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[2020] 4th Mini Poll Results
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I'm a little surprised that neither the foreign literary prize or ALA made the list. To be honest, they were both bottom votes for me, but they seemed very popular so I was sure we'd end up with at least one of them.
Spreadsheet is updated!
I am ambivalent about the winners... I'm really excited about the leading news story, but I think southern hemisphere is a bit easy (I read a lot of Australian authors, apparently), and the list of suggestions that didn't win will basically be a free choice... it's easy to choose one prompt to fit any book I want to read. The close call/polarizing prompt was a bit more restrictive this year.
I am glad to see more variety though! 3 winners, 2 bottom, and our first polarizing prompts of the process. A bit bummed about the essays, but I think there are quite a few people who saw it as nonfiction only, and we don't get a lot of nonfiction readers here.
I'm with Ellie... I'm itching for a list prompt. Hopefully one will get suggested next round.
I am ambivalent about the winners... I'm really excited about the leading news story, but I think southern hemisphere is a bit easy (I read a lot of Australian authors, apparently), and the list of suggestions that didn't win will basically be a free choice... it's easy to choose one prompt to fit any book I want to read. The close call/polarizing prompt was a bit more restrictive this year.
I am glad to see more variety though! 3 winners, 2 bottom, and our first polarizing prompts of the process. A bit bummed about the essays, but I think there are quite a few people who saw it as nonfiction only, and we don't get a lot of nonfiction readers here.
I'm with Ellie... I'm itching for a list prompt. Hopefully one will get suggested next round.

A couple recent releases for the news story prompt are Whisper Network (about the #MeToo movement) and The Gifted School (about the parents who bribed their kids way into college).
I planned on reading both this month, but I may hold off on The Gifted School until next year.... or just go historical fiction for the prompt.
I planned on reading both this month, but I may hold off on The Gifted School until next year.... or just go historical fiction for the prompt.

I have to agree that the prompt that didn't win is a freebie. By the time the list is complete we have so many left over prompts that I can pick up any book and fit it somewhere in the rejects list. I also do a rejects challenge at the end of the year, so that takes some excitement out of it too.
Anyway, they are all prompts that I can work with so on we go!

This.
I am, however, very happy that "A book inspired by a leading news story" made the list. There are so many ways to do that prompt. It will be fun to research and interesting to see what others do with it.


Very sad to see that the debut author of colour and book of essays prompts didn't make it through.

I'm fine with news story. I might finally read 11/22/63 for that one.
I downvoted "southern hemisphere," because we already have a lot of geographical prompts, and it's early in the voting process.
I voted for both the polarizing prompts, so that's a bummer.
I downvoted book by an author I previously disliked, so I'm glad I don't have to do that one.
I hope we get some genre or list/awards prompts soon. I'm not as inspired by the prompts thus far as I usually am. So many of them are just so easy.
Marie wrote: "I'm probably being dense, or just wasn't paying attention, but for the news story prompt is it the author who was inspired to write the book by the news story? Or am I just looking for something I ..."
Marie, it just has to be a book that is inspired by a news event. It can be a fiction book that portrays an event from history (like an historical fiction book about the Titanic), a fiction book that talks about a movement or newsworthy thing going on now (something like The Hate U Give and police brutality), or it can be a nonfiction book about a specific event. It's really up to your interpretation.
Marie, it just has to be a book that is inspired by a news event. It can be a fiction book that portrays an event from history (like an historical fiction book about the Titanic), a fiction book that talks about a movement or newsworthy thing going on now (something like The Hate U Give and police brutality), or it can be a nonfiction book about a specific event. It's really up to your interpretation.

Joanne, this is my fourth year in the list creating process (I participated in the 2017, 2018, 2019, and now 2020 lists), and I feel like we have had a wider variety and more challenging prompts in the list by now. I'm guessing this has to do with the change in voting rules... people are upvoting a lot more than they used to, so their votes are spread a bit wider, so prompts that are a bit more challenging are having to battle against the more generic prompts in a way that they wouldn't have had to battle before.
For example, people are saying "I upvoted 5 and downvoted 2 and I'll just throw this generic prompt in my upvotes since I have one extra vote." rather than before when we were forced to vote 4 up and 4 down. If they had to narrow those 6 upvotes down to 4, they may have chosen the more specific, challenging prompts for their top 4 and not upvoted the ones they were more ambivalent about. Combine this across all of the voters and, while they feel strongly one way or another about the challenging ones, they are in general agreement about the generic ones, so those are the ones that get in.
I don't know if I'm rambling a bit, but that's what I think is happening. Not saying it is necessarily a bad thing... after all, people are voting for them, so they want them in. It just may mean we have an easier list this year than we have in the past. It could also mean that, down the road, the mods may have specific polls (like no title or setting polls, or polls specifically dedicated to awards/lists/genres).
For example, people are saying "I upvoted 5 and downvoted 2 and I'll just throw this generic prompt in my upvotes since I have one extra vote." rather than before when we were forced to vote 4 up and 4 down. If they had to narrow those 6 upvotes down to 4, they may have chosen the more specific, challenging prompts for their top 4 and not upvoted the ones they were more ambivalent about. Combine this across all of the voters and, while they feel strongly one way or another about the challenging ones, they are in general agreement about the generic ones, so those are the ones that get in.
I don't know if I'm rambling a bit, but that's what I think is happening. Not saying it is necessarily a bad thing... after all, people are voting for them, so they want them in. It just may mean we have an easier list this year than we have in the past. It could also mean that, down the road, the mods may have specific polls (like no title or setting polls, or polls specifically dedicated to awards/lists/genres).


I don't care for list or award winning prompts so I'm glad those did not make it.


I thought last year's list was easier than previous years, and this year is going the same way. I was wondering if it's just because as I do more challenges my brain has gotten better at twisting the prompts to fit what I want to read, and my reading tastes have broadened, making the prompts easier to fill as a consequence.

I agree with Angie about wanting to see a few genre prompts. I've been trying to think of genres that we haven't seen on previous lists, but haven't been able to come up with anything yet. But then again, southern hemisphere & prompt that didn't win have both been on previous lists, so maybe it wouldn't be so bad to have a genre we've had before.

For the news story, every installment of the Miss Kopp series by Amy Stewart, is based on a news story from the life of the real life Miss Kopp. I love this series. First one is Girl Waits with Gun - which I read for the “Clue weapon on cover prompt” in 2017(?). This was a book I probably would not have picked up if not for the ATY challenge, and I am so glad I did. I read all of them so far :)

I was hoping the essay would get in. It would force me to read in a genre that I appreciate but don't seem to ever get to. I think the news item prompt could be very interesting if researched properly. I would think any biography of a famous person would satisfy it, so more difficult to narrow down than to find.

I'm with you. Sad to see some great prompts not make it through and disappointed that the "prompt that didn't win" is a promp since it is essentially a gimme. There is nothing challenging about it at all. I suppose on the plus side, I can use it to read a debut novel by a person of color.

Very true!




The list always seems to balance itself out in the end. It truly is too early in the process to start saying we have too many or too few of a certain type of prompt.
Of course, as was said, we will implement further rules if needed down the line.
Viemag > there's really no hard rule on a certain number. There was a bit a gap between the polarizing prompts and the top (more than in the past years) but it was close enough for us to feel comfortable in saying they were polarizing (equal number top/bottom votes).
Some may have argued for including the 5+ words in the list but having seen results for a number of years now, I got a feeling that it was more that people didn't care about the prompt one way or the other rather than a majority actually wanting it. I think that is one danger of having all 8 votes available to be split as people wish. People get excited and vote for ones they like or vice versa. I think it's definitely affecting our numbers but that's not necessarily a bad thing.
I do think the 5+ words one, like any close call, would be good one re-submit down the road if people really do like it. Since we break the process up into smaller polls, a prompt may end up being a close call if it just happens to be in a poll with clear winners.
Of course, as was said, we will implement further rules if needed down the line.
Viemag > there's really no hard rule on a certain number. There was a bit a gap between the polarizing prompts and the top (more than in the past years) but it was close enough for us to feel comfortable in saying they were polarizing (equal number top/bottom votes).
Some may have argued for including the 5+ words in the list but having seen results for a number of years now, I got a feeling that it was more that people didn't care about the prompt one way or the other rather than a majority actually wanting it. I think that is one danger of having all 8 votes available to be split as people wish. People get excited and vote for ones they like or vice versa. I think it's definitely affecting our numbers but that's not necessarily a bad thing.
I do think the 5+ words one, like any close call, would be good one re-submit down the road if people really do like it. Since we break the process up into smaller polls, a prompt may end up being a close call if it just happens to be in a poll with clear winners.

A polarizing prompt is one that has a lot of top votes but also a lot of bottom votes.
There is no set number of votes to make a prompt a close call. When we analyze the votes, we look for clusters of prompts, so the three winners all had a similarly large number of positive votes. A close call is a prompt that has a lot of positive votes, but it's off that cluster of top votes, so it doesn't have enough top votes for us to consider it an overwhelming favorite.

But, it's still exactly as hard as you want it to be, right? I mean, you could still choose a hard prompt if you wanted to.
I do get that it's anti-climactic for people who usually do reject challenges anyway, so in that sense I can see how it feels boring.


The biggest thing for me is that I tend to read a book and need somewhere to put it. So I find a previous suggestion that it will fit. That's a total gimme in that situation.
Next year I will just have to really push myself to choose a prompt first.
Next year I will just have to really push myself to choose a prompt first.

Laura, this year, when I was making my plan, I chose a prompt that I voted for and actually replaced the close call/polarizing prompt with that new one. It helped me remember that I had already committed to a prompt. I chose a pretty open one anyway (a book connected to a cultural appreciation month), but it did narrow it down a bit, rather than me just using a free choice and filling something in later.
I'll probably do the same next year. I'm still undecided if I'll be doing a reject challenge... I'll have to wait until I see the final list before I decide.
I'll probably do the same next year. I'm still undecided if I'll be doing a reject challenge... I'll have to wait until I see the final list before I decide.


I'm definitely going to choose a prompt I where I was disappointed that it didn't get in.

I have to assume my problem is that my goals in a reading challenge do not synch with the majority this year.


I'm very relieved that the collection of essays didn't win...that would have been *extremely* difficult for me personally to get through.
Books mentioned in this topic
Girl Waits with Gun (other topics)The Gifted School (other topics)
I Know Your Kind: Poems (other topics)
Earthquake in the Early Morning (other topics)
The Hate U Give (other topics)
More...
Top 3:
- A book inspired by a leading news story
- A book set in the southern hemisphere
- A book that fits a prompt from the list of suggestions that didn't win
Bottom:
- A book by an author whose previous book you disliked
- A collection of essays
Close Call:
- A book with a title of 5 or more words
Polarizing:
- A book from an American Library Association’s Notable Books List
- A winner of a foreign literary prize
Results are calculated by subtracting the number of voters who put a prompt in their bottom 4 from those who put a prompt in their top 4 (top 4 - bottom 4). The totals are then compared to find the top result(s).
The next round of suggestions will open tomorrow, Sunday, July 7 at 8:00pm EDT.