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[2022] Poll 10 Voting
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Jackie, Solstitial Mod
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Aug 25, 2021 08:33AM

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A couple I can think of off the top of my head are:
Frankenstein in Baghdad - Frankenstein retelling
The Palace of Illusions - Mahabharat retelling
Mexican Gothic - Wuthering Heights retelling
Burning Roses - Red Riding Hood retelling
The Ballad of Black Tom - Lovecraft retelling
1Q84 - Orwell 1984 retelling
Home Fire - Antigone retelling
Also any adult mythology story with a BIPOC character would also apply.

Gods of Jade and Shadow might work -- it fits into adult fantasy and historical fiction. It's described as "inspired by" Popol Vuh rather than a straightforward retelling, though.

Marin wrote: "Gods of Jade and Shadow might work..."
Thanks!

Some of the characters are (quite literally): Can o' Beans, Dirty Sock, Spoon, Painted Stick, and Conch Shell.
Tom Robbins is a weirdo, but he's usually my kind of weirdo, at least.
Hoping that category makes it in! I'm not big into supernatural characters, but I am a big fan of atypical narrators. It would also probably be a great excuse to read another Terry Pratchett book...

Memoir/biography is also hard for me. This year neither PS nor ATY has it (while I actually do have one in my TBR and planned for something else; I might have to switch it out and save it for next year if this one gets through...).
Most of the others, I like :) I'm not a big fan of retelling, but the BIPOC angle would make it fun and I know there are tons of options (just none on my existing TBR).


Thomas wrote: "Hi. SOrry about the other day, i just got scared I couldn't fufill soem catergories. is it too late for me to opt back in?"
No problem, Thomas! We never took you out of anything. You are a member of the group and you can choose to participate or not at any time in any of our yearly or seasonal challenges, readathons, etc. I'm sure you're not the only one who at first is stymied by some of the categories. Of course, we will have the listopias and threads for each prompt, so you can get ideas from others. And if there's some category you really don't want to read, you don't have to! This group is for fun and exploration.
No problem, Thomas! We never took you out of anything. You are a member of the group and you can choose to participate or not at any time in any of our yearly or seasonal challenges, readathons, etc. I'm sure you're not the only one who at first is stymied by some of the categories. Of course, we will have the listopias and threads for each prompt, so you can get ideas from others. And if there's some category you really don't want to read, you don't have to! This group is for fun and exploration.


One that jumped to mind for me was Beartown, which led me down a thought process to Friday Night Lights: A Town, a Team, and a Dream and for a different reason Seven Fallen Feathers: Racism, Death, and Hard Truths in a Northern City. I think this would be a fun one to build a listopia for, by looking through my read and TBR lists on GR, and to get recommendations from others.
ETA: Here are some books I've read this year and liked that are based around a community: The MerciesMilkman, Four Lost Cities: A Secret History of the Urban Age, Firekeeper's Daughter and Deacon King Kong.

Look at me, fighting for science fiction! 🤓🙃 This is a scary prompt for me and I'm willing to give it a chance.

I agree - the SFF list was crowd-sourced, I gather, not "critically acclaimed". I've read about half of it and agree it is full of good ones, including for newbies to the genres. I didn't vote for it because I've already read so many of them, but will be happy to find something new (or continue a series) if it gets in.


I really like the community idea, it feels specific but still with a lot of interesting ways to interpret it. Although lots of books feature groups of people, when I actually sat down to think about it, I realized I wouldn't necessarily consider them communities without a certain sort of established cohesiveness. I tend to really like books that feature strong communities, whether that community is warm and welcoming to the protagonist like in The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet or weird and claustrophobic like in If We Were Villains or used as an interesting setting in a science fiction book like The Dispossessed.
I also will definitely vote for women in STEM, since it aligns with another very specific book preference I have, which is for books about naturalists or biologists.
And I'm surprised that I like the idea of a title that describes me! Like others have said, I usually am not a big fan of personal prompts but that one just seems super fun to research and be creative with, and I like the flexibility.
I feel conflicted about BIPOC Retellings. I want to like retellings a lot, because I love the idea and I do occasionally love them, but I have to admit at this point that I'm often disappointed by them. It's strange when you come across a subgenre that you apparently largely dislike despite not disliking the content - I realized this last week about Up Lit! Perhaps there's a similar writing style to many of the retellings I've read that doesn't do it for me? Or certain notable tropes? Maybe I'll vote for it just so I can figure my tastes out!


One that jumped to mind for me was [book:Beartown|334131..."
Thanks for suggesting Beartown. My bookclub friends tell me I'll like it despite the sports. Backman's other books are concerned with community and neighborhoods too.
I also recommend Beloved by Toni Morrison.
Hannah wrote: " community..."
The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet has been recommended a lot too, and this might be the book I need for this year's future prompt. I started late this year.

But that's not how I feel. You may be frustrated that people aren't listening to one another, but you clearly aren't listening either. So instead of "yelling", maybe respect that opinions can differ from yours and practice what you're preaching. I didn't insult your opinion, so please don't insult mine.
I see what others are saying and I've reviewed the listopia linked in this thread for SF/F, as well as the listopia curated for the previous NPR prompt. And as I said in my previous post, the only ones that interest ME overlap significantly. That doesn't mean that's the case for you, but I'm not voting with your book preferences in mind. I'm voting with my book preferences, as I assume everyone does.
I also gave other reasons for why I'm not interested in that prompt and it has nothing to do with the three letters NPR being in the name of both prompts.

1. A book that includes a mental health topic
2. A book from historical fiction genre
3. A book with a non-human as one of the main characters
4. A book where a community plays an important role
7. A book (or any book in a series) mentioned on NPR’s list of 50 Favorite Sci-Fi And Fantasy Books Of The Past Decade
10. A book with a word or phrase in the title that describes you
11. A book about a character on a journey
I haven't even looked at most of the rest yet. I have a feeling I'll have 8 upvotes.
Least favorites
Retellings - I think I should read the original classics before the retellings.
Banned Books - If I were a teacher I would pay more attention to these.

Sorry about that. It wasn't directed at anyone in particular. I just kept seeing the same comments over again. You know better than anyone else what will interest you.
I'm not excited about retellings because I always feel like what is the point when you know the story. If we have a retelling, I would go more for one of the BIPOC versions of Jane Austen. I also have a couple of Sherlock Holmes stories by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, where Sherlock has a black partner.
To be totally shallow, can I just compliment whoever puts the surveys together. They're always so pretty!

1. Historical fiction (so many on my TBR)
2. Non-human main character
3. Handwriting on the cover
4. Woman in STEM
5. NPR's Sci-Fi and Fantasy List (again, so many on my TBR)
6. Retelling with BIPOC main character
7. Word or phrase that describes you in the title (I have A Wife of Noble Character on my TBR and I will probably do that if it makes it in just because it makes me laugh.
This was a great round of suggestions!

Book Lovers
Grown Ups
Forever, Interrupted
Earthlings
My Lovely Wife
A Nearly Normal Family
A Good American
And some others I found from searches:
Fancy Nancy (haha)
The Soccer Mom's Bad Boy
The Teacher's Wife
Pamela wrote: "To be totally shallow, can I just compliment whoever puts the surveys together. They're always so pretty!"
Emily did this one, but I'm glad someone likes the randomly selected background pictures!
Emily did this one, but I'm glad someone likes the randomly selected background pictures!
After much waffling back and forth, I went 4 up and 4 down. I'll be very intrigued to see where the results land this week.

I used to gravitate to the Pride and Prejudice retellings, but lately I've started to feel that a large chunk of the romance market (especially regency) is a retelling of Pride and Prejudice, with a snobby aloof man, or characters who dislike each other at first. But sometimes that's still what I want to read.


I am tagging them temporarily as 00-cover if anyone wants to use that shelf tag to share.

You might be right about the handwritten covers. The covers in my tbr are too small to really tell, but some blogs show nice big covers, so I'll try to pay attention.
For Community I agree about Becky Chambers books. I would add The Authenticity Project

I hope that the military veteran gets resubmitted. There are some interesting possibilities both fiction and non fiction.

This one caught my eye while looking for something else, and "up all night" definitely fits me. I found many books with the same term.

Up All Night: Ted Turner, CNN, and the Birth of 24-Hour News
Up All Night - This same exact title is used a lot.
Up All Night: 13 Stories between Sunset and Sunrise
Lumberjanes: Up All Night
Thriller: Stories To Keep You Up All Night
Grumpy Monkey Up All Night
Up All Night: My Life and Times in Rock Radio
Unfortunately, these do not describe me:

Up All Night Long: From Lust to Love
NancyJ wrote: "I used to gravitate to the Pride and Prejudice retellings, but lately I've started to feel that a large chunk of the romance market (especially regency) is a retelling of Pride and Prejudice, with a snobby aloof man, or characters who dislike each other at first. But sometimes that's still what I want to read.."
There's a group of P&P retellings by Muslim authors that all came out at the same time a couple years ago. All excellent. But Sonali's Des's Pride, Prejudice, and Other Flavors flips the story with the guy in the Bennett role and the woman playing Darcy. I'm reading the third one in the series Incense and Sensibility for the NATO alphabet book this year (the main character's name is India)
There's a group of P&P retellings by Muslim authors that all came out at the same time a couple years ago. All excellent. But Sonali's Des's Pride, Prejudice, and Other Flavors flips the story with the guy in the Bennett role and the woman playing Darcy. I'm reading the third one in the series Incense and Sensibility for the NATO alphabet book this year (the main character's name is India)

Book Lovers
Grown Ups
Forever, Interrupted
Earthlings
My Lovely Wife
[book:A Nearl..."
Ooh, I like these. Forever interrupted definitely fits me right now too. I don't think I'll use Nancy Drew or Fancy Nancy either. 😄
So far I found (without looking for it) Up All Night. This prompt will be a lot of fun.

Thanks Pamela, they do sound good.

Alicia wrote: "dalex wrote: "Anyone have suggestions for BIPOC retelling that is not young adult and/or romance? That seems to be all I can find for that topic and I am not a fan of either. If you have recs for a..."
Mexican Gothic is Wuthering Heights??? I missed that by a mile!
Mexican Gothic is Wuthering Heights??? I missed that by a mile!
NancyJ wrote: "Pamela wrote: "NancyJ wrote: "I used to gravitate to the Pride and Prejudice retellings, but lately I've started to feel that a large chunk of the romance market (especially regency) is a retelling..."
There's also Ayesha at Last, Pride and Unmarriageable
There's also Ayesha at Last, Pride and Unmarriageable

Oh I thought it was! It felt very Wuthering Heights mixed with Get Out (the movie). I may be wrong. But the whole time I was reading it I was thinking about how at least this husband is better than Heathcliff.

I'm pretty sureSilvia Moreno-Garcia has said it interviews it's not intended as a retelling but that she took the most inspiration from The Shuttle
Thomas wrote: "I downvoted banned book but if it gets in i will reread Alice's Adventures in Wonderland I also downvoted the NPR fantasy list one as I agree with previous comments that we already h..."
Banned books are my pet peeve- I have someone in my book group obsessed with them and it just annoys me. Pretty much every book seems to have been banned somewhere, somehow
Banned books are my pet peeve- I have someone in my book group obsessed with them and it just annoys me. Pretty much every book seems to have been banned somewhere, somehow

Oh didn't know that. Then disregard.

My three favorites so far are:
When all is Said, The One Hundred Years of Lenni and Margot, Aristotle and Dante...


















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