Around the Year in 52 Books discussion
Weekly Topics 2024
>
05. A book set in one of the 25 most beautiful cities in the world


City of God
The Gods of Tango


LeahS, thank you for mentioning this book. I am planning a Scotland trip next year and will be spending some time in Edinburgh. If I can get my hands on this book, I would love to visit places it names as I enjoy his fiction.
I have 3 books planned as frequently I am not in the mood for my plans and this gives me options. All are set in Edinburgh.
One Good Turn
The Library of the Dead
A Distant View of Everything



LeahS, thank you..."
Edinburgh is my favorite city in the world. I first visited there in 1977 and have been back many, many times.

I've read another book by Elif Shafak, so I'm assuming this one will go well, but if not, I'll have another try at finding a new location I'm interested in.

The Bastard of Istanbul by Elif Shafak
The Elegance of the Hedgehog by Muriel Barbery

Leah..."
I am planning a trip to Scotland next year and Edinburgh will be my arrival and departure city. I am looking forward to my visit.

Thanks LeahS!

I'm torn between reading from my own country, or reading from a city I've never been to...so my possibles are:
- The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox by Maggie O'Farrell (Edinburgh)
- 10 Minutes 38 Seconds in This Strange World OR Three Daughters of Eve by Elif Shafak (Istanbul)

Thanks, Sadie.


I loved this book. Enjoy

1. Paris, France
2. Venice, Italy
3. San Francisco, California
4. Prague, Czech Republic
5. London, U.K
6. Cape Town, South Africa
7. Rome Italy
8. Amsterdam, Netherlands
9. Buenos Aires, Argentina
10. Kyoto Japan
11. New York City, US
12. St Petersburg, Russia
13. Sydney, Australia
14 San Miguel de Allende, Mexico
15. Edinburgh, UK
16. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
17. Seville, Spain
18. Hong Kong
19. Quebec City, Canada
20. Florence, Italy
21. Istanbul, Turkey
22. Budapest, Hungary
23. Lucerne, Switzerland
24. Mexico City, Mexico
25. Vancouver, Canada

Barcelona, Spain
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Cape Town, South Africa
Cartagena, Colombia
Chefchaouen, Morocco
Dubrovnik, Croatia
Edinburgh, Scotland
Hoi An, Vietnam
Istanbul, Turkey
Kyoto, Japan
London, England
New York City, New York
Palermo, Italy
Paris, France
Queenstown, New Zealand
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Rome, Italy
San Francisco, California
San Miguel de Allende, Mexico
Sedona, Arizona
Seoul, South Korea
Singapore
Sydney, Australia
Taipei, Taiwan
Tbilisi, Georgia
Does anyone else want to do a Side Challenge to read books from 10 or more of the cities on these lists? I'm going to allow for overlaps on mine - - - meaning a book for a completely different prompt can be on my side challenge. So I won't necessarily be reading extra books.


Great! I’m preoccupied with two other challenges starting soon, but I want to try to fit these in with other goals. I’m going to use a combined list of cities.

One of the books that fit this prompt was "Regeneration" by Pat Barker. Although, the main setting is in a war hospital. It is still set in Edinburgh, Scotland which checks off for this prompt :)



Barcelona, Spain
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Cape Town, South Africa
Cartagena, Colombia
Chefchaouen, Morocco
Dubrovnik, Croatia
Edin..."

Barcelona, Spain
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Cape Town, South Africa
Cartagena, Colombia
Chefchaouen, Morocco
Dubrovnik, Croatia
Edin..."
I would do a side challenge. I would use some overlaps too.

City of God
[book:The G..."
For Books set in Buenos Aires I recommend you check the authors Claudia Piñeiro and Eduardo Sacheri.




I chose and finished

short and sweet review: 4.0
I enjoyed this book. It goes to show you how people can be all about themselves never realizing that you can hurt so many more people with your secrets and lies. I love that the sisters finally meet and are together at the end of the story. I feel that the mom was selfish with the dad knowing that the other child had lost her mom. Especially since it is her friend's child.

Barcelona, Spain
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Cape Town, South Africa
Cartagena, Colombia
Chefchaouen, Morocco
Dubrovnik, Croatia
Edin..."
I'll do a side challenge as well.

Added!

Thanks, Robin. I'm joining in.

One of my favorite 2023 reads! Used it for my Prompt #2 "connected to" book.

**** The German title is New York Ghost- the American title is of course Severance- the cover is very different, too!



That's the second negative recommendation I saw this week! Just in time. Thanks!

_Read 18th Jan; 4*)

My 2024 plan is to "not plan."
BOOK 1 ~ I work at a big library and I'm just going to go with the first book that appeals to me that crosses my returns desk.
BOOK 2 ~ And I'm challenging myself to work on clearing out my old TBR shelf this year, so I'm trying to read the dustiest "fits the prompt" books on my TBR shelf as well.
I used this list from Conde' Nast Traveler, which lists the 50 most beautiful cities in the world in alphabetical order ~
~ � ~
BOOK 1

Read ~ 1.15.24
Pages ~ 320
Rationale ~ Setting is New York City
Review ~ ★★�
The book was ok, but I'm not the intended audience for a book written about a 25 year old "coming of age" woman. Someone who is would most certainly give it a higher rating because for its target audience, it was a really good book. I'm just so far past 25, that particular age feels like a lifetime ago. And besides, even when I was 25, I was not even remotely similar to this character. It was hard not to just reach into the pages and slap some sense into her. She got there eventually, but it took her a lot longer than it should have. But I guess that's what Coming Of Age novels are all about - the "getting there eventually" part.
~ � ~
BOOK 2

Read ~ 1.18.24
Pages ~ 240
Rationale ~ Setting is Budapest
Review ~ ★★�
Maybe I'm just burned out on Holocaust fiction, or maybe this title just suffered from coming so close on the heels of Alice Hoffman's The World That We Knew. I don't expect every book I read to hit it out of the park simply because if every book was a five star read, what would make any book exceptionally special? It's sort of like the sunset; one happens every single night, but once in a while you just have to stop and take in one that is truly awe inspiring. This book wasn't that, but it wasn't bad. It was ok. It was interesting from the perspective of location at this pivotal point of history. Hungary was one of the minor axis powers during WW2 - mostly because its tenuous geographical location midway between Russia and Germany, with Italy sitting down a little to the southwest. Early on, it had an agreement with Germany, mostly because the citizens of Hungary had a bigger fear of the Russians than they did the Germans. But this particular story was pretty typical of the "delusion" that Jews in outlying states had about the rumors that they heard about atrocities being committed against Jews in other areas and how "it won't happen here...." I guess that's something that people still do though - delude themselves into thinking "it can't happen here," or "they wouldn't do that," and then Russia invades Ukraine, or Hamas blindsides Israel, or the United States has a crisis of democracy on the capitol steps and we're left wondering "how did that happen?" Mostly as I was reading this book, I just kept thinking how NAIVE' they all were, and then remembered how many Hungarian Jews died in Auschwitz-Birkenau because they just didn't BELIEVE something so horrible would actually happen. If history teaches us anything, it teaches us that it is absolutely incredible the utter destruction and cruelty that one group of people - when given absolute power - are capable of inflicting on another. All they have to do is convince the rest of us to believe a lie.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Library of the Dead (other topics)The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (other topics)
Bridget Jones’s Diary (other topics)
The Chaperone (other topics)
The Alienist (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Paul Bowles (other topics)Annelise Freisenbruch (other topics)
Josephine Bell (other topics)
Stendhal (other topics)
Ernest Hemingway (other topics)
More...
Note: You do not have to use this particular list, but this one is provided to you if you need a reference point.
The Travel+Leisure article:
List according to Travel+Leisure: Sydney, Australia; Barcelona, Spain; Queenstown, New Zealand; Istanbul, Turkey; Paris, France; San Francisco, United States; Palermo, Italy; Cape Town, South Africa; Seoul, South Korea; Cartagena, Colombia; Kyoto, Japan; Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Tbilisi, Georgia; Rome, Italy; Hoi An, Vietnam; London, England; Buenos Aires, Argentina; Dubrovnik, Croatia; Sedona, United States; Chefchaouen, Morocco; Taipei, Taiwan; Edinburgh, Scotland; San Miguel de Allende, Mexico; Singapore; New York City, United States
ATY Listopia /list/show/1...
What are you reading and where is it set?