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50 Books Challenge 2026 Part Six

91 replies

Southeastdweller · 08/07/2026 07:31

Welcome to the sixth 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, the fourth thread here and the fifth thread

OP posts:
Bunnyofhope · 08/07/2026 17:47

No list from me but a couple more reads.
44 Faking friends Jane Fallon I had said I would not read anything by this author again as I didn't enjoy ‘Worst Idea Ever’ but this one seemed much fresher. It's a revenge plot, a bit formulaic but filled a quiet weekend in an amusing way.
45 Oryx and Crake Margaret Atwood Didn't enjoy it as much as I hoped. It became background music for me and I was definitely expecting more as I know it is a classic. I will likely read the next two though. Also re no 44… I have already forgotten what it was about so I think I over reviewed it above!

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 08/07/2026 18:19

Still Liverpool 50 Booker Squad Unite @Iamnotaloggrip!!

TimeforaGandT · 08/07/2026 19:18

43. House of Glass - Hadley Freeman

The journalist, Hadley Freeman's book about her Jewish grandmother's family. Her grandmother, Sala, and her brothers grew up in Poland and survived WW1 before fleeing Poland because of anti-Semitic persecution by the Poles. They moved to France where some of them assimilated more than others although they all adopted French/Western names. Two of Sala's/Sara's brothers became very successful - Henri in tech (microfiche photography) and Alex in fashion. But WW2 saw the family being persecuted again but this time by the French. Sara ended up in the US and although she survived the war, she never got over leaving France and her family.

The Glahs/Glass family history is fascinating and it's astonishing, given everything they endured, that two of them were so successful. It's a moving book which focuses on family relationships as much as the historical/political aspects. I know a reasonable amount about WW2 but learnt more.

I think lots of you read it several years ago but I am pleased that I have now done so too (as part of RWYO).

FuzzyCaoraDhubh · 08/07/2026 20:20

I enjoyed your review @TimeforaGandT
I thought it was a fascinating read too.

Arran2024 · 08/07/2026 20:23

Thanks for the new thread. My list so far

1 The Sleepwalkers by Scarlett Thomas
2 Hitler's People by Richard Evans
3 Malice by Keigo Higashino
4 The Rest of Our Lives by Ben Markovits
5 Never A Dull Moment 1971 by David Hepworth
6 Murder at Mount Fuji by Shizuko Natsuki
7 A Beginner's Guide to Breaking and Entering by Andrew Hunter Murray
8 The Party by Tessa Hadley
9 Gabriel's Moon by William Boyd
10 Place Brugman by Alice Austen
11 A Quiet Place by Seicho Matsumoto
12 Tokyo Express by Seicho Matsumoto
13 Murder on Line One by Jeremy Vine
14 The Names by Florence Knapp
15 Point Zero by Seicho Matsumoto
16 Three Days in June by Anne Tyler
17 Imperium by Robert Harris
18 A Schooling in Murder by Andrew Taylor
19 Arthur and George by Julian Barnes
20 Wise by Frank Tallis
21 The Infamous Gilberts by Angela Tomaski
22 Geneva by Richard Armitage
23 The Vipers by Katy Hay
24 The Ending Writes Itself by Evelyn Clarke
25 The Long Shoe by Bob Mortimer
26 The Story of Lucy Gault by William Trevor
27 By Your Side by Ruth Jones
28 Felicia's Journey by William Trevor
29 The Amateur Marriage by Anne Tyler
30 Creation Lake by Rachel Kushner
31 The Impossible Fortune by Richard Osman
32 YesterYear by Caro Claire Burke
33) Death on Gokumon Island by Seishi Yokomiso

Arran2024 · 08/07/2026 20:34

34 Universality by Natasha Brown

Long listed for last year's Booker, it's the kind of book that people in the literary/media/political world love, because it's about people like them.

It is like a few short stories put together with a flimsy connection to each other to pull the whole together as a novel.

We start with a near murder at a rave at a run down old farm during covid. A banker has bought the farm and has let the son of a woman he is sleeping with stay there. He has left a gold ingot there (!) and this is the object used in the attack.

We then follow up on some of the main characters, such as the journalist who broke the story who is now hosting a dinner party for her old uni friends who had dropped her until she became current with the story, but by this point the plot has somewhat been dropped in favour of an exploration of politics, culture wars etc and by the end I felt it was like reading posts on X.

I wasn't keen but it has great reviews.

SpunkyKhakiScroller · 08/07/2026 21:09

Thanks for the new thread @Southeastdweller. Here is everything I've read since the last thread.

  1. Carl's Doomsday Scenario by Matt Dinniman – funny and inventive, with enough heart beneath the absurdity to make up for the bouts of toilet humour

  2. The Names by Florence Knapp – an intriguing exploration of how domestic abuse echoes across generations, let down by an ending that ties its threads together a little too neatly

  3. North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell – a rich Victorian novel that combines social commentary, memorable characters and one of literature's most satisfying romances

  4. Fundamentally by Nussaibah Younis – a sharp satire of aid politics and identity whose ideas outshine its emotional impact

  5. Legends & Lattes by Travis Baldree – a warm, cosy fantasy about friendship and second chances that succeeds completely on its own modest ambitions

  6. Pages to Fill by Travis Baldree – a return to Viv's world that captures the same cosy atmosphere in miniature

57. Crow Lake by Mary Lawson – a beautifully observed family novel where quiet moments carry extraordinary emotional weight

  1. One Summer: America, 1927 by Bill Bryson – a fascinating history of the summer that shaped modern America, full of vivid personalities and Bryson's trademark storytelling

  2. The Inheritance Games by Jennifer Lynn Barnes – an entertaining YA puzzle-box that rattles along on clever twists, even if the characters never quite escape their archetypes

  3. Brigands and Breadknives by Travis Baldree – another delightful slice of cosy fantasy

  4. The Hawthorne Legacy by Jennifer Lynn Barnes – another fast-paced instalment that doubles down on the twists, though the romantic leads feel more like teen fantasies than real people

  5. The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi by Shannon Chakraborty – a joyous Sinbad-inspired pirate adventure with a memorable middle-aged heroine and enough magic and monsters to keep the pages flying

  6. Red Shore by William Shaw – a solid, grounded mystery whose understated prose kept me at a distance from characters I wanted to know better

BlueFairyBugsBooks · 08/07/2026 21:12

Thanks for the new thread. Here's my list carried over, I'm terrible at keeping it up to date so have about 10 more to add later.

  1. Tears of Autumn. David Wiltshire.
  2. Dead On. Bryan J Mason
  3. She Took My Baby. Steena Holmes
  4. When The Light Is Mine. Chaz Holesworth
  5. The Island King. Gina Giordano
  6. The Eagles Shadow. Michael Reit
  7. Phoenix Rising. Michael Reit
  8. Two Wives. Helen Durrant
  9. The Whisperwicks: The Labyrinth of Lost and Found. Jordan Lees
  1. The Hidden Storyteller. Mandy Robotham

  2. Lie Quietly. Alice Wright

  3. The Seamstress of Auschwitz. C.K McAdam

  4. The Angel of Warsaw. Rebecca Scott

  5. Crowning the Snow Queen. Michelle Moras

  6. The Vicar’s Daughter at the Lodging House. Natalie Meg Evans

  7. Finding Ida. Marya Burgess.

  8. The Orphan at the Irish Adoption House. Michelle Vernal

  9. Braving the Dawn. Peggy Joque Williams

  10. Between A Roc and a Hard Place. E.J Tanda

  11. Once We Were Sisters. Ann Bennett

  12. To His New Wife. Willow Rose

  13. The Son of Osivirious. Cathryn Devries

  14. A Bedtime Story (Beauty Meets,The Beast.) L.C Moon

  15. The Tuscan Sisters Promise. Daniela Sacerdoti

  16. A Stranger in the Family. Diane Saxon

  17. Small Acts of Mercy. Emma Salisbury

  18. The Planter's Daughter. Susan Lanigan

  19. Woven In Time. Jessica Ann

  20. The Girl With The List. Shari J Ryan

  21. The Other Moctezuma Girls. Sofia Robleda

  22. The Sister Behind The Berlin Wall. Cynthia Anderson

  23. The War Orphans Courage. Jenna Ness

  24. The Last Train Home. Marion Kummerow

  25. The Children of Hamelin. Janine Ireland

  26. Gathering Storm. Maggie Craig

  27. What Fools We Have Been. Hank Williams

  28. The Last Baby In Auschwitz. Anna Stuart

  29. The Diva's Daughter. Heather Walrath

  30. Hotel Mirabelle. Valerie Sinason

  31. Color of Fire. Gina Giordano

  32. The Resident Murder. Jessi Kroft

  33. Chameleon. Pip Landers-Lett

  34. First of December. Karen Jennings

  35. Murder Under Redwood Moon. Sherri L Dodd

  36. Tracks in Time. Steve McCarthy

  37. Blood Feud. Maya Ross

  38. Icarus Plummeting. David Zigmond

  39. The Heroine of Auschwitz. Mark Demeza

  40. A Long Way Home. Mark Demeza

  41. Illegitimate. Maddie Lock

  42. Wind Flowers. Lina C. Amarego

  43. Where It All Began. Debbie Howells

  44. Chosen. Allison Wells

  45. The Secrets of Silver Edge. Shirsten Shirts

  46. Martin's Eyes. Iain Ballantyn

  47. The Sanctuary. Danielle Bannister

  48. The Secret House In Orchid Bay. Ann O'Loughlin

  49. Death In Valetta. Lynne Marie Taylor

  50. Blade of a Witch. Fiona Fairhurst

  51. Let's Play a Game

  52. Death On the Island. Lynne Marie Taylor

  53. The Irish Cottage by the Sea. Clodagh Murphy

  54. The Darkening Sky. Hugh Greene

  55. The Lemon House Murders. Tucker May

  56. Fablenoir. Vic Sinclair

  57. A Quantum of Thought. A.D Quinton

  58. The Last Daughter of Highdown Hall. Kathy Hayward

  59. A World of One's Own. Susan Winterberg

  60. Wishes On The Waves. Catherine Michaels

  61. Bright Midnights. L.S Delorme

  62. The Bone Garden. Tess Burnett

  63. The Lady At The Lodging House. Natalie Meg Evans

  64. The Flight. Heather J. Fitt (8/5-10/5)

  65. Hijab and Red Lipstick. Yousra Imran

  66. The Puppet Master. Abigail Osborne

  67. How To Bury A Secret. Ainsley Reid

  68. The Galway Girl. Steve McCarthy

  69. Of Sisters and Spitfires. Frank Francis

  70. The Malfunction. Orval Wax

  71. A is for Amy. Stevenson Crandell

  72. Wednesday Night Whites. Marci Lin Melvin

  73. The Nowhere Sisters. Jan Casey

  74. Blood Will Be Born. Gary Donnelly

  75. A Warriors Vow. Morgan McLaren

  76. Temporary Fix. Colleen McNamara

  77. Mrs. Benedict. Emma Parry

  78. Hope Begins. Rebecca Griffiths

  79. A Wartime Promise For The East End Girls. Jean Fullerton

  80. The Romance Loop

  81. Survivors. Allan Zullo and Mara Bovsun

  82. Hunted. Abir Mukherjee

  83. Case Files Vol 1. Rachel Amphlett

  84. Auschwitz: My First Train Journey. Conrad Jones

  85. A Fatal Austen Affair. Anna A.Armstrong

  86. The People Next Door. Carla Kovach

  87. 6 Rocabarra Terrace. CC Gilmartin

  88. The Vellum Morta. Myrddin Young

  89. The Vineyard Secret. Gosia Nealon

  90. The Boy With The Heart of Seaglass. Laura Livingstone

  91. Rübezahl. M Laslo

  92. The Orange Man and Me. Lord Hugo Dastardly

  93. Case Files Vol 2. Rachel Amphlett

  94. Three Days Grace. Jeremy Bradley-Silverio Donato

  95. Watching Them Humans In The AI Age. Will & Alice Shin

  96. The French Vendetta. Simon Michael

  97. More Than This. Layla Emmerson

  98. Point Blank. Tana Collins

  99. Lisa Doyle Is Absolutely Fine. Mo Fanning

  100. A Million Miracles. Roberta Kagan

  101. Perilous Journey to Freedom. Marion Kummerow.

  102. Tam's Tale. Michael Findlay

  103. Fanning Fireflies. L.S Delorme

Pigtailsandall · 08/07/2026 22:41

Thank you for the new thread!
I finished Piranesi by Susanna Clarke. I read it in two days, in pretty much two sittings (a speed quite unheard of by me). I have to digest it for a bit. It was certainly magnificent but it made me feel uneasy and sad and longing all at once. I can't stop thinking about.

I also need to write a list of all my books this year while I might still remember them all

StitchesInTime · 08/07/2026 23:01

Thanks for the new thread @Southeastdweller

My list so far:

  1. The Obesity Code by Jason Fung
  2. Belzhar by Meg Wolitzer
  3. Is Heathcliff a Murderer? by John Sutherland
  4. Can Jane Eyre be Happy? by John Sutherland
  5. The Island by C L Taylor
  6. Escape Room by Christopher Edge
  7. Zero Days by Ruth Ware
  8. The Last Odyssey by James Rollins
  9. My Hero Academia Vol 5 by Kohei Horikoshi
  10. The Chase by Ava Glass
  11. I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou
  12. Around the World in Eighty Days by Jules Verne
  13. How to Lose a Lord in Ten Days by Sophie Irwin
  14. The Fast Diet by Dr Michael Mosley & Mimi Spencer
  15. No One Would Do What The Lamberts Have Done by Sophie Hannah
  16. Menopausing by Davina McCall with Dr Naomi Potter
  17. My Hero Academia Vol 6 by Kohei Horikoshi
  18. How Not To Be Wrong by James O’Brien
  19. The Doctor Will See You Now by Amir Khan
  20. The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett
  21. Onyeka and the Academy of the Sun by Tola Okogwu
  22. The Promised Neverland Vol 6 by Kaiu Shirai and Posuka Demizu
  23. Young Knights of the Round Table by Julia Golding
  24. Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell
  25. The Nobody People by Bob Proehl
  26. The Every Other Day Diet by Dr Krista Varady & Bill Gottlieb
  27. The Promised Neverland Vol 7 by Kaiu Shirai and Posuka Demizu
  28. The Dark Forest by Cixin Liu
  29. Wolverine: Origins Vol 4: Our War by Daniel Way, Steve Dillon & Kaare Andrews
  30. Omniscient Reader’s Viewpoint Vol 1 by singNsong
  31. Lies Sleeping by Ben Aaronovitch
  32. The Inheritance Games by Jennifer Lynn Barnes
  33. Our Bodies Their Battlefield by Christina Lamb
  34. The Girl and the Stars by Mark Lawrence
  35. The Promised Neverland Vol 8 by Kaiu Shirai and Posuka Demizu
  36. Frozen in Time by Ali Sparkes
  37. The Promised Neverland Vol 9 by Kaiu Shirai and Posuka Demizu
  38. Gate to Kagoshima by Poppy Kuroki
  39. The Women Who Wouldn’t Wheesht edited by Susan Dalgety and Lucy Hunter Blackburn
  40. That’s Not My Name by Megan Lally
  41. Death’s End by Cixin Liu
  42. The Future by Naomi Alderman
  43. Omniscient Reader’s Viewpoint Vol 2 by singNsong
  44. Talk With Your Kids by Michael Parker
  45. A Lesson in Vengeance by Victoria Lee
  46. The Promised Neverland Vol 10 by Kaiu Shirai and Posuka Demizu
  47. My Hero Academia Vol 7 by Kohei Horikoshi
  48. The Castaways by Lucy Clarke
  49. The Promised Neverland Vol 11 by Kaiu Shirai and Posuka Demizu
  50. First Class Murder by Robin Stevens
  51. Down Among the Sticks and Bones by Seanan McGuire
  52. The Darkangel by Meredith Ann Pierce
  53. The Promised Neverland Vol 12 by Kaiu Shirai and Posuka Demizu
  54. The Girl and the Mountain by Mark Lawrence
  55. Who Betrays Elizabeth Bennet? By John Sutherland
MamaNewtNewt · 09/07/2026 08:12

Thanks for the new thread @southeastdweller Here’s my list since the last thread, and one review.

62 Beneath Devil’s Bridge by Loreth Anne White
63 The Cipher by Isabella Maldonado
64 A Different Dawn by Isabella Maldonado
65 The Falcon by Isabella Maldonado
66 When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit by Judith Kerr
67 The Appeal by Janice Hallett
68 The Dark Angel by Elly Griffiths
69 Kindred by Octavia Butler

69 Kindred by Octavia Butler

The start to this book - an arm in a wall - pulled me straight into the story. Dana is a black woman in the 1970s who is sent back into the early 1800s whenever Rufus’s life is in danger. I found it really interesting that it was always Dana that Rufus called to for help, and the change in the balance of power between the two, as Rufus grew older, was interesting and kind of sad. One of the most compelling parts of the book was watching Rufus change over time, and how completely he was corrupted by the world he grew up in, which was reflected in the way he gradually treated Dana and Alice.

Despite the time travel, this isn’t really a time travel novel. Butler just uses it as a way to immerse both Dana and us in the reality of slavery. The brutality is unflinching, from families being torn apart and children sold, to the physical violence and the routine sexual exploitation of enslaved women. It’s horrifying, but one of the things that struck me most was how slavery corrupted the slave owners. It normalised cruelty, entitlement and the abuse of power until even people who might once have seemed capable of kindness became part of the system. A powerful, thought-provoking novel that has stayed with me, and a definite bold.

LadybirdDaphne · 09/07/2026 09:00

Thanks for the new thread southeast!

1 Psyche - Kate Forsyth
2 The Forgotten Forest - Robert Vennell
3 Did I Ever Tell You This? - Sam Neill
4 Raising the Sen-betweeners - Lisa Lloyd
5 What We Fear Most - Ben Cave
6 A Tale of Two Titties: a writer’s guide to conquering the most sexist tropes in literary history - Meg Vondriska
7 The Night Circus - Erin Morgenstern
8 Cultish: the language of fanaticism- Amanda Montell
9 William Wordsworth - selected by Seamus Heaney
10 Oaxaca Journal - Oliver Sacks
11 The Greatest Nobodies of History - Adrian Bliss
12 Hunchback - Saou Ichikawa
13 Crypt - Alice Roberts
14 The Lost Rainforests of Britain - Guy Shrubsole
15 The Midnight Library - Matt Haig
16 The Wager - David Grann
17 Hero - Katie Buckley
18 Birds, Sex & Beauty - Matt Ridley
19 Witch Trial - Harriet Tyce
20 Heresy - Catherine Nixey
21 Ghost Wall - Sarah Moss
22 Creatures of a Day - Irvin D. Yalom
23 No One Would Do What the Lamberts Have Done - Sophie Hannah
24 Embers of the Hands - Eleanor Barraclough
25 Little Face - Sophie Hannah
26 A Tale of Two Cities - Charles Dickens
27 The Age of Magical Overthinking - Amanda Montell
28 Sedated - James Davies
29 Good Girl - Aria Aber
30 Cunning Folk and Familiar Spirits - Emma Wilby
31 The Last Death of the Year - Sophie Hannah
32 Mother Tongue - Jenni Nuttall
33 The Parents’ Guide to Managing Anxiety in Children with Autism - Raelene Dundon
34 Making It So - Patrick Stewart
35 The Starving Saints - Caitlin Starling

36 Hellmouth - Giles Kristian
37 The Opposite of Murder - Sophie Hannah
38 His Only Wife - Peace Adzo Medie
39 A History of Modern Britain in 20 Murders - David Wilson

And the latest:
40 Wolf Worm - T. Kingfisher
It’s 1899, and scientific illustrator Sonia Wilson goes to take up a position in a creepy house deep in the creepy North Carolina woods working for a grumpy entomologist. Semi-cosy horror - it was light-hearted and very funny, but the body horror element was strong (flesh eating fly larvae everyone?) Just the ticket while I was off work with a stinking winter cold - it’s midwinter here but we don’t even get Christmas to make up for it 🙄

StrangewaysHereWeCome · 09/07/2026 13:06

@LadybirdDaphne I previously missed your review of Creatures of a Day. I was given Yalom's Staring at the Sun by a psychiatrist friend and loved it, so I'll look this one up as well.

NotWavingButReading · 09/07/2026 13:34

Thanks @Southeastdweller .
Far From Home by Val Wood.
I like Val Wood because she sets most of her books in and around Hull which I know well.
They are usually historical dramas with strong female characters and I find them very well written. This one was different. It starts in Hull but the bulk of the book is in America in the mid 19th century. I don't require a book to be realistic in order to enjoy it and this one certainly isn't,it's outrageously far fetched, yet entertaining. The protagonist Georgiana, while not exactly a pioneer, manages to travel across the US, meeting native Americans, taking part in the gold rush and confronting a bear
The Killing House by Claire McGowan
A Darker Domain by Val McDermid
I like Val McDermid's writing but most of her books are too dark/graphic for me. The Karen Pirie ones are a bit less violent. I enjoyed the TV series as well.

@EineReiseDurchDieZeit have you found a clever way to search for your wish list or are you checking each one individually?
.

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 09/07/2026 13:38

@NotWavingButReading

CLEVER WAY I literally discovered LAST WEEK that you can filter the list Price : Low To High. I was thrilled with myself Grin

ChessieFL · 09/07/2026 15:06

@EineReiseDurchDieZeit I do the price sorting with my wish list every day but just be aware that it’s not completely foolproof - it can sometimes take a bit of time for the filters to catch up with new prices so I do still sometimes find a 99p book in the daily deal hidden amongst the £10.99 books on my wish list because that’s the price it was yesterday. It’s usually right though and a good way to save checking a long wishlist (mine is massive because I just add anything I like the sound of to it and then wait to see if it ever goes down in price enough - some things have been on my wishlist for years because they never go down enough!)

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 09/07/2026 15:08

Same ! @ChessieFL I saw a book today that has been on there since 2015!

Thanks for the tip

ÚlldemoShúl · 09/07/2026 16:50

Books 99 and 100 just finished for me. Definitely one, possibly both of which are bold.

99 The God of Small Things by Arundahti Roy
Continuing both RWYO and my attempt to read all the previous Booker winners in the next couple of years. This book is exceptional. It tells the story of a family in Kerala - twins Estha and Rachel, the older generation of their family and the arrival of their cousin Sophie Mol from England. The prose is dense and lush and a sense of foreboding and rot leaks out through it and the setting as we are told from the start that a tragedy happens. The timeline moves back and forth as the lead up to and aftermath of the tragedy are explored. The characters are fully rounded and real and I could hardly put it down. Definitely bold.

100 An artist of the Floating World by Kazuo Ishiguro
Artist Masuji Ono revisits his past when marriage negotiations for his daughter seem to be struggling. Ono slowly reveals the pertinent events of his life but is he unreliable, rewriting a little or misrepresenting events? Set in an unnamed Japanese city in the aftermath of the Second World War, this was a fascinating read and explored many of the same themes as the BBB but not quite as well (in my opinion). It’s maybe bold. I want to see if it sticks with me.

NotWavingButReading · 09/07/2026 17:03

@ÚlldemoShúl The God of Small Things is now on my TBR.
It's currently free with Prime Reading if anyone wants to borrow it from Amazon.

InTheCludgie · 09/07/2026 17:06

Thank you for the new thread @Southeastdweller. Here is my list:

1 To All The Boys I've Loved Before - Jenny Han
2 Vagabond - Tim Curry
3 Witches Abroad - Terry Pratchett
4 Legends and Lattes - Travis Baldree
5 The Housemaid - Freida McFadden
6 Last Night at the Lobster - Stewart O'Nan
7 Literary Noir 1 - Cornell Woolrich
8 Eleanor & Park - Rainbow Rowell
9 The School of Night - Karl Ove Knausgaard
10 Burial Rites - Hannah Kent
11 Across The Nightingale Floor - Lian Hearn
12 The Benefactors - Wendy Erskine
13 Gone Tomorrow - Lee Child
14 Heart The Lover - Lily King
15 Kingfisher - Rosie Kelly
16 This Is The Story Of A Happy Marriage - Ann Patchett
17 The Correspondent - Virginia Evans
18 The Best of Everything - Kit De Waal
19 Accidental Tourist - Anne Tyler
20 On Earth As It Is Beneath - Ana Paula Maia
21 The Mercy Step - Marcia Hutchinson
22 A Guardian and A Thief - Megha Majumdar
23 A Beast Slinks Towards Beijing - Alice Evelyn Yang
24 The Director- Daniel Kehlmann
25 Poirot's Early Cases - Agatha Christie
26 Strange Houses - Uketsu
27 A Tale of Two Cities - Charles Dickens
28 Future Homemakers of America - Laurie Graham
29 Jamaica Inn - Daphne du Maurier
30 Heated Rivalry - Rachel Reid
31 The Nineties - Chuck Klosterman
32 Three Days in June - Anne Tyler
33 Third Form At Malory Towers - Enid Blyton
34 Kin - Tayari Jones
35 Palaver - Bryan Washington
36 Passing - Nella Larsen
37 The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo - Stieg Larsson
38 Rizzio - Denise Mina

Today I started reading Trustee From The Toolroom by Nevil Shute and I'm still plodding along with Les Miserables on audio. Next up will be Golden Hill by Francis Spufford.

Very late to the party with the pet pics but here is one of the cat just chillin'.

50 Books Challenge 2026 Part Six
CutFlowers · 09/07/2026 17:15

Thanks for the new thread @Southeastdweller .

A continuation for me.

49 Let's Explore Diabetes with Owls - David Sedaris
50 Every Light in the House is Burnin' - Andrea Levy
51 Letters from Burma - Aung San Suu Kyi
52 Sedated: How Modern Capitalism Created our Mental Health Crisis - James Davies
53 Good Harbour - Anita Diamant
54 The Missing Family - Tim Weaver
55 The Correspondant - Virginia Evans
56 The Luminaires- Eleanor Catton
57 One August Night - Victoria Hislop
58 Three Men in a Boat - Jerome K Jerome
59 A Horse Walks into a Pub - David Grossman

Thanks to the person on the thread that recommended the David Raker books. I have struggled a bit with detective/crime recently as my concentration is rubbish but The Missing Family kept me gripped!

Southeastdweller · 09/07/2026 19:05

A Mind of My Own - Kathy Burke

Really poor memoir from the actress and writer, this was barely a snapshot of her life that felt like it was over before it properly began. Most of the anecdotes were dull and everything was skimmed over so it felt like a cash grab, lazily written and thought out.

OP posts:
EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 09/07/2026 19:18

So many Sleb books are just cash grabs. None of them want to be honest because they are too concerned with their careers and getting cancelled @Southeastdweller

VikingNorthUtsire · 09/07/2026 20:55

Southeastdweller · 09/07/2026 19:05

A Mind of My Own - Kathy Burke

Really poor memoir from the actress and writer, this was barely a snapshot of her life that felt like it was over before it properly began. Most of the anecdotes were dull and everything was skimmed over so it felt like a cash grab, lazily written and thought out.

Edited

Ah I'm really disappointed to hear this. I've always thought that Kathy would do a good memoir. She comes across as quite contrary and free of bullshit on the few times I've seen her interviewed.

Southeastdweller · 09/07/2026 21:49

VikingNorthUtsire · 09/07/2026 20:55

Ah I'm really disappointed to hear this. I've always thought that Kathy would do a good memoir. She comes across as quite contrary and free of bullshit on the few times I've seen her interviewed.

Yes, I too have seen interviews she’s done, so was expecting a (somewhat) revealing life story, entertainingly told. Can’t recall the last time I felt so disappointed after reading a book.

OP posts: