Reading with Style discussion

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Theresa~OctoberLace (octoberlace) | 518 comments I just finished reading Divergent by Veronica Roth. The Goodreads page lists Young Adult, but the BPL page (copied below) does not include that designation. Can I use it for this challenge if I can fit it to any of the categories?

Divergent / Veronica Roth.
Author: Roth, Veronica.
Imprint: New York : Katherine Tegen Books, 2011.
Edition: 1st ed.
Description: 487 p. ; 22 cm.
Call #: FIC ROTH
Summary: In a future Chicago, sixteen-year-old Beatrice Prior must choose among five predetermined factions to define her identity for the rest of her life, a decision made more difficult when she discovers that she is an anomoly who does not fit into any one group, and that the society she lives in is not perfect after all.
Subject: Science fiction.
Identity (Psychology) -- Fiction.
Families -- Fiction.
Courage -- Fiction.
Social classes -- Fiction.
ISBN: 0062024027 (trade bdg.) :
9780062024022 (trade bdg.)
0062024035 (pbk.) :
9780062024039 (pbk.)


Elizabeth (Alaska) | 14225 comments Divergent is listed as YA Sci Fic and has a Lexile of 700. You can use it for any RwS task for which it qualifies, without styles, but not for Pick N Mix.


Theresa~OctoberLace (octoberlace) | 518 comments Where are you finding the YA designation? I copied the listing above directly from the BPL. There is no YA listing there.


message 54: by Elizabeth (Alaska) (last edited Oct 27, 2013 10:48AM) (new)

Elizabeth (Alaska) | 14225 comments Theresa~OctoberLace wrote: "Where are you finding the YA designation? I copied the listing above directly from the BPL. There is no YA listing there."

Under the Location heading - that is primarily where you'll find the designation, although sometimes it is under the Call# heading.

ETA: I didn't mean to sound short, I'm sorry. Yes, looking at the BPL screen can take getting used to. Be sure you're looking at the classic catalog - I think the new catalog doesn't show these designations (and we're mighty disappointed about that). It's why I linked to the page we look at.


message 55: by Sam (new)

Sam (theliteraryhooker) | 1008 comments This might be a silly question, but can I make changes to which task I want to put a book against AFTER I've already posted it?


Elizabeth (Alaska) | 14225 comments Sam wrote: "This might be a silly question, but can I make changes to which task I want to put a book against AFTER I've already posted it?"

Not a silly question, and the answer is YES! You need to make a new post telling us of the changes - do not delete the old post. Be sure to reference the original Post #, the book and old task #, and the new information.


message 57: by Sam (new)

Sam (theliteraryhooker) | 1008 comments Great, thanks! :)


Theresa~OctoberLace (octoberlace) | 518 comments Just to be on the safe side, I plan to read Ethan Frome by Edith Wharton before this challenge ends. Right now it's listed as #98 in the Belle Epoque list for task #20.3, so I hope you'll agree that I can use that for this challenge, even if the stats change before I finish it.


Elizabeth (Alaska) | 14225 comments Theresa~OctoberLace wrote: "Just to be on the safe side, I plan to read Ethan Frome by Edith Wharton before this challenge ends. Right now it's listed as #98 in the Belle Epoque list for task #20.3, s..."

Yes, and it has a few combos too!


message 60: by Karen Michele (new)

Karen Michele Burns (klibrary) | 5272 comments Elizabeth, I love the quick links! They are so helpful. I would like to ask one thing, though. Is it possible on Goodreads to set them up so that they open in a new window? Then I could leave them up and still refer back to the challenge home page for multiple "look-ups".


message 61: by Bea (new)

Bea Karen GHHS wrote: "Elizabeth, I love the quick links! They are so helpful. I would like to ask one thing, though. Is it possible on Goodreads to set them up so that they open in a new window? Then I could leave them ..."

Karen, you can do that yourself when you click on them. Just right click and select "Open in new tab".


message 62: by Karen Michele (new)

Karen Michele Burns (klibrary) | 5272 comments Bea wrote: "Karen GHHS wrote: "Elizabeth, I love the quick links! They are so helpful. I would like to ask one thing, though. Is it possible on Goodreads to set them up so that they open in a new window? Then ..."

Ok, thanks Elizabeth. I will try that. I'm on my iPad right now, so I'll play around with it.


Elizabeth (Alaska) | 14225 comments Karen GHHS wrote: "Ok, thanks Elizabeth. I will try that. I'm on my iPad right now, so I'll play around with it. "

That was Bea that gave you the quick response. I don't know if it's possible to make them automatically open in another tab - at least I don't know how to do it. I do often right-click on links so that I don't have to leave the page, but still get to the linked page - I've done it several times for the polls this time. When I enter books into our scorekeeping database, I do have all of those links open in other tabs so I can easily go back and forth as needed.


message 64: by Karen Michele (new)

Karen Michele Burns (klibrary) | 5272 comments Elizabeth (Alaska) wrote: "Karen GHHS wrote: "Ok, thanks Elizabeth. I will try that. I'm on my iPad right now, so I'll play around with it. "

That was Bea that gave you the quick response. I don't know if it's possible to m..."


Oops, thanks Bea, and thanks Elizabeth. I can always open up the pages myself - it's not a problem. I was just wondering if Goodreads had an easy option because my blog always gives me that option when I create a link.


Elizabeth (Alaska) | 14225 comments Karen GHHS wrote: "Goodreads had an easy option because my blog always gives me that option when I create a link.
"


I don't know what GR criteria is for that, but I think it is internal. Some links open in a new tab and some don't. I think the links *within* GR open in a new tab but the ones offsite do not.


Theresa~OctoberLace (octoberlace) | 518 comments I have a couple more books to post, but my daughter doesn't have wifi yet at her new house. I was up to date through Sunday and will be able to post when I get home Friday evening. I hope that's okay. Happy Thanksgiving everyone!


Elizabeth (Alaska) | 14225 comments Have a nice holiday, Theresa. The Fall completed tasks thread is open until midnight Eastern on Saturday, so anything you post before then will count!


Theresa~OctoberLace (octoberlace) | 518 comments Does anyone know whether Albert Camus qualifies for Non-Western in style points? He was born in Algeria (Africa) and is referenced as having French nationality. However, I cannot find whether he retained his Algerian citizenship as well. If it helps, he did attend college in Algeria.


Elizabeth (Alaska) | 14225 comments Theresa~OctoberLace wrote: "Does anyone know whether Albert Camus qualifies for Non-Western in style points? He was born in Algeria (Africa) and is referenced as having French nationality. However, I cannot find whether he ..."

Camus was French and does not qualify as non-western. The northern part of Algeria where Camus was born was a French possession.


Theresa~OctoberLace (octoberlace) | 518 comments Thanks for the info, Elizabeth!


Elizabeth (Alaska) | 14225 comments Theresa~OctoberLace wrote: "Thanks for the info, Elizabeth!"

I've read only one Camus - he's good, but not for the extra 10 non-Western points.


Theresa~OctoberLace (octoberlace) | 518 comments Elizabeth, in that case, would Camus' The Stranger qualify for 20.1 read a book originally written in French by an author born in France?


Elizabeth (Alaska) | 14225 comments Theresa~OctoberLace wrote: "Elizabeth, in that case, would Camus' The Stranger qualify for 20.1 read a book originally written in French by an author born in France?"

No, because he was born in Algeria. Seems like a contradiction, I know. Camus was born a French citizen in Algeria, which is why he isn't non-western, but he wasn't born in France, so he doesn't qualify for 20.1.


Theresa~OctoberLace (octoberlace) | 518 comments Thanks again...I guess it would compare to an author being born in Puerto Rico not considered being born in the USA.


Elizabeth (Alaska) | 14225 comments Theresa~OctoberLace wrote: "Thanks again...I guess it would compare to an author being born in Puerto Rico not considered being born in the USA."

Oh, thank you for finding that explanation! Yes, like that.

My husband (not an author), was born in the Territory of Alaska, but has always been a US citizen.


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