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50 Books a Year - The 2025 Challenge

(1001 Posts)
TerriBull Tue 31-Dec-24 21:49:54

It's that time of year again, out with the old in with the new.
Boy, the past year has whizzed by, it seems like no time at all since I was starting up the 2024 thread.

So here it is, our brand new one for the coming year and welcome back to all our stalwarts, I do hope you will all keep posting away, giving your invaluable feedback and recommendations.

For those of you who happen to be newbies, this is a dedicated thread for books lovers. Our aim is try and read 50 books by the end of the year, for some that's a piece of cake, for others, depending on what's going on in life, or time constraints, 50 books may seem a daunting number However, that number is merely an aspiration, please do join in even if you feel you may not reach 50, or if you think you may just dip in and out from time to time.

Your choice of books is entirely up to you, they can be fiction, non fiction, biographies, whatever floats your boat. They can be a physical book, or on a Kindle, or Audible.

If you don't want to commit to the challenge, but books are your thing and feel you would like to share your thoughts on something you've read and enjoyed........or alternatively something you thought was quite abysmal and only suitable for lobbing in the bin grin then do park yourself right here and tell us about it, where I'm sure you'll have a captive audience.

To regular posters who would like to look back on your best reads of 2024 and list them, there is a separate thread for that.

So all that remains is to wish everyone a Happy and Healthy 2025 and may all your books be good ones or at the very least not bin lobbers!

I'm posting early, in case I feel the need for a 2025 lie in grin

Oreo Fri 14-Feb-25 11:41:14

Am reading four books by Jane Harper, am reading them in order, set in Australia and the first book is called The Dry and is gripping.

Sara1954 Fri 14-Feb-25 11:58:59

Love Jane Harper

Juno56 Sat 15-Feb-25 15:01:18

#9 Ride the Storm Karen Chance.
Number eight in the Cassie Palmer series about a young woman who has unexpectedly received the power of the Oracle of Delphi, the Pythia. She has to learn how to manage the power while negotiating some hair-raising adventures. I have stuck with this series from the beginning so I will continue but goodness this one in particular is exhausting. Gods, demons, the Fey, vampires, ghosts, steamy sex scenes and King Arthur's Camelot combine in a confusing (but very entertaining) package. I need to find something very different for my next read!

Calendargirl Sat 15-Feb-25 15:07:06

#16. On Cold Ground by DS Butler.

FriedGreenTomatoes2 Sat 15-Feb-25 15:11:50

You won’t be disappointed Oreo! Great read.
Sara1954 I’m going to add ‘Home’ by Marilynne Robinson to my Kindle now.
It sounds my kind of novel. Thank you.

I’m still ploughing through ‘Strange Sally Diamond’. I’m not loving it and since the backstory took a darker vibe (too graphic - think those misery genre books) I’m liking it even less!

NittWitt Sat 15-Feb-25 19:19:57

6. An Aura of Mystery by Joy Ellis
(On Audible only)

Ellie McEwen is a successful florist when she is badly injured in a car accident.
Recovering, Ellie is startled to see bright colours around everyone - their auras.
Ellie begins learning to control & interpret her new skill then finds herself drawn into a police murder investigation.
I wouldn't usually read/listen to a book described as a thriller but gave this one a chance and I would recommend it.

7. The Girl Behind the Wall
by Mandy Robotham

Completely by chance, Karin is staying overnight in East Berlin on the night in August 1961 that the Berlin Wall goes up. (The Anti-Fascist Protection Barrier).
That means Karin is separated from her twin sister, Jutta, and the rest of her family.
At first, they believe that Karin, as a West Berlin citizen, will soon be returned home but things turn out very differently.
Another one I recommend.

Sara1954 Sat 15-Feb-25 19:41:01

Book 11
The Girls of Slender Means - Muriel Spark

I’m quite relieved that this was a relatively short book, because I didn’t care for it very much.

I feel like I must have missed something, because it’s highly acclaimed, but not for me.

Diggingdoris Sun 16-Feb-25 11:46:52

15-Child's Play-Danielle Steel
Kate Morgan is a widow with three grown children who in her mind have perfect lives. Then one by one they tell their mother that things are not what she imagined. It takes a while for her to come to accept their choices.

Sparklefizz Sun 16-Feb-25 11:52:54

Oreo

Am reading four books by Jane Harper, am reading them in order, set in Australia and the first book is called The Dry and is gripping.

I loved the Jane Harper books. It's always good to hear that somebody else is enjoying them.

mabon1 Sun 16-Feb-25 13:10:27

I read a book every week.

suelld Sun 16-Feb-25 13:25:11

TerriBull

My first book of the year is The Monk - Tim Sullivan

Plus I'm dipping in and out of The Plantagenets - Dan Jones

Tim Sullivan was one of my really enjoyable ‘finds’ last year , read them all to date and just received the latest ‘ The Bookseller’ . Really looking forward to that!
Just finished ‘Mrs Palfrey at the Claremont’ by Elizabeth Taylor for our book club… at 80 next year I found that tho it’s an interesting, well written book, it was quite depressing !

suelld Sun 16-Feb-25 13:30:01

PS: I used to read almost a book a day back in my heyday, but there are so many more ‘distractions’ nowadays, and the energy to do those, the essentials of life, and read loads of books has become a real problem nowadays… but still trying!

DeeDe Sun 16-Feb-25 13:35:32

First The Woman by Kristin Hannah

Moggycuddler Sun 16-Feb-25 13:46:17

Just finished Stephen King's Dark Tower series. A bit late in the day, but I'm so glad I gave it a go, after being unsure about it for a long time. I feel quite bereft now without those fabulous, vivid characters that I grew to love. And what an enigmatic but fitting ending.

Dowsabella Sun 16-Feb-25 14:08:33

Only just found this thread - 7 weeks late! However, I'm a fairly fast reader, so, theoretically, it should be possible wink grin

I've just finished reading "Little Book of Seeds" by Marshalls Garden. Not sure it counts, and I won't be upset if it doesn't, but, yes, I have read it from cover to cover (very sad person that I am!), theoretically spent lots of money, and now trying to prune my spending!! (OK, that was definitely not a serious read!)

Just a quick question: do children's books count? I usually spend some time reading to my DGGD (aged three and a half) when I visit, and some children's books are so lovely.

FriedGreenTomatoes2 Sun 16-Feb-25 14:15:27

mabon1

I read a book every week.

Fancy sharing them on here?

Indigo8 Sun 16-Feb-25 14:18:07

I think children's books might be cheating as some take about 2.5 minutes to read.

I agree some are so lovely. I still enjoy illustrated books.

FriedGreenTomatoes2 Sun 16-Feb-25 14:19:14

suelld

TerriBull

My first book of the year is The Monk - Tim Sullivan

Plus I'm dipping in and out of The Plantagenets - Dan Jones

Tim Sullivan was one of my really enjoyable ‘finds’ last year , read them all to date and just received the latest ‘ The Bookseller’ . Really looking forward to that!
Just finished ‘Mrs Palfrey at the Claremont’ by Elizabeth Taylor for our book club… at 80 next year I found that tho it’s an interesting, well written book, it was quite depressing !

Lovely film though! Joan Plowright in the lead, superb actress.my darling late mum bought me the dvd a few months before she died and I watch it at least once a year.

Sorry to divert!

Susieq62 Sun 16-Feb-25 14:37:10

I am in two book groups plus have a London I keep topping up and a daughter who is z as n avid reader so keeps me on my toes! I also volunteer at the library which doesn’t help!
Just read Brooklyn and Long Island by Colm Toibin
Am now on a Chris Hammer detective story set inAustralia but my favourite books last year were Water, Earth and Fire ( three separate titles) by John Boyne whose work I really love! The final book in the series is Air and will be out in May!
Am waiting for the new Kate Atkinson to come out in paperback so will treat myself!
Just finished Keir Starmer autobiography which was very interesting ! I love to read and am currently setting up my 4th bedroom as a reading/ironing/writing/chilling room
Happy days !

annab275 Sun 16-Feb-25 14:56:13

A bit late in the day but I am reading The Escape Artist by Jonathan Freedland about escaping from Auschwitz - it’s quite harrowing so I can only read a bit at a time. I have also started reading Weathering by Ruth Allen - equating the making of a landscape with creating a life experience for a person

Pennygran Sun 16-Feb-25 15:02:37

I'm thoroughly enjoying The Shipyard Girls by Nancy Revell, onto book 7.

GrannyIvy Sun 16-Feb-25 15:06:18

I am reading Joy Ellis the Matt Ballard series and on the last one now The Bag of Secrets. If you like murder mystery thrillers these are a good read.

Also recommend Rachel McLean The Dorset Crime series.

I read on my kindle mostly using Kindle Unlimited subscription. I’m on my 7th book this year.

Allalongagatha Sun 16-Feb-25 15:08:26

I am reading The Other Bennett sister. It is about Mary Bennet from Pride and Prejudice. I am really enjoying it. It starts after Elizabeth and Jane are married and 2 years after their fathers’ death.

I always wonder what would haven when the Collins moved to Longbourn.

Nanny27 Sun 16-Feb-25 15:10:24

Can I join your book group please?
I have just finished Lannie by Max Porter. A very strange book but somehow difficult to put down especially towards the end. I haven't read any of his books before but might seek out another one now.

LadyGaGa Sun 16-Feb-25 15:15:52

I’ve just finished an unusual little book by the author Sylvia Townsend Warner - Lolly Willowes or the Loving Huntsman.
I read about her in a book review, and discovered that she was a modern classical writer from the earlier 1900’s but I’d never heard of her.
The first two thirds of the book is a typical post Victorian story of an upper middle class family - along the line of E. M Forster. Within the family there’s the obligatory ‘spinster’ who becomes a beloved Aunt and companion. It then takes a turn and a seemingly routine event leads her to move to a small out of the way village where she makes a pact with devil to win her emancipation from her controlled life.
It’s a bit odd at the end and she actually meets the devil in human guise and he seems like quite a nice bloke!
I will definitely give some of her other books a go.
Back to my favourite Melvyn Bragg now. Crystal Rooms. One I’ve never read. It’s about the media scene in London in the 90,s. Not fully grabbed me yet but will stick with it as I love his style of writing.

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