Around the Year in 52 Books discussion
Archives
>
[2023] Keep it Simple (KIS) or Bring it on (BIO) Group Collab List

Including the baseline is a great idea, Emily!

AMY! Great idea on including the baseline. Want to give credit where credit is due.
°~Amy~° wrote: "I had a bit more time this morning than I thought I would have. Each prompt now has a BASELINE. Theoretically, our suggestions for KIS will be ideas that stretch the baseline to include more option..."
I'm impressed, I wonder if you are a writer or editor by trade! I'm sure your work will definitely help some of our members who want to be sure they understand the exact intent of the prompt. (As you know, I rarely worry about that myself!)
Thanks for finding this info in the original threads/proposals, because members may not want to take the time to go back and look for them. All this can be added to the individual threads when we set them up after all the prompts are chosen.
I'm impressed, I wonder if you are a writer or editor by trade! I'm sure your work will definitely help some of our members who want to be sure they understand the exact intent of the prompt. (As you know, I rarely worry about that myself!)
Thanks for finding this info in the original threads/proposals, because members may not want to take the time to go back and look for them. All this can be added to the individual threads when we set them up after all the prompts are chosen.

BIO: Use a setting that is located in a place that starts with A, T, or Y: As in Tanzania, Africa, or Yorkville, Tennessee.

I don’t see how it can possibly be challenging for anyone.
I don't deliberately read LGBTQ books, so it is a challenge for me to find something else related to "pride".

Oh definitely not Robin! I do hope it helps though!

10. A Book that is Dark
Baseline: "Genre-such as dark noir, dark fantasy, true crime, horror; Topics- war, slavery, plague/disease; Cover-black, mid night blue, night time"
11. A Book that is Light
Baseline: "Genre- up lit, beach reads, humor...; Theme- family, friends; Cover- bright colors, daytime; Physical- short not a door stop"
12. A title that contains a word often found in a recipe
Baseline: examples could be Add, Fold, Mix, Stir, Blend, Chop, Crush, Measure, Pour, Bake, Heat, Melt or ingredients such as Flour, Sugar, Water, Milk, Eggs, measurements such as Cup, Teaspoon, Half, Spices/seasoning (Salt, Thyme, Bay, etc)
13. A book set in a UNESCO City of Literature
Baseline: "List of 42 Unesco Cities found here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_of..."
14. A book with ONE of the five "W" questions in the title
Baseline: "who, what, where, when OR why"
For the UNESCO city of literature, a KIS could be something set in that country but not in that exact city.

This is what I love about this list. I thought UNESCO was one that absolutely could not have a KIS or BIO because it just IS what it is, but here you all are proving me wrong! I guess there is ALWAYS a way to stretch a prompt if you just think outside the box a little! Thanks Robin!

Because Quebec City is the Canadian city on the list, I have seen books on the listopia that have confused Quebec (the province) with Quebec (the city). I'm not sure if this was supposed to be KIS or just people not realizing the difference. (In French they don't even use the word for city and you know what people are talking about by the prepositions they use.)
I suppose a KIS could be to use the province of Quebec.

BIO: The title and cover are both predominately dark (e.g. this edition of How High We Go in the Dark)

A Book that is Light
BIO: The title and cover are both predominately light (e.g. The Luminaries)

BIO The plot/theme involves light or a light source in a significant way.
A title that contains a word often found in a recipe
BIO: Must be an unusual or harder to find word in a recipe (e.g. "grate" not "water")
BIO: Title contains a word from a recipe in the book (bonus BIO if it is a work of fiction with a recipe)
A book set in a UNESCO City of Literature
KIS: The book mentions one of the cities, but does not actually have any action there.
BIO: The plot occurs entirely within one of the cities.
A book with ONE of the five "W" questions in the title
BIO: The title must be in question form.

For example, I am looking at The Luminous Dead for my dark book, because the title has both light and dark, and the theme and setting are dark, and I'm interested to know what is luminous about that situation. I am thinking about using She Who Became the Sun for my light book, because of the darkness and deception in the theme.
This is probably a really odd way to see this prompt, but it's what sets my heart aflame as a reader. Just dropping it here in case anyone else finds it interesting.

Because Quebec City is the Canadian city on the list, I have seen books..."
I suspect that a lot of people will be using that KIS option without even realizing it. Geography is hard! lol

For dark/light my BIO option is to connect the books in some way (since it’s a multi-week prompt). I’m not really sure what that looks like, so far I’ve been googling “dark retellings of classic books/fairy tales” and “lighthearted books about [insert topic here]”

KIS: Include variations and other W questions, eg: which, whichever, whatever, whoever, whom, whose.
KIS: Include homonyms eg: hoo, Y, Wye, wot, watt, witch, were(wolf), ware.

I agree. BIO could be read a dark and light book from same genre or having a similar theme.
Personally, I am planning on reading two nature related books for the same. For dark, I will pick a heavy topic and light something fun.

domestic thriller vs rom com
dark academia vs campus lit
satire vs comedy
Or opposing genres, like:
Nordic noir vs cozy mystery
adventure vs chick lit
historical gothic vs historical romance
grimdark vs hopepunk
cli-fi vs solarpunk
For me the UNESCO BIO is to pick a more obscure city, not a major city like Edinburgh or Dublin.

A Bio for KIS might be to use a favorite family or personal recipe and choose a word from there.

I hope to get the next batch listed for tomorrow. Stay tuned!

That’s not really a KIS imo. It’s what the prompt says - a word found in a recipe. The prompt doesn’t say that word has to be a cooking term or a food item.


(Like dalex, I took any word in the recipe as the baseline meaning of this prompt rather than a KIS option, as long as it's a word commonly found in recipes)
BIO: The word from the recipe needs to be used in a cooking-related context in the title (so not "season" in "The Fifth Season")
For "A book set in a UNESCO City of Literature"
BIO: Literature should be important to the plot as well
BIO: The book needs to be set entirely in the UNESCO City of Literature rather than partially
KIS: The book only needs to have one scene take place in the UNESCO City of Literature
And this one might be too goofy, but:
KIS: Read a book that is literally light (in weight)

That’s not really a KIS ..."
I don't believe that was the original intent of the prompt, I think it is a way to stretch the prompt which is what KIS is for. Even if it is an overlap with the baseline, it doesn't hurt anything to put it there for people who may have thought it HAS to be a food or measurement.

15. A character that might be called a Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, or Spy
Baseline: “tinker would be someone who travels for a living, or someone who 'tinkers around', perhaps a mechanic or hobbyist. Tailor - anyone working in the fashion industry, or involved with concerns around fast fashion. Soldier and Spy are pretty self-explanatory but fairly wide, and Spy could include anyone involved with surveillance”
16. An author's debut book
Baseline: “the first book an author has every published, as well as an author's first book in a new genre (an adult fiction author publishing their first YA book, or a nonfiction author publishing fiction for the first time, for example)”
17. A book that involves a murder
Baseline: Fiction or non-fiction book that involves a murder either as the main focus of the book or as a minor part of the story
18. A book related to science
Baseline: fiction or non-fiction including topics such as: nature, biology, environment, genetics, oceans, medical topics, mental illness, chemistry, physics, psychology, neuroscience, climate change, evolution, extinction, health sciences, space, astronomy, etc.
19. A book with a school subject in the title
Baseline: “Examples of School Subjects: Math, Science, Chemistry, Physics, English, Spanish, French, History, Geography”
20. 3 Weeks: Three books, each of which is set in a different century
Baseline: Self-explanatory?

KIS: inlcude attempt or planned murder of threat of even if it doesn't happen

Wow, That sounds like it would be incredibly hard. Maybe a historical fiction set during war time? That idea has my brain thinking!

Wow, That sounds like it would be incredibly hard. Maybe a historical fiction set during war time? That idea has my brain thinking!"
A soldier who serves as a vehicle mechanic (they tinker with engines) and is a double agent (spy) with a hobby of doing embroidery (tailor). Hahaha. Does this book exist?

BIO - All three books have a similar theme (wars, murder mysteries, family sagas, etc)
A children's book (MG), a YA book and a NA/Adult book
KIS - read three books that are set in very different time periods (not necessarily different centuries) (eg. A historical fiction, a contemporary romance and a science fiction set on a space station/ship)

Wow, That sounds like it would be incredibly hard. Maybe a historical fiction set during war time? That idea has ..."
Not sure, but I want to read it if it does! I was thinking more of a soldier who returns home to their parents who are tailors, and his mechanic sibling and they all spy on the neighbor that they think is sabotaging the town Christmas play (if the soldier and the neighbor end up falling in love, I just accidently wrote a Hallmark movie script).....but anyway, your idea is way better!

Bahahaha!!!

Wow, That sounds like it would be incredibly hard. Maybe a historical fiction set during war time? That idea has my brain thinking!"
Leigh Bardugo's Grishaverse might. Well the whole series does but I can't think which would be the best single book to capture them all.
A BIO might be to read Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy.

KIS: Tinkering, tailoring, soldiering, or spying are simply mentioned in the text or performed in the plot
An author's debut book
KIS: Read an author's earliest book on your TBR
BIO: Read a 2022 debut that gets longlisted for a major prize in 2023
(Still noodling the others over.)

I'm thinking that The Alice Network might come very close.

I just thought of this as a BIO for the book that is dark and light, but I know it might be way too hard: Read two books in a duology (or two books in the same series)
Example:




I am off to compile our next list of prompts and baselines. I'll be back shortly to post them!

21. A book that has been translated from another language
Baseline: No explanation given
KIS
BIO
read a translated book NOT from continental Europe
22. A book posted in one of the ATY Best Book of the Month threads in 2022 or 2023
Baseline: No explanation given
KIS
BIO
23. A book by an author from continental Europe
Baseline: “The idea is to read a book that is written by a European author who is not from the UK or Ireland.”
KIS
BIO
24.. A book that fits a suggestion that didn’t make the list this year
Baseline: No explanation given
KIS
BIO
25.A book with 4 or more colors on the cover
Baseline: No explanation given
KIS
BIO
Several of this batch are pretty straight-forward, but are also ones that group members are struggling with the most. It will be a challenge to come up with ways to make KIS/BIOs for these!

Baseline: No explanation given
KIS: a book already in your TBR
BIO: a book you first heard about in the Best Book of the Month threads or listopias

KIS: Can count different shades of the same color - light blue, navy blue, royal blue, pale pink, hot pink, sherbet orange, pumpkin orange, burnt orange, lime green, grass green, pine green, olive green, and so on.
BIO: Must be 4 distinct colors.
23. A book by an author from continental Europe
KIS: The author was born in or lived in continental Europe at some point, but doesn't necessarily live there now.

BIO - A translated book from continental Europe."
That is how I am going to approach the Cont Europe challenge :)

Translated from another language
BIO - read a translated book NOT from cont. Europe (I saw that idea on one of the boards in response to questions about the overlap between the two prompts
Continental Europe
KIS - include all regions of Europe (less research)
4 or more colors on the cover
BIO - Must contain the three primary colors (red, yellow, bule) and one secondary color (Orange, Green, Violet)
BIO- Black and White do not count as colors

Great KIS idea. I was thinking also of an author currently living in cont Europe who wasn't actually born there, to open up to the immigrant populations. I'll add that as a KIS.

BIO: A book translated from a language you've never read a translation from
(This is more aimed at those of us who read a lot of works in translation.)
BIO: A book longlisted or awarded for excellence in translation (see link for examples)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Categor...
(Oh wow I have made a terrible error in researching this one - my TBR did NOT need me to know about that Wikipedia link!!!)
Books mentioned in this topic
Grilled and Seasoned With Murder (other topics)The Fifth Season (other topics)
The Hour of the Star (other topics)
The Decameron (other topics)
A Million Little Pieces (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Maureen Johnson (other topics)Candice Carty-Williams (other topics)
Imogen Robertson (other topics)
Hanna Jameson (other topics)
Adam Johnson (other topics)
More...
KIS: Count articles (A, The) in place names.
BIO: The whole story must take place in the specific location used for the challenge
A Book With A Full Name in the Title
KIS: Nicknames are full names.
BIO: There are no other words in the title, just the full name.
BIO: The named person is also pictured on the cover (e.g. Lillian Boxfish Takes a Walk).
A Book with Sun, Moon or Stars on the cover
KIS: Titles on the cover include the word sun, moon, or star.
KIS: Other heavenly bodies (planets, comets, asteroids, etc.) also count. (They are seen as stars by premodern astronomers, so not a huge stretch.)
BIO: There is a specific star, moon, or constellation on the cover (e.g. Europa or Phobos, Sirius or Polaris, Orion or Cassiopia)
BIO: The sun, moon, or star on the cover is significant to the story