Category Archives: Challenges

Wizard Wars

Duration: 1st November – 30th November 2020
Number of books: 6
Hosted by: My Vampire Book Obsession

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Wizard Wars

Duration
November 1st – 30th

Rules
Complete at least two tasks to get the vampire heart
All genres welcome
Rereads welcome
No minimum page count

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– Read a book with a magic user
– Read a book with a battle or fight – The Cruel Prince by Holly Black
– Read a book tagged fantasy – Death’s Excellent Vacation edited by Charlaine Harris & Toni L.P. Kelner
– Read a book where a character dies – Marley and Me by John Grogan
– Read a book where the bad guy wins – The Good, the Bad, and the Undead by Kim Harrison (Trent)
– Read a book with a weapon on the cover – Temptation in a Kilt by Victoria Roberts

Genevieve

Duration: 1st November – 30th November 2020
Number of books: 21
Hosted by: My Vampire Book Obsession

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Ollie-and-Gen

Duration:
November 1st – November 30th

How it Works:
Ten books each month is a lot, so there will be 5 different levels. Pick which level you want to do and that’s how many items you will need to check off.

Levels:
Transitional – 2 books
Fledgling – 4 books
Vampire – 6 books
Master – 8 books
Vampire King or Queen – 10 books

1. November 1st- Every year on November 1, millions of people celebrate authors and the books that they write on National Author’s Day. Read a book by your favorite author.The Good, the Bad, and the Undead by Kim Harrison

2. November 2nd-Cookie Monster is a blue, furry puppet on Sesame Street. His favorite treat is Cookies, especially chocolate chip. His day celebrates his birthday when he was created by Muppet creator Jim Henson. Read a book with a blue cover and/or a furry monster on the cover.Temptation in a Kilt by Victoria Roberts

3. November 8-Abraham “Bram” Stoker (8 November 1847 – 20 April 1912) was an Irish author, best known today for his 1897 Gothic horror novel DraculaRead Dracula or read another vampire book.

4.November 10 is World Science Day for Peace and Development. It was celebrated for the first time in 2002. Read a science fiction book or a book with a scientist. You could also eat a vanilla cupcake…Westward Weird edited by Martin H. Greenberg & Kerrie Hughes

5. November 11-Veteran’s Day honors those who have served in the military. It is observed on November 11th. Read a book with a MC/love interest who is a soldier, spy, diplomat.

6. November 13 is a Friday. Friggatriskaidekaphobia is a morbid, irrational fear of Friday the 13th. Read a horror or thriller book. Make sure to read it at night, hopefully during a thunder storm…or listening to storm or horror music.

7. November 18 is National Princess Day. Pamper yourself today. Take a nice bubble bath, curl up in soft blankets on the couch, sip a delicious glass of apple cider. Read a book where the MC is a princess/prince.

8. November 20 is Beautiful Day. Celebrate the day by reading a book with a beautiful cover or relationship.Begin, End, Begin edited by Danielle Binks

9. November 23 is National Adoption Day. The first one was held in 2000. Read a book with a character who has been adopted or with a character that adopts a child.The Cruel Prince by Holly Black

10. November 24 is celebrate your unique talent day. Read a book where the MC has a unique talent that you would like to have.Murder on the Orient Express by Agatha Christie (Poirot’s skills of deduction)

Bonus-It is National Candle month & National Fragrance month-Read any book you want, preferable with a nice, scented candle…If you find any sentences going on about how a man smells like cinnamon etc, you can post them here for fun!More Than Words: Volume 6 by Joan Johnston, Robyn Carr, Christina Skye, Rochelle Alers & Maureen Child

This year I am grateful for…
Books & Hobbies-Read a book with a dragon in it.
Family-Read a book with a close family relationship.
Food-Read a book with a letter in the title from the words Thanksgiving Feast.
Friendship-Read a book with a friend or with a side character you’d like to be your friend.
Health-Read a book with a vampire or other immortal character.
Job, Career, Vocation-Read a book with an interesting task, work environment and/or a great boss.An Elephant in My Kitchen by Francoise Malby-Anthony
Money-Read a book with a rich character or buy a book and read it.The Mammoth Book of Westerns edited by Jon E. Lewis
Pets-Read a cat/dog mystery or a book where an animal is important to the story.Marley and Me by John Grogan
Significant Other-Read a book with a book boyfriend/girlfriend you have or want…
Success-Read a book where the good guys/gals triumph or with a great reward at the end.

Give a Little

Duration: 1st November – 30th November 2020
Number of books: 3
Hosted by: Bookworm Bitches

November 2020: Give a Little
Duration: 11/1/2020-11/30/2020

There are 3 tasks, you only need to read three books to finish this challenge. Or pick one task and read 3 books for that one task.

November – Charitable
1. Read a book where someone does a good deed for another – An Elephant in My Kitchen by Francoise Malby-Anthony
2. Read a book about a morally grey character – The Cruel Prince by Holly Black
3. Read a book involving a charity or non profit (i.e. character works for a non profit, character donates, character attends a charity event, etc.) – More Than Words: Volume 6 by Joan Johnston, Robyn Carr, Christina Skye, Rochelle Alers & Maureen Child

Rules
~Books must be read during the selected time period.
~Post the date you finished the book.
~All books read for challenges can be used for more than one challenge.
~Books can be either Fiction or Non Fiction. Your choice.
~At the end of the challenge, it will be closed for commenting and moved to the archives folder
~Use the add book/author tool to tag your book within your challenge.

Remembrance Day Scavenger Challenge

Duration: 1st November – 30th November 2020
Number of books: 7
Hosted by: Crazy Challenge Connection

November 2020 Scavenger Challenge : Remembrance Day
November 1 – 30, 2020

We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie,
In Flanders fields. John McCrae ~ “In Flanders Fields”

2/7 Complete

1. Remembrance Day was first observed in 1919 throughout the British Commonwealth. Inaugurated by King George V, it was originally called “Armistice Day” to commemorate the armistice agreement that ended the First World War on Monday, November 11, 1918, at 11 a.m.— on the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month.
✠ Read a book that was originally published in a year ending in “11;” tell us the year OR read a book that takes place in Britain or is written by a British author.

2. From 1921 to 1930, Armistice Day was held on the Monday of the week in which November 11th fell. In 1931, Alan Neill, Member of Parliament for Comox–Alberni, introduced a bill to observe Armistice Day only on November 11th. Passed by the House of Commons, the bill also changed the name to “Remembrance Day.”
✠ Read a book with “MONDAY” in its title (exact matches only) OR read a book that takes place during the 1920’s; tell us when.

3. The United States used to commemorate Armistice Day on November 11th. However, in 1954 at the end of the Korean War, the name was changed to Veterans Day so that all war veterans would be honored.
✠ Read a book whose title has changed since its original publication; tell us the original title OR read a book in which a main character served in, or is currently serving in, any military branch (for any country); tell us who and in which branch they serve(d).

4. Many countries observe Remembrance Day every year on November 11th. Wreath-laying ceremonies, usually organized by branches of the Royal British Legion, are performed at war memorials across the UK. Canada has a huge parade of veterans and current military forces led by a Color Guard.
✠ Read a book in which some type of formal ceremony takes place; tell us what OR read a book with a gravestone, cemetery, or memorial structure on its cover; post the cover.The Cruel Prince by Holly Black (coronation)

5. At 11 am on the 11th of November, many countries of the British Commonwealth observe two minutes of silence. The sounding of the “Last Post” (video) announces the period of silence, and is then followed by the sounding of “Reveille” (video) or sometimes just “The Rouse” (video).
Read a book whose cover shows a sunrise or a sunset; post the cover OR read a book with a “2” in its total page count; tell us how many pages. – An Elephant in My Kitchen by Francoise Malby-Anthony (320 pp.)

6. The “two minute period of silence” tradition had lapsed before being revived by a campaign in the early 1990s. The silence is now broadcast as a special program on BBC with a voice over stating, “This is BBC One. Now on the 11th hour, of the 11th day of the 11th month. The traditional two minute silence for Armistice Day.” The program starts with a close up of the Big Ben clock chiming 11:00 and then shows different parts of the world observing the silence. Many employers and businesses invite their staff and customers to observe the two minutes’ silence at 11:00 a.m.
✠ Read a book with any timepiece on its cover; post the cover OR read a book whose title contains the word “SILENCE” or any word synonymous with silence – i.e. silent, quiet, whisper.

7. Poppies are worn on Remembrance Day to remember and honor those who have given their lives in battle. The flowers grew on the battlefields after World War I ended. The flower-covered battlefields are immortalized in the famous World War I poem In Flanders Fields.
✠ Read a book whose cover is primarily poppy-red OR read a book in which a character dies in battle; tell us who OR read a book of poetry (must be 150+ pages).

Sources:
Veteran Affairs Canada
Wikipedia

CHALLENGE RULES

See this thread for more detailed rules for all CCC challenges.

♣ If you want to participate in this challenge, please sign up by posting at least a partial list of the challenge requirements. This gives us a post to link you to, which you can use to update your books as the challenge progresses.

♣ For each book you read, please indicate the title, the author and the date you finished reading it. If a challenge task gives several options, please make it clear which option you’ve chosen. If the task calls for an item on the cover, include a link to the book cover.* If it’s not obvious from the book title or cover, be sure to explain how your book fits the task. If you don’t, you won’t get credit for completing that task.

♣ Unless otherwise noted, books must be at least 150 pages long. (See the link above for rules regarding graphic novels.) Books may only be used for one task in this challenge, but cross-challenge posting is encouraged 🙂 Re-reads are allowed, as long as you read the entire book. You must read at least half of the book AFTER the challenge begins in order to count it for this challenge.

♣ Books may only be used for one task in this challenge, but cross-challenge posting is encouraged!

♣ If you want the challenge moderator to check your progress as you make updates, please copy/paste your update into a new message . We don’t have time to scroll back through the entire thread looking for “message #15,” or to follow links back to an original post.

♣ When you complete the challenge, please post your entire list as a new message to make it easier for everyone to see what you’ve read. If you don’t repost your list, you won’t be included in the list of those who have completed the challenge.

*If you don’t know how to post a link to the book title or cover, see the instructions here: Link Instructions

Remembrance Day Spell Challenge

Duration: 1st November – 30th November 2020
Number of books: 5
Hosted by: Crazy Challenge Connection

November 2020 SPELL – Remembrance Day
Timeframe: 11/1/20 to 11/30/20

PProm Nights from Hell by Meg Cabot, Stephenie Meyer, Kim Harrison, Michele Jaffe & Lauren Myracle
EAn Elephant in My Kitchen by Francoise Malby-Anthony
A
CThe Cruel Prince by Holly Black
E

To go along with Suzanne’s Remembrance Day challenge, choose one or more of these words to spell out in November. You may use the first letter of the first word in the book’s title (excluding A, An and The) OR the author’s first or last initial (middle names or initials can NOT be used).

Alan Neil
Armistice
Battlefield
Ceremony
Commemorate
Conflict
Eleventh
Flanders
Honor
Last Post
November
Peace
Poppy
Remembrance
Reveille
Rouse
Sacrifice
Silence
Veterans
World War One

CHALLENGE RULES:
♦ Please sign up by posting at least a partial list of the challenge requirements. This gives us a post to link you to, which you can use to update your books as the challenge progresses.

♦ Unless otherwise noted, books must be at least 150 pages long. (See the link here for rules regarding graphic novels.) Books may only be used for one task in this challenge, but cross-challenge posting is encouraged 🙂 Re-reads are allowed, as long as you read the entire book and not simply skim through it.

♦ For each book you read, please post a link to the title, and indicate the author and the date you finished reading it.
* If you don’t know how to post a link to the book title, cover or author, see the instructions here:
Add a link to the book title, book cover and/or author

♦ When you complete the challenge, please post your entire list as a new message to make it easier for everyone to see what you’ve read 🙂 If you don’t repost your list, your name will not be added to the list of those who have completed the challenge.

Fall 2020 Spell – Coffee

Duration: 1st October – 31st December 2020
Number of books: 16
Hosted by: Crazy Challenge Connection

FALL 2020 SPELL – COFFEE

This challenge complements Chaitra’s scavenger challenge. Choose one or more of the following coffee-related words or choose any other favorite coffee type/flavor. Spell them using the first letter of a book’s title OR the author’s first or last initial. When using the author name to fill a spot, please remember to include a link to the author’s GR page. Our usual spelling rules apply.** Because this challenge is 3 months long, we encourage you to choose words that add up to a minimum of 15 letters.

B Bad Boys in Black Tie by Lori Foster, Erin McCarthy & Morgan Leigh
L
Looking for Alaska by John Green
A
Archangel’s Kiss by Nalini Singh
C
The Belles by Dhonielle Clayton
KIce and Embers by Melanie Karsak

I I Am Malala by Malala Yousafzai
V
Stray by Rachel Vincent
O
Becoming by Michelle Obama
R
Grin and Beard It by Penny Reid
Y

C Children of Blood and Bone by Tomi Adeyemi
O

F
Feels Like Family by Sherryl Woods
F

E
Everything Is Fucked by Mark Manson
E
An Elephant in My Kitchen by Francoise Malby-Anthony

The Bean Belt
Black Ivory Coffee
Boston Tea Party
Brazil
Caffe Latte
Cappuccino
Coffea Arabica
Coffea Robusta
Coffee logs
Columbia
Espresso
Ethiopia
French Press
George Constant Louis Washington
Goat-herder
Guatemala
Honduras
Indonesia
Instant Coffee
Kopi Luwak
Kona Coffee
Qahweh
Satori Kato
Soluble Coffee
Sumatra
Starbucks
Turkish Coffee
Yemen

**Standard CCC Spelling Rules:
Book Titles – “A,” “an,” and “the” should be disregarded if they start the book’s title. If reading a book written in another language (besides English), the corresponding articles equivalent to “a,” “an,” and “the” should be disregarded.
Author Names – The author’s first or last initial may be used; middle initials may not.
In the case of a hyphenated first or last name (i.e. Sarah-Kate LynchKate E. Dyer-Seeley), the first letter of the hyphenated name may be used (not the second initial directly following the hyphen).
If an author uses what appears to be “two last names” (usually a female author using her maiden name and then her married last name; i.e. Kathy Hogan Trocheck), the last initial of the two names counts since the maiden name is now serving in the place of a “middle” name.

Fall 2020 Scavenger Coffee

Duration: 1st October – 31st December 2020
Number of books: 18
Hosted by: Crazy Challenge Connection

Fall Scavenger Challenge 2020 – Coffee

I was a tea drinker for a very long time, until I started associating tea with early morning cramming for exams – it was so anxiety inducing that I avoided tea for a couple of years after college, and I turned to coffee. Black coffee, generously topped with cayenne, helps my migraines as well, so I’m a fan. I had to come up with this challenge for fall, because this is when Starbucks starts carrying pumpkin spiced latte, one of my favorite flavored coffees.

To finish, choose a book to fit one of the options and finish all 18 tasks!

CHALLENGE RULES – PLEASE READ!
See this thread for more detailed rules for CCC challenges.

❖ If you want to participate in a challenge, sign up by posting at least a partial list of the challenge requirements. This gives us a post to link you to, which you can use to update your books as the challenge progresses.

❖ Books must be at least 150 pages long (unless they are graphic novels, see below) and may only be used for one task in this challenge, but cross-challenge posting is encouraged.

❖ Graphic novels must be at least 300 pages long, but two books can be combined to make up the page count as long as they both meet the same criteria.

❖ For each book you read, please post a link to the title and mention the author and the date you finished reading it. If a challenge task gives several options, make it clear which option you’ve chosen. If the task calls for an item/color on the cover, include a link to the book cover.* If it’s not obvious from the book title or cover, be sure to explain how your book fits the task. If you don’t, you won’t get credit for completing that task.

❖ If you want the challenge moderator to verify those books as you post them, please copy/paste your update into a new message. If you do this while you still have the Edit window open, it will copy all of your formatting, etc. too. It will make it easier on the moderators if we won’t have to scroll back through the entire thread looking for “message #15,” or to follow links back to an original post.

❖ When you complete the challenge, please post your entire list as a new message to make it easier for everyone to see what you’ve read 🙂 If you don’t repost your list, your name will not be added to the list of those who have completed the challenge.

❖ Rereads are allowed, as long as you read the entire book and not just skim the best portions! 🙂

* If you don’t know how to post a link to the book title, cover or author, see the instructions HERE.

1. Coffee beans are actually seeds, which come from the inside of a fruit very similar to a cherry. In fact, they are often called coffee cherries. The plant’s scientific name begins with the genus Coffea, followed by the species. For example, arabica beans come from the Coffea arabica plant.
☕ Read a book with a fruit on the cover (post the cover) -or- read a book in which scientific names of a plant or animal is discussed (tell us both the common and the scientific names).

2. When coffee berries turn from green to bright red in color – indicating ripeness – they are picked, processed, and dried. Processing can be wet process, which requires a substantial amount of water to wash the fruit. It can also be dry, in which the fruit is dried unwashed. Dried coffee seeds are roasted to varying degrees, depending on the desired flavor. Roasted beans are ground and then brewed with near-boiling water to produce the beverage known as coffee. It can be prepared and presented in a number of ways (espresso, French press, Caffe latte and so on).
☕ Read a book with water on the cover (post the cover) -or- read a book which takes place in a dry season or climate (tell us where and/or when your book is set).The Stone Mage and the Sea by Sean Williams

3. Coffee is next only to crude oil when it comes to the world’s most traded commodity. The global consumption reaches approximately 2.25 billion cups of coffee each day. The best climates for growing coffee beans are known as The Bean Belt. This includes Papua New Guinea, Brazil, Sumatra, Honduras, Peru, Guatemala, Columbia, and Ethiopia. Coffee is now grown in over 70 countries with Brazil being the leading coffee grower of the world producing 35% of the world’s coffee.
☕ Read a book you bought -or- read a book set in a Bean Belt country (tell us where the book is set).Bad Boys in Black Tie by Lori Foster, Erin McCarthy & Morgan Leigh

4. The part of Ethiopia where wild coffee originated was called the Kingdom of Kaffa from the 14th century onward. That may be where the drink gets its name. Another theory says that the Arabians who first popularized coffee named it qahwah after one of their ancient drinks that was similar to wine. Qahwah became kahve in Turkish, then koffie in Dutch, and finally coffee in English. Cappuccino is so called because the drink resembles the clothing of the Capuchin monks.
Read a book with a Q anywhere in its title (title only, no subtitles) -or- read a book with a hair covering of some sort on the cover (post the cover). – I Am Malala by Malala Yousafzai

5. Other legends and myths state that a goat herder by the name of Kaldi found the first coffee forest in Ethiopia centuries ago and he reported the mysterious beans to the local monastery. Supposedly, the monks made a beverage with the beans and felt energized. Another legend about Kaldi the goat herder also states he stumbled upon the coffee when his goats ate the cherries and became sprightly. However, the most credible accounts of early coffee drinking comes from Sufi shrines in Yemen during the 15th century.
Read a book with a farm animal on the cover (post the cover) -or- read a book that makes you feel happy and energized. – The Pregnancy Test by Erin McCarthy

6. Over 60 percent of the world’s coffee is made out of Arabica beans, and they are popular and common for a reason. These beans are grown at high altitudes and therefore, they receive the perfect amount of shade and rainfall to result in a full, delicious taste. Arabica trees are usually fairly small – no more than six feet in height – and they are easy to take care of, which is one of the reasons they are such a commonplace bean to make coffee from.
Read a book with a mountain on the cover (post the cover) -or- read a book with a 6 in its first published year (tell us the year). – Across the Nightingale Floor by Lian Hearn (2016)

7. Robusta beans, grown primarily in Africa and Indonesia, are the world’s second favorite coffee beans. They contain almost double the caffeine of their arabica cousins—just under three per cent, to 1.5% for arabica. This extra caffeine also helps make Robusta easier to grow, because it turns off some pests and makes the tree practically immune to disease.
☕ Read book #2 of a series (tell us the series) -or- use a book which kept you up at night. – Archangel’s Kiss by Nalini Singh

8. Mecca banned coffee in the 16th century because they believed it inspired radicals. Nevertheless, Catholic clergy viewed it as a Muslim drink (Satanic, in their view) and asked Pope Clement VIII to ban it. The pope tried it, and liked it so much he had it baptized, jumpstarting its popularity in the Christian world. In 1675, King Charles II of England banned coffeehouses because he believed people gathered there to plot against him. But then again, maybe he was right, because both the American and the French revolutions were plotted in coffee houses.
☕ Read a banned book (tell us where and why it was banned) -or- read a book with a revolution in its plot (tell us how it fits).Looking for Alaska by John Green (not sure, it’s just on the Banned Books List)

9. In 1732, composer Johann Sebastian Bach wrote a comic opera called Coffee Cantata about a coffee-crazy young woman whose father tries to come between her and her coffee. Beethoven counted the number of coffee beans he used to make his coffee and insisted on 60 beans per cup.
☕ Read a book whose main character is a musician -or- read a book with HUMOR on its main GR page. – Beard Science by Penny Reid

10. A tea tax imposed by the British government in 1773 not only led to a raid on tea ships in Boston Harbor and the American Revolution, it also paved the way for coffee. During and after the revolution, many Americans considered drinking tea to be unpatriotic and switched to coffee. Many never went back. Only 2 US states produce coffee alongside Puerto Rico – Hawaii & California. Hawaii cultivates Kona Coffee on the slopes of Hualalai and Mauna Loa of Big Island. It is one of the most expensive coffees in the world (and delicious!)
☕ Read a book with a ship on the cover (post the cover) -or- read a book set in Hawaii or Puerto Rico (tell us which one your book is set in).

11. Instant coffee, also called soluble coffee, coffee crystals, and coffee powder, is a beverage derived from brewed coffee beans that enables people to quickly prepare hot coffee by adding hot water or milk to the powder or crystals and stirring. Instant coffee is commercially prepared by either freeze-drying or spray drying, after which it can be rehydrated. Instant coffee in a concentrated liquid form is also manufactured.
Read a book that is 150-200 pages long (tell us the number of pages) -or- read a book that is available to you right now (as in, you have it out of the library right now or you own it). – The Summer I Turned Pretty by Jenny Han (owned)

12. Instant coffee was invented and patented in 1881, by Alphonse Allais, France. The invention was previously attributed to Satori Kato, a Japanese scientist working in Chicago in 1901. Kato introduced the powdered substance in Buffalo, New York, at the Pan-American Exposition. George Constant Louis Washington developed his own instant coffee process shortly thereafter, and first marketed it commercially in 1910. The Nescafé brand, which introduced a more advanced coffee refining process, was launched in 1938.
Read a book with a French or Japanese origin character in the story (tell us who) -or- read a book whose author’s first and last initials are in NESCAFE. – Murder on the Orient Express by Agatha Christie

13. Turkish coffee is made by bringing finely powdered coffee, water and usually sugar to boil in a special pot called cezve. Turkish coffee is also a part of the traditional Turkish wedding custom. During a pre-wedding meeting of the prospective bride and groom, the bride-to-be must prepare and serve Turkish coffee to the guests. For the groom’s coffee, the bride-to-be sometimes uses salt instead of sugar to gauge his character. If the bridegroom drinks his coffee without any sign of displeasure, the bride-to-be assumes that the groom is good-tempered and patient. In some parts of the country, salt or a lack of sugar in coffee might also be received as a lack of desire on the part of the girl to marry the suitor.
☕ Read a book in which a wedding occurs -or- read a book in which a character is even tempered or patient (tell us the character). – Becoming by Michelle Obama (Michelle Obama)

14. Black Ivory coffee costs more than $500 per pound, or $50 per cup. The beans are sourced from the poop of elephants in Thailand, after they’ve eaten coffee cherries and excreted the pits. The elephants’ digestive enzymes are said to transform the compounds in the beans. It’s not a new concept—for many years, Kopi Luwak coffee sourced from the feces of civets was regarded as the world’s priciest.
☕ Read a book with a predominantly black colored cover (post the cover) -or- use a book that you think should have not been written!Death’s Excellent Vacation edited by Charlaine Harris & Toni L.P. Kelner

15. The world’s first webcam was created to watch a coffee pot. Computer scientists at Columbia University didn’t want to waste a journey to the coffee pot only to find it empty, so they set up a camera to watch the coffee pot. When switched on, the camera provided a 129X129 pixel grayscale image of the coffee pot at one frame per second. The camera stream predates the world wide web by a couple of years, but it went on the web as soon as the web itself went live.
Read a book set in a school or college -or- read a book in which a webcam is used for whatever reason (tell us how it fits). – Bad Boys Online by Erin McCarthy (cybersex)

16. A UK company called Bio-Bean partnered with Shell on a project to turn coffee grounds into biodiesel. The fuel worked without any modifications to the buses. Bio-bean now makes “coffee logs” out of recycled coffee grounds, for use in fireplaces and wood stoves.
☕ Read a book with a vehicle on the cover (post the cover) -or- read a book in which climate change is a concern.

17. A 2017 review of clinical trials found that drinking coffee is generally safe within usual levels of intake and is more likely to improve health outcomes than to cause harm at doses of 3 or 4 cups of coffee daily. In 2012, the National Institutes of Health–AARP Diet and Health Study analyzed the relationship between coffee drinking and mortality. They found that higher coffee consumption was associated with lower risk of death, and that those who drank any coffee lived longer than those who did not. However the authors noted, “whether this was a causal or associational finding cannot be determined from our data.” A 2011 review found that regular coffee consumption of up to 6 cups per day reduced the risk of several types of cancer. Trials have also found that long-term coffee consumption is associated with lower risk of Parkinson’s, Type II Diabetes and so on, but adversely affects anxiety.
Read a book in which a character has a disease -or- read a book which reduces your anxiety (it could be a favorite author or genre, the subject is something that makes you happy, tell us how the book fits). – Houston, We Have a Problem by Erin McCarthy (a sweet, easy to read romance)

18. The first Starbucks opened in Seattle, Washington, on March 31, 1971, by three partners who met while they were students at the University of San Francisco: English teacher Jerry Baldwin, history teacher Zev Siegl, and writer Gordon Bowker. The company took the name of the chief mate in the book Moby-Dick: Starbuck, after considering “Cargo House” and “Pequod”. The siren of the famous Starbucks logo is intended to represent the seductive power of coffee. There are over 87,000 possible drink combinations at Starbucks.
☕ Read Moby Dick (sorry!) -or read a book with a title word that matches a word in one of these Starbucks Secret Menu drinks (tell us the drink!)Moby-Dick by Herman Melville

Pepper 2020

Duration: 1st October – 31st October 2020
Number of books: 11
Hosted by: My Vampire Book Obsession

How It Works:
Ten books each month is a lot, so there will be 5 different levels. So pick which level you want to do and that’s how many items you will need to check off.

Levels:
Transitional – 2 books
Fledgling – 4 books
Vampire – 6 books
Master – 8 books
Vampire King or Queen – 10 books

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OCTOBER MONTHLY CHALLENGE
Duration: October 1 thru October 31
It’s that macabre time of year. Again

* Read a book:
With a demon hunter or;
Where the MC’s first name initial is in ‘HUNTER’ or:
Where the series name begins with a letter in ‘SUPERNATURAL’

Archangel’s Kiss by Nalini Singh (Elena)

* Read a book:
Where the MC is a ghost or a goblin;
Where any two letters of the series name are in ‘GHOUL’ or;

Where two consecutive numbers are in the page count
The Belles by Dhonielle Clayton (434 pp.)

* Read a book:
With a title in the last half of the alphabet M-Z or;
With a skeleton or headstone on the cover or;
With a tag of Horror

The Pregnancy Test by Erin McCarthy

* Read a book:
Where the MC is a witch or;
Set in a state that begins with a letter in “CAULDRON’ or;
Where any character has a cat

* Read a book:
With Vampires And Wolves or;
With the author’s last name initial is in ‘UNDERWORLD’ or;
A book published in 2003

Feels Like Family by Sherryl Woods

* Read a book:
With zombies or;
Where the authors first and last initial is in ‘GAME OF THRONES’ or;
That has a leadership battle

Houston, We Have a Problem by Erin McCarthy

* Read a book:
Where ‘Dark’ or ‘Tower’ can be spelled using the title or;
Where the MC is a mix of races or species or:

That became a movie or TV series
Becoming by Michelle Obama

* Read a book:
With a gypsy or;
Where the Villain’s first and last name initial is in ‘I SEE DEAD PEOPLE’ or;
Set in a city that begins with a letter in Romani

Across the Nightingale Floor by Lian Hearn (Iida Sadamu)

* Read a book:
Where someone is unwillingly turned into a vampire or;
With a cape on the cover or;
Where the MC’s lover’s name begins with a letter in ‘DRACULA’

Dracula by Bram Stoker

* Read a book:
Where the MC is a shifter – BUT NOT THE ALPHA LEADER or;
With a group of friends or;
Where a character leads a secret life or has low self esteem
The Summer I Turned Pretty by Jenny Han

***BONUS*** Read a book with a Halloween theme or a book with sweet treat on the cover
Killer Cupcakes by Leighann Dobbs

Dracula’s Beauties – October 2020

Duration: 1st October – 31st October 2020
Number of books: 6
Hosted by: My Vampire Book Obsession

description

Collect a Dracula Beauty each month by completing at least 2 tasks out of a set of 6.
A new set of tasks with a new doll will be posted each month.

The dolls you collect will be in your Vampire Heart thread. Don’t have a thread? You can still do the challenge if you want 🙂

Rules
One book per task.
No minimum page count.
Complete at least two tasks to get the doll.

1. Read a book that takes place during Halloween. – Dracula by Bram Stoker
2. Read a book with a character that is a ghost.
3. Read a book with a dark cover. – Looking for Alaska by John Green
4. Read a book with monsters or creatures in the story. – Working Stiff by Rachel Caine
5. Read a book with a black cat on the cover OR cat shapeshifters in the story. – Stray by Rachel Vincent
6. Read a book starting with any letter In TRANSYLVANIA. – Archangel’s Kiss by Nalini Singh

A Cozy Mystery

Duration: 1st October – 31st October 2020
Number of books: 6
Hosted by: My Vampire Book Obsession

description
A Cozy Mystery

Duration
October 1st – 31st

Rules
Complete at least two tasks to get the vampire heart
All genres welcome
Rereads welcome
No minimum page count

description

Start your own bakery/cafe
Read a book with something delicious on the cover – Killer Cupcakes by Leighann Dobbs
Dodge your mothers attempts to set you up with her friends “cute” son
Read a book by a female author – Bad Boys in Black Tie by Lori Foster, Erin McCarthy & Morgan Leigh
Start a murder mystery book club in your bakery/cafe
Read a book with a mystery – Dracula by Bram Stoker
Stumble upon a dead body behind your bakery/cafe!
Read a book with a murder – Archangel’s Kiss by Nalini Singh
Go on a date with the detective
Read a book tagged romance – The Pregnancy Test by Erin McCarthy
Solve the mystery with your book club buddies
Read a book that is last in a series or a recent release – Death in Daylesford by Kerry Greenwood