Around the Year in 52 Books discussion
Weekly Topics 2024
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12. A book that has been on your TBR for over a year




Jillian, I read that series back when we had the Egypt/Muslim author prompt (2021?) and loved it so much. I'm hoping to read the author's newest book The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi for the sea prompt next year.

If you haven't read it already, The River of Silver was a wonderful trip back to the world of Daevabad. I loved how she ordered the stories in chronological order so it felt more like a companion novel that short story collection!


This is a great one for me too. It was a terrific reminder for me to look back at the books I’ve had the longest. Since we voted, I read 5 or 6 books that fit this prompt.

That's awesome! It's always so satisfying to finally read those books!

I decided to go for The Library at Mount Char by Scott Hawkins. It's been on my Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ TBR since 2017, there are some books that have been on there longer but nothing I was more enthusiastic about than this.

Of course I also have a bunch of physical books I've owned since the 90s that I haven't read yet. Maybe even a few from the 80s.
So not sure where I'll end up going for this, but I'm certainly not short on options.



The book that should really be on my list for this prompt is A People's History of the United States by Howard Zinn because I've owned this book for about 25 years! I started it when I got it, but I found it too depressing at the time. I'm a different reader now. I still plan on reading Zinn this year, but using Connected to a Book You Read in 2023, as this year I read A People's Future of the United States: Speculative Fiction from 25 Extraordinary Writers.
Update:
I ended up reading Yellowface for a different prompt (25. A book involving a crime other than a murder � plagiarism, theft, fraud). And I found A People's History of the United States by Howard Zinn to still be too depressing to read all at one go, so that will be a slow read, 1 chapter hear and there as I can handle it. Maybe the chapters after Chapter 1 it will be easier to bear the reality of it?
I ended up reading Entangled Life: The Illustrated Edition: How Fungi Make Our Worlds by Merlin Sheldrake (love his name!). Although this edition was on my TBR for "just" under a year (about a week short when I finished it), the original "non-illustrated" edition has been on my TBR since December 2020. I never have a "cheat" answer upon completion of the challenge, so I guess this year I'll be able to use this slight stretch of dates.
Fascinating book, AND I got to read my choice for the MUSHROOM prompt as it seems that this will not be added for 2025 either - so sad. I know a book about mushrooms and fungi sounds odd (and disgusting to some), but fungi and how they work and what they do for our world is really incredible. I see them as a potential "technology" or even Nature's AI based on some of what they can do and how they have already been used.

- The Bullet Trick by Louise Welsh
- My Childhood by Maxim Gorky
- So Many Ways to Begin by Jon McGregor
- Perishable: A Memoir by Dirk Jamison
- Mouthing the Words by Camilla Gibb
- The Memory Box by Margaret Forster
- The Wonders of the Invisible World by David Gates
- Other People by Martin Amis

Hahaha same! Some of mine go back to 2008 - and those are just the ones I actually listed on Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ.

Since I use Wishlist TBR for the annual challenge to read lost (longest on TBR) books each year, I decided to use the owned books TBR for choices for this prompt in an effort to read more of my owned books.
Snow and Ice- on list since 2010
The Hornet's Nest: A Novel of the Revolutionary War - on list since 2011
The Pony Wife - on list since 2011

The next oldest books are Fall on Your Knees, Things Fall Apart, and Scaramouche. All have been on my TBR since 2009.
I should try to knock out at least a few of these next year, either in this prompt or elsewhere.



The Color of Lightning by Paulette Jiles - 1/8/24 - 4* - My Review
(also fits 14. protagonist that is a person of color)






BIO: A book that has been on your TBR for five or more years
REJECT: A book where a main character is a writer, a librarian or a bookseller
Finished: 02/17/2024
Rating: 4 stars
Although the book was excellent, I must admit I liked the movie better. Maybe because of George Burns...


My 2024 plan is to "not plan."
BOOK 1 ~ I work at a big library and I'm just going to go with the first book that appeals to me that crosses my returns desk.
BOOK 2 ~ And I'm challenging myself to work on clearing out my old TBR shelf this year, so I'm going to read the dustiest "fits the prompt" book on my TBR shelf as well.
~ � ~
BOOK 1

Read ~ 2.27.24
Pages ~ 372
Fits Task ~ Added to TBR in 2022
Review ~ ★★★★
I wasn't sure about this one when I started it. The print was small and it was a bit of a struggle to get into the story, but around chapter 9 things just "clicked" and I realized that this was going to be a GOOD book. Bit of mystery, bit of romance, bit of historical fiction, bit of suspense, and a bit of magical realism. They never did find the tiger, so the author left that bit hanging, but I think that in the case of this story, that was a good call on her part. Was there EVER a tiger?
~ � ~
BOOK 2

Read ~ 3.4.24
Pages ~ 352
Fits Task ~ Added to TBR in 2022
Review ~ ★★�
I'm not even sure why I put this book ON my TBR back in 2022. I'm sure it fit some kind of challenge task at some point, but while it was "ok" it wasn't great.

(read 4th March; 4*)



short and sweet review: 5.0
I enjoyed this book. Single Black female hit home for me. BLACK MEN DESERVE TO GROW OLD!!!





The Christie Affair � Nina de Gramont � 3.5***
On December 3, 1926, Agatha Christie drove away from her home after an argument with her husband. She would be missing for eleven days. This is a novel about marriage, about motherhood, about love, about grief, about how society punishes those who fail to follow the rules, about forgiveness and justice. De Gramont took the story in a direction I wasn’t expecting, and at first, I was unhappy, but eventually the two parallel stories merge in a fashion that fascinated me.
LINK to my full review

There were some insightful and lovely things in the first book - the trouble is I don't remember them when I read them. I do better with insights in novel form.
Moving a book from another prompt, I also read Corruptible: Who Gets Power and How it Changes Us, a much lighter and more enjoyable read than I'd expected, with some fascinating details.


When I started reading the book, a piece of paper fell out from between the pages. It was a boarding pass stub for a flight to Punta Cana. I assume the previous owner was using this as a bookmark and left it in the book when he dropped it off at the bookstore. I hope they had a nice trip (best time to travel down south is in February!).
I'm so happy that I dug this book out of my shelves. It was great reconnecting with Ludlum's world of international espionage and conspiracies.
My review here:
/review/show...
Books mentioned in this topic
A Certain Hunger (other topics)The Buried Giant (other topics)
Entangled Life: The Illustrated Edition: How Fungi Make Our Worlds (other topics)
Death of an Addict (other topics)
Side by Side: A Novel of Bonnie and Clyde (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Chelsea G. Summers (other topics)Kazuo Ishiguro (other topics)
Merlin Sheldrake (other topics)
M.C. Beaton (other topics)
Jenni L. Walsh (other topics)
More...
ATY Listopia: /list/show/1...
What are you reading for this prompt, and how long has it been on your TBR?