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2026 - 50 Books a Year Challenge

(489 Posts)
TerriBull Wed 31-Dec-25 20:58:35

Happy New Year and welcome to the new book challenge for 2026.

Those of you who are regulars of the thread will know what it's all about. However, should you be new to GN, or are an avid book reader and have yet to discover this forum, then please feel free to join us here, on what is first and foremost a dedicated thread for book readers. Our aim is to try and read 50 books a year, or more, but I appreciate that sometimes that number is too many for some, but don't let that preclude you from joining in.

Bearing in mind that life's difficulties and distractions can often derail plans, please feel free to dip in and out of the thread on an ad hoc basis. I'd like to emphasise that it doesn't really matter that much if you don't hit the prescribed target of 50, if you like books and want to discuss them then this is the place for you.

Reading choices are entirely up to the individual, fiction, non fiction, biographies even children's fiction should you fancy a trip down memory lane, essentially whatever floats your boat. Similarly, you don't have to choose a physical book, your reading matter can be on a Kindle, or if you're a listener rather than a reader then anything such as Audible is also fine.

We welcome reviews, recommendations and discussions, always bearing in mind, books are subjective and we won't always agree about what we love or even what we've hated, but all points of view are appreciated.

Here's hoping all your choices for 2026 will mainly be good ones. So whenever you're ready with your first book, lets get started.

Diggingdoris Tue 19-May-26 11:47:38

39-Meet Me at Rainbow Corner-Celia Imrie
London 1944 Rainbow Corner is a social club for American GI's in Piccadilly. It's here that Dot finds a new best friend in Lilly, and together they must learn to face their fears, uncover secrets and discover the true meaning of love.

Calendargirl Tue 19-May-26 13:44:14

#37. The Intruder by Freida McFadden.

Apple3pie Tue 19-May-26 13:53:08

15. I Want to Go Home But I'm Already There by Roisin Lanigan

Although I'm a different generation from the protagonist of this book and different in personality too, I felt that I could understand this young lady and what she was going through. The hopelessness the young generation faces nowadays, with the cost of living crisis, unable to afford rent even on damp bedsit and the bleak landscape of social media and personal relationships were palpable throughout the book.

16. With or Without You by Drew Davies

Following a car accident, Wendy's husband is in a coma, and she finds herself without direction. I liked this book as it had the right combination of heart and humour.

17. Going Mainstream:How Extremists Are Taking Over by Julia Ebner

Written by a counter-extremism researcher who was named Austrian of the Year in 2024. Ebner has conducted research, often going undercover, on different extremist groups (Incels, Neo-Nazis etc.) and paints a bleak picture of what has been happening over the last decade. How social media and deliberate efforts from powerful sources bring nasty, radical ideas into the mainstream. How easily a lonely young man finds himself in a seemingly supportive online community where he is being radicalised to hate all women, eventually ending up being open to other extreme ideas and supporting terrorism. This book was written before AI misinformation became widespread. I can't imagine how much worse the situation is going to get.

18. A Deadly Episode by Anthony Horowitz

I'm a huge fan of the Hawthorne series. This book was a bit below average for me but still enjoyable.

Sparklefizz Wed 20-May-26 08:22:03

#30 Rise and Shine by Anna Quindlen
I have enjoyed other books by this author but there were so many "American references" in this book that I found it hard to stay interested in it.

Obviously for American readers, this is all well and good. I know my American friend struggled with Richard Osman's cosy crime for exactly this reason, ie. full of British references.
8/10

AliBeeee Wed 20-May-26 11:15:18

#29 Now You See Them by Elly Griffiths
A girl goes missing from the exclusive Roedean boarding school. It looks like she’s run away, but there are disturbing similarities to the disappearance of 2 other girls who went missing recently. Then the body of one of the girls is found and a race is on to find the others before it’s too late.
This is #5 in the Brighton Mysteries series, I seem to be reading these in reverse order so I must go back to book 1 - The Zig Zag Girl. 8/10

#30 State of Wonder by Ann Patchett
Deep in the Amazon jungle enigmatic scientist Dr Annick Swenson is developing a drug that could alter the lives of women. The work is shrouded in mystery, especially from her investors. When Anders Eckman, a lab researcher, is sent to investigate, a curt letter is received reporting his death. Now another researcher, Ander’s colleague Marina Singh, and former student of Dr Swenson, is sent to uncover what happened amongst the remote tribes.
This was really gripping and surprising. Great characters and sense of place. 10/10

31 When Cranes Fly South by Lisa Ridzen
Elderly Bo lives a quiet life in his rural village in northern Sweden with his beloved dog Sixten and his memories for company. His days are punctuated with visits from his carers and phone calls with his best friend Ture. Only his son is now insisting that Bo can no longer look after Sixten and he must be taken away. The same son that Bo is trying to mend his relationship with before it’s too late.
With everyone telling him what’s best, can Bo speak up and make himself heard?
I wasn’t sure about this book at first, but it quickly became very poignant and brought tears to my eyes at the end (a very rare occurrence for a book). 8/10

HelterSkelter1 Wed 20-May-26 16:15:52

Apologies. I dip in and out of this thread. I have just finished Brooklyn by Colm Toibin. I read its sequel Long Island first. Wrong way round! And will re read Long Island.

I loved both books. About a young Irish girl emigrating to America on her own. She lives in Brooklyn and works on the shop floor of a department store. She is so young under 20 to have undertaken such a journey by today's standards. But this was the 1950s. She suffers from home sickness and is helped by the local RC priest who liaised with her older sister to give her this opportunity. She has to return to Ireland after 2 years then back to Brooklyn for heart breaking reasons. You so feel for her in this terrible dilemma.
Long Island continues her story 20 years down the line where she faces another dilemma.
Beautifully written. You can picture her life. Such a good read.
I have more of his books and will crack on with the re read of Long Island first....once I have finished my current book. Booker prize winning Offshore by Penelope Fitzgerald about life on the Thanes at Battersea Reach in the 60s.

TerriBull Wed 20-May-26 17:56:59

I very much enjoyed reading Long Island having seen the film of Brooklyn HelterSkelter.

30 Sociopath's Guide to a Successful Marriage M K Oliver Audible

A debut novel - Black comedy/thriller of the absurd nature. Opens with a stranger breaking into the home of Lalla Rook, status obsessed housewife who she subsequently stabs to death and is left with the dilemma of disposing of the body. Opportunistic Lalla, lacking in any moral compass whatsoever, manages to implicate her malleable friend who just happens to call round whilst she is in the process of doing that and who she coerces into becoming her accomplice. Being the arch manipulator any blame she manages to shift on to her naive and unsuspecting friend. Social climber and ruthless, Lalla doesn't stop at anything to achieve the life she aspires to which include making sure her husband, who she doesn't really love, gains a partnership at his investment firm, her somewhat psychotic daughter being accepted at a prestigious school and a move to the house of her dreams in Hampstead. Several of the book's antagonists are obstacles for elimination, in particular an acerbic, vitriolic mother in law who hates her, a former husband behind the hit man sent to do his worst. Lalla moves through the book using her warped ingenuity to trump all her adversaries. The book rewinds to piece together a previous life far removed from the one she has created and a determination to move up the social ladder at any costs. Quite entertaining, I believe I read somewhere that one of the major screening platforms, maybe Hulu, have acquired the rights to turn it into a series it probably has the right qualities for a successful drama.

Bellanonna Wed 20-May-26 18:39:48

Helter-Skelter, I did just as you did - read them in reverse order. What a good writer and how well he draws his characters. I must read more Colm Toibin. I’ve even checked how to pronounce his name correctly!

Another recent read was The Names. It’s about a family but described in three different ways, so three different endings. Fascinating. Apologies if this has been commented on earlier!

TerriBull Wed 20-May-26 20:33:09

The Names was one of my standout books from last year, well worth a recomnend Bellanonna.

Sparklefizz Thu 21-May-26 08:31:53

TerriBull

The Names was one of my standout books from last year, well worth a recomnend Bellanonna.

One of mine too!

AliBeeee Fri 22-May-26 09:03:35

#32 The Couple Next Door by Shari Lapena
Anne and Marco leave their 6 month old baby Cora sleeping at home while they attend a dinner party next door, taking the baby monitor with them. They go home to check on her every 30 minutes, but when they check at 1am the crib is empty.
This book’s been discussed here before, that’s why I read it. It has a lot of twists, some of which I guessed, but it’s a good enough read. 7/10

HelterSkelter1 Fri 22-May-26 19:27:15

I have written The Names in my diary to order from the library.

Diggingdoris Fri 22-May-26 21:41:43

40-The Holiday-T.M.Logan
A new author for me but one I shall be looking out for in the future.
Four best friends and their husbands and children go on holiday to Provence. But there is trouble afoot, as Kate suspects that her husband is having an affair with one of her best friends. How far would a parent go to protect their child? A fabulous page-turner, full of secrets and lies

Calendargirl Sat 23-May-26 10:22:37

#38. Lazybones by Mark Billingham.

Sparklefizz Sun 24-May-26 17:48:39

Diggingdoris

40-The Holiday-T.M.Logan
A new author for me but one I shall be looking out for in the future.
Four best friends and their husbands and children go on holiday to Provence. But there is trouble afoot, as Kate suspects that her husband is having an affair with one of her best friends. How far would a parent go to protect their child? A fabulous page-turner, full of secrets and lies

Diggingdoris I think I'll put that one on my list.

Book 31 The Winds from further West by Alexander McCall Smith

I am not one of this author's great fans but decided to give this one a try.

Not long after starting a new job, Neil meets Chrissie and romance follows and they move in together.

Neil is a lecturer and a throw-away meaningless comment unintentionally causes his career to collapse after a student complains. At the same time he faces another betrayal, and decides to escape to the secluded remote beauty of a Hebridean island. Here he finds a different way of life and develops new friendships.

This book was ok, but the dialogue seemed stilted at times, and I never really felt it all rang true. 7/10

Diggingdoris Sun 24-May-26 19:27:37

41-Hannah Fox-Elizabeth Jeffrey
This author lives a few miles from me, so I've read lots of her historical novels that are often set locally. But this one is set in Sheffield and based around the silversmith trade. It is a rags to riches story showing the hard times that our ancestors must have suffered.

stewaris Sun 24-May-26 20:14:39

32 The Mirror and the Light by Hilary Mantel

The final book in the Wolf hall series. I couldn't put these books down. Loved every minute of them.

HelterSkelter1 Sun 24-May-26 20:36:37

I loved them too stewaris. I immersed myself in them. And the TV series kept so close to the books.

stewaris Mon 25-May-26 06:13:39

HelterSkelter1 I haven't seen the TV series or bits and pieces of them (I kept forgetting to watch) but the Tudor period is my favourite bit of history. I think these stay pretty close to what actually happened. My DH got a bit fed up as once I got really into them I didn't really speak very much and he complained he had to be standing right beside me to get an answer! on second thoughts, maybe he liked the peace and quiet.

HelterSkelter1 Mon 25-May-26 11:45:04

The tv series was excellent. In interviews it is said that Hillary Mantell was very happy with it. Mark Rylance as Cromwell despite being quite slim was brilliant. You have a pleasure ahead of you if and when you watch it. It could well still be on iPlayer

HelterSkelter1 Mon 25-May-26 11:46:14

I have watched it several times and read the books several times too. And could watch it all again.

HelterSkelter1 Mon 25-May-26 12:03:52

Oh its still on iplayer and I am watching episode 1 right now. The opening music is fabulous too. Just the best thing to do on a very very hot day here.

Calendargirl Mon 25-May-26 16:57:20

#39. Want To Know A Secret? by Freida McFadden.

stewaris Mon 25-May-26 18:05:02

Thanks, HelterSkelter1, I'll have a look and see. I did start watching it ages ago but then I forgot about it. Must find it and make sure I watch it.

stewaris Tue 26-May-26 17:21:12

33 A Walk in the Woods Bill Bryson

Really enjoyed this. It was hilarious in places. I've always quite liked his books as they are easy reading, quite informative and also has a few good laughs.