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2017 Challenge prompts
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A book with a month or day of the week in the title
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Christy
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Feb 24, 2017 11:29AM

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The May Queen Murders - Read this last year - good horror book.
Buy Shoes on Wednesday and Tweet at 4:00: More of the Best Times to Buy This, Do That, and Go There - A quick non-fiction read.
Live from New York: An Uncensored History of Saturday Night Live


Thegirlintheafternoon wrote: "I had intended to use Tuesdays at the Castle for this prompt, but I enjoyed it so much that I promptly moved it into my "first book in a series I haven't read before" so that I can ..."
I'm glad to read this, because I'll be reading Tuesdays at the Castle too! (My daughter has been insisting I read it for years.)
I'm glad to read this, because I'll be reading Tuesdays at the Castle too! (My daughter has been insisting I read it for years.)

I found it thoroughly charming! Read the whole thing in a couple of hours. Hope you enjoy!

I tried this for the second time and it has completely disrupted my challenge. I persevered for a week and couldn't get a long with it at all. I was really disappointed with myself more than anything else, but didn't even get halfway through after reading it for a week and when I had been getting through books 3 times as long in the same time. I had to give up :-(

Middlemarch is so good that you can seize any good excuse to read it!

If only it could count for both this AND a book that always leaves me with a smile..."
No lack. I just finished it today for this prompt. Although after reading up on the book and learning that it is a "metaphysical thriller" I may change my mind and use it as a genre I hadn't heard of before... I mean there are another six days of the week that I can always find something to read about.
And while I'm still mulling over the ending, the book definitely had me laughing out loud.


That is exactly what I was thinking! Great choice.


Maybe I'll reread One of Our Thursdays Is Missing.

Amazing read. Can't wait to read the rest, though my library doesn't have the other two on Overdrive, so I'll have to go find the paper copies.




Jackie wrote: "I am struggling with this one! Anybody have any recommendations for a cozy mystery that fits the bill? Preferably something of the old school "can you figure it out before the detective variety" bu..."
The Rabbi series would be a cozy (cozy-ish?) mystery series that works for this category. Starts with Friday the Rabbi Slept Late.
The Rabbi series would be a cozy (cozy-ish?) mystery series that works for this category. Starts with Friday the Rabbi Slept Late.


I can't personally recommend it but I came across this one during a search and it's free on Kindle. Murder by Monday


How about, May your days be Merry?




I became interested because December 6th is our independence day, I should have guessed the year it is set is 1941. (I have also always wondered if Churchill deliberately waited to the next day before declaring war against us in Dec 7, 1941...)
Tytti wrote: "Brooke wrote: "I am going to either read December 6 or The Friday Night Knitting Club."
I became interested because December 6th is our independence day, I should have g..."
Wow I learned something today! I'm not much of a WWII buff, and I never knew that Finland had sided with the Nazis. Your comment confused me so I googled it. According to this BBC article, Finland, Hungary, and Romania joined forces with Germany, Japan, and Italy in November 1940, and Britain declared war on them on 5 December 1941.
I became interested because December 6th is our independence day, I should have g..."
Wow I learned something today! I'm not much of a WWII buff, and I never knew that Finland had sided with the Nazis. Your comment confused me so I googled it. According to this BBC article, Finland, Hungary, and Romania joined forces with Germany, Japan, and Italy in November 1940, and Britain declared war on them on 5 December 1941.

Yeah, well, siding with the Soviet Union wasn't really an option, after what they had done in 1939-1940 (the occupation of Eastern Poland and the Baltic countries, starting a war against Finland) and before the war (mass deportations and executions of tens of thousands of ethnic Finns in the USSR ), so you do what you have to to survive, even accept help from Germany. Without outside help people would have soon started starving to death, which Stalin very well knew because he had already blackmailed Finland by stopping grain deliveries. He had a lot of experience about starving people to death since the early 1930's, just ask Ukrainians.
(Dec 5 was the date in the ultimatum to stop the advance but Finland wasn't going to let the enemy know what they were planning. The advance was stopped in Dec 8.)

I also read March: Book One! What a great book, can't wait to read the rest, and very glad so many people read this great work too!

Books mentioned in this topic
October: The Story of the Russian Revolution (other topics)March: Book One (other topics)
The Wednesday Letters (other topics)
The Friday Night Knitting Club (other topics)
December 6 (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
John Lewis (other topics)George Saunders (other topics)
John Lewis (other topics)
John Lewis (other topics)
Mark Z. Danielewski (other topics)