I have now finished this challenge. It has been fun and interesting to look for books that fit this challenge. It started with five categories but a new was added and I read 6 books.
List of books at the bottom of this post.
The basics
The challenge runs from January to December. During this time you
choose a book to read from each of the following categories (examples of
books you could choose are in brackets):
- A reference to time (Eleven Minutes, Before Ever After)
- A position of royalty (The People’s Queen, The Last Empress, The Curse Of The Pharaoh)
- A number written in letters (The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms, A Tale Of Two Cities)
- A forename or names (Rebecca, Eleanor & Park, The Unfinished Work Of Elizabeth D.)
- A type or element of weather (Gone With The Wind, Red Earth Pouring Rain)
- A book with a school subject in the title. (And yes, that does mean you can get creative and use a magical academic subject if you wish – Hogwarts is a school, after all.)
Remember the titles I’ve given here are only examples, you can by all
means use them if you want to – some are classics after all – but it’s
not necessary. There are plenty of other books that will fit the
categories and you may have some in mind already or even some on your
shelves you can read. I’ve been getting a lot of questions
about whether there will be a sixth category – not this year. I
realised too late after publishing the post that I hadn’t included a
sixth, so as not to confuse everyone we’ll be sticking with five this
time around.
Extra information
- Books can be any format (print, audio, ebook).
- It’s preferred that the books don’t overlap with other challenges, but not a requirement at all.
- Books cannot overlap categories (for instance my first example, Eleven Minutes, could be used for category 1 or 3 but not both).
- Creativity for matching the categories is not only allowed, it’s encouraged!
- You don’t have to make your list of books beforehand, you can choose them as you go.
- You don’t have to read your chosen books in any particular order.
- A reference to time: Forever Fae by L.P. Dover
- A position of royalty: Death on the Aegean Queen By Maria Hudgins
- A number written in letters: Honeymoon For One by Chris Keniston
- A forename or names: John Macnab by John Buchan
- A type or element of weather: After the Storm by M. Stratton
- A school subjec: The Secret History by Donna Tartt
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