One of my favorite sources for reading ideas is the Sarah's Bookshelf podcast. On each episode, Sarah asks her guest for:
- Two old books that they love
- Two new books that they love
- A book that they didn't love
- An upcoming release that they are excited about
- The last five star book that they read
I'm going to be a pretend guest on Sarah's podcast and give you my answers.
Two Old Books that I Love
Once I limited myself to just two, the answers were clear. I read both of these books for the first time in junior high, have reread both of them many times throughout my life, and plan to continue rereading them.
The Far Country by Nevil Shute
Set in the early 1950's, the story follows Jennifer Morton, a young woman living a very dull and drab life in post-WWII London. After a family tragedy, she is invited to visit her relatives in Australia and discovers a whole new world and seemingly endless opportunities. Adventures ensure, but will Jennifer be able to stay in her new found home or will she have to go back to Drabland?
And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie*
*Yeah, yeah I'm aware that the book in my picture has a different title, but it's the same book. And Then There Were None is the original/most polite title. Google will happily fill you in on the third title that this book was published under.
Ten people are invited to a luxury home on Indian Island off the coast of England. Once they get there and the boat leaves, they discover that they are the only people there and no one seems to know the house's owner. There's a copy of the poem "Ten Little Indians" in every room, which is about the ten little Indians dying one by one until "and there were none". It is soon discovered that while these people are all strangers, they do have something in common. Each has been responsible for at least one death in circumstances that cannot be prosecuted==>they've all literally gotten away with murder.
People start dying, and the deaths tie to the descriptions in the poem. Can the survivors follow the clues and figure it out in time?
What I love the most about this book is that there is a point in time toward the end where no one knows what has happened and nothing can be explained AND IT'S SO CREEPY! It scared me to death when I was twelve and it still gives me the shivers now. Oh don't worry, the final chapter tells us everything but there's that moment where all of the characters in the book and the reader just don't know.
I have a huge beef with every single movie and TV adaptation of this story, because they mess with the ending. The original stage play and first movie changed it completely. There's a Russian version from the 80's and a more recent British TV version that come close, but they both leap into the explanation and don't give us the pause of "OMG no one knows what's happening and we're going to take a minute to sit with the feeling".
Two New Books That I Love
I think that in the context of Sarah's show, "new" means less than a year old, so I'm sticking to 2021 publications.
When the Stars Go Dark by Paula McLain
This was a recommendation that I got from Sarah, who described it as a unicorn book - just a magically good, good, good book. All I will say is that it's about a missing teenager and the detective with a past who is assigned to the case.
It's part memoir, part advice, and pure poetry. Alexi's mother committed suicide when she was very young, and she picks up the pieces that got her to the Olympics and beyond.
A Book That I Didn't Love
Sarah's guests usually dodge this one by naming a classic. Yes I do loath A Christmas Carol because we spent something like two months on it in high school English but I'm not going to take the easy way out.
I try not to call out books that I don't like on the blog because I personally am not looking for a list of bad books and I don't want to be a troll. In the spirit of not being a troll, I am not going to name one book but I'm also not going to dodge the question. I'm going to change it a bit! Here are all of my 2021 DNF's from my Libby checkout history. In some cases I hated these books and in some cases I just wasn't interested enough to finish them. And you know the drill, just because these weren't for me doesn't mean that they aren't great books for someone else.
The Sun Down Motel by Simone St. James
Invisible Girl by Lisa Jewell
The Bad Muslim Discount by Syed M. Masood (he was a guest on Sarah's podcast and his interview was fascinating...the writing was excellent, but I just couldn't get into the book.)
Sorrow and Bliss by Meg Mason
The Unseen World by Liz Moore
Sea Wife by Amity Gaige
The Push by Ashley Audrain
Good Company by Cynthia D'Arpix Sweeney
The Good Sister by Sally Hepworth
Where'd You Go, Bernadette by Maria Semple
Lady Killers by Tori Telfer
An Upcoming Release That I am Excited About
It's a ways away, but I've got my eye on Hideout by Louisa Luna, which is coming out on March 8, 2022.
The Last Five Star Book That I Read
I've read a lot of really good books lately that I'd rate between 4.5-4.9 stars, but the question is for a five star book. I gotta repeat myself with When the Stars Go Dark. It really was that good.
Your Turn: You're the guest on Sarah's show! What are your answers???
Great tips, Birchie! I'll need to get my hands on that Agatha Christie book.
ReplyDeleteHere are my old books that I still love - I'm couldn't put them down as a teenager:
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Bette Smith
All the vet stories by James Herriot
All the Sherlock Holmes stories
All the Bertie Wooster stories by PG Wodehouse.
I just received another book I'm intrigued about: "In The Sea There Are Crocodiles" by Fabio Geda. It's about a young refugee from Afghanistan. The book is 10 years old but ties in nicely with current events.
Yes to Tree and yes yes yes to the James Herriot stories! It's been a long time and I had forgotten about those.
DeleteGosh, I’m such a slouch. I seldom read real books these days. No valid excuse other than I’m spending too much time on the bike(s) or the blog(s). Some favorites, though, from awhile ago...The Harry Potter series (especially the third book, The Prisoner of Azkaban. I loved The Da Vinci Code (the blending of art with history totally had me captivated). The Girls from Ames was a book about a group of gals from Ames, Iowa, who stayed friends from childhood well into their adult years. The kids got me interested in the Hunger Games & Twilight series, too. . Ummm....there are more, but I can’t recall them. I’m gonna find that Agatha Christie book...that sounds like a page-turner!
ReplyDeleteTruth time: I probably spend more time listening to Sarah's podcast each week than I do actually reading. I only read a chapter or two a night right before bed. I love it, but there's just too much other stuff going on.
DeleteThumbs up on Da Vinci and fun fact that I read the books AND saw all of the Twilight movies.