For January I read "The twentieth century" by Aurélien Bellanger. In fact I listen to a very nice critical podcast of literary/movie every month and this time they proposed this novel which is a tribute to the German philosopher, Walter Benjamin. Well, it was a bit of a difficult read, quite philosophical with a writing not easy, I liked it even if I found it a little repetitive after a while. What I appreciated the most is everything I could discover about this philosopher, we feel a real love of the author for him, even if I think that the tribute is incomplete.
This year I want to discover more of contemporary French literature (Emmanuel Carrère, Philippe Janaeda, Julia Deck ...) and trying to read books (that was highly recommended to me) that I bought the last year and that I didn't have time to read (Toni Morrisson, Russel Banks, Jon kalman Stefansson, Karl Ove Knausgard...) and continue to discover the classics.
I just finished reading "The Diary of Anne Frank" (we only watched the 2016 movie version at school). I know how it ends, but I still got tears when I read the epilogue (one sentence in particular really hit me). Her last entries were with so much hope for a near end and to be able to go back to school in a few months. You can really follow her development, her thoughts and their relationships through the years while reading her diary.
For January I read 50 Shades of Grey, first chapter, finished in early February as part of a challenge, contemporary book adapted to screen.
It was like watching a serie with the aim of pointing out all the plot holes, the absurdities of the story. Not sure I'll continue with the other 2 volumes as I can't find any depth to the characters. Some topics are brought up so lightly and bringing in BDSM codes w/o really respecting them doesn't excuse everything. I don't plan to watch the movies.
Next book for February Interview with the Vampire by Anne Rice for the same challenge. It will be a rereading.
Hello I'm new to this, is this club only limited to books in English?
In January I completed 错撩 (Accidental Love) and I've recently finished 向师祖献上咸鱼 (Offering Salted Fish To Master). Started both titles because they are both being adapted to dramas and I can't wait for them to start HAHA.
Accidental love was an amusing light hearted read and I cant wait to see Hedi as Shiyan after seeing all the photos/videos!
As for Offering Salted Fish to Master, I'm not very sure how they can turn this to a drama or how much of the script they have to change to pass censorship because there are so many killing scenes in the book but it's hard not to love a "I hate everyone in this world but you" ML :")
So I'm reading this series right now and I'm on book 3 because I just finished the 2nd book I don't know who here has read it but its amazing and I recommend but I will put out some warnings for those who don't like dark (There is murder, rape, gore, sex, )
The name of the series is MindF*ck the names of the books are
The Risk #1✔️
Sidetracked #2✔️
Scarlet Angel #3
All the lies #4
Paint it all red #5
Berd:I've heard of that series and wanted to give it a try but I'm scared it'll be just another one of those hyped up series.
Nooo way its so worth reading I honestly didn't know it was hyped up till I started digging it's so good if you love Mystery Murder Dark romance tragedy you will love it it's so well done and leaves you wanting more!!
I have only read one book this month!
The three-body problem by Liu Cixin
It was an incredible and fast-paced book! I was initially afraid because I heard that it's hard to read due to all complex matters in the plot, but it's not. It's actually a very easy and good read and I love how the writer explains all concepts in an easy and understandable manner!
After reading it, I became even more astonished at how well the tv adaptation captured the vibe of the plot and how closely it followed it!
5/5 Totally recommend if you're into sci-fi!!