Oops it’s nearly the end of October so I am very late dipping into the TBR Book Jar this month. Not to worry, I’m pretty sure none of you were unduly concerned about my tardiness. But now I’ve completed the task with the aid of my wonderful assistant (Mr Booker Talk) so here are the three titles that resulted. Which of these would you recommend I read in the next few months.

I Am Dust by Louise Beech

This is a tale of magic and murder set against the backdrop of the theatrical world. The blurb on Goodreads tells me that the action takes place at a theatre believed to be haunted by a long-dead actress, singing her last song, waiting for her final cue, looking for her killer. That same theatre is now about to host a revival of a musical in which that actress played the starring role. A reviewer on Goodreads describes the book as “ghostly, mysterious, emotional, atmospheric and has a touch of the supernatural.”

The Radium Girls: The Dark Story of America’s Shining Women by Kate Moore

I’m not certain but I think I acquired this book as a result of Non Fiction November. It’s a true account about a scandal involving young girls who worked in factories where they handled radium, using it to paint luminescent dials onto watch faces. it wasn’t just the watches that glowed in the dark; so did the girls as the radium settled over their skin, clothes and hair. When those same girls began to fall sick in increasing numbers, questions were raised about the harmful effects of their expose to radium. The result was a groundbreaking battle for workers’ rights in the USA.

The Sellout by Paul Beatty

My project to read the Booker Prize winners ended with 2015, the year before Beatty won with a satire about a young man’s isolated upbringing and the race trial that sends him to the Supreme Court, He doesn’t seem to have been a popular winner — in the Goodreads community group that reads/comments on the Booker contenders every year, there were several comments that the satire became tiresome. One of the contributors described The Sellout as “a book that is memorable only in its sheer awfulness.” Ouch.

Which book do you recommend?

Do you have a favourite among these three books? I’m leaning towards The Radium Girls

When I started the book jar lucky dip at the beginning of the year my intention was to read each selected book within two months. In the light of my decision last month to take a more relaxed approach to my reading, I’m now going to give myself an additional month. Whichever book you choose from this trip, will be one i aim to read by end of December.

The People’s Vote from September

Thanks to everyone who pitched in with my September lucky dip options. There were several fans of Commonwealth by Ann Patchett but slightly more votes in favour of A Small Revolution in Germany by Philip Hensher. So Hensher it shall be.

17 responses to “TBR Book Jar Lucky Dip — October 2024”

  1. Definitely interested in the Louise Beech book!

  2. No idea! I know none of them,

  3. I listened to The Radium Girls, my VERDICT: A horrifying tale. Great research but dry style. And dry narration for the audiobook performance.
    https://wordsandpeace.com/2022/03/14/book-review-the-radium-girls-the-dark-story-of-americas-shining-women/

    Beatty: big name, but I am not too much into satire. I didn’t read it, but my husband did, and he hated it, lol

    1. I’m not a great fan of satire either. Maybe Radium Girls will work better in print format??

  4. I haven’t read any of these. I’ve had a copy of The Radium Girls for a few years, so I’ll be interested to know what you think of it, if it’s chosen.

    1. There is an interesting comment from Words and Peace on her reaction to the book

  5. The Radium Girls is the only one I have read. Highly recommended even if the content is distressing.

    1. Another blogger who commented here said she found the style very dry – was that your experience

  6. I would go straight to the ghost and the musical. But only because I am really tired at the negativity and sadness and anxious about the world just now. Maybe when the US election is over I will feel much better or mich worse. Hahaha Need some distraction and a ghost would provide that😃😃😃

    1. Well that’s a fair point. maybe that’s why I’ve been reading more crime fiction than normal recently??

  7. Radium Girls sounds interesting, because it’s the sort of thing we ought to know about, but I don’t know that I’d want to read a whole book about it.
    I’ve read a novel about a similar sort of issue. Last Day in the Dynamite Factory (2015), by Annah Faulkner got itself tangled up in too many relationship issues but it also unearthed the dangers experienced by many women working in munitions factories during the war, (Remember that episode in Foyle’s War where a young woman died in an explosion?)
    I have never been able to muster the slightest interest in The Sellout. I miss the old Booker when we used occasionally to get some marvellous book from somewhere that wasn’t the UK or the US.

    1. I’m with you on the recent offerings from the Booker Prize lists. I look at the lists and can’t summon up a huge level of interest.

  8. I haven’t read any of them, but you’ve reminded me that I wanted to read I Am Dust and then somehow it slipped off my radar. So if by chance it becomes your chosen one, you might persuade me to finally get around to it. Or you might persuade me to leave it off my list permanently… 😉

    1. I might read it as a way of distracting me from all the depressing news from around the world

  9. I’ve had Radium Girls on my tbr for a long time!

    1. I had thought you were the one who put me onto it Carol but I did a quick search on your site yesterday and didn’t find it, so that put the lid on that idea

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