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What books did you get from the library, bookstore or online ~ 2022
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Rachel
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Nov 11, 2022 04:41PM

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Wintering: The Power of Rest and Retreat in Difficult Times-Katherine May
A friend of mine is reading this for a library book group discussion. I said I would give it a look so we could discuss it. I'll give it a short leash. I do love winter, so I hope this memoir will appeal to me. The year is almost over and there are more books I want to read for our BNC challenge.

Wintering: The Power of Rest and Retreat in Difficult Times-Katherine May
A friend of mine is reading this for a library book group discus..."
I'd be interested to hear how you like this one! I was really excited about it & started it earlier this year, but couldn't quite get into it. It's on my "try again eventually" list :)

A Philosophy of Walking—Frédéric Gros, which i am using for my philosophy quest. There are essays about the pleasures of walking with chapters about renowned philosophers who relished walking miles per day, including Nietzsche, Thoreau, Rimbaud and others.
The One-Minute Workout: Science Shows a Way to Get Fit That's Smarter, Faster, Shorter—Martin Gibala, mentioned here last week by Alias. I get a laugh or two when i read the last two alternately, as one suggests walking for contemplation and the latter, speed walking for health. LOL! The timing was accidental, btw.

I hope you find the One Minute Workout as interesting and motivational as I did.
Recently, I was looking at the book, The Philosophy of Walking. So I'll be very interested in your thoughts. I love walking for exercise and I would like to read more works on philosophy. I'm hoping this one fits the bill.
Deb, by the way, I listened to the author intro to Anatomy of a Murder and liked the author's telling how he came to write the book. He has a great sense of humor. I also thought the narrator, Jason Culp, was very good.
Still, I do wish the library had the eBook version.
I read online that, "Robert Traver is the pseudonym of the former Michigan Supreme Court justice John D. Voelker (1903-1991)"

In the last year or so i’ve found quite a few titles i want available only in audio. While i am sure there is a reason libraries only offer that, i end up opting to not read the book.
There is less philosophy per se than i supposed by the title. However, it has been interesting to learn how vital some philosophers felt walking was, for hours each day. For a couple, this was how they wrote their works—thinking as they walked, then writing conclusions afterward.
The One Minute idea is different from what i first understood it to be when i first heard about in a dozen years or so ago. I’m intrigued.

Thanks for the recommendation. I just put it on my wish list.


This year I think we had 4 people join in.
This challenge had 100 prompts. A single book can fill multiple prompts. So you don't have to read 100 books.
This is the list of prompts we had for 2022. I'll link it.
However, you can also find it and our attempts to do the challenge in the:
Folder: Determination Lists & Challenges
Each person who joined in created their own thread.
Main Thread explaining the challenge
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...

Creating our own categories could be a blast.



Rachel, no pressure. I will add that this week i topped last year’s number of books read—106, yet i have read a dozen or so which don’t fir the challenge. So, you could probably do well with this, especially because we are helping to shape the list.
Some of my own speed was tempered by the fact there were several books i don’t usually read and didn’t care for, thus slowing me down.
Random additional thoughts.

It's not as hard as it seems with the possibility of the same book covering multiple categories, and no pressure on how far you get with the challenge. I went through my TBR pile to see which ones might fit, and did purchase a few later as well.

The challenge will begin on January 1, 2023.


Yes, John. That is the way I was thinking of it, too. It's the way we did it for 2022. It would be books completed after the start date.
I thought we can think of prompts in December. I can keep a running list of suggestions and then curate them into our challenge list.

No. We haven't started to create the list yet for 2023. We can begin in December. It's prompts for books we will begin to read in 2023.
I'm still trying to work on my two 2022 challenges ! :)
Not to confuse things. This has NOTHING to do with the 100 book challenge we have been discussing.
For years here at BNC, some of us also make Determination Lists. (DL) This is a carryover from when BNC used to be on AOL message boards. When AOL shut their boards down, we landed here at Good Reads.
The DL can be anything you want it to be. It's just for you. Basically, it's a dozen or so book, (the number is up to you, of authors, books, topics you are "Determined to read" in the coming year.
For example, here was my list for 2022. By the way, I think I've only completed my DL one year. :) Still, I always enjoyed looking over my books shelves, discovering what is in that black hole of my Kindle and scouring the internet to create my DL. That is how I came to read Tobacco Road this year. It was on my Kindle for ages. I was determined to finally read it!
I thought I would mention it now, if anyone wishes to create a DL for 2023.
What is the DL and some ideas.
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
Here was my list.
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...


Sweet !

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
I see I only need one to complete it but time is ticking!



Okay. We will see how it goes with everyone's prompt suggestions and take it from there.
I'm really new to these challenges. So any ideas are most welcome.


Okay. :) Glad to have you join in.

You can find the complete list here. https://www.goodreads.com/topic/group...

I belong to that, too, John.

While i liked learning about the men (yes, all were men) but also how they viewed that activity as part of their process. Names discussed included Emanuel Kant, Friedrich Nietzsche, Henry David Thoreau, and more.
There were numerous spins on the activity and that was interesting and rather encouraging. Just don’t come for deep reading.

I'm sorry to hear that the book didn't work for you. I do have it on my TBR list.


The Amazon sample does look appealing to me. Unfortunately, my library doesn't have the eBook. They do have the paper edition. The paperback isn't too expensive. Maybe I'll tread myself if my library hasn't acquired the eBook. I can request that they buy it.


Not the same incident as the book you are reading. However, Under the Banner of Heaven: A Story of Violent Faith by Jon Krakauer also is hair raising. It's an excellent read.
"This extraordinary work of investigative journalism takes readers inside America’s isolated Mormon Fundamentalist communities.
“Fantastic.... Right up there with In Cold Blood and The Executioner’s Song.” —San Francisco Chronicle"

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