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Reading Goals/ Challenges
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Spring/Summer 2012: Questions, Task Help and General Discussion
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Tami
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Feb 27, 2012 08:44AM

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I know it is updated every 2 years (I think) where they drop some off, and add others on. I would say that it doesn't have to be on the current one, as long as it was on the list sometime. Whatever list you can find would work. There are several on the internet.

Thanks, Tami, I think I'll use the most current one if I can find it.


The link used to be on the goodreads homepage but it has disappeared. I just googled it and it was easy to find :)



I did find Sharks and Boys by Kristen Tracy, which sounds like fun.
Thanks for your ideas. I like choices. :)
On the Winner Is, I would allow any that made nominations. That will give us a larger pool. I also will allow any winners from 2010. :)
On the vacation one, I am fine if they go on vacation but aren't on vacation for the entire book. As long as the vacation plays a part in the story.
Shark Week: I was thinking that may be a little difficult. I would be fine with including other sea life. So Moby Dick would work, a story where fishermen are the main characters and it takes place on the water I am fine with too.
Hopefully this answers everything. :)
On the vacation one, I am fine if they go on vacation but aren't on vacation for the entire book. As long as the vacation plays a part in the story.
Shark Week: I was thinking that may be a little difficult. I would be fine with including other sea life. So Moby Dick would work, a story where fishermen are the main characters and it takes place on the water I am fine with too.
Hopefully this answers everything. :)

2011 Goodreads Choice Awards
2010 Goodreads Choice Awards


Also could I read Island of the Blue Dolphins for shark week?
Kayla, it doesn't need to be nonfiction, I would say that book would work.
Beks, I am right with you. Anything under 90 degrees is cold for me. So I say yes. :) Island of the Blue Dolphins would work too.
Beks, I am right with you. Anything under 90 degrees is cold for me. So I say yes. :) Island of the Blue Dolphins would work too.
Which task is everyone having the most difficulty with? We were thinking about changing up our group reads to coincide with the challenge, so if there is one really giving people grief, we may make out April group read related to it.
Julia, I couldn't tell if it was influenced or about William Shakespeare from the blurb. Has anyone else read this? What do you think?


I would be open to doing a group read for the Shark Week, Summer Loving and Lost in Translation tasks. I'm not particularly excited about the books I chose and it'd be great to have other options.
The task I'm having the most difficulty with is the Ripped from the Headlines task, though I don't know how we can make that a group read since it's a two book task and the books have to be about the same subject.
There are plenty of historical fiction books that I'd like to read, but since I don't read much nonfiction I think it'll be hard finding one that I'm interested in enough to read for the task. I mostly read science/medical books the rare times that I actually do pick up a nonfiction book, and I have no idea what I could choose for a fiction book to go along with something like that.

Ripped from the Headlines

Tami: I was thinking of reading The Other Life for my Earth Day book but it's about the aftermath of environmental destruction so it's a stretch. Does it count?

I'm having trouble with that as well. Romance isn't something I normally read.
I was thinking about some sort of classic like To Kill a Mockingbird - where Scout and Dill's childhood love for each other is based on summer holiday visits. But it is hard to know what love interests take place during the summer if you haven't already read the book.
I was wondering if anyone else had any suggestions like that.


YA
The Summer I Turned Pretty
Past Perfect
Sometimes It Happens
Sixteenth Summer
Adult:
Juliet
Austenland
(I think they took place in the summer, I'm not entirely sure)
I remember having read more summer romances... I just can't think of the names right now.

http://answers.yahoo.com/question/ind...
I'm gonna read The Truth About Forever.

Some non-shark sea-life-centric books, besides the ones already mentioned, are The Whale Rider, Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, and a bunch of other ones on this list http://www.goodreads.com/list/show/30....

Nicki
Tami: I was thinking of reading The Other Life for my Earth Day book but it's about the aftermath of environmental destruction so it's a stretch. Does it count?
I think that would work just fine.
Julia,
Since a reasonable amount of time is spent on The Wall and other cold locations, would A Dance With Dragons be acceptable as the Cold part of 25.2 - Hot and Cold?
this will work too.
Tami: I was thinking of reading The Other Life for my Earth Day book but it's about the aftermath of environmental destruction so it's a stretch. Does it count?
I think that would work just fine.
Julia,
Since a reasonable amount of time is spent on The Wall and other cold locations, would A Dance With Dragons be acceptable as the Cold part of 25.2 - Hot and Cold?
this will work too.

Good Question: I will have to put this up for debate. What do you all think? Fictional cultures work?



Okay, so I guess fictional cultures will work as long as the culture is a major point in the book.
Rachel, I would say diary based books would work. I remember when I was little instea of writing a diary/journal, I would write letters to an imaginary person. :)
Rachel, I would say diary based books would work. I remember when I was little instea of writing a diary/journal, I would write letters to an imaginary person. :)




I know Tami is supposed to answer but I think for the 'then' portion the book has to be published in 2012 (view spoiler)
Alicyn, yes, that would work.
Sashana, if you can't find something else to fit, I think it looks blue enough.
Nullifidian, I am fine with that.
Sashana, if you can't find something else to fit, I think it looks blue enough.
Nullifidian, I am fine with that.

Miranda's disbelief turns to fear in a split second when a meteor knocks the moon closer to the earth. How should her family prepare for the future when worldwide tsunamis wipe out the coasts, earthquakes rock the continents, and volcanic ash blocks out the sun? As summer turns to Arctic winter, Miranda, her two brothers, and their mother retreat to the unexpected safe haven of their sunroom, where they subsist on stockpiled food and limited water in the warmth of a wood-burning stove. Told in journal entries, this is the heart-pounding story of Miranda's struggle to hold on to the most important resource of all--hope--in an increasingly desperate and unfamiliar world.


Miranda's disbelief turns to fear in a split second when a meteor knocks the moon closer to the ..."
That sounds awesome! I'm reading that as my "we're all in this together" book.

For the fiction book, would it be alright if the story was just about any kind of virus outbreak or would it have to be about an ebolavirus outbreak specifically?
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