Book Riot's Read Harder Challenge discussion
2017 Read Harder Challenge
>
Task #10: Read a book that is set within 100 miles of your location

I really enjoyed the Kat Colorado series

If you like poetry, I'd recommend something by Charles Wright or John Casteen.

Flowers in the Attic is set in the Charlottesville area, too, like much of Wright and Casteen's work. This one's hard because I find that a lot of the big writers who set their work in the region set it in fictional towns, so there's no real way to know if it's within 100 miles.

Possibly A Tale for the Time Being?

So far I've got Work Song and Buster Midnight's Cafe noted, but I'm not jum..."
A River Runs Through It and Other Stories is not a Western and is one of my all-time favorites. It would fit.

For Alexie, it's hard to go wrong, but my favorite is probably The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven.


I'll be going with a novel that will be published in August. A friend of mine, writer Louise Juhl Dalsgaard is writing a semi-biographic novel on living with an eating disorder. It is set in Aalborg which is 141 km about 87.6 miles from where I live.
It is perfect!


Loving Day by Mat Johnson is set in Philadelphia and it is by and about people of color. However, I can't remember if there are multiple POV's and if so whether they are all people of color.

Great - thanks for the suggestion, I'll look into that one!

A few of Margaret Atwood's books take place in Toronto so you have some options there (Blind's Assassin partially takes place in Toronto, Cat's Cradle, Robber's Bride and maybe a few others)
Fifteen Dogs takes place in the High Park neighbourhood of Toronto. It won a few awards when it came out so it should be a good one.
Here's a goodreads list for books that take place at least partially in Toronto:
https://www.goodreads.com/places/6756...

How about: Delancey: A Man, a Woman, a Restaurant, a Marriage by Molly Wizenburg.

A few suggestions: The Lovely Bones is set in Philly, and the writer Lisa Scottoline bases many of her novels in Philadelphia as well. Hope these help!

Oh, thanks! I'll check those. And in case anyone else is looking, I just found this list on Goodreads of philly books: https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/1...

I'm in Ireland so there are plenty of options. But usually I can't stand anything that's set locally. It's just one of my pet peeves, sets my skin crawling!
Most of the books I've read based here are quite dark and heartbreaking. I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions for a lighter option?
Otherwise I think I might end up re-reading an Artemis Fowl book for this task, which could check off two tasks with one book!


I'm in Ireland so there are plenty of options. But usually I can't stand anything that's set locally. It's just one of my pet peev..."
Nora Roberts has written at least three books with Ireland as at least a partial setting. (She writes romantic suspense.) Do you ever read (and enjoy) paranormal romance? Her Circle Trilogy has the set-in-Ireland books I'm thinking of in it. And at least one of them was, I think, set completely in Ireland.

Nora Roberts's Circle Trilogy is paranormal so there are some dark elements and it was pretty sickening what the queen vampire does to a toddler. I wouldn't recommend that one. That series put me off Nora Roberts.
I found some items that might point you in the right direction:
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles...
http://www.irishtimes.com/culture/boo...
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/b/books...
https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/8...

I'm in Ireland so there are plenty of options. But usually I can't stand anything that's set locally. It's just one of my pet peev..."
I read Casting Off for a bookclub several years ago. I don't remember much except it's in Ireland (possibly a fictional town?) and I think it's fairly light.

Try Diane McKinney-Whetstone's novels. You will not be sorry.



https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...

I live in rural Upstate New York, 40 miles from Albany & 40 miles from Cooperstown.


I'm sorry to hear that. I wasn't bothered by the scenes involving the toddler for a few reasons. One perhaps being that I'm not the mother of any human kids (I have a puppy-son and toddler nieces). Another is that these are fiction stories, and the "queen vampire" was the "bad guy," defeated in a great battle in the third and final book.
I find it a huge shame that this one character and her actions turned you off of the writing of Nora Roberts. After all, Nora has written over 200 books, and she's still an active writer. I have not loved all of her books (Angels Fall comes to mind as one I did not like), but I still recognize that even the ones I did not like were well written works of fiction.
So I stand by my recommendation of the Circle Trilogy.

Compartment No. 6 ends there, and I believe the author has visited the country herself because she made that same journey as the protagonist.
This is an easy one for me. Before I moved (inside the town) last year, I lived right at the centre of what was the place for the biggest battle in the Nordic countries before that (the biggest ever was fought in 1944). I might pick "The Driver of the Cold" which is about a man taken to clear the streets and take the dead to be buried. Though there are 2-3 big towns also within that radius, let's see what I will read first.


I would think yes. But really, I think it's up to you. If you want to count it, count it! :-)


Is Swamplandia! too far? I know FL's huge ...

If you're a fan of Dave Barry, I found Best. State. Ever.: A Florida Man Defends His Homeland pretty amusing - even though I haven't ever been to Florida - he travels around the state a bit and may be near you






Yes! Almost all Don Winslow is set there and it is all fantastic, witty noir. The Cartel is excellent, but so are all the others.

Is Plains, GA within 100 miles? I read Jimmy Carter's An Hour Before Daylight: Memories Of A Rural Boyhood and enjoyed it a lot. My mother was from southern Georgia. On the other hand, I hated the novel The Hornet's Nest a lot. His strengths aren't as a novelist, in my opinion. You may like Christmas in Plains: Memories or Living Faith by him.
Books mentioned in this topic
Ready Player One (other topics)The Devil All the Time (other topics)
What You Don't Know (other topics)
Natural Obsessions: The Search for the Oncogene (other topics)
Temporary People (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Paulette Jiles (other topics)Emily Woof (other topics)
Richard Russo (other topics)
Laurie Halse Anderson (other topics)
Katherine Howe (other topics)
More...
Robertson Davies would seem to be a natural for this. Also,..."
Have you considered books by Louise Penny? She writes about the Quebec/Montreal area of Canada.