VT Christian Reading Challenge discussion
General Discussion 2025
>
January Reads
date
newest »

message 1:
by
Christabelle
(new)
Jan 01, 2025 03:02PM

reply
|
flag

Book of 100 Pages or Less: Four Quartets
Book about Heaven: Heaven Is a World of Love
Book from a Library: The Lilies of the Field
Book about Mental Health: Encouragement for the Depressed
Book by an Author is Who No Longer Alive: Godric

And Linda, yes! I love the new prompts as well!

The prompts are a change: more geared at non-fiction and explaining things to kids. I might struggle this year.

The prompts are a change: more geared at non-fiction and explaining things to kids. I might struggle this year."
I am going to find it hard to read the prompts and the amount of fiction that I like/need just because of life. I miss the multiple book of my choice options.

The prompts are a change: more geared at non-fiction and explaining things to kids. I might strugg..."
Yes once I saw how non-fiction heavy the prompts were, I tried to fit fiction anywhere I could and still only ended with 24 at Rare Reader level (78).

So far I've read:
Address Unknown by Kathrine Kressman Taylor (100 pages or less)
His First Bible by Melody Carlson (book about Jesus for kids) - there's also an OT section but the NT section was all about Jesus...
Both these books were very short of course. I reviewed them both here and on YouTube. I want to do that with every book I read this year.


Best: My Stubborn Heart by Becky Wade. Just a fun love story that was a good start to the new year
Worse: The Second Sight of Zachary Cloudesley by Sean Lusk. A boy with the ability to see the future goes to rescue his dad from a Ottoman Sultan in a steam punk setting but I got so lost as the steam punk struggled with the author's lack of history being explained.
Surprise: Calculated by Nova MvBee. Young Woman with a dark past who has super ability to read and see numbers and patterns gets hired to prevent a company going bankrupt just to find out that there is a New Great Depression looming on the horizon. Also, turns out this is a retelling of an OT story. No I am not going to say which one as it would be spoilers.

How you doing on your goal, Chelsea? 400 pages always seems daunting! But if it’s a good book it goes quickly.
My best was Humility by Andrew Murray. It was reread, but one I gain so much from!
Worst: Nightmare Alley. The end of it I kinda skimmed through.
Surprise: Uglies. I thought the themes were really important for this day and age. I look forward to talking them over with my teens.

I forgot to mention that though I'm not going to buy anymore physical books until after I read 100 of them, I have excepted audiobooks. I get those through an annual subscription to Audible or from Libby. So there's room for some good old fashioned mood reading. The author was also a surprise. I'd never heard of Buddy Levy before, but I enjoyed his writing and will read more of his survival books.
Here's the January book awards:
Best:
Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Journey, by Alfred Lansing - ★★★★★
I've been reading a lot of nonfiction survival literature lately. This one was very inspiring.
Worst:
Several People Are Typing, by Calvin Kasulke - ★
This was so, so terrible. The author likes profanity. I read it because it was written all in Slack messages between co-workers, but the plot was lame, the sub-plots were worse, and the language was just not my style.
Surprise:
Labyrinth of Ice: The Triumphant and Tragic Greely Polar Expedition, by Buddy Levy - ★★★★★
I guess the only real surprise was that I'd never heard of this expedition before, and didn't even know about Ellesmere Island or where it was. It was a very tragic nonfiction survival story that hit me hard. (Very sad.)
Books mentioned in this topic
Four Quartets (other topics)Heaven Is a World of Love (other topics)
The Lilies of the Field (other topics)
Encouragement for the Depressed (other topics)
Godric (other topics)