Around the Year in 52 Books discussion
Weekly Topics 2018
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40. A book from Amazon's 100 Books to Read in a Lifetime list
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The House at Pooh Corner
- Why did you choose this book?
I'm cheating with this one. I had a few books on my list of what I was going to read for this prompt, but I've spent heaps of time on ARC's in the last few months go not up to date with the challenge. I'm currently reading this book to my daughter (after Mum found it at her house and she is clearing out and it has my name on it so I got it!). I checked the list again and there it is. So yup, I'm going to count it.
Edited to add my daughter is finding the writing very odd...

The Looming Tower: Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11
Why did you choose this book?
It has been on my TBR and I have been interested in reading it for a while now.

For this prompt my initial plan choices were : Breath, Eyes, Memory or Bel Canto, both of which have been on my TBR forever.
What I actually ended up reading: Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood. Excellent decision. I LOVED THIS!!! I feel like I learned so much about Iran and the Islamic Revolution and I enjoyed hearing about it from the writers point of view as a young girl. I also loved that there was humor infused throughout a serious subject, and that the children had moments where they behaved like children and enjoyed parts of their childhood, even with the violence going on around them. I will be moving on to Persepolis 2: The Story of a Return. I can't recommend these books enough!
Why did I choose it? Ummm because times a running out and I needed something a little shorter and a mental break ( and also a red cover for the read a thon)
Also did a re read of Where the Wild Things Are with the girls because who can ever get enough that book ?

- Why did you choose this book? I just didn't see anything else I really wanted to read on the list.
The Secret History
I'd heard good things from reviewers, and had this on my tbr because it sounded like something I would like. It probably would have sat there forever given how long it is without the push to finally read it. I'm super glad I finally got around to it. 5 stars!
I'd heard good things from reviewers, and had this on my tbr because it sounded like something I would like. It probably would have sat there forever given how long it is without the push to finally read it. I'm super glad I finally got around to it. 5 stars!


- Why did you choose this book? I want to finish the series this year.
I deleted my other post. I started out reading Angela's Ashes and just couldn't get into it right now so I switched over to Harry. A picture of the whole series was depicted in 100 books to read in a lifetime on the Amazon list.


This is the second Micheal Chabon book that I've read (I've also read The Yiddish Policemen's Union) and I'm just not a fan. They're sad and serious but have outlandish premises and I just can't get behind how it mixes that.



I am reading The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger
- Why did you choose this book?
I has been on my shelf for ages, and the first line is on a mug I own (with first lines), and since it fit the category, I thought it was time.



Great Expectations, by Charles Dickens (no 16 on the list)

Why did you choose this book?
I have wanted to read this for ages and this seemed like the perfect prompt.

The Road by Cormac McCarthy
- Why did you choose this book?
This counts for both this category and for a read on my Pulitzer Prize challenge. Two birds, as they say.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Road (other topics)Great Expectations (other topics)
Interpreter of Maladies (other topics)
Things Fall Apart (other topics)
Interpreter of Maladies (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Cormac McCarthy (other topics)Jhumpa Lahiri (other topics)
Jhumpa Lahiri (other topics)
J.D. Salinger (other topics)
W. Somerset Maugham (other topics)
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Why did you choose this book? Because it has been sitting on my (physical) bookshelf for a long time and I feel like I should read a classic once or twice a year.
Full disclosure I just picked it up and I'm feeling like this one could be somewhat of an ordeal to read. It's 600+ pages and the subject matter is not exactly uplifting. Oh well, it must be a classic for a reason.