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Trim 2021 – The Official Unofficial Challenge Thread
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Amy
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Mar 20, 2021 05:15PM

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Thank Amy! Super excited to be part of this unofficial challenge and to pick the next number!
I'm doing much better this year ready my January and February picks in the same month picked. I have my March pick queued up for next week and hope to squeak it in!

Hope it is a good one for everyone!
Edited to Add: My #5 is The Elegance of the Hedgehog
The Cellist of Sarajevo - pretty sure this is a buddyread?!




Too bad it missed March given it is about Beryl Markham.

Great book Sallys, just recommended, minutes ago, to someone else



Why do I feel like I've read this already...? Better check!
ETA: I think I messed up in moving over which books I needed to bring forward to 2021 because I just read this last year. Will need to change this, anyway.
Shoot - looks like I read it for Bingo last year! I must have missed that I had it on my trim list, then I just pushed to this year the ones (numbers) we didn't read last year. Ok, I guess I just get to pick something else, then. Will figure it out tomorrow!

Too bad it missed March given it is about Beryl Markham."
I am looking forward to it.

A Promised Land by Barack Obama
A Promised Land
4 stars
Barack Obama has written an insightful memoir on his life with much of the focus relating to his time in the White House as President of the United States. Personal stories of his family are included making him relatable to others. He talks about his influences growing up and how his mother and her parents played important roles. He recalls nice memories related to his wife and daughters. He also address race and its affects.
Obama’s book is long, but very well written. He gives a lot of background and tries to explain polices affecting his work and the thought process behind many of his decisions. He gives credit to others when it is due and talks about obstacles. The memoir gives a good picture of Obama; and the reader sees more sides to him than just a President.

However, I do love me some BA Paris.
She doesn't write as well as Liane Moriarty and the stories aren't as smart as other thrillers but that's what I love about it. Just good ole' popcorn thrillers. I might have to fit this one in!

Too bad it missed March given it is about Beryl Markham."
I am looking forward to it."
I will set up a buddy read thread in early April

I haven't read my March Trim yet, The Vanishing Half. I finally bought this book and I am going to start it tonight. We'll see if I can get to April's books in April! I have Tinker Tailor on the bookshelf. I took it down and when I opened it, there was a note from my husband to his father, written in 1974. He gave the book to his dad for his birthday. Makes it feel very special.

I haven't read my March Trim yet, The Vanishing Half. I finally bou..."
I LOVED The Book Woman of Troublesome Creek and The Vanishing Half! I hope you like them too.

Maybe I'll be able to fit Steppenwolf in this month, too, and be caught up. I've been wanting to read it for a long time. I have the 1990 edition, and I think I've had it on my shelf about that long.

Pretty sure I read Steppenwolf in college as part of a literature and philosophy course. Unfortunately like so many of the books read all those years ago - back in mid-1970s- I remember nothing.

Mine is also The Space Between Us, Joanne! Hope you can get to it but no pressure.


I am reading lots of books at once, so I can start whenever you are ready.

The Time In Between by María Dueñas - 4 stars - My Review
Moved it up the list from its original position as #12 (so I've picked a replacement for whenever #12 is called). I am trying to finish my "real" #7 this month too.


I am reading lots of books at onc..."
I moving some things around, because I really do want to read this-I will PM you when I have a start date-

I love animal books and had high hopes for Seabiscuit as many like minded people I know rated this highly.
It started out strongly with Hillenbrand's excellent writing. I was focused on Charles Howard's story and impatient to get to Seabiscuit. Somewhere between the end of Charles Howard and the introduction of Seabiscuit the book bogged down with details and gathered too many extraneous details to be read smoothly and excitedly.
I am sorry to the author and everyone who loved the book, I didn't. I did love Seabiscuit, but I had to wade through a lot to find him.
Glad I have read and finished it and have one more off my shelf.

Review: https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...


Daughter of Sand and Stone - Libbie Hawker - 3.5 Stars
Daughter of Sand and Stone is a historical fiction novel that follows the life of Zenobia, Queen of Palmyra and Empress of the East in the 3rd century AD. I don't know if I ever remember hearing about this real life warrior who, like Cleopatra, saved Egypt from the powerful Roman Empire. Unfortunately, just when things started going her way, Aurelian, one of Rome's most powerful emperors, decides to take her dreams away.
In many ways Zenobia is an unlikable character that left me feeling annoyed about her incredible arrogance. There is so little known about her but for some reason I never felt the connection to female empowerment that I think the author intended. There's a strong romance thread that may or may not have been totally fictional.
The author includes a substantial Author's Note that makes the path she chose for the book more clear. She definitely wrote an atmospheric novel, with wonderful descriptions of the desert and culture. Overall, I liked the book and enjoyed reading about Zenobia.


I, on the other hand, am not rocking this challenge AT ALL 😂

Circling the Sun by Paula McLain

3 stars
Beryl Markham is a fascinating and remarkable woman. Raised on a farm and race horse training stable in Kenya, Beryl grew into an independent woman who followed her own path, breaking many barriers along the way such as becoming one of the leading race horse trainers in Africa if not the world let alone as a very young age and the first woman to be licensed at that. Beryl moved between local colonial farming and racing communities and the local tribes, mingled with the upper class British who found their way to colonial Africa and even with British royalty. She counted Karen Blixen as a friend and even rival as they both loved the same man. What Beryl is most famous for though is being an aviatrix, one who not only was the first woman to fly across the Atlantic solo from east to west, but was the first person ever to do so. In so many ways, Beryl Markham epitomizes the spirit of the British for whom Kenya in the 1920s and 1930s was their true home.
I do not believe that McLain succeeded as well with this historical novel centered on a remarkable woman as she did with either The Paris Wife or Love and Ruin. I did not feel that she caught Beryl's actual voice in the same way. McLain and thus the reader remain observers, reporters, not pulled into the character or the events as well. I'm wondering if that's because there was so much less primary source material available? It's a very enjoyable work of historical fiction, and particularly excellent at depicting colonial Africa from about 1910 to 1930. I found the sections on training race horses in Africa to be quite interesting. I also thought that McLain captured well the variety of colonialists and colonial society that existed.
Now I need to read Beryl Markham's autobiography and also Out of Africa and compare.

About 1/2 way through the book and I need to DNR another one.
I'm happy to take it off my TBR at least!

Hi Amy! I just picked up Cold Sassy from the library! When you are planning to read this one?



Circling the Sun by Paula McLain

4 stars
Paula McLain captures the personality of her main characters well when she writes historical fiction about real life people. She did this in The Paris Wife, where she wrote about Ernest Hemingway's wife, and she has done it in Circling the Sun with Beryl Markham. Most of the setting of Circling the Sun takes place in Kenya. Beryl grew up on a horse farm there with her father after her mother had left them. She did not have much in the way of a formal education, but Beryl's full life taught her to be adventurous and fend for herself. The timeframe is mostly the 1920's to 1930's and the author includes older cultural views of that period. Beryl is young and stands out as she enters the mostly male dominated area of horse training. Her relationships are often complicated, and she negotiates her way through them with some failures. The book includes the solo air flight of her crossing the Atlantic Ocean that she is known for, but that event is not really the focus of the book. Beryl's love of Kenya and nature come through as does her tenacity. Her character is flawed, but it adds a sense of realism. I did not enjoy Circling the Sun quite as much as The Paris Wife, but readers of Paul McLain should like this book.

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