Ultimate Popsugar Reading Challenge discussion
2020 Challenge - Regular
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26 - A book with a pun in the title






I used Let's Fake a Deal by Sherry Harris for this prompt. It's a quick read that is part of a series but I hadn't read the others before and it was fairly stand alone in my opinion





Yes. The title plays on the Christie novel, Murder on the Orient Express, so definitely a pun.


Yes. The title plays on the Christie novel,..."
Thanks Heather, much appreciated!

I'm admittedly bad at puns, but I can't find any pun there.

I don't see any puns.




Lilith is correct about where the title comes from, but it is NOT a pun even if it is a play on another title because girl and lambs do not have either a similar sound or sense (hast to be one or the other). In order to be a pun it has to fill one or both of the following:
n.
A play on words, sometimes on different senses of the same word and sometimes on the similar sense or sound of different words.
Sometimes doesn't mean there are any other types other than these two, but because these are the two types of puns.


Ella Minnow Pea is LMNOP and it's a story about the alphabet. It is quite cleverly written.

Johanne wrote: "Oh! Thank you! I had never figured that out (maybe I don't pronounce it correctly in my head, I didn't think about the alphabet at all)."
I think it only comes automatically to those of us who learned the English alphabet song as kids, and naturally misunderstood it at first haha!!
Although I guess as a kid what I heard was: “Ellem Enno Pee!”
I think it only comes automatically to those of us who learned the English alphabet song as kids, and naturally misunderstood it at first haha!!
Although I guess as a kid what I heard was: “Ellem Enno Pee!”

I don't often read nonfiction books, but John Carreyrou's promise to uncover the biggest scam in Silicon Valley was too tempting to ignore - and boy, did he deliver. He takes his readers into the depths of Theranos, a promising unicorn startup that crashed in 2015 when it was revealed that its CEO Elizabeth Holmes had been duping investors and was selling defective products and tests to patients. The sensational tales from Theranos employees and business partners gets more thrilling with each and every page. Would definitely recommend!

A great choice if you like engineering disasters and computing errors. The author has a sense of humor. I listened to the audio book and it often made me laugh.


A great choice if you like engineering disasters and computing errors. The author has a sense of humor. I listened to the audio book an..."
Did it mention the Second Narrows Bridge in Vancouver? Just curious. Or the Lion's Gate Bridge in Vancouver (built by the same company that did the Golden Gate bridge)?


Possibly a double meaning of "party"? They're a group of friends throwing a party, but possibly also a "hunting party" (using "party" in the RPG sense, a crew of hunters). This is going off the blurb so I'm not sure if I'm stretching it.

Honestly, I'm not sure if I'd count it here. You could maybe say that there's a double entendre between the book being about characters at a hunting lodge and then a murder happening, but it's still a big stretch. Good book though, just maybe somewhere else.


Do you happen to already know who the killer is and their motivation? If so, that might be where you got the idea it's a pun. Honestly, I'm terrible at deciding if something is a pun or not so I can't make a judgement. The title could have a double meaning.


Can The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and Other Tales of Terror be considered a pun? (hyde/hide jekyll/kill) Do onomastic puns count?
Sincerely,
Me, who is in lockdown and has a limited choice of books and is desperately trying to make them fit in the prompts

Can The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and Other Tales of Terror be considered a pun? (hyde/hide jekyll/kill) Do onomastic puns coun..."
No, it's not a pun. But the book satisfies the prompt for an anthology.
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I just read Wyrd Sisters, of course meaning Macbeth's weird sisters. In my German edition it is called MacBest. I gues..."
It is not a pun in English, because weird comes from the word wyrd in its etymology (word history) and is merely the contemporary spelling.