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50 Books a Year - The 2025 Challenge

(1000 Posts)
Grannmarie Wed 01-Jan-25 20:59:14

Happy New Year, TerriBull, and all readers on this great thread. Thank you for starting this again. I joined last year but fell by the wayside, I'll try harder to keep posting this year. I love reading and it's great to get so many varied recommendations.
Just before Christmas I finished my annual Advent re reading of How Far to Bethlehem by Norah Lofts, which I found recommended here a few years ago. It is a wonderful fictional retelling of the Christmas story, with great characterisations and ' back stories' of the Wise Men, shepherds, Mary, Joseph and Mary's mother Anne. Amazing details about King Herod too.The author certainly puts flesh and blood ( sometimes warts and all!) onto the bare bones of the biblical characters.
I am about to start reading Coffin Road by Peter May for this month's Book Group with my sisters and friends.

I'm looking forward to reading more reviews and recommendations.

Reubenblue Wed 01-Jan-25 20:18:39

My first book this year is The Place of Tides by James Rebanks,
anything he writes has me captivated, usually about his own life, this is too but set in Norway.
I have to read on kindle these days as my eyesight is poor but reading has been a lifelong passion.

NonGrannyMoll Wed 01-Jan-25 19:57:40

My first book this year is 'Nella Last's War', which I've been meaning to read for years (my best friend finally bought me a copy, I suspect to shut me up). The book I read last in 2024 (finished it yesterday) was Ben Aaronovitch's 'Moon Over Soho'.
My New Year's resolution is to work my way through the Cambridge Centenary version of 'Ulysses', a doorstop of a book with masses of extra material, which I can only read sitting up at the table (I don't have the strength to hold it on my lap).
I don't read just one book at a time, so my book-list isn't really a list. Rather, it's a jumble of disparate publications which I pick up & put down at will. I spend anything from a few minutes to several hours reading every day and have been known to go at something all night and then sleep until lunchtime (ain't retirement just grand?!). I'm always dipping in and out of whatever I've got going at the time, and it's an unusual week when I don't buy at least 1-2 new ones. The contents of my "must read" shelves are spilling onto the floor, but I wouldn't be without a good selection of the little varmints. Just ordered Paul Morley's 'How I Fell in Love With Classical Music & Decided to Re-Write its Entire History', which I know is going to take me out of the social whirl for a good amount of time! Happy reading, all.

NittWitt Wed 01-Jan-25 19:14:38

**
I meant to say your library may have free online audio books, as well as physical ones.

suep1953 Wed 01-Jan-25 19:07:35

I'm going to start Opal Country by Chris Hammer, which I believe is set in outback Australia. I do like a bit of Aussie noir

NittWitt Wed 01-Jan-25 18:59:13

Kate1949

I've just started The Salt Path by Raynor Winn. I used to be an avid reader but have gone off the boil of late. I'll try to read a few this year. It won't be 50 I'm sure.

I listen to audio books far more often than reading actual books these days.
Your library may be like mine and have free audio books available to library members.

Juno56 Wed 01-Jan-25 18:27:25

#1 Lights! Camera! Mayhem! Jodi Taylor.
Every Christmas Day the author releases a short story. I have only just had an opportunity to read this the latest. It involves members of St Mary's Institute of Historical Research and a movie star finding themselves in Troy just before the city falls to the Greeks. Just wonderful! I think Ms Taylor is one of my favourite authors.

JamesandJon33 Wed 01-Jan-25 14:38:46

HelterSkelter Just starting to read ‘Cider with Rosie’ once again. Then I will probably read the next two in the trilogy.

Bridie22 Wed 01-Jan-25 14:28:01

My first book of the year is,
Glorious Exploits by Ferdia Lennon

HelterSkelter1 Wed 01-Jan-25 14:22:25

I am starting As I Walked Out One Midsummer Morning by Laurie Lee. I think I read it many years ago, but it is fresh to me and warming to read of the spanish sun on a cold wet January day.

Soroptimum Wed 01-Jan-25 13:59:25

I am just about to start ‘The House of Spirits’ by Isabel Allende, my U3A book club choice. I must say I’m not looking forward to it as the font and line space is strange. Really hoping it’s a good read!

Indigo8 Wed 01-Jan-25 13:34:00

I would not describe myself as 'well read' but I read all kinds of books; fiction and non fiction.

I am just about to start reading 'Americanah' by Chimamanda
Ngozi Adiche.

I usually have several books on the go and I am also reading 'The Green Man' by Kingsley Amis and 'Daphne du Maurier, A Daughter's Memoir' by Flavia Leng. Not sure about recommending TGM, it is typical KA and of its time, the 1970s. Flavia Leng's book is very readable and offers a glimpse of what it was like to be the child of two famous
people.

Ziplok Wed 01-Jan-25 13:33:05

I’m reading “Murder in the Falling Snow” a collection of 10 classic short stories.
I’ve also got “The Ghost Ship” by Kate Mosse on the go, but it’s taking me a while to get through for some reason. Not sure why, because when I do pick it up I find it quite absorbing.

Sar53 Wed 01-Jan-25 13:27:11

I'm still reading 'The Girl Behind the Wall' by Mandy Robotham. A story based in Berlin when the Wall was built.

yogitree Wed 01-Jan-25 13:13:11

Hi I just found this book-readers' thread! I read a lot so perhaps I can join in here.

My first for 2025 is (as I've already shared on the main forum) "The Uninhabitable Earth, A Story of the Future by David Wallace-Wells.

I am finding it quite disturbing, although I knew many of the issues, to see them all in the one book is quite frightening. It's left me worried for my children/grandchildren and what life might look like for them when I am gone.

On a lighter note, there seems quite a few books named above that I like the descriptions of and that I may enjoy!

Kate1949 Wed 01-Jan-25 13:07:01

I've just started The Salt Path by Raynor Winn. I used to be an avid reader but have gone off the boil of late. I'll try to read a few this year. It won't be 50 I'm sure.

weenanni59 Wed 01-Jan-25 13:02:58

Hi, I’m reading the shipping news by Annie Proulx as it’s my current book club read .
I am finding this book quite a chore to read because some of the sentence construction is awkward. I like the actual story itself but feel that I have to force myself to pick it up .
I’m plodding on as I have another one to read already downloaded on my kindle

FriedGreenTomatoes2 Wed 01-Jan-25 12:55:42

*Actually my NY resolution is “must read more books”.
#lazygran

FriedGreenTomatoes2 Wed 01-Jan-25 12:53:05

I’m going to start The Whalebone Theatre. Not sure how much I actually fancy it to be honest but it’s our book club read!

granfromafar Wed 01-Jan-25 09:15:23

Happy New year to Terribull and all readers. Have just finished reading The Last Man by Jane Harper (The Dry, Force of Nature) and it's another terrific story set in the Australian outback. Her descriptions of the difficulties of living in such a remote area is wonderful. Next book is The chain of Curiosity by Sandi Toksvig, an easy one to dip in and out of.

Sparklefizz Wed 01-Jan-25 09:06:15

I saw the New Year in by reading The Siege by Ben Macintyre.
It's non-fiction and covers the siege of the Iranian Embassy in 1979. I remember this very clearly because my children were toddlers and I was bathing them while my husband was watching the rescue of the hostages unfold live on tv. He kept shouting up to me, and it sounded so exciting that I quickly dried the children so that I could rush down and see it.

Ben Macintyre's book details all the behind-the-scenes work and practice that the SAS did before the "James Bond-esque" rescue, all the tech and gadgets that were used (nothing like today's of course) plus the police, MI5 and MI6 and many others. It has made me proud of our security services to read how it was handled. Absolutely astonishing. I am only halfway through the book and the rescue has yet to take place.

Greyduster Wed 01-Jan-25 07:30:13

My first this year will be “The Voyage Home” by Pat Barker, the last in her Women of Troy trilogy. I hope it will be as unputdownable as the other two. I’m also still hauling my way through “A Column of Fire” by Ken Follett. It’s so long and there are so many characters in it that you lose track of who they are and it’s becoming tedious but I won’t give up on it.

Calendargirl Wed 01-Jan-25 07:22:30

#1. My Darling Daughter by JP Delaney.

TerriBull Tue 31-Dec-24 21:52:34

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

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

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

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