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2017 Challenge prompts
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A book that is a story within a story
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Rachelle
(last edited Mar 20, 2017 03:52PM)
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Mar 20, 2017 03:51PM

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House of Leaves would absolutely work for this

It would also match the unvisited country prompt if you have never been to Sweden or one of the prompts from the advaced list.




I wondered if this had originated with a book. I've just finished the series on Netflix and thought it was incredible. I will take a look at the book.




Oh, I hadn't even thought of that one! I listened to the audiobook last year & thought it was great. Yes, I definitely think that book would work for this prompt.

Unless I've completely forgot the structure of the book, I don't think it does.

I'm currently reading the The Count of Monte Cristo for this prompt. It was suggested by someone else -- and it seemed like a good time to read this clasic.


That's a good book. That Author has written acouple more books that fits this category.
The Solitaire Mystery
The Christmas Mystery
He was one of my favorite Authors growing up

I find the plots a bit confusing in these comics - I read that the art and structure has been influenced by manga and I think that helps explain my problems with it.

The main character is an editor at a London publishing house whose most famous author is a bestselling crime novelist. When she reads the manuscript of the latest book, parallels emerge between the plot and real-life events, and she has to do some sleuthing of her own. It's a bit of a tribute to the Agatha Christie/Midsomer Murders genre of detective stories in quaint English villages (which I can't say I've ever been drawn to), but it's very well done and entertaining from start to finish.


I just finished reading The Marvels by Brian Selznick for the "book set in two time periods" challenge. However, it would fit perfectly with "a story within a story," too.
For those who don't know his work, Brian Selznick writes these hugely long tomes (I read his Wonderstruck for the 600-page challenge last year; he also wrote The Invention of Hugo Cabret, which the movie Hugo is based on) where about half of the book is written in a traditional way, and half of the book is full-page, rich, pencil-drawn expressions of what is going on. The Marvels includes 400 pages of pictures, and then 200+ pages of story, so don't let the page count scare you. Selznick has the ability to take a dozen things that don't have anything to do with anything and tie them together into a gorgeous story, and I recommend all three of them.

I am reading The Lure of the Moonflower for this, which is the last book in Willig's "Pink Carnation" series, and it definitely fits the category. Any of the books in this series would work, each one is framed by an ongoing story of a woman doing research for her PhD, and the "story within" is about a variety of spies (British spies during the Napoleonic war) she is researching, and each one has a romance. So these would work for "espionage" too, if you like historical romance with your espionage.



I am currently reading The Story of a New Name .
Thanks for helping!

If not, I think I can still fit it in with a bit of list rearranging.
Wendy wrote: "Would Kindred work for this one?
If not, I think I can still fit it in with a bit of list rearranging."
No, the main character travels through time, so it takes place in different time periods, but it all HER story, one story. So ... it definitely works for "set in two different time periods" ... or "difficult topic," "book by a person of color," "book involving [time] travel," and, if you stretch the definition a bit, "book with family-member term in the title." As well as a bunch of topics that are reader-specific and may or may not apply to you (different ethnicity, different country, used book store, on TBR list, etc)
If not, I think I can still fit it in with a bit of list rearranging."
No, the main character travels through time, so it takes place in different time periods, but it all HER story, one story. So ... it definitely works for "set in two different time periods" ... or "difficult topic," "book by a person of color," "book involving [time] travel," and, if you stretch the definition a bit, "book with family-member term in the title." As well as a bunch of topics that are reader-specific and may or may not apply to you (different ethnicity, different country, used book store, on TBR list, etc)


oh such a good story - A reread of this would be an excellent idea :-)


It's not strictly a character retelling another story that a lot of other suggestions are... but it is a tale from a wider work of fiction...


I'm currently reading The Romance Reader's Guide to Life by Sharon Pywell and it seems to fit this category. This book is a bit of a genre-blender. It's historical fiction, coming-of-age, and possibly mystery and romance as well (I'm only about 1/4 of the way in, but it seems to be leading in that direction - one of the narrators is dead and telling the story from beyond the grave, so I suppose the mystery is "how did she die?"). Within the story of the two sisters is interspersed portions of a romance that one of the sisters is reading ("The Pirate Lover" - which is not nearly the bodice-ripper that the title would imply, it's really more of an adventure story than a romance).
I'm enjoying this so far.
I'm enjoying this so far.

I just finished this (WOW) and I hadn't thought it would count for any of these prompts but I was thinking I would put it in here, as while we're reading the story of Adele and Louise, we're learning the old story of Adele at the same time.

Just getting around to reading through this thread. I really enjoyed the book too, but I don't think it fits for this category.


This book was weird! You know the 2016 people in the 60s imagined we'd have? Flying cars, moving sidewalks, the Jetsons... yea, a guy from that 2016 goes back in time and fucks shit up and gets stuck in our 2016. Not bad, seriously quirky. I will definitely never read it again lol
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