also y and z are thrown into the mix). If she'd dialled it down a bit I would have loved it.

VikingNorthUtsire · 04/07/2026 21:11

I already own A Place of Greater Safety, and am generally a HM fan, but I think I might get confused if I try to read this at the same time as Les Miserables.

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 04/07/2026 21:13

VikingNorthUtsire · 04/07/2026 21:11

I already own A Place of Greater Safety, and am generally a HM fan, but I think I might get confused if I try to read this at the same time as Les Miserables.

You won’t at all, covers very different ground and characters

The book you were thinking of in your review is The Light Between Oceans which I loved

StitchesInTime · 04/07/2026 21:19

53. The Promised Neverland Vol 12 by Kaiu Shirai and Posuka Demizu

Manga.
In this instalment the children are looking for clues that will help them find the seven walls and make a new compact with the demons that doesn’t involve humans being farmed for food. Of course it’s not as easy as all that, and this instalment ends on a bit of a life and death cliffhanger.
The children are all a bit too competent to be fully believable, but I’m invested in finding out how this turns out now.

VikingNorthUtsire · 04/07/2026 21:21

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 04/07/2026 21:13

You won’t at all, covers very different ground and characters

The book you were thinking of in your review is The Light Between Oceans which I loved

It was! I feel a bit mean (and unreasonable) because I can't remember why I didn't like it. I just read the blurb for WDS and thought "oh, no thank you". I might see whether I reviewed it here to refresh my memory.

Benvenuto · 04/07/2026 21:33

66 . The Rose Field by Philip Pullman - the end of Lyra’s adventures. I enjoyed this more than I expected (I didn’t particularly enjoy the previous volume) but I didn’t find it satisfactory in the end. There were some expectations built up in the novel that weren’t fulfilled and some connections between characters not satisfactorily explained.

AliasGrape · 04/07/2026 22:12

Hope you get your appointment and some answers soon @EineReiseDurchDieZeit

I too loved A Place of Greater Safety. What a writer she was.

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