Ultimate Popsugar Reading Challenge discussion

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2018 Challenge Prompts-Advanced > 5. A book with a fruit or vegetable in the title

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message 51: by Meredith (last edited Dec 04, 2017 05:48PM) (new)

Meredith (mcgraced) | 53 comments For those looking for non-fiction options, there's Lemon Tree and Animal, Vegetable, Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver and it's food porn in the best sense of that term!


message 52: by Deb (new)

Deb Omnivorous Reader Under Plum Lake was one of my favourite kids books. Really interesting themes that make one think.

Thing I learnt today; Huckleberry is a real fruit, I never knew that.


message 53: by Anna (new)


message 54: by Caitlin (new)

Caitlin (catielane) | 60 comments Haven’t read any Oscar Wilde yet so I’m going to try his A House of Pomegranates.


message 55: by Floor (new)

Floor (floor1101) | 14 comments I have to read Vineland by Thomas Pynchon for one of my uni courses and I know it's a stretch but I think that's my pick for this prompt.


message 56: by poshpenny (new)

poshpenny | 1916 comments Deborah wrote: "Thing I learnt today; Huckleberry is a real fruit, I never knew that."

One of my three favorite berries, with Boysenberry and Marionberry. Delicious!


message 57: by Adeline (new)

Adeline (addystarr) | 6 comments Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit by Jeannette Winterson is such a beautiful and heartbreaking book. If you haven’t read it, I so strongly recommend it!!


message 58: by Caitlin (new)

Caitlin (catielane) | 60 comments Adeline, I’m reading it right now! I picked it up to read during lunch at work yesterday. I’ve only got through the first chapter so far but it’s already unlike anything I’ve ever read before.


message 60: by Crumb (new)

Crumb | 395 comments These threads are a lifesaver!! I have been wanting to read The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society for a while and have never gotten around to it.. Now, I can read it for this prompt!


message 61: by Deb (new)

Deb Omnivorous Reader poshpenny wrote: "Deborah wrote: "Thing I learnt today; Huckleberry is a real fruit, I never knew that."

One of my three favorite berries, with Boysenberry and Marionberry. Delicious!"


Boysenberries are amazeballs, but I have never tried a Marionberry, though I have read about them. Recently tried Saskatoon berries for the first time also. And fresh Lingonberries in Finland a couple of years ago.


message 62: by Megan (new)

Megan | 361 comments Kristy wrote: "Orange is the New Black"

That's my pick!


Kimberley - TardisBookishTales (whovian_reads_books) | 9 comments The Potato Factory by Bryce Courtenay is an oldie but a goodie. I have it at home and haven’t read it yet so it will be perfect for this prompt.


message 66: by Lin (new)

Lin (gramatumaja) | 43 comments I want to read the book which was made into a movie in 1980's. (raspberry wine). And I just realised that the tilte of the book has no raspberries in it !!! Read or not to read? To count it in or not?


message 67: by Teresa (new)


message 68: by Jackie (new)

Jackie | 734 comments Lin wrote: "I want to read the book which was made into a movie in 1980's. (raspberry wine). And I just realised that the tilte of the book has no raspberries in it !!! Read or not to read? To count it in or not?"

Did they publish a movie-tie-in edition? Because sometimes they'll do that and change the title to match the movie, like with Rocket Boys which got republished as October Sky after the movie came out.


message 70: by Chloe (new)

Chloe (grrrlbrarian) | 33 comments Oranges in No Man's Land - also it's only 116 pages if you're looking for a nice quick read


message 71: by Mary (new)

Mary | 4 comments Oranges by John McPhee. He's a great non-fiction writer and makes topics that I'm not even interested in compelling (I'll read anything if it's well-written). You'll never look at the navel orange in your refrigerator the same way. Also, it's 160 pages, so it makes it easy to check of a box when you're also tackling something 400+ pages. The first book by McPhee I read was Oranges (1967), and it was obvious then that he was a writer who could juice the pulp of unpromising subject matter: a seven-sectioned book on, yes, oranges that brilliantly tracks the fruit’s uses and myths from sixth-century-BC China to the citrus barons of contemporary Florida.
-- The Guardian


message 72: by Susan (new)

Susan A. (suzsoccer) Finished A Clockwork Orange. Great book, but not easy reading. Glad that I can add this to the list of classics I’ve read.


message 73: by SadieReadsAgain (new)

SadieReadsAgain (sadiestartsagain) | 767 comments Going for another of the long-time TBR shelf inhabitants - Where the Apple Ripens and Other Stories


message 74: by Mo (last edited Jan 08, 2018 07:49PM) (new)

Mo McCallie (minimod) | 22 comments If people like cozy mysteries, almost all of Joanna Fluke's Hannah Swensen mysteries have fruits in the title.


message 75: by Leona (last edited Jan 09, 2018 10:13AM) (new)

Leona (mnleona) | 244 comments I have Cherry Cheesecake Murder by Joanne Fluke on my bookshelf I have not read yet.


message 76: by Danielle (new)

Danielle (a_bookish_shelf) | 26 comments I got an email the other day telling me my reservation for Juniper Lemon's Happiness Index was available. I have wanting to read it for ages now. And it works so well for this category!

So I read it in 2 nights. I would have read it in one if I didn’t have to work!


message 77: by Suni (new)

Suni (sunibu) I'm reading Wild Strawberries by Angela Thirkell for this prompt.


message 78: by Jess (new)

Jess Penhallow | 427 comments I recommend Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe, it would also work for LGBT and if you've seen the film


message 79: by willaful (new)

willaful It's probably not findable, but one of my favorites is a book of romantic fairy tales called Martin Pippin in the Apple Orchard by Eleanor Farjeon.

Also throwing out a title of a book I personally didn't care for. Fantasy romance: Winter Oranges


message 80: by Amanda (new)

Amanda (amandamichellesmith) | 14 comments poshpenny wrote: "I picked up a great little 1936 edition of Five Little Peppers and How They Grew for less than 5 bucks! That's the same year the movie came out, so bonus movie nerd credits for me.
..."


I read some of the Cherry Ames books when I was growing up. I can't remember if I found them at a library book sale or at a thrift store or what. They were already pretty old though.


message 81: by Trish (new)

Trish | 67 comments I forgot The House on Mango Street would work for this prompt! I almost put it down for "about feminism," but this one is too perfect. Such a heartbreaking book, I would recommend it to anyone and everyone!


message 83: by Chrissi (last edited Feb 12, 2018 04:34AM) (new)

Chrissi (clewand84) | 238 comments I've read the first three - The Blueberry Bakeshop and Coconut Cake were nice, quick reads that had decent romance - along with food. :) I've always wanted to read about Spain and Granada, so I thought the first pomegranate book might be good choice.

The Irresistible Blueberry Bakeshop & Cafe
The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake
The Coincidence of Coconut Cake
Shadows of the Pomegranate Tree
A House of Pomegranates
Fruit of the Lemon


message 84: by Jamie (new)

Jamie Ghione (jannghi) | 30 comments The Irresistible Blueberry Bakeshop & Cafe
I read this one for this prompt


message 85: by Cornerofmadness (new)

Cornerofmadness | 806 comments I just finished Lime Gelatin and Other Monsters for this prompt. It would also work for LGBT. If you like the X-Files and wanted to see a Philly police station in that sort of storyline you'll enjoy this.


message 86: by Juliebean (new)

Juliebean (juliebean512) | 145 comments I just found on my Kindle the book The Lemoncholy Life of Annie Aster. Might be a bit of a stretch, but...


message 87: by Ashley (new)

Ashley White (celadore) | 6 comments Cranberry Queen Was pretty good when I read it years ago.


message 88: by Megan (new)

Megan (oreodont) | 56 comments On the Banks of Plum Creek Such a great series!


message 89: by Rachel (new)

Rachel A. (abyssallibrarian) | 643 comments I'm currently in the middle of The Mango Season


message 90: by Lindsay (new)

Lindsay S There is a biography about Clementine Churchill by Mary Soames which could work.

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


message 91: by Serendipity (new)

Serendipity | 146 comments I loved 84 Charing Cross Road so went for Apple of My Eye


message 92: by Karen (new)

Karen | 127 comments I read Monique and the Mango Rains: two years with a midwife in Mali for this prompt and really enjoyed it!


message 94: by ✨ A ✨ (new)

✨ A ✨  (az_youread) does anyone know of any YA books that fit with this prompt?


message 95: by Ria (new)

Ria (ria-) | 11 comments Azrah wrote: "does anyone know of any YA books that fit with this prompt?"Cherry Crush


message 96: by Carol (new)

Carol Roote | 119 comments Azrah wrote: "here are book by one of my favourite authors
The Coincidence of Coconut Cake
Luck, Love & Lemon Pie
The Simplicity of Cider"


Hmm...does cider count? I really want to read The Cider House Rules, because I read A Prayer for Owen Meany for the book set in the decade I was born prompt and loved it and want to read more John Irving.


message 97: by Carol (new)

Carol Roote | 119 comments Azrah wrote: "does anyone know of any YA books that fit with this prompt?"

I haven't read all of these, but here is a selection that I found:

The House on Mango Street
A Raisin in the Sun?
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
The Orange Girl
Dandelion Wine
Peaches
The Tattooed Potato and Other Clues
What's Eating Gilbert Grape
A Mango-Shaped Space
Surviving the Applewhites
Reflections on a Gift of Watermelon Pickle

Hopefully one of those will appeal.


message 98: by Mel (new)

Mel | 90 comments Azrah wrote: "does anyone know of any YA books that fit with this prompt?"
Cherry
Juniper Lemon's Happiness Index


message 99: by Cyndy (new)

Cyndy (cyndy-ksreader) | 133 comments I read Eight Hundred Grapes by Laura Dave. 800 Grapes are what it takes to make a bottle of wine. That's where the title of the book comes from. A story of a family - empty nest parents, their two older sons and their younger sister. The parents just happen to own a winery in Sebastipol, CA, and are ready to retire.


message 100: by Baroness Ekat (new)

Baroness Ekat (baronessekat) | 117 comments I started Clockwork Orange yesterday as an audiobook.

As much as I do eventually want to read it, I think this is one that I may have to shelve. Especially as an audio. The language is just very hard to follow as an audio.


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