bayboi's books for the year!

Keskustelu75 Books Challenge for 2024

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bayboi's books for the year!

1bayboi55
helmikuu 15, 9:35 am

I read a wide variety of genres from mystery to romance to even manga. If you're looking for a variety of content for 2024 this is the thread to go to!

2drneutron
helmikuu 15, 12:34 pm

Welcome!

3bayboi55
helmikuu 19, 10:59 pm

Still working on some technical aspects of the thread. Not sure how to hyperlink books, but once I figure that out, I will post the books I have already read this year.

4bayboi55
Muokkaaja: helmikuu 20, 4:50 pm

Book 1! Sleeping Freshman Never Lie

This book, in my opinion, is a slight exaggeration of all the topics that it addresses. The characters are all over the top, but that is kind of the point. The plot hinges upon the humor of it all yet has an unpredictable ending. Anyone wanting a coming-of-age book that is darkly humorous with some real-world issues addressed, this it the one!

5bayboi55
Muokkaaja: helmikuu 20, 4:50 pm

Books 2-7: Wotakoi: Love Is Hard for Otaku, Vol. 1

I linked only the first book in the series of six, but there are six total.
This manga series is the best I have read so far. Most manga today are focused on one of two things.
1. Crazy ridiculous fantasy stories with unbelievably powerful characters,
2. High schoolers in a cliche setting and circumstance.
This does neither. It is adult in its themes, but not inappropriate. It has more than one story line, and not one is boring. Just a simple slice of life about adults who don't fit in. I would highly recommend.

6bayboi55
helmikuu 20, 4:45 pm

Book 8: Stung by Bethany Wiggins

This book is one that I read in high school and wanted to revisit. It's an apocalyptic story with an interesting plot Very anti-government, but also anti-anarchy. It makes everyone the bad guy, and the main character is on her own most of the time. Well worth the re-read.

7bayboi55
helmikuu 20, 4:48 pm

Book 9: Cured by Bethany Wiggins

This book, the sequel to Stung, I had not previously read. The start is iffy. The main characters from the first book decide to leave the comfort and safety they earned in order to adventure for something that is, in my opinion, not worth it. They introduce new likable characters and focus less on the old government tropes and more on the anarchy tropes. Again, it is the group of main characters vs the world, and a decent sequel.

8bayboi55
Muokkaaja: helmikuu 20, 4:59 pm

Book 10: Bloodlust: Irresistible by Michael Bates

Found this one for a dollar at a used bookstore, and it is my best find so far in that manner. Short, quick, but builds the world well. The idea of a jealous high schooler making perfume that will drive her enemies to murder is a great one, and somewhat sympathetic. If you can get your hands on a copy, I would.

9bayboi55
helmikuu 20, 4:51 pm

Book 11: Death on the Nile by Agatha Christie

This is a popular one, but I'm trying to read more classic works, so I started here. Not much I can say that hasn't already been said. Christie is one of the best authors to write.

10bayboi55
helmikuu 20, 4:56 pm

Book 12: You'd Be Home Now by Kathleen Glasgow

Kathleen Glasgow is becoming one of the most popular contemporary authors, and she deserves it. This ballad about a high school girl helpless to get her brother out of drug addiction is masterful and is not one dimensional. Glasgow captures one of the most realistic portrayals of high school I have seen in literature.

11bayboi55
helmikuu 20, 4:59 pm

Book 13: Kill All Your Darlings by David Bell

David Bell is my favorite mystery author and might be my favorite author hands down. This is another multi-dimensional mystery about ordinary people, Bell's specialty. It touches on the difficulty of being a writer by profession, sexual harassment in Academia, and the struggle of college. All while spinning a mystery of two murders connected by a plagiarized book the protagonist publishes. Masterful work.

12bayboi55
helmikuu 20, 5:01 pm

Book 14: Glass Wings by Misuzu Asaoka

This one-shot manga is a decent read for a day. It takes place in three parts following three different characters, all who are outcast for supernatural reasons. The metaphor is there, and is good.

13Tess_W
helmikuu 20, 5:01 pm

Welcome and good luck with your 2024 reading.

14bayboi55
helmikuu 20, 5:04 pm

Book 15: Boys Abyss 4 by Ryo Minenami

Boys Abyss is a manga that is currently being translated into English, and only four out of the twelve are available. This manga is very good, but mature. The plot follows a high schooler trapped in his hometown for a few factors, yet women keep coming into his life that try to get him out, one way or another. While the sexual aspects are a bit much depending on what you're looking for, the story is amazing, and I recommend it if you want to get into manga without having to buy and read a million volumes of something.

15bayboi55
helmikuu 20, 5:04 pm

>13 Tess_W: Thank You!

16bayboi55
maaliskuu 24, 12:12 pm

Book 16: Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut

Yet another book on my quest to be well read in American Literature. As someone who wants to be a lit teacher at some point, knew this was one I would need to read. Also it was assigned in a class so I kind of had to.

Vonnegut earned his status as an American Lit legend with this book, and I can see why. It is the easiest to read book I have ever read. It is quick but consumed me whole for the duration of time I was reading it. The blend of sci-fi and a wartime book by using time travel is an interesting concept that I have not seen done anywhere else, but the book is fantastic with it. Somehow gritty and hilarious at the same time, it feels wrong to laugh at some parts that Vonnegut approaches with satire. Fantastic book.

17drneutron
maaliskuu 24, 5:09 pm

Vonnegut’s great! Cat’s Cradle is my second favorite of his after Slaughterhouse Five.

18bayboi55
maaliskuu 29, 11:17 pm

>17 drneutron: Planning on reading Breakfast of Champions as well.

19bayboi55
maaliskuu 29, 11:28 pm

Books 17-18: Your Name, Another Side: Earthbound by Makoto Shinkai

This two volume manga series is a piece produced after the success of the Your Name movie, which is one of my favorites. The movie is the story of a boy and girl who's minds swap within each other's bodies, and they have to work together to figure out why. This book explores the point of views of the other characters from the movie that are not the two protagonists, those being a friend of the girl, as well as her father and little sister.

While not as good as the movie, this manga throws a ton of context into the mix, about why the girl hates her father, why the town she lives in is miserable, and what the three different characters want to do about it. I give it four stars, and it is well worth the read if you liked the movie.

20bayboi55
maaliskuu 30, 11:13 pm

Book 19: Lolita by Valdimir Nabokov

This book is the next stop in my aim to be an expert in American Literature. Lolita has seen its fair share of controversy. It barely earned publication due to the content and has been banned multiple times in many countries. I picked up the book because of this controversy, and because I knew that it would be the most challenging read that I've undertaken. I've taken two things from this book.

1. Nabokov perfects the unreliable narrator.

Reading the exploits of a predator like Humbert Humbert is a challenge, and the need to constantly be fully invested in this book, due to its language and vague metaphors, was tough. Reading the actions of a pedophile, even in the slim detail this book provides, will push any reader to their limits. But that's the point. It is understood that these events being told are accurate, and having it told by the perpetrator is convinces the readers just how disgusting H. H. is. It convinces the audience of the depravity that is on display.

2. Theme is EXTREMELY important.

At the surface level, it is the story of a predator's countrywide exploits with a young girl. However, thematically, it is an examination of American culture during the post WWII era. The girl, Dolores, is obsessive over all of the "capitalist" offerings of the American countryside. The European Humbert Humbert watches in awe as Dolores fills her time with these things. As nasty as it is, it is a testament to the European view of America in my opinion. A complete obsession.

Tough read, but worth the time spent.

21bayboi55
huhtikuu 2, 2:48 pm

Book 20: I Am Watching You by Teresa Driscoll

This novel is a shorter mystery read, one that tries to do a lot. My biggest praise for it is that it has range. There are so many side stories within the book, most will be able to find something to relate to. From parental abuse, teen pregnancy, self-harm, adultery, and most importantly, guilt. This book does too much in my opinion. I forget that this book is mainly about a stalker because there is so much more going on all at once.

The choice to jump between perspectives of different characters is a bold one for any novel, and I feel it was essential for what this is trying to do. The interwoven plots would be impossible to explain without the jumping POV. However, the 6+ characters that get featured chapters is a lot to comprehend, and you need to be paying great attention to remember who we are seeing from.

Still, it was enjoyable, and quick. I enjoyed it.

22bayboi55
huhtikuu 4, 12:47 pm

Book 21: Step Closer by Scott Cawthon

This book is a collection of three short stories set in the Universe of the Five Nights at Freddy's video game. This is the fourth volume in the series Fazbear Frights, which has over ten titles now, each with three short stories. I've previously read the first three.

The stories are written by the creator of the game, so it is not a true author writing it. This doesn't take away from it much, and makes the stories feel homier. As a fan of the games, nothing would make me dislike these shorts. All horror, usually with younger protagonists and some form of animatronic bad guy, with some good endings, some bad endings. For a book bought in a Walmart, it's not too bad, and does the game justice.

23Owltherian
huhtikuu 4, 12:48 pm

>22 bayboi55: My brother has a few of his books!

24bayboi55
huhtikuu 11, 9:21 am

>23 Owltherian: Cawthon does a good job creating these, even though he isn't a true author. I would recommend any of the series' he has written alongside the games to any FNAF fan.

25Owltherian
huhtikuu 11, 9:22 am

>24 bayboi55: Yeah, i have played most of his games, except for the VR ones

26bayboi55
Muokkaaja: huhtikuu 11, 10:22 am

Book 22: The Wolves Are Waiting by Natasha Friend

This book is a YA essential in my opinion. The writing is fantastic and makes a mystery flow better than I have seen in any modern mystery writer. She gives readers enough to hold onto every chapter, meaning that it is very hard to get bored with. The subject matter is heavy but important to write about, although I'll throw in a trigger warning for SA as well.

One thing I don't like about this book is it's portrayal of feminism. It is a weird critique, because Friend writes about the MeToo movement very well, but the feminist characters are different. They all seem very extreme, and to a reader who is unfamiliar with the modern feminist movement, or one that is opposed to it, it would be hard for them to catch onto it.

27elorin
huhtikuu 14, 11:41 pm

>22 bayboi55: How do you define a true author?

28bayboi55
huhtikuu 16, 10:33 am

>27 elorin: I guess that is very subjective. In my opinion, anyone that writes something is an author. However, I true author is someone who's life's work is writing whatever it is they write. In Cawthon's case, he is a good writer and author, but not a true author.

29bayboi55
Muokkaaja: huhtikuu 21, 12:54 pm

Book 23: Somebody I Used to Know by David Bell

David Bell does it again. He has now firmly stamped himself in as my favorite author. There is no one else's writing that I could read in two days, especially when it is up to 400 pages.

This mystery revolves around a lookalike spiraling a man into an investigation that almost gets him killed, and I love it. The ending is somehow expected and unpredictable at the same time, don't ask me how. But a lot of this book has the complexity to keep readers turning the pages, while simultaneously understanding everything.

The complex relationships that the main character has with a multitude of other characters, including his ex-wife, stepson, former college lover, and members of the police force are immaculate. The wild goose chase that Bell takes readers on is amazing.

Top tier mystery fiction.

30bayboi55
toukokuu 2, 6:36 pm

Book 24: Never Have I Ever by Joshilyn Jackson

This book is an interesting case of thriller writing, and one that I enjoyed. Most thrillers based around secrets let them be secrets. This, however, is a book about trying to keep a secret that the readers know. It is a fun twist on the genre.

I think that the MC blows out of proportion how bad her secret is. She thinks that if it comes out, she would lose her husband, her friends, and her livelihood, but I don't think it was THAT serious. I'll leave readers to decide, because I could be wrong.

TW about sexual assault, but it's not graphic.

Overall, I liked the book, I just think that the thing it hinges upon is not as serious as the characters believe it is.

31bayboi55
toukokuu 3, 9:55 am

Book 25: Sakamoto Days Volume 11 by Yuto Suzuki

This manga is responsible for getting me into shonen manga full time. I have loved every volume of this, having read the first 10 in 2023. The premise is fun, the art is outstanding, and the story is complex and weighty, making me crave each new volume. The last one comes out in June, and I cannot wait.

32bayboi55
Muokkaaja: toukokuu 7, 9:32 pm

Books 26-29: Assassination Classroom Volumes 1-4 by Yusei Matsui

This series has me hooked, and my bank account is not ready for the next 18 volumes that I have to read.

This is the funniest manga I have read, and it has a mix of everything that makes shonen manga amazing. It does not take itself too seriously, has a plethora of amazing characters, and somehow has no true antagonist.

I can't say enough good about this series, and I would highly recommend if you have the capabilities to get all 22 volumes, because you'll want to read them all in a day.

33bayboi55
toukokuu 5, 7:42 pm

Book 30: Boys Abyss, Vol. 5 by Ryo Minenami

This volume of Boys Abyss does more for the series than past volumes have. The first four, while enjoyable, spent a lot of time setting up background, which involved a lot of random sexual encounters, and a bleak situation for the MC.

This volume, however, shows the first true signs of the plot moving forward. Bad guys get worse, and some of the likeable characters become sketchy, and not the most appealing. It moves the story forward and leaves a cliff hanger that will have me instantly buying the next volume when it comes out.

And this does it without sexual content.

Fan service aside, the sexual content is a large part of the series, and this volume has almost none. It does all it needs to do without having to distract with nudity.

34bayboi55
Muokkaaja: toukokuu 13, 11:44 am

Book 31: If He Had Been with Me by Laura Nowlin

There are a million things I would like to say about this book, all of which are negative, but I will limit myself to just three of them.

This book might be the most unrealistic portrayal of a high school setting I have ever seen. It is worse than Netflix dramas. Here is a female MC who purposefully leaves the clique of popular people, nothing wrong with that. But Nowlin does this only to try and make here character interesting, and most of the time, her only personality trait is that she relishes being a loser. She is also described as hot all the time, like it needs to be said that she and her friends are all losers, but they're still very hot, and that is important. It is ridiculous.

The story spans four years of time in 400 pages, which I think is reckless. The first two years, about 200 pages are all exposition and world building. It is a waste of time. I can describe those two years in two sentences and tell the reader to start halfway through the book, and they would miss nothing.

The ending. The ending is the worst thing about this book. Shock value aside, Nowlin thinks so highly of herself that she thinks she can make twenty different horrible things happen to her character in the last ten pages. And none of them make sense. If she chose one, and leaned into it, it might work. But she just spins the wheel of tragedy five times and uses all of them.

This book was a colossal waste of time, and the only benefit I got out of it is seeing how terrible literature can blow up because of the internet. This should never have been published anywhere, and it is only popular because teenage girls who consider themselves "disturbed" have a book to latch onto.

Climate activists should glue their hands to Nowlin's living room floor for the blatant murder of thousands of trees used to make the paper that this book was printed on.