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[2019] Voting for 13th Mini-Poll

The assigned book prompt is too much like one from Read Harder this year which has put me off finishing their list. Life's too short to re-read books you know you don't like (and I never skipped assigned reading at school). I'd probably have to wildcard that one if it makes it in.
I'll probably wait till the 3 day poll results are announced to vote.



This one just seems fun to me, and we only have 1-2 cover prompts so far. Plus, I haven't seen this prompt in other challenges!
Here is a Listopia link, as well as a variety of example covers from all types of genres.
https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/1...


















https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/2...
I submitted the two books that are related by topic, genre, or theme, and I'm hoping that this might be the two week prompt that makes it on to the list... I feel like it encompasses all of the polarizing prompts that we have come across so far, and it allows for as much flexibility as you might need (without being too open).
I also had trouble narrowing down my bottom and finding enough for my tops. There are few that interested me (like the periodic table one) but I'll need to do some research before I vote for them. I think I'm going to wait for the mini-poll to be published before I decide for sure.
I also had trouble narrowing down my bottom and finding enough for my tops. There are few that interested me (like the periodic table one) but I'll need to do some research before I vote for them. I think I'm going to wait for the mini-poll to be published before I decide for sure.





1. a book about or inspired by an ancient civilisation
4. a Victorian or neo-Victorian related book... no idea what this is, but a ghotic book was a good experience, so why not a neovictorian ?
7. a book featuring a character with a job or profession you aspired to when you were a child. I was not excited about this one until someone mentioned options as jedi or princess... maybe a wizard could fit here :)
9. a book that involves another world or planet or realm, because it reminds me the portal one :)
My bottom 4 (that are 3):
2. a book related to one of the elements on the periodic table of elements
6. a book you were assigned to read that you either didn’t read, didn’t finish. We already had something similar and it was very difficult to find something to fit in here.
11. a book about a person, place or topic that you have a negative opinion of

There are just so many ways this one can be twisted.

There are just so many ways this one can be twisted."
The more I was thinking about the more I realized people probably didn’t realize how diverse you could make it and just thought I was a weirdo who was way too much into conspiracy theories

Glad I saw this before voting. I loved the idea when I first saw it, but got put off a bit when I thought it had to only be real conspiracy theories. I have lots of psychological thrillers on my TBR so I'll have to look and see if I think any of them are close enough to count.

This may have just swayed me lol, and I was thinking it might be a bottom for me.

I am really not a fan of “give it a second try” prompts.
Especially from school.
I didn’t finish it for a reason, and that reason wasn’t that I didn’t enjoy reading. Most of those weren’t books I even chose to read to begin with.




This may be my easiest voting yet. I had exactly 4 that I liked and disliked with everything else falling someplace in the middle.

5. A book in which faith or religion play a role in a main character’s life or decision making
7. A book featuring a character with a job or profession you aspired to when you were a child
8. A book about or related to a conspiracy theory
14. Two books - one inspired but the word high and one inspired by the word low
I only down voted 3.
1. A book about or inspired by an ancient civilization
6. A book you were assigned to read that you didn’t finish, didn’t read or didn’t like but you think deserves a second chance
11. A book about a,person, place or topic that you have a negative opinion of

Neo-Victorian just means a modern book set during the Victorian era as opposed to Victorian which means a book written during the Victorian era.
Some neo-Victorian and Victorian books are gothic, but not all gothic books are neo-Victorian or Victorian.

Tops
- Author's Name is Larger than Title: I think I already expressed my love for this prompt in my earlier post :)
- Assigned to Read: I have so many books on my TBR from my real-life book club, celebrity book clubs, and subscription boxes that I need to catch up on!
- Another World: This is an interesting prompt, and I think would encompass portal fiction and time travel novels that are on my TBR.
- Two Books Related To Each Other: I really just needed a fourth prompt to round out my top picks... and this one seemed open-ended enough.
Bottoms
- Ancient Civilization: Too similar to the indigenous people prompt, which I already have an ancient civilization book in that slot.
- Costa Awards: There was only one book on the list that was remotely interesting to me.
- Victorian: Not my cup of tea.
- Negative Idea Of: This prompt just rubs me the wrong way.
The more I thought about, I think the negative opinion prompt has some solid opportunities. You could definitely read about many historical events (i.e. world wars, Holocaust, genocides, etc.) or about many different crimes (i.e. Manson murders). It really could even be illness or death, like cancer. I would say I have a "negative opinion" of all those things.

I was thinking more this could be books inspired by things like Greek myth, Egyptian gods, or the Library of Alexandria for people who aren't interested in the history side. Not all ancient civilisations were made up of indigenous people (eg. the Roman Empire).

Laura, I totally agree and I came very close to voting for it, but the more I thought about it, the more I felt it was a redundant topic. There are prompts that have won or will win that I have negative feelings about that I will be reading a book for already. I look at these topics as an opportunity to learn more about things I think I don't like. A lot of the time I am proven wrong. But I totally agree that the prompt is a really good one and could be examined and filled in a way that could be very beneficial to a reader. If you are a Democrat, read a book by a Republican or vice versa. Learning more about the things you oppose can only make you a better rounded person.

1. a book about or inspired by an ancient civilisation
3. a book that was nominated for or won an award in a genre you enjoy
10. a book from the Costa Awards - winner or short list from any year14. two books - one inspired by the word high and one inspired by the word low (eg title, author, setting, # of pages, highbrow/lowbrow)
My bottom 4 were
5. a book in which faith or religion play a role in a main character's life or decision making
6. a book you were assigned to read (for school, Book Club, by a friend/family member) that you either didn’t read, didn’t finish, or didn’t like but which you think deserves a second chance
12. a book with a theme of gender or gender issues
4. a Victorian or neo-Victorian related book
My close calls were
2. a book related to one of the elements on the periodic table of elements
9. a book that involves another world or planet or realm
I have to say that the only prompt I will have a problem finding a book for is the assigned book one because in my school we weren't assigned books. We read a lot of poetry or short stories. I was never a part of a book club and I finished all the books other people told me to get to. If that prompts win I will just have to be creative and read a book from my country's canon that I never got to. The other in my bottom I will find something for, I am just not very enthusiastic for them. I dare say they will push me outside my comfort zone.

My other tops were genre award, ancient civilisation and two connected books.

I was thinking more this could be books inspired by things like Greek myth, Egypt..."
Same. For me, "ancient civilization" is historical fiction set in late BC times or first century AD. "Indigenous people" will be a modern fiction novel written by (and about) an indigenous person, like Tommy Orange (except not him since I already read There There). Of course I'm a mostly fiction reader, obviously ;-)

My top three are faith/religion, two books on same topic/genre/theme, and two books inspired by high & low. The two that I'm trying to decide between for spot #4 are periodic table & author's name larger than title. I just don't know which one to pick!
My bottoms were pretty easy to me, and the first three jumped out as soon as I saw them: ancient civilization, Victorian/neo-Victorian, book you were assigned to read, and other world/planet/realm.

I put the author/cover prompt as one of my bottoms. I feel that generally speaking those kind of covers are for "popular" lit that are being sold on the basis of the author's name and not the quality of the literature. It's more of a promotional gimmick: "You're going to buy this book because you love James Patterson, even not knowing what this book is about." I don't love reading those kind of books.

I did assume the point of that prompt was to read a popular author but I disagree that it's only commercial fiction that it happens to. In the UK at least, once an author has had a few successful books their name starts to get bigger on the cover. There are plenty of Booker Prize shortlisters whose names suddenly enlarge on the paperback release.
I didn't vote for that one only because we already have quite a few cover prompts. I think there's plenty of covers that I could apply to that prompt if it does get through too.
I ended voting for:
- Two books related to the same topic, genre, or theme
- A book related to one of the elements on the periodic table of elements
- A book in which faith or religion play a role in a main character's life or decision making
- Two books - one inspired by the word high and one inspired by the word low
I really hope one of these multi-week prompts make it in. I'm not sure why I'm so tied to them getting in, but... I just want to see one succeed!
I did vote for high/low and for religion in a previous poll, so I picked the two new ones that I liked, then added those two to round out my four. I plan on reading for those anyway for my rejects challenge, so if they make it, that's less books on my rejects list haha!
- Two books related to the same topic, genre, or theme
- A book related to one of the elements on the periodic table of elements
- A book in which faith or religion play a role in a main character's life or decision making
- Two books - one inspired by the word high and one inspired by the word low
I really hope one of these multi-week prompts make it in. I'm not sure why I'm so tied to them getting in, but... I just want to see one succeed!
I did vote for high/low and for religion in a previous poll, so I picked the two new ones that I liked, then added those two to round out my four. I plan on reading for those anyway for my rejects challenge, so if they make it, that's less books on my rejects list haha!



Ancient civilization
Faith/religion
2 books related
2 books high/low
I too am weirdly invested in getting one of multi weeks voted in!
The discussion on the periodic elements is interesting. I almost downvoted it but after hearing some ideas, I wouldn't mind seeing that make it even if I didn't vote for it.

As an initial thought, I wasn't crazy about the periodic table idea, but now I really like it after the conversation. I wonder how it will pan out in the voting for those who don't read the discussions.
Books mentioned in this topic
There There (other topics)The Kingdom of Copper (other topics)
The Disappearing Spoon: And Other True Tales of Madness, Love, and the History of the World from the Periodic Table of the Elements (other topics)
11/22/63 (other topics)
11/22/63 (other topics)
More...
The entire Around the Year challenge list is generated by the group members. We enjoyed the process so much in the past three years that we are creating another list for 2019.
The Process:
The topics for the 2019 RC list will be determined through around 13 mini-polls. Each user will vote for their favorite 4 topics in each mini-poll, which will then add up to the 52 topics (13 polls x 4 topics/poll=52 weekly topics). Suggestions for each poll will be opened until 15-20 suggestions are received+seconded. Then a poll will be opened for voting for one week so you can select your 4 favorite suggestions. This timeframe allows for a completed list in October-November.
The Rules:
- Vote for your TOP 4 and BOTTOM 4 - You are allowed to vote for less than 4
- Voting ends October 1
- One vote per poll per user
- see the suggestions thread for more details on some entries
Poll Entries:
1. a book about or inspired by an ancient civilisation
2. a book related to one of the elements on the periodic table of elements
3. a book that was nominated for or won an award in a genre you enjoy
4. a Victorian or neo-Victorian related book
5. a book in which faith or religion play a role in a main character's life or decision making
6. a book you were assigned to read (for school, Book Club, by a friend/family member) that you either didn’t read, didn’t finish, or didn’t like but which you think deserves a second chance
7. a book featuring a character with a job or profession you aspired to when you were a child
8. a book about or related to a conspiracy theory
9. a book that involves another world or planet or realm
10. a book from the Costa Awards - winner or short list from any year
11. a book about a person, place or topic that you have a negative opinion of
12. a book with a theme of gender or gender issues
13. two books related to the same topic, genre, or theme
14. two books - one inspired by the word high and one inspired by the word low (eg title, author, setting, # of pages, highbrow/lowbrow)
15. a book with a cover where the author's name is as large or larger than the title
Survey Link