Around the Year in 52 Books discussion
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I may read that one a few weeks early to coincide with the election. It seems appropriate.

I read Lonely Hearts. It was terrible. Such a generic cop thriller, where everyone is shacking up with everyone else, and the rules are more like guidelines, and "I'm a tough guy but I still care deep down". Blah. Hopefully the rest of the year goes better.

I was not expecting it to be a thriller mystery type book. Based on the cover and title, I was expecting it to be much cozier. That said, the two sides to the story came together nicely. It was tied up without too many stretches in the story and was sufficiently creepy.


I'm officially on the hold list for Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House, but we'll see if I get it at a time that's good for the Fire part of this prompt!



Yea, the library thing has made it rather difficult. I'm trying not to get too far ahead in this challenge so I'm focusing on some of my other challenges. I did get a notification that they purchased the book on South African corruption I recommended, so there is a chance that they'll get what you need.


One of the most fascinating things about Malala that I Iearned from the book was that her being shot was not the beginning of her being famous for activism. I knew that she had been singled out for going to school but I had pictured it more as her being vocal in her village for her own education. Turns out she had an anonymous blog on BBC and she regularly did interviews on Pakistani TV. It seemed much more like a Rosa Parks scenario where Malala know damn well that she was sticking her neck out and she was willing to face any and all consequences. My admiration for her intensified immensely, which I did not think was possible.



It's one of the most frustrating things with Victorian novels, Dickens being the worst offender. Because they were periodicals, some chapters are drawn out when the author couldn't figure out the plot and needed to get something published and other chapters have way to much in it because they are running up on a deadline. They desperately needed a discerning eye after the fact to help with flow.
I'm glad others can commiserate!

The other one was for a narrative nonfiction: The Long Walk: The True Story of a Trek to Freedom. A group of seven escape a prisoner's camp in northern Siberia and attempt to escape to India. On foot. It was definitely a serious, sobering counterpoint to my earlier humorous book. It was a great story that was very well written. I'd recommend it for this challenge or the surviving a hardship one.

I finished off the April books with an unusual format The Tough Guide to Fantasyland. It's basically an encyclopedia for the fantasy genre. While there were some great entries, it did drag on a bit between these gems. If ever found read the horses entry!

The two books that i enjoyed were Red Rising and Six of Crows. I definitely get now why these two books come up again and again as recommendations. They will be added to my list of books to recommend as well.


Books mentioned in this topic
Sisters of the Revolution: A Feminist Speculative Fiction Anthology (other topics)Victory Disc (other topics)
Hounded (other topics)
Siddhartha (other topics)
The Call of Cthulhu (other topics)
More...
I use challenges like this to help pick out books from my very long TBR list. It will probably go through massive changes by the end of the year, but I have at least one thing for every week.
1. A book with the letters A, T & Y in the title. Read: Lonely Hearts
2. A book from the first 10 books added to your To Be Read list. Read Rule Zero
3. A book from the 2017 Goodreads Choice Awards. Read: Midnight at the Bright Ideas Bookstore
4. 4 books linked by the 4 elements: Book #1 Earth A Wizard of Earthsea
5. A book about or inspired by real events Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House
6. A book originally written in a language other than English The Dead Lake
7. A gothic novel The Woman in White
8. An "own voices" book* I Am Malala: The Story of the Girl Who Stood Up for Education and Was Shot by the Taliban
9. A book with a body part in the title Blood Rites
10. An author's debut book Semiosis
11. A literary fiction How the García Girls Lost Their Accents
12. A book set in Africa or South America The President's Keepers: Those Keeping Zuma in Power and Out of Prison
13. A book with a plot centered around a secret The Secret History
14. 4 books linked by the 4 elements: Book #2 Fire An Ember in the Ashes
15. A book with an unique format/writing structure The Tough Guide to Fantasyland
16. A narrative nonfiction The Long Walk: The True Story of a Trek to Freedom
17. A book you expect to make you laugh Feet of Clay
18. A book with a location in the title First Grave on the Right
19. A book nominated for the Edgar Award or by a Grand master author (books & authors) The Screaming Staircase
20. A book rated 5 stars by at least one of your friends Gregor the Overlander
21. A book written in first person perspective Marathon Woman: Running the Race to Revolutionize Women's Sports
22. A book you have high expectations or hope for Glass Sword
23. A medical or legal thriller Whose Body?
24. A book with a map Red Rising
25. A book with an antagonist/villain point of view Six of Crows
26. A book with a text only cover The Princess Saves Herself in this One
27. A book about surviving a hardship (war, famine, major disasters, serious illness, etc) Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City
28. 4 books linked by the 4 elements: Book #3 Water Over Sea, Under Stone
29. A book with a "Clue" weapon on the cover or title (lead pipe, revolver, rope, candlestick, dagger, wrench) Our Kind of Cruelty
30. A short book Herland
31. A book set in a country you'd like to visit but have never been to Dreaming in Cuban
32. An alternate history book Black Powder War
33. A book connected (title, cover, content) to a word "born" in the same year as you (link) I Am Pilgrim
34. A suggestion from the AtY 2018 polls, that didn't win but was polarizing or a close-call (link) The Name of the Rose
35. A book featuring a murder Chocolate Chip Cookie Murder
36. A book published in the last 3 years (2016, 2017, 2018) by an author you haven't read before Paradox Bound
37. A Women's Prize for Fiction winner or nominee Alif the Unseen
38. A science book or a science fiction book Ancillary Justice
39. A book with a form of punctuation in the title The City & the City
40. A book from Amazon's 100 Books to Read in a Lifetime list (link)The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay
41. A book by an author with the same first and last initials On What Grounds
42. A book that takes place on, in, or underwater The Call of Cthulhu
43. A book with a title that is a whole sentence I Let You Go
44. A ghost storySing, Unburied, Sing
45. A book that intimidates/ scares youWar and Peace
46. 4 books linked by the 4 elements: Book #4 Air The Cloud Roads
47. A book where the main character (or author) is of a different ethnic origin, religion, or sexual identity than your own Siddhartha
48. A book related to one of the 7 deadly sins (pride, greed, lust, envy, gluttony, wrath, sloth)The Wrath and the Dawn
49. A book from one of the Goodreads Best Books of the Month lists (link) The Girl with All the Gifts
50. A book with a warm atmosphere (centered on family, friendship, love or summer)Hounded
51. An award-winning short story or short story collectionSisters of the Revolution: A Feminist Speculative Fiction Anthology
52. A book published in 2018 Victory Disc