The New York Times’ Best Books of 2024 So Far

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  • Опубликовано: 5 июн 2024
  • I love mid-year best lists, so I was very excited when The New York Times released a list of the best books of 2024 (so far). Let's look at what made it and talk about what missed. Expand for more information. 👇
    Links 💻
    The Article: www.nytimes.com/2024/05/24/bo...
    Further Viewing 🎥
    The Book Review’s Best Books of 2023: • The New York Times Boo...
    The New York Times’ 100 Notable Books of 2023: • The New York Times’ 10...
    My Pride Month Pile of Possibilities: • My TBR for June and Pr...
    Do I Still Want to Read These Books (Featuring Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight)? • Do I Still Want to Rea...
    Titles Mentioned 📚
    James, Percival Everett: bookshop.org/a/99775/97803855...
    Good Material, Dolly Alderton: bookshop.org/a/99775/97805938...
    Martyr!, Kaveh Akbar: bookshop.org/a/99775/97805935...
    The Hunter, Tana French: bookshop.org/a/99775/97805934...
    Wandering Stars, Tommy Orange: bookshop.org/a/99775/97805933...
    Headshot, Rita Bullwinkel: bookshop.org/a/99775/97805936...
    Beautyland, Marie-Helene Bertino: bookshop.org/a/99775/97803741...
    Knife: Meditations After an Attempted Murder, Salman Rushdie: bookshop.org/a/99775/97805937...
    Everyone Who Is Gone Is Here: The United States, Central America, and the Making of a Crisis, Jonathan Blitzer: bookshop.org/a/99775/97819848...
    The Wide Wide Sea: Imperial Ambition, First Contact and the Fateful Final Voyage of Captain James Cook, Hampton Sides: bookshop.org/a/99775/97803855...
    The Rebel’s Clinic: The Revolutionary Lives of Frantz Fanon, Adam Shatz: bookshop.org/a/99775/97803741...
    Fi: A Memoir, Alexandra Fuller: bookshop.org/a/99775/97808021...
    My Affiliate Page on Bookshop: bookshop.org/shop/supposedlyfun
    If you would like to support this channel, please feel free to use Super Thanks or the affiliate links to Bookshop, but please do not feel obligated. I appreciate your presence regardless.
    But wait, there's more!
    Email: supposedlyfungreg-at-gmail.com
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    Website: supposedlyfun.com/

Комментарии • 114

  • @maggs4400
    @maggs4400 26 дней назад +7

    From this list, I've read James, Martyr, Wandering Stars, and Beautyland. Enjoyed all of them. Beautyland is definitely on the "quirky" side if that's not something you gravitate toward. I thought Bertino's previous novel "Parakeet" was even better, but also something that would probably be described as quirky. Martyr! is one of my favorite reads of the year so far, and I'm certain will be one of my favorites at the end of the year as well. My favorite book that wasn't on the list was My Friends by Hisham Matar. Five star, Booker material in my opinion.

  • @kellyhunsaker3775
    @kellyhunsaker3775 26 дней назад +13

    I recommend Erasure for your next Percival Everett. I know you love movies, and American Fiction is an adaptation of it. Both were really good.

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  26 дней назад +1

      Thanks for the recommendation!

    • @AvAlanchian
      @AvAlanchian 25 дней назад +1

      I second the suggestion. Loved the Trees but it’s nowhere near as much of a Greg book than The Trees (very Tarantino like)

    • @jeremyl2594
      @jeremyl2594 25 дней назад

      I third this recommendation! Parts of this book had me sobbing and other parts were laugh out loud. Erasure just stays with you. I haven't watched American Fiction

    • @kellyhunsaker3775
      @kellyhunsaker3775 25 дней назад +1

      @@jeremyl2594 I thought the movie was a very good adaptation. I recommend it.

    • @suzanneward5131
      @suzanneward5131 22 дня назад +1

      James is brilliant. 😊
      Erasure should win all the prizes!
      Loved Martyr! It took a minute to get into.

  • @cassietower9694
    @cassietower9694 26 дней назад +5

    I'm waiting to hear Paulette Jiles mentioned, by anyone, on Booktube. I think she is one of the most talented writers of our time, and wonder if anyone at all agrees. Also, Matt Haig has a novel coming out this fall, i am curious if it will be as readable as his previous novels, which i found absolutely mesmerizing.

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  24 дня назад

      I can’t remember if I had a BookTube channel when I read News of the World, which I really liked. I’ve always meant to read more of her books but too many shiny objects have gotten in the way. And I still need to read Matt Haig!

    • @deborahaguruso
      @deborahaguruso 23 дня назад +1

      I loved Paulette Jile's Simon the Fiddler and my favorite Mattt Haig is The Humans.

    • @KAZHE63
      @KAZHE63 22 дня назад +1

      I agree! Paulette Jiles is an auto-buy for me

  • @smilagan7816
    @smilagan7816 26 дней назад +2

    Headshot is fantastic! The prose is quick, propulsive, and hypnotic. I'm not into boxing either, but I found the writing to be extremely effective at evoking the feeling of the sport, rather than just providing a play-by-play of what's happening. The book also plays with time in a way that, weirdly, reminded me of To The Lighthouse. So, Virginia Woolf with boxing gloves lol

  • @awebofstories
    @awebofstories 18 дней назад +1

    I think the only reason why Fire Exit isn't included is because it was released after the list was compiled. I have yet to read it (although my copy is sitting just inches away), but I've heard it is fantastic.

  • @benreadsgood
    @benreadsgood 26 дней назад +5

    The fiction seems like a really solid list to me. All the ones I’ve read are legitimately great.
    The Dolly Alderton was a surprise 5 stars for me - I went in with low expectations and it was just very, very well written and warm and heartbreaking.
    Reading Headshot right now!

    • @duckylittledictum6149
      @duckylittledictum6149 26 дней назад +1

      Totally agree about Good Material. Surprisingly touching and complex. And the audio version (two narrators) is A+

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  24 дня назад

      That’s very good to know about Dolly Alderton-thanks! I look forward to hearing your final thoughts on Headshot.

  • @RyanLisbon
    @RyanLisbon 26 дней назад +1

    Awesome video - just stumbled on your superb channel. If you ever need mystery/crime/thriller recs please ask. Look forward to binging your backlog!

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  25 дней назад

      Thanks so much! I can't promise that I will get to any mystery/thriller books soon, but am always open to recommendations.

  • @ilya1046
    @ilya1046 26 дней назад +3

    In the Woods by Tana French was excellent. It’s definitely worth checking out.

  • @curtisrobinson7962
    @curtisrobinson7962 25 дней назад +2

    Sir Salman Rushdie was interviewed on the NPR program (podcast) Fresh Air. He read a passage from his book (knife) and I was wowed. If one digs through the archives of Fresh Air it's available for a listen.
    Support your local public radio, and bookstore.

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  25 дней назад +1

      I heard a segment of that interview on NPR's Book of the Day podcast. Such an interesting conversation. NPR is so good!

  • @Schwendan
    @Schwendan 25 дней назад

    First-time commenter here on any RUclips channel. I am nearing the end of two personal 5-year journeys: the first is to read all the Pulitzer Prize fiction winners since the year I was born, and the second is to watch every available film to be nominated for a Best Picture Oscar. I guess you can see how Google led me to your blog and channel over a year ago. I have been more diligent in making progress with the film journey (93%) than with the fiction journey (83%), but I appreciate how both journeys have exposed me to works and auteurs I might not have encountered otherwise, and I appreciate how people like you have helped me navigate. Your recent videos on the Pulitzer have prompted me to become a more active listener of your channel, and so here I am.
    Anyway, my observation on this video is that, like you, I enjoyed There There by Tommy Orange. In fact, it's one of my top 5 reads of this century. So, I had very high expectations for Wandering Stars. I have to say that those expectations were met with the prequel part of the book. However, I found the sequel part of the book to lose some of the momentum that the first part established. I did enjoy the book, though, and I hope you enjoy it also. You mentioned you probably wouldn't re-read There There beforehand. I agree a total re-read is unnecessary, but you may want to skim the chapters pertaining to Orvil and his grandmothers to reacquaint yourself with their family structure. Also, I found myself wishing I had paid more attention to Orvil's interactions with his brothers since they figure prominently in Stars. I look forward to your reaction after you read it.
    Finally, I appreciate how when you talk about books you've read, you provide just enough information to help me decide whether to read a book or not. I thank you for your many recommendations. I hope the string continues with Fire Exit. Your enthusiasm for the book and author got me to put a library hold on it before anyone else, and it now awaits my next visit to the library.

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  24 дня назад +1

      Congratulations on coming to the end of two huge projects! I’m at 88% in watching all the Best Picture winners (according to Letterboxd). I just watched Ben-Hur this week, which felt like a huge hurdle given how long it is. I actually spread it out over two weeknights. I can’t even imagine how long it would take to watch all the nominees!
      Thanks for the feedback on Wandering Stars. I’m actually still waffling back and forth about whether or not I should reread There There first. I figure that’s a July problem while I focus on Pride reading this month. 🤣
      And thank you so much for the kind words! I’m glad you’ve gotten something from following my channel and I hope you like Fire Exit as much as I did!

  • @BandysBooks
    @BandysBooks 26 дней назад +2

    I agree with waiting to July for mid-year check-ins. I like a. full 6 months too. I just picked up a copy of James and can't wait to read it. I also have a copy of Beautyland and Wandering Stars. Looking forward to them as well. :) All of the nonfiction reads sound really interesting to me too.

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  24 дня назад +1

      I feel like some of the books I’m reading and have coming up could creep onto my list by the end of June, so definitely important to wait for the full six months to be up. I look forward to your thoughts on anything you pick up from the list!

  • @olgastanford6813
    @olgastanford6813 26 дней назад +1

    Hi! Really love your channel! I also love Tana French and her novels, so, I figured I’d chime in with my two cents. While In the Woods is probably her best known work, I’m not sure I’d recommend starting there. It is a solid book, but I did not find it as satisfying as her other entries into the Dublin murder squad. It was entertaining. It was fine. However, had I not been on a thriller kick at the time, I’m not sure I would have read any of her other works after reading In the Woods. I think there are multiple places of entry into the series since they follow multiple detectives. I would recommend starting with either her second book, The Likeness, or with her third book, Faithful Place. You will miss nothing by not reading In The Woods. The events of that first book are alluded to in The Likeness, but only to the extent that the aftermath of a breakup is affecting the protagonist. So, if you want an edge of your seat thriller, I’d go with The Likeness. If you want a fantastic “who done it” and “why” that will also absolutely shatter your heart only to piece it back together again, go with Faithful Place. Then again, I’m VERY biased here since Faithful Place is my favorite in the series. Anyway! I hope you give Tana French a shot! :)

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  25 дней назад

      That's a very intriguing recommendation for A Faithful Place! Thanks for sharing your thoughts.

  • @starstuffpuff
    @starstuffpuff 26 дней назад +1

    The Trees is a very different book than James. I loved The Trees (read it three times already), but I had to switch to audio for James after 75 pages as I was kinda getting bored and losing interest (still reading it in short bursts). I'm much more interested in getting to some of his back catalog. I found Knife to be an interesting read. I loved Martyr! As someone who loves novels written by poets (eg. The Love Songs of w.e.b du Bois), I had a very strong emotional reaction to this book. It's wonderful, thought-provoking and heart-breaking.

  • @Phillybookfairy
    @Phillybookfairy 24 дня назад

    I have an ebook of Wandering Stars but haven’t gotten to it yet. I haven’t read any on this list but the ones I want to other than WS are: James, Beautyland, and The Wide wide sea (and now the River of the gods too) maybe Martyr and maybe the Alderton one - it’s been getting a lot of hype but I really don’t read too much romance - I do find them if they are funny to be a huge mood booster so I do enjoy them - especially when my other reads are heavy sad or disturbing topics!!!! And I appreciate them, more so than the thrillers, although since I get a lot of those on audio from publishers, I enjoy them but not as much as I’d like to - usually - every once in a while I’m like oooh this is fun 🤩 but my issue is I’ve got to stop listening to audio (kinda addicted to it) and get to my WALL OF BOOKS. This was my year to really accumulate some non fiction into my reading but I have three I’m knee deep into and just am reading inbetween so much fiction… sigh. I’m excited about my books for this month and I’ll hopefully be starting Our Hideous Progeny before this weekend is over - it has some connections to Mary Shelly - I believe it’s a fictional tale about her niece who goes on an adventure trying to discover a mystery about her aunt Mary Shelly - and I love all things Frankenstein and Shelly. But I digress… now I have 4 more books my trigger finger is trying to order but I already I said I wouldn’t buy books this month bc next month is my birthday month, I’ll be old af and sent in my divorce papers this past week so I’ll definitely want to be buying myself many books for my birthday next month. I may even wrap them up and unwrap them on my bday. My spouse used to buy me books. He tried. But siiiiigh never mind just know your recs will be part of my haul for my happy birthday to me celebration next month 😊😂❤

  • @HelenSchneider-tl3yh
    @HelenSchneider-tl3yh 26 дней назад +3

    Knife by Rushdie is amazing, I read it over a weekend. Highly recommend!

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  24 дня назад

      I’m hoping to catch up to it at some point.

  • @hayleystenger2799
    @hayleystenger2799 26 дней назад +2

    I really liked Knife. I thought it was so personal and had a lot of vulnerability. Rushdie also adds some humor in the book, which can lighten it up in sections. He reads the audio and I liked hearing it in his voice. It is pretty short. 6 hrs or so.

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  26 дней назад

      He gave a great interview with NPR about the book, and the humor he had about it was surprising.

  • @leslieschippert4954
    @leslieschippert4954 26 дней назад +2

    Read the Searcher first, before The Hunter. Lovely book, not a thriller though.

  • @jordana99
    @jordana99 24 дня назад +1

    I may get to non-fiction here and there but lit fic is my love! Just read Horse, reading James, Kairos and Tin Man. Brotherless Night next. I requested my library to get Fire Exit and they did, although I have a 10 week wait. Meanwhile got Night of the Living Rez. Thanks for the rec!

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  23 дня назад +1

      I hope you like it as much as I did! I just finished Tin Man and loved it.

  • @KristenLiebsch
    @KristenLiebsch 24 дня назад +1

    In the Woods is an excellent start for Tana French. I am like you, don't embrace thrillers, but being of Irish heritage with many trips to Ireland, that is why I read it. I don't tend to do a series either. So I will generally choose those that stand alone.

  • @rhughes2962
    @rhughes2962 25 дней назад +1

    Headshot is one of my favourite books of the year so far. (I would say I have a passing interest in boxing) There is quite a lot of boxing in it, most of the book is set during a boxing match, kind of like a short-story for each fight, though there is a lot of other content within those chapters. It explores the ways that their characters and their lives affect the way they fight and why they fight which I found really interesting. There's relatively little technical stuff about boxing, more about the psychology of the sport I guess. I thought the first 2/3rds were absolutely excellent, but the ending wobbled a little for me.

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  25 дней назад

      That's very interesting--thanks for sharing your thoughts on the book! I'll probably still wait for the Book Review's book club episode to decide if I want to read it myself, but that does make me feel a lot more interested.

  • @MJ-in-Canada
    @MJ-in-Canada 26 дней назад +5

    I’m not planning to read Dolly Alderton’s book but you’ve got to laugh at a book that’s billed as “pee-your-pants funny.” I’m currently loving a new Irish book (2024), “The Coast Road” by debut novelist Alan Murrin. ☘Set in 1994, it’s about women in small-town Donegal before the legalization of divorce.

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  26 дней назад +2

      I thought about picking that one up when I was in Ireland but held off. I look forward to your thoughts on it!

    • @MJ-in-Canada
      @MJ-in-Canada 26 дней назад +2

      @@SupposedlyFun I’ll report back to you when I’m finished. I’m 30% into it and at this point I can tell you that the author excels at capturing the feeling of gossipy small towns where everyone knows everyone else’s business.

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  26 дней назад +2

      @@MJ-in-Canada That immediately catches my attention. I look forward to more!

    • @marjoriedybec3450
      @marjoriedybec3450 26 дней назад +1

      @BenReadsGood just did a video featuring it. I think he bought it at Hay, perhaps?

    • @MJ-in-Canada
      @MJ-in-Canada 25 дней назад +1

      @@marjoriedybec3450 I'm not one of Ben's subscribers but I might pop over later and see if I can find that video. Thanks for letting us know.

  • @imanolover
    @imanolover 26 дней назад +1

    Good Material was a 5-star read for me. I went in expecting an entertaining British rom-com, and it does kind of start out that way, but by the end I found it quite poignant. It explores how men and women navigate post break-ups in their mid-30s as their social circles slowly dwindle and how one can find fullfillment and personal growth alone. As a single woman about to enter her 30s, it just resonated a lot with me.

  • @marylt
    @marylt 26 дней назад +2

    I have read all three of the colonial expedition books that you mentioned (The Wide Wide Sea, River of the Gods and The Wager) and thought that The Wide Wide Sea was by far the best of the group. I didn't know much about Captain Cook and thought his story was fascinating - a five star read for me.

  • @lynniepie52
    @lynniepie52 26 дней назад +2

    Hi Greg, you might try Wounded by Percival Everett…lesser known but I think you would appreciate it.

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  26 дней назад

      Thanks-I’ll check it out.

    • @shannongeier8155
      @shannongeier8155 26 дней назад +2

      I enjoyed James and then moved onto his Dr. No by Everett. After Dr. No, which I enjoyed, I realized you can't go in thinking his books are straightforward fiction. It ends, you sit for a while, mainly going "Huh." but I find they stay with you. Can't wait to read Erasure because I loved American Fiction so much.

    • @lynniepie52
      @lynniepie52 26 дней назад +2

      Wounded is a shorter book and I’m not Sydney Poitier is a trip! In a good way!

  • @CindyRakowski
    @CindyRakowski 24 дня назад +1

    I've been a subscriber for a while, but this is my first time commenting. Jack Edwards and you are some of my few " always watch."
    Highly recommend Tana French! She's all you could want from an Irish mystery writer because she is one of those great Irish story tellers. Do start with Into the Woods. The books in that series are connected, but loosely, so that "need to read them one after the other" is not really an issue.

    • @CindyRakowski
      @CindyRakowski 24 дня назад +1

      *In the Woods. Sigh...why I rarely comment.

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  24 дня назад

      No worries-I make worse mistakes in my videos all the time! 🤣
      Thanks for sharing your thoughts on Tana French. I will give her a try someday! And thanks for watching.

  • @readandre-read
    @readandre-read 26 дней назад +1

    I loved James and I also really liked The Hunter but I don't think it stands alone; it is very much a sequel to The Searcher. I have Wandering Stars on my book cart and Beautyland on my library list. The NYT fiction suggestions are usually pretty solid for me.

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  24 дня назад +1

      I’ve found the same thing with their fiction recommendations!

  • @1book1review
    @1book1review 23 дня назад +1

    Dolly Alderton is an author I am intrigued by whenever I see people talk about her books and love the covers, but I am not sure it would be a me-book, so still putting them off. I need a year off just to give all those books in that category a try. There are so many. :D

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  23 дня назад

      There really are so many books out there!

  • @Where4_Art_Thou
    @Where4_Art_Thou 26 дней назад +1

    Loved Beautyland.

  • @KurtAnderson812
    @KurtAnderson812 26 дней назад +1

    Have Mrs Quinn’s Rise on my top ten list for the year so far.
    I need a few more cinnamon bun books

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  25 дней назад

      My anxiety level is spiking again, so I think I need to pivot to some cinnamon bun books very soon.

  • @joelwedel5792
    @joelwedel5792 26 дней назад

    Martyr! is my favourite book of the year so far (out of 38 reads in 2024). Definitely don't wait too long to read it, and an fyi that it also fits into pride month if you want to get to it quicker.

  • @tompagnillo
    @tompagnillo 26 дней назад

    Hi Greg, I think the pronunciation of “ Fi” is pronounced as it would be in the Marine Corps motto “ Semperfidelisl “ Aka Semper Fi. Always faithful.

  • @alexsarchives
    @alexsarchives 26 дней назад

    I got through about half of Beautyland. I would say despite its alien messenger setup it's a pretty conventional coming-of-age story. I don't really enjoy reliving the cringe of middle school life, so it wasn't for me, but there's a part of me that's still curious to come back to it.

  • @doreene11
    @doreene11 22 дня назад

    I'm curious, are the NY Times just recommend books written in English? The other two writers who are foreigners on this list (Tana French/Irish and S. Rushdie/Indian) both write in English. It's like there are no more books except English ones, not one translation It's just a thought, and also I'm genuinely asking 🙂 Good job with the video/reaction, Greg!

  • @dwritesbooks5772
    @dwritesbooks5772 25 дней назад +1

    Don’t miss Beautyland. I understand your hesitation. But I think you’ll love it.

  • @lorrainekorytko7927
    @lorrainekorytko7927 25 дней назад +1

    He was speaking at the Chautauqua Institute.

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  24 дня назад

      And I think he went back while writing the book.

  • @junpi8562
    @junpi8562 26 дней назад +1

    The Thursday Murder Club books might bridge the murder mystery/cinnamon bun gap. Four elderly people in an English retirement village solving cold cases as a hobby, very fun. The first one was a 4 star for me, and the second one was a 5.

    • @Fangrrrll
      @Fangrrrll 24 дня назад +2

      I second this! Very cinnamon bun vibes!

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  24 дня назад +1

      My mother-in-law loves the Thursday Murder Club books, so I’ll have to try them at some point. Thanks!

  • @KierTheScrivener
    @KierTheScrivener 26 дней назад +1

    Everyone Who Is Gone is Here is a book I would live to read.

  • @gilliankingston1141
    @gilliankingston1141 25 дней назад +1

    So many people had recommended this Tana French book but I abandoned it after 50 pages. I would far rather have the more interesting thriller writer Nicci French. Alexandra Fuller books are great but do try Cocktail Hour under the Tree of Forgetfullness first.

  • @user-ne4th2nz2z
    @user-ne4th2nz2z 25 дней назад

    Wait, what is the current state of the mystery genre that you’re struggling with? I’m curious about your take on how it’s changed.

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  25 дней назад +1

      I feel like Gone Girl ended up taking over the whole genre. We're starting to come down from that, but I feel like there's an over-reliance on unreliable (usually alcoholic) narrators and 'shocking' twists. I also feel like there's a lot of teasing the reader with hidden secrets that are supposed to be revealed later on in the book (things like "I just couldn't face him after that awful night that I don't want to tell you about right now"). Things like that.

  • @audreyh7892
    @audreyh7892 26 дней назад +1

    I loved the characters in James so much more than in Huck but the pacing felt a bit off. I was just the opposite of you. I found the beginning quite slow and then grew more interested as things started to speed up.

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  25 дней назад

      I was most interested in the middle, actually. It seemed like it was starting to have a very interesting conversation about voice, stories, and who gets to share them. And then it felt like it devolved into something else for me.

  • @pamredden1843
    @pamredden1843 26 дней назад

    I’m half way through Wandering Stars and I just don’t think I can finish it. I never give up on a book, but I’m gonna have to. I loved There,There! But this one,meh…

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  26 дней назад

      I'm sorry you didn't like Wandering Souls as much as I did. Oh well!

  • @arp711
    @arp711 26 дней назад +1

    For the last one, it's pronounced "Fee" although...my brain still wants to say it like "Fie" even though I know it's wrong :P

  • @MsPixieD
    @MsPixieD 26 дней назад

    I recently finished Good Material. I wouldn't call it "snappy funny." It felt more "British funny," like back in the day when I watched 4 Weddings and a Funeral and that one with Hugh Grant they always watch at Christmas and wondered why those were marketed as comedies. Based on the pink and yellow color scheme of the cover you know right away what age group is the target readership. Londoners struggling with careers and singles vs. young families will relate. I thought since the blurbs said the guy was a stand up comedian that there would be stand up-level comedy, but no. He is a schlimazel rather cluelessly going through a breakup. The hat trick that Alderton pulls off is to make the guy so likeable that things I would normally find irritating as a reader don't make me want to dnf it. I wouldn't quite call it "cinnamon bun" read, though (and btw, Greg, watching your videos has exponentially increased the number of times I've thought about cinnamon buns!)
    Even though expectations for comedy might be dashed, and even though it's definitely sounds like a woman writing a male narrator, she does such a good job with the first-person character development that the book won me over and I was willing to hear her out to the end (when we finally get to hear narration from the girlfriend who initiated the breakup, who up to that point I didn't really like).
    Martyr! was recently added to my tbr after seeing it mentioned in a Gunpowder Fiction and Plot video. I see the yellow cover (as in Yellowface and Butter) as a trend and a signal to a hoped-for demographic, as that color was "assigned" to the post-millennial ("millennial pink") generation. (I've also seen a trend for simple, bright color blocking made digitally, and while it's easy to understand the branding advantages of how that shows up so well in little thumbnails on smartphones, I do miss "real" cover art).
    I agree with you about boxing. To me it's a fundamental human right now to be hit by other people, so why anyone does it for fun, or has fun watching people do it, is beyond me. Plus I just have no interest in sports, so any novel based on sports had better be amazing to convince me to consider reading it.

  • @jackwalter5970
    @jackwalter5970 26 дней назад

    I've read two Tana French novels, but IMO she is really not good at endings. I won't read her again. Knife sounds like a must. Don't Let's Go was so harsh I couldn't finish it. Great writing, though.

  • @bc-mv5se
    @bc-mv5se 26 дней назад +1

    Martyr is def an lgbtq book. The b in particular.. Perfect for pride. And a very good book.

  • @lesliepowell-mccarty7067
    @lesliepowell-mccarty7067 26 дней назад +1

    Friends who have read Good Material did not like it. I doubt I'll try it. I borrowed Beautyland from my library. It was a DNF for me. I wasn't in the right mood for it. Others may enjoy it though.

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  26 дней назад +1

      I feel like I would definitely need to be in the right mood for Beautyland if I ever try it.

  • @csd8204
    @csd8204 10 дней назад

    You're a bit of a literary elitist, but nice video. Informative and entertaining.

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  10 дней назад

      I’m glad you enjoyed the video. What makes me a literary elitist?

  • @jennrecord2784
    @jennrecord2784 26 дней назад +2

    The Wager was a good book. Not life-changing, or anything. Very twisted and disturbing in some scenes but not so much that they come back to mind.

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  25 дней назад +1

      Thanks for sharing your thoughts.

  • @anthonybiancanello4702
    @anthonybiancanello4702 26 дней назад +1

    Beautyland isn't for you I think. Quirky musings on humanity from an alien outsider's perspective. Pretty cutesy all things considered (didn't work much for me either)

    • @SupposedlyFun
      @SupposedlyFun  24 дня назад

      That’s good to know-thanks for the honest feedback!

  • @alldbooks9165
    @alldbooks9165 24 дня назад

    Percival Everett books are not “grounded and realistic” so … 🧐