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[2021] Poll 15 Voting

I hope that when people see "must read list" they aren't thinking they are stuck with the same 100 classics that get mentioned ad nauseum. A wi..."
For me it's a big leap to assume any list is a must read list. I would want the list to say something about "must read" but I agree I automatically though of those lists of classics people keep trying to make me read. I am struggling to find something where I don't like the cover though so I am not sure I am swayed to turn my downvote into an upvote.
One example from this year is the US cover of The Glass Hotel which I don't like but it's on a lot of must read lists. However my UK copy was so pretty! So would I just go with the fact the edition on the lists isn't to my liking?

I guess you could make that argument, but I know for myself, if someone tells me to read "a best seller from a certain year," I'm going to choose a book that was a best seller in that year, because that's what that means to me. I don't see any wiggle room. And yes, "best sellers" have changed a lot over the years! In 1967, they all seem either sexist, or depressing, or boring, or all three at once! Who the heck was buying these books back then?? (And it's funny that I hadn't even heard of a few of them - they did not have any staying power!)

Sure, I don't see why not, especially if you encountered the US cover first (from the lists or where ever) and got it anyway.
I see what you mean about the "must read" thing, I would probably look for "must read" or "should read" when i'm looking at lists. there's some KIS room in there for "any list" though, I'd say.


This is funny to me because I'd totally read this 😂

I read a V.C. Andrews book for that prompt and if it hadn't been a library book I would have thrown it in the recycling bin or a bonfire. But I also just looked at a more expanded list from my year and found some things I wouldn't mind reading, so I agree - don't limit yourself to the top of the bestseller list!

I quite like classic romances so that's my favourite prompt this round

I'm excited for the recipe prompt, the Tropic of Cancer one, the trapped together one, the epistolary one, and the best reads of 2020 (loved it this year!) and my own suggestion (the real person fiction/fictitious person non-fiction one), so I guess I'll be up voting six and then figure out which of the ones I'm not keen on I am REALLY not keen on^^

Maybe it could be kept broad by of course including CLASSIC classic romance like Jane Austen as well as books that have attained somewhat of a classic status by now, like "The Notebook." What do ya think?

That's kind of the way I'm interpreting the prompt anyway. I'm in a classics group that broadly defines classics to include books written 1999 and earlier. Perhaps not the traditional definition of "classic," but one I'm open to...
I can reword it for the poll, if you'd like to make it more clear. Just let me know what you'd like it to say (as long as it doesn't change the meaning too drastically). I think everyone would agree to a clearer wording.


I was trying to think of a prompt based around a story element that could be common across many genres. A few years ago we had the prompt about a book involving a murder, so I saw this as something similar. Like others have said, mysteries, thrillers, science fiction & fantasy would all be genres where an injury could be a common plot element.
There are also medical memoirs, Sick: A Memoir or Ask Me About My Uterus: A Quest to Make Doctors Believe in Women's Pain, or books about mental health/illness that would fit the prompt as well.

"Become a classic" seems to imply that it is a book that is so well known that many consider it classic, regarding of publication date. That would exclude books that could be defined as a classic by publication date, regardless of how well known the book is.
Also, I think we need to clarify if it means a romance novel (which is a very specific genre) or a novel with a love story central to the plot (which is something else entirely).


Ha, I was thinking along similar lines! I would probably read a Romantic novel myself.

FWIW Katie I didn't think that at all. A thriller would definitely work for this, or one of Lisa Genova's books, which are each about an illness or disease - Alzheimer's, ALS, etc. I didn't have a "Covid oh no!" reaction to the prompt at all.

I'm sorry for the Seriously???. The tone was off and I didn't mean that it was heinous. I was aiming for amusement and definitely fell flat. If it goes through, I'll probably read another book about the black death.


I like the #ownvoices prompt personally. I have Tembe Locke's book From Scratch: A Memoir of Love, Sicily, and Finding Home on my list and that would fit (I hope?!). I will probably upvote that one.

I looked up some resources when I suggested it last time, so I just copy them here:
Listopia for most popular books published by year, on the top right you can change the year. https://www.goodreads.com/book/popula...
Best books by decade https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/6...
Bestsellers of the last 100 years https://lithub.com/here-are-the-bigge...
Lists of The New York Times Fiction Best Sellers https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_o...


My likely upvotes: epistolary, #ownvoices (I find it easy to find them, especially if you read YA), trapped together, and maybe injury/illness. I fully get why people might be put off the injury/illness prompt due to the pandemic, but I think there are plenty of options for it, and it's something I don't think I've seen before in a challenge.
I'm likely to downvote: classic romance, bestseller from the year I was born (I've done way too many prompts that involve books from the year I was born), unattractive cover, and maybe the fiction/non-fiction prompt because that feels like a combo of two very different ideas to me.

I like the epistolary one. I downvoted the multimedia prompt because I also thought of some sort of audio/video/etc. I read a lot of audiobooks and then was confused if that counted or would be cheating. But I like the broader wording here and will be voting for it!
I have picked up books solely because of awesome covers, but I've never not read a book because of the cover. So I'm not sure where I would go with that. A "must read" list where I'm not wowed by the cover?
Final question/point, for "trapped together" does anyone have a listopia that isn't romance based? Interested to see what type of books show up for something like that.

I love the real people prompt. I have read and enjoyed a lot of books that fit this definition. I have The Angel of Darkness still to read, and I'm on a waiting list for Ring Shout - probably won't get it until next year. So lots of options.
I love the "trapped together" prompt - it's right up my alley, as I love mystery books where people are isolated on an island, stuck on a train, or snowed in. Other ideas: Jurassic Park, Anxious People, Room, The Haunting of Hill House, and many others.
Several others I like: set in the 19th century, book written as documents, books with illustrations, and--to my surprise--classic romance (includes modern classics). I initially turned up my nose when I saw it, but I have books like The Prince of Tides, Rebecca, and The Accidental Tourist on my list. A little nudge to read them might be nice.
The only definite downvotes right now are "owned the longest" - honestly, I can't always remember to pick up milk at the store. How am I going to remember what book I've had the longest? I have hundreds of books acquired when I saw them on sale, etc. The other definite downvote will have to be bestseller prompt. It's just too specific--I could probably work with "year you were born," but narrowing it to bestseller gives me very little to work with.
I'm not entirely sure what all I'll vote for or against yet, but those are my thoughts right now.

https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/3...
https://www.barnesandnoble.com/blog/5...
https://www.reddit.com/r/booksuggesti...
https://www.writersdigest.com/write-b...
https://www.goodreads.com/shelf/show/...
https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/th...


The Closed Circle page at TV Tropes has some ideas if you scroll down to Literature: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.ph...
Same with Locked in a Room: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.ph...

Tropic of Capricorn is doable.
Own voices, not sure if I have one that fits perfectly. Not sure I want to check ifnit is own voices.
I really like the ATY link.
Trapped together, I may have a thriller with that premise.
Dislike lists in general.
Bestseller, like others been there, done that, do not want to do again.
Injury or illness, I have a few that deal with PTSD, medical stories, both non-fiction and fiction.
The 2020 one is more open then this years similar prompt. It is a possibility.


I think the spirit of the prompt is to finally read that book you’ve been considering for years. I’m sure we all have books that we purchased or added to our TBR a long time ago that we still haven’t read. For me it’s Rules of Civility by Amor Towles.
I just finished Anxious People and it would work perfectly (and is just an awesome book -- best of the year contender for me lol). It's not a traditional mystery or romance, so if you're looking for something outside of those two genres, you can get on the wait list now lol.

I second Anxious People! Loved it!

Thanks everyone for the ideas for the Trapped Together suggestion! I’m going to give it some thought just because it’s different and I’m sure I could find something. I think that one of my all time favorite books, The Winshaw Legacy: or, What a Carve Up! by Jonathan Coe would work. But, it’s the kind of book that you wouldn’t know it fits until you read it, unless it’s on a list.

Thanks for posting the link. 1945 was not a good year. None of the books are of interest. I haven't heard of most of the authors. This will be a down vote... too many books from other years I am excited about reading.


Fair point, Rachel, Just let me explain that I deliberately set it up this way to accommodate both fiction and non-fiction readers in a way that still felt connected/like two aspects of the same prompt if that makes any sense. (I would have suggested it in the multi-part poll if I'd thought of it back then.)

To be honest, I didn't even think of the whole 2020 disaster situation at all when I saw your prompt because I read so many thrillers and detective stories which all involve injuries (at the very least). I'm not as excited about it as I am about a few other prompts (because I feel a few others are a bit more original), but I will certainly not downvote it and will have various ways to make it work for me if it gets in :)

That was to be expected, I guess :D It didn't even occur to me to look at the prompt that way, but then of course it said "classic romance" and not "romantic novel", capital R or not^^
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