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Ultimate Popsugar Reading Challenge discussion

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2020 Challenge - Advanced > 08 - A book published in the 20th century

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message 1: by Sara (last edited Nov 18, 2019 11:56AM) (new)

Sara Lots of great books to choose from! What are some great books from the last century that you've been meaning to read?

Listopia link: /list/show/1...


message 2: by Milena (last edited Nov 18, 2019 08:59AM) (new)

Milena (milenas) | 1195 comments My three favorite books from this past year were all published in the 20th century:

Rebecca
The House of the Spirits
The Secret History


message 3: by Karin (last edited Nov 19, 2019 07:17PM) (new)

Karin This is a fairly easy one because there are so many still in print :) I have a number on my tbr, and am not sure which one I'll choose for this--most likely something that doesn't fit anywhere else.


message 5: by F (new)

F (fyogurt) Milena wrote: "My three favorite books from this past year were all published in the 20th century:

Rebecca
The House of the Spirits
The Secret History"


I didn't realize The Secret History was published in the 1990s! Very cool.


message 7: by Rachel (new)

Rachel (mrshurd) | 33 comments I have a lot from 1990s that I haven't read but I have narrowed it down to these for now:
The Witching Hour
Practical Demonkeeping
Real Murders
Jurassic Park


The Chapter Conundrum (Stacey) | 404 comments I'm using this one as a great excuse to continue with the Outlander series and will be reading either Voyager or Drums of Autumn =D


message 9: by Darci (new)

Darci Day | 164 comments I'm going to use this prompt to continue with The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Universe series. I'm on The Restaurant at the End of the Universe.


message 10: by Jill (new)

Jill  (jills_bookish_life) | 3 comments F wrote: "Milena wrote: "My three favorite books from this past year were all published in the 20th century:

Rebecca
The House of the Spirits
The Secret History"

I ..."

I see a publication date of 2004 for The Secret History. Am I missing something?


message 11: by Heather L (last edited Dec 06, 2019 12:38PM) (new)

Heather L  (wordtrix) | 780 comments Jill wrote: "F wrote: "Milena wrote: "My three favorite books from this past year were all published in the 20th century:

Rebecca
The House of the Spirits
[book:The Secret History|2..."


Jill, It was originally published in 1992.


message 12: by Jill (new)

Jill  (jills_bookish_life) | 3 comments Heather L wrote: "Jill wrote: "F wrote: "Milena wrote: "My three favorite books from this past year were all published in the 20th century:

Rebecca
The House of the Spirits
[book:The Sec..."

Ah, I see! I know where to look now. Thanks! This is on my TBR so I might use it too!


message 13: by poshpenny (new)

poshpenny | 1916 comments This is a gimme for me. One of the many P.G. Wodehouse books I listen to each night will work. I'm sure I'll read at least one more Mrs Pollifax book. My next is A Palm for Mrs. Pollifax. Maybe I'll finally read all of The Case-Book of Sherlock Holmes. Or something from Ellery Queen. Maybe The Golden Compass


message 15: by Ally (new)

Ally (allybl) | 47 comments I'm probably reading Motherless Brooklyn for this one, Motherless Brooklyn by Jonathan Lethem

But also considering:
Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel García Márquez

Turtle Moon by Alice Hoffman

and

Let the Drum Speak (Kwani, #3) by Linda Lay Shuler (recommended to me by my local bookshop owner)


message 16: by Megan (new)

Megan | 361 comments Dumb question time: this means any book published between 1900 and 1999, correct?


message 17: by Diana (new)

Diana (candystripelegs) | 245 comments Megan wrote: "Dumb question time: this means any book published between 1900 and 1999, correct?"

Not a dumb question. =) Yes. Anything published from 1900 to 1999 will work.


message 18: by Linda (new)

Linda Varick-cooper | 20 comments Megan wrote: "Dumb question time: this means any book published between 1900 and 1999, correct?"

Well, technically the 20th century would run from 1901 to 2000. But everybody seems to use the years you've said.


message 19: by Linda (new)

Linda Varick-cooper | 20 comments


message 20: by Karin (last edited Dec 26, 2019 03:07PM) (new)

Karin Linda wrote: ""

This explains it well. People also kept thinking that 2000 meant the next millennia, but of course it started in 2001.


People also often confuse the following:

When you are age 19 they think you are in your 19th year, but you are in your 20th year (your first year is from birth to age 1, so it goes from there).

Also, pregnancies. I have met people who think that because it averages 40 weeks it is 10 months--if it were true, the year would have to have only 48 weeks in it; there are 13 weeks for every 3 months (roughly given the calendar, but 13 times 4 is 52). A ten month pregnancy is 44 weeks and those used to happen, and some of them were healthy at that point but they don't play the odds.

End of tangent.


message 21: by Evil Secret (new)

Evil Secret Ninja (evilsecretninja) | 56 comments I finished
The Man in the High Castle Written in 1962
by Philip K. Dick
259 pgs I gave it a three star rating


message 22: by Ilham (new)

Ilham Alam (ilhamalam) | 38 comments For the book written in the 20th century prompt, I’ll be starting Jude Devereaux’s famous romance novel, “A Knight in Shining Armour�, next. As soon as I’m done reading my current non-fiction, “The Demon in the Freezer� by Richard Preston


message 23: by Karin (new)

Karin Mary Poppins is originally from the 1930s--for some reason I thought it was older1


message 24: by Cindy (new)

Cindy Belden | 73 comments I read " What Little I Remember" by Otto Robert Frisch, published 1979.
Short book of anecdotes of his life as a nuclear physisit. He worked with many Nobel Prize winners; worked at Los Alamos on the atomic bomb; was part of many of the important discoveries in physics during the 20th century. Very entertaining book.


message 25: by Kim (new)

Kim (kmyers) | 108 comments I read A Lesson Before Dying A Lesson Before Dying by Ernest J. Gaines by Ernest J. Gaines for this prompt. It was published in 1993.


message 26: by SadieReadsAgain (new)

SadieReadsAgain (sadiestartsagain) | 767 comments I read The House of the Spirits by Isabel Allende. I came to this book with no expectations, knowing only that I'd heard that of all Allende's books this is probably one of the best and it felt like a good place to start. And I wasn't disappointed, particularly as this book is a family saga set in a country I don't know a lot about - two things which will always appeal to me. But it takes more than a good premise to make a book worth reading, and this book has so much going for it. I loved the touches of magical realism, but that they were more accents to a book much more fully grounded in reality. And that reality was so fascinating - the power struggles of Chile throughout the 20th century, the class divides and prejudices of a society and how those play out within a family when the generations have different views, or when their hearts draw them to people across those divides. The story allows the ripples of time to pass so that the actions of one person or group can be seen as they spread across generations. There is so much sadness and violence in this story, it is a story of endurance and change. At times it can make for tough reading, and not all the characters are likeable. But at the same time, none are without understandable motivation. I was engaged the whole way through this story, and I'm intrigued to read more of Allende's work.


message 27: by Teri (new)

Teri (teria) | 1554 comments Anything by Agatha Christie

I read Man's Search for Meaning by Viktor E. Frankl


message 28: by Jennifer (new)

Jennifer Gibbons | 10 comments Saw an interview with Tatum O’Neal, inspired me to finally read this one:
Paper Moon by Joe David Brown


message 29: by E (new)

E | 12 comments The Forgotten Beasts of Eld by Patricia McKillip was published in 1974.


message 30: by Sherri (new)

Sherri Harris | 767 comments I finished Death At La Fenice (Commissario Brunetti #1) by Donna Leon. It was originally published in 1994.


message 31: by Shelley (new)

Shelley | 230 comments I read Midnight's Children it was really scattered which gets really old when the book is over 600 pages.


message 32: by Harry (new)

Harry Patrick | 109 comments I read The Sirens of Titan by Kurt Vonnegut Jr.. First published in 1959 & I believe my first Kurt Vonnegut Jr. book. Got interested in him after seeing an exhibit of his artwork at Cornell U.


message 33: by Jennifer Muster (new)

Jennifer Muster | 31 comments I read Soulforge from the Dragonlance Universe for this challenge. It was a wonderful trip down memory lane bringing back the other books I read as a teenager!


message 35: by Cornerofmadness (new)

Cornerofmadness | 790 comments So many to chose from but I went with the first one I found on my shelves Ruins by Kevin J. Anderson


message 36: by Ashley (new)

Ashley (ashleym99) I read Dragonfly in Amber as I trying to read this series and was excited that a few book could fit some prompts.


message 37: by Barbara (new)

Barbara (futuregirl) | 39 comments I read The Dark Frigate by Charles Boardman Hawes. It's a weird book. I wouldn't have thought a pirate book would be dull. But this one painfully is. There's a lot of meandering about. And the book was written in this faux old-timey speech that comes across as gimmicky, but is actually really distracting. And it's hard to find a good copy of the audiobook. It's available at Audible, but it's basically unlistenable. The narrator sounds like his voice is coming through an old fashioned radio.


message 38: by Tamara (new)

Tamara Evans (bamalibrarylady) I read "Tambourines to Glory" by Langston Hughes published in 1958.


message 39: by Virginia (new)

Virginia (dogdaysinaz) | 52 comments I read The Grapes of Wrath for this prompt.
The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck


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