Ultimate Popsugar Reading Challenge discussion
2023 Challenge - Regular
>
02 - A Book You Bought From an Independent Bookstore
date
newest »


I also don't drive, but I live in subu..."
Thankfully a lot of indie bookstores have sites from across the country.
I discovered BirchBark Books, located in Minnesota, online, and I'm in Texas so that's pretty cool. And a lot of their online stores ship which is even better.

I am going to Italy in March and want to check out the cool bookstore in Venice, Liberia Acqua Alta, so maybe I will find something there?
I can't remember the last time I read an actual book...

I am going to Italy in March and want to check out the cool bookstore in Venice, Liberia Acqua Alta, so maybe I will find something the..."
Shopping bookstores in Italy sounds like a dream! Have fun!
I'll read The Overdue Life of Amy Byler, which I bought at my local, independent bookstore and never got around to it this year.

I am going to Italy in March and want to check out the cool bookstore in Venice, Liberia Acqua Alta, so maybe I will find something the..."
What about reading an e-book by an independent publisher? I know there are some independent bookstores that sell ebooks, so you might try that route. This link may help: https://www.indiebound.org/ebooks

Never mind access to a local indie bookstore- anybody who can get online can buy books from an independent website instead.
But some of us don't have the budget to actually purchase books at all! I'm only able to participate in these reading challenges because I live near an amazing public library. I absolutely love that when I finish a book, I put it in the "return" bag and don't have to find space for it on my limited shelf space.
I'm honestly not sure how I'm going to be able to fulfill this prompt.

Never mind access to a local indie bookstore- anybody who can get online can buy books from an independent website instead..."
That’s what irritates me about the two prompts requiring not one but two 2023 releases, as well. Not everyone has access to a library or bookstore, which makes at least three of the 2023 prompts more difficult for some people.

Never mind access to a local indie bookstore- anybody who can get online can buy books from an independent website in..."
Yeah, I'm not crazy about those prompts either. I like having one book "published this year" as a prompt. But usually I can use any book, no matter what time of year it's published. But this year's prompts exclude anything published in the first few months of the year- either the winter or the "second half of the year." Which also irks me because I can't possibly finish the reading challenge before June. I'll likely be done with 49 prompts and waiting for a book to be published AND available from the library before I can finish.
But I do have access to the library, and this will be an annoyance, not an undue burden. But these prompts also won't be encouraging me to find new books to read that I otherwise wouldn't be reading, or expanding my literary horizons the way that most of the prompts do. The good prompts anyway!






So I'll be able to use one of the two books I get from there.

American Carnage: On the Front Lines of the Republican Civil War and the Rise of President Trump
The bookstore has this thing called 'Blind Date With A Book' and this is the one that I was surprised with. Which is actually pretty cool because I've seen it around and always been curious about it so it's perfect.


Currently I have ordered some photography books, but I doubt that I will choose one of those for the prompt since I expect them to be reference.


Anyway, I gave in and bought, from Wimbledon Books in London SW19, Elizabeth Finch by Julian Barnes. I was rather disappointed.
The narrator, Neil, begins the book as a mature student on a course in 'Culture and Civilisation', taught by EF. He thinks she is wonderful, and unfortunately I found her extremely irritating.
Two parts of the book deal with the course and Neil's continuing obsession with EF after her death. The middle of the book is a paper written by Neil on EF's hero, Julian the Apostate. As a history geek, I thought JTA was rather more interesting than EF.
The blurb on the front of my copy says 'She [EF] will change the way you see the world.' Sorry, no.


You can't get much more "independent" than getting it directly from the author, can you? And, being a picture book, it was a quick and easy read.
And for those of you who like to use books for more than one prompt, this one also fills "a book about a holiday other than Christmas" (Purim) and " a modern retelling of a classic" (Little Red Riding Hood.) It came out while it was still winter so it can't be used for either of the 2023 prompts (though it did occur to me that a book that comes out in the first three weeks of June could fulfill both prompts!)

The Lost Journals of Sacajewea - this book isn't released yet, but I've pre-ordered a copy from the indie bookstore in Minnesota, Birchbark Books.
******
For my nonfiction challenge part I'm going with:
Joan of Arc: A Life Transfigured - this book I got at my local indie bookstore.

Love's Abiding Joy



My Review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...




The spirit of this prompt is "a book that you didn't buy from a large chain." I'd say a library sale counts.

Books mentioned in this topic
The Curveball (other topics)The Rebel and the Kingdom: The True Story of the Secret Mission to Overthrow the North Korean Regime (other topics)
Rules of Civility (other topics)
The Paper Palace (other topics)
Lore Olympus: Volume One (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Megan Cousins (other topics)Miranda Cowley Heller (other topics)
Julian Barnes (other topics)
Connie Archer (other topics)
Nora Roberts (other topics)
More...
Third Place Books - https://www.thirdplacebooks.com/
The Strand - https://www.strandbooks.com/
Powells - https://www.powells.com/
Elliot Bay Book Company - https://www.elliottbaybook.com/
Annie Bloom's - https://www.annieblooms.com/