Wild Things: YA Grown-Up discussion
YA Reading Challenge
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YA Reading Challenge #2 - Tasks and Discussion

Big thanks to Linda Grace for putting it together!
:) Your Welcome!! Thank you for all your help again. I could not have gotten it up so quickly wihtout your help!
Now I have to get my spreadsheet together to keep track of everyone's points! Hehe that's my favorite part... I love excel.
I think that is an awesome idea! I wouldn't mind doing it again, but other people should have a chance also. It was a lot of fun getting it together.

Haha yup!! Those sexy librarian glasses are exactly what helped me with setting up the challenge! haha love my glasses...
Oh and thanks! :)
Oh and thanks! :)

And good job Linda Grace!!!
p.s. Does anyone wanna push any books on me???
Jennifer, if you haven't yet read The Graveyard Book, I highly recommend it. I also really liked Graceling!! Hopefully, these will work if you haven't already read them!
Of course! Just take a look at either/both threads for the YA Reading Challenge #1. There are pages of information on what everyone has been reading for the current challenge. Once a book someone else read for that challenge pops out at you, read it! Then just discuss why this one popped out at you and if it met your expectations. Have fun!

Yeah. You could post your list here, unless you think we should make a separate thread for that too. I don't mind calculating totals based on a list either, so if you guys want to post your list on the Report Points Here Thread that would be fine with me. I will open up that thread today so if anyone wants to do a list and just cross them off as they go, they can post it there.

Heather wrote: "I have a question about 1.20. I didn't participate in the last challenge, so can I still do that task?"
And maybe, since you don't have an original to compare to, you can tell us about what other book you would have read for this task and why, or what you think would have worked/what you would have picked had you participated, etc.
Yes, that sounds very good. :)

5. Feather Boy by Nicky Singer
10. Poison Study by Maria Snyder
15. The Absolutely True Diary of a Part Time Indian by Sherman Alexie
20. TBA
25. TBA
2 – Author’s Name A-Z Section
5. Graceling by Kristen Cashore
10. Coraline by Neil Gaiman
15. TBA by Brian Jacques - one of my roommates is named Brian
20. American Born Chinese by Gene Luen Yang & Elsewhere by Gabrielle Zevin
25. Thirteen Reasons Why by Jay Asher, Monster by Walter Dean Myers and I Am The Messenger by Markus Zusak.
3 – Newbery List Section
5. 2006 Honor - Princess Academy by Shannon Hale
10. The Hero and the Crown by Robin McKinley
15. 1978 - Bridge to Terebithia 1979 - The Westing Game
20. 2009 - The Graveyard Book by Gaiman & Savvy by Ingrid Law
25. TBA
4 – Shelves Section, Please stick to books you haven’t read yet for this section!
10. A Northern Light
15. TBA
20. I've read from every genre, how would I do this task?
25. TBA
April, your list looks awesome so far!
For 4.20 is there a genre you haven't read much from or don't know much about? I will see if I can come up with a list of genres to choose from, maybe there is one you haven't read from, but just haven't thought of it as a genre.
For 4.20 is there a genre you haven't read much from or don't know much about? I will see if I can come up with a list of genres to choose from, maybe there is one you haven't read from, but just haven't thought of it as a genre.

Here is a list of Young Adult sub-genres I have come across. Let me know if you can think of anything else and I will add it:
Romance, Historical, Science Fiction, Classic, Fantasy, Horror, Supernatural, Mystery, Suspense, Graphic, Christian, Biographies (YA authors), Poetry, Fairy tales, Chick Lit, Dystopian, Utopian, Altiverse, Gay/Lesbian.
Romance, Historical, Science Fiction, Classic, Fantasy, Horror, Supernatural, Mystery, Suspense, Graphic, Christian, Biographies (YA authors), Poetry, Fairy tales, Chick Lit, Dystopian, Utopian, Altiverse, Gay/Lesbian.

Woo Hoo Lydia! The first one is always fun! :)

Thanks Jennifer for posting that. My internet was down last night.
Heather, your list looks good. You have some really good books on there! Have fun reading!
Heather, your list looks good. You have some really good books on there! Have fun reading!


I do have a few questions though-
With the book pushing, does it have to be directed at me specifically, or could it be a book that a lot of people have pushed in general?
For task 4.25, could we read a book by Ellen Hopkins or something similar- a story told in poem format, or does it have to be specific and individual poems?
For 4.20, I haven't read many graphic novels. Does anyone love those? Or, something Sci/Fi. I read very, very little Sci-Fi. I can think of maybe one or two books that I have read, especially YA that would count. A recommendation from either or those genres would be greatly appreciated!

If someone recommends the first in a series, could I read the second instead?

Just a quick question regarding section 3 of the challenge, could I substitute the Newberry award for the Carnegie award, as more of the books on that list are easily available in the uk.
Ashley wrote: "With the book pushing, does it have to be directed at me specifically, or could it be a book that a lot of people have pushed in general?
A book that is being pushed in general is fine.
Ashley wrote: For task 4.25, could we read a book by Ellen Hopkins or something similar- a story told in poem format, or does it have to be specific and individual poems?
If it is in poetry format, then that is fine.
A book that is being pushed in general is fine.
Ashley wrote: For task 4.25, could we read a book by Ellen Hopkins or something similar- a story told in poem format, or does it have to be specific and individual poems?
If it is in poetry format, then that is fine.
Nirmala wrote: "Hi, Just a quick question regarding section 3 of the challenge, could I substitute the Newberry award for the Carnegie award, as more of the books on that list are easily available in the uk."
I updated the list title to be 3 – Newbery List/Carnegie Award Section. Hopefully this will be okay with everyone and help with other people having a hard time finding Newbery books in their area!
I updated the list title to be 3 – Newbery List/Carnegie Award Section. Hopefully this will be okay with everyone and help with other people having a hard time finding Newbery books in their area!

Thanks
Your welcome! Have fun with the challenge!

Half the fun is working out which books on my TBR list can be worked into the challenge. Since the children are on their summer break we are doing our little reading challenge at home, so I need to make sure that the books I choose have to work into both challenges.
My pesonnel challenge is just to get further then I did in the last challenge, lets see !



I was wondering who on here hasn't heard from my big mouth? I need to chat with someone about their 5 star rec's for task 4.5...

My recent 5-star YAs are
Thirteenth Child (loved this, great quick read)
MadappleAmerican Born ChineseThe Book ThiefThe Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian
Little Brother
Peeps
And my old stand-bys are:
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-timeWalk Two Moons
The Uglies series
The Keys to the Kingdom series (though these are an iffy 5 for me)
Fever 1793
The Perks of Being a Wallflower
And the "of courses" are:
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, etc
Anne of Green Gables
Twilight (grumble all you wanna)To Kill a Mockingbird
That's my list, Ashley and anyone else who would like to be my hey-nice-to-meet-ya-buddy buddy for task 4.5

and if you need genre/subgenre recommendations, I love dystopic and retold fairytales (shelves here and here). Many of them are adult, but for ya:
From dystopic, I highly recommend:
The Knife of Never Letting Go
Uglies
Feed
Little Brother
and The House of the Scorpion
and from retold fairytales or similar (urban fantasy, ft like feel, etc):
The Goose Girl
Wildwood Dancing
Valiant A Modern Tale of Faerie
Princess Academy
The Hollow Kingdom

Books mentioned in this topic
Sold (other topics)Esperanza Rising (other topics)
Kabuki, Vol. 1: Circle of Blood (other topics)
Singer (other topics)
Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Ysabeau S. Wilce (other topics)Cynthia Kadohata (other topics)
Ingrid Law (other topics)
Melissa de la Cruz (other topics)
Michael Chabon (other topics)
More...
Ground Rules:
1. The Challenge begins at 12:00 A.M. local time on August 1, 2009 and ends at 11:59 P.M. local time on October 31, 2009.
2. Whoever has the most points by 12:00 A.M. local time August 15, 2009 will be able to create a 50 point task. If there is a tie, whoever got to that amount of points first will be the one to create the task.
3. This Challenge is just for fun, so make sure you enjoy yourself and all the books you will be reading!
4. All books must be classified as Young Adult or Juvenile Fiction, unless otherwise noted in the task. If your local library classifies the book you chose as such, then the book may be included.
5. All books must be at least 100 pages long to count for any of the tasks.
6. Re-reads count, unless they are specifically excluded in the task.
7. Audiobooks and electronic books, such as Kindle, etc. all count for this Challenge.
8. If you have been keeping track of pages for the Official YA Challenge and would like to continue, then please feel free to post it when you post your finished tasks and I will add it to the totals. However, you do NOT need to post page numbers in order to get onto the leaderboard.
PLEASE NOTE: This thread is for a discussion of the tasks ONLY, we are adding a separate thread (which will open the day the challenge starts) to post everyone's points as tasks are completed.
1 – Official YA Challenge Section
5. Choose any book from our “Top YA Novels” thread not posted by you and read it.
10. Read a book someone at Goodreads has been “pushing” you to read.
15. Read any book discussed in one of the discussion threads here at Wild Things, and contribute to the discussion.
20. Read a book someone (other than yourself) read for the 1st YA Reading Challenge and discuss why this one stood out when you saw people posting it, if it met your expectations, and if you prefer the book you originally read.
25. Read any two books from a Young Adult series.
2 – Author’s Name A-Z Section
5. Read a YA book where the first letter of the Author’s last name matches your own.
10. Read a YA book by a Goodreads author.
15. Read a YA book where the author’s first name is the same as someone in your household, past or present.
20. Read 2 YA books where the first letter of the author’s last name is consecutive. i.e. Harry Potter (Rowling) & Holes (Sachar).
25. Read a YA book from each of the following: the author’s last name starts with a letter between A-I, J-Q, and R-Z.
3 – Newbery List/Carnegie Award Section - You can use the following lists to help you find books for this section: Newbery Medal & Honors list, Carnegie Short List, or Carnegie Medal List
5. Read a winner/honor book and give a full review of it, including your thoughts on its award status.
10. Read a winner/Honor book whose author has won or been nominated more than once.
15. Read 2 consecutive years' winners (2000 and 2001 for example) and see if there's a commonality between winners.
20. Read the winner and one of the Honor books from the same year, then post whether you agree with these choices.
25. Read any YA book that came out after January 2006 and an award winner/Honor book that was published the same year.(i.e. If you are reading a book that was published in 2006, you would read a winner/Honor book from 2007 because they would have been published in 2006) Discuss the comparisons between the two and whether you agree that the right book won.
4 – Shelves Section, Please stick to books you haven’t read yet for this section!
5. Read a YA book that was rated 5 stars from any Wild Thing member’s shelf you don't know or have had a discussion with in a post, and then discuss your thoughts on the book with them when you're done
10. Read a YA book from one of Wild Thing’s bookshelves.
15. Read a book classified as ADULT that you think would be good for YA, and then post why you think it would be good for YA.
20. Get recommendations from someone who loves a genre you’ve never read before and read one of those YA books, and then post what you thought and whether you might read from the genre again.
25. Pick from 3 of the following categories and read 1 YA book from each of the 3 you choose: non-fiction, poetry, short story, drama, horror/gothic, top 100 Goodreads YA bookshelf (go to http://www.goodreads.com/shelf/show/y... and pick from the first 2 pages).
50 point task: There are four (a-d) books required for this question. [Only unread books up to this point for this question:]
(a) Read a previously unread book from the WT YA Best Novel List.
(b) Read a book where the first letter of the author’s name (first or last) is alphabetically consecutive to the first letter of EITHER the first or last name of the author you read in section (a).
(c) Read an award or honor book published the same year as the book read for section (b). [Award/Honor book is interpreted liberally here. Check with not only Newbery, Chatham, Printz, Lambda and other national awards, but also your state library association books awards and let us know which award you are referring to.:]
(d) Read a book from a WT member's bookshelf (ranked 4 or 5 star only) OR on the top 100 GR YA bookshelf that has also won an award AND is of a different genre than the book read for section (c). [Go to “Find Books” on the top navigation bar of GoodReads and you will find there are multiple YA book lists.:]
***Thank you Lydia for putting the 50 point task together!