This year I started the PopSugar Reading Challenge right in January and worked pretty well on it for a while. I didn't finish, but I did get 25 categories of the 50 covered. I only allowed myself to count a book in one category, even if it would fit in more than one. I also didn't count anything that I didn't finish...ooops! And things like articles didn't count.
Total for the year: I finished 43 books (low for me) with over 16500 pages read (low for me), but I feel pretty good about it. The oldest book I read was published in 1939 (And Then There Were None) and the newest were published this year. The longest book was 662 pages (The Name of the Wind).
REGULAR (24 of 40 finished!)
- A book recommended by a Librarian
- A book that's been on your To Be Read list for way to long
City of Stairs by Robert Jackson Bennett (452 pages, read in hard copy in April 2017, published in 2014, fiction--fantasy) How it fits the category? Three years isn't ALL that long, but I got this book for free when it was featured by its publisher at the ALA conference in 2014. There was actually a really cool display/advertisement on a staircase...*so* clever! It is a pretty neat book, with a setting that is kind of an alternate, fantastical future in India, Russia, and Asia. - A book of letters
- An audiobook
Born a Crime:Stories from a South African Childhood by Trevor Noah (304 pages--8 hours and 50 minutes, published in 2016, narrated by the author, non-fiction--memoir) How it fits the category? It is an audio book and I would recommend listening to this one instead of reading it. It is like the author really is telling you stories. Plus, the language, voices, and accents make it worth it. - A book by a person of color
- A book with one of the four seasons in the title
Dragons of Autumn Twilight by Margaret Weis and Tracey Hickman (444 pages, read in hard copy, published in 1984, fiction--fantasy) How it fits the category? "Well," says Captain Obvious, "It has the word 'autumn' in the title, there." - A book that is a story within a story
The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss (662 pages, read in hard copy, published in 2007, in April 2017, fiction--fantasy) How it fits the category? The whole book is a story being told over two days/nights in the main character's pub in an out-of-the-way town. Sometimes it is actually a story within a story within a story! - A book with multiple authors
Magic Bites by Ilona Andrews (260 pages, read on kindle and phone, published in 2007, read in December 2017, fiction--urban fantasy) How it fits the category? Written by a husband-wife team Ilona and Andrew Gordon. - An espionage thriller
- A book with a cat on the cover
In the Hand of the Goddess by Tamora Pierce (264 pages, read in hardcopy, published in 1984, read in August 2017, fiction--fantasy, YA/middle grade) How it fits the category? It has Faithful, Alana's magical cat on the cover, complete with violet eyes. This is a re-read and an old favorite, but I had a hard time finding books featuring illustrations of cats... - A book by an author that uses a pseudonym
Melusine by Sarah Monette (477 pages, read in hard copy in June 2017, published in 2006, fiction--high fantasy) How it fits the category? So....this book was written under the author's real name, but she also has written under the pseudonym Katherine Addison. - A bestseller from a genre you don't normally read
- A book by or about someone with a disability
- A book involving travel
The Talented Mr. Ripley by Patricia Highsmith (273 pages, read in hard copy, published in 1955, read in June/July 2017, fiction-mystery/literature) How it fits the category? The titular Tom Ripley travels to Italy on Mr. Greenleaf's dime, to get Greenleaf's wayward son Dickie to come home. Tom travels to the small village in Italy, then around Italy with Dickie, then kills Dickie, then travels around pretending to BE Dickie, and finally leaves Italy for Greece under his own identity. - A book with a subtitle
- A book published in 2017
Etched in Bone (#5 in The Others series) by Anne Bishop (397 pages, read in hard copy, published in 2017, read in March 2017, fiction-urban fantasy) How it fits the category? Erm...it was published in 2017. - A book involving a mythical creature
Rebel of the Sands by Alwyn Hamilton (314 pages, read in hard copy in February 2017, published in 2016, fiction-fantasy) How it fits the category? This is a fantasy novel--that has guns in it--set in a a desert. There are mythical beasts roaming around, including djinn (genies!). - A book that you've read before that never fails to make you smile
One for the Money by Janet Evanovich (320 pages, read in hard copy, published in 1994, read in July 2017, fiction--mystery) How it fits the category? I first read this book the first time I worked at the bookstore--between 2003 and 2005. The series was quite popular and I wondered what all the fuss was about. I think these are pretty funny books, though this one had more violence than I remember from before. I sort of love that cars keep blowing up, that she has a pet hamster, and that the hot private security guy keeps saving her. - A book about food
- A book with career advice
- A book from a nonhuman perspective
Silence Fallen by Patricia Briggs (371 pages, read in hard copy and read in April 2017, published in 2017, fiction--urban fantasy) How it fits the category? The main character is a non-human, a coyote shapeshifter. - A steampunk novel
Mission Impossible (London Steampunk: The Blue Blood Conspiracy #1) by Bec McMaster (380 pages, read on phone in November 2017, published 2016, fiction--steampunk urban fantasy?)How it fits the category? This is a bit of a silly book that is very cross-genre. Sort of a procedural, steampunk, werewolf/vampire, romance book. - A book with a red spine
A Court of Thorns and Roses by Sarah J. Maas (416 pages, read in hard copy, published in 2015, read in February 2017, fiction--YA, fantasy) How it fits the category? Well, the spine of the book is red, like the cover :) - A book set in the wilderness
- A book you loved as a child
The Woman Who Rides Like a Man - Song of the Lionness Quartet #3 by Tamora Pierce (253 pages, read in hard copy, published in 1986, read in July 2017, fiction--young adult, fantasy) How it fits the category? I read this series when I was a kid and loved the girl-disguises-herself-as-a-boy story. This and the Robin McKinley books (Blue Sword and Hero & the Crown) were favorites in childhood. The women were women that embraced all aspects of themselves, their strength, smarts, abilities, and ultimately their femininity, as well. - A book by an author from a country you've never visited
The Heart Goes Last by Margaret Atwood (308 pages , read on phone, published 2015, read January 2017, fiction--sci-fi, literature) How it fits the category? Margaret Atwood is Canadian...and it sometimes shows through in this book. Occasionally someone will say something that is much more Canadian than American, even though the book is set in the U.S. - A book with a title that's a character's name
Alanna: The First Adventure - Song of the Lionness Quartet #1 by Tamora Pierce (274 pages, read in hard copy, published in 1983, read in July 2017, fiction--young adult, fantasy) How it fits the category? Duh. - A novel set during wartime
- A book with an unreliable narrator
- A book with pictures
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Volume 1 by Alan Moore (192 pages, read in hard copy, published in 1999, read in July 2017, graphic novel) How it fits the category? It's a graphic novel. I'm still not a graphic novel fan, but I keep trying to find one that I enjoy. This, at least, only took an hour to read. It was a Amazing Book Club of Doom selection for the movie/book meeting month (where we traditionally eat pie!). - A book where the main character is a different ethnicity than youSmilla's Sense of Snow by Peter Hoeg (469 pages, read in hard copy, published in 1995, read in February 2017, fiction--mystery) How it fits the category? The main character, Smilla Jasperson, is half Danish and half indigenous-Greenlander. Raised in Greenland by her mother--mostly in a traditional, in-nature sense--she is a unique character...torn between the two very different parts of her. The mystery involves the death of her neighbor, a little boy who is also part-Greenlander.
- A book about an interesting woman
Trick of the Light by Rob Thurman (339 pages, read in hard copy, published 2009, read September 2017, fiction--urban fantasy) How it fits the category? The main character, Trixa, is interesting in a number of ways: she owns a dive bar that she lives above, has a pet crow, has a semi-reformed-from-really-bad best friend, took in two "stray" teens who have psychic abilities and are now in their 20s, has an ongoing battle-flirtation with a vampire, etc. And then there's the ending, which I won't spoil here. - A book set in two different time periods:
Future Shock by Elizabeth Briggs (272 pages, read in hard copy, published 2016, read January 2017, fiction--YA). How it fits the category? A group of teenagers are recruited to travel to the future in a type of corporate espionage. They were supposed to be sent 10 years forward, but end up 30 years in the future and they discover that someone is going to kill them upon their return to the present. - A book with a month or a day of the week in the title
- A book set in a hotel
And then there were None by Agatha Christie (264 pages, published in 1939, Read in December 2017 in hard copy, fiction--mystery) How it fits the category? I mean, technically the plot follows 10 guests at a private island house...but it is like a hotel, complete with staff. Read the book and saw the play for December bookclub and they varied quite a bit, including the ending. - A book written by someone you admire
- A book that's becoming a movie in 2017
The Circle by Dave Eggers (493 pages, read on my phone, published 2013, Read in July 2017, fiction--maybe sci-fi?) How it fits the category? It was made into an Emma Watson/Tom Hanks movie this year. Haven't watched it yet, but I will. This story is pretty scary because it was written over 4 years ago and the way social media works has followed the path in this book. :( - A book set around a holiday other than Christmas
- The first book in a series you haven't read before:
Six of Crows by Leigh Bardugo (465 pages, read in hard copy, published 2015, read January-February 2017, fiction--YA, fantasy) How it fits the category? This is the first of a duology that is actually set in the same world as a previous trilogy. (But this is a separate book that can be read individually.) I've been meaning to read it since it came out. In fact, I got it the week it came out because I stumbled upon it on Amazon.com and thought, "Awesome!" It is a combo of fantasy and a heist story. And certainly more of a book for teens than for younger readers--all characters are flawed, there is a certain amount of violence, and adult themes like abuse and prostitution that are handled in not-graphic, but effective ways. I was lucky to get the sequel from a vendor for only $5 at ALA Midwinter this year. - A book you bought on a trip
ADVANCED (1 of 12 finished)
- A book recommended by an author you love
- A bestseller from 2016
- A book with a family-member name in the title
- A book that takes place over a character's life span
- A book about an immigrant or a refugee
- A book from a genre/subgenre that you've never heard of
- A book with an eccentric character
- A book that's more than 800 pages
- A book you got from a used book sale
Ghosts in the Snow by Tamara Siler Jones (488 pages, read in hard copy, published in 2004, read Feb. to March 2017, fiction--fantasy, mystery) How it fits the category? I purchased this from a used book sale in Chapel Hill back when I was in grad school. Turns out it is a cool blend of mystery, fantasy, and historical novel. - A book that's been mentioned in another book
- A book about a difficult topic
- A book based on mythology
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