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2024 Brainstorming and wish list

Year-long challenge themes: nonfiction, Black authors
Quarterly challenges: feminism, African authors, Scandinavian authors, social justice, read around the world (any country other than US or UK) , LGBTQ+
Themes for group reads: Women in translation, feminism, Black authors, social justice/civil rights, world history, authors of Asian descent

Feminism and women in translation are always high on my list as well.


I'm new here but I love how this group is managed and organized. I wish other groups were more like this one. I can't think of anything I would change/add/subtract.
I plan to join group reads, and I would consider those that I skip as an opportunity to read other things on my TBR list, which could potentially fit quarterly/annual challenges or reads for other groups. This is actually valuable to me as a slow reader...

I truly appreciate the amazing variety of authors and themes that people suggest in this group. I have read some wonderful novels since joining this group that I may never have come across if it were not for the Group reads or challenges.
What themes or challenges are likely to interest you over the next 12 months?
Carol, I liked the idea of non-fiction being a year long challenge. Due to my own personal issues, I was uable to complete the BINGO challenge this year. Maybe we could try making it a non-fiction Bingo this year?
I would be very interested in some authors from the Middle East, whether by way of a Group read or a quarterly challenge.
Someone suggested last year having a challenge for a particular author. I quite like that idea. It is quite interesting to compare works written by the same author and so much easier to remember things when read close together.
I'd also love to see another group read on female artists. I really enjoyed our art read recently but I'd love to read more about the work of a female artist.
Perhaps due to the current issues taking place in the world, we could have a group read on the history of the dispute for the West Bank and Gaza strip.

I truly appreciate the amazing variety of authors and themes that people suggest in this group. I have read some wonderful novels since join..."
Oh, as a visual artist I would really enjoy art-centric topics, although I might be very picky about the read. I joined the group just after that theme happened... A drawback is that art books can be expensive. But there must be nomination possibilities that are interesting, accessible (price-wise), and woman-centered and -authored. Perhaps library loans could be helpful in this case for many. For me, library is not an option because I'm American living in small-town Germany... but I assume many have the option...
As for the Palestine-Israel topic, I think Alwynne is bringing up a good point about sensitivity. I wonder if we could look at the topic sort of indirectly, perhaps by looking at books that are more generally on feminist politics.

I have been researching nonfiction books written about Palestine/Isreal and am having a terrible time finding one that doesn't have reviews saying that the author got it wrong, he/she has no right to write about the topic, and at the same time getting 4-5 stars (probably by people like me). The only book I ever read was The Faith Club: A Muslim, A Christian, A Jew-- Three Women Search for Understanding, a wonderful book, but definitely "biased" (correct term?) in all directions by the three women who wrote the book but which also gave me a much better understanding of the various facets (related to 9/11). IS there a good book to read?

Access our thread and share your recommended books on Palestine/Israel here:
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
Not to discourage the conversation here, just to give it another home to continue and for members to find it.
Thanks for all comments to-date and keep them coming.

I truly appreciate the amazing variety of authors and themes that people suggest in this group. I have read some wonderful nov..."
I apologise for my wording. My intention was really to suggest a look at the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict overall. It was not to lump any areas together. To only look at one area would not do justice to the long and rich history.


nonfiction
Black authors
science-science/environmental related
nature
climate change
Black authors on nature, environment, climate change
feminism
artists (female)
latin american literature
memoir/biography
classics
African authors
MENA authors
West Bank/Gaza history
feminist politics
Scandinavian authors
social justice / civil rights
read around the world (any country other than US or UK) LGBTQ+
Women in translation
world history
authors of Asian descent
Liesl raised the possibility of an author-specific challenge, and I was thinking about how to make it work. One possibility is to come up with a calendar of 12 authors, each month starts a new one, but each thread and activity lasts for 90 days. I think this could be really fun, and the discussion would last long enough to read 2 - 3 books by an author, without it feeling like a race. OTOH, if we pick only 4 authors and do consecutive 3-month challenges, we run the risk of low participation in 1 or more. What's your interest level, understanding that, in part, it depends on the authors selected?

Hannah, I'm sorry this year has been a bad one for you. I understand how leading can be intimidating when you haven't done it before, like hosting a party and you don't know if anyone will come; but if you're willing to participate in the thread, and you just want Anita or me to lead, send us a PM and ask. I can't speak for Anita, but I suspect we would approach similarly. If I'm interested and not over-committed to first-of-the-month book reads, I'd be glad to lead or tag team with you - particularly if you are open to commenting in the first half of the month. We really appreciate you thinking about us and how it works out when a nom wins and there's no leader : )

I think the group is great, though I had a reading slump this month. I like the diversity of the themes, the great preparations by our mods (thanks for all your work!) and those leading, the liberty for us to suggest themes and the friendly interaction.
When I had a look on our page, I found that I had wanted to read the short stories but didn´t remember, so perhaps a reminder in a general thread about nominating, voting and what we´re reading? It doesn´t have to be a PM.
Generally I´m always glad when I can read books that are available here in Austria, so either translated or at least old and famous enough to be in our library system. A cheap Kindle edition is also okay with me, as I just reduced my physical books and don´t want to buy many more.
I liked the bingo or a similar challenge, as we can choose more freely what we´re reading.
Otherwise my interests are Indigenous, Classics, Nonfiction, Disability, Nature and Environment; perhaps Children´s Books/Middle Grade? Not sure about the Palestine/Israel conflict, as it´s a sensitive theme. Perhaps something about Peace in general, looking at the World today?

This could be interesting and fun or it could totally flop! Maybe we could brainstorm authors and then have a poll and to see how many people would take part. Based on the results we could see if there's enough interest before we decide whether to try 12 or 4?


ETA: Carol mentioned this but I think it could work if the books were mixed up instead of read consecutively.


Or we could do an author bingo card which we fill with prominent female authors of different genres and members can try to get an author bingo.

I’m a fan of fantasy, sci-fi, and horror, so I would love these. I try to remind members on open choice months to take advantage and nominate these types of genres as well.

ETA: Anita, I read horror all during October, so getting a few prompts, or suggestions would work for me.

I also liked the suggestion of the Bingo. That could work very well.

I truly appreciate the amazing variety of authors and themes that people suggest in this group. I have read some wonderful nov..."
Jen, I would love some art-related suggestions when and if you have the time to do that!

I'd be interested in sci fi or fantasy as a topic

Oh hmm. That's a conversation I could really get into. But I imagine it depends on what kind of art/artists interest you, and that's so individual.
For the sake of giving some examples anyway, here are two recent publications that I personally really want to check out:
The Slip: The New York City Street That Changed American Art Forever by Prudence Peiffer which is actually longlisted for the National Book Award. It's about a group of artists who worked closely together 1956-1967, and the standout names in the group would be Ellsworth Kelly and the beloved Agnes Martin.
And as I work in textiles, in recent years primarily quilting, I'm very interested in Ferren Gipson's Women's Work: From Feminine Arts to Feminist Art.
Happy to discuss ideas further ...

Same! October is my horror month. Dreamsnake has been on my tbr forever. If you do a buddy read next year I would love to join.

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
On a different topic, we've had less engagement this year in the year-long women in translation challenge. Are you more interested in focusing on #WiT as a quarterly challenge or group read theme?

I was a bit confused about why WIT was both a yearly and quarterly challenge this year and would personally be more likely to engage with it as a shorter challenge

I was a bit confused about why WIT was both a yearly and quarterly challenge this year and ..."
One of the challenges in a group this large, but where the active readership is really fewer than 40 members, and that 40 is different every year and the things that excite them also change over time, is that 14 months ago, I'd have said that #WiT was a theme many folks had a lot of energy around so it made sense then. We tried for 2023 to make the monthly and quarterly themes more in synch with one another, which can either feel appropriate (hey - this theme helps me with that challenge over there) or boring (this again?) or just not relevant.
Anyhoo.. : )

Yes, Ozsaur! We sometimes struggle with discussions on genre themes, but that doesn't mean we shouldn't keep teeing them up. There are so many different random reasons why sometimes a theme works and other times it doesn't. Yes, we'll try science fiction and horror. Would you like to see them as quarterly challenge themes or as a monthly read or Bingo option?

Also, I'll be doing a few buddy reads next year starting with Dreamsnake. I have a couple of other books in mind, and I might post a list or ask others if they want to suggest a book or two.

I second Michaela's interest in disability and indigenous authors

nonfiction
indigenous authors
disability
Black authors
science/environmental related
nature
climate change
Black authors on nature, environment, climate change
feminism
artists (female)
latin american literature
children's/middle grade lit
memoir/biography
classics
African authors
MENA authors
Peace
feminist politics
scifi / fantasy (or separate them)
horror
social justice / civil rights
read around the world (any country other than US or UK) LGBTQ+
Women in translation
world history
authors of Asian descent
Scandinavian authors
If anyone wants to weigh in on themes they're interested in, this is the moment and please do. We'll be opening up nominations for January group reads soon and finalizing a road map would be ideal before we take that step.
@michaela - your comment about a general thread reminder of what's going on and where is a great one, and easily implemented. thank you!

I usually participate in:
March Dewithon (reading books by Welsh authors)
March Irish Readathon
August WIT (Earlier in the year I will also read books by women from the International Booker longlist)
September Shorty September
October Victober
October Black History month (UK) (I will read these books throughout the year, but will keep something for October)

ya'll help us out - do you participate / celebrate one or several of the events Sonia named?

I’ve read something for UK Black History Month. I’m gonna pick up one or two nonfiction for Nonfiction November. I also hope to fit in something on theme for Native American Heritage Month… I like the sound of a few mentioned there… Sept Shorty, Irish/Welsh March…

I hate to say that I don't usually participate in the monthly themes, mainly because I am in way too many annual challenges. So some of these themes: Black authors, Women in translation, etc are already ones that I do, even if they are only personal challenges. I made myself get more involved with monthly reads this year, which I rarely did in the past. I'm reluctant to add anymore "monthly" on for me - I'm too much of a mood reader. But please discount my opinion by about 98.5%!


The thing I love about this group is that I find so many new authors, and genres I rarely look at. I've been pushed out of my comfort zone several times, and it's been a good experience for me, even if the book/author didn't work out. Mostly they do!
Sonia wrote: Maybe a compromise could be that if a book is suggested that could fit a future readathon I could ask if it could be deferred.
This makes sense. If a book is suggested, and it fits a monthly theme, I'd be happy to read it then.


Absolutely. We'll align where it makes sense and add theme threads as people are interested and events come up or are mentioned by members.
(I'm quite excited to learn about Dewithon and the Irish Readathon and looking forward to setting up threads next March.)


Proposed Annual, Quarterly and Monthly Themes, plus Questions
Year-Long Challenges
Women Authors
NonFiction
Black authors
Question: Do you want to add 2024 (year-long) opportunity to read indigenous authors?
2024 Quarterly Challenges (all include F or NF)
Q1 - Science /Climate Change / Environment
Q1 - Africa or Latin America – authors, takes place in
Q3 - Women in Translation
Q4 - Fantasy and Horror
Monthly Group Read Themes (OC = Open Choice; F = Fiction; NF = NonFiction; RatW = Read around the World)
Jan F: Science Fiction; NF: Nature / Science / Climate Change / Environment
Feb F:OC; NF: LGBTQ+ author or theme
March: F: Feminism; RatW: Wales or Ireland (supporting Dewithon and the Irish Readathon)
April: F: Childrens/Middle Grade; RatW: Africa
May F: Black women authors NF: OC
June F: Womens Prize Longlist Pick; RatW: Middle East+ North Africa (MENA)
July F: Disability; NF: Memoir / Biography
Aug F: #WiT; NF: feminism
Sept F: OC (under 200 pages for Shorty Sept); NF: Art & Artists
Oct F: Horror or Fantasy; NF: Black Britain
Nov F: Indigenous Authors/People/MCs; NF: OC
Dec F: Latin America (author, takes place in); NF: Social Justice/ Activism
(BINGO and other topics in message 46)
If there are big gaps or concerns, feel free to flag them. Otherwise, I think we've got a fun plan that addresses the themes we're most comfortable with, includes themes that stretch us into the less familiar in a good way, and brings together alot of our personal goals into threads where we'll engage with each other, learn, grow and enjoy our readings. Feedback?

Womens Prize Plan
In August, we'll start a Buddy Read thread on the subject ot he Womens Prize winner, which will have been announced in June.
Author-specific discussion We'll be reading Elif Shafak and Zadie Smith, if not more authors together, in 2024. Join us and express your preferences on timing in the "author" thread. (Nothing's stopping us from focusing on additional authors next year as time and interest coalesce around additional choices.)
BINGO
We're thinking about offering a January to June BINGO card with varied prompts, and a July - December BINGO card that has authors in each square. BINGO can be completed as many times as a member likes, or all spaces can be completed, at your option.
Are you down for author Bingo?
Here's the Jan - June proposed BINGO card. (I apologize for how difficult it is to imagine a BINGO card without the ability to present a table with rows and columns.) Any theme can be satisfied by either non-fiction or fiction books.
A1 Witches
B1 Science/Nature/ the Environment / climate change
C1 Booker, Stella or Booker International Prize Nom or Winner
D1 Author of Middle Eastern descent
E1 Graphic Novel
A2 Author of African descent
B2 Memoir or Biography (Woman subject)
C2 Classic (first published on or pre-1973)
D2 Short Story Collection
E2 Wales
A3 Author or MC identifies as LGBTQ+
B3 Fantasy
C3 FREE
D3 Indigenous Author
E3 Book in a Series
A4 YA or NA
B4 Essays
C4 Health, Fitness or Healthcare (includes Mental Health)
D4 Feminist Politics
E4 Author of Asian Descent
A5 Disability (author or theme)
B5 Africa
C5 Book by Zora Neale Hurston
D5 SciFi
E5 Retelling of a folktale or myth
Let us know what you think.


I had no idea Waters is Welsh! I’m reading Affinity for my IRL mystery/true crime book club later this month. I’m excited to take you up on your offer, Sonia, as we get into next year. Thank you.

Carol, excellent job for the plan. I think everything looks great. To answer your question about indigenous authors, yes, I'd love to see a full year challenge. Although I read 1 or 2 a year, I'd love to do more.
Question on Bingo A4: What does NA stand for?
Thanks!

I'm also excited for the first quarter - I've really been into climate change and solarpunk science fiction for the past couple of years, so this will be a great opportunity to fill up my TBR.
The Bingo card also looks exciting!
Sonia, I'm looking forward to your Welsh recommendations.
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Authors mentioned in this topic
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Kathleen Kent (other topics)
C.J. Cooke (other topics)
Deborah Harkness (other topics)
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Respond to any of these questions or share your thoughts on topics not raised below:
- What do you enjoy or appreciate most about this group?
- What themes or challenges are likely to interest you over the next 12 months?
- Is there a thread or approach you like in another group and would like to see introduced here?
- If you don't participate in group reads, is there a change that would inspire you to participate?
- If you participate in group reads from time to time, is there a change that might inspire you to participate more often?
Whether you joined this group years ago or yesterday, your inputs are equally valuable.