75 Books...More or Less! discussion

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Archive (2011 Challenge) > Gnatalby's 75 in 2011

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message 1: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby Well, I just joined up so I could do the 75 books challenge. It seems only fair, since I read a lot of... ahem... short... books. I'm excited!


message 2: by Andrea, Moderator (new)

Andrea | 4472 comments Mod
Welcome Gnatalby! I'm glad you found us and hope that you will have fun participating in the challenge! Feel free to yell if you have any questions or comments.


message 3: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 1. It had to be you, Cecily von Ziegesar


message 4: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 2. Drinking at the Movies, Julia Wertz


message 5: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 3. Squirrel Seeks Chipmunk, David Sederis


message 6: by Andrea, Moderator (new)

Andrea | 4472 comments Mod
Gnatalby, what did you think of Squirrel Seeks Chipmunk? I just read it and thought it was interesting!


message 7: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby Andrea wrote: "Gnatalby, what did you think of Squirrel Seeks Chipmunk? I just read it and thought it was interesting!"

I really enjoyed it! I could totally hear David Sederis's voice reading it in my head. I also found it perfect, um, bathroom reading.


message 8: by Andrea, Moderator (new)

Andrea | 4472 comments Mod
Ha Ha! Yes, I can see what you mean!


message 9: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 4. American Wife, Curtis Sittenfeld.

I really loved this book and would recommend it to anyone. I had read Prep and enjoyed it, but didn't think it was anything special, but this book is clearly the work of a ridiculously smart and talented writer. And I have a lot more sympathy for Laura Bush now!


message 10: by Andrea, Moderator (new)

Andrea | 4472 comments Mod
This is the book that was said to be based on her life in a fictional way right?


message 11: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby Andrea wrote: "This is the book that was said to be based on her life in a fictional way right?"

Yeah, it's a very thin veil. Like, her husband is elected in 2000 as a "tolerant traditionalist" following a president who became mired in sex scandals in his second term. President Blackwell loses the popular vote, and then starts are very unpopular war.

It's definitely a worthwhile read, though.


message 12: by Andrea, Moderator (new)

Andrea | 4472 comments Mod
Ohhh wow, sounds like something I would like!


message 13: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 5. Heart and Soul, Maeve Binchy

This book was just ok. Normally I'm a huge Binchy fan because her books are usually quite long and satisfying and you end up feeling like you've really learned everything about the characters therein, but this books seemed particularly shallow to me. There are lots of cameos by characters from other books, which kind of just made me wish I were rereading one of them.


message 14: by Andrea, Moderator (new)

Andrea | 4472 comments Mod
Oh wow, I love Maeve Binchy too!


message 15: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 6. Drinking: A Love Story, Caroline Knapp


message 16: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby Gnatalby wrote: "6. Drinking: A Love Story, Caroline Knapp"

I really liked this memoir. It was short, self-aware without being either uncomfortably self-deprecating or self-pitying. A lot times with substance-abuse memoirs I have problems continuing to like the narrator because so many of their choices endanger other people. While Knapp certainly made some bad decisions while drinking, her casualties are mostly limited to herself.


message 17: by Gnatalby (last edited Feb 19, 2011 08:14PM) (new)

Gnatalby 7. Water for Elephants, Sara Gruen.

I would never have read this book if it weren't our group read for February. Sometimes when things are really popular I get a weird reluctance toward them even though I'm not the sort of person who generally thinks I'm too cool for popular things. I feel like there's been a lot of hype about this book and a spate of circus novels in recent years.

But I really liked it. I liked the way Jacob's two stories worked together and as soon as I finished I had to go back to reread the first few pages because I wasn't entirely sure I'd read what I thought I had. Those who have read it know what I mean.

I would definitely recommend reading it.


message 18: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 8. The Hunger Games, Suzanne Collins


message 19: by Andrea, Moderator (new)

Andrea | 4472 comments Mod
Gosh, it seems like everyone is reading these books- I wonder if I'm missing something good!


message 20: by Amy J. (new)

Amy J. | 595 comments Gnatalby wrote: "8. The Hunger Games, Suzanne Collins"

I loved the hunger games trilogy!


message 21: by Marta (last edited Feb 21, 2011 07:41AM) (new)

Marta Gnatalby wrote: "7. Water for Elephants, Sara Gruen.

I would never have read this book if it weren't our group read for February. Sometimes when things are really popular I get a weird reluctance toward them even ..."


This is one book that I would like to read, as I have seen that is going to be a film based on it soon. The last part of your review is interesting, so if I see it on the library I will pick it up. Regards!


message 22: by Gnatalby (last edited Feb 21, 2011 10:10AM) (new)

Gnatalby Andrea wrote: "Gosh, it seems like everyone is reading these books- I wonder if I'm missing something good!"

I've only read the first one so far, but I got the second one immediately on finishing. It's really, really great. The main character is really interesting and has a lot of flaws, but remains very sympathetic. I definitely cried on the train while reading.


message 23: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 9. Commencement by J. Courtney Sullivan.

This book is amazing! I had put it on my wishlist so long ago that I no longer remembered what it was meant to be about. It's about four friends who meet in college and what happens to them in the rest of their twenties. It's not particularly concerned with their romantic lives, although that comes into it somewhat, and is mostly about the strength they find in their friendships with one another even though they're not particularly alike. It's rare to have one woman who seems so real in a novel, much less four.


message 24: by Andrea, Moderator (new)

Andrea | 4472 comments Mod
Wow, I guess I'll have to check them out!


message 25: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 10. The Magicians of Caprona by Diana Wynne Jones.

This books was somewhat disappointing. I had read two other books in the Chrestomanci series a million years ago and really, really loved them, but I think this one was just pitched a little young for me. Its lesson was really simplistic in a way the others weren't, plus it just felt rushed, and I didn't care very much about any of the characters.


message 26: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 11. Game Control by Lionel Shriver

Unpleasant characters, unsettling premise, undeniably good writing.

I love Shriver's work, generally, and I find that her unsentimental take on people really works for me. The question "Can you plan a genocide and still be a good person" does not work for me. The answer, for the record, is no.


message 27: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 12. Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins


message 28: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 13. The Chronicles of Chrestomanci, vol. 1: The Lives of Christopher Chant by Diana Wynne Jones

I think, in retrospect, that I've read this one before, but there were many delightful things I didn't remember.


message 29: by Christy (new)

Christy (christy_t) Gnatalby wrote: "12. Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins"

This series has been one of my favorite reads this year! How are you liking it?


message 30: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby Christy wrote: "Gnatalby wrote: "12. Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins"

This series has been one of my favorite reads this year! How are you liking it?"


I like it, I did think they could have just split it into two books. Often the second book of a trilogy can't stand on it's own, and that's a pet peeve of mine.


message 31: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 14. Mockingjay, Suzanne Collins.

Really great up until the very end, when it seemed like Collins just got tired of writing and wrapped things up very hastily. Still worthwhile, obviously, it's not like you're going to read the first two and then stop.


message 32: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 15. The False Friend, Myla Goldberg.

It's definitely no Bee Season. I didn't really care for it, although there's nothing really wrong with it. This one was an audiobook due to a library mishap, but I don't think reading reading would have improved the experience.


message 33: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 16. I Don't Care About Your Band: Lessons Learned from Indie Rockers, Trust Funders, Pornographers, Felons, Faux-Sensitive Hipsters, and Other Guys I've Dated by Julie Klausner

Hilarious dating memoir, funny and just mean enough without going overboard.


message 34: by Christy (new)

Christy (christy_t) Gnatalby wrote: "16. I Don't Care About Your Band: Lessons Learned from Indie Rockers, Trust Funders, Pornographers, Felons, Faux-Sensitive Hipsters, and Other Guys I've Dated by Julie Klausner

Hilarious dating me..."


Sounds like my kind of book! Another one for the TBR.


message 35: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 17. So Much for That, by Lionel Shriver.

I loved it. It was very moving. It seemed like it could get bogged down in technical details about health care and insurance, but it was detailed without being dull.

Although I anticipated the ending, there were several interesting surprises along the way.


message 36: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 18. Rent Girl, by Michelle Tea

I got this book on a whim because I had a discount that could only be used on physical books, not nook books, so I wanted something I couldn't get for my nook. I really like it. I had read Michelle Tea's The Chelsea Whistle before and I hadn't loved it, but this book really worked for me.

It's a memoir about a dark subject, but it manages to be funny without being flippant or undercutting how depressing sex work can be, particularly when there's an element of economic coercion in place.


message 37: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 19. Sing Them Home, by Stephanie Kallos

I wrote about this over on the group reads discussion page. Suffice it to say here, I was not impressed.

In other news though, I'm now at 25% of the goal, which is where I should be at the end of March. Pretty exciting stuff, I might not heap shame on the family name.


message 38: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 20. Juliet, Naked by Nick Hornby.

I like this one, though not as much as some of his other works. Personally I'd have preferred a different ending, but I can see why the choice was made.


message 39: by Alecia (new)

Alecia Gnatalby wrote: "17. So Much for That, by Lionel Shriver.

I loved it. It was very moving. It seemed like it could get bogged down in technical details about health care and insurance, but it was detailed without b..."


I read this one last year, and it was one of my favorites. I agree about the technical details, but I thought it was extremely moving.


message 40: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 21. Sweet Valley Confidential: Ten Years Later, by Francine Pascal

Definitely not great literature, but very fun for what it was. I loved Sweet Valley when I was a kid, so it's nice to catch up with these amoral, meddling sociopaths in their late twenties.


message 41: by Joy (new)

Joy | 1116 comments Gnatalby wrote: "21. Sweet Valley Confidential: Ten Years Later, by Francine Pascal

Definitely not great literature, but very fun for what it was. I loved Sweet Valley when I was a kid, so it's nice to catch up wi..."


I loved these books as a kid too!! This looks like it'd be fun...I like your description of the twins!! Too funny!!


message 42: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 22. The Carrie Diaries, by Candace Bushnell

I really enjoyed this book. I was a big Sex and the City fan and I've read Bushnell before and always found her writing style amateurish and a little annoying although I enjoyed the stories and the characters. I really feel like her writing has improved a lot. Maybe she found the correct place for herself writing Young Adult. I would read more about young Carrie.


message 43: by Andrea, Moderator (new)

Andrea | 4472 comments Mod
I have not read the Carrie Diaries yet. I do agree with you about Bushness's writing though, but somehoe I still read it...lol :)


message 44: by Joy (new)

Joy | 1116 comments I love Candace Bushnell!! I want to read lipstick jungle one of these days! (I think I got the title right!)


message 45: by Andrea, Moderator (new)

Andrea | 4472 comments Mod
Yup, I'm pretty sure that's right!


message 46: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 23. The Frenzy, by Francesca Lia Block

My first book by this author, although I've been hearing good things about her forever. All well deserved. This book was great, I read it all in an afternoon. It's romantic and poignant and dramatic-- some would say melodramatic, but fantasy as an extreme metaphor for the normal adolescent experience really works for me.


message 47: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 24. L.A. Candy, by Lauren Conrad

This book was really enjoyable! Whoever ghostwrote it is a pretty good writer and it's perfectly enjoyable fluff. I didn't love the ending, since it really doesn't end, it just sort of stops in the middle of things, presumably to be picked up in the sequel. It bothers me when books in series can't stand alone.

I expected this to be a shame read, but it's a lot better than you'd think.


message 48: by Gnatalby (last edited Apr 04, 2011 08:04PM) (new)

Gnatalby 25. Mini Shopaholic, Sophie Kinsella

This book was all right. Didn't love it, didn't hate it.


message 49: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 26. Soulless (The Parasol Protectorate), by Gail Carriger

Very sexy, romantic book. It definitely reminded me of many victorian romance novels read under the covers, but with vampires and werewolves.


message 50: by Gnatalby (new)

Gnatalby 27. Darkly Dreaming Dexter, by Jeff Lindsay.

I liked it, but I think I prefer the tv show.


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