Ultimate Popsugar Reading Challenge discussion
2020 Challenge - Regular
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18 - A book with a made-up language
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Irma
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May 25, 2020 10:40PM

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Thanks for this one Sue - I've been looking for months for something in this category with a different cultural context, and this looks amazing!


I’m reading Oona Out of Order by Margarita Montimore, and it’s a story about a woman who jumps back and forth in time. There are sections of the book devoted to specific years/decades and those sections are out of order...get it?
Anyway, in big chunks of the book, the protagonist is using words and phrases from the future and this causes a lot of confusion because it is a “'made up language,'” even though we know these words today.
Does this book, then, count for this prompt?
Hmmm...


Personally, if it's actual words we know today, I wouldn't count it.
If she's going into the future and using made-up slang from 2070 (or whatever) then I would count that.


Thank you so much for your thoughts, Drakeryn! After your post, I see what you mean and will find another book.

Can it be considered for this challenge ?"
I read this book - the enchantments / spells are in Yoruba, which is a real language.



Another book I have that includes a lot of made up language is



I’m reading Oona Out of Order by Margarita Montimore, and it’s a story about a woman who jumps back and forth in time. There are sections of the..."
No


My Review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...




Does anyone know if any books by N K Jemisin or Octavia Butler fit this prompt? I haven't read anything by either but have been meaning to try both out for ages!

You will hate the MC. You should. The question whether or not he can be redeemed.
I can see why Alice Walker loved this Utopian society and novel. The made-up language is key, as it includes words for concepts we don't really have in the West ... or perhaps East, either. The MC starts collecting and writing down the words, as the Kin do not have a written language. It's very thought-provoking, and I'm glad I read it.


Thursday's son, Friday, spent his childhood inside the bookworld, and he speaks only Lorem ipsum.
Here's what I got from Wiki:
Languages
(according to Bradshaw's BookWorld Companion) 'Courier Bold is the traditional language of those in the support industries such as within the Well of Lost Plots, and Lorem Ipsum is the gutter slang of the underworld - useful to have a few phrases in case you get into trouble in Horror or Noir'.[3]
(Lorem ipsum is a dummy text used to demonstrate layout. It is the only language Friday Next speaks as a young child).


I wouldn't necessarily count this one as a made-up language - but it depends on your interpretation of the prompt. Yes, the language Nushu is made up - but it wasn't made up by the author, it was a real language used in China.
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