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2017 Read Harder Challenge
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Task #10: Read a book that is set within 100 miles of your location
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Chrissy
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Jul 16, 2017 09:08PM

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Any chance it's just a dialect thing? I tend to say we're going "down to" wherever, even if it's somewhere north of where I'm physically located, vs. "up the street" if it's somewhere within walking distance, even if the location is further south than my location. I don't think it's an uncommon way to describe it, but I could be wrong. Maybe I'm just THAT bad at directions...

I talk the same way.

Interestingly, you go up to Oxford and go down from
Oxford, also without regard to direction. Being sent down from Oxford was to be expelled. I think it also applies to Cambridge.



I just bought All the Birds in the Sky and hope to get around to reading it soon. It's cool that the author even mentions your street. I lived in San Francisco for twelve years. My friends and I would have ribbed someone who didn't know their directions, there. Here, in the landlocked Northeast, I am often confused as to directions and west, east, north and south. In San Francisco I always knew.
Similarly, if in hilly San Francisco, you are going up or down it refers to the hills you are traveling, usually.


Although I was -very- tempted to re-read Preacher, Volume 1: Gone to Texas instead.

It takes place in Americas, Georgia, which is a a town in South Georgia; I live in the Atlanta metro area. I had another book in mind, a historical novel and mystery set in Atlanta, and I'll definitely read that too, so I can count both and know that one of them fits the prompt without any fudging—and that I read two excellent books.
I live in Yangon, Myanmar, so I read a novel set in my city called ရင်ထဲကဆောင်းရာသီ. It is a family drama centered on a child with developmental problems

I'm in Austin TX, so I just finished, News of the World by Paulette Jiles.
Here's my review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Here's my review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Try The Dog, by Joseph O'Neill
I haven't read it, but I saw it recently on a list of the 10 best city novels, and I was intrigued: The "narrator is a lost and tormented Manhattan lawyer working in Dubai for a family of Lebanese billionaires. In O’Neill’s hands, Dubai becomes a metaphor for the futility of the narrator’s cosseted existence: the city is depicted as a place of empty luxury and moral ambiguity full of luxury resorts and glitzy high-rise apartment buildings. At the end of the book, the narrator revisits New York and is shocked to realise he hates it. He is drawn ineluctably back to Dubai, much to his own bafflement."

You could try Temporary People, which is about guest workers in the UAE.


The Legend of Indian Mary and Umpqua Joe by Percy T. Booth. It tells the story of Indian Mary Park in Galice. Though I didn’t particularly enjoy the writing, it was interesting to learn more about the history of the area where I live.

Well, there is The Devil All the Time which takes place in part in that area. Ready Player One takes place in Columbus of the future.


Love this whole series!!


I would say as long as one place in the book is 100m/160km, then it counts.

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)
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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)
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