Ultimate Popsugar Reading Challenge discussion
2017 Challenge prompts
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A book set in the wilderness
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Ashley
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Mar 12, 2017 05:57PM

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I just started reading Annihilation yesterday and I think it fits the wilderness prompt. I am using it for genre/subgenre I have never heard of before. I saw it classified as New Weird.


Well, they are in a forest for the Hunger Games Quarter Quell. I'd count the first book and this book.

Great, thank you. I read the first book but I didn't know what to expect for the second.
Sabrina wrote: "Anyone know if Catching Fire would qualify for this? I haven't read the book or seen the movie before and I'm wondering if it will qualify for this prompt. All the descriptions I can..."
I wouldn't count it. The quarter quell, just like the first hunger games, takes place in a faux wilderness that is completely controlled by the game makers, and they are watched constantly on TV.
I wouldn't count it. The quarter quell, just like the first hunger games, takes place in a faux wilderness that is completely controlled by the game makers, and they are watched constantly on TV.



Yes, definitely count Life of Pi for this prompt.

P.S. Spoiler Alert: they don't die.

A classic young adult novel: Hatchet by Gary Paulsen
(so glad I read this thread to get my juices flowing, because I was stumped!)

I wouldn't count it. The quarter quell, just like the first hunger games, takes place in a faux wilderness that is completely controlled by the game makers, and they are watched constantly on TV.
I would count it, it is a wilderness, the dangers are real to the contestants who have no control.




Kalahari seems like the wilderness to me.


It 100% works, given that it takes place in the Amazon rainforest. I've seen a few people who loved it and it's actually my pick for this task, as well.

I just did this as my "book made into a movie in 2017" as it's doing limited release this month. I loved it and it VERY much would fit this category.
the categories it works for are: book set in the wilderness, book becoming a movie, book set in two time periods

I'm currently reading this one! Definitely an interesting read :)

Just finished it, and it's really good and fascinating! If haven't read it yet, I highly recommend it!

Tobi wrote: "I'm thinking of reading The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon for this one. Has anyone read it, would recommend it, or know if it works for this category?"
Just finished it, and it's really good and fascinating! If haven't read it yet, I highly recommend it!

The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon would work if you are a Stephen King fan.

Unless you're reading historical fiction, or Fantasy set in a pseudo-historical time. I've read books taking place in London or New York or fictional cities without electricity at all!

(large for the time but snug by modern day standards) and there's mention of local villagers, though I'm not sure if their house is in the village proper or slightly outside of it.
I'm wondering if this could count for the Wilderness prompt, or if I should just use it for the "published in 2017 prompt" instead. ( I don't want to "double dip" books unless I find that I haven't met all the prompts by mid-December.)
I'm also currently reading Hunted by Megan Spooner, which is a Beauty and the Beast retelling, and this version has Beauty's family living in a hunting cabin near the woods, a several days' journey from the nearest city, and at least half a day's journey from the nearest inn. When I finish the book, I'll know how much of it takes place in the forest itself- though the small family living in an isolated cabin may be "wilderness" enough anyway?
Thoughts on how well either of those books fit into this prompt?

IMO, wilderness cannot be owned. I have been in many forests and I wouldn't call any of them "wilderness".
Ruthla8 wrote: "I just finished reading "The Bear and the Nightingale. It takes place in Russia several hundred years ago. The main characters are an upper-class landowning family. While in Moscow, others refer to..."
I read that book (loved it!) and I think it counts. A big part of the story is what happens in the woods around her house.
I read that book (loved it!) and I think it counts. A big part of the story is what happens in the woods around her house.

Other ideas:
Annapurna: A Woman's Place is about an all-women team climbing one of the word's highest mountains, and it's on the "500 great books by women" list.
The Golden Spruce: A True Story of Myth, Madness, and Greed -- another book by the author of Tiger, set in the Canadian forest wilderness, about the logging industy.
Alive: The Story of the Andes Survivors, a true story about the rugby team that survived a plane crash in the Andes mountains. There's a more recent book about the same incident called Miracle in the Andes.
I've heard good things about Skeletons on the Zahara: A True Story of Survival set in the Sahara desert in 1815.
I love mountaineering books! If you like Into Thin Air, try:
- Dark Summit: The True Story of Everest's Most Controversial Season
- Eiger Dreams: Ventures Among Men and Mountains
- Buried in the Sky: The Extraordinary Story of the Sherpa Climbers on K2's Deadliest Day
- And cave exploration should totally count! Blind Descent: The Quest to Discover the Deepest Place on Earth
ETA: These books all work for the "books with subtitles" category too, I just realized :)


Other ideas:
[book:Annapurna: A Woman's..."
Great suggestions!


I love that book!


I've read Clan of the Cave Bear. I would say yes. I am not strict with the prompts and I suppose some people might say that it's modern people learning the wilderness - but I would definitely count it. It talks about how to fish and make medicines, etc. That makes it sound boring, which it isn't.

Also I picked up "A Lantern in Her Hand on..."
The Harvester

I've read Clan of the Cave Bear. I would say yes. I am not strict with the prompts and I suppose some people mig..."
Julie wrote: "Sisa wrote: "Has anyone read Clan of the Cave Bear? Is that set in the wilderness?"
I've read Clan of the Cave Bear and a couple of the series. I would say it is wilderness. It sounds like a boring premise, but it is a fascinating read. I highly recommend it.
I've read Clan of the Cave Bear. I would say yes. I am not strict with the prompts and I suppose some people mig..."

I read "A Walk in the Woods," and it was a fun choice. I live fairly close to the southern end of the trail and have day-hiked in some of the areas he described, so it was both a good choice for the prompt and somewhat of a "been there, done that" pick, which can be fun.


Books mentioned in this topic
Lumberjanes: Up All Night (other topics)What We See in the Stars: An Illustrated Tour of the Night Sky (other topics)
Ancestor (other topics)
Once Upon a River (other topics)
Walden: Life in the Woods (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Gene Stratton-Porter (other topics)Michael Finkel (other topics)
Tracy Chevalier (other topics)
Conrad Richter (other topics)
Michael Finkel (other topics)
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