Around the Year in 52 Books discussion

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Weekly Topics 2025 > 48. A book with a character dealing with death

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message 1: by Jackie, Solstitial Mod (new)

Jackie | 2450 comments Mod
As we near the end of the year, it seems an apt time to think about endings of all kinds, including the final ending of death. For this week's prompt, you could find a book in almost any genre. There are the more obvious genres of mystery, horror, thriller, and true crime of course, but any character dealing with grief would work for this prompt as well.

Some lists and links:
Best books about grief: https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/1...
YA Death and Dying books: https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/2...
Best Children's books about death: https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/1...
Books that include a funeral: https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/1...
Nonfiction books about death and death culture: https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/1...

ATY Listopia: https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/2...

What are you reading for this prompt?

Note from the mods: We understand that this can be a sensitive topic for anyone currently dealing with loss and encourage everyone to keep the discussion respectful as you always do.


message 2: by LeahS (new)

LeahS | 1359 comments I am reading The Plague, where the MC is a doctor in the middle of an epidemic, and Chaos, where the MC is a forensic examiner.


message 3: by Pam (new)

Pam (bluegrasspam) | 3837 comments I might read The Road by Cormac McCarthy since I just read the graphic novel. This one seems like it should be easy to fill.


message 5: by Dubhease (new)

Dubhease | 1150 comments A Skullduggery Pleasant book - he's a crime fighting skeleton brought back to life by his desire for revenge to the guy who killed him. I think he qualified as a character dealing with death.


message 6: by Marie (new)

Marie | 1060 comments I've had Working Stiff by Rachel Caine on my shelf since 2016, there's never going to be a more fitting prompt for it. It's urban fantasy about someone who works in a mortuary and the dead are being resurrected by her dodgy bosses.


message 7: by dalex (new)

dalex (912dalex) | 2646 comments In Gods of Jade and Shadow by Silvia Moreno-Garcia, the protagonist goes on a quest with the Mayan god of death. Time to clear this title off my bookshelf!


message 8: by Kathy (new)

Kathy E | 3306 comments I'm looking forward to this prompt since I've found these books:

The Obituary Writer - Ann Hood
Mort - Terry Pratchett
The Collected Regrets of Clover - Mikki Brammer
The Obituary Writer by Ann Hood Mort (Discworld, #4; Death, #1) by Terry Pratchett The Collected Regrets of Clover by Mikki Brammer


message 9: by Charlsa (new)

Charlsa (cjbookjunkie) | 547 comments dalex wrote: "In Gods of Jade and Shadow by Silvia Moreno-Garcia, the protagonist goes on a quest with the Mayan god of death. Time to clear this title off my bookshelf!"

I loved Gods of Jade and Shadow and Mexican Gothic. Moreno-Garcia has become an auto-buy for me. I was in the independent bookstore in Dallas yesterday, Interrabang Books, and selected Silver Nitrate. The man checking me out said that she is a favorite of his as well and suggested I also read one of her backlist books, Certain Dark Things.


message 10: by Charlsa (new)

Charlsa (cjbookjunkie) | 547 comments Kathy wrote: "I'm looking forward to this prompt since I've found these books:

The Obituary Writer - Ann Hood
Mort - Terry Pratchett
The Collected Regrets of Clover..."



I loved The Collected Regrets of Clover.


message 11: by Kathy (new)

Kathy E | 3306 comments Charlsa wrote: "Kathy wrote: "I'm looking forward to this prompt since I've found these books:

The Obituary Writer - Ann Hood
Mort - Terry Pratchett
[book:The Collected Regrets of Cl..."


Good to hear Charlsa!


message 12: by NancyJ (new)

NancyJ (nancyjjj) | 3532 comments A friend highly recommended this book.

The Collected Regrets of Clover


message 13: by Denise (new)

Denise | 523 comments I meant to read these this year for prompts and didn’t, so maybe next year:
Thirteen Reasons Why
Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail


message 14: by Angie (new)

Angie | 65 comments Honestly, I'll probably read a mystery. Maybe The Body in the Library.

The Body in the Library (Miss Marple, #2) by Agatha Christie


message 15: by John (new)

John Warner (jwarner6comcastnet) | 171 comments Under consideration:All the Dangerous Things
-The Reading List by by Sara Nisha Adams
-All the Dangerous Things by Stacy Willingham
-Killers of a Certain Age By Deanna Raybourn


message 16: by Isabel (last edited Dec 05, 2024 12:45AM) (new)

Isabel (xisabelx) | 103 comments I recommend this reddit thread as inspiration for romance readers: https://www.reddit.com/r/RomanceBooks... All books with the trope 'death and the maiden'.
Death and the Maiden is a popular motif throughout art history. Traditionally, one character is death personified - dark, broken, winter, and maybe even literally the bringer of death. The other character is the opposite - light, rebirth, spring.
In several books one of the love interests is a grim reaper or Death himself, for example River of Shadows by Karina Halle.


message 17: by Samantha (new)

Samantha | 1560 comments This prompt is the reason I am doing the challenge backwards so I am happy to be done with it. I ended up reading The Widow's Husband's Secret Lie. I hadn't read anything by Freida McFadden and have been a little skeptical so thought a novella would be a good taste test. Before starting, I failed to notice it is a satire so it ended up being a very odd book and I have a feeling nothing like her other work. In any case a good one for me and this prompt, I have a lot to worry about death in the real world so just wanted to be done with this prompt, I am so I am happy to move on.


message 18: by Severina (new)

Severina | 395 comments I read The Three by Sarah Lotz, a paranormal-tinged tale of the aftermath of four plane crashes.


message 19: by Alistair (new)

Alistair | 53 comments I read Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic by Alison Bechdel.


message 20: by NancyJ (new)

NancyJ (nancyjjj) | 3532 commentsThe Collected Regrets of Clover
I really liked this book about a death doula who helps people at the end of their lives. It starts off a little slow but it was engrossing. (It’s not ghoulish.)


message 21: by Marie (UK) (new)

Marie (UK) (mazza1) | 484 comments The Passing Storm I listened to this book on audio and the narration was excellent. I think the story line just teetered under the mark for it's mystery MPG . However I didnt dislike it - perhaps just an average read for me


message 22: by Robin P, Orbicular Mod (new)

Robin P | 3958 comments Mod
It seems like this is all I'm reading lately, though I didn't intend to -

Kitchen, Goodbye, Vitamin, Laurentian Divide, even the romcom The Merry Matchmaker.

Then of course there are all the mysteries with serial killers, pathologists, coroners, etc.


message 23: by Lorna Boyd (new)

Lorna Boyd | 4 comments I read The Brilliant Life of Eudora Honeysett for this prompt. I adored this book. I found myself laughing out loud one minute, then seriously thinking about how most of us have no choice on how, or when we’ll die. At 85 yrs old Eudora has decided she wants to be in control over these decisions.


message 24: by Michelle E (new)

Michelle E | 105 comments I read The Deep Dark Descending by Allen Eskens for this prompt.


message 25: by Joy D (new)

Joy D | 711 comments For this prompt, I read:
Joe Nuthin's Guide to Life by Helen Fisher - 4* - My Review


message 26: by Odette (last edited Feb 06, 2025 01:09PM) (new)

Odette (odman) | 46 comments I'm reading The Missing Brides by Helen Goltz. This is the first book in The Lady Mortician's Visions Series.
Also came across Also One Last Dance: My Life in Mortuary Scrubs and G-strings by Emma Jane Holmes


message 27: by Michelle E (new)

Michelle E | 105 comments I changed my previous book for this prompt to another prompt. So I'm going to read The Collected Regrets of Clover by Mikki Brammer. The main character is a Death Doula.


message 28: by Michelle E (new)

Michelle E | 105 comments Joy D wrote: "For this prompt, I read:
Joe Nuthin's Guide to Life by Helen Fisher - 4* - My Review"


Sounds like a great book -- just added to my TBR. Thanks!


message 29: by Kathy (new)

Kathy E | 3306 comments I read Tell the Wolves I'm Home by Carol Rifka Brunt. Set during the 1980s AIDS crisis, 14-year-old June deals with the death of her beloved uncle. Very heart-felt.


message 30: by Michelle E (new)

Michelle E | 105 comments Kathy wrote: "I read Tell the Wolves I'm Home by Carol Rifka Brunt. Set during the 1980s AIDS crisis, 14-year-old June deals with the death of her beloved uncle. Very heart-felt."

I LOVED that book!


message 31: by Kathy (new)

Kathy E | 3306 comments Me too, Michelle. It was way more than I thought it would be, although I don't really know what I expected. The two girls are so authentic.


message 32: by LeahS (last edited Apr 24, 2025 08:47AM) (new)

LeahS | 1359 comments I read The Plague in which the MC is a doctor in an Algerian town locked down by a plague epidemic.

This book is partly an allegory about fascism, particularly occupied France in World War II, and there is a pertinent warning in the last paragraphs, but after the Covid pandemic, it is an excellent description of dealing with (or not dealing with) such a threat.

I also read for my 2016 round, The Tidal Zone, where the narrator is a father reframing his life after his teenage daughter almost dies from an allergic reaction, and will thereafter be at risk from this unknown allergen. I thought this was a very good book, with the fear and stress of the situation leavened with humour and good observations of family life. The book has two 'digressions' - extracts from a guide the narrator is writing about the rebuilding of Coventry Cathedral, which fits as a sort of resurrection, and passages about the narrator's youth in the States, which didn't fit so well. Despite that, this was one of the best books of the month.


message 33: by J (new)

J Austill | 1116 comments When I read this prompt, it immediately made me think of book's where the main character is literally making a deal with the personification of Death, such as Mort, On a Pale Horse, The Sandman, Vol. 2: The Doll's House.

I used it to read A Dirty Job by Christopher Moore, which wasn't as good as any of those.


message 35: by Misty (new)

Misty | 1485 comments I read The Door by Magda Szabó. The book is all about the MC's relationship with her housekeeper and dealing with the housekeeper's death. It's a very odd book. I loved Abigail, and I was so looking forward to this book. It was a bit of a disappointment.


message 36: by Andrea (last edited Mar 31, 2025 08:12PM) (new)

Andrea | 173 comments I used The Bone Houses for this one. The main character works as a gravedigger.

I was reading the synopsis of some books on my TBR and they seemed applicable to this prompt:
-Origin: main character is a fingerprint expert investigating a series of crib deaths
-Bat Eater and Other Names for Cora Zeng: main character is a crime scene cleaner
-I See You've Called in Dead: main character is an obituary writer


message 37: by Robin H-R (new)

Robin H-R Holmes Richardson (acetax) | 956 comments I read:
A Killer in the Crystal Palace (The Kier and Levett Mystery Series, #1) by Deb Marlowe A Killer in the Crystal Palace by Deb Marlowe

REJECT: A book about a strong woman

Finished: 07/09/2025
Rating: 5 stars

First in a series. This book was excellent! I was hooked from the first pages. Loved the characters and the chemistry between them. Great plot. Looking forward to the next installment.


message 38: by Anne (new)

Anne | 307 comments I am reading West of Sunset by Dirk Bogarde. It is about several people dealing with the death of a celebrated writer as the life he lived comes back to haunt them.


message 39: by Phil (new)

Phil | 126 comments I read Here Goes Nothing by Steve Toltz for this topic (Read September 2nd; 3*)


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