Around the Year in 52 Books discussion
Weekly Topics 2024
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09. A book with fewer than 2024 ratings on Goodreads


The Last Chance Olive Ranch - 1893 ratings
Exile - 1134 ratings
Not for Ourselves Alone: The Story of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony - 224 ratings
Given that two are within easy range of being pushed over 2024 by then, I might have to find two more for choice.

I read some books in French that aren't even translated so there are very few reviews (like 4!) Makes me sound intellectual but I also have some cheap Regency romances that have a few hundred reviews.

I'm going to exclude newer releases as there's a good chance the number of ratings will reach the threshold by the time I get to fulfilling this prompt.
Non-fiction seems to dominate my remaining options and it is quite a varied bunch! Some ideas:
Gone: A Girl, a Violin, a Life Unstrung (1537)
The Stopping Places: A Journey Through Gypsy Britain (670)
As If!: The Oral History of Clueless as told by Amy Heckerling and the Cast and Crew (1605)


I went through my kindle this weekend and removed all of the library holds that were lingering in my kindle library. What was left was mostly Amazon Prime First Reads, most of which (surprisingly) have very few ratings. So my goal is to read one of those books.
But also, inevitably, there will be one or two books on the Tournament of Books list that have a low number of ratings, so given the timing of this prompt, I may go that route instead.
But also, inevitably, there will be one or two books on the Tournament of Books list that have a low number of ratings, so given the timing of this prompt, I may go that route instead.

I'm going to exclude newer releases as there's a good chance the numbe..."
I've loved "Clueless" since it came out in theaters. It's one of my top five go-to comfort watches. I really enjoyed reading "As If".


The Shamshine Blind by Paz Pardo (524, comes out 2/14/2023)
Unseen City by Amy Shearn (296, originally published 9/29/2020)
Update: I ended up not liking the style of The Shamshine Blind. Before I got the chance to try Unseen City, someone in my IRL book group chose I See Buildings Fall Like Lightning by Kieran Goddard. This book had only 90 ratings, so I chose to put it here. I hope to have the chance to get back to Unseen City at some point.

- Stirring the Dust by Mary McCabe (0
- Dream of Belonging: My Years in Postwar Poland by Janina Bauman (13
- The Gloaming by Kirsty Logan (1973
- You Will Be Safe Here by Damian Barr (1911
- So Many Ways to Begin by Jon McGregor (1863
- Wintering: A Novel of Sylvia Plath by Kate Moses (1401
- Signs for Lost Children by Sarah Moss (1186


Good catch Lori. The prompt itself has always been about “ratings” not reviews. I’m sure the word “reviews” was a typo/mistake in the description. The prompt has gone through discussions and voting, and “ratings” was always the operative word. Sadie’s list refers to reviews, but all her examples match the # of ratings in the books.

Oops, so it does. My numbers refer to ratings, not reviews!
Fixed it!

Thanks for clarifying! Much appreciated!

I'm probably not going to plan this one, and let the right book "find" me at the right time.





Sally Brady's Italian Adventure
293 ratings
133 reviews
3.76 average rating
Looks to be a decent storyline - WW2 American party girl, stuck in Italy when the war starts.

I'm also using Barcelona Dreaming, which currently has 1,082 ratings. It's a novel of interlocking stories, with a focus on the immigrant experience in the city.


I read The Home-Maker- it's my book club book this month. It was published by Persephone Press, a publishing house that publishes "forgotten" female literature. I have a friend obsessed with them, but honestly, the books she's passed onto me are better left forgotten. This one was really interesting- written in the 1920s discusses male vs female roles vis a vis homelife and children- but the writing was quite twee and dulll

Author: Anthony Trollope
How it fits the prompt: 1,337 ratings as of 1/12/23
Rating: 5*
Also fits: #5 set in one of the 25 most beautiful cities (London, England); #13 on a Five Books List; Best Anthony Trollope books recommended by Francesca Simon


I remember being exposed to some of her work maybe a decade and a half ago and really enjoying it so I put a lot of her books on my ATY list.
This book currently has 1,829 ratings, including mine.
I enjoyed it much more than the next one I read of her which was The Wild Iris, but maybe I just wasn’t in a poetic mindset that day because usually I really enjoy her work.
Also I’m surprised Ararat had so few ratings because I think of her as a very talented and well known poet but maybe there just aren’t a lot of older poetry connoisseurs on GoodReads…


I enjoy all the obscure books that keep cropping up in the author's Bryant & May novels.
Whoops. I've adjusted the first post of this thread to say ratings instead of reviews! I've also gone through the listopia's first few pages and removed any books that had passed the threshold. I said I wouldn't be keeping up with it, and I definitely won't be, but I may go in every now and then to adjust.


short and sweet review: 3.5
Felix just wanted to be loved, I didn't like the fact that he would accept less than to experience love when love was right in front of his face.




ratings at time of posting this comment.

My 2024 plan is to "not plan."
BOOK 1 ~ I work at a big library and I'm just going to go with the first book that appeals to me that crosses my returns desk.
BOOK 2 ~ And I'm challenging myself to work on clearing out my old TBR shelf this year, so I'm going to read the dustiest "fits the prompt" book on my TBR shelf as well.
~ ♞ ~
BOOK 1

Read ~ 2.10.24
Pages ~ 240
Rationale ~ 1,545 ratings
Review ~ ★★★★★
I had heard about this study years ago, and at the time found it interesting, but never pursued really learning about it. I bred sporthorses for a long time - and at the time, I thought about how particular gene traits might piggyback on others, but still didn't really think about how the "fox study" applied. I wish I'd read more about it years ago, but I'm pretty sure a lot of it would have gone over my head. This book is easy reading, but I think you'd have to have a real interest in genetics and heritability to get into it as much as I did. I found it really fascinating. Bottom line - gene inheritance isn't a one and done. Select for one particular trait and you'll eventually get a host of others that you never expected. There are plenty of issues in purebred breeding programs that prove this now, but back in the mid-50's, when we didn't even know about DNA, this concept was revolutionary. And it generated more questions which led to more answers which generated more questions. That's science for you.
~ ♞ ~
BOOK 2

Read ~ 2.12.24
Pages ~ 384
Rationale ~ 180 ratings
Review ~ ★★★
This book is a perfect description of why I don't read much romance. There's just no "there" there. Typically lighthearted, but the point of the story is boy meets girl meets boy - boy loses girl loses boy - boy gets girl gets boy - happily ever after. With a cute dog to add an "aw" factor. It was ok. Nothing earth shaking, but easy reading and a sweet little story. Not for me, but I can see the appeal of the genre.

AMY BANKS is the daughter of a man who was murdered in New Orleans in 1979.
ISAAC KNAPPER is the 15 yr old boy who is wrongfully imprisoned for a murder he did not commit, and is eventually exonerated and released from prison. It’s a true story of how two families deal with this heartbreaking trauma.
( I’m new to the group, I joined today. I’m not sure if I’m posting this properly. )

This book would work well for the two of the December prompts: #49 a book with a senior citizen character and #52 a cozy mystery.

It had 1,283 ratings as of the date of this post.
Books mentioned in this topic
Beneath the Scarlet Frost (other topics)Esther's Innocence (other topics)
Program MIRA (other topics)
Charlotte Bronte: A Fiery Heart (other topics)
Unfortunate Elements of My Anatomy (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Benjamin J. Boswell (other topics)Marissa Miller (other topics)
R.J. Setser (other topics)
Claire Harman (other topics)
Hailey Piper (other topics)
More...
ATY Listopia: https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/1...
The nature of this listopia means that the more of us who read a book, the more likely the book will be pushed over the 2024 ratings threshold. The listopia will not be monitored for ratings changes. Please check all books on this list before using them for your challenge!
What are you reading for this prompt, and how many ratings does it have?