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willoyd

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  1. Finished Bright Days this evening - superb read. My first JB Priestley, and am going to seek out more. 5/6 stars. Have started my first Read Around The World book, The Promise by Damon Galgut (South Africa).
  2. Had to put the two books I'm currently reading (Bright Days - JB Priestley, The Burgundians - Bart van Loo) aside to read Mr Wilder and Mei - Jonathan Coe - in time for a book group meeting next week. A quick read - essentially two sittings on two consecutive evenings, eminently readable, with some interesting points, but for some reason never really, deeply, engaged me. Fuller review later on my blog thread once I've had a chance to think that through.. 3/6 stars.
  3. Read that last year for book group - will be interested in reading what you think of it. I've not read any Krailsheimer translations - I gather that's a relatively new one from Oxford World's (relatively, as I know he died in 2001).
  4. #25 Wisconsin: American Wife by Curtis Sittenfeld **** (copied across from my reading blog thread) My first book of the year, a book group choice, but one that nicely satisfies one of my aims this year, to read some bigger books. At over 600 pages it certainly counts as one of those! Having said that, it proved a fairly rapid read - more to do with the readability than any physical aspect of the book! With the main character, Alice, modelled on Laura Bush, the wife of George W Bush, it opens with the couple in bed in the White House, and Alice contemplating her marriage: she's betrayed the President (we don't know how) and is not certain how her marriage is going to progress - we then move into flashback and Alice tells the story of her life and how she got to this point. Whilst Alice is modelled on Laura Bush, it becomes fairly quickly apparent that Alice is not actually Laura Bush: there are enough differences, not least that the story, until it reaches Washington, is set in Wisconsin rather than Texas - which meant that rather neatly but unexpectedly, I found I could slot it in as my Tour of the USA book for that state!. However, there are some key aspects where the 2 lives coincide, aspects, or events, which inevitably impact massively on the women's respective lives. It would be too much of a spoiler to itemise them all, but one which has been well-flagged in reviews, and occurs early on enough not actually spoil, is that it's well documented that Laura Bush, at the age of 19, drove through a stop sign one evening, and collided with a car coming along the other road, killing the driver, a boy who she knew well. A similar incident occurs to Alice, but the circumstances and the aftermath are pure fiction. I initially thought that a lot of this book would be about the rise to the Presidency, but in fact that barely features. Three quarters of the book is about the Alice's life before Charlie (her husband) runs for political status, whilst the last quarter (there are 4 parts) jumps to a couple of years after they reach the White House. But the parts are all strongly connected. What the book does focus on is Alice's relationship with Charlie: they love each other, but they are political opposites - Alice is a signed up Democrat. There social background is also very different (as were the real-life couples'). So, how does Alice work this, how does she compromise her political beliefs and principles to handle that relationship. Or does she? I have to admit, I did find the book quite hard going at times, not because of its readability (as we know), but because of of the extent of the navel-gazing, or internal monologue, and, to be honest, some of the repetition. The challenge and its resolution, the moral hurdles Alice has to negotiate make for fascinating reading, but a good editor would have made this even better (interesting to hear only the other day the presenters of the Book Club Review podcast saying exactly the same about Sittenfeld's latest, 'Rodham', another alternative history biography). I never felt the desire to abandon the book, but I did find myself skimming on occasions. When we came to the book group discussion, I think I was the most positive about the book. Most felt it overlong, a good proportion found Alice frustratingly annoying ('Why was she such a doormat?' was one's question that summed this up neatly), but I have to say that I never once thought that: rather the opposite: this was very much a woman trying to balance her obvious love for her partner with the fact that they were such diametric opposites in so many areas - how did she handle this. It may have been the life of an American First Lady, but so much of it reflected the questions pretty much every couple must face at one time or the other. In her own way, I found Alice to be a rather strong character. In summary: a generally engaging read, with a few patches of longeuse that would have benefited from a stronger editor, asking some very human questions. It certainly made for a good book club read. A promising start to the year, with the added bonus that I've taken my Tour of the USA score up to 25 - one off half way! : 4 stars out of 6.
  5. American Wife by Curtis Sittenfeld **** My first book of the year, a book group choice, but one that nicely satisfies one of my aims this year, to read some bigger books. At over 600 pages it certainly counts as one of those! Having said that, it proved a fairly rapid read - more to do with the readability than any physical aspect of the book! With the main character, Alice, modelled on Laura Bush, the wife of George W Bush, it opens with the couple in bed in the White House, and Alice contemplating her marriage: she's betrayed the President (we don't know how) and is not certain how her marriage is going to progress - we then move into flashback and Alice tells the story of her life and how she got to this point. Whilst Alice is modelled on Laura Bush, it becomes fairly quickly apparent that Alice is not actually Laura Bush: there are enough differences, not least that the story, until it reaches Washington, is set in Wisconsin rather than Texas - which meant that rather neatly but unexpectedly, I found I could slot it in as my Tour of the USA book for that state!. However, there are some key aspects where the 2 lives coincide, aspects, or events, which inevitably impact massively on the women's respective lives. It would be too much of a spoiler to itemise them all, but one which has been well-flagged in reviews, and occurs early on enough not actually spoil, is that it's well documented that Laura Bush, at the age of 19, drove through a stop sign one evening, and collided with a car coming along the other road, killing the driver, a boy who she knew well. A similar incident occurs to Alice, but the circumstances and the aftermath are pure fiction. I initially thought that a lot of this book would be about the rise to the Presidency, but in fact that barely features. Three quarters of the book is about the Alice's life before Charlie (her husband) runs for political status, whilst the last quarter (there are 4 parts) jumps to a couple of years after they reach the White House. But the parts are all strongly connected. What the book does focus on is Alice's relationship with Charlie: they love each other, but they are political opposites - Alice is a signed up Democrat. There social background is also very different (as were the real-life couples'). So, how does Alice work this, how does she compromise her political beliefs and principles to handle that relationship. Or does she? I have to admit, I did find the book quite hard going at times, not because of its readability (as we know), but because of of the extent of the navel-gazing, or internal monologue, and, to be honest, some of the repetition. The challenge and its resolution, the moral hurdles Alice has to negotiate make for fascinating reading, but a good editor would have made this even better (interesting to hear only the other day the presenters of the Book Club Review podcast saying exactly the same about Sittenfeld's latest, 'Rodham', another alternative history biography). I never felt the desire to abandon the book, but I did find myself skimming on occasions. When we came to the book group discussion, I think I was the most positive about the book. Most felt it overlong, a good proportion found Alice frustratingly annoying ('Why was she such a doormat?' was one's question that summed this up neatly), but I have to say that I never once thought that: rather the opposite: this was very much a woman trying to balance her obvious love for her partner with the fact that they were such diametric opposites in so many areas - how did she handle this. It may have been the life of an American First Lady, but so much of it reflected the questions pretty much every couple must face at one time or the other. In her own way, I found Alice to be a rather strong character. In summary: a generally engaging read, with a few patches of longeuse that would have benefited from a stronger editor, asking some very human questions. It certainly made for a good book club read. A promising start to the year, with the added bonus that I've taken my Tour of the USA score up to 25 - one off half way! : 4 stars out of 6.
  6. After quite a lot thought, I've decided to go ahead with a new challenge this year, even if I haven't finished (and am really enjoying) my Tour of the United States. In some ways, they could be regarded as complimentary. So, I've set up a new thread in Reading Challenges, Willoyd's Read Around the World, the aim being to read a book (preferably novel) from every country in the world (plus one or two places that might not be regarded as 'countries' in their own right) - 202 in total. It's a bit daunting, and indeed it may never be finished, but just as my American tour has hugely helped diversify my reading, so my main aim is for this to do that even more. A couple of book group choices in the past year or two have really made me appreciate how narrow my reading was getting, and how much I have enjoyed the variety and different insights these new authors and books have provided. I suspect that it won't be long before I add non-fiction books to the challenge, which really would sort out my reading for the next few years! On a slightly different tack, I'm going to keep a record here also of books acquired for reading this year. Just a prompt to me to actually read some of them, rather than let them merge into my overlarge TBR shelves. To that end, I've acquired the following books since New Year, not all for immediate reading admittedly, as one or two are adding to series or sets of which I'm reading earlier books Ice Rivers by Jemma Wadham Restoring the Wild by Roy Dennis Mistletoe Winter by Roy Dennis Matrix by Lauren Groff Beak, Tooth and Claw by Mary Colwell What Is History Now? by Suzannah Lipscomb and Helen Carr The Devil's Cathedral by David Fairer The Malice of Waves by Mark Douglas-Home J.B. Priestley by Vincent Brome
  7. I'm both pleased and relieved you enjoyed it! I can also recommend her other ghost novel, Dark Matter, although a word of warning, in that several reviewers feel the two books are far too similar. I can certainly see why, but actually found I enjoyed them both, Dark Matter perhaps slighly more than Thin Air. But then I'm a sucker for anything set in the Arctic, or in the Himalaya for that matter! I'd suggest it worth a try anyway.
  8. South America (3/12) Argentina: Not A River - Selva Almada; Elena Knows - Claudia Pineiro Bolivia: Our Dead World - Liliana Colanzi; Fresh Dirt from the Grave - Giovanna Rivero; The Fat Man from La Paz - Rosario Santos (all shorts) Brazil: Macunaima - Mario de Andrade; The Violent Land / Gabriela, Clove and Cinnamon - Jorge Amado; Hour of the Star - Clarice Lispector Chile: The House of Spirits / Eva Luna - Isabel Allende; When We Cease To Understand the World - Benjamin Labatut; Ways of Going Home / Bonsai - Alejandro Zamba Colombia: One Hundred Years of Solitude - Gabriel Garcia Marquez Ecuador: The Pot-Bellied Virgin - Alicia Yanez Cossio; Jawbone - Monica Ojeda; Gabriela Aleman - Poso Wells Guyana: My Bones and My Flute by Edgar Mittelholzer; Frangipani House - Beryl Gilroy Paraguay: I, The Supreme - Augusto Roa Bastos Peru: Red April - Santiago Roncagliolo; Aunt Julia and the Scrptwriter - Maria Vargas Llosa Suriname: The Cost of Sugar - Cynthia McLeod Uruguay: Who Among Us - Mario Benedetti Venezuala: Dona Barbara - Romulo Gallegos; The Night/Simpatia - Rodrigo Blanco Calderon Oceania and Antarctica (3/15) Antarctica: Antarctic Navigation -Elizabeth Arthur Australia: Stone Yard Devotional - Charlotte Wood Fiji: Kava in the Blood - Peter Thomson (NF) Kiribati: Nuanua - Albert Wendt (ed) plus readings from Indigenous Literatures of Micronesia, Pacific Island Legends Marshall Is: Marshall Islands Legends and Stories - Daniel Kelin II Micronesia: Indigenous Literatures of Micronesia - Evelyn Flores and Emelihter Kihleng (eds), plus readings from Pacific Island Legends Nauru: Stories from Nauru - Bam Bam Solomon and others; readings from Indigenous Literatures of Micronesia New Zealand: The Garden Party and Other Stories - Katherine Mansfield; Potiki - Patricia Grace (Maori) Palau: Pacific Island Legends - Bo Flood et al (eds) Papua NG: Maiba - Russell Soaba Samoa: Where We Once Belonged - Sia Figiel Solomon Is: Being The First - Pollard and Waring (eds) Tonga: Tales of the Tikongs - Epeli Hau'ofa Tuvalu: Tuvalu, A History - Simani Faaitu (ed - NF) Vanuatu: Sista, Stanap Strong - Mikaela Nyman (ed)
  9. North America (7/24) Antigua and Barbuda: Annie John - Jamaica Kincaid Bahamas: Thine is the Kingdom - Garth Buckner Barbados: In the Castle of My Skin - George Lamming Belize: Beka Lamb/The Festival of Sain Joaquin - Zee Edgell Canada: Runaway - Alice Munro Costa Rica: The Assault on Paradise - Tatiana Lobo Cuba: Havana Year Zero - Karla Suarez Dominica: Wide Sargasso Sea - Jean Rhys Dominican Republic: The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao - Junot Diaz, Tentacle - Rita Indiana; Julia Alvarez El Salvador: One Day of Life - Manlio Argueta Greenland: Crimson (orig. Homo Sapienne) - Niviaq Korneliussen Grenada: The Bone Readers - Jacob Ross Guatemala: The President - Miguel Angel Asturias; The Art of Political Murder - Francisco Goldman; Haiti: The Dew Breaker - Edwidge Danticat Honduras Jamaica: Augustown - Kai Miller, The Hills Were Joyful Together - Roger Mais; The Book of Night Women - Marlon James Mexico: Pedro Paramo - Juan Rulfo Nicaragua: Infinity in the Palm of Her Hand - Gioconda Belli Panama: The Golden Horse - Juan David Morgan St Kitts and Nevis: Only God Can Make A Tree - Bertram Roach St Lucia: Garth St Omer St Vincent and Grenadines: The Moon Is Following Me / Cassie P Caribbean PI - Cecil Browne Trinidad and Tobago: Minty Alley - CLR James United States: Beloved - Toni Morrison
  10. Asia (9/49) Afghanistan: The Patience Stone / Earth and Ashes - Atiq Rahimi; The Wasted Vigil - Nadeem Aslam Armenia: Three Apples Fell From The Sky - Narine Abgaryan Azerbaijan: Ali and Nino - Kurban Said, Days in the Caucasus - Banine Bahrain: Yummah - Sarah A. Al Shafei Bangladesh: A Golden Age - Tahmima Anam Bhutan: The Circle of Karma - Choden Kunzang Brunei: Written in Black - KH Lim Cambodia: In the Shadow of the Banyan - Vaddey Ratner China: To Live - Yu Hua Georgia: The Pear Field - Nana Ekvitimishvili; The Eighth Life - Nino Haratischvili India: A Fine Balance - Rohinton Mistry; The God of Small Things - Arundhati Roy; Tomb of Sand - Geetanjali Shree Indonesia: The Earth of Mankind - Pramoedya Ananta Toer; Man Tiger - Eka Kurniawan Iran: Touba and the Meaning of Night - Shahrnush Parsipur, Savushun - Simin Daneshvar; The Enlightenment of the Greengage Tree - Shokoofeh Azar Iraq: Prophecy of Pharaoh - Maysalun Hadi; Frankenstein in Baghdad - Ahmed Saadawai Israel: Judas - Amos Oz, More Than I Love My Life/A Horse Walks into a Bar - David Grossman Japan: Snow Country - Yasunari Kawabata; Tokyo Express - Seicho Matsumoto Jordan: Times of White Horses/others - Ibrahim Nasrallah Kazakhstan: The Silent Steppe/Surviving the Silent Steppe Mukhamet Shayakhmetov Korea, North: The Accusation - Bandi Korea, South: The Vegetarian - Han Kang Kuwait: The Book Censor's Library - Bothayna Al-Essa Kyrgyzstan: Jamilia / The White Ship - Chinghiz Aitmatov Laos: Mother's Beloved: Stories from Laos - Outhine Bounyavong Lebanon: The Prophet - Khali Gibran, The Tiller of Waters - Hoda Barakat Malaysia: The Night Tiger - Yangsze Choo Maldives: Dhon Hiyala and Ali Fulhu - Abdullah Sadiz Mongolia: The Blue Sky - Galsan Tschinag Myanmar: Smile As They Bow - Nu Nu Yi Nepal: The Tutor of History/others - Manjushree Thapa; Samrat Upadhyay; Karnali Blues - Buddhisagar Oman: Celestial Bodies - Jokha Alharthi Pakistan: The Wandering Falcon - Jamil Ahmad Palestine: Wondrous Journeys in Strange Lands - Sonia Nimr; Minor Detail - Adania Shibli Philippines: Illustrado - Miguel Syjuco Qatar: The Corsair by Abdulaziz Al-Mahmoud Russia: Stalingrad/Life and Fate - Vasily Grossman Saudi Arabia: The Ruins Of Us - Keija Parssinen; The Dove's Necklace - Raja Alem; Girls of Riyadh - Rajaa Alsanea Singapore: Fistful of Colours / The River's Song - Suchen Christine Lim; How We Disappeared - Jing-Jing Lee Sri Lanka: The Story of a Brief Marriage / A Passage North - Anuk Arudpragasam; The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida / Chinaman - Shehan Karunatilaka Syria: The Frightened Ones - Dima Wannous Tajikistan: Hurramabad - Andrei Volos Taiwan: The Stolen Bicycle / The Man with the Compound Eyes - Wu Ming-yi Thailand: Arid Dreams - Duanwad Pimwana Timor-Leste: Eyewitness/Jazz, Perfume and the Incident - Seno Ajidarma Turkey: 10 Minutes 38 Seconds in This Strange World - Elif Shafak Turkmenistan: The Tale of Aypi - AK Welsapar, Unknown Sands - John Knopf (memoir) UAE: Temporary People - Deepak Unnikrishnan; The Sand Fish - Maha Gargash Uzbekistan: Heirs to the Great Sinner San'On - Erkin A'zam Vietnam: The Sorrow of War - Bao Ninh Yemen: The Hostage - Zayd Mutee' Dammaj; They Die Strangers - Mohammed Abdul-Wali (shorts); A Land Without Jasmine - Wajdi Al-Ahdal
  11. Africa (11/54) Algeria: What the Day Owes the Night - Yasmina Khadra; Fantasia - Assia Djebar Angola: The Book of Chameleons - Jose Eduardo Agualusa Benin: Florent Couao-Zotti (in French); Olympe Bhely-Quenum Botswana: When Rain Clouds Gather - Bessie Head Burkina Faso: So Different From My Life - Monique Ilboudo Burundi: Baho! - Roland Rugero Cameroon: Mission to Kala - Mongo Beti Cape Verde: The Madwoman of Serrano - Dina Salustio Central African Republic: Co-Wives, Co-Widows - Adrienne Yabouza Chad: Told By Starlight in Chad - Joseph Brahim Seid Cormoros: A Girl Called Eel - Ali Zamir Congo, DR: Before the Birth of the Moon - Valentin Y Mudimbe; Tram 83 - Fiston Mwanza Mujila Congo, Rep: Black Moses - Alain Mabanckou Cote d'Ivoire: Standing Heavy - GauZ Djibouti: In the United States of Africa - Abdourahman Waberi Egypt: Palace Walk (Cairo Trilogy v1) - Naguib Mahfouz Equatorial Guinea: By Night the Mountain Burns - Juan Tomas Avila Laurel, Shadows of Your Black Memory - Donato Ndongo Eritrea: The Consequences of Love - Suleiman Addonia Eswatini: A Beautiful Place to Die - Malla Nunn Ethiopia: Cutting for Stone - Abraham Verghese; Beneath the Lion's Gaze - Maaze Mengiste Gabon: Mema - Daniel M Mengara; African Tabloid - Janis Otsiemi Gambia: Reading the Ceiling - Dayo Forster Ghana: The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born - Ayi Kwei Armah Guinea: The Black Terrorist - Tieno Monenembo Guinea-Bissau: The Ultimate Tragedy - Abdulai Sila Kenya: A Grain of Wheat - Ngugi wa Thiong'o Lesotho: Chaka/Traveller To The East - Thomas Mofolo Liberia: She Would Be King - Wayetu Moore Libya: The Bleeding of the Stone - Ibrahim al-Koni; My Friends - Hisham Matar Madagascar: Beyond the Rice Fields - Naivo Malawi: The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind - William Kamkwamba (NF) Mali: The Fortunes of Wangrin - Amadou Hampate Ba Mauritania: The Desert and the Drum - Mbarek Ould Beyrouk Mauritius: The Last Brother - Nathacha Appanah Morocco:: The Sand Child - Tahar Ben Jelloun, The Year of the Elephant - Leila Abouzeid, The King's Fool - Mahi Binebine Mozambique: Woman of the Ashes - Mia Couto Namibia: The Purple Violets of Oshaantu - Neshani Andreas; Born of the Sun/Troubled Waters - Joseph Diescho Niger: The Epic of Askia Mohammed - Thomas Hale/Nouhou Malio Nigeria: The Joys of Motherhood - Buchi Emecheta Rwanda: Our Lady of the Nile - Scholastique Mukasonga Sao Tome and Principe: Short Stories - Gervaiso Kaiser Senegal: The Most Secret of Men - Mohamed Mbouga Sarr Seychelles: Kolony - Glynn Burridge Sierra Leone: The Last Harmattan of Alusine Dunbar - Syl Cheney-Choker; The Memory of Love - Aminatta Forna Somalia: Crossbones / From A Cracked Rib - Nuruddin Farah South Africa: The Promise - Damon Galgut South Sudan: Edo's Souls - Stella Gaitano Sudan: Season of Migration to the North - Tayeb Salih Tanzania: Abdulrazak Gurnah Togo: Michel the Giant, An African in Greenland - Tete-Michel Kpomassie (NF) Tunisia: The Pillar of Salt - Albert Memmi Uganda: Kintu / The First Woman - Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi Zambia: A Cowrie of Hope - Binwel Sanyangwe Zimbabwe: The House of Hunger - Dambudzo Marechera; We Need New Names - NoViolet Bulawayo, Nervous Conditions - Tsitsi Dangarembga
  12. Europe (20/47) Albania: Ismail Kadare Andorra: The Teacher of Cheops - Albert Salvado Austria: Chess Story - Stefan Zweig Belarus: King Stakh's Wild Hunt - Uladzimir Karatkevich, Svetlana Alexievich (NF), Belgium: The Sorrow of Belgium - Hugo Claus Bosnia and Hezorgovina: The Bridge over the Drina - Ivo Andric Bulgaria: Time Shelter - Georgi Gosposdinov Croatia: Our Man in Iraq - Robert Perisic; Dubravka Ugresic Cyprus: Margarita's Husband - Andriana Ierodiaconou, The Silent Patient - Alex Michaelides Czech Republic: Closely Watched Trains - Bohumil Hrabel Denmark A History of Danish Dreams - Peter Hoeg; We The Drowned - Carsten Jensen England: The Good Companions - JB Priestley; White Teeth -Zadie Smith Estonia: The Autumn Ball - Mati Unt, Border State - Tonu Onepalu, Treading Air - Jaan Kross Finland: The Year of the Hare - Arto Paasilinna France: The Black Notebook / Missing Person - Patrick Modiano Germany: Measuring the World - Daniel Kehlmann Greece: Zorba the Greek/Report to Greco - Nikos Kazantzakis Hungary: The Door/Katalin Street - Magda Szabo Iceland: History. A Mess. - Sigrun Palsdottir Ireland: Ulysses - James Joyce Italy: The Leopard - Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa Latvia: Flesh-Coloured Dominoes - Zigmunds Skujins Liechtenstein: Die letzte Reise der Hindenburg - Armin Ohri Lithuania: White Shroud - Antanas Skema, Tula - Jurgis Kuncinas, Vilnius Poker - Ricardas Gavelis Luxembourg: The Pleasure of Drowning - Jean Burlesk Malta: In the Name of the Father (and of the Son) - Immanuel Mifsud; The Lives and Deaths of K. Pensa - Clare Azzopardi Moldova: The Good Life Elsewhere - Vladimir Lorchenkov Monaco: Envoyé Spécial Dans La Cage Aux Fauves - Armand Gatti Montenegro: The Son/The Coming/Anomaly - Andrej Nikolaidis Netherlands: The Safekeep - Yael van Der Wouden Northern Ireland: Travelling in a Strange Land - David Park North Macedonia: Freud's Sister - Goce Smilevski Norway: The Ice Palace - Tarjei Vesaas Poland: Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead - Olga Tokarczuk Portugal: Jose Saramago; The City and The Mountains - Jose Maria de Eca de Queiroz Romania: Nostalgia - Mircea Cartarescu, Life Begins On Friday - Iona Parvulescu San Marino: The Republic of San Marino - Giuseppe Rossi (NF) Scotland: O Caledonia - Elspeth Barker Serbia: The Tiger's Wife - Tea Obreht; The Box - Slavoljub Stankovic Slovakia: Rivers of Babylon - Peter Pistanek Slovenia: Alamut - Vladimir Bartol, The Harvest of Chronos - Mojca Kumerdej Spain: A Heart So White - Javier Marias Sweden: The Details - Ia Genberg Switzerland: I'm Not Stiller - Max Frisch; The Assistant - Robert Walser; About Uncle - Rebeccas Gissler; A Simple Intervention - Yael Inokai Ukraine: Death and the Penguin - Andrey Kurkov Vatican City: When In Rome: A Journal of Life in Vatican City - Robert Hutchinson (NF) Wales: One Moonlit Night - Caradog Prichard
  13. As June said in the first post of her trip round the world's nations, I've been thinking about this for some time. Given that I've only just reached the half-way point of my Tour of the USA, it's probably a bit precipitate to start a new challenge, but I think I can handle too, and having seen June complete her journey recently, I'm inspired to get going on mine, so two challenges it is! In terms of places I've decided to start with: + the 193 full member countries the United Nations +.the 2 observer countries: Vatican City, Palestine + an ex-member: Taiwan + the largest island (and semi-autonomous state): Greenland + the United Kingdom split into its 4 constituent countries (I've read loads of English literature, but little from the others) + the only continent otherwise not represented in this tour: Antarctica which takes me to 200 countries and 1 continent, although that may well change as things progress. As for criteria in choosing each book, I'm primarily going for aims rather than rules, simply because I suspect, from reading others' challenges, it would be nigh on impossible to find books which I can read (eg most will need to be available in translation) that satisfy similar conditions to those I used in my Tour of the USA. So, my main aim is to read an example of adult literature (narrative prose) written in the last hundred years (I'm using the publication date of Ulysses on 2/2/22 [1922!] as my starting point) by an author born in or a citizen of that country (or resident as next best), ideally set in that country. I will generally go for fiction, but non-fiction is allowed; it may even, on occasions, be preferred if I think it gives more insight into the country and/or its literature. If all else fails, a book about the country written by someone who is neither from nor a resident (eg, a history of...). The one strict criterion is that it has to be a book I haven't read before.- this is about expanding my literary experience after all! To keep posts manageable, I'm splitting countries up by continents in the checklists below: Europe; Africa; Asia; North America; South America and Oceania/Antarctica. Books in blue are those that have been read - I may list more than one book if I think later books are 'worthy' enough! Books in black are possibilities for countries which I haven't visited yet. Read to date: 53/ 201
  14. That's interesting, because he's quite a well-regarded fiction writer too. It's good to see night trains making a comeback: we've long used trains as our main means of transport in Europe, and it was really saddening to see all the overnight routes that we used to use being struck off one by one. They were/are particularly useful for us as cyclists! That was particularly so as the ferry routes were being destroyed too - and they've not started coming back, rather the reverse continues, the latest being Hull-Zeebrugge.
  15. Completed I Belong Here by Anita Sethi - her account of walking (parts of) the Pennine Way as part of her therapyafter a traumatic experience of racial abuse whilst travelling by train. I so wanted to like this, but....whilst she has important things to say, and some valuable insights, I found her writing dreadful: a real chore to read. Interestingly, it's had some rave reviews in the press, featuring in end of year recommendations (which is how I came to it), but now browsing Good Reads reviews, I see I'm definitely not alone. I read it to the end only because there were those important moments, and almost felt I ought to, but all it did was convince me that this was in desperate need of a good editor. 2 stars out of 6 (it would have been 1 star for the writing alone). Continuing with The Burgundians, which I am thoroughly enjoying. Finding that I'm enjoying it most in relatively small bites and then reviewing what I've read - so much to take in!
  16. Finished American Wife this morning. A fascinating book, 4/6 stars. Most of the book was set in Wisconsin, so have replaced the incumbent title(The Art of Fielding) that I was going to read for this state, with this, a worthy replacement. Takes my Tour of the US to 25 states now. Have moved on to a Christmas present: The Burgundians by Bart van Loo, a chunky history tome. This could take some time!
  17. Wow well done! I see it's almost exactly 10 years since your first post on this thread - a super achievement and well sustained! I'm part way through my tour of the USA; like you I will almost certainly feel a bit of 'what next?' (I certainly did after English Counties, and that was only a fraction of this commitment). However, this looks like a fascinating challenge to take up. Your list will be invaluable! Thank you for keeping us all in touch.
  18. From my perspective there are several reasons why that doesn't work for me: I buy a lot of hardbacks, particularly for non-fiction, as I find print sizes in the paperbacks too small to read pleasurably. They often go out of print or unavailable quickly. If they are available they are often far more expensive even second hand (most of my buying of new books is in sales etc). I also buy a lot from specialist charity bookshops and 2nd-hand shops, and those books aren't there when I go back. IN terms of paperbacks, I read a fair amount of series and, being the sort of geek/nerd I am, I like to have them in uniform bindings - and publishers have a habit of changing them, so I tend to buy several books in a series at one go, or as soon as the next one in that series is out, ready to read later. I also dip into books a lot - not easy to do if they are in the bookshop. And I enjoy sitting in a room with lots of full bookshelves (would love a proper library!). So, having a library/anti-library works at several levels for me; it won't of course for everyone (my wife thinks I'm mad - she's probably at least partly right, she usually is!). I'd agree with all of that! I think your interpretation of that is spot on. For me, it underlined the fundamental shallowness of Gatsby - showing off all those books, which he's got for display not to read. My book storage is very similar to luna's. We don't even have the book wallpaper, although I do have a large cushion on one sofa in the sittingroom covered in a booky fabric!
  19. Hmmm. There's quite a value judgement there. Why is it 'virtuous' to have a TBR list 'under control'? I adore reading and having books around me - why wouldn't I have a huge TBR pile? What's virtuous about having a small list? As I said in my earlier post, I long ago abandoned any idea of keeping my TBR list 'under control', simply because that didn't work for me - I have a philosophy that means a fairly large unread library of books is a good thing (virtuous)!
  20. Great choice! I've also just acquited a copy of his diaries (1988-98) for very much the same reasons. We read this as a book group read in 2020 - took us a bit by surprise as nobody had read either this or his previous book before, and without exception we loved it. Can see why it featured so prominently in your awards. Will be intrigued to see if The Lincoln Highway lives up to these standards!
  21. Yes, a lot of my reading is of older books, and strictly speaking most of them will inevitably be recognisably from the time they were written. However, for me, 'dated' means a bit more than that, something along the lines of 'has not worn well' - i.e. they were probably OK at the time but don't read well now. There's a fine line between fashionably 'retro', and out of date, and one person's retro will be another person's dated (and vice-versa!).
  22. I have to say I pretty much gave up with this series: far too many of them were exactly that - two dimensional. Wooden characters, unlikely plots and, as you say, dated. It seemed to me that there was a pretty good reason why they hadn't been republished!
  23. Most of it is copied across from year to year, and then just edited, so it's not half as much work as it might look. I'm a bit obsessive about organising my books and reading - as my LibraryThing catalogue might show. almost all my books are catalogued and shelved in categories and then alpha/chronological/Dewey order! Drives my OH demented, whilst I just regard it as fairly essentil when dealing with a fairly sizeable library!
  24. Welcome to my reading blog for 2022. This thread is now open! (2021 Review and 2022 Preview on its way!)
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