Nineteenth challenge finish of the year.
This one has been on my Kindle since 2013. It took me over a week to finish; I've had other stuff going on. My daughter and I were reading it at the same time; I finished it last night, she finished it today. I was reading it on my Kindle; she was reading a paperback, but may have switched over to audiobook, as she said the print in the paperback was almost too small to read. At 416 pages of tiny print, maybe that's why it took me so long. I really thought she was going to beat me to the finish line.
I didn't love it, and can't put my finger on why. The main characters were likable, most of the secondary characters not so much. I was contemplating exactly what kept me from really liking it. It is based in Greek mythology, and as I was thinking back to high school literature classes, I realized I didn't enjoy learning about mythology even then. So maybe I can chalk it up to it just not being a genre I enjoy.
Twentieth challenge finish of the year.
I don't like to try to rate non-fiction. I'll say that it is not light reading. This was along the lines of a journal written by C.S. Lewis as a way to work through his grief after his wife died from cancer.
Tomorrow will be the 27th anniversary of the death of my best friend, also from cancer. Did I pick this one now on purpose? I didn't think so, but perhaps. I will probably read it again. It's impossible to absorb and process something this deep in one read through. But it had enough points I agreed with that I would like to revisit it.
I'm now about halfway through the bigraphical fiction book about C.S. Lewis and his wife that will fill prompt 45.
The first quarter of the year is behind us already! I'm satisfied with the challenge progress I've made so far. I've read books for each prompt that has red arrows at their number. And if a prompt number has two red arrows pointing to it, it means the book that I read for that one has been lingering on my Kindle for a loooong time.



