Ultimate Popsugar Reading Challenge discussion
2019 Challenge Prompts - Regular
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13 - A book published posthumously

Northanger Abbey
Wives and Daughters
Sleeping Murder
The Mysterious Stranger
As far as I know they should all be good for this prompt.


Yes I think so...

A couple that came to mind right away were:
First 3 of the Girl with the Dragon Tattoo series
Part of The Wheel of Time series
The Children of Húrin
The Silmarillion

I'm reading this right now. Good, but so creepy.

Yes. I'm reading The Girl Who Played with Fire and The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest for this prompt and the 'set in Scandinavia' prompt.


What other books have been published after the death of the author?"
Sorry Sara, but Go Set a Watchman was published in 2015. Harper Lee died in 2016. I remember the controversy when the publication was announced in 2014 because there was real concern that any approval for publication given by Lee was invalid as her competancy and capacity to give consent was seriously in question.


(I was also wanting to count it for ATY's 'book from multiple perspectives'--hoping the list that had it on there was accurate.)

For this, I'm thinking of reading 2666 by Roberto Bolaño or History of the Peloponnesian War by Thucydides if I feel like revisiting a favorite.


It wasn't, I'm sorry to say. The book follows the fates of several characters, but it's all told in third-person omniscient form. What we can infer from the interior states of the characters is only what we're told by the narrator or what they reveal when they speak. It's in no way a book told from multiple perspectives, which would be an innovation unheard of at the time Gaskell was writing. I don't want to drift from the purpose of this comment section by responding with suggestions, so I'll go post them in their proper thread, because this challenge also has a category for books told from multiple perspectives.

It wasn't, I'm sorry to say. The book follows the f..."
Ah, well. For ATY I'm specifically trying to fill the prompts with books I already own, so I may just have to wait and see what I read over the course of the year that counts. Thanks!

Before I Say Goodbye: Recollections and Observations from One Woman's Final Year by Ruth Picardie.
From wikipedia - Her memoir of living with breast cancer, Before I Say Goodbye, was published posthumously, culled from five columns written for the Observer's magazine Life, and from her personal correspondence. These were collected and edited by her husband, Matt Seaton and her sister, Justine Picardie.

You are right it was originally published in a newspaper. I forgot about that fact but will probably still be reading it as the book was after :-)



Oooh The Pale King has been on my TBR for ages. I think I'll be reading that as well. And I also enjoyed A Confederacy of Dunces though it took a little while to get into it.
Sorry Nadine, Y was published a few months prior to Grafton's death.

No, it's not. Sue Grafton died a few months after it was published. She didn't get to write the Z novel.


There seems to be some other non-traditional books that have been published posthumously, so i might go with that.


Thanks Nullifidian! I will definitely look into those.




A great choice! Read it earlier this year. Loved it...brilliant and my copy had a couple of forwards andtor that added a lot, especially about when it was written vs. published.


A Death in the Family
Poodle Springs - published after my Raymond Chandler phase so I have not read it! This might be my choice.
The Mystery of Edwin Drood - been trying to think of this one for days...was inspiration for a fun Broadway show where audience chose ending every night.
The Ivory Tower
The Man With the Golden Gun- Bond, James Bond
The Love of the Last Tycoon - Fitzgerald
The Mysterious Stranger - Mark Twain
The Lighthouse at the End of the World - classic
The Islands of Chaldea - children's fantasy
The Way of All Flesh

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An obvious choice is Go Set a Watchman.I stand corrected ;)What other books have been published after the death of the author?