Ultimate Popsugar Reading Challenge discussion
2017 Challenge prompts
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A book that is a story within a story
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Janette
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Jul 10, 2017 01:46PM

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Janette wrote: "Would Into the Water work for this prompt Into the Water"
meh - not really, but kinda sorta? if you squint and look at it just right. It's a murder mystery, and the woman who died was writing a book, and you read excerpts from her book as well as follow the murder investigation, but it's all connected, it's not really separate stories.
meh - not really, but kinda sorta? if you squint and look at it just right. It's a murder mystery, and the woman who died was writing a book, and you read excerpts from her book as well as follow the murder investigation, but it's all connected, it's not really separate stories.


I'd count it, but it's really up to you.


I think this counts! I used it for the unreliable narrator prompt, but I debated between that and story within a story.



Uh... no. ..."
I hated it anyway so I'm going to read Wuthering Heights, which has been on my TBR list for almost 5 years

Victoria wrote: "Does anyone think The Notebook would fit this prompt?"
Sure. It's an elderly man telling his story. It's all one story, their story, but their young story is framed within their elderly story.
Sure. It's an elderly man telling his story. It's all one story, their story, but their young story is framed within their elderly story.

Sure. It's an elderly man telling his story. It's all one story, their story, but their young story is framed w..."
Thanks! I think I'm going to read this.




Winter Garden by Kristin Hannah
Thanks for these suggestions. I was going to do Princess Bride but then I decided that I like the movie SO MUCH that I don't want to confuse myself by trying to read a confusing book.
So, I am going to give Winter Garden a try.




I personally did not think so. I slotted it instead into book over span of character's lifetime as opens at Franny's christening and ends in her life 50 years later, the current day.

Excellent idea! I read it for last year's challenge [book from library] and considrred it one of best reads of my year. Loved it. And it is short.

So does The Sherwood Ring - a great YA historical ghost story published originally in 1950s.
I would say The Night Circus could fit.
So could several Tana French's Dublin Murder Squad series.

One is Delicious!. I did not think at the beginning that it would fit this prompt, and I've already read my book about food (this one would count there too). It's about a young woman who goes to work at a cooking magazine and finds something that leads her to the story of a young girl from the 40's. Even though the previous story was mostly told in letters, I'm counting it.
The second was recommended previously. The Marvels. The story is not at all what I expected it to be, and it was my first story by Brian Selznick. I will say that the first half is told entirely by pictures, like a beautiful silent movie. The second half is prose. I found myself thinking of it days and even weeks after. I've bought his other two but haven't cracked them open, waiting for a chance when I can savor them.

Unless I've co..."
I wouldn't classify this as a story within a story. It's one of my favorites but I don't think it works for this challenge.

Oh, thank you, I didn't know The Power would fit here, and I really want to read it! I'd picked The Name of the Wind for this category but am not feeling too excited about it, so it's great to have an alternative.

:-) that settles it then, definitely scrapping Name of the Wind!

It could also be used for the prompt of a book written by multiple authors.


Oh, thank you, I didn't know The Power would fit here, and I really want to read it! I'd picked The Name of the Wind for this..."
Name of the Wind is awesome! You should go back to it at some point.

Oh, thank you, I didn't know The Power would fit here, and I really want to read it! I'd picked [book:The Name of the Wind|1..."
I agree, Name of the Wind is one of my all-time favorite books, and I'm not a big fantasy fan.

I was thinking that myself. I was underwhelmed by it myself. I didn't hate it but thought it in no way lived up to its hype and was way too long to say nothing.



It's a story within a story! :-) For example, The Thirteenth Tale is an older woman who has hired a younger woman to write her biography, much of the book is the older woman's story of her youth, interspersed with what the younger woman is doing when she's not listening to the older woman's story. Or The Princess Bride is a grandfather reading the story of The Princess Bride to his grandson who is home with a cold. Or The Romance Reader's Guide to Life is the story of two sisters, interspersed with chapters from an adventure story one of the sisters is reading.


Thanks for clarifying Nadine! That makes perfect sense - I think I was just over-complicating it!

No, it's just a collection of short stories; there's no framing story. All of the stories are from his experiences as a vet, so there's definitely recurring characters and a consistent setting to the stories, but they're not told within a broader story.
I loved James Herriot when I was kid. I had All Creatures Great and Small and James Herriot's Favorite Dog Stories.

Does it work for any of the categories?
Lindsey wrote: "Sarah wrote: "Everything I Never Told You doesn't fit for this category. However, it's an amazing book that I highly recommend."
Does it work for any of the categories?"
2017 categories that it might fit (some of these will vary by reader, of course):
recommended by a librarian
author of color
author from a country I've never visited (if you've never been to the US)
main character is a different ethnicity
two time periods (it jumps around quite a bit in time, in my book that counts but others may differ)
recommended by an author I love
about an immigrant (okay this one is THIN, the father's father is an immigrant, and part of his experience as the son of an immigrant is at the core of the story)
about a difficult topic
Does it work for any of the categories?"
2017 categories that it might fit (some of these will vary by reader, of course):
recommended by a librarian
author of color
author from a country I've never visited (if you've never been to the US)
main character is a different ethnicity
two time periods (it jumps around quite a bit in time, in my book that counts but others may differ)
recommended by an author I love
about an immigrant (okay this one is THIN, the father's father is an immigrant, and part of his experience as the son of an immigrant is at the core of the story)
about a difficult topic
Books mentioned in this topic
The Brothers Karamazov (other topics)It (other topics)
The Princess Bride (other topics)
Where'd You Go, Bernadette (other topics)
My Grandmother Sends Her Regards and Apologises (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Clea Simon (other topics)Alexander Chee (other topics)
Mark Lawson (other topics)
Jodi Picoult (other topics)
William Goldman (other topics)
More...