Around the Year in 52 Books discussion
Weekly Topics 2018
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4: 4 books linked by the 4 elements: Book #1 Earth (in title, cover, content, setting, author...)


Melanie, I love your recommendation. I went right in & added it to my TBR. Poisonous plants sound fascinating.

I know! But I only read it a week ago, and unless I totally spaced out, there was no hot air balloon. We've been misled, people. MISLED.
Katie wrote: "The Good Earth is such a good idea for this one. I keep meaning to read it, but then I see how long it is & get deterred."
I have been like that the past few years, but I'm determined to read more big books this year. I'm only 15% in, but so far it's really enjoyable, and a very easy read.

I know! But I only read it a week ago, and unless I totally spaced out, there was no hot air balloon. We've been misl..."
There is a ballon in the movie...
I read it last year, but I have so bad memory that I couldn't remember if there was a ballon or not, so I checked Wikipedia and this is what it says:
"Although a journey by balloon has become one of the images most strongly associated with the story, this iconic symbol was never deployed by Verne – the idea is, briefly, brought up in Chapter 32, but dismissed, as it "would have been highly risky and, in any case, impossible." However, the popular 1956 movie adaptation Around the World in Eighty Days used the balloon idea, and it has now become a part of the mythology of the story, even appearing on book covers. This plot element is reminiscent of Verne's earlier Five Weeks in a Balloon, which first made him a well-known author."



My Side of the Mountain, by Jean Craighead George.
Mountain is in the title, and he lives off the land. So it fits, right? This is a book I stole from my son's bookshelf.



I've also considered A Crack in the Edge of the World for this one, since it has to do with a major geological event/catastrophe.





I had planned to read The Pillars of the Earth this week but my library hold hasn’t arrived in time. So instead I typed “Earth” into the search box on Overdrive just to see what would come up and came across this book. Jhumpa Lahiri is an author I’ve been meaning to read for a while so I decided to choose it. It’s a collection of eight short stories, I’ve read the first one and loved it so I’m quite happy with my choice.


I had planned to read The Pillars of the Earth this week but my library hold hasn’t arrived in time. So ins..."
She's wonderful!! I LOVED Interpreter of Maladies , and also The Namesake. I'll be reading Unaccustomed Earth this year too.





Sarah Waters and Ocean Vuong are two authors I found with books I want to read. I just searched for water type words.




Hello Shelly, I'm new to the group. I've also chosen Unaccustomed Earth as my week 4 read, and am interested to know what you think of it.
Marguerite

Tracy, that’s great to hear you enjoyed Interpreter of Maladies. I’m adding it to my TBR as after this book I can imagine I’ll want to read more by Jhumpa Lahiri.

Tracy, that’s great to hear y..."
You could always slot it in for the prize winning short stories prompt, lots of people here reading it this year.

well thats good to hear haha. it's slow going but so far i've enjoyed the first 14 pages lol



East of Eden is Steinbeck's best, imo. He's one of my favorite authors so I've read most all of his books.


Thanks Tracy, that’s a great idea. I haven’t picked a book for that prompt yet so this will be perfect.

Thanks Tracy, that’s a great idea. I haven’t picked a book for that..."
Oh Yay!! 😊. I remember reading a couple of the stories twice.

I read Grapes of Wrath for "book you should have read in high school but didn't" for a book challenge a few years ago and it was PAINFUL. But I've also had several people rave about East of Eden, so maybe I'll give it a try.


East of Eden is Steinbeck's be..."
i'm about 100 pages into it and i'm definitely enjoying it more than i thought i would. the families are very complex and intriguing
Just finished Dead Mountain: The Untold True Story of the Dyatlov Pass Incident as my 'Earth' book (I went for a thematic connection). I really liked it, and it even had a satisfying ending, which is rare in books about mysterious long-ago events. I'd recommend it.

Sleeping Giants
I read this on a whim because I requested the library to buy it ages ago and forgot about it, and it suddenly got purchased and checked out. But I think it works for the prompt. It's about finding giant pieces of an ancient robot buried deep within the earth, that surfaced unexpectedly. A good portion of the early story is them going around and figuring out how to find them and get them unearthed.


You all have such good ideas for this one! I'm extra-challenging myself this year to only read (print) books I currently have on my physical bookshelf, so this was the earthiest of the lot.
Books mentioned in this topic
A Wizard of Earthsea (other topics)Everyone's a Aliebn When Ur a Aliebn Too (other topics)
Unaccustomed Earth (other topics)
From the Earth to the Moon (other topics)
The Waking Land (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Jhumpa Lahiri (other topics)Jules Verne (other topics)
Andy Weir (other topics)
Callie Bates (other topics)
Mary Stewart (other topics)
More...
This one doesn't really fit air - I don't know if you are thinking the same thing I was before I read this, but this doesn't happen in a hot a..."
Get OUT!! I had no idea!!!!!