20 Books Of Summer 2024 Wrap Up #20booksofsummer24

20-books-of-summerThis annual challenge run by my namesake Cathy at 746 Books is over for another year. It has a simple objective: pick 10, 15 or 20 books you’d like to read during the period of the challenge: 1st June to 1st September.

Once again, I aimed for the full 20 books. So, how did I get on?

Version 1 – I failed. I read only eight books from my list, stubbornly refusing to make use of the option to swap books in/out of my list during the period of the challenge. I am part way through another two though. The other ten? Let’s all meet again next year…

  1. Magpie Murders by Anthony Horowitz –  Read
  2. Transcription by Kate Atkinson
  3. The Draughtsman by Robert Lautner
  4. The Legacy of Elizabeth Pringle by Kirsty Wark
  5. Appetite by Philip Kazan
  6. Anna of Kleve by Alison Weir
  7. Blood Orange by Harriet Tyce
  8. Finding Dorothy by Elizabeth Letts Read
  9. The Cross and the Curse by Matthew Harffy
  10. Swan Song by Kelleigh Greenberg-Jephcott
  11. The Second Sleep by Robert Harris
  12. To Calais, In Ordinary Time by James Meek – Currently reading 
  13. Tidelands by Philippa Gregory
  14. A Place Without Pain by Simon Bourke – Currently reading 
  15. In the Garden of Sorrows by Karen Jewell  – Read
  16. French Windows by Antoine Laurain  – Read
  17. Alvesdon by James HollandRead
  18. Dark Frontier by Matthew HarffyRead
  19. The King’s Mother by Annie GarthwaiteRead
  20. Heart, Be at Peace by Donal RyanRead

Version 2 – I succeeded. I read 22 books during the period of the challenge. Only eight were on my original list but who cares?

  1. The Comfort of Ghosts by Jacqueline Winspear
  2. French Windows by Antoine Laurain
  3. The Heart in Winter by Kevin Barry
  4. Alvesdon by James Holland
  5. A Beginner’s Guide to Breaking and Entering by Andrew Hunter Murray
  6. The Days of Our Birth by Charlie Laidlaw
  7. The Housekeepers by Alex Hay
  8. In This Ravishing World by Nina Schuyler
  9. Dead Ground by Graham Hurley
  10. Dark Frontier by Matthew Harffy
  11. The King’s Mother by Annie Garthwaite
  12. In the Garden of Sorrows by Karen Jewell
  13. Magpie Murders by Anthony Horowitz
  14. The Trap by Ava Glass
  15. West Heart Kill by Dann McDorman
  16. normal rules don’t apply by Kate Atkinson
  17. Cabaret Macabre by Tom Mead
  18. Berlin Duet by S. W. Perry
  19. Heart, Be at Peace by Donal Ryan
  20. The Instrumentalist by Harriet Constable

If you took part, how did you get on?

Book Review – Six Lives by Lavie Tidhar @HoZ_Books

About the Book

Book cover of Six Lives by Lavie Tidhar

Six lives, connected through blood and history, each rooted in the dirt of their inheritance, look to the future, and what it might hold.

THE GUANO MERCHANT – In 1855, Edward Feebes travels to the guano islands of South America, to investigate an irregularity in the accounts of the House of Feebes & Co.

THE BLACKMAILER – In 1912, post-mortem photographer and reluctant blackmailer Annie Connolly plots her escape from Ireland to America on board the Titanic.

THE IDEALIST – In 1933, idealistic Edgar Waverley faces a choice of the heart when he becomes embroiled in a country house murder.

THE SPY – In 1964, hapless KGB agent Vasily Sokolov makes his career conjuring valuable information from worthless detritus.

THE MOVIE STAR – In 1987, actor Mariam Khouri looks back at ‘Black Dirt’, the movie that lifted her from the streets of Cairo.

THE HEIRESS – In 2012, Isabelle Feebes attempts to break with her poisonous heritage once and for all. Can she forge a new life for herself in the New World? Can you ever truly escape your past?

Format: Hardcover (464 pages) Publisher: Apollo
Publication date: 29th August 2024 Genre: Historical Fiction

Find Six Lives on Goodreads

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My Review

Having very much enjoyed Lavie Tidhar’s novel Adama, I was pleased to spot Six Lives on NetGalley, especially since I’ve lately become a fan of interconnected stories.

I particularly enjoyed the first four stories. The fifth set in Cairo was interesting for its insight into the political history of Egypt in the 1970s and 1980s but I couldn’t warm to the angst of Isabelle, the subject of the sixth story. Having said that there are some clever touches in this final story such as the bookshelf of Isabelle’s adopted mother, Henrietta, which contains volumes with titles that relate to the previous five stories. And there’s an object that appears in each story, handed down the generations sometimes purposefully, sometimes accidentally.

Each story skilfully evokes the milieu of the period. The first set in mid-nineteenth century Peru is particularly notable for the amount of historical detail, meaning I learned more about the trade in guano than I ever thought possible. And I had no idea there was such a thing as memento mori photography which features in the second story. The third, written in the style of a ‘Golden Age’ murder mystery complete with country house setting, a brutal murder, a range of characters (including an Agatha Christie-like author of detective stories) and lots of possible motives, was the most entertaining. I imagine the author having a lot of fun writing this one, ticking off one trope of the genre after another.

It’s possible to detect several themes in the book. One is the value to be found in detritus, such as the guano which is the source of Feebes family’s prosperity – ‘the birds rained excrement upon those lonely outcrops of rock, and their shit turned to gold’ – or the intelligence material that KGB agent Vasily Sokolov harvests from the discarded papers of foreign embassies. Neatly, the film which makes actress Mariam Khouri a star is entitled ‘Black Dirt’.

Another theme is the consequences of actions and the moral choices people make. For example, the guano traded by Feebes & Co is used not only as fertiliser but increasingly for manufacturing munitions. And the Chinese workers who dig the stuff and load it onto waiting ships are pretty much slave labour, their lives merely an entry in a profit and loss account. Ironically, it is the Chinese from whom Edward Feebes obtains the supplies of laudanum he has become reliant on. These consequences become part of the inheritance of those who come later, often unaware their good fortune may have been earned through the suffering of others.

Even if I warmed to some of characters more than others, there’s no doubting the storytelling ability of the author. And who can resist chuckling at an absurd sentence like, ‘Rain rained and snails snailed and squirrels squirrelled squirrelly things‘. I enjoyed coming across the little connections between the stories, especially the ones that could easily pass you by. I was thoroughly entertained by Six Lives which I think demonstrates the author’s versatility, mastery of detail and sly humour.

I received a review copy courtesy of Head of Zeus via NetGalley.

In three words: Absorbing, assured, clever
Try something similar: Ancestry by Simon Mawer or Held by Anne Michaels


About the Author

Author Lavie Tidhar

Lavie Tidhar’s work encompasses literary fiction (MarorAdama and Six Lives), cross-genre classics such as Jerwood Prize winner A Man Lies Dreaming (2014) and World Fantasy Award winner Osama (2011), and genre works like the Campbell and Neukom prize winner Central Station (2016). He has also written comics (Adler, 2020) and children’s books such as Candy (2018) and A Child’s Book of the Future (2024).

He is a former columnist for the Washington Post and a current honorary Visiting Professor and Writer in Residence at the American International University in London.

Connect with Lavie
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