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[2021] Poll 14 Voting
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Robin P, Orbicular Mod
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Sep 17, 2020 07:01PM

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And oh! Thanks for the reminder, Steve--I've had Then We Came to the End sitting on my shelf for years lol. It's supposed to be a satirical take on corporate america so maybe I'd use that just to clear it off finally.

Looking through the books I've read this year, these would work for workplace:
The Silent Patient - therapist's office, psychiatric hospital
Convenience Store Woman - the convenience store
My Sister, the Serial Killer - a hospital/clinic
Twenty-one Truths About Love - a book store
The Sun Down Motel - the motel's office


I guess this is one of those things where you decide how strict you want to be, and stick with it. For me, the "related to" prompts must hold a clear connection. I imagine it like this: If I were to tell somebody else "I'm reading a book X because it's related to Y", they should go, "Oh, yeah, good choice" (or similar) and not "How is that related to Y exactly?" I should not have to explain the relation. If I had to explain it, it would be too obscure or far-fetched. Does that make sense?
Random example: for a book related to, say, a circus, "Water for the Elephants" or "The Night Circus" or something about P.T. Barnum would be obvious. A book that just happens to have a scene where a character visits a circus, even if something substantial happens there (recovering evidence, interviewing a witness, discovering a dead body ...), would not. Someone who has not read that book would never know because the circus component is not essential to the book. (If you're struggling with the prompt, you could of course extend it to include the above.)
Similarly, I would not just count any book featuring witches or wicca or witchcraft as filling the usical prompt because it kinda-sorta relates to "Wicked". That would be like saying I'll read a book set in France because it relates to "Les Misérables" -- to broad a relation. For a "Wicked" relation, I'd look for a Wizard of Oz connection or perhaps a book centered on the friendship of two women who are polar opposites, or a character who goes gren in the face :D For a "Les Miz" connection (apart from, well, reading "Les Misérables" :D), I'd look for books set in France during the 1832 Paris Uprising, or featuring a reformed criminal, or a setting of someone relentlessly hunting someone else.
Seeing as there are so many musicals based on books (From "Les Misérables" to "War and Peace"), it should not be too hard to find something fitting that prompt even with a very narrow definition.

[book:Severance is set partially in an office.

Yes I know, I used Romeo and Juliet as an example, doesn't mean I don't know of the existence of other plays, that I also would prefer to see performed.
Laughing at people for only knowing Shakespeare is also not a good way to make people vote for the prompt, if that was the case.


Not to mention: police stations and PI's offices :D


1. The person who uses the prompts to help them decide what to read and like to find a book that very closely fits the prompt.
2. The person who has a list of books they want to read and enjoys finding the most out-of-the-box way to make those books fit the prompts.
I'm very a #2. I think it's great fun to have to explain the clever way I've thought of to match a book to a prompt, when it isn't at all obvious. As an example, a recent prompt was to read a book related to Shakespeare. Because Lennox is a character in Macbeth, I read The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox by Maggie O'Farrell.
I'm definitely planning to do all the letters for the NATO alphabet prompt as a side challenge. I've had such fun hunting for books for each of the letters, some with the most tenuous of connections.

and bookshops! Lots of good books set in a bookshop/ bookstore.
dalex, I always love seeing the connections you make lol. Even though I'm pretty literal in my choices, I think it's amazing how you can connect random books with the prompts!

1. The person who uses the prompts to help them decide what to read and like to find a book that very closely fits the prompt.
2..."
Oh, I'm curious about this one: so it has to somehow relate to the "letter"/"word" like Alpha, Bravo, etc.?

Yes, I made some sort of connection between each word and a book.
You can see my listopia of books choices and explanations HERE.
One of my favorites is Lima. I plan to use The Starless Sea by Erin Morgenstern. Why? Because Lima is the Roman goddess of doorways and this book is about doors and keys.
Emily wrote: "dalex, I always love seeing the connections you make lol. Even though I'm pretty literal in my choices, I think it's amazing how you can connect random books with the prompts!"
Aw, thanks! :)


I wrote this suggestion as an AND because it had come up before as an OR and people thought it was too broad. Personally I think that any ensemble book would fit, authors tend to have one of each of these stereotypes of characters in a group cast. And I thought if people could extend the words to the cover, title, subject, characters and size of the book it would be more accessible.
I think you are right about Gone with the Wind, it certainly fits.
I don't know why some people are so against the BBB prompts in general. I know that as a three week prompt and as an OR prompt I also downvoted them for being too broad. Maybe people are just having a knee jerk reaction to seeing it again instead of really thinking about how the AND makes a huge difference to the prompt? Anyway, my prompt ideas are getting trashed recently, not just discussed but trashed so I think I may be done suggesting for this year. :(


..."
It wasn't my intention to laugh at you, or at any of the people mentioning Shakespeare plays (since it wasn't only you, and I wasn't addressing you specifically), merely to point out how many other options there are. The options include many, many plays that one is unlikely to have the opportunity to see instead of perform, especially now in the middle of a pandemic, whereas Shakespeare is relatively easy to find in film or recorded stage performance, so the dichotomy of "see vs read" seems like a false one to me; also to point out that the range of options includes many plays that aren't as inaccessible, linguistically, as Shakespeare is for many.
I'm going to refrain from participating in these discussions in the future, and simply vote.

Roxana do you have any suggestions for modern plays that would be a good read for this prompt? I'm the first to admit, I'm not very familiar with plays outside of Shakespeare and Harry Potter and the Cursed Child: Parts One and Two =)


ok....thanks. I didn't see that explained with the post said that voting would begin today.

It is just my opinion that I don't want to read them, not that I don't want people to read them if they want to or as a substitute for seeing them. I am sorry if you thought I was suggesting otherwise.

If this prompt wins, I may read The Laramie Project again; I've probably read it 5-6 times, not counting the times I re-read it as part of helping to stage it. The quick synopsis: members of the Tectonic Theater Project went to Laramie, WY and interviewed people (including the murderers) about the murder of Matthew Shepard; the play is drawn from the interviews and their journals about the experience. It's powerful.
Sorry, I have had a busy morning and haven't posted the survey link yet. Will be coming in the next hour!
Just a note from the mods: Please be respectful in your tone and understand that tone written online may translate differently than what you intend to express. We are a user-generated list, which means that each prompt is submitted by a real human person. While we don't discourage you expressing why you aren't voting for a prompt, we expect that you do so with humility and the understanding that not everyone feels the same way you do.
Just a note from the mods: Please be respectful in your tone and understand that tone written online may translate differently than what you intend to express. We are a user-generated list, which means that each prompt is submitted by a real human person. While we don't discourage you expressing why you aren't voting for a prompt, we expect that you do so with humility and the understanding that not everyone feels the same way you do.


Off the top of my head, here are some:
Playwrights with lots of plays that might be of interest:
Arthur Miller
Tom Stoppard
Sarah Ruhl (my personal favorite playwright - I especially love her adaptation of Virginia Woolf's Orlando)
Neil Simon
Tennessee Williams
George Bernard Shaw
Sam Shepard
Lynn Nottage
Paula Vogel
David Lindsay-Abaire
Rajiv Joseph
David Henry Hwang
August Wilson
Theresa Rebeck
Christopher Durang
Edward Albee (especially Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?)
And some specific titles by other playwrights-
Anna in the Tropics (Nilo Cruz), 'Art' (Yasmina Reza), Between Riverside and Crazy (Stephen Adly Guirgis), The Children's Hour (Lillian Hellman), Crimes of the Heart (Beth Henley), Doubt (John Patrick Shanley), Proof (David Auburn), A Raisin in the Sun (Lorraine Hansberry), Red (John Logan), Stop Kiss (Diana Son), Trifles (Susan Glaspell - this is a short one), Wit (Margaret Edson), Zoot Suit and Other Plays (Luis Valdez)
Many of these I've found in libraries and on Libby, and picked up copies in secondhand bookshops; I've stayed away from listing really new plays that are less likely to be freely or easily available (Shaw, for one, is mostly available in public domain, even). If this prompt does make it into the list, I'll add these & others to the listopia for it.
For those who would rather not read plays that were meant to be viewed & heard, may I suggest closet dramas? These are plays that were never intended for stage performance, but to be read either alone or with a small group of readers, so, perfect for a reading challenge - Goethe's Faust is one of the more famous.
Edited to add links.
I took a drama class in college (opted for that instead of poetry lol), and my favorite of the class was Pygmalion by George Bernard Shaw, which is what My Fair Lady is based on. Waiting for Godot was another one I really remember, but it was a bit too weird for me lol.

When reading them alone it's often easier to focus on plays with a smaller cast as it's easier to imagine the different characters and act it out in your head.
Good suggestions I can think of are:
Pygmalion
Hobson's Choice
A Doll's House
A Streetcar Named Desire
The Crucible
The Manga Shakespeare series is a good way of accessing his plays but still managing to understand what is going on with such a large cast. I have used this version for some of the more difficult tragedies.


I like the random word generator prompt. I've done this one before. I would likely go with the original 10 words I generated today. (I would suggest that you set the limit to 10 and use one of them. You should get one decent word out of 10.) My first two words were Collection and Photograph, which are perfect for me! Ironically, two other words were Office and Job and a third - Redundancy.
For the office/workplace prompt, the first book I thought of, that I haven't seen mentioned, was The Post-Office Girl by Stefan Zweig.

https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.ph...

https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.ph..."
I wonder if Ready Player Two is going to have this trope.


My favorite from this list was non-fiction that relates to a fictional book I read. I did this a few times this year and it really enhances my reading experience. The one that comes to mind from this year was Beartown and Missoula. I just finished The Great Believers and have been contemplating finding a nonfiction book about the start of the aids epidemic. I realize I know so little about that time since I was a young kid.
Pam wrote: "Here's a website on the Putting the Band Back Together trope. There are links to different media including literature.
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.ph..."
I had thought of one of those - Twenty Years After. Lonesome Dove also is about old-time comrades getting back together. Also some of those “person returns to small town” stories might work.
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.ph..."
I had thought of one of those - Twenty Years After. Lonesome Dove also is about old-time comrades getting back together. Also some of those “person returns to small town” stories might work.
Bec wrote: "I don't really get the random word generator. I can see me just putting in heaps of words or just keeping on spinning until I get a word I like so I feel it's a freebie."
you can set the generator so it produces a list of words (and limit the number) rather than just a single word, so you have more options! just fyi if you didn't realise
you can set the generator so it produces a list of words (and limit the number) rather than just a single word, so you have more options! just fyi if you didn't realise
i think i'll vote for the 'you read WHAT?' prompt (even if i'm not sure what i'll read for it yet), a book involving getting 'the band' back together (because i think Kings of the Wyld will count for that), related to folklore (because i love retellings), workplace or office (because The Hating Game is one of my favourite romances and i don't mind reading another office romance), and the random word generator.
i can't say i'm in love with the play prompt but i don't mind stretching myself out of my comfort zone occasionally!
i can't say i'm in love with the play prompt but i don't mind stretching myself out of my comfort zone occasionally!

I’ll be downvoting play (even though I love theatre) and non fiction. Upvoting random word and folklore. I’ll have to think more on the rest.
I'm personally really excited about the Tony Award prompt. I read My Dear Hamilton: A Novel of Eliza Schuyler Hamilton last year right after I saw Hamilton the play on stage, and it was so awesome to compare the two stories. I also read Dear Evan Hansen this year, and my friend gave me a song list to listen to after each chapter (the book was written after the musical) so that was a fun experience.

Kat wrote: "I've just gone down a Wikipedia wormhole looking at Tony Award winning musicals. There are so many ways to interpret it and some great options to think about. I really miss going to the theatre and..."
Yes, that is the thing I miss most. I don't care about going to movie theaters or eating in restaurants but I had to miss seeing the touring productions of My Fair Lady and Come from Away and several operas. At least Hamilton came to my town last fall.
Yes, that is the thing I miss most. I don't care about going to movie theaters or eating in restaurants but I had to miss seeing the touring productions of My Fair Lady and Come from Away and several operas. At least Hamilton came to my town last fall.

I upvoted the “You read What?!?” prompt of course. I also upvoted the BBB prompt because it was one of the first unique prompts I ever suggested way back when... but I do feel bad for those that dislike it and keep having to downvote it. I hope it just gets in now that way we don’t have to keep suggesting it!
I was going to downvote the nonfiction prompt, just because we already have a nonfiction prompt on the list, but decided I liked the idea of it enough and actually ended up upvoting it! I hope that if we end up with two nonfiction prompts that we get some fiction genres on the list too to balance it out - so I also voted for the domestic thriller!
Random word generator - way to broad and everyone’s books would be so random and I wouldn’t be able to look at what people read to help me decide what to read and how it fits.

I don’t know if it was just my phone, but the finish survey button was hard to find for me because it was dark on dark. Don’t know if others are experiencing that and if there’s a way to change font color on it so it’s white.

I do agree with the person above who thinks play, based on a musical, or adaptation could be one prompt and I would probably vote for that. FWIW (I didn't vote for any of these this time).
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