Play Book Tag discussion
Member Challenge Tracking 2025
>
Cindy/LibraryCin's 2025 Challenges
message 1:
by
LibraryCin
(new)
Jan 02, 2025 06:45PM

reply
|
flag

Play Book Tag (tags or challenges)
1. Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands / Kate Beaton. 4.5 stars
2. Find You First / Linwood Barclay. 3.75 stars
3. The Sister Season / Jennifer Scott. 3.5 stars
4. The Tumbling Turner Sisters / Juliette Fay. 4 stars
5. My Extraordinary Ordinary Life / Sissy Spacek. 3.5 stars
6. The Woman Who Died a Lot / Jasper Fforde. 2 stars
7. Shaded Grove / Oliver C. Seneca. 4 stars
8. The Overstory / Richard Powers. 2.5 stars
9. Cruise Confidential / Brian David Bruns. 4 stars

1. Sweet Fury / Sash Bischoff. 3 stars
2. Oh No He Didn’t / Wendy Murphy. 3.5 stars
3. Listen to Your Sister / Neena Viel. 2 stars
4. The Ascent / Allison Buccola. 4 stars
5. Welcome to Cemetery / C.J. Daley. 4 stars
6. The Thing in Christmas Town / Iseult Murphy. 4 stars
7. What Kind of Paradise / Janelle Brown. 4 stars
8. The Intelligence Explosion / James Barrat. 3.5 stars
9. Atlas of Unknowable Things / McCormick Templeman. 3 stars
10. The Night That Finds Us All / John Hornor Jacobs. 3 stars

1. Galileo's Daughter / Dava Sobel. 2 stars
2. White Like Her / Gail Lukasik. 3 stars
3. The Donnellys: Powder Keg / John Little. 3 stars
4. The White Princess / Philippa Gregory. 4 stars
5. Beauty and the Werewolf / Mercedes Lackey. 4 stars
6. Hotline / Dimitri Nasrallah. 3.5 stars
7. The Four Seasons / Laurel Corona. 3.75 stars
8. Three Sisters / Three Queens / Philippa Gregory. 4 stars
9. Dark Harvest / Norman Patridge. 4 stars

1. The Break / Katherena Vermette. 4 stars
2. The Incredible Journey / Sheila Burnford. 3.5 stars
3. Greenmantle / Charles de Lint. 3.5 stars
4. Nobody's Mother / Lynne Van Luven (ed.). 3.5 stars
5. Big Lonely Doug / Harley Rustad. 4 stars
6. I'm Thinking of Ending Things / Iain Reid. 2.5 stars
7. Amuse Bouche / Anthony Bildulka. 4 stars
8. The Crisis of Canadian Democracy / Andrew Coyne. 4.5 stars

1. The Mammoth Hunters / Jean M. Auel. 3.5 stars
2. Better Nate Than Ever / Tim Federle. 3.25 stars
3. Blood Orange / Drusilla Campbell. 3.75 stars
4. The Shopping Bags / Anna Wallner, Kristina Matisic. 3.5 stars
5. Lonbourn / Jo Baker. 2.5 stars
6. The Marriage Pact / Michelle Richmond. 4.5 stars
7. The Goldfinch / Donna Tartt. 3 stars
8. Beyond the Burning Time / Kathryn Lasky. 3.25 stars
9. City of Bones / Cassandra Clare. 4 stars
10. The Sixth Gun / Cullen Bunn. 2 stars

Will it Ever End? (Continuing Series)
1. The Lord God Made Them All / James Herriot. 3 stars
2. A Twist in Time / Jule McElwain. 3.5 stars
3. Heirs and Graces / Rhys Bowen. 3.5 stars
4. Emerald Green / Kerstin Gier. 3 stars
5. Dust / Hugh Howey. 2.75 stars
6. Codex Born / Jim C. Hines. 3.75 stars
7. The Shepherd's Crown / Terry Pratchett. 3.25 stars
8. Chickadee / Louise Erdrich. 3.5 stars
9. Breaking Silence / Linda Castillo. 3.5 stars

1. The Haunting of Ashburn House / Darcy Coates. 4.5 stars
2. Everything She Ever Wanted / Ann Rule. 4 stars
3. Hunted / Darcy Coates. 4 stars
4. Malibu Rising / Taylor Jenkins Reid. 3.5 stars
5. A Newfoundlander in Canada / Alan Doyle. 4 stars
6. The Mall Walkers / R. Brian Howe. 3.5 stars
7. A Ladder to the Sky / John Boyne. 3.75 stars
8. Firefly Lane / Kristin Hannah. 4.25 stars
9. Ghost Camera / Darcy Coates. 4 stars
10. The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry / Rachel Joyce. 3.5 stars

1. Beyond That, the Sea / Laura Spence-Ash. 3 stars
2. The Donnellys: Massacre, Trial, and Aftermath / John Little. 3 stars
3. Look Me in the Eye / John Elder Robison. 3.5 stars
4. Code / Kathy Reichs, Brendan Reichs. 4 stars
5. The Postscript Murders / Elly Griffiths. 3 stars
6. The Mayor of Casterbridge / Thomas Hardy. 3 stars
7. Mercy / Jodi Picoult. 3 stars
8. Dead Silence / S. A. Barnes. 3.75 stars
9. Saving Sophie / Ronald H. Balson. 3.5 stars
10. The Rooster Bar / John Grisham. 3 stars

1. Rock Paper Scissors / Alice Feeney. 4 stars
2. The Nightingale / Kristin Hannah. 4.5 stars
3. Love in the Time of Cholera / Gabriel Garcia Marquez. 2 stars
4. Ghosts of the Tsunami / Richard Lloyd Parry. 3 stars
5. The Lifeboat / Charlotte Rogan. 3 stars
6. As Long as the Lemon Trees Grow / Zoulfa Katouh. 4.5 stars
7. Tamarind Mem / Anita Rau Badami. 3 stars
8. Maria / Michelle Moran. 3.5 stars
9. Far North / Marcel Theroux. 3 stars
10. Tiger / Tash Aw. 2 stars

1. Food Pets Die For / Ann N. Martin. 4 stars
2. The Wisdom of Sheep / Rosamund Young. 2.25 stars
3. Science Comics: Sharks: Nature's Perferct Hunter / Joe Flood. 4 stars
4. Animal Madness / Laurel Braitman. 3.75 stars
5. Don't Turn Your Back in the Barn / David Perrin. 4 stars
6. A Dog's Journey / W. Bruce Cameron. 4 stars
7. Seal Wars / Paul Watson. 4.25 stars
8. True Story / Marty Chan. 2 stars
9. Bird Brain / Nathan Emery. 3 stars
10. Our Native Bees / Paige Embry. 3 stars
11. We Bought a Zoo / Benjamin Mee. 4 stars

1. The Autobiography of an Execution / David R. Dow. 4 stars
2. When We Were Shadows / Janet Wees. 3.5 stars
3. Where the Buffalo Roam / Anne Matthews. 3 stars
4. Unsinkable / Daniel Allen Butler. 4 stars
5. Anne Neville: Queen to Richard III / Michael Hicks. 3 stars
6. The Carpool Detectives / Chuck Hogan. 3.75 stars
7. The Trial of Lizzie Borden /Cara Robertson. 2.5 stars
8. Dangerous World / Marq De Villiers. 2.5 stars
9. Come Fly the World / Julia Cooke. 3 stars
10. Helter Skelter / Vincent Bugliosi. 4.5 stars

1. Benazir Bhutto / Brooke Allen. 3.5 stars
2. Moon of the Crusted Snow / Waubegeshig Rice. 3.5 stars
3. All the Sinners Bleed / S. A. Cosby. 4 stars
4. The Orphanage by the Lake / Daniel G. Miller. 4 stars
5. Tituba, Reluctant Witch of Salem / Elaine G. Breslaw. 3.25 stars
6. Sure, I'll Be Your Black Friend / Ben Philippe. 3 stars
7. Love and Other Consolation Prizes / Jamie Ford. 4 stars
8. The Red Letter / Daniel G. Miller. 4 stars
9. The Only Good Indians / Stephen Graham Jones. 3 stars
10. The Short and Tragic Life of Robert Peace / Jeff Hobbs. 2.75 stars
11. While We Run / Karen Healey. 3.5 stars

1. Brideshead Revisited / Evelyn Waugh. 2 stars
2. If It Bleeds / Stephen King. 4 stars


1. Newly in public domain.
2. Features adoption/foster care/nontraditional family. Beyond That, the Sea / Laura Spence-Ash. 3 stars
3. A long title (5+ words).Oh No He Didn’t: Brilliant Women and the Men Who Took Credit for Their Work / Wendy Murphy. 3.5 stars
4. Author has your or relative’s 1st or last name. The Donnellys: Massacre, Trial, and Aftermath / John Little. 3 stars
5. Nonhuman narrator.. The Incredible Journey / Sheila Burnford. 3.5 stars
6. The sun on cover/in title.
7. Hollywood!. Rock Paper Scissors / Alice Feeney. 4 stars
8. A place you've never been.Galileo's Daughter / Dava Sobel. 2 stars
9. Features winged creature(s). Bird Brain / Nathan Emery. 3 stars
10. A profession in title. Don't Turn Your Back in the Barn: Adventures of a Country Vet / David Perrin. 4 stars
11. Travel. Where the Buffalo Roam / Anne Matthews. 3 stars
12. Child as a main character. Better Nate Than Ever / Tim Federle. 3.25 stars
13. Read a CAT. Benazir Bhutto / Brooke Allen. 3.5 stars
14. Totally random.
15. Originally published in a language not your own. Emerald Green / Kerstin Gier. 3 stars
16. Medical topic. Animal Madness / Laurel Braitman. 3.75 stars
17. A holiday in title. The Thing in Christmas Town / Iseult Murphy. 4 stars
18. Writing about writers.. Sweet Fury / Sash Bischoff. 3 stars
19. Either "Library" or "Thing" in title. Everything She Ever Wanted / Ann Rule. 4 stars
20. Features fire. The Donnellys: Powder Keg / John Little. 3 stars
21. Recommended by a friend or LT member. Sure, I'll Be Your Black Friend / Ben Philippe. 3 stars
22. Oldest book in your TBR.
23. Set in your favorite season. The Sister Season / Jennifer Scott. 3.5 stars
24. Features a birth. The Wisdom of Sheep / Rosamund Young. 2.25 stars
25. A piece of furniture on the cover.

January: Migration or displacement
- Beyond That, the Sea / Laura Spence-Ash. 3 stars
- Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands / Kate Beaton. 4.5 stars
March: Neurodiverse voices
- Look Me in the Eye / John Elder Robison. 3.5 stars
May: Punk/metal
June: Aboriginal Australia
July: India
- Tamarind Mem / Anita Rau Badami. 3 stars
August: Free space - any culture you are not part of
- Chickadee / Louise Erdrich. 3.5 stars
- The Only Good Indians / Stephen Graham Jones. 3 stars
September: Working class cultures
- The Short and Tragic Life of Robert Peace / Jeff Hobbs. 2.75 stars
October: Non-Mainstream Religious Subcultures (Amish, Quakers, Mennonites, or Church of the Brethren)
- Breaking Silence / Linda Castillo. 3.5 stars
November: Indigenous North America
December: LGBTQ+
Bonus CAT 1: South East Asia/Pacific Islander
Bonus CAT 2: Wrongly convicted people

January: Green
- Galileo's Daughter / Dava Sobel. 2 stars
- Benazir Bhutto / Brooke Allen. 3.5 stars
February: Gold
- Blood Orange / Drusilla Campbell. 3.75 stars
March: Pink
- The Shopping Bags / Anna Wallner, Kristina Matisic. 3.5 stars
- Look Me in the Eye / John Elder Robison. 3.5 stars
April: Brown
- If It Bleeds / Stephen King. 4 stars
- Tituba, Reluctant Witch of Salem / Elaine G. Breslaw. 3.25 stars
- Love in the Time of Cholera / Gabriel Garcia Marquez. 2 stars
May: Red
- Beauty and the Werewolf / Mercedes Lackey. 4 stars
June: Yellow
- Love and Other Consolation Prizes / Jamie Ford. 4 stars
- What Kind of Paradise / Janelle Brown. 4 stars
July: White
- A Dog's Journey / W. Bruce Cameron. 4 stars
- Seal Wars / Paul Watson. 4.25 stars
- Maria / Michelle Moran. 3.5 stars
August: Grey
- Saving Sophie / Ronald H. Balson. 3.5 stars
- The Mall Walkers / R. Brian Howe. 3.5 stars
September: Silver
- The Intelligence Explosion / James Barrat. 3.5 stars
October: Black
- Helter Skelter / Vincent Bugliosi. 4.5 stars
- Dark Harvest / Norman Patridge. 4 stars
November: Blue
December: Purple

February: a tree
- Listen to Your Sister / Neena Viel. 2 stars
- Greenmantle / Charles de Lint. 3.5 stars
- When We Were Shadows / Janet Wees. 3.5 stars
March: farm animals
- Where the Buffalo Roam / Anne Matthews. 3 stars
- Don't Turn Your Back in the Barn / David Perrin. 4 stars
- Heirs and Graces / Rhys Bowen. 3.5 stars
April: a road
- Welcome to Cemetery / C.J. Daley. 4 stars
May: more than two elements/objects
- The White Princess / Philippa Gregory. 4 stars
- Beauty and the Werewolf / Mercedes Lackey. 4 stars
- Codex Born / Jim C. Hines. 3.75 stars
June: something with wheels
- Beyond the Burning Time / Kathryn Lasky. 3.25 stars
July: a fruit
- As Long as the Lemon Trees Grow / Zoulfa Katouh. 4.5 stars
August: a photograph
- Firefly Lane / Kristin Hannah. 4.25 stars
September: dogs and/or cats
- True Story / Marty Chan. 2 stars
- Tiger / Tash Aw. 2 stars
- We Bought a Zoo / Benjamin Mee. 4 stars
October: something that will fit in your pocket
- Atlas of Unknowable Things / McCormick Templeman. 3 stars
November: celestial objects
December: something you would like for a Christmas present

January: Diverse Perspectives
- Rock Paper Scissors / Alice Feeney. 4 stars
- Moon of the Crusted Snow / Waubegeshig Rice. 3.5 stars
- All the Sinners Bleed / S. A. Cosby. 4 stars
February: Haunted Houses / Haunted Places
- The Haunting of Ashburn House / Darcy Coates. 4.5 stars
*March: Real-life Monsters (True Crime)
- Everything She Ever Wanted / Ann Rule. 4 stars
April: Arachnids, Insects, and Reptilia
- Codex Born / Jim C. Hines. 3.75 stars
May: Out in the Wild
- Hunted / Darcy Coates. 4 stars
June: YA and graphic novels
- The Sixth Gun / Cullen Bunn. 2 stars
July: Ghosts
- Shaded Grove / Oliver C. Seneca. 4 stars
- Dead Silence / S. A. Barnes. 3.75 stars
August: Female authors
- Ghost Camera / Darcy Coates. 4 stars
September: Stephen King and family
October: Gothic
- Atlas of Unknowable Things / McCormick Templeman. 3 stars
- Dark Harvest / Norman Patridge. 4 stars
November: Psychological Thrillers
December: Your Favorite Scary Trope

January: Eat, drink and be merry
- Food Pets Die For / Ann N. Martin. 4 stars
February: Playing With Time
- A Twist in Time / Jule McElwain. 3.5 stars
March: Wishes
- If It Bleeds / Stephen King. 4 stars
April: Prime
- Anne Neville: Queen to Richard III / Michael Hicks. 3 stars
May: Punctuation
- Sure, I'll Be Your Black Friend / Ben Philippe. 3 stars
June: Invasion
- The Shepherd's Crown / Terry Pratchett. 3.25 stars
July: "The Hills are Alive..."
- A Newfoundlander in Canada / Alan Doyle. 4 stars
- The Four Seasons / Laurel Corona. 3.75 stars
- Maria / Michelle Moran. 3.5 stars
August: A Writer
- A Ladder to the Sky / John Boyne. 3.75 stars
September: Cardinal Direction in Title
- Far North / Marcel Theroux. 3 stars
October:
November:
December:

January: Sheep and Shepherding
- The Wisdom of Sheep / Rosamund Young. 2.25 stars
- The Lord God Made Them All / James Herriot. 3 stars
February: Forests, Farms & Grasslands
- Greenmantle / Charles de Lint. 3.5 stars
March: Landscape
- Where the Buffalo Roam / Anne Matthews. 3 stars
April: Flying Creatures
- Bird Brain / Nathan Emery. 3 stars
May: Plants, Fungi, Etc.
- Big Lonely Doug / Harley Rustad. 4 stars
- Codex Born / Jim C. Hines. 3.75 stars
June: Oceans and Rivers
- The Lifeboat / Charlotte Rogan. 3 stars
July: Inner Lives of Animals
- A Dog's Journey / W. Bruce Cameron. 4 stars
August: Weather and Climate
- Dangerous World / Marq De Villiers. 2.5 stars
September: Urban Nature
- Our Native Bees / Paige Embry. 3 stars
*October: Endangered Species
November: The Effects of Nature on Human Beings
December: Wild Card

January: S O
- Sweet Fury / Sash Bischoff. 3 stars
- Galileo's Daughter / Dava Sobell. 2 stars
- Oh No He Didn’t / Wendy Murphy. 3.5 stars
- The Incredible Journey / Sheila Burnford. 3.5 stars
- All the Sinners Bleed / S. A. Cosby. 4 stars
February: L G
- Listen to Your Sister / Neena Viel. 2 stars
- Greenmantle / Charles de Lint. 3.5 stars
- White Like Her / Gail Lukasik. 3 stars
- The Donnellys: Massacre, Trial, and Aftermath / John Little. 3 stars
March: U A
- Everything She Ever Wanted / Ann Rule. 4 stars
- Animal Madness / Laurel Braitman. 3.75 stars
- Where the Buffalo Roam / Anne Matthews. 3 stars
- Unsinkable / Daniel Allen Butler. 4 stars
- The Shopping Bags / Anna Wallner, Kristina Matisic. 3.5 stars
April: K E
- Brideshead Revisited / Evelyn Waugh. 2 stars
- Emerald Green / Kerstin Gier. 3 stars
- If It Bleeds / Stephen King. 4 stars
- Tituba, Reluctant Witch of Salem / Elaine G. Breslaw. 3.25 stars
- Code / Kathy Reichs, Brendan Reichs. 4 stars
May: I D
- Dust / Hugh Howey. 2.75 stars
- The Thing in Christmas Town / Iseult Murphy. 4 stars
- Hunted / Darcy Coates. 4 stars
June: C Q
- City of Bones / Cassandra Clare. 4 stars
- The Sixth Gun / Cullen Bunn. 2 stars
- The Lifeboat / Charlotte Rogan. 3 stars
July: W T
- The Woman Who Died a Lot / Jasper Fforde. 2 stars
- Tamarind Mem / Anita Rau Badami. 3 stars
- A Dog's Journey / W. Bruce Cameron. 4 stars
- Seal Wars / Paul Watson. 4.25 stars
August: N J
- A Ladder to the Sky / John Boyne. 3.75 stars
- The Rooster Bar / John Grisham. 3 stars
- The Only Good Indians / Stephen Graham Jones. 3 stars
September: B M
- True Story / Marty Chan. 2 stars
- Far North / Marcel Theroux. 3 stars
- The Intelligence Explosion / James Barrat. 3.5 stars
- Cruise Confidential / Brian David Bruns. 4 stars
- We Bought a Zoo / Benjamin Mee. 4 stars
October: F P
- Dark Harvest / Norman Partridge. 4 stars
November: Y H
December: V R
Yearlong: X Z
- As Long as the Lemon Trees Grow / Zoulfa Katouh. 4.5 stars

(3+ years on the tbr)
1. Stay / Allie Larkin (ILL req)
2. Sea of Slaughter / Farley Mowat (own)
3. The Perfect Ghost / Linda Barnes
6. No Way Down / Graham Bowley (openlib)
7. No Kidding: Women Writers on Bypassing Parenthood / Henriette Mantel (ILL req)
10. The Singing Bones / Shaun Tan (CPL)
11. The Impossible Fortress / Jason Rekulak (CPL)
12. Apollo 8 / Jeffrey Kluger (CPL)
1. Food Pets Die For / Ann N. Martin. 4 stars
2. Benazir Bhutto / Brooke Allen. 3.5 stars
3. Moon of the Crusted Snow / Waubegeshig Rice. 3.5 stars
4. The Autobiography of an Execution / David R. Dow. 4 stars
5. The Mammoth Hunters / Jean M. Auel. 3.5 stars
6. The Incredible Journey / Sheila Burnford. 3.5 stars
7. Better Nate Than Ever / Tim Federle. 3.25 stars
8. Greenmantle / Charles de Lint. 3.5 stars
9. Blood Orange / Drusilla Campbell. 3.75 stars
10. The Haunting of Ashburn House / Darcy Coates. 4.5 stars
11. Everything She Ever Wanted / Ann Rule. 4 stars
12. Where the Buffalo Roam / Anne Matthews. 3 stars
13. Nobody's Mother / Lynne Van Luven (ed.). 3.5 stars
14. Don't Turn Your Back in the Barn / David Perrin. 4 stars
15. Unsinkable / Daniel Allen Butler. 4 stars
16. The Shopping Bags / Anna Wallner, Kristina Matisic. 3.5 stars
17. Look Me in the Eye / John Elder Robison. 3.5 stars
18. Find You First / Linwood Barclay. 3.75 stars
19. Tituba, Reluctant Witch of Salem / Elaine G. Breslaw. 3.25 stars
20. Code / Kathy Reichs, Brendan Reichs. 4 stars
21. Longbourn / Jo Baker. 2.5 stars
22. The Sister Season / Jennifer Scott. 3.5 stars
23. Ghosts of the Tsunami / Richard Lloyd Parry. 3 stars
24. Anne Neville: Queen to Richard III / Michael Hicks. 3 stars
25. The Tumbling Turner Sisters / Juliette Fay. 4 stars
26. The White Princess / Philippa Gregory. 4 stars
27. My Extraordinary Ordinary Life / Sissy Spacek. 3.5 stars
28. Sure, I'll Be Your Black Friend / Ben Philippe. 3 stars
29. Love and Other Consolation Prizes / Jamie Ford. 4 stars
30. The Marriage Pact / Michelle Richmond. 4.5 stars
31. The Goldfinch / Donna Tartt. 3 stars
32. Beyond the Burning Time / Kathryn Lasky. 3.25 stars
33. Amuse Bouche / Anthony Bildulka. 4 stars
34. City of Bones / Cassandra Clare. 4 stars
35. The Sixth Gun / Cullen Bunn. 2 stars
36. The Shepherd's Crown / Terry Pratchett. 3.25 stars
37. The Woman Who Died a Lot / Jasper Fforde. 2 stars
38. A Newfoundlander in Canada / Alan Doyle. 4 stars
39. A Dog's Journey / W. Bruce Cameron. 4 stars
40. Seal Wars / Paul Watson. 4.25 stars
41. Saving Sophie / Ronald H. Balson. 3.5 stars
42. Dangerous World / Marq De Villiers. 2.5 stars
43. Firefly Lane / Kristin Hannah. 4.25 stars
44. True Story / Marty Chan. 2 stars
45. The Short and Tragic Life of Robert Peace / Jeff Hobbs. 2.75 stars
46. Our Native Bees / Paige Embry. 3 stars
47. Far North / Marcel Theroux. 3 stars
48. Tiger / Tash Aw. 2 stars
49. Cruise Confidential / Brian David Bruns. 4 stars
50. Three Sisters / Three Queens / Philippa Gregory. 4 stars
51. We Bought a Zoo / Benjamin Mee. 4 stars
52. While We Run / Karen Healey. 3.5 stars

1. Sea of Slaughter / Farley Mowat
2. Still Life / Joy Fielding
4. The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox / Maggie O’Farrell
6. Born Bad / Heather Burnside
8. A Newfoundlander in Canada / Alan Doyle. 4 stars
9. Seal Wars / Paul Watson. 4.25 stars
10. Anne Neville: Queen to Richard III / Michael Hicks. 3 stars
11. Nobody's Mother: Life Without Kids / Lynne van Luven (ed.). 3.5 stars
12. The Autobiography of an Execution / David R. Dow. 4 stars

1. A book featuring a journey, trip, or quest. The Incredible Journey / Sheila Burnford. 3.5 stars
2. Read a book that's been included on a celebrity book list (Oprah, Barack Obama, Reese Witherspoon, Bill Gates, etc).
3. A book published in the 1970s. Helter Skelter / Vincent Bugliosi. 4.5 stars
4. A book featuring female friendship.. The Carpool Detectives / Chuck Hogan. 3.75 stars
5. Book with a dog on the cover. Food Pets Die For / Ann N. Martin. 4 stars
6. A book with a plot including a circus or carnival. The Tumbling Turner Sisters / Juliette Fay. 4 stars
7. A book related to exploration (of any type). White Like Her / Gail Lukasik. 3 stars
8. Read a book that was made into a movie. Everything She Ever Wanted / Ann Rule. 4 stars
9. A book about intelligence. Bird Brain / Nathan Emery. 3 stars
10. A book set in Asia. Ghosts of the Tsunami / Richard Lloyd Parry. 3 stars
11. Read a book from the 2024 Play Book Tag Top Ten list. All the Sinners Bleed / S. A. Cosby. 4 stars
12. Read a book recommended by a librarian. The Overstory / Richard Powers. 2.5 stars

October (Halloween):
- Atlas of Unknowable Things / McCormick Templeman. 3 stars
- The Night That Finds Us All / John Hornor Jacobs. 3 stars
- Dark Harvest / Norman Partridge. 4 stars
November (Remembrance Day):
December (Christmas):

Alberta: (16 books between 2014 – 2024)
- Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands / Kate Beaton. 4.5 stars
British Columbia: (24 books between 2014 – 2024)
- Don't Turn Your Back in the Barn / David Perrin. 4 stars
- Big Lonely Doug / Harley Rustad. 4 stars
Labrador: (1 books between 2014 - 2018)
Manitoba: (8 books between 2014 – 2023)
- The Break / Katherena Vermette. 4 stars
New Brunswick: (0 books between 2014 - 2020)
Newfoundland: (10 books between 2014 – 2023)
- A Newfoundlander in Canada / Alan Doyle. 4 stars
Northern Canada: (3 books 2019-2022)
Northwest Territories: (3 books between 2014 – 2021)
Nova Scotia: (7 books between 2014 – 2022)
Nunavut: (4 books between 2014 – 2021)
Ontario: (28 books between 2014 – 2024)
- Moon of the Crusted Snow / Waubegeshig Rice. 3.5 stars
- The Incredible Journey / Sheila Burnford. 3.5 stars
- Greenmantle / Charles de Lint. 3.5 stars
- The Donnellys: Massacre, Trial, and Aftermath / John Little. 3 stars
- The Donnellys: Powder Keg / John Little. 3 stars
Prince Edward Island: (3 books between 2014 – 2022)
Prairie Provinces: (2 books between 2014 – 2021)
Quebec: (7 books between 2014 – 2024)
- Sure, I'll Be Your Black Friend / Ben Philippe. 3 stars
- Hotline / Dimitri Nasrallah. 3.5 stars
- Seal Wars / Paul Watson. 4.25 stars
Saskatchewan: (21 books between 2014 – 2023)
- Amuse Bouche / Anthony Bildulka. 4 stars
Yukon: (1 book between 2014 – 2019)

January: Canada
- The Break / Katherena Vermette. 4 stars
- Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands / Kate Beaton. 4.5 stars
- Moon of the Crusted Snow / Waubegeshig Rice. 3.5 stars
- The Incredible Journey / Sheila Burnford. 3.5 stars
February: Science
- Science Comics: Sharks: Nature's Perferct Hunter / Joe Flood. 4 stars
March: Thriller
- Find You First / Linwood Barclay. 3.75 stars
April: Fun
- The Sister Season / Jennifer Scott. 3.5 stars
May: Strong Women
- The Tumbling Turner Sisters / Juliette Fay. 4 stars
- The White Princess / Philippa Gregory. 4 stars
- My Extraordinary Ordinary Life / Sissy Spacek. 3.5 stars
- Beauty and the Werewolf / Mercedes Lackey. 4 stars
June: Summer
- Malibu Rising / Taylor Jenkins Reid. 3.5 stars
July: Speculative Fiction
- The Woman Who Died a Lot / Jasper Fforde. 2 stars
- Shaded Grove / Oliver C. Seneca. 4 stars
- The Overstory / Richard Powers. 2.5 stars
August: Family Drama
- Saving Sophie / Ronald H. Balson. 3.5 stars
- Chickadee / Louise Erdrich. 3.5 stars
September: Around the World
- Cruise Confidential / Brian David Bruns. 4 stars
- Come Fly the World / Julia Cooke. 3 stars
October: Scifi-Fantasy
- Atlas of Unknowable Things / McCormick Templeman. 3 stars
- The Night That Finds Us All / John Hornor Jacobs. 3 stars
- While We Run / Karen Healey. 3.5 stars
- Dark Harvest / Norman Partridge. 4 stars
November:
December:

January: Look to the Heavens
- Galileo's Daughter / Dava Sobel. 2 stars
February: Colors
- White Like Her / Gail Lukasik. 3 stars
March: Sweet, Sweet Revenge
- The Donnellys: Powder Keg / John Little. 3 stars
April: All is not what it seems
- The White Princess / Philippa Gregory. 4 stars
*May: Once Upon a Time (Fairy Tales)
- Beauty and the Werewolf / Mercedes Lackey. 4 stars
June: People on the Move
- Hotline / Dimitri Nasrallah. 3.5 stars
July: Composers
- The Four Seasons / Laurel Corona. 3.75 stars
September: Highlands & Islands
- Three Sisters / Three Queens / Philippa Gregory. 4 stars
October: Autumn
- Dark Harvest / Norman Partridge. 4 stars
November: The High Seas
December: Countrylife

Beyond That, the Sea / Laura Spence-Ash
3 stars
Bea is 11-years old(?) in England during WWII when her parents decide it would be safer to send her away to the United States to live with a family there. Bea stays with Mr and Mrs G, and their two sons Gerald and William. The book continues beyond the war when Bea heads back home, and in the years beyond.
I listened to the audio and it was ok. There were a few times I lost interest, though I think not many. There were a few characters I never quite figured out, though – who are they? I guess I either missed when they were introduced or I heard it, but then forgot. The book is told from multiple points of view.

The Break / Katherena Vermette
4 stars
Emily is only 13-years old. She has a crush on a boy and attends a party he invited her to, but she also doesn’t realize a. what kind of party this is; and b. the boy has a girlfriend… a very jealous girlfriend with a violent streak. Emily ends up in the hospital after a very severe attack, and is surrounded by her extended family as she heals and as the police try to figure out what happened.
This was very good. It’s a very difficult topic, but I liked the writing and thought it was well done. There were a LOT of characters. The first five or six paragraphs were all from different points of view and initially didn’t appear connected. Of course, they were and it was explained, but it was still hard to keep everyone straight and how they were related (many literally) to each other.

Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands / Kate Beaton
4.5 stars
In 2005, the author Kate finished university with a social science degree and had student loans to pay off. She was from Cape Breton Island (off the coast of Nova Scotia) and there weren’t a lot of good paying jobs there, so she (like many men do) headed to Alberta to work in the oil sands (which I will, going forward, call the tar sands… yes, that’s what environmentalists call it, but after having read “Fire Weather” by John Vaillant, I do feel like it’s a more accurate description), so she could make a lot of money and pay off those loans. Unfortunately, it is a place where the men outnumber women 50 to 1. There was (likely still is) a lot of sexual harassment (and worse) going on, and Kate had to just deal with it. Complaining did nothing.
It’s disheartening to see this is still so prevalent. It reminded me of the “Class Action” book about the woman in Minnesota(?) working in a mine in the 70s and everything she went through (the movie made from the book was called “North Country”). I used the word disheartening; maybe frustrating or enraging are better words. By the time Kate went to Alberta, it had been three decades since that case (or at least when it all happened), and things haven’t changed!? Ugh! Of course, with the way things appear to be (politically) now and how people talk, etc, it seems another two decades probably still haven’t changed much (if at all).
Though that was the main focus of the book, toward the end there was some mention of the environmental impacts to animals and the other Indigenous communities living nearby.

Sweet Fury / Sash Bischoff
3 stars
Lila is an actress who has come to psychologist Jonah to help unpack some childhood trauma as she embarks on a new movie with her director fiancee, Kurt. The new movie is based on an F. Scott Fitzgerald novel, but with a feminist twist. It seems, though, that Lila has more going on than the childhood issues; is Kurt mistreating her, as well? Plus, there are things Jonah hasn’t told Lila about knowing her when they were at Princeton together.
This started very slowly for me. I wasn’t interested in all the movie scenes, nor am I much interested in F. Scott Fitzgerald. I have read “The Great Gatsby”, but nothing else by him and the author tells us early on there are a lot of Fitzgerald references (and Easter eggs). I wasn’t a fan of the writing style. The first bit of the book was a mix of the movie scenes and letters written by Lila to Jonah (as a way to put down her thoughts). Now, it did pick up in the last half or 1/3 of the book or so, and there were some tense moments, but it wasn’t enough to bring my rating up by much (though it did a little). The end was also ambiguous to me; I wasn’t quite sure what happened there, so I didn’t like that, either. Overall, I’m rating it ok, but only for the twists and extra suspense close to the end of the book.

Galileo's Daughter: A Historical Memoir of Science, Faith and Love / Dava Sobel
2 stars
(One of) Galileo’s daughters wrote letters to her father, so this includes those letters. She was a nun (as were her other sisters, I think, though one not by choice, I think). Primarily, though, I think this followed Galileo himself more than his daughter.
This is nonfiction, and I listened to the audio (which may explain why I’m not too sure what all happened). It just didn’t hold my interest. I caught bits and pieces of things… Galileo was still religious despite the conflict his science brought to religion; somewhere along the way he was on trial and I think he went to jail? I haven’t read anything else about him, so I’m not sure, and either this book or the audio or both just didn’t interest me enough to pay attention. One word I heard far too many times was the odd pronunciation of Soeur (sounded like “sewer” or “sewar”), so I feel like I heard him say “Sewer” Maria [whatever the rest of her nun name was]. That definitely bothered me! (And as I read the summary now, of course, it’s Italian, not French so the word is Suor… so I’m not sure how that should be pronounced.) Anyway, I might be willing to try a different book about Galileo, but this isn’t the one for me.

Food Pets Die For: Shocking Facts About Pet Food / Ann N. Martin
4 stars
This is the third edition. The author is looking at commercial pet food diets, what’s in them, the animals testing, all kinds of other crazy things the pet food companies do for profits (potentially at the expense of people’s pets, and certainly at the expense of animals who are used for testing). The author advocates for people making their pets’ food from human-grade foods.
I knew of some of these things, but there are horrifying things going on, particularly the animal experiments. I will add that this book (I don’t think there is a newer edition) is from 2008, but I’d be surprised of many of these practices have changed. The author is Canadian, and looks mostly at pet food in Canada and the US.
There is a good chunk of detail explaining what many of the ingredients you see on packaging actually mean. For this reason, I feel like this is a good book to have as a reference (I borrowed a library copy). It’s hard to keep all the ingredients straight. Pets that were euthanized, but not cremated, are likely in most of these foods… this includes the drug used to euthanize those pets ending up in these foods. Also dead livestock, roadkill, and zoo animals. These are all sent to rendering plants that grind and mix them up, then send them to pet food companies to use in pet food.
The drug companies do awful tests on animals for useless purposes (some, actually useless, while other testing is likely done to find the cheapest things they can add to the food to make more money). I’d already read this, but vets are rarely taught about nutrition except in elective courses, and even then, those courses are taught by the pet food companies themselves. Regulations are pretty much nonexistent, and what regulations there are, are mostly voluntary.
Despite the author preferring a home-made diet for pets (and she includes all kinds of nutrition information that needs to be included (for cats and dogs), as well as recipes), she also mentions a few of the companies that she thinks are better than others (at least back in 2008).
There is a lot of repetition in the book, but I just assumed that was in case someone read the chapters out of order (that is, if they were reading a certain chapter on a certain topic, then maybe later (or not) came to read a different chapter on a different topic).

Benazir Bhutto: Favored Daughter / Brooke Allen
3.5 stars
Benazir Bhutto was the first female prime minister of Pakistan in 1988 (she was also the youngest at 34-years old). Her father had been prime minister earlier on before the country was taken over by the head of the military. Her father was a socialist and believed in democracy. He made sure his children were well-educated in the US and England. Benazir was attractive and charismatic. When she was elected, she promised health care, education, and more housing.
But underneath it all, Benazir herself wasn’t really democratic nor socialist, despite her adoration of her father and being groomed by him to become a politician. With her feudal family background, she felt she had a God-given right to rule as she wished. She and another party leader switched leading Pakistan throughout the 1990s, but Benazir and her husband were actually quite corrupt and stole/skimmed a lot of money from Pakistan. She was later arrested and forced into exile. But she came back to devastating results (for herself): she was assassinated in 2007.
I’ve left out quite a bit and there is a lot of detail in this short book (it’s under 200 pages). The history of Pakistan is not something I know much about, so I feel like I learned a lot, but there was also so much information that it was also hard to take it all in. It is a good book; I do feel if I’d already known more about Pakistan, I might have been able to absorb even more.

MysteryKIT
January: Winter mysteries
- Rock Paper Scissors / Alice Feeney. 4 stars
March: Espionage
- Heirs and Graces / Rhys Bowen. 3.5 stars
April: Paranormal
- Emerald Green / Kerstin Gier. 3 stars
- Code / Kathy Reichs, Brendan Reichs. 4 stars
May: Mysteries not set in my country
- The Postscript Murders / Elly Griffiths. 3 stars
June: LGBTQ+ detectives
- Amuse Bouche / Anthony Bildulka. 4 stars
July: Series sleuths
- The Red Letter / Daniel G. Miller. 4 stars
*August: Legal thrillers
- The Trial of Lizzie Borden /Cara Robertson. 2.5 stars
- Saving Sophie / Ronald H. Balson. 3.5 stars
- The Rooster Bar / John Grisham. 3 stars
October: Police procedurals
- Breaking Silence / Linda Castillo. 3.5 stars
November: Psychological mysteries and thrillers
December: Cozies

Rock Paper Scissors / Alice Feeney
4 stars
Amelia and Adam have been having trouble in their marriage. When Amelia wins a trip at work to head to Scotland to stay in an old isolated church, she jumps at the chance, hoping the two of them can start to repair their marriage. They drive through a snowstorm to get there and the church is locked. It’s cold, and dark, and they were lucky to not be killed on the drive, due to the road conditions. There are creepy things happening all around. Meanwhile, Robin lives in a small cottage nearby. Robin is a hermit and rarely goes into town. Amelia and Adam don’t know she’s there, but she is keeping a very close eye on the two of them.
We read the story from the viewpoints of all three characters. In addition, we back up in time to read letters written to Adam on their anniversary every year and we can see where things have been going wrong. There were definitely creepy bits and there were a few twists at the end; I don’t think I saw any of them coming.

Moon of the Crusted Snow / Waubgeshig Rice
3.5 stars
When a remote northern Indigenous community loses all power and cell service, no one is quite sure why, but this happens sometimes, just not usually at the same time. But when this continues for a while, the community decides they need to figure out what to do to make it through the winter in case is doesn’t come back. When two young boys from the community return from the city in the south on snowmobiles, they learn that things are just as bad in the city and it’s getting worse. At least many of the Indigenous peoples can hunt and fish. Soon, a large white man appears asking for a place to stay; he has followed the tracks of the boys’ skidoos to get there. People aren’t sure if they can trust this guy, but they allow him to stay.
I listened to the audio. It occurred to me that Indigenous people (at least those who learned to hunt and fish and to do other traditional things might be in a better position than many (certainly us city folk) to withstand hardships like this). Of course, even so, not everyone fares well. It was actually a pretty slow moving book, but there were moments of tension. I am willing to give the sequel a try, as well.

Oh No He Didn't!: Brilliant Women and the Men Who Took Credit for Their Work / Wendy Murphy
3.5 stars
This is a collection of essays highlighting different women in history (mostly the 19th and 20th centuries, but at least one earlier than that) who were inventors, scientists, architects, artists, and more, but had their work “stolen” by men, and the men got the credit (and often, the men were awarded prestigious prizes for that work, including a number of Nobel prizes).
This was good. The stories/essays were short, so it’s hard to remember them all. There was biographical information included about the women, as well. And, sadly, a few women whose husbands took advantage and took credit for their wives ideas/inventions/art/etc. (some of those marriages also ended later). A couple of memorable ones for me was who invented Monopoly and the discovery of two-strand DNA. There were also chapteres on Einstein and his wife, Mileva, as well and F. Scott Fitzgerald and his wife, Zelda.

The Wisdom of Sheep: Observations from a Family Farm / Rosamund Young
2.25 stars
The author runs an organic farm. These are little anecdotes.
The book started well – a bit of her biography/background. But then it got into chapters of (sometimes odd, in my opinion) anecdotes. Some chapters were just a poem or a quote from literature; some were about other critters (not sheep) such as frogs, insects, butterflies, birds. Many chapters (maybe more than the ones about sheep?) were about cows. (Some of) the chapters on cows and sheep were the most interesting to me, but often she’d also throw in more literary references and other things that just were odd to me. There were some nice little illustrations and it was a very fast read.

The Autobiography of an Execution / David R. Dow
4 stars
The author is a lawyer for inmates on death row in Texas. In fact, at one point, this lawyer was in favour of the death penalty. The main part of this book is when he was fighting to save the life of a man convicted of killing his wife, then two kids. But it was all circumstantial evidence and his lawyer was completely inept. Another death row inmate talked to Dow to tell him he knew who killed the other man’s family and it was a mistaken identity. You can’t always believe these guys, but Dow and his staff looked further into it, and they were pretty convinced the man didn’t do it.
In the meantime, other cases came up with people looking for help. Like with our main case in this book, many were represented in their trials by inept lawyers who didn’t do their jobs. There are appeals after appeals for the people on death row, but they rarely help or change anything. There are so many rules, it’s almost impossible to overturn these sentences, despite the legal issues with some of the inmates even being on death row.
I already don’t agree with the death penalty. But the more I read about it, the more convinced I am (once upon a time I wasn’t convinced).

The Lord God Made Them All / James Herriot
3 stars
This is another of English veterinarian James Herriot’s books about his practice during the mid-20th-century in rural England, mostly working with farm animals. Amidst the usual anecdotes about various critters, he did a couple of long trips (one on a ship to Russia), tending to the animals aboard during the trips.
I listened to the audio, so there was a bit too much that I missed to be able to rate it higher. Most of what I heard was enjoyable. There were tidbits included about his family and kids, as well.

The Mammoth Hunters / Jean M. Auel
3.5 stars
In the 3rd book of the series of prehistoric people, Ayla and Jondalar have arrived at a “Mamutoi” settlement. These are humans more like we know them now, and more like Ayla, than the “cave” people she was raised with. In addition to having to learn the new culture and still being new to the spoken language, it’s hard for Ayla to fit in. Not only that, she brought domesticated horses with her, which is unnerving for the people here. But she is beautiful and she brings many good qualities, first and foremost as a Healer. So she is soon welcomed. But her relationship with Jondalar is tested as one of the men in this camp is very interested in Ayla and doesn’t keep it a secret.
Of course, there is a lot more going on in this than I’ve summarized. It’s a good book, but it was so long. I started it two months ago, but it was taking so long to read, I set it aside for other books before I came back to finish it off. It is a bit annoying how perfect Ayla is, though. Maybe not perfect, but she does so many things so well – things that others can’t do or have a hard time doing. I also hate the hunting; I cry for the animals, though I know the people needed to hunt to survive.

The Incredible Journey / Sheila Burnford
3.5 stars
When their owners leave for months, two dogs and a cat are boarded with a friend many miles away, but when that person leaves for a few days, the pets (after a mixup with the people meant to care for them for those few days) head out to find their way to their owners’ home through the wilderness in Ontario. One of the dogs is older, one younger, but they all have bumps and bruises along the way and sometimes come close to death as the three do their best to survive and take care of each other as they encounter water to swim across, various humans (most who help), and various wildlife.
I enjoyed this. It was quick to read. I do suspect the author had pets herself as many of the descriptions of the animals seemed pretty true to life. Despite this being a Canadian “classic” (I think), I’ve never read it before, nor have I seen any of the movies.

All the Sinners Bleed / S. A. Cosby
4 stars
It started as a school shooting in a small town in Virginia. A white teacher was shot and killed by a black man. The black man came out of the school to confront the black sheriff and was shot by two white officers. Then they found the pictures and videos on the teacher’s phone and it gets messy in this religious Virginia town with religion and racism all mixed together.
Titus is the black sheriff. He once worked for the FBI and something happened there. He came home to help out his elderly father, and ran to be sheriff, hoping he could make some changes from the inside to this racist area.
This was very good. Definitely some tense moments. The book is very dark and some awful things happen. On the personal side (Titus’ personal side) of the book, I have to agree with his girlfriend – what did he ever see in his ex!?

[Science Comics: Sharks: Nature's Perfect Hunter] / Joe Flood
4 stars
Another in the Science Comics series, this focuses on sharks. Many people are fascinated by them; many are scared of them. This looks at their biology, their evolution, many different types of sharks, and their (rare) interactions with humans.
I love this series. It’s geared toward a younger audience, but there is so much for adults to learn, as well. These are also graphic novels, but with the colour pictures, they can illustrate so much of what is being explained to make it all easier to picture. Have to admit, I liked that this one had less “focus” on the story to tell us about sharks (in comparison to some of the other Science Comics); I’m sure that part of it is to appeal to younger readers, so maybe it is more appealing for the younger ones, but I feel like this one had less of that.

Listen to Your Sister / Neena Viel
2 stars
A young woman (in her mid-20s), Callie, ends up taking care of her 16-year old brother, Jamie, while her other brother, Dre (early 20s), had said he’d help out, but he rarely does. After Jamie is suspended from school due to drugs, things get worse when he attends a protest with friends and is driving a vehicle caught handing out weapons. Meanwhile, Dre gets caught up in a conflict that should have been his roommate’s conflict, but it’s Dre in the middle of it. Callie has nightmares about both her brothers dying. With all this going on, they decide to leave town and find a horribly beaten down cabin to regroup. Then things get worse.
I am not a fan of stories within a story, or in a similar note, I tend to tune out if there is a dream in a book. This was all about the dream. Especially when they reached the cabin and it was hard to tell what was a dream and what wasn’t. I like horror. I also was interested before the horror aspect picked up, in what was going on with this family. But the nightmare and trying to figure out the nightmare vs reality… I just ended up tuning half (or more) of that out.

Better Nate Than Ever / Tim Federle
3.25 stars
13-year old Nate lives in Pennsylvania, but dreams of being on Broadway. When there is a casting call for a musical production of E.T., he and his best friend Libby collaborate so he can get into NYC for a day without his parents finding out so he can try out for the part of Eliot. Nate was excited, not only to try out, but to also experience New York for a short time.
I listened to the audio and this was enjoyable. Some humourous bits thrown in. It’s meant for a young audience and I expect many that age would enjoy this little adventure of Nate’s. It looks like this is the start of a series, but I’m not sure if I’ll continue. The narrator was the author himself and he did a very good job. Adding an extra ¼ star for his narration.

Greenmantle / Charles de Lint
3.5 stars
14-year old Ali and her mom, Frankie, have moved to Frankie’s old house after she won the lottery. They are going to fix the house up and stay. But when Frankie’s ex, Earl, learns that Frankie won the lottery, he’s coming after her for the money. Meanwhile, Ali is making friends with their neighbour, Tony. They don’t know at first, but Tony is hiding from the mafia, which he used to be involved in until there was a “hit” out for him. But Ali can tell Tony’s a good guy. In the forest behind their homes are some odd things though: a piper that plays eerie music that makes people do odd things, a stag that appears, a young girl who is a little odd…
This was good. I’m not always a fan of fantasy, but this is urban fantasy (though not an urban area, the bulk of the story is in the “real” world, with parts of fantasy in the forest), and I usually do better with this type of fantasy. Based on the description and cover, there was less fantasy that I expected, so I was happy about that. The book followed many different characters at different points, and I’m not always as interested in the “bad guys’” perspectives when books do this. This was the case, once again, particularly following Tony’s crew. Overall, though, I did like the story, and I like Ali and Frankie, especially. And even Tony. There were some pretty terrible characters, though (looking at you, Earl! For one).
Books mentioned in this topic
Dark Harvest (other topics)While We Run (other topics)
The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry (other topics)
The Night That Finds Us All (other topics)
Atlas of Unknowable Things (other topics)
More...