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Quarterly Challenges
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2019 Spring Challenge - Nonfiction

This list of then-best-new feminist books is from April 2018, but includes several gems I'd like to keep on my radar.
https://www.independent.co.uk/extras/...
This list isn't limited to woman authors, but avoids the same-old, same-old in its list of 20 Biographies of Remarkable Women.
https://earlybirdbooks.com/biographie...

Not challenging myself to a specific number, but definitely keeping track,

At the Existentialist Café: Freedom, Being, and Apricot Cocktails by Sarah Bakewell 30/06/19
Fascism: A Warning by Madeleine K. Albright 02/06/19
The Darkening Age: The Christian Destruction of the Classical World by Catherine Nixey 29/06/19

My first choice is Lab Girl by Hope Jahren. I’ve owned it for some time and always pick something else instead so am hoping to defy on my own tendencies.


My first choice is Lab Girl by Hope Jahren. I’ve owned it for some time and always pick something else instead so am hoping to defy o..."
This sounds lovely.

review from NPR:
https://www.npr.org/2019/03/20/705069...

review from NPR:
https://www.npr.org/2019/03/20/705069......"
you've totally enticed me, Lark. What a fascinating topic.



That one is on my list too :) I also hope to get to Who Thought This Was a Good Idea?: And Other Questions You Should Have Answers to When You Work in the White House, The Greatest Love Story Ever Told, and I'd really like to read Michelle Obama's book.

That one is on my list too :) I also hope to ..."
I forgot! Becoming is my F2F book club read in early May, so I need to get on finding a copy.
I’ve never read a Mary Roach book and the topics always intrigue me. This challenge might give me the push to prioritize one...

https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/1...
A surprising find is a book written by Zora Neale Hurston just published in 2018, Barracoon: The Story of the Last "Black Cargo", which I'm currently reading and led me to the list through goodreads algorithms ("lists with this book").
*every single one of the books I listed as wanting to read for this challenge are on extreme backlog at my library. Of course.

ht..."
That’s a great list, Anita!
As to your asterisk, heck I’m just glad when my library owns what I want to read. The Venn diagram of my TBR and my library inventory is 99% different:(

On a lighter note, I started an ARC of The Ungrateful Refugee by Dina Nayeri last evening and am such a fan of her rhetorical style.

Love seeing everyone's great suggestions so far! Am adding The Ungrateful Refugee, Men We Reaped and Baracoon to my TBR

This has actually made me really excited, as I have Sing, Unburied, Sing on my list for this year.

We’re you bored? Too much detail? I’m curious about what didn’t float your boat if you don’t mind sharing.

I’ve heard universally good things about that, except from those who fundamentally aren’t fans of ghosts as characters. The same folks disliked Lincoln in the Bardo, and the writing is entirely different.

It wasn't so much the substance of the book - I did find it interesting - but more her style of writing. I found the way she inserted herself in the story all the time and the not funny jokes and attempts at light-heartedness really irritating. But that's of course a very subjective experience; other people might not be bothered by it or actually enjoy it. So I wouldn't necessarily say not to read the book. Really depends on what kind of narrative tone you like in your nonfiction books.

Thanks, Valerie. I would react similarly to both of the stylistic choices you mention.l. Very helpful.

Finished Barracoon: The Story of the Last "Black Cargo". It was mostly easy to read, but there were a few times I stumbled over the phonetic writing. A short and interesting read though.
Next up: Dead Girls: Essays on Surviving an American Obsession for a book club read but it also works for this challenge. Two birds, one stone.


I’ve wondered about Furiously Happy for some time, so hearing your reaction is really helpful in clarifying it ain’t for me.
I’m still reading and enjoying The Ungrateful Refugee, and am starting Becoming this afternoon for a F2F book club meeting Wednesday. A little more pressure than I like, but I’m looking forward to reading it.

@anita , did you read Dead Girls or are you into it? I’m curious. It sounds perfect for me.

Yes, I finished it, Carol. I had mixed feelings about it. I think because it happens to be one of those books that is marketed a little off from what it actually delivers. You can read my review, it's not a spoiler review, but generally it was more of a compilation of American media analyses than the specific "dead girls" focus that one may be expecting. I really did enjoy the essays that I did like, but there were a couple that seemed oddly out of place in which she goes off on tangents about her childhood or her college years and it's a little hard to understand how these tangents fit in with her theme...
The essays cover a lot of media - shows, movies, some music, and books. So there could be spoilers in it for certain t.v. shows and book series'. But if mystery and thriller are a genre of yours then most likely you've read/seen the media discussed. It was still pretty interesting.

Thanks, Anita. I get annoyed when a thematic collection doesn’t focus squarely on what it is marketed as covering; it’s so odd when a publisher or editor tosses in a couple of off-point essays, but I’ve had that reading experience before.

My next books on hand for this challenge after I finish my current (not applicable here) non-fiction are All You Can Ever Know: A Memoir and An American Princess: The Many Lives of Allene Tew. But I have Anna Karenina coming up for a book club so they may have to wait until June!


I've heard good things about that Allene Tew book. Good luck with AK - I think everyone falls on the pole positions and I hope you're on the "love it" side.

Wow - that's quite a story. I"m not sure my reaction to losing everything would be so healthy or positive (Honey, let's go on a multi-hundred mile hike!) I'll have to keep an eye out for that one.


This book there will be another view on her, so I would like to read this as a group reading.
Have a fine time!

Carol I think that Michelle Obama wrote this herself. I am sure that she had a great Editor but I don't think there was a ghost writer.

Maybe not.

Is this challenge going to be added to the Challenges section of the group in addition to it being a discussion?

Michelle wrote this herself and she also recorded the audiobook.

Laura, yes! Thank you, the Spring challenge is up and can be found under the challenges tab for the group, or here. (Sometimes links from my phone don't work)

Laura, yes! Thank you, the Spring challenge is up and can be foun..."
Thank you! I prefer tracking my challenges that way. :)



Done! In two days. A bit lighter than is my style, but I found this book to be both educational and charming.

I thought it sounded lovely in the description. Have you read her other book Between You & Me: Confessions of a Comma Queen?

I haven’t but plan on finding it now. I would want her for a friend IRL.

The next book I am going to read is Elizabeth Kolbert's The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History

Thanks for the rec Valerie! Added to my tbr, looks great. I read the sixth extinction - it's a little horrifying but a really good read. Hope you enjoy it

There is also a lot of thoughtful commentary about democracy as well.
Books mentioned in this topic
How to Live: A Life of Montaigne in One Question and Twenty Attempts at an Answer (other topics)At the Existentialist Café (other topics)
Book Love (other topics)
Lab Girl (other topics)
A Really Good Brown Girl (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Sarah Bakewell (other topics)Sarah Bakewell (other topics)
Sarah Bakewell (other topics)
Nicole Chung (other topics)
Svetlana Alexievich (other topics)
More...
Whether a book meets the challenge criteria – is it published in the last 5 years if it was first published in Chinese in 2010 but translated into English in 2017, for example - is up to each member reader's judgment.
Let us know if you plan to participate and share any recommendations in this thread, along with your thoughts on the books you select.