The 20 Books of Summer Challenge was to take 20 books from my to-be-read pile and read and review them over the summer from the beginning of June to the beginning of September. I outlined how I had chosen which books to include and what I wanted to achieve in this post here.
I am delighted to say that I have succeeded in the challenge and twenty books have been read and reviewed. I list them below with a link to each review – just click on the title. You will note that I abandoned one book and substituted it with another and I give an explanation of that at the end of this post.
My favourite books were Travels With My Aunt and Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight both of which I highly recommend.
This has been an interesting and achievable challenge which should have cleared quite a few books off that tottering to-be-read pile. Sadly, I think that I may have bought more than 20 to replace them ! Maybe next year ….
Fiction
- Apex Hides the Hurt – Colson Whitehead
- The House I Loved – Tatiana De Rosnay
- Where the Crawdads Sing – Delia Owens – Did not finish. See below
- The Great Leader – Jim Harrison
- The Mitford Scandal – Jessica Fellowes
- Mystery in White – J Jefferson Farjeon
- The Dancing Floor – John Buchan
- Union Street – Pat Barker
- The Vanishing Half – Britt Bennett
- Every Man for Himself – Beryl Bainbridge
- Travels with my Aunt – Graham Greene
Non-Fiction
- A Different Class of Murder – Laura Thompson
- Selkirk’s Island – Diana Souhami
- The Riddle and the Knight – Giles Milton
- The Africa House – Christina Lamb
- The Daughters of Yalta – Catherine Grace Katz
- Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight – Alexandra Fuller
- True to Both My Selves – Katrin Fitzherbert
- The Wilder Shores of Love – Lesley Blanch
- No Boys Play Here – Sally Bayley
- Starvation Heights – Gregg Olsen
Why I didn’t finish Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens
I don’t usually write blogs or reviews about books I don’t finish but in this case I chose this book for my challenge and then didn’t manage to get through it so I should explain why. It’s a popular book and my copy was loaned to me by a relative who thought it was a great story so I assume that this is a matter of taste. I have now skimmed through the remainder of the book and read quite a few reviews and I know what is going to happen including a twist at the end. I found the book trite and completely unbelievable and knowing the rest of the story and the ending doesn’t change my view of it. I could not accept the way that the main character grew up as being at all realistic or plausible and that spoiled any enjoyment which I might have had in the story. I don’t often give up on books but even for the sake of a challenge I couldn’t read any more. My opinion is not widely shared but the variety of stories, readers and opinions is what makes the book world so interesting.

Congratulations Anne,. well done! Thanks for taking part
LikeLike
I enjoyed it a lot.
LikeLike
Thanks for taking part!
LikeLike
I didn’t appreciate the ending of Crawdads and it spoiled the story the more I thought about it.
LikeLike
It seems amoral but a lot of people found it very satisfying I understand
LikeLiked by 1 person
I found the same.
LikeLike