Around the World in 80 Books discussion
ATW in 80 Books World Challenge
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Ruth circumnavigator

Delirio by Laura Restrepo - there's an English translation Delirium. This is a gripping read. It's a little confusing to begin with as there are several narrators and the voice moves from one to another - sometimes within the same paragraph but it's worth persevering as the threads eventually combine. There's a reference to the Spanish Golden Age drama La vida es sueño Life is a dream by Pedro Calderón de la Barca so I may make that my next read as I need to read a book set in Poland.

La vida es sueño by Pedro Calderón de la Barca and I also read a translation Life is a Dream. Poland just happens to be a useful setting (a bit like Denmark for Hamlet). I need to see a performance now. This deals with interesting themes - what is reality, parent child relationships, who deserves to hold power.

My Walk to Equality: Essays, Stories and Poetry by Papua New Guinean Women
Some interesting pieces but I felt I needed to know a bit more about PNG to really appreciate this.

Bloody January by Alan Parks
Bleak detective story set in the underbelly of Glasgow in 1973

Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children by Ransom Riggs
Fantasy cleverly using old photographs.

8) Italy: The Mozart Question - Michael Morpurgo's glimpse into the holocaust and how being a musician was a way to survive. This is poignant, he's a master storyteller and the illustrations are beautiful. The story begins and ends in Venice.
9) Germany: All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque. I saw Sam Mendes' film 1917 while I was reading - both are hard going and disturbing but need to be read/seen, Mendes seems to have taken ideas from Remarque.

(And a revisit to Colombia with Memories of My Melancholy Whores)

12) Bosnia & Herzegovina: The Cellist of Sarajevo by Steven Galloway.

This is set in both France and Japan.



Not a chronological memoir but musings on many different subjects based on experiences from the writer's life. I found it grew on me, at the beginning it seemed to be a collection of diverse short articles but a thread develops which drew me in.

Fascinating to read the many accounts these historians have discovered about fraternisation not only with the Christmas truce of 1914 but at other times during WWI. I found it interesting to read a scholarly work about the war having recently read All Quiet on the Western Front.

Engaging children's story featuring cats

20) Canada: February by Lisa Moore
21) Norway: The Woman in Cabin 10 by Ruth Ware


This is a poignant story (possibly somewhat autobiographical) about the relationship that develops between the narrator and her cleaning lady and how through the stormy relationship that develops between them she learns more about herself and the world. A book I found hard to put down.

24) Afghanistan: The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini
25) Lithuania The Boy in the Suitcase by Lene Kaaberbøl & Agnete Friis
The translator is not given in my edition but an article from the New York Times says that Kaaberbøl| did the translation. The action takes place in both Lithuania and in Denmark


and a revisit to England & Spain with Jessie Burton's The Muse


Thank you Diane, with so many interesting books I come across on other readers' threads there's always a new place waiting to be visited.

With any comic writing you tend to love it or hate it, I like Tony's slightly whimsical sense of humour and I've heard him speak at the Way with Words Festival and I was interested to have a second go at this. I first listening to the audio book as we were driving round Ireland in 2007. I still like it but realise much has changed in 23 years since he did his trip. A fun, light-hearted hitch around Ireland in the company of his fridge Saiorse.


A fascinating exploration of the connection between the author and different landscapes through which he has walked. Most of the chapters deal with England and Scotland but there are three taking the reader further afield to Palestine, Spain and Tibet.

I found this heavy going, but very well researched.

Very descriptive, Anita Desai evokes a stifling, dusty, family home in Old Delhi. Little joy and a fair amount of resentment and guilt in this read but an interesting look at family relationships.

This 1992 publication with text by Duncan Green and paintings by John Keane follows the visit of a a group of artists belonging to the Association of Artists for Guatemala and published by the sadly missed Latin America Bureau.

This really transported me to the rainforest, troubling and inspiring. It reminds you of the pleasure of reading but also of so called "civilised" man's tendency to destroy and treat nature as something to be exploited. Available in an English translation The Old Man Who Read Love Stories
I'm now going to read his children's story The Story of a Seagull and the Cat Who Taught Her to Fly
Sadly Luis Sepúlveda died recently in Spain of Covid-19.

Following two branches of the same family through the generations. Has introduced me to episodes of history I didn't know.

Interesting to read a crime novel set in the 1990s in the Philippines with a Jesuit Priest as the sleuth.

This has been on my to-read list for some time but I was prompted to read it when a friend posted some photos of the gardens in Hamilton which are the setting for the title story. A very enjoyable read, she skilfully evokes characters, atmospheres and places with few words. I have her collected stories so have several other volumes of hers to enjoy.

Interesting read set in both the Dominican Republic and New York City about a teenager from a poor rural family made to marry a much older man who takes her to New York to a miserable life. When her husband has to return home for a couple of months she finally begins to blossom.

For me this was too long and too detailed probably because I had no empathy for the protagonist, Teresa Mendoza, nor any of the other characters involved in the various drug cartels and mafias. It definitely felt like a novel written by a journalist. For me the opening chapters and the final exciting chapter were the most interesting parts. However I was listening to the Spanish audio version and resorted to speeding up the narration. I chose Mexico as the book opens and closes violently in Sinaloa, Mexico.

Engaging and well written, dark comedy dealing with a relationship between sisters.

45) Switzerland: Slow Train to Switzerland: One Tour, Two Trips, 150 Years - and a World of Change Apart by Diccon Bewes Having also visited Switzerland on my first ever foreign holiday I found this engaging.

47) Morocco: Hideous Kinky by Esther Freud




53) Ukraine: The Good Angel of Death by Andrey Kurkov translated from the Russian by Andrew Bromfield
Books mentioned in this topic
The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society (other topics)The Museum of Innocence (other topics)
Lo que la marea esconde (other topics)
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No Beast So Fierce: The Terrifying True Story of the Champawat Tiger, the Deadliest Man-Eater in History (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Mary Ann Shaffer (other topics)María Oruña (other topics)
Pajtim Statovci (other topics)
Orhan Pamuk (other topics)
Dane Huckelbridge (other topics)
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1) England The Red House Mystery
Countries visited in 2020
England, Colombia, Poland, France, Papua New Guinea, Scotland, Wales, Germany, Italy, Australia, Spain, Bosnia, Japan, Iran, China, Sweden, Belgium, USA, The Netherlands, Canada, Norway, Laos, Hungary, Afghanistan, Lithuania, Montecarlo, DRC, Russia, Czech Republic, Ireland, Greece, Tibet, Ethiopia, India, Guatemala, Ecuador, Syria, Ghana, The Philippines, New Zealand, Dominican Republic, Mexico, Nigeria, Trinidad, Switzerland, Peru, Morocco, Turkey, Cambodia, Lesotho, Armenia, Micronesia, Ukraine