Ultimate Popsugar Reading Challenge discussion
2025 Challenge - Regular
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02 - A book you want to read based on the last sentence

After all, tomorrow is another day. (Gone with the Wind)
It is not often that someone comes along who is a true friend and a good writer. Charlotte was both. (Charlotte's Web)
He loved Big Brother (1984)
So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past. (Great Gatsby)
The most modern one I could think of is:
I'm haunted by humans (The Book Thief)

I don’t hate it he thought, panting in the cold air, the iron New England dark; Idon’t. I don’t! I don’t hate it! I don’t hate it!
–William Faulkner, Absalom, Absalom!(1936)
Go, my book, and help destroy the world as it is.
–Russell Banks, Continental Drift (1985)
I never saw any of them again—except the cops. No way has yet been invented to say goodbye to them.
–Raymond Chandler, The Long Goodbye (1953)


Lol!
There's got to be a listopia of this already, right?? BRB
Surprisingly, no.
But I did find this article of 100 books with great last lines:
https://americanbookreview.org/archiv...
Doni wrote: "I hate this one. I don't want to preview the last sentence of books before I read the whole book. Who am I, Harry?"
yeah I confess I hate it too. But I think Dani just saved the day for me by mentioning a Raymond Chandler book. I think that's the book for me!!!!
yeah I confess I hate it too. But I think Dani just saved the day for me by mentioning a Raymond Chandler book. I think that's the book for me!!!!

"'It is a far, far better thing that I do, than I have ever done; it is a far, far better rest that I go to than I have ever known."







I do NOT want to know the last line in a book before I read it. I don’t even want to read articles or see comments that give away the last line of a book! Brutal! I think I’ll just twist this prompt to be ‘a book with a great ending’ and then I’ll retroactively assign it. My reading challenge, my rules!
Haha.


I might post books' last lines here as I read them (under spoilers), but I don't read the hottest thing... :)
One of the most brutal last lines I've ever read came from the book The Return of the Soldier, (view spoiler) , but I don't know that I would have read the book based on that line, and it's a major spoiler.


"In homeopathy there is a remedy called pulsatile for those who weep at music. "
Such a beautiful last line, and I've always meant to read it.

That is my absolute favorite book ever.

-Snow Falling on Cedars
She said, "You can't tell a gift how to come."
Patience & Sarah
What little balm we have, we have against all odds. Do not walk away in sorrow. Do not be consoled.
Hummingbird House

Lol!
There's got to be a listopia of this already, right?? BRB
Su..."
thank you for sharing this! I was so scared to go through my library of books to peek at the last page - I have lots of trouble filtering out visual information, so I thought I'd get so many spoilers! This is a great way to avoid that.

The podcast is What Do I Read Next? Episode 445 “Startlingly beautiful sentences and perfect last lines”.
Thank you to Jennifer for that link!!!
I've never read Hemingway, but I've been meaning to get around to it, and I gotta say, this last line intrigues me:
"After a while I went out and left the hospital and walked back to the hotel in the rain."
–Ernest Hemingway, A Farewell to Arms
I just finished a fantastic KDrama that packed a serious emotional wallop (Mr Plankton, for anyone who is interested - no it's got nothing to do with SpongeBob; yes it's all I can think about now) and now I'm all in my feels and this line fits my current mood perfectly.
So I think I found my book.
(I know, I already said I was gong to read Chandler - and I will! I know I love his books! but I might use Hemingway for this category now.)
I've never read Hemingway, but I've been meaning to get around to it, and I gotta say, this last line intrigues me:
"After a while I went out and left the hospital and walked back to the hotel in the rain."
–Ernest Hemingway, A Farewell to Arms
I just finished a fantastic KDrama that packed a serious emotional wallop (Mr Plankton, for anyone who is interested - no it's got nothing to do with SpongeBob; yes it's all I can think about now) and now I'm all in my feels and this line fits my current mood perfectly.
So I think I found my book.
(I know, I already said I was gong to read Chandler - and I will! I know I love his books! but I might use Hemingway for this category now.)


That might be a good solution! Thank you! I really wouldn't know how to solve this otherwise, I loath reading the end first!

"I'm looking out for you." Look Out For The Little Guy!

"Yet here I was, and in the morning, I would open my eyes and go on with my life."




Yesss...happy to see someone else is thinking along the same lines as me. I'll likely do the same unless I come across one organically. I'm trying to avoid going above 200 unread books on my physical shelf and it's been hovering dangerously close lately so if there's an opportunity to bend a task to suit--I'm taking it!

Thank you! Found what I need that I already own and already have listed for another challenge! "If on a winter's night a traveler", which I've been putting off for years. And it is a great last line!


That said, there are a lot of books where the title of the story is the last line of the book (or contains it in some form - there's a GR list for this too). I'm going to read This Is How It Always Is by Laurie Frankel, and shocker! That's the last sentence of the book too... so you already read it when you picked up the book. And, no spoiler.
Also, isn't this connected to a Listopia list then? So, if you really really don't want to read a last line, just go to the List and pick a book that someone thought had a great last line and is basically recommending to you...easy peasy.

"It was going to be a glorious year.""
Ah, that brings back such a good memory. I loved Oona's story so much! Great book, excellent last line!

It's always possible that the last line can be a spoiler. For me, the bigger risk is that something else on the last page will be a spoiler that I will glance at while I'm trying to check the last line. I totally spoiled The Overnight Guest for myself just by checking how many pages were in the book and seeing something that gave away the whole plot on the last page.
That said, I like this prompt. I'll see what other people post, maybe pull from the list I posted, or just read a book that ends up having a great last line.





Good one!

Charles Darwin closed the last paragraph of the first edition, (publication date 24 November 1859), of his On the Origin of Species with this sentence:-
There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved.

My suggestion is either the novel Circe or the short story/Nnovella Galatea, both by Madeline Miller. Both have incredible last sentences, and I routinely tell friends when I recommend them not to read theendfirst, not even the last sentence because you need to experience them after reading the book.
Jennifer W wrote: "But I did find this article of 100 books with great last lines:
https://americanbookreview.org/archiv..."
This is a great resource! Thanks for posting!
I think I'm going to assume that a book I read in 2025 will qualify to fulfill this prompt, at last IMO! 😁
https://americanbookreview.org/archiv..."
This is a great resource! Thanks for posting!
I think I'm going to assume that a book I read in 2025 will qualify to fulfill this prompt, at last IMO! 😁

This might be the year I re-read (AGAIN, lol) GWTW.

Wow. I think we're all going to have to help each other on this one!!! Right now, all I can think of is "reader, I married him.""
Wikipedia says: A famous line in the book is at the beginning of Chapter 38: "Reader, I married him." So it isn't the last sentence.
Wikipedia goes on to mention something that happened to Rochester two years after he and Jane got married. So mentioning that they got married wasn't the last sentence in the book.
There is a difference between a memorable sentence and the last sentence.
Books mentioned in this topic
Circe (other topics)Memento (other topics)
All the Colors of the Dark (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Chris Whitaker (other topics)Alice Greenway (other topics)
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Richard Osman (other topics)
Richard Osman (other topics)
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Wow. I think we're all going to have to help each other on this one!!! Right now, all I can think of is "reader, I married him."
Listopia list is Here: A book you want to read based on the last sentence