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Final book of 2020
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Sallys
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Dec 28, 2020 10:56AM

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What is this Feminerdy book club you speak of?


Feminerdy is a book club that discusses Fantasy and SciFi novels from a feminist perspective. Meets once a month for about 1,5 hours on a Sunday afternoon. Some of the books discussed: A Game of Thrones, Binti, The Fifth Season, Harrow the Ninth, The Bear and the Nightingale and last time was The Bird King . I am not a huge fantasy reader but attend whenever the book interests me and it is always a lively discussion. Since I come to fantasy with a very eclectic reading background and far less fantasy than most in the group, I often throw a different reaction or reference in triggering some fun discussions.
Started as an in person book club at Astoria Book Shop in Queens NYC, it is now of course totally virtual, meeting to discuss the month's pick on Facebook Room linked on the Feminerdy Book Club FB page: https://www.facebook.com/groups/31257... should get you there. It is a public group. Also here on Good Reads: https://www.goodreads.com/group/show/....
Activity is all in the monthly meetings. New members welcome and you don't have to be in NYC. Nor attend regularly.
Next meeting is Sunday Jan 10th at 1 pm EST. via FB room on Feminerdy Book Club page. To be discussed: The Priory of the Orange Tree. Will also be picking the next couple of month's books. Would love to get a few PBT fantasy readers attending!





The Heart's Invisible Furies
Quit Like a Woman: The Radical Choice to Not Drink in a Culture Obsessed with Alcohol
The Stationery Shop
another might sneak in...

@Theresa, I really enjoyed The Priory of the Orange Tree and should make for a really interesting discussion!
Currently I'm reading In a Holidaze and Untamed which are fun end of year reads.

Friends Like Us by Lauren Fox
Kitchen Confidential: Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly by Anthony Bourdain
A Nantucket Christmas by Nancy Thayer

My last planned book is The Samurai's Garden by Gail Tsukiyama

My last planned book is [book:The Samurai's Garden|51..."
I have read #'2 and 3 of The Welsh Princes, I never read # 1-I think this year I will read the entire trilogy

I an now starting Gulp: Adventures on the Alimentary Canal, which I should finish this month.

Also part way through an e-print copy of “Hidden” by Megg Jensen (fantasy, dragons) from the library, which I need to finish though it is a bit slow so far. Backlit on phone, so if insomnia strikes (and the book doesn’t make me fall asleep), it might get done.
The delight that I might well finish though is my Christmas present from my lovely friends in DC - “World of Wonders: in praise of fireflies, whale sharks and other astonishments” by Aimee Nezhukumatathil. A complete gem in short episodes. I am trying to savour it rather than gobble. Now I have to find her poetry too.




My last planned book is"
The first one was my favorite. It was nice to reread them over the past year and a half. I have rereads of The Sunne in Splendour and When Christ and His Saints Slept in 2021 since they are on my Unofficial Trim list.
I had a chance to read The Land Beyond the Sea a couple months ago and liked it more than you. I'm not a big fan of Crusades historical fiction, but I listened to the audio, which forced me to slow way down and I had low expectations due to the setting. I did love Baldwin, the Leper King, but I know it won't ever be a reread for me.


I love that series on audio. After the first one, I knew I would only do them by audio.
It looks like my last book will be The Worst Best Man, which I must have gotten as a nook/kindle deal sometime this year. It's a bit original as a romcom, because the heroine is of dark-skinned Brazilian ancestry and there is quite a lot about her family traditions, foods, etc. I usually read historical romances from the Regency and Victorian times. Although there are plenty of sex scenes in some of them, the characters don't talk about sex the way modern people would. So it was a bit of a surprise for me to have the main characters talking and thinking in graphic terms. Of course it's obvious that the 2 who are enemies to start with end up together. I wanted something light before taking on some reading plans for 2021.

I loved that series too, but the audio was a big part of it. I think it was rather original at the time but since then lots more books were done in the same vein. I can definitely see why it could come across as annoying. It is appropriate for this date in that it starts on New Year's and goes through the year.

I am in the smack middle of And They Called it Camelot by Stephanie Marie Thornton. About Jackie O and JFK. And I want to finish it by tomorrow night. Not sure. But that is my plan.

I am in the smack middle of And They Called it Camelot by Stephanie Marie Thornton. About Jacki..."
Cannot wait to see your review Amy,. this one has been on my radar


Since I am waiting for January 1 to start a number of reads for various things, I am probably going to end with one or two more holiday reads--light, easy and the just arrived at the library so I picked them up this afternoon.
But what to start on Jan 1 is hard since there are a few here I am itching to begin.

My last book will be Jeanette Winterson's Christmas Days. I have 2 stories to go.
I slept away most of December, and I hope that tomorrow I'll wake up to a brighter new year.

A New Year's Eve movie "tradition" I've done a few times (when I can find it on tv) is all three "That's Entertainment!" movies. I love those.

..."
I am just over halfway.. it's probably not going to be my last book of 2020, but my first book of 2021.
Just finished The Stationery Shop


Book review to come - probably tomorrow. Top 10 also to come tomorrow.

Books mentioned in this topic
Break The Bodies, Haunt The Bones (other topics)The Cuckoo's Calling (other topics)
The Stationery Shop (other topics)
Winnie-the-Pooh (other topics)
Bridget Jones’s Diary (other topics)
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