The Seasonal Reading Challenge discussion
TASK HELP: Winter Challenge 2019
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20.8 - Nickels & Dimes - MEGSCL's Task: Title Tropes
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That's a tropeOption 2
The Revolution of Birdie Randolph
Mary Toft; or, The Rabbit Queen
Daisy Jones & The Six
Option 3
The Carpet Weaver of Usak
The Garment Maker's Daughter
Would either of these work?:Option 2: The Revolution of Birdie Randolph
"Birdie" is a nickname, so I'm not sure if this counts for the task
Option 3: The Red Queen
is something like King or Queen considered a job for the purpose of this task?
(I have other options if these don't work. Just trying to make sure I interpret it correctly.)
Emily wrote: "Would either of these work?:Option 2: The Revolution of Birdie Randolph
"Birdie" is a nickname, so I'm not sure if this counts for the task
Option 3: The Red Queen
"Birdie" is a nickname, so I'm not sure if this counts for the task
Option 3: [book:The Red Queen|7148256..."
I'm happy with birdie for option 2.
But I'll say no to Queen for option 3
Laura wrote: "Will The Garment Maker's Daughter work for option 3?"Yes that works. I might edit the task description to ok two-word jobs
Meg wrote: "Emily wrote: "Would either of these work?:Option 2: The Revolution of Birdie Randolph
"Birdie" is a nickname, so I'm not sure if this counts for the task
Option 3: [book:The Red..."
Makes sense. Thanks!
Kaora wrote: "I love this task!Please verify this works for option 1: The Girls Weekend"
Thanks
Yep that works
Just confirming this for Option 2. The rules seem to indicate subtitle is after the colon (not semicolon).Mary Toft; or, The Rabbit Queen
Ann A wrote: "Just confirming this for Option 2. The rules seem to indicate subtitle is after the colon (not semicolon).Mary Toft; or, The Rabbit Queen"
That sounds right to me. Interesting book!
Kristi wrote: "For option 2, does '&' count as a word? Asking for Daisy Jones & the Six by Taylor Jenkins Reid."Yes I'll allow it
Meg wrote: "Denise wrote: "Could you confirm The Huntress by Kate Quinn for Option 3?"That works"
Thank you!
Trish wrote: "MorningDoes this work for Option 3?
The Strange Case of the Alchemist's Daughter
Thanks."
Yes, I suppose an alchemist could be a job
Books mentioned in this topic
The Strange Case of the Alchemist's Daughter (other topics)The Strange Case of the Alchemist's Daughter (other topics)
Mary Toft; or, The Rabbit Queen (other topics)
Daisy Jones & The Six (other topics)
Mary Toft; or, The Rabbit Queen (other topics)
More...








I've noticed lately there are a lot of books coming out with similar title themes. New books seem to want to capitalise on the popularity of other books in the genre.
Choose one option.
Required: State the option.
Option 1: The Thrilling Woman
We've moved past Gone Girl but now it seems to always be woman or wife, e.g. The Woman in Cabin 10, My Lovely Wife, All the Missing Girls.
Read a book with mystery or thriller as a main page genre and the word 'girl" 'wife' or 'woman' in the title. Subtitles are excluded. Plurals and possessives work.
Option 2: The Feel Good Story of Quirky Fullname
You know it's going to be cute and quirky when you see a title like Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine, The Truths and Triumphs of Grace Atherton or Natalie Tan's Book of Luck and Fortune.
Read a book with at least five words in the title including a full name (first name and surname). Subtitles are excluded. Plurals and possessives work
Option 3: The Historical Job
Read a book with the main page genre historical fiction and a title referring to a job or employee, e.g. The Tattooist of Auschwitz, The Dressmaker's Gift or The Watchmaker of Filigree Street. Subtitles are excluded. Plurals and possessives work. Jobs such as "garment maker" or "cloth weaver" work.