You'll love this one...!! A book club & more discussion

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Challenges: Year Long Main 2021 > Helen's High (h)Octane (h)Alphabet

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message 1: by [deleted user] (last edited Jul 14, 2013 10:49AM) (new)

Ok, I'm in. not sure how far I'll get, but task one is go:



And task 2 can b found here:
here

A - Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie Half of a Yellow Sun, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie - finished 06Jan
B - Never Hit a Jellyfish With a Spade How to Survive Life's Smaller Challenges by Guy Browning Never Hit a Jellyfish With a Spade: How to Survive Life's Smaller Challenges, Guy Browning - finished 09Jan
C - Gallows Thief by Bernard Cornwell Cornwell Bernard, Gallows Thief - finished 12Jan
D - Boy and Going Solo by Roald Dahl Boy and Going Solo, Roald Dahl finished 17Jan
E - The First Casualty by Ben Elton The First Casualty, Ben Elton finished 23Jan
F - Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn Gone Girl, Gillian Flynn finished 30Jan
G - I, Claudius (Claudius, #1) by Robert Graves I, Claudius, Robert Graves finished 17Feb
H - Map Of A Nation by Rachel Hewitt Map Of A Nation, Rachel Hewitt finished 5Mar
I - The Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro The Remains of the Day, Kazuo Ishiguro finished 9Mar
J - The Children of Men by P.D. James The Children of Men, PD James finished 14Mar
K - English Passengers by Matthew Kneale English Passengers, Matthew Kneale finished 25Mar
L - The Gemini Contenders by Robert Ludlum The Gemini Contenders, Robert Ludlum finished 24Mar
Discarded (due to being naff) A Field Guide To The British (although my version is English, not British), Sarah Lyall
M - The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel by Deborah Moggach The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, Deborah Moggach finished 25Mar
N - God's Secretaries The Making of the King James Bible by Adam Nicolson God's Secretaries: The Making of the King James Bible although the edition I have is just titled "Power and Glory", Adam Nicolson
O - (no cover - no picture)Not Forgotten, Neil Oliver finished 01Apr
P - State of Wonder by Ann Patchett State of Wonder, Ann Patchett, finished 11Apr
Q - Scandal by Amanda Quick Scandal, Amanda Quick, finished 22Apr
R - Old City Hall by Robert Rotenberg Old City Hall, Robert Rotenberg
S - The Suspicions of Mr. Whicher A Shocking Murder and the Undoing of a Great Victorian Detective by Kate Summerscale The Suspicions of Mr. Whicher: A Shocking Murder and the Undoing of a Great Victorian Detective, Kate Summerscale 01May13
T - No Picnic by Julian Thompson No Picnic, Julian Thompson
U - The Songs of the Kings A Novel by Barry Unsworth The Songs of the Kings: A Novel, Barry Unsworth
V - Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea by Jules Verne Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, Jules Verne
W - The Map That Changed the World William Smith and the Birth of Modern Geology by Simon Winchester The Map That Changed the World: William Smith and the Birth of Modern Geology, Simon Winchester
X - The Persian Expedition by Xenophon The Persian Expedition, Xenophon
Y - Daughter of the River An Autobiography by Hong Ying Daughter of the River: A Memoir. Hong Ying, Hong Ying
Z - The Shadow of the Wind (The Cemetery of Forgotten Books, #1) by Carlos Ruiz Zafón The Shadow of the Wind, Carlos Ruiz Zafón

Whoop! Whoop! Finished!!


message 2: by Pragya (new)

Pragya  (reviewingshelf) | 3954 comments Yippie! :)


message 3: by [deleted user] (new)

Helen felt she ought to - I did suggest an alphabet challenge - although it was nothing like as fiendish as the one Janice has posted!

I'm going with the "play it by ear" approach. None of this being organised and having spreadsheets on the go, if I'm more than 1 letter ahead, I'll be going nicely.
(says she with an idea for Q already stashed away...)


message 4: by Pragya (new)

Pragya  (reviewingshelf) | 3954 comments Helen wrote: (says she with an idea for Q already stashed away...) "

LOL!


message 5: by Janice, Moderator (new)

Janice (jamasc) | 57255 comments LOL! It doesn't sound like she's sharing that "Q" option, does it?


message 6: by [deleted user] (new)

Author Q shared - candyfloss, anyone?
Also discovered that:
a) there are a lot of books with authors whose names start with letters I already have ideas for and
b) too many books of 175 to 190 pages long. grrr.


message 7: by Janice, Moderator (new)

Janice (jamasc) | 57255 comments What's up with all the short books? When I want them, I can never find them.


message 8: by [deleted user] (new)

Just received a note that my book for A is sitting in the library ready for me. so that's A & B ready, C's on the shelf, just thinking about D.

I could read Boy: Tales of Childhood, for another group's Non-ficiton read in Jan/Feb, but it's only 176 pages. (grrr) There's an omnibus edition, which is Boy and Going Solo, and comes in at 393 pages. If I've read more than 200 pages, does it matter that it was, technically, in two different books?


message 9: by [deleted user] (last edited Dec 15, 2012 06:40AM) (new)



All set - ready to go.


message 10: by Janice, Moderator (new)

Janice (jamasc) | 57255 comments Helen wrote: "Just received a note that my book for A is sitting in the library ready for me. so that's A & B ready, C's on the shelf, just thinking about D.

I could read Boy: Tales of Childhood, for another g..."


I would think anthologies would be acceptable, as long as you read the whole book and not just portions of it.


message 11: by [deleted user] (new)

Ta muchly - omnibus edition on library order. >:-)


message 12: by [deleted user] (new)

Well that's nearly done. only T, U, X and Y remain with no real idea. Where I've got the author and (tbc) it's because I have more than one of their titles sitting on the shelf to read, so I'll pick when I get that far - might depend what I'm in the mood for. ought to have a browse of his shelves, see if I can't pick up something from there.

I'm so wanting to get started, A, B & C are all lined up, ready to go...


message 13: by Snoozie Suzie (new)

Snoozie Suzie (snooziesuzie) | 937 comments Ready, set.... Wait for it....
Just 11 days to GO!!


message 14: by [deleted user] (new)

Just that annoying period called "Christmas" between now and then. Bah! Humbug!

I do love Christmas, but not until 23rd december - until then I do my Scrooge impression - it's getting pretty good >;-)


message 15: by Ava Catherine (new)

Ava Catherine | 4258 comments Helen, I wish I could see your Scrooge impression! LOL!


message 16: by [deleted user] (new)

It's not a costume impersonation (!) - more a tone thing. Involves saying "far too early for Christmas *** - Bah! Humbug!"
Where *** = decorations, carols, trees, lights etc etc etc.

And it does start far too early - who puts their tree up in November?! Mine's gone up today, that's in plenty of time.

Actually, this year I'm really struggling to find any Christmas spirit, so having this epic starting in January is helping pull me through - although I am wanting to get on & read the books that are lined up on the shelf, waiting for 8 more days...


message 17: by Janice, Moderator (new)

Janice (jamasc) | 57255 comments Helen wrote: "And it does start far too early - who puts their tree up in November?! Mine's gone up today, that's in plenty of time."

I know someone who had her tree up on Nov 11.


message 18: by [deleted user] (new)

Bah! Humbug!!
>;-)
Happy Christmas all


message 19: by [deleted user] (new)

And we're off!
Settling down with book 1 (as a break from Dostoevsky) as we speak.
Can I finish "B" before it's due back at the library - on Friday - maybe not!


message 20: by Pragya (last edited Jan 01, 2013 03:16AM) (new)

Pragya  (reviewingshelf) | 3954 comments The list looks good. Go Helen!


message 21: by Ava Catherine (new)

Ava Catherine | 4258 comments I think you will have A and B completed and documented by Friday. (and returned safe and sound to the library, too! ) ; )

I have scratched my eye with my contact lens, I guess, and I am having the Dickens of the time trying to read with the discomfort. None of my eyedrops are working...dang! I have just given up and spent my time cooking today instead.

I hope I get to start on my books tomorrow. Glad you are reading today, Helen! ; )


message 22: by Janice, Moderator (new)

Janice (jamasc) | 57255 comments Connie wrote: "I think you will have A and B completed and documented by Friday. (and returned safe and sound to the library, too! ) ; )

I have scratched my eye with my contact lens, I guess, and I am having t..."


Agreed! Helen, you can do it. Phone in sick at work, and just read. :)

Connie, sorry about your eye. I hope it heals quickly.


message 23: by Ava Catherine (last edited Jan 02, 2013 10:51PM) (new)

Ava Catherine | 4258 comments Helen, the sick day might work...flu is going around where I am, and it is bad (or so I hear).

Maybe you just need a mental health day...one of those days just for you...you get to do whatever you want to help you feel more balanced and creative.

Janice, my eye is much better. Thanks. How are you?
Judy, I promise that I am going to try an audio this year. I have not tried one in years because I am not auditory. It usually drives me crazy if I cannot SEE what I am hearing. I understand that the tapes are much better now, so I am going to try it once more.
It would really give my eyes a break from all the reading and hand sewing.


message 24: by Janice, Moderator (new)

Janice (jamasc) | 57255 comments Connie wrote: "Helen, the sick day might work...flu is going around where I am, and it is bad (or so I hear).

Maybe you just need a mental health day...one of those days just for you...you get to do whatever you..."


I'm starting to feel human again. The zombie is going away. Thanks for asking. :)


message 25: by [deleted user] (new)

Glad you're feeling better Janice. I can't believe you're encouraging me to throw a sickie and read. *shocked face* that's just awful!

Although I have made one of my NY resolutions to actually stop and take lunch away from my desk. Too often I end up eating at my desk and working through it without actually stopping. So I now have my A book in my handbag. Less than half an hour (by the time I've faffed about & got sorted) but it's better to take a proper break - that's my theory any way.


message 26: by Janice, Moderator (new)

Janice (jamasc) | 57255 comments Is there a place that you can sit and read that is away from your desk?


message 27: by [deleted user] (new)

I think so... I work in 2 different offices and from home.
Home, yes, easy to find somewhere else.
Office 1 has a couple of small meeting rooms off it, one of which has a vaguely comfortable sofa in it - so that'll be lunch spot.
Office 2 is a much bigger site, so I could go to the canteen, but that can get quite noisy & crowded. I suspect finding a reading corner here will actually be more difficult. But it's an idea that's got to be worth a try.


message 28: by Ava Catherine (last edited Jan 03, 2013 11:49PM) (new)

Ava Catherine | 4258 comments Helen, I do hope you find the perfect place to read during your lunch and that you won't be disturbed. Maybe you can finish it today! : )

Janice, I am glad that you have chased the badies away. Nothing beats feeling well.: )

Judy, I have read The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society; however, I loved it so very much that I gave it 5 stars, which means I would reread the book. So, I might get it on audio and try it out. It might even work out better the first time with a book I have read before. I'm going to check my library's audio books, and, hopefully, they will have it. : ) Thanks for the rec.


message 29: by Janice, Moderator (new)

Janice (jamasc) | 57255 comments Helen wrote: "I think so... I work in 2 different offices and from home..."

I work from home too. Some days, I don't want to drag myself away from my desk for a lunch break. Others, I don't want to drag myself away from my book to go back to work. Long gone are the days I have a coffee break!

I remember when I was employed (instead of self-employed) and coffee breaks were "necessary". I wouldn't have missed one. Now, I rarely take one.


message 30: by [deleted user] (new)

OK, that's A finished. Onto something altogether different, with B.


message 31: by Janice, Moderator (new)

Janice (jamasc) | 57255 comments Good job in finishing your first book.


message 32: by Pragya (new)

Pragya  (reviewingshelf) | 3954 comments Doing great Helen. I have to read that book. Did you like it?


message 33: by [deleted user] (new)

umm, not sure. I didn't feel the characters were very easy to understand and I'm not sure they really engaged me. It was interesting, but I wasn't moved by it.

I've read another of hers, Purple Hibiscus, which I enjoyed a lot more.


message 34: by Pragya (new)

Pragya  (reviewingshelf) | 3954 comments Uh oh, ok. Thanks.


message 35: by Lucy (new)

Lucy Furr (lucyfurr) | 775 comments You're selection for "B" is going to my TBR list. That just seems like a book I would enjoy.


message 36: by Ava Catherine (last edited Jan 06, 2013 05:15PM) (new)

Ava Catherine | 4258 comments I love Antonia Fraser! I have been reading her so many years and loving her! You have so many wonderful authors on your list! I look through it and say, "Oh, yes!"


message 37: by [deleted user] (new)

B is taking the form of a series of very short (2 pages) essays all starting "How to ..." Some of them have certainly made me smile of chuckle.

That's gone in the handbag to read at lunch time. Anything I can pick up & put down quickly is a good lunchtime read book.

Thanks Connie - the tricky bit will be deciding which Antonia Fraser to read...


message 38: by Ava Catherine (last edited Jan 09, 2013 01:58PM) (new)

Ava Catherine | 4258 comments Have you read any of her fiction? I stumbled upon it accidentally when I had read everything else she had written (nonfiction). I like her fiction, too.


message 39: by [deleted user] (new)

That's B finished. Quite amusing on a number of subjects.

On to C, where the decision is which Cornwell to read. Debating The Fort, which I haven't read or the first of the Saxon series, The Last Kingdom, because it's been ages since I read number 3 and I now have 4 and 5 awaiting attention.


message 40: by [deleted user] (new)

Bernard Cornwell duly selected - Gallows Thief. one I don;t remember reading before, so we'll see how it goes.

Connie, no I don't think I have read her fiction. I've read The Lady Elizabeth, byAlison Weir, who is another historian who has allowed herself to wonder what might happen within the gaps of the historical record. Very convincing - keep meaning to try her other books like this.


message 41: by Ava Catherine (new)

Ava Catherine | 4258 comments Yes, Alison Weir is another excellent author of English historical works.


message 42: by [deleted user] (last edited Jan 12, 2013 02:14PM) (new)

C finished. Not in Cornwell's usual style - not a battle in sight - but an ex-army man, so not a million miles distant. Pretty good, too. A bit detective with some physical action and emotional turmoil thrown in.

D to start, Roald Dahl's first two volumes of his autobiography, from childhood into young adulthood.


message 43: by Janice, Moderator (new)

Janice (jamasc) | 57255 comments You're doing great, Helen. I haven't read anything of Cornwell's yet though I do have his The Winter King on my wishlist.


message 44: by [deleted user] (new)

That one I have read, Janice. Most bizarrely, in a warm summer in Italy and aloud, to a friend who was struggling with sleeping. I sent her right off. The names I sort of made up pronunciations for...

I find him a bit patchy. Azincourt I simply adored. There's an American civil war series that I simply can't get into, while I have enjoyed the birth of England series and the Arthur series (of which Winter king is the first). not read any of the Sharpes, although did enjoy watching them on the TV and being mildly diverted by Sean Bean in various uniforms and states of undress.


message 45: by Janice, Moderator (new)

Janice (jamasc) | 57255 comments Wasn't there a movie about Sharpes? I'm like you and would probably appreciate the Athur series better than Civil War stories. I love the Arthurian legend.


message 46: by [deleted user] (new)

That's D finished.
I'm going to start E for my handbag book and F for home. F is somewhat larger than E!
E is Ben Elton's novel of the first world war - The First Casualty, as in the saying the first casualty of war is truth. I have read it before, but some time ago, so worth a revisit.

However, I need help on the F. I have 3 of Antonia Fraser's books to read & can't decide. so, do I want to read:
Mary Queen of Scots
The Wives of Henry VIII
Love and Louis XIV: The Women in the Life of the Sun King
Over to you...


message 47: by Rusalka, Moderator (new)

Rusalka (rusalkii) | 18907 comments Well, no one wants to read about cheese-eating, surrender monkeys.

And I always thought Mary Queen of Scots was evil, but I don't think she was. But do you want to read a whole book on one person? Or on 6 for variety? Or do you think that may be a bit skitish?

Helpful as usual I know.


message 48: by [deleted user] (new)

Rusalka wrote: "Well, no one wants to read about cheese-eating, surrender monkeys."

That always makes me laugh! It's not fair to stereotype an entire nation quite so harshly you know. How is it in convict land?

But no, not terribly helpful!


message 49: by Rusalka, Moderator (new)

Rusalka (rusalkii) | 18907 comments Hey! I narrowed it down to two!

I stole some shoes, ate some Vegemite, all while riding a kangaroo.

It's actually ridiculously hot. Sydney was the hottest it has ever been since records started at 46.6 degrees (114F for our friends). It was only 42 (108) here. So I am doing the only respectable thing for an Aussie to do in this situation, drinking a lot of beer. Sometimes it's important to stick to stereotypes ;)


message 50: by Janice, Moderator (new)

Janice (jamasc) | 57255 comments Helen wrote: "That's D finished.
I'm going to start E for my handbag book and F for home. F is somewhat larger than E!
E is Ben Elton's novel of the first world war - The First Casualty, as in the saying the fir..."


Do you want me to throw the titles in the fruit machine?


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