Around the Year in 52 Books discussion
2023 Weekly Question
>
Weekly Question - Jan 8 - Starting 2023

I noticed it in the library to use for the Winter Challenge prompt ' a fast-paced book' and realised that it would work brilliantly for this prompt.
It would also work for prompt 20, as the cover in most editions includes a route of travel.





My first book for this challenge was also read this week. I read Stillhouse Lake by Rachel Caine and hot damn. That was such a fantastic read - much much better than I was expecting. It was the perfect combination of mystery, thriller, and kept me on the edge of my seat.

I read Fool Me Once for ATY Location prompt. When we completed the list making I had great plans to read a book with locations that fit all 3 letters but then failed to plan. I noticed this took place in Austin, Texas and I could get it from my library so it was an easy last minute choice. It was fine but don't think I will remember much about it in December.

I used it for prompt 27 ‘A book by an author from continental Europe‘. The setting is France and the author is Swedish.

I could make something up about starting the new year with a debut book.


It was a pleasant read, nothing deeply thought provoking, but with a nice touch of magic and wonder, which is really what you need to open up a brand new year, I think.
I'm doing the prompts in order, and while I wanted to read Demon Copperhead FIRST, the waiting list at my library was very long - I'd been on it for about 5 months. I got it in my hands last Thursday, and by some miracle was able to finish it before the week rolled over, but I had to pull a late nighter!
And OMG. Worth the wait. Totally.


I also started my NetGalley arc of The Poisoner's Ring, which I just finished today.
Bofuri fit with prompts in both Aty and Popsugar and on a mini challenge. Poisoners ring because I couldn’t wait until May to get the book, and it also fit both challenges.

I read This Is What It Sounds Like: What the Music You Love Says About You. It sounded interesting when I read a review. I am an ignoramus about music but I liked the author's approach. She says for each person there are preferences we have for familiarity vs novelty, music vs lyrics, rhythm vs. melody. None are "better" than the others. She said that when people listen to music, some see pictures of the story or mood (I do this), others see themselves playing or singing, others see abstract patterns.






I started off easy with Rivers Of London: Deadly Ever After, because I like the series and they always come out late in the year.
The first serious book I read was Sworn To Silence, as I'd had it recommended to me a few months ago. A 4* procedural/thriller for me, with a good POV character and a decent supporting cast. I've used it for 43. A book that involves a murder (several actually), although I could probably also have used it for 28. A book that is dark!
Both Sworn to Silence and The Cold Heart of Capricorn, which I read for the last read-a-thon, surprised me. They're quite similiar thematically, and while I normally tend more towards Cozies than procedurals/thrillers, both were fast-paced and engaging, and ended up being 4* books.
The first serious book I read was Sworn To Silence, as I'd had it recommended to me a few months ago. A 4* procedural/thriller for me, with a good POV character and a decent supporting cast. I've used it for 43. A book that involves a murder (several actually), although I could probably also have used it for 28. A book that is dark!
Both Sworn to Silence and The Cold Heart of Capricorn, which I read for the last read-a-thon, surprised me. They're quite similiar thematically, and while I normally tend more towards Cozies than procedurals/thrillers, both were fast-paced and engaging, and ended up being 4* books.

Silver Sparrow is about half-sisters who share a father, though one sister is unaware the other exists. Dana grows up in the shadow of her father's legitimate daughter, having to hide herself from her father's wife and having limited opportunities as a result. Halfway through, the POV changes to Chaurisse, the other sister, and reveals that her life isn't plain sailing either. I liked the dual POV and the way that, by the end of the story, you end up both liking and disliking both sisters.
As well as the location prompt, it would fit "a con, deception or fake" and my edition fits "a faceless person on the cover".
At a bit of a stretch, it would also fit "relating to birds, bees or bunnies" as Chaurisse's first name is actually Bunny, after her grandmother who is also a character in the story.

@Samantha - SO great to hear Hard Day is ends well. I was nervous it would be a let down like Charley Davidson.
I read & enjoyed The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry for prompt #1


However, I often like to read a novel at the same time that I'm reading a short story collection, so a couple stories in I started The Psychology of Time Travel by Kate Mascarenhas. I had a copy of this one already, too — I had gotten it to fulfill a prompt in another challenge that I do on Reddit, a sci fi/fantasy BINGO challenge. The prompt was for "Wibbly Wobbly Timey Wimey," that is, "any book that deals with time not behaving as it should." I'm really enjoying this book and it fits the prompt perfectly! I'm also going to use it for the ATY challenge, but I haven't decided where yet — it fits a ton of prompts!
Does anyone else have a minor superstition that the first book you read in a year is a sign for how the year's reading will be as a whole?



My first start was Sarum: The Novel of England which I'm about 1/3 through.
My first start and finish was The Great Alone.
Lonesome Dove and Sarum: The Novel of England are both chunksters, but worth it.
The first book I read was something that happened to come in at the library just before New Year. I read way less nonfiction than fiction but the reviews intrigued me and it was interesting
This Is What It Sounds Like: What the Music You Love Says About You
. I used it for the prompt on a cover with many colors on it! The book explains how music has various attributes - familiarity vs. novelty, lyrics vs. instrumental, rhythm vs. melody - and we all have preferences. None are inherently better or worse. The book has a list of songs that you can look up on youtube to see how you feel about them. I didn't take the time to do that, but it would be interesting. I was trying to explain to my family that I like "deedle-deedle music" but that only meant something to me. I guess I meant that I like "catchy", upbeat tunes, fairly simple. I don't generally appreciate classical or choral music or slow, sad songs.
The first book I read was something that happened to come in at the library just before New Year. I read way less nonfiction than fiction but the reviews intrigued me and it was interesting
This Is What It Sounds Like: What the Music You Love Says About You


First book I used for the ATY challenge was The Summer Party, by Rebecca Heath, which is set in the Yorke Peninsula, Australia. (Couldn’t quite get the T in as well, unfortunately, lol) a very run-of-the-mill thriller, ultimately a bit forgettable, but fun to read while I was reading, you know?


The Stolen Heir by Holly Black because I've been a sucker for Holly Black since I was fifteen and picked up Tithe. I think she is the godmother of modern fae writing. I'll always cherish her characters and worlds, so I knew this would be an easy and lovely novel to fly through. Plus, it's just been released, so that excitement pushes the momentum forward. :)



The first book I read was something that happened to come in at the library just befor..."
I listened to this book on audio. I would stop the audio and go to Spotify to listen to the song. Not everyone has time to do that, but it made the experience of the book very enjoyable.


I loved it. The style definitely reminded me of the Lady Astronaut books.
The first book I read ended up being a holdover from 2022 (I try to avoid that usually, but as soon as I started this one, I realized I wanted to finish it in 2023 and use it for ATY).
The Rabbit Hutch by Tess Gunty for the birds, bees, and bunnies prompt.
It was excellent, though I wasn't as impressed with the ending as I hoped to be. That was a prompt I was nervous about, so I'm really glad I got it out of the way, and with a book I enjoyed.
The Rabbit Hutch by Tess Gunty for the birds, bees, and bunnies prompt.
It was excellent, though I wasn't as impressed with the ending as I hoped to be. That was a prompt I was nervous about, so I'm really glad I got it out of the way, and with a book I enjoyed.


I'm in a group that has a monthly mission. This month's mission is to Color By Number so qualifying books have either a color or a number in the title. My second book was Little White Lies.
Next month's mission involves a cover element where an object/person is only partially depicted because the rest of it runs off the edge of the cover. Missions are quite varied and I can always find 5-7 in my TBR that fit.
Katherine, thank you for saying that Dinosaurs works for ATY setting! I'm not a huge fan of setting prompts and I'm also reading the TOB list, so I can slot that in!
Misty wrote: "I started the year off with Cat on the Edge by Shirley Rousseau Murphy. I started reading it on Dec 31 and finished it on Jan 1. It was okay, but also it was kind of dumb. I read it..."
I started Cat on the Edge and found the sudden abilities of the cat just too ridiculous. I just finished The Sentence yesterday and I loved it. I lived in Minneapolis 25 years and my son still lives there so I recognized the streets and businesses Erdrich mentions, including her own. I love how she even put herself in as a lesser character. It was a weird feeling to read an account of the recent past sort of like a historical novel.
I started Cat on the Edge and found the sudden abilities of the cat just too ridiculous. I just finished The Sentence yesterday and I loved it. I lived in Minneapolis 25 years and my son still lives there so I recognized the streets and businesses Erdrich mentions, including her own. I love how she even put herself in as a lesser character. It was a weird feeling to read an account of the recent past sort of like a historical novel.


Ridiculous is the exact word. I stuck it out, but I won't be reading any of the other books. I didn't realize that Birch Books was her store. That's cool. I was looking up Indigenous owned bookstores to order some of the books for our book club, and I found that one, but I didn't realize it was owned by Erdrich until I looked up which business you were talking about that was mentioned in The Sentence.



The first book I finished was The Defining Decade: Why Your Twenties Matter—And How to Make the Most of Them Now by Meg Jay.
But I started I think more than half of this in 2022. So I didn't purposefully choose this to be the first book I finish in 2023. It just so happened that I didn't finish it in 2022. It's a non-fiction self-help book aimed at people in their early twenties. I read it even though I'm in my thirties because maybe I can give sound advice to younger people because of that book. I put it in the prompt ✓ 7. A book with ONE of the five "W" question words in the title.
--
The first book that I started and finished in 2023 is Sunreach by Brandon Sanderson. I chose this because it's a novella in the Skyward series, which I'm currently reading. I find that getting into addicting series is a great way to reach my reading challenge goals! This one's for the prompt ✓ 45. A book whose author has published more than 7 books.
Robin P wrote: "Lonesome Dove and Sarum: The Novel of England are both chunksters, but worth it."
Lonesome Dove is on my "one day" list. My curiosity was piqued as Craig Johnson's Walt Longmire mentions it as his favourite book.
Lonesome Dove is on my "one day" list. My curiosity was piqued as Craig Johnson's Walt Longmire mentions it as his favourite book.




Does anyone else have a minor superstition that the first book you read in a year is a sign for how the year's reading will be as a whole?
Yes! I sometimes felt that the first book set a tone for the year. But this year I forgot to plan for it. I started an impulse read for a “food” tag, A Wizard’s Guide to Defensive Baking, which wouldn’t work. I’m also in a game where our books are randomly selected from a list of 100 books we submitted. My first book was Why We Get Sick: The Hidden Epidemic at the Root of Most Chronic Disease―and How to Fight It. I decided to let it stand as my first because health will be salient this year whether I like it or not. Plus the book is empowering, and covers topics relevant to my siblings too. I want to spend more time with them this year, even though we live far away from one another.
It works for science, W question, and some rejected prompts. I also read the Wizard book, but I can’t think of where it fits other than Title begins with W, a rejected prompt, or child protagonist.
Books mentioned in this topic
A History of Glitter and Blood (other topics)Desert Star (other topics)
The Balloon Man (other topics)
Scotland with a Stranger (other topics)
The Priory of the Orange Tree (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Hannah Moskowitz (other topics)Jodi Picoult (other topics)
Jennifer Finney Boylan (other topics)
Andy Weir (other topics)
Amanda Flower (other topics)
More...
What is the first book you read/are reading in 2023? Why did you choose that one?