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2022 Annual Reading Challenge
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Kathleen 2022 Annual Reading Challenge
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Great list. I've enjoyed many of them; Game of Thrones, Jonathan Strange, The Amber Spyglass, Stranger in a Stange Land (Grok), The Once and Future King and Dune. Enjoy your 2022 reading.
This list is absolutely fabulous. I wouldn't change a thing.
Copy/Paste!!!
11/22/63 is just phenomenal.
Good luck and happy reading
Copy/Paste!!!
11/22/63 is just phenomenal.
Good luck and happy reading

Martha wrote: "I love your list! I loved 11/22/63 & Good Omens. Happy Reading!"
I've been meaning to read it for quite awhile. A former roommate worked at The Sixth Floor exhibit and had some interesting stories about how they went about setting up the displays.

Ioana wrote: "You have some great books on this list: A Game of Thrones (sadly, we're still waiting for the end of this series to be written), 1Q84, World Without End, 11/22/63 are the ones I've read and loved. ..."
I'm really looking forward to this list. Just hoping I wasn't overly optimistic in the number of tomes l can handle.

Hoping I have a similar reaction!
Kathleen wrote: "Bill wrote: "Great list. I've enjoyed many of them; Game of Thrones, Jonathan Strange, The Amber Spyglass, Stranger in a Stange Land (Grok), The Once and Future King and Dune. Enjoy your 2022 readi..."
Game of Thrones and Jonathan Strange are tomes but once you get into them, you'll find them hard to put down.
Game of Thrones and Jonathan Strange are tomes but once you get into them, you'll find them hard to put down.
I loved Game Of Thrones and 11/22/63. I finished His Dark Materials last year and felt a little disappointed with Amber Spyglass, I preferred the first 2 books.


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Mixed feelings on this. The premise is intriguing - an old coffeehouse in a Tokyo alley where one can time travel albeit with severe restrictions. Nothing one does will change the present. One must remain in a chair in the coffeehouse. The experience only lasts until a cup of coffee turns cold.
Where I felt let down was in an uneven writing style (a result of translation?) with a lot of repetition.
In the end I liked the book's idea that while those who make the trip can't change what happens, they are left with a sense of release at being able to say those things that have been left unsaid and finding ways to reconcile with the present time.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Black Count: Glory, Revolution, Betrayal, and the Real Count of Monte Cristo (other topics)The Bookseller of Florence: The Story of the Manuscripts That Illuminated the Renaissance (other topics)
Stranger in a Strange Land (other topics)
The Amber Spyglass (other topics)
11/22/63 (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Tom Reiss (other topics)Ross King (other topics)
Robert A. Heinlein (other topics)
Stephen King (other topics)
Philip Pullman (other topics)
More...
1. A Game of Thrones byGeorge R.R. Martin
2.
Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrellby Susanna Clarke, 09/30/223.
We Keep the Dead Close: A Murder at Harvard and a Half Century of Silenceby Becky Cooper, 03/10/224. 1Q84 by Haruki Murakami
5.
The Bookseller of Florence: The Story of the Manuscripts That Illuminated the Renaissance.by Ross King, 12/28/226.
The Black Count: Glory, Revolution, Betrayal, and the Real Count of Monte Cristoby Tom Reiss, 12/31/227. Blood Meridian, or the Evening Redness in the West by Cormac McCarthy
8. World Without End by Ken Follett
9.
11/22/63by Stephen King, 10/31/2210.
Good Omens: The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, Witchby Terry Pratchett andNeil Gaiman, 03/30/2211.
Before the Coffee Gets Coldby Toshikazu Kawaguchi, 01/03/2212.
The Amber Spyglassby Philip Pullman, 12/12/221.
Stranger in a Strange Landby Robert A. Heinlein, 12/21/222. The Once and Future King by T H White
3. Dune by Frank Herbert
4. Empire Falls by Richard Russo