Challenge completed on July 24
Friday, May 31, 2024
Erin's Book Challenge 21.0
Wednesday, May 29, 2024
2024 Summer Reading Challenge @Messy Middle
Been waiting for this one! One of my favorite summer challenges. I will get as many books as possible during the time indicated.
It will start on June 1 (I know!! Sorry for the last minute) and run through August 16, 2024. To enter, read seven books from 25 plus categories and leave a comment at the end of the challenge with the books you read. That’s all. No entrance fee, no hassle, just fun. Also, if you’re trying to find this on the website, surprise, you’re going to struggle because the website is being redone :). Why not add that into the mix, right :)?!
But here in the messy middle, we sally forth!
What’s different?
A book related to the Olympics (Paris, we see you!)
A book related to weddings or marriage (My oldest niece is getting married)
A book related a broken bone (My mom’s femur broke ☹)
What’s the same?
Many categories will be similar because reading is reading. As mentioned above, you will notice a few new gems
Choosing a penalty book within the first week of the challenge. A penalty book or category is one you declare to yourself I will read or be penalized. The last six summers I’ve selected a penalty book and it worked, except that my penalty book two years was horrible. I’m now a bit gun shy, but am reminding my self that my track record is 87% good books. I tend to choose “long” history books that I have meant to get around to but this summer is different … my penalty book was an impulse buy last Saturday and has the potential for me to not get around to it . . . so ha! I’m tricking myself into reading it! My penalty book for 2024 is Beaverland: How One Weird Rodent Made America by Leila Philip.
Like previous years, if you do not read your “penalty” book, you will subtract two books from your total.
The joy of reading!
What’s in it for you?
All who comment on a summary blog post that I’ll publish on August 12th will be entered to win one of ten $10 Amazon gift cards. You will have between August 12-16th to comment with the names of the books you read.
Drumroll . . . here are the categories!
- A biography or a book about history: Thunderstruck--Erik Larson
- A book you already own: Summer on Sag Harbor--Sunny Hostin
- A book you’ve been wanting to reread: Where'd You Go, Bernadette--Maria Semple
- A book a friend recommended: Mistress of All Evil--Serena Valentino
- A Young Adult book (YA): Burn for Burn--Jenny Han & Siobhan Vivian
- A book of poetry: Kabir's Jacket Has a Thousand Pockets--Ayaz Pirari
- A memoir or autobiography: Rolling Warrior--Judith Heumann
- A graphic novel: Lumberjanes: Out of Time--Noelle Stevenson
- A book for professional development (loosely defined): Meditations for Personal Healing--Louise L. Hay
- A book longer than 600 pages (counts as two books): The Fiery Cross--Diana Gabaldon
- A book with a verb in the title: I'll Take You There--Joyce Carol Oates
- A play: Prometheus Bound--Aeschylus
- A book about a country or culture you’ve never visited: Yellowface--R.F. Kuang
- A book that won an award: Whistling Past the Graveyard--Susan Crandall
- A book by an author you know (get “credit” for supporting your friends 😊)
- A mystery or classic: The Leper of St. Giles--Ellis Peters
- An audiobook: Pam Ayres: Down the Line
- A book with an animal: Lone Wolf--Kathryn Lasky
- A book less than 100 pages: Aladdin--Walt Disney Company
- A book you want to discuss with others: Funny Story--Emily Henry
- A book you read as a child: These Happy Golden Years--Laura Ingalls Wilder
- A book in a different language than English (could be sign language, morse code, Spanish, don’t get hung up on terms 😊): Bilingual Fairy Tales Rapunzel--Blackwell Burke (in English and Spanish)
- Read out loud to someone. Could be a whole book, a favorite passage, or to a child: Read a Bible passage to a friend.
- Listen to someone reading out loud (not an audio book, an actual person): Listened to a friend read a Bible passage.
A few categories special to Summer 2024
- A book related to the Olympics (Paris, we see you!): Rise--Lindsey Vonn
- A book related to weddings or marriage (My oldest niece is getting married): Picture Bride--Yoshiko Uchida
- A book related a broken bone (My mom’s femur broke ☹): Henry Heckelbeck Breaks a Leg--Wanda Coven
Bonus: choose a Penalty Book in the first week of the challenge as a way to kick yourself in the pants. If you don’t read your penalty book you will subtract two (2) books from your grand total.
My Penalty Book: Life is Sweet--Elizabeth Bass
26 books and penalty book completed on August 12
Sunday, May 26, 2024
Book Discussion: Gowns on Covers
Yet another common cover design that was not mentioned in the Twitter/X Post that was linked in my previous discussion. And one that did not occur to me until after I'd made that post.
Girls and women in fancy dresses and gowns, often with big, bulky and poofy skirts, is yet another cover design that has been used many times. This is especially popular on YA fantasy and on historical fiction covers.
I'm not familiar with this series, but the titles and covers alone look tempting! |
I read this series in 2015. I barely remember the books, but did remember these covers! The fourth and fifth books in the series are not shown here. |
I'm sure there are plenty other gown and dress covers out there somewhere. But these big bulky ones seem to be the most common. I couldn't seem to find any with just plain dresses, without the bulky or goofy skirts. Again, that seems likely to only be on historically themed or YA fantasy covers. I would not expect to see such a dress on a cover of a book in a contemporary setting, at least not in most cases. Of course, that depends on the plot.
How do you feel about his cover cliche?
Posted to Feed Your Fiction Addiction and It Starts at Midnight.
Friday, May 24, 2024
Summer Reading Challenge @ Book Girls' Guide
I found a new summer reading challenge through the host of my Decades Challenge. This has six reading prompts.
- Related to a summer Olympic sport OR set in the 2024 host city Paris: The Singles Game--Lauren Weisberger
- Set in a location you'd love to visit: The Summer Getaway--Susan Mallery
- Character who loves swimming: The Tail of Emily Windsnap--Liz Kessler
- Summer book from your favorite genre: Summer on Sag Harbor--Sunny Hostin
- Set on a island or at a lake: When We Believed in Mermaids--Barbara O'Neal
- About a road trip: Bunkie Spills--Bradley K. Rosen
Thursday, May 16, 2024
Book Discussion: Strangely Similar Covers
Nearly all the silhouettes in these examples seem the same. Many are curly-haired women. Note that two different books by the same author (Chris Cleave) use this design, and that each one has the silhouette looking in opposite directions.
Can we blame Twilight for this cover trend? I was looking at my library recently and saw this book, using an apple core as a statue of a person. That is an interesting idea.
This has many possibilities. No two swirls seem exactly the same, but the designs are still very similar. There may be other such covers that that his photo missed. Here is one I read about a year ago.
Why does it seem to be only girls wearing glasses on covers? I happened to read the book The Black Kids last summer, not too long after I'd read these two books, both not shown above.
Note how many of these kinds of covers often show images pictures in the frames of the glasses, and some use the glasses to display the book title.
Just what is the rhyme or reason for these covers having shoes? Do any of these books have much, if anything at all, to do with shoes? And this one I read earlier this year. Why is there a boot on this? At least I was able to use that one for the prompt "show on the cover" that I encountered this year.
Animated Covers:
Wednesday, May 15, 2024
Summer Reading Challenge @ Brewing Writer
Doing this one. Begins on June 1. One prompt for each of the summer months.
- June--A book set in a destination you want to visit: Summer on Sag Harbor--Sunny Hostin
- July--A book with summer/sun in its title: The Summer Book Club--Susan Mallery
- August--A book set on a beach/island: Emily Windsnap and the Monster From the Deep--Liz Kessler
Sunday, May 12, 2024
Summer Reading Challenge: Read the Rainbow
Doing this one again at Booklist Queen. The challenge is to read a book with a cover in each of the colors.
Red: Picture Bride--Yoshiko Uchida
Orange: White Lies--Jayne Ann Krentz
Yellow: Yellowface--R.F. Kuang
Green: Garden Spells--Sarah Addison Allen
Blue: The Singles Game--Lauren Weisberger
Purple: Life is Sweet--Elizabeth Bass
Black: My Video Game Ate My Homework--Dustin Hansen
White: Every Last Word--Tamara Ireland Stone
Challenge completed on June 28
Saturday, May 4, 2024
A to Z Road Trip
I will be joining the post-A to Z Road Trip.
It's time for the Post A to Z Road Trip 2024! This is a great opportunity to catch up on the many blogs you would have liked to have spent more time visiting, but didn't during the Challenge, and a chance to visit the blogs of people who did the Challenge that you never got to. And, if you're one of those people who did the Challenge but didn't get a lot of visitors, this is a way to let people know that you'd appreciate a visit.
Here's what you do:
- Sign up for the Road Trip. There's a place where you can put in the URL of a post that you would like visitors to read first. Then, grab a copy of the Road Trip badge from the graphics page (if you want) for your home page to use as a "bumper sticker."
- Get copies of both the Road Trip List and the Master List. Both will be useful.
- Start with the Road Trip list and visit the blogs of the people who signed up there. Take some time to read their blog and their Challenge entries. Leave comments where you feel led to do so, and make sure you identify yourself as a Road Trip participant. Leave a link to your blog so they can return the favor.
- Then, if you have the time and inclination to do so, visit some of the blogs on the Master List that you didn't get the chance to visit. Even if they didn't sign up for the Road Trip, I'm sure they'd appreciate a visit.
Friday, May 3, 2024
May Bookish Bingo
Here is the card for May.
My Books:
- Cinderella Liberator--Rebecca Solnit (4 squares): Audiobook, Siblings, Humor, Shifter
- The Clue of the Gold Coin--Helen Wells (8 squares): E-Book, In a Series, Unlikely Team/Misfits, Ancient Culture, Betrayal, Travel (Distance), Ghost, Shady/Sketchy Character
- The Girl From the Train--Irma Joubert (5 squares): Library Book, Physical Book, Not in a Series, Book Club Read, Free Space
- My Video Game Ate My Homework--Dustin Hansen (2 squares): Science Experiment, Art/Architecture
- The Jane Austen Society--Natalie Jenner (2 squares): Free Book, Debut Author
- The Pilgrim's Progress--John Bunyan (2 squares): Shelf Love, Abstract Design on the Cover
- Garden Spells--Sarah Addison Allen (2 squares): Garden, Gnome
Wednesday, May 1, 2024
Blogging A to Z Reflections
This week, participants in the A to Z Blogging Challenge will be writing Reflections posts. The Reflections post sign ups actually begin tomorrow, but I'm posting mine now.