The 52 Book Club: 2025 Challenge discussion

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2021 Challenge > 28 -- Includes A Historical Event You Know Little About

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message 1: by Liz (new)

Liz Mannegren | 123 comments Mod
This category is for a book containing a historical event you know little about. Which event have you picked? How did you find your book choice?


message 3: by Jeanette (new)

Jeanette (jenb_73) | 62 comments The Book Woman of Troublesome Creek by Kim Michele Richardson


Books, Brews & Booze (topazandtourmaline) | 26 comments I picked Gertrude Jekyll's Lost Garden. I wanted to pick a book I already own and I don't know a lot about Gertrude Jekyll


message 5: by Julia (last edited Apr 13, 2021 06:10PM) (new)

Julia (_mj_howard) | 91 comments The Women's Pages by Victoria Purman

I had no idea about the sinking of the SS Montevideo Maru, so sad


message 8: by NCChris (new)

NCChris | 32 comments When the Emperor Was Divine by Julie Otsuka


message 9: by Elaine (new)

Elaine Completion Post
I read The Five: The Untold Lives of the Women Killed by Jack the Ripper as I knew next to nothing about the women murdered by Jack the Ripper (and turns out what I thought I knew wasn't based on fact). I very much enjoyed the author's writing style as she gave a lot of information regarding the norms of the times to help those without a strong historical knowledge base (like me).


Laurie (Kwiltreader) (lauriekwiltreader) | 70 comments The Lincoln Sisters by Jennifer Chiaverini. Recommended by my daughter. Historical fiction through the eyes of Lincoln/Todd families especially during the Civil War.


message 12: by Lauren (new)

Lauren Gilfillan | 1 comments Half of a Yellow Sun - Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie


message 13: by Dietrich (last edited Jan 23, 2021 10:14AM) (new)

Dietrich West-Graham | 5 comments Try My Seneca Village by Marilyn Nelson. A book of poems. About a Black village where part of Central Park now is.


message 14: by Star (new)

Star Gater (star-gater) Madhouse at the End of the Earth by Julian Sanction. "A true survival story of an early polar expedition that went terribly awry."

This is a GoodReads Giveaway win for me.


message 15: by SueAnn (new)

SueAnn G_Organa (sapphiresuz) | 11 comments I'm reading The Dig by John Preston The Dig


message 16: by Shonna (new)

Shonna Froebel | 255 comments I read The Dream Daughter by Diane Chamberlain and one event in the book is an attack at Pleiku in the Vietnam War.
https://cdnbookworm.blogspot.com/2021...


message 17: by Sally (new)

Sally | 45 comments The Familars by Stacey Halls. I had intended it to cover #16 (set before 17th century) but I learned a lot about the Pendle Witch Trials so switched it. Really good read and historically accurate


message 18: by Elspeth (new)

Elspeth (elspethm) | 49 comments The Lincoln Conspiracy: The Secret Plot to Kill America's 16th President⁠—and Why It Failed is a great book. Not only is it about an assassination attempt while he was still the president elect, but it's about the beginning of the Pinkerton Agency and the first female detective in the US.


message 19: by Kim (new)

Kim Hampton | 266 comments The Moonlight School by Suzanne Woods Fisher. I have read a few books about the Packhorse Librarians of Kentucky, but I had never heard about the Moonlight Schools, which were classes held in the schoolhouses at night to teach the adults how to read. This book was fantastic!


message 20: by Ben (new)

Ben Truong | 60 comments Completion Post:

Just finished reading: "The Shadow King" by Maaza Mengiste (★★★★☆), it is a historical fiction centering on Hirut, a servant girl, set in the backdrop of the Italian invasion of Ethiopia in 1935 during the Second World War.

Mengiste's narrative is wonderfully written as she is a master of characterization, and her characters reveal just who they are by their actions. She depicts both a servant girl’s low status and the ferocity of her spirit, which allows her to survive betrayal by the married couple she serves and her eventual imprisonment.


message 21: by Kerrie (new)

Kerrie Hurrell (craftykez) | 27 comments Death du Jour whilst i have heard about cults such as Jonestown and Waco cults Kathy Reichs explains a lot about the operation of there cults and their members and the endings of these and other well known cults, against the backdrop of her murder mystery.


message 23: by Desiree (new)

Desiree Disedare (dezi_aglaee) | 16 comments I read The Mountains Sing by Nguyen Phan Que Mai


message 25: by Nicole (new)

Nicole (njberardi) | 8 comments Glass Houses

Very intriguing read, with the usage of flashbacks. I enjoyed the plot of present day murder trial and how the author then transitioned back to tell the back story of how we came to the trial. This style added to the character development and gave us insight into their present day involvement in the trial and the sub plot. I was very surprised with the ending and how the author also tied up all angles of the sub plot.

References Prohibition and makes use of those methodologies in present day drug smuggling.


message 26: by Eliza (new)

Eliza Howard The Boy in the Striped Pajamas by John Boyne


message 27: by Amanda (new)

Amanda | 5 comments I just finished Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI by David Grann. A very sad but interesting recounting of the 1920 murder of many of the Osage Native American tribe.


message 28: by Elspeth (new)

Elspeth (elspethm) | 49 comments Amanda wrote: "I just finished Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI by David Grann. A very sad but interesting recounting of the 1920 murder of many of the Osage ..."

That was a great book. I was especially upset to hear that Oklahoma means "red people" right now. Not that we'd change the name of a state, but boy was that offensive.


message 29: by Carol (new)

Carol (cquan01) | 590 comments The Warmth of Other Suns by Isabel Wilkerson examines The Great Migration highlighting 3 people who fled the Jim Crow South. It is 543 pages(excluding Notes), but it is excellent.


message 30: by Naailah (new)

Naailah | 6 comments My pick for this one is The Stationery Shop of Tehran. I got to know about the 1953 Iranian Coup D'Etat.


message 31: by Emily (new)

Emily | 57 comments The Phone Booth at the Edge of the World by Laura Imai Messina. It's based on the aftermath of a tsunami hitting Japan in 2011. The titular phone booth is also a real place in Japan. It's a beautifully written book about love and loss.


message 32: by Brother Stephen (new)

Brother Stephen | 168 comments I chose The Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett. I know next to nothing about 12th century England.


message 33: by Lindsey (last edited Aug 10, 2021 12:46PM) (new)

Lindsey Rojem (lrojem) | 1883 comments Mod
I read An Extraordinary Union by Alyssa Cole, it was set during the American Civil War. 3 Stars

An Extraordinary Union (The Loyal League, #1) by Alyssa Cole


message 34: by Kim (new)

Kim (kmyers) I read Helena. Evelyn Waugh, about Constantine the Great's mother. She is said to have discovered the true cross, among other things. It was a three star read for me.


message 35: by Tracy (new)

Tracy | 59 comments I read Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. It's about the Nigerian Civil War.


message 37: by Cassie (new)

Cassie (cwalters-shantal) | 107 comments The Complete Persepolis (Persepolis, #1-4) by Marjane Satrapi

The Complete Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi
Completed: August 13, 2021


message 38: by Tamara (new)

Tamara Evans (bamalibrarylady) | 266 comments I read "They Called Us Enemy" by George Takei

They Called Us Enemy by George Takei


message 39: by Shirley (new)

Shirley McAllister | 57 comments I read "The Children's Blizzard" by Melanie Benjamin. It is about the great midwest blizzard in 1888 that happened right when school was letting out and a brave teacher that saved her children. I did not know about this event before reading the book. It was an excellent read.


message 40: by Jjean (new)

Jjean (httpswwwgoodreadscomjjean) | 6 comments Thank you for sharing - saved to read


message 41: by Cathal (new)

Cathal Kenneally | 22 comments An Officer and A Spy would suffice for this prompt. It’s fiction but it’s based on the Dreyfus affair that was the precursor to World War 1. The book contains a dramatis personae of all the major players involved which are not fictional characters.


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