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[2023] Wild Discussion
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Chrissy
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Jul 10, 2022 11:06AM

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goodreads just popped this up on my home page
https://www.goodreads.com/blog/show/2......"
There seem to be a lot based on Shakespeare. I like retellings of classic books, and my book club is looking for a pair we can read together (the original and the retelling).
I would upvote retellings or books inspired by other books (or whatever wording you all come up with).

My least favorite is the brooding man with a secret sensitive side lol 🤦🏽♀️


That way the prompt would for anything that has the same characters or plot or theme or whatever.
For example, The Silent Patient by Alex Michaelides is inspired by “Alcestis” by Euripides but really it only shares a common theme and if you aren’t super familiar with the play you’d probably miss it. As opposed to something like Ash by Melinda Lo, which is pretty much exactly the Cinderella story except Cinderella is a
lesbian.


Juliet Brown wrote: "I would upvote apartment building OR house because I enjoy haunted house stories, just apartment building would be a no from ma as too narrow"
the listopia for apartments is pretty long
the listopia for apartments is pretty long
Multiweek prompt idea I'm noodling on--
a fiction and a non-fiction book about the same subject
But then I'm thinking some people detest non-fiction (I always want to read the real story or more about the era after reading a good book)--- should I change it to Books in two different genres on the same subject?
a fiction and a non-fiction book about the same subject
But then I'm thinking some people detest non-fiction (I always want to read the real story or more about the era after reading a good book)--- should I change it to Books in two different genres on the same subject?


Edit: added all caps word segment in first line. Totally changes the meaning — sorry.

a fiction and a non-fiction book about the same subject
But then I'm thinking some people detest non-fiction (I always want to read the real story or more ..."
Yep this would be a downvote for me as I do not enjoy non-fiction.

That was a good list, I would vote for a prompt like this.



Yeah, unless you're into highly experimental fiction, you're going to come across the same things again and again in stories, it's how it's written, and what an author adds to the mix, that matters. Not that they've managed to come up with a plot that no one has ever thought of using before. I can stumble upon quite unique concepts since I read a lot of genre fiction, but essentially they are wrapped up in a familiar plot type that has been proven to work again and again.

You do find quite original stuff once in a while - like
, Craphound and Doctor Olaf van Schuler's Brain

a fiction and a non-fiction book about the same subject
But then I'm thinking some people detest non-fiction (I always want to read the real story or more ..."
I like to read some non-fiction each year, but my problem is that I would have a hard time finding a FICTION story that is the same subject as the non-fiction I enjoy. I guess I read quite different fiction and non-fiction. I tend to read a lot of science / climate / microhistory books. Climate obviously lends itself well to cli-fi, but if I read Cod: A Biography of the Fish that Changed the World or Banana: The Fate of the Fruit That Changed the World or I Contain Multitudes: The Microbes Within Us and a Grander View of Life, I'd be hard-pressed to find a fiction book that I would want to read about that same subject. (yes, I'm sure the fiction exists, but the trick is finding one I want to read.)



a fiction and a non-fiction book about the same subject
But then I'm thinking some people detest non-fiction (I always want to read the real..."
I think if you took a broader interpretation it could work pretty well. For example, for the banana book, you could read a book set in a country that is famous for growing bananas, such as the Dominican Republic. For the cod example, a book where a character is a fisherperson would probably work.

a fiction and a non-fiction book about the same subject
But then I'm thinking some people detest non-fiction (I always ..."
Cod: A Biography of the Fish that Changed the World is a book I have on my TBR list and Clammed Up series is one that I’ reading. I would not have thought of the pairing. Thank you!
I do think, for a fiction and non-fiction pairing to make it it would need to be fairly broad.

Tracy wrote: "@dalex — I think “homage” might be the word we are looking for to cover “retelling” and “inspired by”."
I'm afraid most people don't really know what "homage" means in the context of books so when they see that prompt (and don't read this thread) they will ignore or downvote it. I think we tried something like that with "pastiche" before, similar idea and reaction. Some good ideas get rejected when voters don't bother checking into what they really are.
I'm afraid most people don't really know what "homage" means in the context of books so when they see that prompt (and don't read this thread) they will ignore or downvote it. I think we tried something like that with "pastiche" before, similar idea and reaction. Some good ideas get rejected when voters don't bother checking into what they really are.
Aimee wrote: "I think if you took a broader interpretation it could work pretty well. For example, for the banana book, you could read a book set in a country that is famous for growing bananas, such as the Dominican Republic. For the cod example, a book where a character is a fisherperson would probably work."
Exactly! Doesn't have to be a bio of Jefferson and then historical fiction on Jefferson but more of a connection in some way. Last year I read Mudlark and this year I read The Lost Apothecary which is built around a character who find something mudlarking- that's an insanely close one! But then there's looser where you read a book that has a road trip and then you read a book about the inventor of the car. I'm reading a chic lit book right now with a photographer and my dad just sent me a digital photography book, which I won't actually read, but if I wanted to, I could pair it with that book.
Exactly! Doesn't have to be a bio of Jefferson and then historical fiction on Jefferson but more of a connection in some way. Last year I read Mudlark and this year I read The Lost Apothecary which is built around a character who find something mudlarking- that's an insanely close one! But then there's looser where you read a book that has a road trip and then you read a book about the inventor of the car. I'm reading a chic lit book right now with a photographer and my dad just sent me a digital photography book, which I won't actually read, but if I wanted to, I could pair it with that book.

Great example. There are a lot of good fiction books that involve Nature - Greenwood, Overstory, Where the Crawdads Sing. For non-fiction nature books, Lab Girl (a memoir that reads like fiction). Sy Montgomery books (memoirs involving animals), and Braiding Sweetgrass are all easier to read than most non-fiction.
I think there are even two books involving an octopus - one fiction, one non-fiction.
But to make it more feasible for most people, I agree that it might be better to just require that the two books be linked in some small way - a word in the title, a similar topic or sub-topic, a similar type of setting. similar covers, author name or initials. Where the Crawdads Sing involves nature and illustrations of nature subjects, and might be matched with a NF book with nature illustrations on the cover.
Jillian wrote: "Cod: A Biography of the Fish that Changed the World is a book I have on my TBR list and Clammed Up series is one that I’ reading. I would not have thought of the pairing. Thank you!.."
I'm reading Cod for Here Be Dragons this year- it' been on my TBR forever too! And now that I don't live on Cape Cod anymore, it feels like time!
I'm reading Cod for Here Be Dragons this year- it' been on my TBR forever too! And now that I don't live on Cape Cod anymore, it feels like time!

You'll need to reword it then. Because "a fiction and a non-fiction book about the same subject" means two books about the same subject, so a banana book would need to be paired with another about bananas.
Perhaps you meant it to say "a fiction and a non-fiction book that are connected in some way."
Nadine in NY wrote: "Perhaps you meant it to say "a fiction and a non-fiction book that are connected in some way."."
That works, keep it flexible for those who are adverse to non-fiction and those who want to challenge themselves still can.
That works, keep it flexible for those who are adverse to non-fiction and those who want to challenge themselves still can.


a fiction and a non-fiction book about the same subject
But then I'm thinking some people detest non-fiction (I always want to read the real story or more ..."
I LOVE the idea of a pair of books from two different genres on the same subject. I would have so much fun with that!
I probably wouldn't vote for the fiction/nonfiction version, because I get antsy about being tasked to read nonfiction, but I would almost certainly still enjoy it if it did get voted in. I read widely enough in fiction that if I chose one of the handful of nonfiction books on next year's TBR I'm sure I would be able to find something interesting to pair with it in fiction.

‘23 calls to mind 23 skidoo. In honor of that…
“A book that coined or popularized a commonly used word or phrase”
Ex. A lot of Shakespeare inventions, “old sport” from Gatsby, “catch-22”, “it was the best of times, it was the worst of times.”

Neat idea, but we would need a listopia, we don't always know which book was the origin of a popular saying. We generally don't know until we read a book that it contains a quote like that. I'm not opposed to it, but I'm afraid it would be in the category of people who don't read the wild discussion or nomination threads look at it for 2 seconds, say "huh?" and move on.

‘23 calls to mind 23 skidoo. In honor of that…
“A book that coined or popularized a commonly used word or phrase”
Ex. A lot of Shakespeare inventions, “old sport” fro..."
on the one hand, that sounds really difficult to find a book for. On the other hand, I've been meaning to read The Stepford Wives for forever now.
I do think this would fall both in the category of "you're forcing me to read a classic" and "this is a very narrow topic", which are two reasons why people downvote a prompt. I like the premise, but I would definitely need to see a list of options before voting.


Steve wrote: "Looking for prompt feedback:
‘23 calls to mind 23 skidoo. In honor of that…
“A book that coined or popularized a commonly used word or phrase”
Ex. A lot of Shakespeare inventions, “old sport” fro..."
It's s neat idea- would need to see examples- it's a neat idea but if there's only a few dozen choices, I won't vote for it as not much choice (and I would negate the Shakespeare as for me, I don't consider reading Shakespeare reading a book)
According to google, 23 skidoo means "leaving quickly, being forced to leave quickly by someone else, or taking advantage of a propitious opportunity to leave"-- maybe something connected to that?
‘23 calls to mind 23 skidoo. In honor of that…
“A book that coined or popularized a commonly used word or phrase”
Ex. A lot of Shakespeare inventions, “old sport” fro..."
It's s neat idea- would need to see examples- it's a neat idea but if there's only a few dozen choices, I won't vote for it as not much choice (and I would negate the Shakespeare as for me, I don't consider reading Shakespeare reading a book)
According to google, 23 skidoo means "leaving quickly, being forced to leave quickly by someone else, or taking advantage of a propitious opportunity to leave"-- maybe something connected to that?

That's not rude at all! It's tomorrow.
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
The schedule chart is post #5.

Either way, I’m not sure I’d love it if it was the book it originated from. But what about a book connected to a popularized/commonly used phrase. Then I could read a book about jousting for “old sport” (and yes, that’s the oldest sport I could think of on the fly).
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