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[2020] Voting for 13th Mini Poll
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Anastasia
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Sep 09, 2019 03:42AM

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Thanks for the clarification.
I was hoping this was a genre prompt but if it's really "a book in which a mystery is central to the plot" then that's just an extremely broad theme prompt. It would cover the many subgenres in the mystery genre as well just about any other genre so I'm much less inclined to vote for it is since it's very nearly a "read a book" prompt.

It's a goodreads list, which anyone can put anything on it, so it might very well not fit.
Reposting my previous post:
The definition of a diaspora is
1. the dispersion of people from their homeland and
2. a community formed by people who have exited or been removed from their homeland
So I'm guessing this prompt covers all books that are about
1. someone fleeing their home country or
2. someone living in a foreign county as an immigrant/refugee/etc. or
3. some combination of 1 and 2
I'm having a hard time voting this week... There's only a couple that really jump out one way or the other to me, and I may end up using less than 8 votes for the first time ever.
Currently looking at voting up: history/historical fiction, Shakespeare in the title, Lambda award, and the last book published by an author (as much as I hate the wording, I really like the concept).
I only have two downvotes as of now, and both of them were immediate for me. I'll have to ponder the list some more and decide what I'll do with my two remaining votes.
Currently looking at voting up: history/historical fiction, Shakespeare in the title, Lambda award, and the last book published by an author (as much as I hate the wording, I really like the concept).
I only have two downvotes as of now, and both of them were immediate for me. I'll have to ponder the list some more and decide what I'll do with my two remaining votes.

I can certainly see how these categories could overlap but an argument can definitely be made that there are distinct difference between the three prompts.
Just as an example, Inland by Téa Obreht. The last book she published was in 2011, and I read it in 2011 or 2012, so it wouldn't count for an author who wrote a book I loved in 2018/19. And it was published last month so it wouldn't count for a 2020 publication. But it definitely counts for "the most recent publication by a favorite author."



To me a landmark is something that instantly lets me know where it is just by looking at it, so if I woke up there I would know exactly where I was. If I woke up in a battlefield, I would just know I was in a field, but if I was staring up at Big Ben, I'd know I was in London.
Not sure if that helps. There are some iconic landmarks, but also more personal ones.



Both in age and the fact it's part of the Palace of Westminster which has seen much History.



I had to look up both to be sure, but with Olivia Twist I immediately went 'oh, is that Big Ben?', which makes it seem like it was very recognizable despite being a small element in the cover.
With Tale of Two Cities I just searched for London landmarks, hoping they used a real/famous building, and I'm mostly sure it's the tower of London shown upside down on the cover.
I immediately thought of buildings for that prompt for some reason--Empire State Building, Statue of Liberty (I guess not technically a building, but on the scale of one), Golden Gate Bridge, Leaning Tower of Pisa... those are the kinds of things I was looking for.




Are the following books from myTBR considered “high fantasy”?
Soldier of Arete
Soldier of Sidon
The Scar
Six of Crows
Sea Glass
(It’s just a weird coincidence that all my book ideas start with S!!!!)

From what I can find, it looks like Six of Crows and Sea Glass are shelved multiple times as high fantasy. I don't see the others on that list, but I haven't read them, so I can't be sure.

High fantasy is defined as fantasy fiction set in an alternative, entirely fictional ("secondary") world, rather than the real, or "primary" world. The secondary world is usually internally consistent but its rules differ in some way(s) from those of the primary world. By contrast, low fantasy is characterized by being set in the primary, or "real" world, or a rational and familiar fictional world, with the inclusion of magical elements.
Epic Fantasy is a subgenre of fantasy that is set in invented or parallel world. It is most commonly considered to be the same genre as High Fantasy, since they share many of the same elements, but Epic Fantasy takes the story even farther, in a bigger and more epic way (e.g. the stakes are greater; the land/world is in peril; a great evil threatens the world; the conflict shakes all who dwell in the world of the story).

This is from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_fa... but I think it gives a good idea of the difference between low and high fantasy.
"High fantasy is set in an alternative, fictional ("secondary") world, rather than the "real" or "primary" world.[2] This secondary world is usually internally consistent, but its rules differ from those of the primary world. By contrast, low fantasy is characterized by being set in the primary or real world, or a rational and familiar fictional world with the inclusion of magical elements."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Low_fan...
"Low fantasy or intrusion fantasy is a subgenre of fantasy fiction where magical events intrude on an otherwise normal world.[1][2] It thus contrasts with high fantasy stories, which take place in fictional worlds with their own sets of rules and physical laws."
With all that being said there is some blurring between the two. I have not read any of the books you listed.

Thanks so much, Avery! I knew I had seen them at one point but just couldn’t remember where.

This made me laugh. I'm pretty sure we all know these guys exist now, but they are always on the lists. *yawn*
I think if you stick to fantasy set wholly in a made up world you'll be on the right track (so Six of Crows, yes).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of...

According to Worlds Without End, "The term high fantasy (also epic fantasy) generally refers to fantasy that depicts an epic struggle between good and evil in a fantasy world, whether independent of or parallel to ours. The moral concepts in such tales take on objective status, and are not relative to the one making the judgement."
Books tagged as high fantasy on Worlds Without End can be viewed
HERE.
My personal definition of high fantasy is anything that is like what is often thought of as fantasy - Hero/Heroine sent on a Quest by a Wise Person plus great adventure, helpful sidekick(s), imaginary land and creatures, triumph over evil, happily ever after.

Thanks for the clarification.
I was hoping this was a ge..."
You're right. I almost said "a book from the mystery genre." I'm personally reading from the mystery genre, but I thought others might like the broadness of the prompt.

There are 7 that I like a lot, but I went with my gut to narrow it down.
I will definitely want to see ATY Listopia lists for some of these to get more ideas.

This cracked me up because my five year old has been really interested in favourites recently and is constantly asking me for mine. Like, mom, what’s your fourth favourite colour? What’s your favourite dinosaur? Who’s your favourite witch?
I tell you, I feel like I’m being to look to the depth of my being multiple times a day to answer her questions.




(Sadly, though, I just discovered that one of my MOST favorite authors - Gene Wolfe - died in April. I am saddened at the loss, sadder still that I didn’t even know, and even sadder yet because I didnt really like his last book and was hoping he would write something else soon.)


For anyone intimidated by the genre, there are plenty of options that are stand alone books or even novellas. (It even includes the basis for The Wizard of Oz.)

I was thinking the same thing for a future prompt. Something like "A book related to witches." Not only do I have books on my TBR where witches are main characters, but non-fictions ones with witch in the title that aren't actually about witches. (Season of the Witch: Enchantment, Terror and Deliverance in the City of Love & The Witches Are Coming)
I figure I would mention this here in case I missed the nomination period again.

Me too. Also, this prompt as it is worded in the poll gives us no choice at all. There is only one book that fits - the last or most recent book published by your one favourite author, assuming you can say who that is.
A lot of us have probably already read that book - perhaps quite recently if the author is still alive. So it's a very limiting prompt.

I was thinking of reading something about Stonewall with the inn on the cover of this one gets in.


I've seen a number of NYC and Paris landmarks on books, especially the Statue of Liberty and the Eiffel Tower.
Examples I have are:







You're all good. It only went through once.

A lot of us have probably already read that book - perhaps quite recently if the author is still alive. So it's a very limiting prompt"
LOL. I love your brain.

It was reworded to include latest/most recent, but I agree that the favorite part also should have been altered a bit.


But at any rate, the two buildings are iconic, so I guess they count as “historical landmarks” - tho I have no idea what role they may have played in history.
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