2025 Reading Challenge discussion
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The String Theory Challenge - 2014
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mim
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Jan 04, 2014 05:04PM

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I think Poison is going to be my first string theory book and since it's so much about poisons and poison making I want to read another book about poison. (Lots of poison in just one sentence!)


The Mists of Avalon by Marion Zimmer Bradley is a wonderful book telling the tale of King Arthur, and Camelot from the viewpoint of some very strong women. Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage: Stories is excellent collection of nine short stories about women, written by Alice Munro, a Canadian author who won the Nobel Prize for Literature. Moving from the Northern to Southern Hemisphere, we find Red April by Peruvian author Santiago Roncagliolo, honored with the Premio Alfaguara de Novela, a very prestigious Spanish language prize in literature.
While I have them linked, I started The Mists of Avalon at Midnight on New Year's Eve and am halfway through the 51 hour audiobook. In between, I've read two of the nine stories in Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage: Stories on my Kindle. Today I decided to listen to Red April to make progress on another challenge and should finish it before the day is over.
So...can I use these three and then have the next book on this challenge linked from Red April?

Yes, I have now finished Het gym (2/10)
So my string so far is:
1) Quesadillas: a book with a 13 year old Mexican protagonist
2) Het gym: a book with a 13 year old Surinamian/Dutch protagonist.

Hmm... well the idea is to read a book and find something you like about that particular book that you would like to explore more. As long as you are reading all those books (which it seems you are) because you see a link between them all then you are good. It's okay if you don't finish them in order as long as all of the above.
So yes (:

Yes, I have now finished Het gym (2/10)
So my string so far is:
1) Quesadillas: a book with a 13 year old Mexican..."
Thanks An. Sorry about that.

Red April


Oooh I really like your choice Theresa!! Sounds very interesting. I think I've just found my South American book for the around the world challenge.

---------------
1. Assassin's Creed: Black Flag(1/5/14)
Male protagonist is caught between two secret orders the Templars & Assassin's in search of the legend "The Observatory" that is told to hold the secrets of power.
2.Inferno 1/22/14
Male Protagonist who solves the mystery of a new scientific wonder that could either destroy/or help mankind.
3.The Blood Gospel 4/24/14
Female Protagonist who tries to solve the mystery of the Blood Gospel. A Gospel that was written by Christ in his own blood.
4.

1.
The main character (and her adopted brother) both are incarcerated at several points in the memoir. This made me interested in:
2. Orange is the New Black: My Year in a Women's Prison by Piper Kerman

Burial Rites


I highly recommend this book, especially the audio version read by Morven Christie. A 5 star read for me.
This week I'll be finishing The Mists of Avalon and Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage: Stories, which I set aside to fit in two books over the weekend.




Really cool connection. Should be interesting.

1) Quesadillas: a book with a 13 year old Mexican protagonist
2) Het gym: a book with a 13 year old Surinamian/Dutch protagonist.
3) The Black Lake: Continuing the theme of Dutch colonisation, this time in Indonesia. This book also has two children as protagonists.
For my 4th book in this string, I'm going to look for a book about the Japanese occupation of the area in WWII, which ended Dutch rule there.


1) Quesadillas: a book with a 13 year old Mexican protagonist
2) Het gym: a book with a 13 year old Surinamian/Dutch prot..."
Cool, link. Will update you!

No problem at all.
Sweet! ^__^

This was the 1st book I started in 2014, but the 3rd finished. I took time to read 2 smaller linked books last weekend. FYI, I'll finish the second book started, Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage: Stories, this weekend.




This year, I have read "Persepolis 2" this month (I read the first before Christmas), plus the group read "And the Mountains echoed" also ties in with this! So, not a bad start already! Any ideas or suggestions much appreciated.
Am I getting the idea???
If not, please correct me.
If so, sign me up for 13. :)

Hopefully I didn't just confuse you.. You seem to have the right idea to me (:




✔ 1.The Mists of Avalon by Marion Zimmer Bradley is a wonderful book telling the tale of King Arthur, and Camelot from the viewpoint of some very strong women. Finished 1/10/14
✔ 2.Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage: Stories is excellent collection of nine short stories about women, written by Alice Munro, a Canadian author who won the Nobel Prize for Literature. Finished 1/12/14
✔ 3. Moving from the Northern to Southern Hemisphere, we find Red April by Peruvian author Santiago Roncagliolo, honored with the Premio Alfaguara de Novela, a very prestigious Spanish language prize in literature. Finished 1/5/14
✔ 4. After the Peruvian work of historical fiction/crime/mystery, Red April, we chose another work of the same genre group set in Iceland, Burial Rites by the Australian Goodreads Author Hannah Kent. Finished 1/5/14
✔ 5. Moving from one Goodreads Author to another, we next read Oryx and Crake, a science fiction fantasy by Margaret Atwood. Finished 1/11/14

Just finished #2 of 12 for the String Challenge.
✔ 1. Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers was a fascinating nonfiction book that covered the history of anatomy schools among other things. Finished 01/07/14.
✔ 2. The Anatomist's Apprentice was a pretty disappointing book. The science seemed too cutting edge for the infancy of forensics. The story featured a romance plus a mystery plus some truly gruesome autopsies plus technical jargon....all set in Georgian Era Britain. Since there were a couple of comical resurrection men in the book and I'll use them to connect to my next book. Finished 01/13/14.
3. The Necromancer


✔ cool! Thank you so much Theresa ;D

1.
The main character (and her adopted brother) both are incarcerated at several points in the memoir. This made me interested in:
2.
Piper wants nothing more than to be at home. This next author wrote a book about the things in his home, room by room:
3.At Home: A Short History of Private Life by Bill Bryson





1. Crystal Ships by Richard Sharp has a character who works as a flamenco dancer. (currently reading)
2. Bird with the Heart of a Mountain by Barbara Mariconda is about a sixteen-year-old flamenco dancer during the Spanish Civil War.
3. For Whom the Bell Tolls by Ernest Hemingway, set in the Spanish Civil War.
4. Nostalgia by Dennis McFarland is set in the American Civil War.

✔ 1. Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers covered the history of anatomy schools among other things. Finished 01/07/14.
✔ 2. The Anatomist's Apprentice had a couple of comical "resurrection men" supplying Oxford's anatomy professor. Finished 01/13/14.
✔ 3. The Necromancer connects with a couple of minor characters who were comical resurrected henchmen (Denzil and Dennis the dead locomotive engineers). This was such a fun book. The main character has the use of a dark carnival to tempt 100 souls to sign themselves over to the devil....all in his effort to regain his own soul. Finished 01/18/14.
✔ 4. Something Wicked This Way Comes is the ultimate dark carnival story with an evil merry-go-round that could change your age forwards or backwards. Finished 01/23/14.
✔ 5. Carousel is set in German-occupied Paris during WWII. A series of murders is solved by a French police detective and a Gestapo officer. Finished 02/10/14.
✔ 6. Dirty Snow is a noir thriller set in German-occupied Brussels during WWII. Georges Simenon wrote this to one-up The Stranger by his rival Albert Camus. Finished 02/12/14.
✔ 7. The Stranger was inspired by The Postman Always Rings Twice below. Finished 02/21/14.
✔ 8. The Postman Always Rings Twice inspired The Stranger . It was banned for violence and frank sexuality. Finished 02/22/14.
✔ 9. One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest is listed often as a banned book. Finished 03/09/14.
✔ 10. The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian continues a theme of banned books. Much of the book takes place on a Spokane Reservation in the western U.S. West. Finished 03/20/14.
✔ 11. Bury my heart at Wounded Knee is a nonfiction reporting of the persecution of Native Americans in the U.S. West and the creation of reservations. There is no way to describe what happened except to call it genocide. Finished 03/29/14.
12. First They Killed My Father: A Daughter of Cambodia Remembers is a memoir by a survivor of the Khmer Rouge genocide. Finished 04/13/14.
Edited 04/13/14.
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