Tuesday, January 7, 2025

My Sign Up Post -- 2025 EUROPEAN READING CHALLENGE

 


THE 2025 EUROPEAN READING CHALLENGE

My Sign Up Post

This is my sign up post for the 2025 European Reading Challenge. To join the challenge yourself (and I hope you do), go to the main challenge page, here

Even though this is the 13th year I've hosted the challenge, I haven't been very good about my own participation. Last year, I even forgot to do a sign up post! I resolve to do better in 2025. 

I haven't picked any particular books for the challenge. Those in the photo are possibilities. My real goal is to read books by authors from, or set in, countries I don't often visit in books. I always read many books set in the UK or by UK authors. France is a close follow up. I usually manage to visit Italy, Greece, and a couple of Scandinavian countries (thanks to Nordic Noir). But I seldom get to the Baltics, Balkans, or micro states. And I read pathetically few books in translation. I hope to address both these weaknesses this year.

I want to pay particular attention to the Balkans this year because my sister and I are taking our 85-year-old mother on a cruise this summer. We will go to Greece, Montenegro, Croatia, Slovenia, and Italy. I want to read a book by an author from each of these countries, preferably set in each country, before I go. 

Any suggestions? Here's what I came up with as possibilities:

GREECE: Zorba the Greek by Nikos Kazantzakis

MONTENEGRO:

CROATIA:

SLOVENIA:

ITALY: Bread and Wine by Ignazio Silone

I have no ideas for the three countries left blank. I could be talked out of the two I picked for Greece and Italy. I picked books on my TBR shelves. 

I'm going to go back to the review pages for prior years of this challenge and see if I can find any for the missing three countries. 

  




1 comment :

  1. I know you already have Zorba, but for Greece think about Margarita Liberal's Three Summers. Gorgeous prose, good translation & great story about three sisters growing up near Athens during WWII. As for others, try NYRB Classics -- it does tons of very interesting, translated literature.

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