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Group Themed Reads: Preparation > October 2015 - Theme Nominations

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message 1: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 18517 comments Ahhh! Where has this year gone?! October means to me that I'll be another year older. Booo!! But besides that, I'd like it to be a good month for reading.

Let's get out thinking caps on for what the October group read theme is going to be. Time for nominations!

So if you have an idea for a theme for next month's group read, go ahead and nominate it.

Alternatively, you can second someone else's nomination instead, but that will count as your own nomination, and that theme will be entered twice in random.org - giving the theme an additional chance to make the cut.

Nominations can be seconded multiple times by different people. If you second a nomination, please make clear that is what you are doing. E.g. If I nominate "Books whose title starts with A", you need to state "I second Books whose title starts with A".

Nominations close 10th September.


message 2: by Lisa (last edited Sep 03, 2015 03:32AM) (new)

Lisa (lisathebooklover) | 9225 comments I would like to nominate books with a Scottish theme (setting, author, etc).


message 3: by Peggy (new)

Peggy (pebbles84) | 15795 comments Yikes, October really sounds so end-of-year!


message 4: by Peggy (new)

Peggy (pebbles84) | 15795 comments I nominate dual-timeline books :)


message 5: by Lisa (last edited Sep 03, 2015 04:01AM) (new)

Lisa (lisathebooklover) | 9225 comments Sarah wrote: "Ahhh! Where has this year gone?!"

I know, it has flown by! I heard a Christmas advert on the radio yesterday!


message 6: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 18517 comments Lisa wrote: "I heard a Christmas advert on the radio yesterday! "

Really? That is bad! That said, I am looking forward to Christmas this year as it was overshadowed by us getting our boat last year. This time we can just chill and I might get more reading done.


message 7: by Lisa (last edited Sep 03, 2015 04:21AM) (new)

Lisa (lisathebooklover) | 9225 comments Yes, I couldn't believe it when I heard it! I really like Christmas but early September is pushing it! It was for a country house hotel so I suppose they are advertising early to get bookings. Sounds like you will have a much more relaxed Christmas this year Sarah. I can't believe you have nearly had your boat for a year already!


message 8: by Sandra, Moderator (new)

Sandra (sanlema) | 11273 comments Peggy wrote: "I nominate dual-timeline books :)"

I second this one! I really like dual timeline stories!


message 9: by Sandra, Moderator (new)

Sandra (sanlema) | 11273 comments Christmas advert even before Halloween! That's crazy!
The year definitively flew away. The problem is that it seems to be happening every year... I'm starting getting worried. :)


message 10: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 18517 comments Sandra wrote: "The year definitively flew away. The problem is that it seems to be happening every year... I'm starting getting worried. :)"

I know. It's scary!

@Lisa - I can't believe it either. And we've hardly got anything done to the boat it seems like. This weekend the floor should be in in our bedroom. I am very much looking forward to sleeping back in there again.


message 11: by Rusalka, Moderator (new)

Rusalka (rusalkii) | 19208 comments Lisa wrote: "I know, it has flown by! I heard a Christmas advert on the radio yesterday!"

There should be a law against that. As someone with a late Nov birthday, and Mum and brother not until mid-Dec, we are not allowed to mention Christmas until the 14th Dec.


message 12: by Peggy (new)

Peggy (pebbles84) | 15795 comments Great rule Rusalka!

A month or so ago I heard on the news that there was a big UK-warehouse that already had their Christmas department open and ready. We have the Sinterklaas-tradition on December 5th and Sinterklaas-candy has been in the shops for a couple of weeks now. I hate how it's earlier and earlier every year.


message 13: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 18517 comments Rusalka wrote: "As someone with a late Nov birthday, and Mum and brother not until mid-Dec, we are not allowed to mention Christmas until the 14th Dec. "

Same here. No mention of Christmas until after my birthday in October. I am wishing my birthday was in December now as not being able to talk about it until 14th December sounds amazing!


message 14: by Canadian Dragon (new)

Canadian Dragon | 1020 comments Lol I wish I didn't have to think of Christmas for a bit but work already has the schedule up for Christmas and we have to write out holiday hours. We either have to work Christmas or New Years


message 15: by Rusalka, Moderator (new)

Rusalka (rusalkii) | 19208 comments Are you in an office Tasha? I had to work Christmas (not the 25th) and New Years in tourism and in hospitality.

But all offices here shut down from 25th Dec to 2nd Jan. If you're unlucky, there is one day that doesn't fall as a public holiday every 3 years or so and you have to take 1 day leave for 8 days holiday.

I guess you guys don't have Boxing Day. There goes two days.


message 16: by Sandra, Moderator (new)

Sandra (sanlema) | 11273 comments I think Tasha is a nurse. Am I right?
When I was still working as a nurse we have to choose between Christmas and New Year too.


message 17: by Canadian Dragon (last edited Sep 03, 2015 05:42AM) (new)

Canadian Dragon | 1020 comments Nice guess, Yes I am a nurse and we always have to work holidays so it is nice to be able to have one off


message 18: by Rusalka, Moderator (new)

Rusalka (rusalkii) | 19208 comments Which makes a lot more sense. Sorry, I was wracking my brains, been a long day. And we all love the fact you do *hug*


message 19: by Canadian Dragon (new)

Canadian Dragon | 1020 comments Rusalka wrote: "Which makes a lot more sense. Sorry, I was wracking my brains, been a long day. And we all love the fact you do *hug*"

thanks :)


message 20: by Lanelle (new)

Lanelle | 4097 comments I'm not sure what a dual timeline book is. Can someone clarify?


message 21: by Rusalka, Moderator (new)

Rusalka (rusalkii) | 19208 comments I am guessing it's books over two timelines (or more Peggy?). Such as The Time Traveler's Wife?

That's how I interpreted anyway. Happy to be corrected.


message 22: by Kristie, Moderator (new)

Kristie | 19512 comments Rusalka wrote: "I am guessing it's books over two timelines (or more Peggy?). Such as The Time Traveler's Wife?

That's how I interpreted anyway. Happy to be corrected."


I was thinking of books with two story lines that fall in different time periods. i.e. Blackberry Winter. Not sure if that's the same as what you were thinking, Rusalka.


message 23: by Sandra, Moderator (last edited Sep 03, 2015 07:16AM) (new)

Sandra (sanlema) | 11273 comments What I understand is a novel with interspersed chapters in two different times. Something like Kate Morton's style. The different times can be when a character is old, and the same character in his/her childhood; or one story line being the story of the grandmother of the main character in the second story line. Not sure if I'm making any sense in my explanation...


message 24: by Rusalka, Moderator (new)

Rusalka (rusalkii) | 19208 comments Ah... both good points. Maybe I'll just shut my face and let Peggy clarify for herself :P


message 25: by Janice, Moderator (last edited Sep 03, 2015 07:14AM) (new)

Janice (jamasc) | 60420 comments I'm currently reading The Nightingale and the majority is set during WWII, but it flips forward to a current time period periodically with one of the main characters as an old lady. I would loosely classify it as having dual time lines.

We're trying to encourage my dad to go to Hawaii and stay with my sister for Christmas this year, so we've been talking Christmas already. I guess I'd better get my passport so that I can accompany him. The commercialism of Christmas has gotten out of hand. School has just started back for goodness sake!


message 26: by Janice, Moderator (new)

Janice (jamasc) | 60420 comments When October rolls around, I always think Halloween and horror stories. I'm going to nominate "haunted house stories" as a theme.


message 27: by Lanelle (last edited Sep 03, 2015 07:28AM) (new)

Lanelle | 4097 comments Ah. Thanks, everyone.

All this talk about that December holiday has me thinking.
I nominate books that happen at Christmastime. (jk)


message 28: by Casceil (new)

Casceil | 2720 comments Lanelle, you're just joking, right?


message 29: by Ariane (new)

Ariane | 949 comments I want to be scared so I second the haunted house stories.


message 30: by Lanelle (new)

Lanelle | 4097 comments Casceil wrote: "Lanelle, you're just joking, right?"

Yeah, just kidding!


message 31: by Canadian Dragon (new)

Canadian Dragon | 1020 comments I nominate titles featuring fears for Halloween. an example -- The Night Circus, because you are afraid of clowns or the dark


message 32: by Kristie, Moderator (new)

Kristie | 19512 comments Sandra wrote: "What I understand is a novel with interspersed chapters in two different times. Something like Kate Morton's style. The different times can be when a character is old, and the same ..."

I thought of that too. There are so many books out there with dual timelines now. I'm glad Lanelle asked the question!


message 33: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 18517 comments I like the idea Tasha about fears. We've talked enough about them in YLTO but never had a theme read on them before. That said, perhaps it could be the characters have the fears or the book has a large portion of it about something that people commonly fear (spiders, snakes, clowns, flying, heights) as opposed to us specifically? It's just that if you nominated IT because of a fear of clowns and it won it wouldn't necessarily reflect everyone else's fears.


message 34: by Kristie, Moderator (new)

Kristie | 19512 comments Tasha☺ wrote: "I nominate titles featuring fears for Halloween. an example -- The Night Circus, because you are afraid of clowns or the dark"

Tasha, I like this. Something you are personally afraid of instead of just a horror story, right?


message 35: by Canadian Dragon (new)

Canadian Dragon | 1020 comments Kristie wrote: "Tasha☺ wrote: "I nominate titles featuring fears for Halloween. an example -- The Night Circus, because you are afraid of clowns or the dark"

Tasha, I like this. Something you are ..."


yes that is what I was thinking


message 36: by Canadian Dragon (last edited Sep 03, 2015 08:02AM) (new)

Canadian Dragon | 1020 comments Sarah wrote: "I like the idea Tasha about fears. We've talked enough about them in YLTO but never had a theme read on them before. That said, perhaps it could be the characters have the fears or the book has a l..."

I like that idea Sarah I guess it is difficult for a specific book but I just thought in case people don't like horror they could read a book about bees, spiders, crowds and aliens or something else they fear


message 37: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 18517 comments As for dual timelines, my take is there are separate chapters which each tell the tale of that time period. So current day and say 1945. Quite often it's the same characters in both timeframes but not always. Some times it kight be linked to time travel but not always. I say we include all the interpretations to allow for multiple genres.


message 38: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 18517 comments I am so pleased you were joking Lanelle!


message 39: by Lanelle (last edited Sep 03, 2015 08:07AM) (new)

Lanelle | 4097 comments Sarah wrote: "I am so pleased you were joking Lanelle!"

I'll bring it back up in November :)


message 40: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 18517 comments Yes it does open it up and reading a nice fluffy book about ducks could be someone's own personal horror book. A bit of immersion therapy! It works when we all read a book we like for the "other books in the theme" but not for the two chosen books. I think I said the same thing a few months back when someone nominated books that our mother/grandmother has read.


message 41: by Casceil (last edited Sep 03, 2015 08:33AM) (new)

Casceil | 2720 comments Fears could work for group books if it can mean either a book about something that the individual reading the book fears or something that many people fear or a book about characters who are very afraid of something. That would make kind of a broad topic, but it could work and would fit with Halloween. As for Sarah's comment on It, I only read half of that book, but I feel confident that just about anyone could find something in that book that they were personally afraid of.


message 42: by Amanda (Mandy) (last edited Sep 03, 2015 08:41AM) (new)

Amanda (Mandy) | 762 comments Tasha☺ wrote: "Nice guess, Yes I am a nurse and we always have to work holidays so it is nice to be able to have one off"

I am also a nurse and we rotate which one we work each year. However, in two weeks I am getting out of the hospital and into a doctors office as a nurse practitioner. This means no more nights, weekends, or holidays. *HAPPY DANCE*

The personal fears idea sounds like it would be good for a monthly challenge if it doesn't work for a group read.


message 43: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 18517 comments I think you're probably right Casceil on It. I love Stephen King but this is one book I'm not too keen to pick up.

Sounds awesome Amanda! Nights were a killer when i worked at a hospital. I like my routines too much for shift work. I bet it will make a big difference for you.


message 44: by Peggy (new)

Peggy (pebbles84) | 15795 comments Wow, so many posts! With regarding to dual-time, yes, I was thinking Kate Morton style, so books that have chapters set in one time-period (usually the present or not so long ago) and chapters set in the past. The storylines in both time periods are usually somehow related. But it's okay to make it as broad as we can, like Sarah said, also including time-travel and such. Just books that are set in two different time periods.


message 45: by Tasha (new)

Tasha Some great ideas, I can't decide yet...

Lanelle, that was funny (Xmas nom). ;)


message 46: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 18517 comments I agree Tasha. Some great ideas. I'm going to struggle choosing which to second, let alone vote on when it comes to the poll.


message 47: by Elsbeth (last edited Sep 03, 2015 12:01PM) (new)

Elsbeth (elsbethgm) | 1150 comments Great ideas, everyone! I second the Scottish theme (before it gets washed over by all the talk about dual time lines, scary things and christmas...)! :D
I love Scotland - even though I saw just a little bit more than the capital, Edinburgh (such a beautiful city!!)!


message 48: by Ollie (new)

Ollie (olliepoppet) | 102 comments A lot of these ideas sound great; I think I'll be happy with any of them. Personally, I nominate books with a "spooky setting or atmosphere."

I think that would pay tribute to Halloween, be fairly universal, and still leave lots of room for interpretation when it comes time to nominate books :)


message 49: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 18517 comments I'm going to second fears.


message 50: by Ava Catherine (new)

Ava Catherine | 4257 comments I second the Scottish theme.


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