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Tag Thread #7: Not A Novel
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I'm still processing. I thought it was powerful, and I just spent 2 hours not working to listen to the the end because I just had to know what happened next. The juxtaposition of the 2 characters worked really well for me. Then I saw all the one star reviews and that's getting me thinking even more.
I read it back at the beginning of college when I was an English education major with a library science minor, in an attempt to read contemporary books I could possible teach. I definitely wouldn't be teaching it, and I feel like a lot of the one-star reviews also are directed to the TV show. I did think it was a powerful book when I read it (and I loved the format and plot structure of it), but I can also see why some people had trouble with it.

It fits the tag "picture-books."

Edited to add: I also just finished Wayside School Beneath the Cloud of Doom, which works for middle grade (44 people)
I finished In Our Prime: How Older Women Are Reinventing the Road Ahead. It's a very new book so there aren't as many people tagging it but several have it as Giveaway, #12

It's an in-between book (book 4.5) of The Innkeeper Chronicles, an urban fantasy/sci-fi with my kind of humor.

I love that, Hilde! I've been following along with a podcast (Harry Potter and the Sacred Text), and they are about to start book 7. I'm really excited to finish the series with them.

This was interesting to read right now. Sometimes I found myself comparing it to the current public health crisis, just in how people react to things out of their control. (and a bit about how scary things could be if people went to extremes, but, I don't actually think that will happen). I would have enjoyed it more at a different time, but I wanted a climate fiction for the spring reading challenge!


Great job, folks!
Traci, that book was our library's readalong book this year, and Neal Schusterman visited our library back in February. I have a free copy of the book, but cli-fi is NOT my genre, so I've been putting it off.
Traci, that book was our library's readalong book this year, and Neal Schusterman visited our library back in February. I have a free copy of the book, but cli-fi is NOT my genre, so I've been putting it off.
Books mentioned in this topic
Dry (other topics)Grand Forks: A History of American Dining in 128 Reviews (other topics)
Fierce Fairytales: Poems and Stories to Stir Your Soul (other topics)
Grand Forks: A History of American Dining in 128 Reviews (other topics)
Dry (other topics)
More...
We will have five genres of books, and shelf tags that go along with each genre (plus a few freebies, for those of us finishing up monthly challenges). Our goal, as a group, is to cross off as many of these shelf tags as possible by the end of the day next Sunday (April 26th).
For this thread, we have NOT A NOVEL.
THE TAGS
1. poetry
2. short-stories- Ana: Sweep with Me by Ilona Andrews3. graphic-novels- Amy: Chilling Adventures of Sabrina: Occult Edition by Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa4. cookbooks- Steve: Grand Forks: A History of American Dining in 128 Reviews by Marilyn Hagerty5. picture-books- Kathy: A Sick Day for Amos McGee by Philip C. Stead6. comic- Amy: The Jetsons by Jimmy Palmiotti7. illustrated- Tracy: El Deafo by Cece Bell8. manga- Rachel: Fence, Vol. 2 by C.S. Pacat9. speculative-fiction- Sarah: All Systems Red by Martha Wells10. anthology
11. re-reads- Hilde: Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone by J.K. Rowling12. giveaway- Robin: In Our Prime: How Older Women Are Reinventing the Road Ahead by Susan J. Douglas13. middle-grade- Rachel: Wayside School Beneath the Cloud of Doom by Louis Sachar14. on-hold- Traci: Dry by Neal Shusterman15. 2014- Traci: Thirteen Reasons Why by Jay AsherAs you complete your books, post them here with the title and author, which tag you are choosing to complete (please only choose one), and a brief note about your book (so we can all get recommendations!).
No, you do not have to read a book in each genre for it to count! It only has to have the tag on the book. (For example, you can read any book tagged 2014 to complete that tag... it doesn't have to be not a novel.)
If you need help finding books, Goodreads has an easy way to see the most popular books on each shelf. Just head to www.goodreads.com/shelf and search for the shelf you're looking for.