The 52 Book Club: 2025 Challenge discussion
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September 2023 - First word in the book is a proper noun
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I read A Lady by Midnight by Tessa Dare. Started with "Corporal Thorne could make a woman quiver, from all the way across the room. An inconvenient talent, so far as Kate Taylor was concerned."


It's a children's picture book. Took less than five minutes to read, and checked off my "dinosaur in title" prompt from another challenge.
What, am I the only one reading multiple challenges?

Hercule Poirot looked with interest....

It's a children's picture book. Took less than five minutes to read, and checked off my "dinosaur in title" p..."
Nope, I have more than one.
Books mentioned in this topic
Hester (other topics)Five Little Pigs (other topics)
Five Little Pigs (other topics)
A Lady by Midnight (other topics)
A Haunting in Venice: A Hercule Poirot Mystery (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Laurie Lico Albanese (other topics)Agatha Christie (other topics)
Agatha Christie (other topics)
Tessa Dare (other topics)
Agatha Christie (other topics)
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This prompt is similar to the prompt on our 2024 challenge (book begins with the word “the”). Except for this prompt, we want the first word to be a proper noun. Most likely, the book you pick for this prompt will open with a character’s name. (For example, the opening from Just Another Missing Person is, “Julia is trying to work out if the man at the table next but one is somebody she has arrested before.”)
We would consider the first word of the first chapter (or prologue) to be the first word in the book. However, it’s up to you whether you count forewords, dedications, chapter or section headings, etc. as the “first word” or not.
As a creative interpretation, some members have also chosen to include the title page as the first word. (For example, for this prompt, they might choose “Iona Iverson's Rules for Commuting” because the first word on the title page is the name “Iona,” even though the first word of the first paragraph is not a proper noun.) As always, you get to decide how to interpret each prompt.
You can find our Goodreads list for this prompt here.