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Self Challenge - Pam's 2016 Read-a-100-books




Yeah, not sure I've ever read that many books in just over half a year!

I've also now realised it is book 1 of a trilogy and am not tempted to get the two follow-ups.

Yeah, not sure I've ever read that many books in just over half a year!"
Not sure I have since I was a kid - used to get through four books a day from the children's section of the public library. Not quite up to that now but the books are mostly longer now. ;-)



This suffered rather from the issue I've had with other homages to Lovecraft: some are very literal and drag in loads of characters/invented esoteric writings/Old Ones etc from earlier writings. The two most successful stories for me departed from that and played off the basic idea instead.




Yeah, not sure I've ever read that many books in just over half a year!"
Not sure I have since I ..."
My school library would only let me have 2 a day, so I ended up there most days. I could only go to the public library once a week, and I was limited on how many books I could take until I was 16.






plus another Flavia de Luce mystery, I Am Half Sick of Shadows.
From the front covers on the Nimmos, it seems the first 2 books were made into TV series by HTV.

plus another Flavia de Luce mystery, I Am Half Sick of Shadows.
From the front covers on the Nimmos, it seems the first 2 books were made into TV ..."
Yes, I'm sure I remember watching them

Started Jack of Shadows by Roger Zelazny. Recall loving this years ago so remains to be seen what I think of it now.

plus another Flavia de Luce mystery, I Am Half Sick of Shadows.
From the front covers on the Nimmos, it seems the first 2 books were m..."
My copy of the third one isn't a TV tie-in but I see there is one on GR that shows it too was made into a series.

I'd heard there were mixed views on that book and that it might be inaccurate so I thought the day by day book would be a good foil that I could cross reference things against.
The controversial one is The Witches: Salem 1692. I've read a short bit and can see what people are saying because it starts off with an account of two women flying to a meeting ... as if the witchcraft is real. The day-by-day one which apparently has a load of research, and cites many original sources, has a useful set of maps of the area and a general essay about the New England community and the political background and Indian wars etc before it gets into the daily account. Also the daily account isn't just a dry recital; there's an attempt to tell a story, as the intro suggests. Although I originally wondered if that book would be heavy going, I'm actually finding it an easier read and have already gone past the other book in terms of the progression of events because I was tempted to read on.
So the day by day account is - The Salem Witch Trials: A Day-by-day Chronicle of a Community Under Seige


Just looked it up and it was 20 in Salem and tens of thousands in Europe.

That's interesting that you've had the opportunity to see Salem. I hadn't realised till I read these books that there was a Salem Town and Salem Village, separated by some distance. The witchcraft accusations spread out and affected all the communities around. Andover and Gloucester for example were badly hit too.
And I can't resist pointing out that the European thing was over quite a few centuries ;-)
Although only about 20 people were hung, according to what I'm reading, quite a few more were tried and condemned, but the whole thing was halted before they could be, and there were more than 100 people languishing in very filthy, cold and generally awful conditions in what passed for prison. Plus some of them had heavy shackles on.
The problem was that in that era and for quite a while afterwards, prison was just for remanding people in effect until they could be tried and punished, either executed, fined or whipped/branded/ or whatever. They weren't meant for longterm imprisonment though with so many people accused they ended up in there for months. Also in those days you had to pay for everything including shackles and this would be a bill you or your familiy paid when you were sentenced/released. Plus your goods and land could be confiscated as part of being accused of witchcraft - at Salem, the officious sheriff went round seizing everything as soon as people were imprisoned, when they hadn't even been condemned yet, even when this meant leaving dependent children destitute.


Literally what it says on the tin. Not the most easy read because of the sheer weight of facts, but the style itself isn't dry or heavy going, just the number of people arrested/questioned etc. A good background reference book against which to assess others. In fact, on the strength of it, I've ordered another book by the author, Six Women of Salem: The Untold Story of the Accused and Their Accusers in the Salem Witch Trials







Well, the first didn't quite live up to my memories of it but I enjoyed the second a lot more, with the threat of the black road that Corwin's curse creates.


I'm not sure there's any such thing as a 'new' idea. It seems to me that if you're widely read, you'll always find echoes of other stories in plot or character, and I don't mean plagiarism here.





Bit of an oddity as it is aimed at a YA age group really, contrasted with the 8 -11 I would estimate for the earlier books, and deals with some rather iffy behaviour by a 30-something man with two girls, one sixteen and the other no older than thirteen.




Books mentioned in this topic
Strange Monsters of the Recent Past (other topics)Hawk of May (other topics)
Hawk of May (other topics)
Blood of Amber (other topics)
Trumps of Doom (other topics)
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A cosy series I'm currently enjoying is the Flavia de Luce one with the 11 year old girl detective/chemist, set in 1950. Have read 3 of those so far.