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24: A book with a map
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Rebecca
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Apr 20, 2018 02:45AM

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Murder Underground by Mavis Doriel Hay
The map was of the station where the murder took place, and was helpful in showing the layout so it was easy to understand how it had been committed.


- Do you think the map will add to the narrative or reading experience? Not really, I only glanced at it every so often but it didn't really add anything or clarify anything further.
I just finished Six of Crows for this prompt, and I actually referenced the maps frequently. I think maps for a fictional world really help with getting a frame of reference.
I'm also not great at reading descriptions.. my eyes tend to start skimming when there's a whole lot of "to the left of the door there is this and to the right of the window there is that", so the map of the Ice Court really helped me imagine how they were moving throughout the last half of the book.
I'm also not great at reading descriptions.. my eyes tend to start skimming when there's a whole lot of "to the left of the door there is this and to the right of the window there is that", so the map of the Ice Court really helped me imagine how they were moving throughout the last half of the book.


- Do you think the map will add to the narrative or reading experience? I honestly don't look at the maps that often. Usually just to see where places are in relation to each other.

At Home in Mitford Jan Karon
Do you think the map will add to the narrative or reading experience?
Yes, it already has given me an idea of where buildings and people's houses are in Mitford.

Do you think the map will add to the narrative or reading experience? Probably. I like to refer to maps when reading books like this especially when territories and battles are involved.



Rachel, all three of the books in the trilogy have maps!

The Smell of Other People's Houses by Bonnie-Sue Hitchcock. (read this myself for this prompt and it was precious!)
We Were Liars by E. Lockhart.

Rachel, all three of the books in the trilogy have maps!"
Excellent! Now to rearrange my plans a bit, lol.

- Do you think the map will add to the narrative or reading experience?
Not really
I read Holy Terror In The Hebrides which has a map of the island of Iona in the front. I looked at it before reading, and then didn't really need to refer back to it again. The layout of the island was pretty easy to remember.

This Must Be the Place by Maggie O’Farrell.
There is a pretty map under the dust jacket of the hardcover edition on the actual cover of the book.
Do you think the map will add to the narrative or reading?
Yes, I hope so. I like maps and often look up places mentioned in books if there isn’t one anyways.






The House at the Edge of the World by Julia Rochester
I LOVED it and devoured it in one day. It's taken the place as my #1 book of the year (so far). Highly recommend!


Ruin and Rising
Do you think the map will add to the narrative or reading experience?
I'd say minimally at this point, since I just finished reading the first two books in the series and they all have the same map. It was helpful at times, but I generally tend to look at maps at the beginning and then not very much while actually reading.

Oh yeah odd, I just checked my (kindle) copy of this book to see if it had a map and nope. I was planning on reading a Robin Hobb book for this category too but it got bumped as I found a map in a sequel that I was reading anyway.
- What are you reading for this category?
Days of Blood & Starlight
- Do you think the map will add to the narrative or reading experience?
Nope not really. So far I can't make much sense of the map but I keep going back just in case :)

The map helps keep me aligned with where everything is taking place throughout the territories.

What are you reading for this category?
A Morbid Taste for Bones by Ellis Peters
Do you think the map will add to the narrative or reading experience?
For books I’m loving, yes, wholeheartedly. I typically glance at the map before starting the book and if I'm fully immersed, will occasionally flip back and forth between the story and the map.
For as well-loved as this book seems to be, sadly it was not one that I enjoyed so I did not refer to the map while reading at all. I looked at it before starting the book but never again.



- Do you think the map will add to the narrative or reading experience? Hmmm, the map is very simple, although it shows which country are next to what other country, so maybe a little.

I guess the map will help as a reference to the areas affected in the story.
For our picture book we read Henry's Map. This was a , well I'm just gonna say we didn't care. The map was the whole story because he drew it throughout. Then at the end none of the animals on the farm could figure out why it didn't look right because they were drawn into the map but they went on the hill to look down and see if the map was accurate but it wasn't because they were all missing. The girls thought they weren't very smart. The girls were right lol


Something better always comes along. I do want to read it eventually its just obviously not a priority lately ( in the last 3 years)


The Goose Girl by Shannon Hale
Do you think the map will add to the narrative or reading experience?
It did, actually. The map showed the two different kingdoms and the land/forest that separated the two, adding to the feeling of desperation of the characters attempting to pass through that separation.

The Bad-Ass Librarians of Timbuktu: And Their Race to Save the World’s Most Precious Manuscripts by Joshua Hammer
- Do you think the map will add to the narrative or reading experience?
The map in this book is actually the inner cover of the book, and it was incredibly helpful when I was trying to figure out where and what people were doing.



https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles...

A Wizard of Earthsea
- Do you think the map will add to the narrative or reading experience?
I looked the map over before I began to read, but I didn't think the sense of place was strong enough to make me want to refer to it again. It did not add anything to the experience.
Anyone know if Gemina, the second book in the Illuminae series has a map? I know the first book didn't necessarily have a traditional map but it did have maps of the ships.
I had been planning on reading The Smell of Other People's Houses for this prompt but the copy disappeared out of my library's system.
I had been planning on reading The Smell of Other People's Houses for this prompt but the copy disappeared out of my library's system.

Thanks, Joan! I'm sure I could fit in somewhere in 2019 but it seems to make sense fitting it into a prompt sooner rather than later.
Books mentioned in this topic
I Am Malala: The Girl Who Stood Up for Education and Was Shot by the Taliban (other topics)The Smell of Other People's Houses (other topics)
Gemina (other topics)
A Wizard of Earthsea (other topics)
The Writer's Map: An Atlas of Imaginary Lands (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Joshua Hammer (other topics)Shannon Hale (other topics)
Frank Delaney (other topics)
Julia Rochester (other topics)
Helen Scales (other topics)
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