Around the Year in 52 Books discussion
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[2021] The Wild Discussion

Medical is good, it could include characters who work in the field, someone dealing with a medical issue, of course any kind of plague, including in sci-fi. Someone mentioned having more non-fiction options, and there would be plenty here. There are probably lists already of medical-themed books.
I had a couple ideas that have to do with titles
A title with a negative in it - that is a word like No, Not, None, Nobody, Never, Can't, Don't, etc. -
or
A title with a form of the verb "to be" - for example, Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine, We Were the Mulvaneys, Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End
A title with a negative in it - that is a word like No, Not, None, Nobody, Never, Can't, Don't, etc. -
or
A title with a form of the verb "to be" - for example, Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine, We Were the Mulvaneys, Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End

A title with a negative in it - that is a word like No, Not, None, Nobody, Never, Can't, Don't, etc. -
or
A title with a form of the verb "to b..."
The negative could go into a multi-book prompt. A title with a negative and a title with the positive. Yes, Always, Everyone, Do, All, etc. Just an idea if you wanted to expand. Totally up to you.
I like the negative one better than the form of the verb "to be" because I feel like the negative one will translate better to other languages, for our members who don't read English books as their default. Plus the negative is so creative!

On the medical prompt: This would also open the doors to a slew of biographies.


Ashley wrote: "Robin wrote: "I had a couple ideas that have to do with titles
A title with a negative in it - that is a word like No, Not, None, Nobody, Never, Can't, Don't, etc. -
or
A title with a form of ..."
Good point about the "to be" - some languages don't use it in simple sentences. I liked the negative better anyway and I think that would translate in whatever language.
A title with a negative in it - that is a word like No, Not, None, Nobody, Never, Can't, Don't, etc. -
or
A title with a form of ..."
Good point about the "to be" - some languages don't use it in simple sentences. I liked the negative better anyway and I think that would translate in whatever language.

I love this prompt idea!

Got this id..."
Oh, I see, I'm not doing this year's challenge so I missed that. And it sounds like people really don't like the idea anyway, so I'll withdraw the suggestion!

I see what you mean! The 21st book on my TBR shelf doesn't change when I add new books (because I sort by date added) so I didn't consider that for some people it would constantly change and become a "freebie" prompt.

I like this. Lots of variety of genres there.

I was thinking of suggesting something in a similar vein but more from the perspective of "Read a book related to healing". Doesn't HAVE to be medical but very easily could. Either way I like the idea of having a prompt like this in the mix.
Khara, I like "a book related to healing" better. You could include people healing from trauma, or characters who are doctors but the medical stuff may not be the main focus, or you could do self-help books. The more I think of it, the more I like it!

For a light fun reads: A book shelved as Brain Candy on Goodreads (brain candy is a fun, not intellectually stimulating read, basically relaxing, enjoyable fluff). There are 15,162 options listed but I think reading whatever you consider Brain Candy or Fluff for yourself counts!
OR
For a potentially more serious read: A book shelved as Mental Health Books on Goodreads. There are 31,191 books listed but again, whatever book speaks about mental health to you would work as a KIS option.
Thoughts?
I like the Brain Candy one... I have so many read and to read on that list. I would just make sure you clarify your prompt when you suggest it (for the mental health one too). Does it have to come from the list of books tagged? or is it anything you'd consider adding to the list?
There's a big difference between A book shelved as Brain Candy on Goodreads and A book you'd consider Brain Candy or fluff
(I personally like the one with the tag, but I know people don't always like lists.)
There's a big difference between A book shelved as Brain Candy on Goodreads and A book you'd consider Brain Candy or fluff
(I personally like the one with the tag, but I know people don't always like lists.)

In the last year or so I've read


Goodreads has a bunch of list with different animals
Favorite Animal - https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/1...
Butterflies - https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/3...

Ellie wrote: "I feel like a book related to healing is a bit vague. And can I really read a palliative care nurse's memoir for it? Probably not."
Interesting, I would say that is fine. Healing doesn't have to mean someone is literally cured of a physical ailment. The reason I like this group's challenges more than others I have tried is that there is more scope for interpretation with a lot of them. It's no more vague than "a book dealing with time" which we have this year.
Interesting, I would say that is fine. Healing doesn't have to mean someone is literally cured of a physical ailment. The reason I like this group's challenges more than others I have tried is that there is more scope for interpretation with a lot of them. It's no more vague than "a book dealing with time" which we have this year.

I'm not usually much of a list person either but when a list includes 15,000+ books, I'm pretty sure I can find something that will work for me :-)

I just personally don't think all medical books would fit healing in my interpretation, I would feel that healing needs to be the focus of the book otherwise, like you said, it becomes a read anything book, like the time one if you don't try and find a focus. My gut instinct would be to vote for medical but not healing. Maybe further into voting I'd be more desperate to get books that I like in though... :)
i don't if this has been said already but i realllllly think the medical one is probably going too triggering and/or difficult for some people with this current pandemic


I think "A book relating to medicine" would be an okay prompt, even in the scope of things. You could be really literal with it (takes place in a hospital, features characters with illnesses, post-apocalyptic, etc.) or you could leave it a bit looser in interpretation (character is a doctor but that doesn't play a huge role, a medical thriller, a character who takes medicine, books featuring mental health issues, etc.)


Or perhaps a prompt related to someone (a person, a group, a role, a job) for whom you have a new appreciation for after this COVID-19 experience.

I really like that idea.

A prompt around a job could be more general like "a book about a job you appreciate" or "a book about a job you would like to have" or "a book about a job you would never want to have".

I kind of love "a book about a job you'd never want to have" because it's so unique!! Or "a book about a job you appreciate" because there's a lot of overlap between those two when thinking about it in the context of COVID19.
For example, I would never want to be a politician personally, and the pandemic really drives that home for me because of the decisions they have to make regarding public health and all that, and being blamed for problems.
Yea I would definitely steer away from directly mentioning 2020 at all in this list 😂 I like the "job you would enjoy having" or "job you would never want to have" (which feels a bit like our place you'd never want to live this year)

I like the 'job you would never want to have'; I think popsugar had a prompt a couple years ago about a book where the main character has the same job as you. It was freaking impossible by the way unless you're like a teacher or a lawyer, because most authors don't write about people who just have normal office jobs. This seems way more achievable.

This could be either fiction or non-fiction

https://www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/rem/i...
Since Don McLean is clearly problematic maybe it's another contender. However, even though it came back into the charts in the UK recently, it's not everyone's idea of a song for our times.

https://www.google.com/doodles. I was thinking of suggesting it again like this: A book related to a person featured in a Google doodle in 2020. It is similar in some ways to the song lyric prompt from this year.
A good BIO (or maybe just to limit the prompt a bit) can be a doodle from an important date for you (birthday, anniversary, date you adopted your dog, etc.)

https://www.google.com/doodles. I was thinking of suggesting it again like this: A book r..."
I don't know if I mentioned it at the time, but last year, one of my students won the state of NJ for Google's studnt Doodle contest. He was then a top 5 finalist. I got to coordinate the ceremony at our school with Google. It was awesome!
Here's his drawing: https://www.burlingtoncountytimes.com...


It’s been exciting seeing South America..."
I really need to post in that thread. I see I've read at least a couple of the countries that haven't been read in two years.

Now I'm thinking of combining them to "A book nominated for a lesser known (by you or others) literary prize".
Any thoughts or comments are welcome. I've got a long list of prizes and awards, with plenty of options that aren't American or literary fiction.
Posted is all drafted - just ready to cut and paste in, hopefully in round 3.
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Oh, I didn't even realize that. Never mind then.