Around the Year in 52 Books discussion
2017 Plans
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Kateryna's "2017 in 52 books" Reading Challenge
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Zaz wrote: "You're starting with a good batch of great books! Have fun :)"Thank you! I definitely will :)
Sophie wrote: "I'm also reading Dark Matter and The Snow Child :)"Yaay for us :) I also have an enormous list of books that fit each category.. These are just the books I want to read for sure, the rest I will choose as I go. Have an exciting reading year!
Me too, I even created a massive spreadsheet with all my to-read books and which prompts they could fit in ;)
Cinder is really fun. The whole series is, very readable and enjoyable. I've loved having them as a bit of relief amongst the weightier books I've read in the last year. I hope you enjoy it!
Katie wrote: "I'll be reading Uprooted too, and I'm very much looking forward to it. Bleak House is a really good book: I got through it really quickly, even though it's long. happy reading, Kateryna!"Thank you Katie! Last time I read Dickens a few years ago, it was A Tale of Two Cities and I loved it. Looking forward to Bleak House. Hopefully you enjoy Our Mutual Friend :)
Jody wrote: "Cinder is really fun. The whole series is, very readable and enjoyable. I've loved having them as a bit of relief amongst the weightier books I've read in the last year. I hope you enjoy it!"Hello from Australia, Jody :) Cider has been on my to-read list for ages now! and with so much hype around it I just have to read it. You have heaps of classics on your list, enjoy your reading! :)
Another Australian! Hello! :) Yep, I love the classics, by far my favourite things to read, but I do like to throw some fun books in too, otherwise my reading life can get a bit too serious.
I also plan on reading American Gods and Cinder this year! :) I loved Uprooted, even if things felt a bit rushed at the end. I hope you enjoy it as well.
Jody wrote: "Another Australian! Hello! :) Yep, I love the classics, by far my favourite things to read, but I do like to throw some fun books in too, otherwise my reading life can get a bit too serious."I love classiscs as well, I was reading lots and lots a few years ago. Yeah you are right, it was too serious :) Nowadays I only read a few per year.
Katie wrote: "Haven't read A Tale of Two Cities yet - that's on my list for some day! Nearly done with Our Mutual Friend and it's very good, one of Mr Dickens' best, I'd say :)"I love Dickens! I've also read Hard Times, The Old Curiosity Shop, David Copperfield, Great Expectations, Little Dorritt. My parents own Dicken's complete works in hardback.. I am slowly going through it :)
Samantha wrote: "I also plan on reading American Gods and Cinder this year! :) I loved Uprooted, even if things felt a bit rushed at the end. I hope you enjoy it as well."Uprooted has high ratings, and I was struggling with Hugo Award category, so will give it a go. And to be honest, I am terrified by American Gods, I don't know what to expect :) Hopefully we will enjoy it!
I'm also planning on reading American Gods but I don't really know what to expect either and it's a long book so it scares me a little. But I've enjoyed some of his other books so hopefully this is just as good.Cutting for Stone was on my list last year but I never read it. Maybe I should give it a chance this year.
Good luck with your list :-)
Even if American Gods is long, I found it read quite quickly. It's not my favorite of Gaiman's though.
I started American Gods years ago, and just never finished it. I didn't intentionally abandon it, I just forgot to pick it back up again. I've since fallen in love with Neil Gaiman's writing, but for some reason I'm still not super enthusiastic about it.
Yeah the size of American Gods is terryfying :) And reviews are so controversial. I have never read any books by Neil Gaiman, it's time now I guess..
I started reading Our Mutual Friend like 10 years ago, and for some reasons I didn't go further than first 50 pages. From my memory it started with a man, a girl and a boat :) I will start it again after Bleak House.
If you don't like it, don't give up on Neil Gaiman. I was put off after attempting American Gods, but I gave him another shot last year and am now head over heels in love with his writing.
Jody wrote: "If you don't like it, don't give up on Neil Gaiman. I was put off after attempting American Gods, but I gave him another shot last year and am now head over heels in love with his w..."Jody, thank you for advice :) I will see how I go with Neil Gaiman.
Books mentioned in this topic
Sleeping Beauties (other topics)Miss Ellicott's School for the Magically Minded (other topics)
Mrs. Fletcher (other topics)
The Twelve Lives of Samuel Hawley (other topics)
Beartown (other topics)
More...



47/52
✔1. A book from the Goodreads Choice Awards 2016: End of Watch by Stephen King ★★★
✔2. A book with at least 2 perspectives: Eleanor & Park by Rainbow Rowell ★★★
✔3. A book you meant to read in 2016: Dark Matter by Blake Crouch ★★★★
✔4. A title that doesn't contain the letter "E": Wolf by Wolf by Ryan Graudin ★★★★
✔5. A historical fiction: The Wonder by Emma Donoghue ★★★★★
✔6. A book being released as a movie in 2017: Ready Player One by Ernest Cline ★★★★★
✔7. A book with an animal on the cover or in the title: Blood for Blood (Wolf By Wolf #2) by Ryan Graudin ★★★★
✔8. A book written by a person of color: The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan ★★
✔9. A book in the middle of your To Be Read list: The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Díaz ★★★★
✔10. A dual-timeline novel: Everything I Never Told You by Celeste Ng ★★
✔11. A category from another challenge - A book you loved as a child (Popsugar): The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (Oz, #1) by L. Frank Baum ★★★★★
✔12. A book based on a myth: The Lightning Thief by Rick Riordan ★★★
✔13. A book recommended by one of your favorite authors: (Khaled Hosseini) The Corrections by Jonathan Franzen ★★
✔14. A book with a strong female character: Burial Rites by Hannah Kent ★★★★
✔15. A book written or set in Scandinavia (Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, Iceland): The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson ★★★
✔16. A mystery: The Girl In The Ice (Detective Erika Foster, #1) by Robert Bryndza ★★★★
✔17. A book with illustrations: Matilda by Roald Dahl ★★★★
18. A really long book (600+ pages): Winter (The Lunar Chronicles #4) by Marissa Meyer
✔19. A New York Times best-seller: Mrs. Fletcher by Tom Perrotta ★★
✔20. A book that you've owned for a while but haven't gotten around to reading:Far From the Madding Crowd by Thomas Hardy ★★★
✔21. A book that is a continuation of a book you've already read: Waking Gods (Themis Files #2) by Sylvain Neuvel ★★★
✔22. A book by an author you haven't read before: Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman ★★★
✔23. A book from the BBC "The Big Read" list: Cold Comfort Farm by Stella Gibbons ★
✔24. A book written by at least two authors: The Shrunken Head by Lauren Oliver, H.C. Chester ★★★★★
✔25. A book about a famous historical figure 11/22/63 by Stephen King ★★★★★
✔26. An adventure book: Miss Ellicott's School for the Magically Minded by Sage Blackwood ★★★
✔27. A book by one of your favorite authors: A House Without Windows by Nadia Hashimi ★★
✔28. A non-fiction: Einstein: His Life and Universe by Walter Isaacson ★★★
✔29. A book published outside the 4 major publishing houses (Simon & Schuster; HarperCollins; Penguin Random House; Hachette Livre): Lilli de Jong by Janet Benton ★★★★★
✔30. A book from Goodreads Top 100 YA Books:Cinder (The Lunar Chronicles, #1) by Marissa Meyer ★★★★
✔31. A book from a sub-genre of your favorite genre: MYSTERY – cozy mystery: Crime and Poetry by Amanda Flower ★★
✔32. A book with a long title (5+ words, excluding subtitle): The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and Disappeared by Jonas Jonasson ★★
✔33. A magical realism novel: Exit West by Mohsin Hamid ★★★★
✔34. A book set in or by an author from the Southern Hemisphere: (AUSTRALIA): The Potato Factory by Bryce Courtenay ★★★★
✔35. A book where one of the main characters is royalty: Scarlet (The Lunar Chronicles, #2) by Marissa Meyer
✔36. A Hugo Award winner or nominee: Uprooted by Naomi Novik ★★
✔37. A book you choose randomly: The Twelve Lives of Samuel Hawley by Hannah Tinti ★★★★
38. A novel inspired by a work of classic literature:
Cress (The Lunar Chronicles, #3) by Marissa Meyer
✔39. An epistolary fiction: Where'd You Go, Bernadette by Maria Semple ★★★
✔40. A book published in 2017:The Alice Network by Kate Quinn ★★★
✔41. A book with an unreliable narrator: The Kind Worth Killing by Peter Swanson ★★★★
✔42. A best book of the 21st century: Cutting for Stone by Abraham Verghese ★
✔43. A book with a chilling atmosphere (scary, unsettling, cold): The Snow Child by Eowyn Ivey ★★★★
✔44. A recommendation from "What Should I Read Next": He Said/She Said by Erin Kelly ★★★★
✔45. A book with a one-word title: Beartown by Fredrik Backman ★★★
✔46. A time travel novel: A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L'Engle ★★★★
✔47. A past suggestion that didn't win - A book with a child as the main character: Serafina and the Twisted Staff by Robert Beatty ★★★
✔48. A banned book: Bleak House by Charles Dickens ★★
✔49. A book from someone else's bookshelf: The Mothersby Brit Bennett ★★★★
50. A Penguin Modern Classic: Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison
51. A collection (e.g. essays, short stories, poetry, plays): Stars Above (The Lunar Chronicles #4.5) by Marissa Meyer
52. A book set in a fictional location: Sleeping Beauties by Stephen King