Ultimate Popsugar Reading Challenge discussion
2019 Challenge Prompts - Regular
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39 - A book revolving around a puzzle or game


I hope/assume so. I'm going with Angels & Demons.

I hadn't thought of this interpretation, I was stuck on the game part. I might go with something along these lines as well!


Theresa wrote: "Curtain - Poirot's last case, involves a crossword puzzle.
The Bookshop of Yesterdays - has a literary scavenger hunt as part of its plot. A good read, enjoyed it a lo..."
Chrissi wrote: "Linda wrote: "Would The Westing Game work for this prompt?"
Yes! I love that book!"

This is such a good idea! I will also be re-reading the Harry Potter series next year, already planning to use Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone for the book that makes me the most nostalgic and Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets for the book with at least 1 million ratings

Stéphanie wrote: "Brittany wrote: "I'm using the Triwizard Tournament as my game here and reading Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire"
This is such a good idea! I will also be re-reading the Harry Potter s..."

I also had no idea that Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore (by Robin Sloane), would qualify for this prompt! I never got around to reading it in 2018, after finding another book for my "library or bookstore" prompt. And all because I want to listen to it on audio, but someone in our group mentioned that we should look under the paper dustcover of the hardback book. I keep forgetting to look for it to take a peek at a brick and mortar store. If it's got lots of illustrations, etc., I will probably just buy it on the spot!



I also had no idea that [book:Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Books..."
There's no illustrations and the book is not a puzzle. It's more that...the fact that the bookstore exists is a puzzle. Yes I'm purposefully being vague. I take a broad approach to spoilers.

I also had no idea that [book:Mr. Penumbra's 2..."
Intruiging...


Some books I had in mind:
Chess
[book:The Flanders ..."
Question then what did you have in mind with puzzle? For example Journey tothe centre of theearth revolves around a puzzle as in cracking a code would that count?

Aw, that's such a lovely idea!"
This is so much fun!! There is a small group in ATY who did a picture book version of the challenge with their children. We had to brainstorm a little bit to figure out books for some of the prompts, but in the end only 2 of the 52 needed to be changed. There was a Womans Prize for fiction category that we substituted other awards for ( Caldecott, Newbury etc...) and the other one was a choice from the Good Reads Best Books of the Month List. For that I used a book from the actual GR choice Awards. My girls are 6 and 8 and they only have 6 books to go to complete their entire challenge. So. Much. Fun. And cuddles. They also did the 2018 GR challenge and set the bar as high as Mommy: 100 books for the year. They are only 10 books away from reading their goal. Its a great way to get the little ones excited about reading!

Aw, that's such a lovely idea!"
This is so much fun!! There is a small group in ATY who did a picture book ver..."
That is so wonderful! And what a great way to get your kids interested in a lifetime of reading! I'll always remember the summer when our teacher handed out a booklet of beautiful bird stickers, that we could put on a tree that we drew with crayons. A bird for every book we read that summer.

Theresa wrote: "Curtain - Poirot's last case, involves a crossword puzzle.
[book:The Bookshop of Y..."
You are welcome. I enjoyed the book as a whole and the literary scavenger hunt aspect is excellent

I also had no idea that [book:Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Books..."
Oooh the tip on the Bantock is great! Just added it to my Christmas wishlist!

Some books I had in mind:
Chess
[bo..."
Oh cracking codes to get answers would definitely count! I had [book:The Da Vinci Code|968] definitely in mind. Someone had already mentioned it so I did not repeat it.

The Flanders Panel has already been suggested involving the game of chess. Another is The Eight by Katherine Neville."
The Eight is sitting on my bedside table! Thanks for the reminder! Also whoever suggested The Rule of Four, another book in my TBR.

Birth of the Chess Queen: A History
Ivory Vikings: The Mystery of the Most Famous Chessmen in the World and the Woman Who Made Them
Graphic Nonfiction:
Tetris: The Games People Play
Middle Grade Fiction:
The Gauntlet (also would work for "own voices" prompt")
When You Reach Me


Yes! The lying game is most definitely about a game. It was a great book!

I am trying to make my list almost entirely classic literature.
I can't really think of any classics surrounding a game.

I am trying to make my list almost entirely classic literature.
I can't really think of any classics surr..."
There are several, including:
The Queen of Spades by Pushkin
The Glass Bead Game by Herman Hesse
The Mystery of Edwin Drood by Dickens
and I would consider The Flanders Panel by Perez-Reverte a contemporary classic.
There are more I'm sure. Check some of my earlier posted suggestions. Those listed here, I've read and enjoyed.


Oh thanks Edie. This book has caught my interest before - but it has a completely different title in Danish, so I didn´t recognise it at first. ("Den skinbarlige sandhed om Lumikkos litterære selskab" meaning "The plain truth about Lumikko´s literary society") I don´t read Finnish, so I wouldn´t know which title is closest to the original. It also has completely different covers:




Have any of you read either book? Would they work for this prompt?


Queens' Play includes what is essentially a scavenger hunt across the rooftops of Blois, France.
It is an awesome series, and fits any number of prompts.

Probably I'll end up using the book for the imaginary creatures prompt or based on folklore instead, but still wondering what you'd all think?
I'm thinking it would count. It is technically a book "revolving around a game" even though the game is not part of the book.
I'd definitely recommend it!



In Finnish it's called "Lumikko and nine others", but lumikko also means a (least) weasel, probably named after snow (lumi) because they are white during winter.
It's weird book, not for everyone, but it's different, at least. I didn't particularly like it but then again, it's not the type of book I usually like, anyway, too much weird stuff going on.

The Bookshop of Yesterdays - has a literary scavenger hunt as part of its plot. A good read, enjoyed it a lo..."
Another Christie is Cards on the Table - another Poirot, solving the case by analysing the game of bridge the suspects were playing
I would not agree, though, for "Name of the Rose" - cyphers, yes, but not really a game

Warcross has already been mentioned and is very good. Grandmaster was also mentioned--I didn't love it, but it wasn't bad, and is probably worth reading if you have any interest in chess.
For the Win is about video game players, revolving around the black market of game currencies and valuable items.
I think you could count A Dance of Silver and Shadow: A Retelling of The Twelve Dancing Princesses, as the princesses are forced to participate in an almost Hunger Games style tournament.
Incarceron is maybe more of a mystery than a puzzle, but might be able to count as they're putting together clues to figure out how to get out of the jail they're trapped in.


This is not your average collection of unrelated logic puzzles. This is an immersive story with embedded first-class puzzles where solving the puzzles reveals more of the story. The puzzles can be quite hard, but they are all reasonable (like a logic puzzle should be!).
Unfortunately, Amazon hasn't got it in stock right now, and is vague about when it might be coming in. I can order it, and they will let me know when it comes in... (I just placed the order).

Books mentioned in this topic
Pachinko (other topics)Cold Day in the Sun (other topics)
Nine Perfect Strangers (other topics)
The Westing Game (other topics)
Never Have I Ever (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Min Jin Lee (other topics)Erin Morgenstern (other topics)
Stefan Zweig (other topics)
Ellen Raskin (other topics)
Matthew Reilly (other topics)
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Middle grade: the Infinity Ring series (A Mutiny in Time) & the 39 Clues series(Into the Gauntlet) ask the reader to solve the puzzle along w the characters. (I have not read these myself so I don't really know how well they fit.)