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Reading Challenges
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2024 May Reading Challenge
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I'll have to go through what I already have checked out and see if anything fits.

I will finish the book, but very doubtful it will happen by May 31.

Pinpoint."
Thanks. The summary sounds so interesting ! Added to my TBR list.
Em wrote: "I will read Typhoon Fury by Clive Cussler. There are usually numerous fictitious inventions in his books, and this one specifically mentions " a Japanese-developed drug, designed, b..."
Sounds interesting!
Sounds interesting!
Darin wrote: "I have a copy of Leonardo da Vinci by Walter Isaacson that I haven’t read yet, so now is the time."
Nice!
Nice!
Britt, Book Habitue wrote: "Hmmm... I know I have a big bio of Tesla somewhere, but with all the end of the school year insanity I doubt I'll get to that😂
I'll have to go through what I already have checked out and see if any..."
I know, can you believe it's May? I'm starting my Summer Reading School Visits, and part of me is like... shouldn't it still be February?
I'll have to go through what I already have checked out and see if any..."
I know, can you believe it's May? I'm starting my Summer Reading School Visits, and part of me is like... shouldn't it still be February?
Previous winners have been posted!
Thank you everyone for being so patient with those announcements.
Thank you everyone for being so patient with those announcements.

I'll have to go through what I already hav..."
Yeah it's completely insane. We're so busy.

😂That's so perfect

Kristen wrote: "I’m about 50 pages into Last Days of Night by Graham Moore, and so far it’s really good! It’s about the legal battle over who invented the lightbulb and includes several larger-than-life characters..."
Ooh, that sounds super interesting.
Ooh, that sounds super interesting.

That was a book I was looking at reading. I am interested to see how you like it.

Hedy Lamarr is so interesting. I've read a few articles about her, but I should definitely read a full biography.

Clancy wrote: "Finished How We Got to Now. It was really interesting and certainly makes you think about stuff we take for granted."
I shall have to add it to my list.
I shall have to add it to my list.

An interesting pair! My favorite part of Rocket Girls was when John Glenn refused to accept the the data from the computers until 'the girls' had verified that data. I've also read New Machine, but I don't really remember it except that I did enjoy it.

Excellent book.

Deborah wrote: "Any recommendations on a cozy romance or mystery that fits this month’s theme?"
Here's a Christian fiction romance title that lands more on the cozy side A Lady's Guide to Marvels and Misadventure
Victorian socialite Clara Stanton strives to protect her eccentric family's reputation, but that proves to be difficult when her grandfather takes off on a flight of fancy. Thrown together with vagabond tinker Theodore Kingsley, Clara sets off to follow her grandfather's whimsical adventure and finds love along the way.
The Invention of Sophie Carter is a YA that seems to fit, too.
In 1851 London identical twin sisters take turns swapping places over the course of a summer in order to pursue their secret ambitions, but things get out of control when they fall in love with two hansome gentlemen.
Here's a Christian fiction romance title that lands more on the cozy side A Lady's Guide to Marvels and Misadventure
Victorian socialite Clara Stanton strives to protect her eccentric family's reputation, but that proves to be difficult when her grandfather takes off on a flight of fancy. Thrown together with vagabond tinker Theodore Kingsley, Clara sets off to follow her grandfather's whimsical adventure and finds love along the way.
The Invention of Sophie Carter is a YA that seems to fit, too.
In 1851 London identical twin sisters take turns swapping places over the course of a summer in order to pursue their secret ambitions, but things get out of control when they fall in love with two hansome gentlemen.
Deborah wrote: "Any recommendations on a cozy romance or mystery that fits this month’s theme?"
On the mystery side there are a few:
The Seance Society
Murder Has Nine Lives
Aunt Dimity and the Summer King
Killer in the Carriage House: A Victorian Village Mystery
On the mystery side there are a few:
The Seance Society
Murder Has Nine Lives
Aunt Dimity and the Summer King
Killer in the Carriage House: A Victorian Village Mystery

This book has a lot of illustrations, so I chose to actually read it, which takes more time. And the book itself is printed on heavier paper, making it kind of hefty, so I’m also getting some weight lifting done!

Here is a brief quote:
"The things he envisioned for the future often came to pass, even if it took a few centuries. Scuba gear, flying machines, and helicopters now exist. Suction pumps now drain swamps. Along the route of the canal that Leonardo drew there is now a major highway. Sometimes fantasies are paths to reality."


Be curious, relentlessly curious
Seek knowledge for its own sake
Retain a childlike sense of wonder
Observe
Start with the details
See things unseen
Go down rabbit holes
Get distracted
Respect facts
Procrastinate
Let the perfect be the enemy of the good
Think visually
Avoid silos
Let your research exceed your grasp
Indulge fantasy
Create for yourself, not just for patrons
Collaborate
Make lists
Take notes, on paper
Be open to mystery

I feel this book was written with a lot of negativity towards Musk. I know he can't be everyone's favorite cup of tea but it makes the book less palatable. I've seen reviews for a couple other books about musk that I plan to read next to get a different take on his achievements.
since being sick I had started 2 other books but didn't get either finished by will get them done next:
Novosaurus a visual guide to the dinosaurs of our future by And Frazer
and
Tesla man out of time by Margaret Cheney

Crystal is our prize drawing winner for May's reading challenge for reading Scooby-Doo: The Swamp Witch.
Congratulations!
Congratulations!
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Books mentioned in this topic
Scooby-Doo: The Swamp Witch (other topics)Imaginative Inventions: The Who, What, Where, When, and Why of Roller Skates, Potato Chips, Marbles, and Pie (other topics)
Drumindor (other topics)
Mistakes That Worked: The World's Familiar Inventions and How They Came to Be (other topics)
One Plastic Bag: Isatou Ceesay and the Recycling Women of the Gambia (other topics)
More...
events.slcolibrary.org/events
For your May Challenge. Read a book about an inventor and/or an invention. Make sure you note what inventor or invention you read about once you finish the book!
Here are some books that you might want to try.
Nonfiction:
A Game Maker's Life: A Hall of Fame Game Inventor and Executive Tells the Inside Story of the Toy Industry
Revolver: Sam Colt and the Six-Shooter That Changed America
The Invention of Miracles: Language, Power, and Alexander Graham Bell’s Quest to End Deafness
The Truth About Tesla: The Myth of the Lone Genius in the History of Innovation
Tools: A Visual Exploration of Implements and Devices in the Workshop
Into the Groove: The Story of Sound From Tin Foil to Vinyl
The Things We Make: The Unknown History of Invention from Cathedrals to Soda Cans
Fiction:
Hero Complex
The Blue, Beautiful World
Misfire
The Spare Man
Lily of the Valley
The Sharpest Needle
Kids Fiction:
The Girl Who Built a Spider
Engine of Change (Rube Goldberg and His Amazing Machines #3)
Reeya Rai and the Secret Workshop
Camila the Invention Star
How to Catch a Daddysaurus
Kids Nonfiction:
Inventions: A Visual Encyclopedia
From Here to There: Inventions That Changed the Way the World Moves
Oh, the Things They Invented!: All About Great Inventors
How Things Work: Discover Secrets and Science Behind Bounce Houses, Hovercraft, Robotics, and Everything in Between