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2022 Fall Reading Challenge Introduction and FAQs

There also seems to have been a totally unrelated film on Amazon called Homecoming about a sinister wellness group.
I'm just going with Homegoing which was my first thought. There's an Ursula LeGuin book Always Coming Home, which I enjoyed years ago.
Ellie wrote: "I don't really understand what "homecoming" is? Is it a school sports event?"
Good question, it's very American-centric. The fall is the American football season in high schools. Some games are played at the home stadium and some away at other schools. Traditionally there is a game at home later in the season, often against a specific rival team. High schools make a big deal of the whole week with days to dress up in team colors or other themes, decorations, a parade with floats, a marching band, a contest for Prom Queen and King, and a dance. You may have seen this in movies. (Actually I went to a girls' school where we had none of this, so others can fill you in more.) In universities, this sometimes is a day for alumni to return to the school as well.
So for the theme, it could have to do with sports, school, teenagers, fall, a parade, a dance - or what I am thinking of - a book where the character actually returns to a home town for whatever reason.
Good question, it's very American-centric. The fall is the American football season in high schools. Some games are played at the home stadium and some away at other schools. Traditionally there is a game at home later in the season, often against a specific rival team. High schools make a big deal of the whole week with days to dress up in team colors or other themes, decorations, a parade with floats, a marching band, a contest for Prom Queen and King, and a dance. You may have seen this in movies. (Actually I went to a girls' school where we had none of this, so others can fill you in more.) In universities, this sometimes is a day for alumni to return to the school as well.
So for the theme, it could have to do with sports, school, teenagers, fall, a parade, a dance - or what I am thinking of - a book where the character actually returns to a home town for whatever reason.
I have a feeling "pumpkin spice" is an American thing too - the combination of cinnamon, cloves, and nutmeg used in pumpkin pie. In recent years, it seems like every food company has put out seasonal products using this flavor - like Starbucks coffee or Oreos cookies, etc. It's kind of a joke now because it's so common in the fall.
And as far as "banned books", there are classics like The Catcher in the Rye but recently in the US, many books that have gender non-conforming characters and/or subjects on race and other political topics have been challenged in schools. They may not be explicitly banned but I think that sort of thing would count.

Homecoming:
In my high school, "Home Coming Weekend" revolved around football. Football teams had "home" games (played on our field), and "away" games (played at another school. Homecoming weekend signifies a weekend when the team is playing a home game after being away. It would start with a school assembly where we had to cheer for the football players and cheerleaders. There was a bon-fire one night, and a big football game the next day - I remember a lot of mud. Many schools have a big dance, and students vote a Homecoming Queen and King. It was intended to build school spirit.
For HOME COMING I would use a book...
- about high school students (maybe with sports, school dances, popularity, social drama, drinking).
- about someone coming home, or going back to visit a school
- about some type of reunion (family or school)
- involving sports
I might read the Second book in the Beartown Trilogy. And the new book Winners if I get it in time.


I think a romance plot fits the phrase perfectly. It doesn't say the words have to be in the text.

Robin P wrote: "I have a feeling "pumpkin spice" is an American thing too - the combination of cinnamon, cloves, and nutmeg used in pumpkin pie. In recent years, it seems like every food company has put out season..."
I agree that it's become a joke. It's particularly bad in Keurig coffee. I had a neighbor who made fabulous pumpkin cookies. They were light on the spice.

By the way, maybe we should have some prompts some month with connections to different countries?

Found a couple BookTok books that fell into that:
Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine
These Violent Delights
The Charm Offensive
Pumpkinheads
Sorry y'all, I will admit that I pulled this list of prompts from a Facebook group I'm in that's using it for their own seasonal challenge, but it is a Book of the Month Club group (which only sells books in the US) so I didn't even think about it being US-centric.
As for this Seasonal Challenge, we are very much of the opinion that, while the Summer Challenge was very structured, this one is very adaptable to whatever you envision. If homecoming sounds like someone coming home, feel free to use a book that centers around that! It's really up to how you want to interpret this one.
And Nike, we typically have some prompts in our seasonal challenges that relate to the opposite hemisphere's season (so summer in the north, but winter in the south for our Aussie members). I just took the easy route with this season's challenge.
As for this Seasonal Challenge, we are very much of the opinion that, while the Summer Challenge was very structured, this one is very adaptable to whatever you envision. If homecoming sounds like someone coming home, feel free to use a book that centers around that! It's really up to how you want to interpret this one.
And Nike, we typically have some prompts in our seasonal challenges that relate to the opposite hemisphere's season (so summer in the north, but winter in the south for our Aussie members). I just took the easy route with this season's challenge.

I like the fact that it's so relaxed, it makes for a nice contrast with the very well-structured summer challenge (which I also loved) :)


Found a couple BookTok ..."
my mind went to a "spicy" romance.

My jar of pumpkin spice says: cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, allspice and cloves. It got its name because pumpkin spice is used in pumpkin pies.
And, yes, I'm American, so i have my very own jar of pumpkin spice :)

I can definitely find something to fit homecoming as I read lots of books set in schools, so I think any book with school spirit or school sports will count for me. I also like the idea of it being to do with a parade or reunion.
But I'm still struggling to understand what 'reminds you of pumpkin spice' means to me. I know someone said Pumpkin Spice is a popular autumn flavouring, but I don't know how to relate that to a book. Maybe a popular book that makes me think of autumn? Or a popular book set in autumn? Can anyone suggest what books they're doing for this prompt? Or what they are interpreting this prompt to mean?




Since I now understand this challenge is very free spirited I wonder how far I can stretch my interpretation of "pumpkin spices"? I've googled now so I know which spices you mean and those are typical spices in the Indian cuisine. I love India and their food and I have a few books by Indian writers still unread in my shelves. So - from pumpkin to cinnamon, ginger and nutmeg and further on to India. Would that be ok or way too far fetched? = D


I'm a teacher at a high school in the south, so homecoming is a *very* big deal lol.
Nike, I don't think either of those interpretations are too far-fetched! And I may be biased, but I think you absolutely should read Harry Potter haha!
Nike, I don't think either of those interpretations are too far-fetched! And I may be biased, but I think you absolutely should read Harry Potter haha!

I love the idea of pumpkin spice leading to curry and India! That opens up a whole other avenue for me to consider, too. (Also, my opinion holds no weight, but I myself would absolutely count quidditch as a sport.) [Edit: Emily is so fast!]

This year I'm just going with the pumpkin/Halloween link.


Since I now understand this challeng..."
Not too far fetched at all, Nike! Years ago, when chai first became popular at American coffee shops, it was commonly described as "tastes like pumpkin pie!" as some spices are common between the two. I twitched quietly whenever I heard or read that comparison. But now, when I see promotions for pumpkin spice this or that, my inner snark thinks "oh! tastes like chai now??" ;-)
So, all that to say, I think your path "from pumpkin to cinnamon, ginger and nutmeg and further on to India" is spot on and delightful. Go for it!

And then in Foster Care it’s the day the kids are returning home and/or the Anniversary of a full year in Foster also called a “Gotcha Day.” The party’s are similar to a birthday party.



I am new to this group but your post helped me locate a book that I think fits the prompt. "Everything Except the Coffee: Learning About America From Starbucks, Pumpkin spice makes me think of Starbucks, the fall, and America, As a long time Seattle resident, I've had the chance to watch Starbucks grow from a local shop to a global enterprise that teaches the world something about America (as well as serving coffee),

Rose wrote: "Where do I get the spreadsheet?"
It's on our main spreadsheet, just a couple tabs over:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/...
It's on our main spreadsheet, just a couple tabs over:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/...

Pumpkin Spice Peril
Death By Pumpkin Spice
I'm planning to read A Catered Halloween:

a cozy mystery featuring sisters who have a catering business. This installment includes the sisters baking pumpkin pie for a customer. They will use pumpkin spice in the pumpkin pie!
I'm a little puzzled by having both "a leaf on the cover" and "a tree on the cover". They seem rather similar. Would the "leaf" one have to be on its own, with no tree anywhere in sight?

Haroun and the Sea of Stories is accessible and one of my favorite books ever!

Most of my tree possibilities don't actually show individual leaves (or even leaves - I seem to have a lot of spooky bare trees on my Halloween shelf). Books with flowers on the cover seem to have much higher chances of showing an individual leaf. (Just my cover hunt findings so far.)

The leaf one could be leaves on trees or plants or just leaves with nothing else around. The tree may or may not have leaves since trees can be shadows, completely bare or have needles. There can be overlap between the prompts but there isn't necessarily. That said, I will probably end up with two books that have trees AND leaves just because it's easiest lol

My son is a high school football player, so it is a very big deal with us, too! :)

I am currently reading Arsenic and Adobo and I'm using it for the pumpkin spice prompt. The main character's best friend works in a coffee shop. Another book that could work, if you want to go the coffee route, is Before the Coffee Gets Cold.
Is there a Completed Challenge thread that I am not seeing?
Rachel, feel free to start your own thread in this folder if that's easier for you to keep track of!
Books mentioned in this topic
The Love Hypothesis (other topics)Arsenic and Adobo (other topics)
Before the Coffee Gets Cold (other topics)
Haroun and the Sea of Stories (other topics)
Pumpkin Spice Peril (other topics)
More...
It's time for our Fall Seasonal Challenge! We have a series of prompts related to the fall season that is sure to inspire you and help you get those books read as we enter the end of the year.
When?
This challenge runs from September 1, 2022 through November 30, 2022.
The Prompts:
Find a book that...
- Has a red cover
- Fits the phrase "I'm falling for you"
- Has a leaf on the cover
- Is magical realism
- Is set in autumn
- Is historical fiction
- Makes you think of pumpkin spice
- Is one last summer read
- Has a tree on the cover
- Features family drama
- Is a banned book
- Reminds you of homecoming
- Is set in a small town
- Features sports
- Was published in September
How to Complete It
Tackle this challenge any way you'd like! Maybe your goal is to read 6 of the 15 prompts, or maybe you want to finish the whole list twice... it's up to you!
What Qualifies?
Because there is no prize attached to this challenge, you can fill these prompts however you'd like! Picture books? Sure! Rereads? Love them! Short books? Go for it! It's your challenge.
How to Track Your Reading
As always, you can add your name to our Community Spreadsheet and track your progress there, and you can also create your own planning thread within this folder to track your reading and your plans for the challenge.