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May 2020 Reading List

06.13.2020 by Tana Henry //

This year, I’m participating in the Unread Shelf Challenge 2020 with a goal to read 75 books that I already own. Each month, I’ll read one fiction, one nonfiction/memoir, one law/business/politics, and one devotional/spiritual book. Quarterly, I’ll be reading one book of classic literature. I’ll be listing where each book came from, whether from my existing collection, I borrowed the book, or purchased the book new this year. This is my May 2020 Reading List, which includes the books that I’ve finished, the books in progress and ongoing, and the books that I’ve abandoned.

Books Finished:

Seabiscuit: An American Legend by Laura Hillenbrand

Already owned physical book. May Nonfiction/Memoir pick from 2020 Reading Plan.

Apparently although I don’t ride horses or really know anything about them, I enjoy reading books about them, particularly horses that race. This isn’t my first book about horse raising (American Pharoah by Joe Drape on Audible was also great!). This one was fantastic. Hillenbrand manages to give a whole lot of information about the topic, while keeping the narrative structure and keeping it interesting. I very much recommend this book.

The Psychopath Test: A Journey Through the Madness Industry by Jon Ronson

Already owned Audible.

I don’t think that I really liked this book. I’ve read books about the topic of sociopaths/psychopaths before, and this book simultaneously felt like it was questioning whether they are real, and delving into perceived weaknesses in the field of psychology, while simultaneously diagnosing everyone the author came into contact with. I wasn’t really a fan.

Fifty Places to Dive Before You Die: Diving Experts Share the World’s Greatest Destinations by Chris Santella

Purchased physical book this year.

Mike picked this book up this year, and I enjoyed reading it, looking at the photographs of various dive sites, and planning for the eventuality of when we can go diving again. It seemed fairly comprehensive, if a little bit general.

Apollo 8: The Thrilling Story of the First Mission to the Moon by Jeffrey Kluger

Purchased this year using Audible credit.

I’ve been on a bit of a space kick lately, with a few books and movies, and the launch of the Space X Dragon. This book is about the lunar orbit mission in the 1960s, and is so fascinating. And the audiobook features excerpts from interviews. This was really good!

The Astronaut Wives Club by Lily Koppel

Borrowed from library using Libby app.

Continuing my space kick, I learned about this book after watching the 1980s movie The Right Stuff (the book is now on my TBR list too). The movie clearly used this book as source material for the wives’ stories. So fascinating to read about how they had to act, how they rebelled against it, and just what their experiences were like. This was a pretty quick and engaging read.

Amy and Isabelle by Elizabeth Strout

Already owned physical book. May Fiction pick from 2020 Reading Plan.

Following the stories of a mother (Isabelle) and her daughter (Amy), I can’t say that I really liked either character that much. But it was a book that I felt compelled to keep reading just to see where the mother daughter stories were going, and whether the dynamic between the pair would improve.

The Siren by Kiera Cass

Borrowed from library using Libby app.

This was a take on the mythological sirens of the ocean which lured sailors to their deaths. It was completely magnetic book, which had me simultaneously attracted and repelled by the characters. I’m a fan of Cass’s books and think this is probably her best book.

The Timeless Tale of Peter Able by Natalie Grigson

Already owned Kindle e-book.

This is the second book in the Peter Able series. The books are really unique, in that the characters of books all live together in a fictional land while waiting for their authors to write more on/of them. They’re sort of funny, and have a mystery, and are just really light fun reading.

The Cellist of Sarajevo by Steven Galloway

Purchased Kindle e-book this year.

As a cellist myself, the title of this book had me hooked. This novel is a fictionalized account of several individuals living in Sarajevo during the 1990s war and their encounters with a cellist who plays in a city square to honor those killed by a shelling while waiting in a bread line. The book is sort of gutting, but at the same time just beautiful. I loved this boook so much.

The Lola Quartet by Emily St. John Mandel

Borrowed from library using Libby app.

This novel follows four characters, members of a high school jazz quartet after they leave school and part ways. Their lives intersect many years later when life hasn’t gone well for many of them. The tone of this book is somewhat melancholy, and I found myself getting angry with the characters bad choices. But the book is wonderful, and masterfully written.

Winter World by A.G. Riddle

Borrowed from Kindle Owners Lending Library.

The Solar War by A.G. Riddle

Borrowed from Kindle Owners Lending Library.

A.G. Riddle’s books are so fast-paced and exciting, that I just can’t help but tear through them as fast as I can turn the pages. This has held true for all of his books for me. This series takes place in a current day where the Earth is getting colder, lots colder, and scientists are trying to figure out why. The protagonists are an astronaut on the International Space Station and a brilliant man in prison.

Follow: A Simple and Profound Call to Live Like Jesus by Floyd McClung

Already owned Kindle e-book. May Devotional/Spiritual pick from 2020 Reading Plan.

This book is about being disciples of and creating disciples for Jesus. The book had some practical tips, but also felt to me a little like a guilt trip. From the other reviews of the book that I’ve read on Amazon and Goodreads, I may be the only one who felt that way, but it was true for me. Not my favorite devotional/spiritual book that I’ve read, but not bad.

Red Letter Challenge – A 40 Day Life Changing Experience by Zach Zehnder

Received as gift this year (from church).

My church all decided to read this book this year. I’m a little behind the curve in getting it finished, due to our trip to Egypt earlier in the year. This book was fantastic, with really practical ways of serving Jesus and transforming ourselves and our churches.

Martin Luther: The Man Who Rediscovered God and Changed the World by Eric Mataxas

Borrowed from library using Libby app.

I’m a Lutheran, and have often wondered about the creator of Protestantism. Martin Luther was a fascinating, and very human man. He studied the word and thought deeply about what it says, and how church teachings lined up it or not. He corrected some errors in church teachings, but was also a flawed man who later in life said some pretty horrible things. But this book was very interesting, even considering how long it is.

 

Books Ongoing through 2020:

Unshakeable: 365 Devotions for Finding Unwavering Strength in God’s Word by Christine Caine (Already owned physical book.) This is a daily devotional that I’ll be reading all year.

Year of Wonder: Classical Music to Enjoy Day by Day by Clemency Burton-Hill (Already owned physical book.) This book has daily readings about classical music generally, various sub-genres of classical, and a daily piece of music to find and listen to. I’ll be working through it all year.

 

Books in Progress:

The St. Nicholas Anthology edited by Henry Steele Commager (Already owned physical book.)

Taste for Truth: A 30 Day Weight Loss Bible Study by Barb Ravelin (Purchased Kindle e-book this year.) My bible study is working through this book.

Pont Neuf by Max Byrd (Already owned Audible.)

 

Books Abandoned:

Mother and Son: The Respect Effect by Emerson Eggerichs (Already owned physical book. May Legal/Business/Politics pick from 2020 Reading Plan.)

Villetteby Charlotte Bronte (Already owned physical book. Quarterly classic from 2020 Reading Plan.)

Wow, No Thank You. by Samantha Irby (Borrowed from library using Libby.)

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Categories // What I Read Tags // A.G. Riddle, Amy and Isabelle, Apollo 8, Barb Ravelin, Charlotte Bronte, Chris Santella, Christine Caine, Clemency Burton-Hill, Emerson Eggerichs, Emily St. John Mandel, Eric Mataxas, Fifty Places to Dive Before You Die, Floyd McClung, Follow, Henry Steele Commager, Jeffrey Kluger, Jon Ronson, Kiera Cass, Laura Hillenbrand, Lily Koppel, literature, Martin Luther, Max Byrd, Mother and Son, Natalie Grigson, Pont Neuf, reading, reading challenge, reading list, Red Letter Challenge, Samantha Irby, Seabiscuit, Steven Galloway, Taste for Truth, The Astronaut Wives Club, The Cellist of Sarajevo, The Lola Quartet, The Psychopath Test, The Siren, The Solar War, The St. Nicholas Anthology, The Timeless Tale of Peter Able, Unshakeable, Villette, What I Read, Winter World, Wow No Thank You, Year of Wonder, Zach Zehnder

Favorite Books of 2016

12.31.2016 by Tana Henry //

In 2016 I read some really fantastic books! And although there were slumps in my reading life, there were months where most of the books were home runs. I tried to limit this list to my top 10 favorites, but I simply could not do it. So without further ado, here are my 25 favorite books of 2016, including links to the post where I reviewed each of them if you’d like to read more about what I thought about them and go to Amazon and purchase them.

 

  1. A Brief History of Montmaray by Michelle Cooper (What I Read January 2016)
  2. Blink by Malcolm Gladwell (What I Read January 2016)
  3. After the War is Over by Jennifer Robson (What I Read January 2016)
  4. The Magician’s Lie by Greer Macallister (What I Read February 2016)
  5. Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel (What I Read February 2016)
  6. The FitzOsbornes in Exile by Michelle Cooper (What I Read Cayman Islands)
  7. Moonlight Over Paris by Jennifer Robson (What I Read Cayman Islands)
  8. The Apostle by John Pollock (What I Read March 2016)
  9. The FitzOsbornes at War by Michelle Cooper (What I Read March 2016)
  10. Shadow Divers by Robert Kurson (What I Read Bonne Terre)
  11. Dear Mr. Knightley by Katherine Reay (What I Read April 2016)
  12. In Cold Storage by James W. Hewitt (What I Read June 2016)
  13. The Big Short by Michael Lewis (What I Read June 2016)
  14. The Butterfly Garden by Dot Hutchison (What I Read June 2016)
  15. Wreckage by Emily Bleeker (What I Read July 2016)
  16. The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald by Frederick Stonehouse (What I Read Northern Michigan)
  17. David and Goliath by Malcolm Gladwell (What I Read August 2016)
  18. Petty: The Biography by Warren Zanes (What I Read September 2016)
  19. The Scent of Lilacs by Ann Gabhart (What I Read September 2016)
  20. The Cello Suites by Eric Siblin (What I Read September 2016)
  21. The Road by Cormac McCarthy (What I Read October 2016)
  22. The Black Violin by Maxence Fermine (What I Read October 2016)
  23. The Odds of Loving Grover Cleveland by Rebekah Crane (What I Read Guadeloupe)
  24. The Last Dive by Bernie Chowdhury (What I Read December 2016)
  25. Things that Matter by Charles Krauthammer (What I Read December 2016)

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Categories // What I Read Tags // A Brief History of Montmaray, After the War is Over, Ann Gabhart, Bernie Chowdhury, Blink, Charles Krauthammer, Cormac McCarthy, David and Goliath, Dear Mr. Knightley, Dot Hutchison, Emily Bleeker, Emily St. John Mandel, Eric Siblin, Frederick Stonehouse, Greer Macallister, In Cold Storage, James W. Hewitt, Jennifer Robson, John Pollock, Katherine Reay, Malcolm Gladwell, Maxence Fermine, Michael Lewis, Michelle Cooper, Moonlight Over Paris, Petty, Rebekah Crane, Robert Kurson, Shadow Divers, Station Eleven, The Apostle, The Big Short, The Black Violin, The Butterfly Garden, The Cello Suites, The FitzOsbornes at War, The FitzOsbornes in Exhile, The FitzOsbornes in Exile, The Last Dive, The Magician's Lie, The Odds of Loving Grover Cleveland, The Road, The Scent of Lilacs, The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald, Things That Matter, Warren Zanes, Wreckage

2016 PopSugar Reading Challenge Wrap-Up

12.29.2016 by Tana Henry //

I just completed the 2016 PopSugar Reading Challenge. It was a great way to read books in different categories than I might typically read. I’ll definitely be doing another reading challenge in 2017. Here is the wrap-up of the categories and what I read each for them. I hope you’ll find inspiration for your reading in 2017!

A book based on a fairy tale: Swept Away by Vanessa Riley

A National Book Award winner: Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel

A YA bestseller: The Maze Runner by James Dashner

A book you haven’t read since high school (I don’t really like re-reading books, so I changed this category to A book you should have read in high school): Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury

A book set in your home state: In Cold Storage: Sex and Murder on the Plains by James W. Hewitt

A book translated into English: Young Babylon by Lu Nei

A romance set in the future: Sleeping Embers of an Ordinary Mind by Anne Charnock

A book set in Europe: Trust To A Degree by Horst Christian

A book that’s under 150 pages: The Side Hustle Path: 10 Proven Ways to Make Money Outside of Your Day Job (Volume 1) by Nick Loper

A New York Times bestseller: Shadow Divers: The True Adventure of Two Americans Who Risked Everything to Solve One of the Last Mysteries of World War II by Robert Kurson

A book that’s becoming a movie this year: The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins

A book recommended by someone you just met: The Light Years by Elizabeth Jane Howard

A self-improvement book: More or Less: Choosing a Lifestyle of Excessive Generosity by Jeff Shinabarger

A book you can finish in a day: The Third Reich: Adolf Hitler, Nazi Germany, World War II And The Last German Empire by Frank D. Kennedy

A book written by a celebrity: Mentoring Matters: What Every Mentor Needs to Know by Tom Osborne

A political memoir: Things That Matter: Three Decades of Passions, Pastimes and Politics by Charles Krauthammer

A book at least 100 years older than you are: The Adventures of Oliver Twist by Charles Dickens

A book that’s more than 600 pages: Ben-Hur by Lew Wallace

A book from Oprah’s Book Club: Paradise by Toni Morrison

A science-fiction novel: The Death Cure by James Dashner

A book recommended by a family member: Wreckage by Emily Bleeker

A graphic novel: Marvels by Kurt Busiek and Alex Ross

A book that is published in 2016: The Moonlit Garden by Corina Bormann

A book with a protagonist who has your occupation: Rogue Lawyer by John Grisham

A book that takes place during Summer: Marking Time by Elizabeth Jane Howard

A book and its prequel: The Fever Code by James Dashner

A murder mystery: The Butterfly Garden by Dot Hutchison

A book written by a comedian: Modern Romance: An Investigation by Aziz Ansari and Eric Klinenberg

A dystopian novel: The Scorch Trials by James Dashner

A book with a blue cover: Great Expectations by Charles Dickens

A book of poetry: Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair by Pablo Neruda

The first book you see in a bookstore: The Magician’s Lie by Greer Macallister

A classic from the 20th century: The Curious Case of Benjamin Button by F. Scott Fitzgerald

A book from the library: The Road by Cormac McCarthy

An autobiography: Stars Upside Down: a memoir of travel, grief, and an incandescent God by Jennie Goutet

A book about a road trip: On the Road by Jack Kerouac

A book about a culture you’re unfamiliar with: Daughter of Fortune by Isabelle Allende

A satirical book: Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers by Mary Roach

A book that takes place on an island: A Brief History of Montmaray by Michelle Cooper

A book that’s guaranteed to bring you joy: After the War Is Over by Jennifer Robson

 

 

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Categories // What I Read Tags // A Brief History of Montmaray, After the War is Over, Alex Ross, Anne Charnock, Aziz Ansari, Ben-Hur, Charles Dickens, Charles Krauthammer, Corina Bormann, Cormac McCarthy, Daughter of Fortune, Dot Hutchison, Elizabeth Jane Howard, Emily Bleeker, Emily St. John Mandel, Eric Klinenberg, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Fahrenheit 451, Frank D. Kennedy, Great Expectations, Greer Macallister, Horst Christian, In Cold Storage, Isabelle Allende, Jack Kerouac, James Dashner, James W. Hewitt, Jeff Shinbarger, Jennie Goutet, Jennifer Robson, John Grisham, Kurt Busiek, Lew Wallace, literature, Lu Nei, Marking Time, Marvels, Mary Roach, Mentoring Matters, Michelle Cooper, Modern Romance, More or Less, Nick Loper, On the Road, Paradise, Paula Hawkins, PopSugar, Ray Bradbury, reading challenge, Robert Kurson, Rogue Lawyer, Shadow Divers, Sleeping Embers of an Ordinary Mind, Stars Upside Down, Station Eleven, Stiff, Swept Away, The Adventures of Oliver Twist, The Butterfly Garden, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, The Death Cure, The Fever Code, The Girl on the Train, The Light Years, The Magician's Lie, The Maze Runner, The Moonlit Garden, The Road, The Scorch Trials, The Side Hustle Path, The Third Reich, Things That Matter, Tom Osborne, Toni Morrison, Trust to A Degree, Vanessa Riley, What I Read, Wreckage, Young Babylon

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My name is Tana, and I am an attorney in South-Central Nebraska. I'm married to a great guy, named Mike, and have a dog named Emmy and a cat named Scout. I read as much as possible, and travel any chance I get. Luggage and Literature chronicles both. I hope you enjoy looking around! Please leave me a comment and tell me what you think.

HELP KEEP CREATIVITY GOING AND MY MIND AWAKE WHILE READING AND REVIEWING!

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