Ultimate Popsugar Reading Challenge discussion
2023 Challenge - Regular
>
26 - The Shortest Book (by pages) On Your TBR list
Well now this is an annoying prompt as I've discovered a load of books without page numbers and I'm sure I didn't have this problem last time this prompt came up?! It's probably an indie comic though, but I will need to get an export out and work through them.
I chose the shortest thing that wasn't a short story being listed as a separate title, and my result was A Home Again!
The Road Not Taken and Other PoemsNothing like poetry since it can be very short sometimes. And I love Robert Frost.
Ellie wrote: "Well now this is an annoying prompt as I've discovered a load of books without page numbers and I'm sure I didn't have this problem last time this prompt came up?! It's probably an indie comic thou..."I also now have a lot of books without pages on my TBR. So this is a new thing? I don't remember seeing it before.
Also, if I marked an audiobook as want to read, those come up first on my TBR since they convert hours as pages. Annoying.
my shortest that is not in the middle of a series (3 short stories that take place after a book I haven't read) or unknown pages (or completely wrong page count) is Jim Henson's Labyrinth: Coronation, Vol. 1
I have a lot of audiobooks on my list, so what looks short really isn't as audiobooks are hours...rounded up and listed as pages.So what I thought was going to be easy and quick, now looks like it will take some time and effort. I might just go with the Listopia or use one of my library lists (which has books form all challenges in that particular library.
I have three separate TBRs - my "throw them all on there" TBR, my separate nonfiction TBR, and my 2023 TBR, so I am letting myself pick from these 3 books:The Cybernetic Tea Shop
Hearth Mage
Darkness Visible: A Memoir of Madness
Milena wrote: "Ellie wrote: "I also now have a lot of books without pages on my TBR. So this is a new thing? I don't remember seeing it before."It's always been possible, but I tend to add in missing page numbers when I add books to my TBR, so I don't know if they've had some data issues with all the updates.
I have a few short stories, but also a play. I think I'll skip the short stories and go with No Exit by Sartre, which I was going to read for the afterlife prompt this year.
Mine turned out to be She and Her Cat. It was originally She and Her Cat: Stories, but I couldn't actually find that one, so going for the other one, which is a graphic novel.
Although I love short books, this prompt annoys me because my TBR is full of books with no page count plus individual short stories, short graphic novels, and picture books. And I don't really think any of them count for THIS category (I would use a graphic novel or picture book for ANOTHER category without hesitation, but somehow using one for "shortest book" feels wrong)
So I have to wade through all of that and pick out the titles that actually qualify. There's no ONE book for me. I do have a few good options, and I'll read either Brokeback Mountain or Lust, Caution (coincidentally they were both made into movies that I really liked)
So I have to wade through all of that and pick out the titles that actually qualify. There's no ONE book for me. I do have a few good options, and I'll read either Brokeback Mountain or Lust, Caution (coincidentally they were both made into movies that I really liked)
Nadine in NY wrote: "Although I love short books, this prompt annoys me because my TBR is full of books with no page count plus individual short stories, short graphic novels, and picture books. And I don't really thin..."I stumbled upon a copy of Brokeback a few years ago and read it over the course of an afternoon (probably could've done in an hour or less but was distracted with Real Life), and liked it a lot!
It does feel like there are a ton more books on my shelf without page numbers than the last time this prompt came up. Sifting through all those plus short stories related to cozy mystery series, I finally came up with a few options. * The Suicide Club by Robert Louis Stevenson (64)
* Candide by Voltaire (79)
* The Thirty-Nine Steps by John Buchan (108) (I’ve seen two movie versions, but have yet to read the novella)
* The Postman Always Rings Twice by James M. Cain (117)
* The Man Who Knew Too Much by G.K. Chesterton (124)
* A Room of One's Own by Virginia Woolf (128)
Since these are all classics, I’ll see if one makes it as a monthly classic group read.
Heather L wrote: "The Postman Always Rings Twice by James M. Cain (117) ..."
If you like audiobooks, STANLEY TUCCI reads this one!! I enjoyed it. (I've never seen the movie so I wasn't quite sure what would happen.)
If you like audiobooks, STANLEY TUCCI reads this one!! I enjoyed it. (I've never seen the movie so I wasn't quite sure what would happen.)
Nadine in NY wrote: "Heather L wrote: "The Postman Always Rings Twice by James M. Cain (117) ..."If you like audiobooks, STANLEY TUCCI reads this one!! I enjoyed it. (I've never seen the movie so I wasn't quite sur..."
Ooh, that is definitely a reason to listen.
It's nicely ironic that my shortest TBR has one of the longest titles…Killer Fashion: Poisonous Petticoats, Strangulating Scarves, and Other Deadly Garments Throughout History by Jennifer Wright
It's sort of an adult picture book, I think! (I skipped my audiobook TBLs and short stories, which came up first.)
It's also very, very different from my longest TBR, which is currently Anna Karenina!
Milena wrote: "Also, if I marked an audiobook as want to read, those come up first on my TBR since they convert hours as pages. Annoying."
I think usually it's the number of chapters in the audiobook that count as pages.
I'll most likely go with this poetry book by Joy Harjo: In Mad Love and War . Poetry is usually the easiest when it comes to short books.
Ellie wrote: "Well now this is an annoying prompt as I've discovered a load of books without page numbers and I'm sure I didn't have this problem last time this prompt came up?! It's probably an indie comic thou..."I have to scroll past 25 (!) pages of books without page numbers. And then, the first just do not make sense, some longer audio books, some books where I rather know they are not 5 or 6 pages but more.
I ended up with ... tadaaaa... a crochet instruction
. Umpf. The first sensible small children's book might do. Work needs to be done on page numbers for sure.
I will be reading Notre-Dame: A Short History of the Meaning of Cathedrals by Ken Follett. It's only 80 pages! I had no idea it was so short, or I probably would have read it when I bought it right after I finished Follett's Kingsbridge series.
The shortest thing I'm comfortable calling a book (as opposed to an essay or short story) on my TBR is The Haunting of Tram Car 015 by P. Djeli Clark at 96 pages.
Luckily, my TBR is carefully curated, so it wasn't hard to find Mile 81 by Stephen King meeting the criteria...Took me a while to get started, though, because let's just say that King is not my usual choice reading. Started and finished this morning, in broad daylight, because King has a tendency to slightly creep me out...
I chose The Little Prince and found it an interesting reflection on human society! I can see why this title is so beloved.
Assembly by Natasha Brown is only 100 pages long but is a powerful book. We hear the thoughts of a seemingly successful young black woman as she is promoted in her job in a City of London bank and as she prepares for a party at the country estate owned by her boyfriend's parents. She relates the endless struggle to succeed against inbuilt prejudice and the legacy of empire.
Re:union by Eric LiuIt is 17 pages long. I am trying to get through the books I have downloaded on my Kindle.
Andrea wrote: "After ignoring the books that are short stories or comics, I picked Galatea!"I just read this too! What a lovely little story.
I'm going with poetry: Names: Poems by Marilyn Hacker.Shameless self-promo: for anyone into science fiction comedy, The Cosmic Turkey is only 161 pages. (Can also count for first-time author or book with a love triangle.)
I read A Prayer for the Crown-Shy by Becky Chambers. It's the sequel to A Psalm for the Wild-Built. They're both short books.I adore this series. It's science fiction set in nature. It's philosophical and character-driven. It's about a monk but not really about religion. And there's a robot who is more "human" than the humans who built it. It's a really lovely series.
I have no shame in calling a comic book or a graphic novel as a book so I'm going to go with iZOMBiE #14 as my choice for this prompt! It's 21 pages. I've had it on my "to read" list forever and I already own it (trying to avoid buying any books this year if I can..).
I am reading Animal Farm by George Orwell. Based on different editions, this book has 100-150 pages, mine has 88. I have read 1984 before, so I am excited about another Orwell book.
Anshita wrote: "I am reading Animal Farm by George Orwell. Based on different editions, this book has 100-150 pages, mine has 88. I have read 1984 before, so I am excited about anot..."
Read it in school and remember really liking it.
Good luck reading Animal Farm. I read in h.s. and it was my most disliked book. I haven't read it since, but maybe as an adult I would have a different perspective on it.
The Pearl Thief is a short, sweet novella by debut Bahraini author Noor Al Noaimi. It is set in Bahrain when it had fishing villages and a pearling industry. Here is my review
My rule is a book has to be at least 75 pages, so my TBR gave me An Ideal Husband by Oscar Wilde. I bought it cheap on Kindle, and it had 78 pages. I had watched the movie ages ago, and after reading the book I watched it again.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Hill We Climb: An Inaugural Poem for the Country (other topics)Foster (other topics)
Push (other topics)
An Ideal Husband (other topics)
The Pearl Thief (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Claire Keegan (other topics)Sapphire (other topics)
Oscar Wilde (other topics)
Noor Al Noaimi (other topics)
Eric Liu (other topics)
More...














I suppose it could be argued that this is an individualized prompt, but a listopia might help others discover a shorter book they would enjoy...so I'm including a listopia! :)
Listopia is HERE