A couple of follow-ups (follows-up, if you must) to the Lost Man's River review: firstly I alluded to it having taken quite a long time to read - just to apply some exactitude there I have that number as 63 days. The last book to take longer than that was Auto Da Fe back in 2022; looking back further there was....oh, heck, let's do a table:
| Book | Pages | Completion date | Days | Pg/Day |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lost Man's River | 539 | 19th April 2026 | 63 | 8.56 |
| Auto Da Fe | 428 | 13th June 2022 | 66 | 6.48 |
| The Pope's Rhinoceros | 753 | 6th September 2021 | 61 | 12.34 |
| A Man In Full | 742 | 2nd August 2018 | 56 | 13.25 |
| The Human Stain | 361 | 23rd December 2017 | 60 | 6.02 |
| The Conservationist | 323 | 22nd July 2017 | 67 | 4.82 |
| Zeno's Conscience | 437 | 4th December 2016 | 78 | 5.60 |
| Midnight's Children | 463 | 16th September 2014 | 91 | 5.09 |
| Infinite Jest | 1079 | 10th February 2013 | 96 | 11.24 |
| The Name Of The Rose | 502 | 28th June 2012 | 53 | 9.47 |
| Sunset Song | 258 | 12th August 2008 | 66 | 3.91 |
That's applying 50 days as an arbitrary cut-off date. Infinite Jest remains the leader here, though to be fair it is also the longest book on this entire list. Sunset Song is the shortest book to clock up over 50 days to read and as a result nabs the award for slowest read at a glacial 3.91 pages per day. I can't remember what I would have been doing to distract me from reading in summer 2008 but it was pre-kids so it was probably some carefree frolicking and spending of ample disposable income or some nonsense of that sort.
Secondly, you'll recall that Killing Mister Watson included a couple of maps at various scales showing the area where the action takes place; Lost Man's River contains what at first glance appears to be the same set of maps, but closer examination reveals some differences, reflecting the decades-later setting of the second book (later map on the right below).

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