Duration: 1st January – 31st December 2018
Number of books: 40 (+12 advanced)
Hosted by: Pop Sugar
A book made into a movie you’ve already seen – Lucinda’s Secret by Tony DiTerlizzi & Holly Black
True crime – Monday Mourning by Kathy Reichs
The next book in a series you started – The Girl with the Windup Heart by Kady Cross
A book involving a heist – The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Nordic noir – Hard Cheese by Ulf Durling
A novel based on a real person – Rejected Princesses by Jason Porath
A book set in a country that fascinates you – Dangerously Charming by Deborah Blake
A book with a time of day in the title – After Midnight by Fiona Brand
A book about a villain or antihero – The Demigod Diaries by Rick Riordan
A book about death or grief – Mort by Terry Pratchett
A book with your favorite color in the title – The Red Queen by Isobelle Carmody
A book with alliteration in the title – The Sword of Summer by Rick Riordan
A book about time travel – Once Upon a Curse by E.D. Baker
A book with a weather element in the title – Ill Wind by Rachel Caine
A book set at sea – Dangerously Fierce by Deborah Blake
A book with an animal in the title – Mastiff by Tamora Pierce
A book set on a different planet – The Light Fantastic by Terry Pratchett
A book with song lyrics in the title – Magic Flutes by Eva Ibbotson
A book about or set on Halloween – Halloween in Atlantis by Alyssa Day
A book with characters who are twins – Allegiance of Honour by Nalini Singh
A book with a female author who uses a male pseudonym – The Cuckoo’s Calling by Robert Galbraith
A book with an LGBTQ+ protagonist – Small Shen by Kylie Chan & Queenie Chan
A book that is also a stage play or musical – Wicked by Gregory Maguire
A book by an author of a different ethnicity than you – Shards of Hope by Nalini Singh
A book about feminism – Equal Rites by Terry Pratchett
A book about mental health – The Heart is a Burial Ground by Tamara Colchester
A book you borrowed or that was given to you as a gift – A Company of Swans by Eva Ibbotson
A book by two authors – The Field Guide by Tony DiTerlizzi & Holly Black
A book about or involving sport – White Tiger by Kylie Chan
A book by a local author – The Sending by Isobelle Carmody
A book mentioned in another book – Shutter by Courtney Alameda
A book from a celebrity book club – Wild: A Journey from Lost to Found by Cheryl Strayed
A childhood classic you’ve never read – The Wrath of Mulgarath by Tony DiTerlizzi & Holly Black
A book that’s published in 2018 – Tempests and Slaughter by Tamora Pierce
A past Goodreads Choice Awards winner – Beastly by Alex Flinn
A book set in the decade you were born – The Alchemist’s Key by Traci Harding
A book you meant to read in 2017 but didn’t get to – Hidden Figures by Margot Lee Shetterley
A book with an ugly cover – The Seeing Stone by Tony DiTerlizzi & Holly Black
A book that involves a bookstore or library – Iron Kissed by Patricia Briggs
Your favorite prompt from the 2015, 2016, or 2017 POPSUGAR Reading Challenges (Steampunk novel) – Cinder by Marissa Meyer
ADVANCED
A bestseller from the year you graduated high school – Inked by Karen Chance, Marjorie Liu, Yasmine Galenorn and Eileen Wilks
A cyberpunk book – Altered Carbon by Richard Morgan
A book that was being read by a stranger in a public space – Angels’ Blood by Nalini Singh
A book tied to your ancestry – Stardust by Neil Gaiman
A book with a fruit or vegetable in the title – Cress by Marissa Meyer
An allegory – Through the Looking-Glass by Lewis Carroll
A book by an author with the same first or last name as you – Falling for Anthony by Meljean Brook (alright, Brook is actually my middle name, but I still identify with it very strongly, and I think that makes it count…)
A microhistory – Jodie’s Journey by Colin Thiele
A book about a problem facing society today – Dangerously Divine by Deborah Blake
A book recommended by someone else taking the POPSUGAR Reading Challenge – Silver Silence by Nalini Singh








North America is home to nearly 565 million people. About 7.5 percent of the world’s population lives here. It is the third largest continent in the world by area and fourth largest continent by population.
* Read a book set, at least in part, anywhere in this continent. – Brazen by Kelley Armstrong
1. In Algonquian folklore, the wendigo or windigo is a cannibal monster or evil spirit native to the northern forests of the Atlantic Coast and Great Lakes Region of both the United States and Canada. The wendigo may appear as a monster with some characteristics of a human, or as a spirit who has possessed a human being and made them become monstrous.
Read a book with a werewolf. – Bounty Hunt by Kelley Armstrong
2. Ogopogo or Naitaka is a mythical cryptid lake monster reported to live in Okanagan Lake, in British Columbia, Canada. Ogopogo has been allegedly seen by First Nations people since the 19th century. The most common description of Ogopogo is a 40 to 50-foot-long (12 to 15 m) sea serpent. Lake monster investigator Benjamin Radford notes “however, that these First Nations stories were not referring to a literal lake monster like Ogopogo, but instead to a legendary water spirit.
Read a book with a sea creature or water fae/spirit. – Iron Kissed by Patricia Briggs
3. The “Black Donnellys” were an Irish family who emigrated to Ontario. Five of the family were murdered by an armed mob in the township of Biddulph in February 1880 and their farm was burned down, the culmination of long-standing conflict between the family and other residents. No one was ever convicted of the murders, despite two inconclusive trials.
Read a book with a family conflict. – Forsaken by Kelley Armstrong
Mexico
1. In the Aztec religion, Huitzilopochtli, is a Mesoamerican deity of war, sun, human sacrifice and the patron of the city of Tenochtitlan. The people had to make sacrifices to him to protect the Aztec from infinite night. It is important to remember that the defeat of their patron deity meant the defeat of his people.
Read a book with an ancient God. – Mastiff by Tamora Pierce
2. La Llorona (“The Weeping Woman”) is a legendary ghost prominent in the folklore of Mexican Culture. According to the tradition, La Llorona is the ghost of a woman who lost her children and cries while looking for them in the river, often causing misfortune to those who are near or hear her.
Read a book with ghosts. – The Girl with the Windup Heart by Kady Cross
3. The Sun Stone or Stone of the Five Eras is a late post-classic Mexica sculpture housed in the National Anthropology Museum in Mexico City, and is perhaps the most famous work of Aztec sculpture. Most scholars think that the stone was carved some time between 1502 and 1521, though some believe that it is several decades older than that.
Read a book with a character from the 1500’s or set during that period. – Rejected Princesses by Jason Porath
United States
1. The tall tale is a fundamental element of American folk literature. The tall tale’s origins are seen in the bragging contests that often occurred when men of the American frontier gathered. A tall tale is a story with unbelievable elements, related as if it were true and factual. Some such stories are exaggerations of actual events; others are completely fictional tales set in a familiar setting, such as the American Old West, or the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. They are usually humorous or good-natured.
Read a book you find humorous or far-fetched. – The Colour of Magic by Terry Pratchett
2. Mothman is a mythical half moth half man from Point Pleasant, West Virginia described as a large humanoid with moth features on its face and large wings with fur covering its body. Mothman has been blamed for the collapse of the Silver Bridge.
Read a book with a character who can fly. – The Demigod Diaries by Rick Riordan
3. John the Conqueror also known as High John the Conqueror, and many other folk variants, is a folk hero from African-American folklore. John the Conqueror was an African prince who was sold as a slave in the Americas. Despite his enslavement, his spirit was never broken and he survived in folklore as a sort of a trickster figure, because of the tricks he played to evade his masters. Joel Chandler Harris’s ‘Br’er Rabbit’ of the Uncle Remus stories is said to be patterned after High John the Conqueror.
Read a book with a character who is clever. – The Valley of the Lost by Emily Rodda