TBR Clear Out Readathon discussion
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I think I'm going to start off the readathon with The Mars House by Natasha Pulley - the newest book on my TBR! - before getting to some older books."
This new book by Natasha Pulley seems amazing, a queer sci-fi novel. I really like Natasha Pulley writing.
I am looking forward to see your review of this book ;)




2: Die Marquise von O... (The Marquise of O-) by Heinrich von Kleist. I bought this book in January 1980. The novella itself is a reread, but the edition I own has a lot of extra material, including material about a 1975 film adaptation, and a discussion about how to adapt classic books to film. Opinions on this have certainly changed over the last forty years. I actually have this old film on my computer and will watch it again when I've finished the book.
3: The book that has been on my shelves for the shortest time is a Swedish crime thriller, Skyddsängeln by Sofie Sarenbrant. I always need a thriller on my bedside table.









In the end of 2023, I started to read "The Thursday Murder Club" by Richard Osman and I was enjoying a lot and I will return to this book, it seems so good, I found this praise from the book:
'Funny, clever and achingly British' Adam Kay, This Is Going to Hurt
My kind of thing ;)

I will be starting Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer next for the third challenge and to give myself a break from all the fantasy books I have been reading lately.

Now, for a more recent add…I have too many choices for this one.





There is British humor, which I like, and some cultural references that are very characteristic of England.
It is a very entertaining book.



On to There There by Tommy Orange, one of my most anticipated books of this challenge and a new one on my list, and Sula by Toni Morrison, one of my shortest TBRs and also one of the newest on my list.

I am now starting The Chronicles of Narnia: Voyage of the Dawn Treader by C.S Lewis for challenge #5.





I am finishing off my final book, and I'm finding myself a little burned out, but proud. This has been a fun and challenging readathon, I learned a lot about what I like to read and how to push myself. I also learned how to rest and let myself be honest about the things I do and don't like!
One big take away for me was the planning ahead of what I want to read. 6 books a month will likely never be a consistent goal of mine, however prepping a few books in advance was helpful! It encouraged me to pick up books I'd been wanting to read but hadn't been itching to pick up, and it took the stress of selection away when I knew I needed to read something but nothing was sounding enticing.
All in all I'm incredibly grateful I found and joined this challenge and I hope to do this again next year!



DONE The Way We Live Now, Trollope--longest (800+) and oldest (2011)
DONE How the Other Half Lives, J. Riis--shortest (under 200 pages) (nonfiction)
DONE Music in the Hills, DE Stevenson--newest (2023)
❤️DONE Young Anne, D Whipple--excited about
DONE John Adams, David McCullough--audiobook--text is 500+ pages (biography)
DONE Dead Secret, Wilkie Collins--in memory of booktuber (& Wilkie Collins lover) Jennifer Brooks and for the 200th anniversary year of Wilkie Collins (b. 1824).
All were good, but I especially loved Young Anne by Dorothy Whipple--it's my first Whipple and I plan to read them all!
I had a wonderful readathon and managed to read 17 books - mostly because I was on holiday for half of April! My TBR now stands at a much less scary 30 books :)


I read:
- "The Thursday Murder Club" by Richard Osman
- "Machines Like Me and People Like you" by Ian McEwan
The first one I bought last year and the second one I had for at least 5 years.
The first one was very entertaining.
And Ian McEwan is one of my favorite writers and I found this book very fascinating, if you are into Artificial Intelligence (AI), I think you gonna like this book a lot.

🤗 Yay!
I think I'm going to start off the readathon with The Mars House by Natasha Pulley - the newest book on my TBR! - before getting to some older books.