Antarctica – Winter Spell Challenge

Duration: 1st January – 31st March 2021
Number of books: 13
Hosted by: Crazy Challenge Connection

GThe Girl with the Make-Believe Husband by Julia Quinn
LKiss of Heat by Lora Leigh
ABorn Free by Joy Adamson
CRolling with the Punchlines by Urzila Carlson
I
O Otherhood by William Sutcliffe
LMegan’s Mark by Lora Leigh
OOne Bite with a Stranger by Christine Warren
GMarry in Haste by Anne Gracie
I
SSoul Deep by Lora Leigh
TTools of Engagement by Tessa Bailey
SRebel Hard by Nalini Singh

WINTER 2020 SPELL CHALLENGE : ANTARCTICA, 12/21/20 – 3/20/21
As usual, we have a spelling challenge to go along with Chaitra’s Antarctica challenge. Choose one or more of the following words/phrases and spell them using the first letter of a book’s title (disregard A, An and The) OR the author’s first or last initial.

PLEASE NOTE :
* When using an author name to fill a spot, remember to post a link to the author’s GR page.
* Since this challenge is 3 months long, we ask that you choose words that add up to a minimum of 15 letters.

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 the word/s you intend to spell. This gives us a post to link you to, which you can use to update your books as the challenge progresses. No link will be created for you until you post your choice/s.

♦ 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.

♦ You may use the first letter of the first word in the book’s title (disregard A, An and The) or the author’s first or last initial (middle names or initials can NOT be used.). If you use an author name to fill a spot, remember to post a link to the author’s GR page.
* 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, i.e. Kathy Hogan Trocheck), the last initial of the two names counts.
* For books by authors like Menna van Praag and Tatiana de Rosnay, use your library’s shelving method to determine whether to use the book for a V/P or D/R spot, but be sure to tell us how your library shelves those books.

♦ If you use books that are in a language other than English, please translate those titles into English (even if there is no English title here on GR) for the purposes of our challenges, unless you plan to use that language for the entire challenge. If you do use another language for the whole challenge, please remember that the translations of exempt words/phrases — for example, A, An and The — would be exempt as well.

♦ 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’re using the author’s name to fill a spot, remember to include a link to the author’s name as well.
    * If you don’t know how to post a link to the book title or author, see the instructions here: Add a link to the book title and/or author

♦ When you complete the challenge, please copy and paste your entire list as a new message at the end of the challenge thread. If you do this while you still have the Edit window open, it will copy all of your links and formatting. If you don’t repost your list, with appropriate links, your name will not be added to the list of those who have completed the challenge. Please do NOT simply post a link back to your original post.

THE WORDS/PHRASES
Adelie Penguins
Antarctic Convergence
Antarctic Ice Marathon
Antarctic Ice Sheet
Antarctic Seals
Antarctic Treaty
Antarctica
Axel Heiberg Glacier
Blood Falls
Canine Distemper
Carbon Dioxide
Chloroflourocarbons
Circumpolar Current
Climate Change
Deception Island
Dry Valleys
Emile Marco Palma
Emperor Penguins
Gamburtsev Mountains
Glaciologists
Greenhouse Gases
Katabatic Winds
King Haakon VII
Lake Vostok
Lava Lakes
McMurdo Station
Meteorites
Midnight Sun
Mount Erebus
Palmer Station
Polar Plateau
Polar Stratospheric Clouds
Polheim
Precipitation
Roald Amundsen
Robert Falcon Scott
South Pole
Southern Pole of Inaccessibility
Taylor Glacier
Transantarctic Range
Tropical Paradise
Vinson Massif
Vostok Station
West Wind Drift
Whiteout

Hit the Reset

Duration: 1st January – 31st January 2021
Number of books: 3
Hosted by: Bookworm Bitches

January 2021: Hit the Reset
Duration: 1/1/2021-1/31/2021

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.

January
1. Read the oldest book on your shelves – Born Free by Joy Adamson (been on my shelf the longest)
2. Read the shortest book on your shelves – The BFG by Roald Dahl
3. Read a book you meant to read in 2020 and didn’t get to. – The Girl with the Make-Believe Husband by Julia Quinn

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.

Copy & paste the blank template below to begin your own challenge.

Supernatural Clue

Duration: 1st January – 31st March 2021
Number of books: 36
Hosted by: My Vampire Book Obsession

Duration
Jan 1st – Mar 31st 2021

Rules
Complete at least 10 Guesses to get the Vampire Heart
All Genres Welcome
No Minimum Page Count
One Book Per Task

🔍 Private Investigator (6 Items per category)
🔍 Police Detective (9 Items per category)
🔍 FBI Investigator (12 items per category)

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1) Werewolf
Task: Read a book where the MC is a shifter – Blood Challenge by Eileen Wilks
2) Vampire
Task: Read a book with a character who is a vampire – One Bite with a Stranger by Christine Warren
3) Fae
Task: Read a book with a character who is Fae – Grave Witch by Kalayna Price
4) Dragon
Task: Read a book with something that can fly on the cover – James and the Giant Peach by Roald Dahl
5) Ghost
Task: Read a book where a character can see/talk to ghosts – Necromancing the Stone by Lish McBride
6) Angel
Task: Read a book where a character can fly
7) Demon
Task: Read a book with a character who is a demon
8) Ghoul
Task: Read a book with an undead character
9) Phoenix
Task: Read a book whose title starts with the letter “P” – The Player and the Pixie by L.H. Cosway & Penny Reid
10) Witch
Task: Read a book with an MPG of Magic – Beautiful Beast by E.J. Hill
11) Goblin
Task: Read a book whose title starts with the letter “G” – The Girl with the Make-Believe Husband by Julia Quinn
12) Unicorn
Task: Read a book with a four legged animal on the cover – Born Free by Joy Adamson

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1) Sword
Task: Read a book with a sword on the cover
2) Knife
Task: Read a book where a character is stabbed – Dr. Strange Beard by Penny Reid
3) Crossbow
Task: Read a book where a character uses a cross bow or a bow and arrow
4) Fangs
Task: Read a book where a character bites another – Soul Deep by Lora Leigh
5) Claws
Task: Read a book with the letters of CLAWS in the title
6) Battle Ax
Task: Read a book with a two word title – The BFG by Roald Dahl
7) War Hammer
Task: Read a book that is tagged war on the first page of tags – Lucky Child by Loung Ung
8) Gun
Task: Read a book with a gun on the cover
9) Grenade
Task: Read a book with an explosion in the book – Zlata’s Diary by Zlata Filipovic
10) Spell
Task: Read a book where the MC can use magic – Splintered Stars by Rachel Madbury
11) Venom
Task: Read a book where a character is poisoned or with the word poison in the titleSapphire Flames by Ilona Andrews
12) Flame Thrower
Task: Read a book with fire on the cover

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1) Castle
Task: Read a book with a large building on the cover
2) Swamp Shack
Task: Read a book where the MC is poor – Dumplin’ by Julie Murphy
3) Mountain Cave
Task: Read a book with a mountain on the cover – The Peak of Love by Langley Gray
4) Cottage
Task: Read a book whose title starts with the letter “C” – The Cad and the Co-Ed by L.H. Cosway & Penny Reid
5) Cabin
Task: Read a book where a character stays in a cabin
6) Lake Chateau
Task: Read a book with a body of water on the cover – Over Sea, Under Stone by Susan Cooper
7) Tree House
Task: Read a book with a tree on the cover – Salvage the Bones by Jesmyn Ward
8) Yurt
Task: Read a book with a one word title – Otherhood by William Sutcliffe
9) Bungalow
Task: Read a book that is between 100 and 150 pages – Fantastic Mr Fox by Roald Dahl
10) Mobile Home
Task: Read a book where a character moves to a new location – Rolling with the Punchlines by Urzila Carlson
11) Palace
Task: Read a book where the MC is a King/Queen/Princess/Prince
12) Igloo
Task: Read a book with snow or ice on the cover

Antarctica – Winter Scavenger Challenge

Duration: 1st January – 31st March 2021
Number of books: 26
Hosted by: Crazy Challenge Connection

Winter 2020 Scavenger Challenge – Antarctica
Duration: Jan 01 2021 – Mar 31, 2021

If this was any year but 2020, now is the time you’d book your tickets on a cruise line to see penguins in Antarctica. But since it is 2020, you get this challenge instead.

This challenge consists of 26 random facts about Antarctica (mostly included because I got fascinated by them as I researched for this challenge). Choose any 16 and do the task associated with them. You do not have to choose before you start. And you can do all of them if you want.

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. Antarctica is cold (and water is wet). The coldest temperature ever recorded on Earth was minus 128.56 degrees Fahrenheit, registered on July 21, 1983, at Antarctica’s Vostok station. Unfortunately, it also recorded a new all-time high (for Antarctica), this year, when temperatures reached 69.35 degrees Fahrenheit.
🐧 Read a book which has the word COLD in its title (compound words are okay).

2. Antarctica is a desert. There is little to no precipitation in Antarctica. The Dry Valleys are the driest place on Earth, with low humidity and almost no snow or ice cover. They occupy about 1% of the continent and they are thought to be the world’s harshest deserts. It is estimated that these areas haven’t seen rain or snow in almost 2 million years. According to one study led by Australian scientists, due to climate change, ice-free areas in Antarctica could expand up to 25% by the end of 21st century. This could drastically change the biodiversity of the continent.
🐧 Read a book that has a landscape without water on the cover (post the cover). – The Peak of Love by Langley Gray

3. Antarctica is windy. Antarctica is one of the windiest places on Earth and is home to unusual katabatic and downslope winds (katabatic wind is a wind that carries high-density air from a higher elevation down a slope under the force of gravity). The strong winds are influenced by cold temperatures and the shape of the continent. The highest recorded wind speed was 200 miles per hour, at a French base back in 1972. Even though it doesn’t snow often in Antarctica, the winds can pick up the snow on the ground and create whiteout conditions.
🐧 Read a book whose cover is almost completely white (post the cover). – One Bite with a Stranger by Christine Warren

4. Antarctica has a ton of ice, and so, a lot of water. The Antarctic Ice Sheet is the largest single mass of ice on Earth. 99% of Antarctica is covered by ice. It is home to about 70% of the planet’s fresh water, and 90% of the planet’s freshwater ice. Unfortunately, this means that if the West Antarctic Ice Sheet melted, it would raise global sea levels by 16 feet.
🐧 Read a book that is mostly set in a coastal town/city (tell us where the book is set). – Over Sea, Under Stone by Susan Cooper (Cornwall)

5. Antarctica has several lakes hidden under ice. Lake Vostok is a pristine freshwater lake buried beneath 2.5 miles of solid ice. It is about the size of Lake Ontario, and is the largest of more than 200 liquid lakes strewn around the continent under the ice. These lakes are absolutely teeming with microscopic life. Scientists can use water samples to learn about how these minuscule creatures survive in such a harsh environment. This could even give researchers an idea for how life might survive on other planets, such as below the ice found on Mars.
🐧 Read a non fiction book that teaches you something (it doesn’t necessarily have to be science, even language or history is okay as long as it is informative. Tell us what you learned).- Zlata’s Diary by Zlata Filipovic (about the Bosnian war and Sarajevo)

6. It has a creepy waterfall called “Blood Falls”. Five million years ago, as sea levels rose, East Antarctica was flooded and a brine lake was formed there. After millions of years, glaciers formed on top of the lake. As they froze, the water below became even saltier. Today, the subglacial lake under Blood Falls is three times saltier than seawater and, therefore, is too salty to freeze. The water beneath Taylor Glacier, which feeds the Blood Fall, contains a lot of iron (picked up from the underlying bedrock) and when iron-rich water comes in contact with air, the iron oxidizes and takes on a red coloring, leaving blood-like stains on the ice.
🐧 Read a book with blood on the cover (post the cover).

7. It also has a rift the size of the Grand Canyon. A rift that could rival the Grand Canyon was discovered beneath the Antarctic ice during an expedition conducted during 2009-2010. It is roughly 6 miles across and at least 62 miles long, possibly far longer if it extends into the sea. It extends nearly a mile down at its deepest.
🐧 Read a book first published in 2009 or 2010 (tell us when). – Grave Witch by Kalayna Price

8. There are mountains above and below the surface. Antarctica’s Gamburtsev Mountains are a range of steep peaks that rise to 9,000 feet and stretch 750 miles across the interior of the continent and are completely buried under 15,750 feet ice. Above the surface, the Transantarctic Mountains divide the continent into East and West sections. At 2,175 miles long, this range is one of the longest mountain ranges on Earth. The highest point on Antarctica is the Vinson Massif at 16,362 feet.
🐧 Read a book that is divided in two in some way (it could be divided into two timelines, two narrators, two parts and so on. Tell us how your book fits). – Born Free by Joy Adamson (divided into three parts)

9. It has two active volcanoes. There are plenty of extinct volcanoes in Antarctica, but there are two active ones as well. One of these is at Deception Island, and is an incredibly interesting and rare type of volcano. Located far beneath Antarctica’s ice, it has subglacial eruptions, which means that all of Deception’s activity happens below the surface of the ice. Antarctica’s other active volcano is Mount Erebus. It is the southernmost active volcano in the world and is home to the only known ‘lava lakes’, which have held liquid magma for eons despite the continent’s frigid conditions.
🐧 Read a book whose author’s first and last initial is in the word EREBUS (ignore middle initials, if any).

10. Antarctica was once a tropical continent and it can become one again due to greenhouse gases. Antarctica was once a green, tropical paradise with furry mammals like possums and beavers. Scientists say that it is only in the quite recent geological past it got so cold there. Around 52 million years ago, the concentration of carbon dioxide was more than twice as high compared to today and the climate was much hotter. However, according to scientists, if the current carbon dioxide emissions continue to rise due to burning of fossil fuels, we might hit the levels of 52 million years ago within a few hundred years.
🐧 Read a book with a furred animal in the story (let us know what kind). – Salvage the Bones by Jesmyn Ward (China the pitbull)

11. The entire continent is dedicated for research. The Antarctic Treaty was signed on December 1, 1959, after more than a year of secret negotiations by 12 countries. It dedicates the continent to peaceful research activities. 48 nations have now signed the treaty. 29 countries operate 70 research stations on the continent. The researchers who occupy these facilities number around 4,000 during the summer months and only around 1,000 during the long, harsh winters.
🐧 Read a book in which a document of some sort is signed (tell us what). – The Girl with the Make-Believe Husband by Julia Quinn

12. It has no official Time Zone. As Antarctica is mostly uninhabited, the continent is not officially divided into time zones. However, a number of existing research stations use either the time zone of the country that operates or supplies them, or use the local time of countries located nearby. For example, McMurdo Station observes New Zealand Standard & Daylight Time (NZDT &NZST). Palmer Station keeps Chile Summer Time (CLST) as Chile is the closest country to their station.
🐧 Read a book that has a time related word in the title. (For the purpose of this challenge, choose from these: Time, Second, Minute, Hour, Day, Night, Afternoon/Noon, Evening, Week, Month, Year. Compound words are okay). – Marry in Haste by Anne Gracie

13. Glaciology is the scientific study of glaciers. Glaciologists study glaciers, usually by extracting tubes of ice (called ice cores). Like year-rings on trees, ice cores can be used to trace the glacial history and therefore, the planet and its climate.
🐧 Read a book in which the main character has a profession that fascinates you (tell us which profession). – Kissing Tolstoy by Penny Reid (Russian Lit Professor)

14. You are not allowed to work in Antarctica unless you have your wisdom teeth and appendix have been removed, whether they have anything wrong with them or not. This is because surgeries are not performed at any of the research stations on the continent.
🐧 Read a book in which a surgery is performed. – Blood Challenge by Eileen Wilks

15. Babies have been born in Antarctica. In January 1979, Emile Marco Palma became the first child born on the southernmost continent. Argentina sent Palma’s pregnant mother to Antarctica in an effort to settle a sovereignty dispute. The child was born in the claimed Argentine Antarctica. This is a sector of Antarctica claimed by Argentina as part of its national territory, but is not internationally recognized (and is in dispute with Britain and Chile). Ten people have been born in Antarctica since, but Palma’s is still the southernmost birth.
🐧 Read a book set in South America (bonus for Argentina. Tell us where it’s set).

16. Antarctica has the midnight sun phenomenon just like the Arctic circle. South of the Antarctic circle, there is a period of months when the sun never sets. Summers near the south pole are perpetually bright. Researchers who stay all year round also experience the opposite – permanent Antarctic darkness. However, tourists can only see this astronomical event in the Arctic circle, as Antarctica’s tourist season ends after summer.
🐧 Use a book that kept you reading at night. – Dumplin’ by Julie Murphy

17. There are no reptiles in Antarctica, but there are penguins! Penguins are the most common birds in the Antarctic. They live in colonies and survive in the harshest conditions. Out of the seventeen existing different species of penguins, two of them are permanent residents on Antarctica – the emperor and Adélie penguins. Others, like the macaroni, gentoo and chinstrap, breed on the northern tip of the Antarctic Peninsula, where the conditions are not that harsh. King penguins only breed on the warmer northern islands.
🐧 Read a book with an object that is both black and white on the cover (if the whole cover is only black and white, that works also. Post the cover). – Lucky Child by Loung Ung

18. Roald Amundsen was the first person to reach the South Pole. It took him and his team two tries to achieve this feat. The first attempt, started on September 8, 1911, had to be abandoned due to extreme temperatures. The second attempt consisted of Amundsen and a team of four others. They departed base on October 19, using four sledges and 52 dogs. Using a route along the previously unknown Axel Heiberg Glacier, they arrived at the edge of the Polar Plateau on November 21, after a four-day climb. The team and 16 dogs arrived at the pole proper on December 14, 1911. Amundsen named their South Pole camp Polheim and renamed the Antarctic Plateau as King Haakon VII’s Plateau.
🐧 Read a book whose title has been renamed for whatever reason. Tell us both titles.

19. But reaching the South Pole was a race and the losing party lost everything. Robert Falcon Scott was planning a South Pole expedition himself and wanted to beat Amundsen, but that was not to be. The Scott Expedition reached the South Pole on 17th January 1912, five weeks after Amundsen’s group. On their return journey, they battled poor weather, poorer health and troubling lack of supplies along their route. One by one, they succumbed to frostbite and starvation, until Scott and two remaining team members made their final camp just 12.5 miles short of their main supply depot. But blizzard conditions made further travel impossible, and as their supplies ran out and the storms didn’t abate, all three died. Scott was the last surviving member of the group, and he might have died on March 29, 1912. Their bodies were found in November of the year.
🐧 Read a book in which a tragedy occurs (using spoiler quotes if needed, tell us what it is). – Splintered Stars by Rachel Madbury (a death)

20. Non-native species are not allowed on Antarctica. Sled dogs were used to haul supplies for the Norwegian explorers and they were kept and used in Antarctica for years. But in 1994, they (along with other non-native species) were banned due to fear that they might transmit canine distemper to the Antarctic seals or would escape and disturb the local wildlife.
🐧 Read a book with a canine (the animal, not the teeth) on the cover (post the cover). – Soul Deep by Lora Leigh

21. Meteorites are everywhere! The continent has earned a reputation for being perfect for finding fallen space rocks. It’s not that it attracts falling meteorites more than any other place in the world. There’s an equal probability of meteorites landing anywhere. But there are two main characteristics that make Antarctica so great for meteorite enthusiasts: the white expanse and the ice drifts. The monochromatic landscape makes the dark rocks stand out, and the ice drifts tend to drop them all off in the same area. The freezing temperatures and extreme aridity also keep the meteorites more or less intact.
🐧 Read a book set in space.

22. The Circumpolar Current circles around Antarctica. It flows clockwise (as seen from the South Pole) from west to east around Antarctica. An alternative name for the Circumpolar Current is the West Wind Drift. It is the largest ocean current and is circumpolar due to the lack of any landmass connecting with Antarctica. This keeps warm ocean waters away from Antarctica, enabling it to maintain its huge ice sheet. Associated with the current is the Antarctic Convergence, where the cold Antarctic waters meet the warmer waters of the sub-Antarctic, creating a zone of upwelling nutrients. These nurture a huge food chain that support fish, whales, seals, albatrosses and many other species.
🐧 Read a book that has a donut/ring shape on the cover (post the cover).

23. There is a point called the Southern Pole of Inaccessibility. It is the point on Antarctica most distant from the Southern Ocean. A variety of coordinate locations have been given for this pole. The discrepancies are due to the question of whether the “coast” is measured to the grounding line or to the edges of ice shelves, the difficulty of determining the location of the “solid” coastline, the movement of ice sheets and improvements in the accuracy of survey data over the years, as well as possible topographical errors. It is far more remote and difficult to reach than the geographic South Pole. There is a Soviet Station in the general vicinity (called the Pole of Inaccessibility Station), and that location is what is commonly referred to whenever a fixed point is needed for a sport expedition.
🐧 Use a book that feels inaccessible for any reason (for example, there are a few books that make me feel very dim, because they’re too clever, too dense or written in not easily understandable way. Tell us why your book felt inaccessible). – Otherhood by William Sutcliffe (I found the mothers and the boys’ attitude to them inaccessible)

24. Antarctica hosts marathons. Each November/December, runners gather at Union Glacier for the Antarctic Ice Marathon and Half Marathon. Runners endure strong winds and cold temperatures to compete in this race, which is the southernmost marathon on Earth. To prepare for the extreme conditions, some runners exercise on treadmills in walk-in freezers or run on sand. An even more extreme challenge is the Antarctic 100k, held in January.
🐧 Read the last book from a long running series (>15 published books. If the series isn’t complete, read the last published book. Tell us the series and the position of your book).

25. The hole in the ozone layer first formed over Antarctica. The term ozone hole refers to the large springtime decrease in stratospheric ozone around Earth’s polar regions. This “hole” in the ozone layer grows and shrinks with the seasons and is largely caused by chemicals called chlorofluorocarbons, once widely used in air conditioners, aerosol sprays and refrigerators, reacting with ozone in the polar stratospheric clouds. The hole has wide negative consequences, such as increased cancer risks.
🐧 Read a book with a main character whose name (first or last) begins with an O (tell us the name).

26. We cannot talk about Antarctica without talking about climate change. In the past 25 years Antarctica has lost more than 3 trillion tons of ice. Sadly, the ice loss process has accelerated dramatically over the last few years. While analyzing data from multiple satellite surveys from 1992 to 2017, a group of 84 international researchers has found that Antarctica is currently losing ice about three times faster than it did before 2012. In fact, Antarctica has lost so much ice so quickly, it has caused a shift in the Earth’s gravitational pull.
🐧 Read a book set on apocalyptic or post-apocalyptic Earth (bonus for climate change end times).

Reading Women Challenge 2021

Duration: 1st January – 31st December 2021
Number of books: 28
Hosted by: Reading Women Podcast

All books read for this challenge must be by women or people of other historically marginalized genders who are comfortable being included in feminine-coded initiatives.

  1. A Book Longlisted for the JCB PrizeThe Far Field by Madhuri Vijay
  2. An Author from Eastern EuropeThe Fountains of Silence by Ruta Sepetys
  3. A Book About IncarcerationPunching the Air by Ibi Zoboi & Yusef Salaam
  4. A Cookbook by a Woman of ColorA Southern Girl’s Guide to Plant Based Eating by Cametria Hill
  5. A Book with a Protagonist Older than 50The Switch by Beth O’Leary
  6. A Book by a South American Author in TranslationThe House of the Spirits by Isabel Allende
  7. Reread a Favorite BookGrave Witch by Kalayna Price
  8. A Memoir by an Indigenous, First Nations, Native, or Aboriginal WomanHeart Berries by Terese Marie Mailhot
  9. A Book by a Neurodivergent AuthorThe Bride Test by Helen Hoang
  10. A Crime Novel or Thriller in Translation
    • As with all of our translation prompts, you can read in any language you like as long as the book has been translated from one language to another.
  11. A Book About the Natural WorldBorn Free by Joy Adamson
  12. A Young Adult Novel by a Latinx Author
  13. A Poetry Collection by a Black WomanWitch Wife by Kiki Petrosino
  14. A Book with a Biracial ProtagonistRed, White & Royal Blue by Casey McQuiston (Alex)
  15. A Muslim Middle Grade Novel
  16. A Book Featuring a Queer Love StoryThe Edge of Heaven by E.M. Lindsey
  17. About a Woman in PoliticsThe Truths We Hold by Kamala Harris
  18. A Book with a Rural SettingOver Sea, Under Stone by Susan Cooper
  19. A Book with a Cover Designed by a WomanKissing Tolstoy by Penny Reid
  20. A Book by an Arab Author in Translation
    • As with all of our translation prompts, you can read in any language you like as long as the book has been translated from one language to another.
    • The Arab World consists of twenty-two countries in the Middle East and North Africa: Algeria, Bahrain, the Comoros Islands, Djibouti, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Mauritania, Oman, Palestine, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, the United Arab Emirates, and Yemen.
  21. A Book by a Trans Author
    • This includes trans women and nonbinary trans authors comfortable being included in feminine-coded initiatives.
  22. A Fantasy Novel by an Asian AuthorThe Iron Hunt by Marjorie M. Liu
  23. A Nonfiction Book Focused on Social JusticeLucky Child by Loung Ung
  24. A Short Story Collection by a Caribbean Author

BONUS

  • A Book by Alexis Wright
  • A Book by Tsitsi Dangarembga
  • A Book by Leila Aboulela
  • A Book by Yoko Ogawa

Around the Year in 52 Books 2021

Duration: 1st January – 31st December 2021
Number of books: 52
Hosted by: Around the Year

Welcome!

It’s best if you create your own plan (using “create a new topic” and choosing “2021 Plans” for the folder) so you can keep track of your progress and share your choices with the other members. If you need help finding ideas, you can have a look at the weekly topics, which will be posted shortly.

You can read in order or jump around, but keep this order in your plan, since this makes it easier for others to find a prompt and gain inspiration.

If you can’t complete the challenge, it’s not a problem. If one topic is too far out of your comfort zone or too difficult to fulfill, you can use a “Wild Card” and read something else for this week (reader’s choice or past suggestions).

This listed is loosely sorted by months.

THE 2021 LIST
1. A book related to “In the Beginning…” – Dumplin’ by Julie Murphy
2. A book by an author whose name doesn’t contain the letters A, T or Y – Beautiful Beast by E.J. Hill
3. A book related to the lyrics for the song “My Favorite Things” from The Sound of Music – Born Free by Joy Adamson (kittens)
4. A book with a monochromatic cover – Blood Challenge by Eileen Wilks

5. A book by an author on USA Today’s list of 100 Black Novelists You Should Read – Salvage the Bones by Jesmyn Ward
6. A love story – Fix Her Up by Tessa Bailey
7. A book that fits a prompt suggestion that didn’t make the final list (with Z in the title) – Zlata’s Diary by Zlata Filipovic
8. A book set in a state, province, or country you have never visited – Tools of Engagement by Tessa Bailey

9. A book you associate with a specific season or time of year – Punching the Air by Ibi Zoboi & Yusef Salaam (winter)
10. A book with a female villain or criminalArchangel’s Consort by Nalini Singh
11. A book to celebrate The Grand Egyptian Museum – The Switch by Beth O’Leary (Grand opening and Letitia’s antiques)
12. A book eligible for the Warwick Prize for Women in Translation – The Little Breton Bistro by Nina George
13. A book written by an author of one of your best reads of 2020 – First Comes Scandal by Julia Quinn

14. A book set in a made-up place – Devils and Details by Devon Monk
15. A book that features siblings as the main characters – Harmony’s Way by Lora Leigh
16. A book with a building in the title – The House of the Spirits by Isabel Allende
17. A book with a Muslim character or authorThe Far Field by Madhuri Vijay

18. 3 books related to “Past, Present, Future” – Book 1 – Be Mine Tonight by Kathryn Smith
19. 3 books related to “Past, Present, Future” – Book 2 – Promise Canyon by Robyn Carr
20. 3 books related to “Past, Present, Future” – Book 3 – Honor Among Thieves by Rachel Caine & Ann Aguirre
21. A book whose title and author both contain the letter “u” – The Fountains of Silence by Ruta Sepetys
22. A book posted in one of the ATY Best Book of the Month threads – The Grendel Affair by Lisa Shearin

23. A cross genre novel – The Kingdom of Back by Marie Lu
24. A book about racism or race relations – The Truths We Hold by Kamala Harris
25. A book set on an island – The Gap by Benjamin Gilmour
26. A short book (<210 pages) by a new-to-you author – Heart Berries by Terese Marie Mailhot

27. A book with a character who can be found in a deck of cards – Red Queen by Victoria Aveyard
28. A book connected to ice – An O’Brien Family Christmas by Sherryl Woods
29. A book that you consider comfort reading – The Wanderer by Robyn Carr
30. A long book – Tower of Dawn by Sarah J. Maas

31. A book by an author whose career spanned more than 21 years – Up the Duff by Kaz Cooke
32. A book whose cover shows more than 2 people – Only Mostly Devastated by Sophie Gonzales
33. A collection of short stories, essays, or poetry – Hot Summer Nights by Jaci Burton, Carly Phillips, Erin McCarthy & Jessica Clare
34. A book with a travel theme – The Answer to the Riddle is Me by David Stuart MacLean
35. A book set in a country on or below the Tropic of Cancer

36. A book with six or more words in the title
37. A book from the Are You Well Read in World Literature list
38. A book related to a word given by a random word generator
39. A book involving an immigrant

40. A book with flowers or greenery on the cover
41. A book by a new-to-you BIPOC author
42. A mystery or thriller
43. A book with elements of magic

44. A book whose title contains a negative
45. A book related to a codeword from the NATO Phonetic Alphabet
46. A winner or nominee from the 2020 Goodreads Choice Awards
47. A non-fiction book other than biography, autobiography or memoir
48. A book that might cause someone to react “You read what?!?”

49. A book with an ensemble cast
50. A book published in 2021
51. A book whose title refers to person(s) without giving their name
52. A book related to “the end”

This list is created by the group members, after suggestions and votes.

Pick Your Poison

Duration: 1st January – 31st December 2021
Number of books: 104
Hosted by: Gregory Road

Baker’s Dozen  |  13 books
Choose one category from any 13 of the topics provided except for the wildcard books
Fortnightly  |  26 books
One category from each topic–you can choose one wildcard
52 Pickup  |  52 books
Two categories from each topic–you can choose one wildcard
Goin’ for the Burn  |  78 books
Three categories from each topic–you can choose two wildcards
Freaky Reader  |  104 books
Two books a week–must complete all the topics–you can choose two wildcards


Who’s in charge?
A book about an empire – Furies of Calderon by Jim Butcher
A book about a social movement – Punching the Air by Ibi Zoboi & Yusef Salaam
A book about being a first time parent – Otherhood by William Sutcliffe
A book about a cat – Born Free by Joy Adamson

Make ’em Laugh
A funny comic or graphic novel – Hopcross Jilly by Patricia Briggs
A book about a comedian – This Will Only Hurt a Little by Busy Philipps
A book with a pun in the title – The Peak of Love by Langley Gray
A book with someone laughing on the cover – Say Everything by Langley Gray

Where You Sleep At Night
A book about a hotel
A book with the word “house” in the title – The House of the Spirits by Isabel Allende
A book with a cabin on the cover – Wild Man Creek by Robyn Carr
A book about a haunted house

Ways To Die
A book with “poison” in the title
A book with a knife on the cover
A true crime murder story
A book about dealing with suicide – The Little Breton Bistro by Nina George

Occupations
A book about a farmer – Bring Me Home for Christmas by Robyn Carr
A book about a librarian or bookseller
A book written by a college professor – Heart Berries by Terese Marie Mailhot
A book about a scientist – Dr. Strange Beard by Penny Reid (Simone)

Generations
A book about millenials – Kissing Tolstoy by Penny Reid
A book about hippies
A book about baby boomers
A book about flappers

Plaids
A book with a kilt on the cover
A book written by someone from Scotland
A book with a plaid cover
A book with a flannel shirt on the cover – Take Me Home by Inez Kelley

Those Bodies
A book by a celebrity known for body positivity – Rolling with the Punchlines by Urzila Carlson
A book with a picture of an ocean on the cover – The Girl with the Make-Believe Husband by Julia Quinn
A book with a dead body on the cover
A children’s book about body parts

The Tools of Writing
A paperback book – Kiss of Heat by Lora Leigh
A book with a typewriter on the cover
A book with “words” in the title
A book with “deadline” in the title

That Creepy Feeling
A horror story or thrillerThe Bone Houses by Emily Lloyd-Jones
A book with an insect on the cover – James and the Giant Peach by Roald Dahl
A book about something that scares you – Anna: A Teenager on the Run by Anna Podgajecki (war, WWI, genocide)
A book with a monster on the cover – Siege and Storm by Leigh Bardugo

Favorites
A book by your favorite author – The Player and the Pixie by L.H. Cosway & Penny Reid
A book in your favorite genre – One Bite with a Stranger by Christine Warren (paranormal romance)
A book with your favorite color on the cover – Blood Challenge by Eileen Wilks (blue)
A book from a celebrity favorite list – Zlata’s Diary by Zlata Filipovic

Crossing Boundaries
A book about an interracial romance – Red, White & Royal Blue by Casey McQuiston
A book about the immigrant experience – The Bride Test by Helen Hoang
A book about reconciliation – The Switch by Beth O’Leary
A book about cross dressing

Bringing the World into Your Home
A book about hygge, feng shui, or home harmony
A book about taking in a stranger – Dark Lover by J.R. Ward
A book about a culture other than your own – Rebel Hard by Nalini Singh
A book about how radio, television, or the internet has changed us – A Wild Life by Martin Hughes-Games

Things We Don’t Talk About
A book with the word “naked” in the title
A book by a politician – The Truths We Hold by Kamala Harris
A book about oppression – The Fountains of Silence by Ruta Sepetys
A book about terminal illness – When Breath Becomes Air by Paul Kalanithi

Reflections
A book with a mirror on the cover
A memoir – The Gap by Benjamin Gilmour
A fiction book about reminiscing
A self help book – Things I Wish I’d Known edited by Victoria Young

Swashbuckling
A book with a sword on the cover – Emerald Blaze by Ilona Andrews
A book about pirates – The Other Miss Bridgerton by Julia Quinn
A rollicking adventure story
A book with a map on the cover

Shapes and Colors
A book with a primarily black cover – Soul Deep by Lora Leigh
A book with a shape-shifting character – The Edge of the Moon by Rebecca York
A book with a shape on the cover that reminds you of a Roschach test – Queene of Light by Jennifer L. Armintrout
A book by an author whose name is a color

Picture This
A book with the word “picture” in the title
A book with a photograph on the cover – The Clockwork Scarab by Colleen Gleason
A book by a journalist or news photographer – The Answer to the Riddle is Me by David Stuart MacLean
An illustrated book – The BFG by Roald Dahl

Shh…
A book about secret societies/clubsBe Mine Tonight by Kathryn Smith
A children’s book about bedtime
A book with the word “secret” in the title – Marry in Secret by Anne Gracie
A book with a peaceful cover – A Night Like This by Julia Quinn

Challenges
A book over 500 pages – Zeroes by Scott Westerfeld, Margo Lanagan & Deborah Biancotti
A book about overcoming obstacles – The Cad and the Co-Ed by L.H. Cosway & Penny Reid
A book you’ve set aside in the past because it was hard to get into – Salvage the Bones by Jesmyn Ward
A book with the word “hard” in the title – Love Hard by Nalini Singh

Drinking Game
A cozy mystery with a beverage in the title
A book with a picture of an alcoholic beverage on the cover
A book title that could be a drinking game – Love Her or Lose Her by Tessa Bailey
A nonfiction book about alcohol

It’s All Relative
A book set in your grandparents’ era
A book with the word “father” in the title
A book you’d share with your child – Dumplin’ by Julie Murphy
A book about an estranged family – Marry in Haste by Anne Gracie

Weather
A book with the word “snow” in the title
A nonfiction book about a weather related disaster
A book with a picture of clear blue sky on the cover – Bad Boys of Summer by Lori Foster, Erin McCarthy & Amy Garvey
A book that comforts you on a rainy day – Beard in Mind by Penny Reid

TBR Burners
A book that had been on your TBR list more than a year – Over Sea, Under Stone by Susan Cooper
A book someone gave to you that you haven’t read yet – The French Gift by Kirsty Manning
Anything you want – Danny the Champion of the World by Roald Dahl
A book you’re excited to read – Beautiful Beast by E.J. Hill

Borrowing
A book with a character from a different book – Happily Ever Ninja by Penny Reid (Fiona from the other Knitting in the City books)
A fairytale or myth retelling in a modern setting
A book written by an author with a pseudonym – Witching Moon by Rebecca York
A book borrowed from the library – Beyond the Dark by Lora Leigh, Angela Knight, Emma Holly & Diane Whiteside

Putting 2020 Behind Us
A book with a crowded cover – The Summer Garden by Sherryl Woods
A book about self care or recovery – Harvest Moon by Robyn Carr
A book set after a major world event (war, weather disaster, etc.) – Lucky Child by Loung Ung (Khmer Rouge & Pol Pot)
A book with the word “better” in the title – Expecting Better by Emily Oster

+++ Wildcards +++
A book by an author under 30
A 2021 release – The Tea Dragon Tapestry by Kay O’Neill
A comic book

A book by two or more authors – The Hooker and the Hermit by L.H. Cosway & Penny Reid
A collection of essays

Happy New Year

Duration: 1st January – 31st January 2021
Number of books: 6
Hosted by: My Vampire Book Obsession

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Happy New Year

Duration
January 1st – 31st

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

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1. Start the year out right! Read any book you want. – Kiss of Heat by Lora Leigh
2. Read a brand new shiny book – Rolling with the Punchlines by Urzila Carlson
3. Read that book you meant to read last year – The Girl with the Make-Believe Husband by Julia Quinn
4. Read a book by a new to you author – Beautiful Beast by E.J. Hill
5. Read a book released this month – Blood Challenge by Eileen Wilks (Jan 2011)
6. Read book 1 in a series – Dumplin’ by Julie Murphy

What to Read in 2021

Duration: 1st January – 31st December 2021
Number of books: 60
Hosted by: Around the Year

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Not sure what to read in 2021? Have monster TBR’s and need help getting some of them read. What to find some new books for 2021? Then this is the challenge for you:

Read the instructions for each task carefully to pick your books. You can use any book that fits the category and re-reads are fine as well. You can create your list in advance or as you go.

Duration
Jan 1st – Dec 31st 2021

Rules
Complete at least 15 tasks to get the Vampire Heart
All genres welcome
Rereads welcome
No minimum page count
One book per task

1. Click on Browse, then Recommendations. Pick a book listed for recommendations based on your To-Read Shelf. – Dumplin’ by Julie Murphy
2. Click on Browse, then Recommendations. Pick a book listed for recommendations based on any of your shelves. – Marry in Haste by Anne Gracie
3. Click on Browse, New Releases. Click on My Authors at the top and pick a book that shows up on the list.
4. Click on Browse, then on Lists. Pick a list that your friends have voted on and pick a book from that list to read. – Just Like Heaven by Julia Quinn
5. Click on Browse, then on Explore. To the right you will see my favorite genres. Pick one and click on it. Read a book on the New Releases for that genre. – Marriage and Murder by Penny Reid

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6. Click on Browse, then on Explore. To the right you will see my favorite genres. Pick one and click on it. Scroll down to the lists. Pick a list and then pick a book on that list and read it.
7. Click on Browse, then on Explore. To the right you will see my favorite genres. Pick one and click on it. Scroll down to New Releases by Authors You’ve Read. Pick a book and read it. – The Kingdom of Back by Marie Lu
8. Click on Browse, then on Choice Awards. Pick any book that has been nominated for any year and read that book or any other book by that author. – Emerald Blaze by Ilona Andrews
9. Pick any book that you rated five stars. Go to the book page and scroll down until you see lists with this book. Click on any of those lists and pick another book from the list to read. – Dark Lover by J.R. Ward
10. On your profile page, scroll down until you see “(Your name) Favorite Authors” on the right side of the page. Click on the link (example: My Favorite Authors Page). Once there, scroll through the list of your favorite authors and choose an author to revisit. You may either re-read an old favorite or continue on with one you haven’t read yet. – A Night Like This by Julia Quinn

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11. Go to your home page. Scroll down through the updates and pick any book mentioned.
12. Sort your TBR to show 50 books per page and sort by date added. Look at how many pages are on your TBR list and divide by 2 (round up if needed) and pick any book on that page. – Be Mine Tonight by Kathryn Smith
13. Sort your TBR to show 50 books per page and sort by date added.
Pick one book off the first page.
14. Sort your TBR and to show 50 books per page and sort by date added. Pick one book off the last page. – Furies of Calderon by Jim Butcher
15. Sort your TBR to show 40 books per page and sort by author, A-Z. Read one book on the first page of that list.

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16. Sort your TBR to show 40 books per page and sort author by Z-A. Read one book on the first page of that list.
17. Sort your TBR to show 50 books per page and sort by number of pages, shortest to longest. Pick a book found on the first page. – Heart Berries by Terese Marie Mailhot
18. Sort your TBR to show 50 books per page and sort by number of pages, longest to shortest. Pick one book found on the first page.
19. List your TBR by 40 books per page and sort by title A-Z. Pick a book off of the first page.
20. List your TBR by 40 books per page and sort by title Z-A. Pick any book off of the first page. – Your Coffin or Mine? by Kimberly Raye

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21. List your TBR by 40 books per page and sort by Date Published. Pick a book off of the first page.
22. List your TBR by 40 books per page and sort by Date Published. Pick a book off of the last page.
23. List your TBR by 50 books per page and sort by Rating. Pick a book off of the first page.
24. List your TBR by 50 books per page and sort by Rating. Pick a book off of the last page.
25. List your TBR by 50 books and sort by Random. Pick a book off the first page. – Queene of Light by Jennifer L. Armintrout

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26. List your TBR by 50 books and sort by Random. Pick a book off the last page. – Only Mostly Devastated by Sophie Gonzales
27. List your TBR by 50 books and sort by Num Ratings. Pick a book off the first page. – A Wild Life by Martin Hughes-Games
28. List your TBR by 50 books and sort by Num Ratings. Pick a book off the last page.
29. Read any book from your TBR – The BFG by Roald Dahl
30. Read a book from your TBR by a new to you author. – Over Sea, Under Stone by Susan Cooper

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31. Read a book that you bought in 2020 but haven’t read yet. If you don’t have one then read a book published in 2020 that you wish you’d bought. – Danny the Champion of the World by Roald Dahl
32. Read a book that you bought in 2019 that you haven’t read yet. If you don’t have one then read a book published in 2019 that you wish you’d bought. – Blood Challenge by Eileen Wilks
33. Read a book that you bought in 2018 that you haven’t read yet. If you don’t have one then read a book published in 2018 that you wish you’d bought. – Angels’ Flight by Nalini Singh
34. Read a book that you bought more than 3 years ago and haven’t read yet. If you don’t have one then read a book published in 2017 or before that you wish you’d bought.Born Free by Joy Adamson
35. Read a book that will either finish a series you have read or is the latest book published in a series you have read.Necromancing the Stone by Lish McBride

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36. Pick a series you’ve been wanting to start and read the first book in that series. – Kissing Tolstoy by Penny Reid
37. Pick a book that you’ve only read the first book in the series and read book #2 in that same series. – The Girl with the Make-Believe Husband by Julia Quinn
38. Read a book from a series that you started but haven’t finished. – Kiss of Heat by Lora Leigh
39. Read a book published in 2021 – Splintered Stars by Rachel Madbury
40. Read a book published in 2020 that you haven’t gotten around to reading but really want to. – Punching the Air by Ibi Zoboi & Yusef Salaam

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41. Read a book published in the year you joined Good Reads. – The Player and the Pixie by L.H. Cosway & Penny Reid (2016)
42. Read a book that has a title that starts with the same letter as your first name. – Soul Deep by Lora Leigh
43. Read a book that has a title that starts with the same letter as your last name. – Rebel Hard by Nalini Singh
44. Read a book whose author’s first name starts with the same letter as your first name. – A Man in a Kilt by Sandy Blair
45. Read a book whose author’s last name starts with the same letter as your last name. – Beard in Mind by Penny Reid

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46. Read a book published in the same month as your birthday. – The Cad and the Co-Ed by L.H. Cosway & Penny Reid (February)
47. Read a book with your age in the page number. (Example if you are 32 – 320 or 325 or 132 would all work). – The Peak of Love by Langley Gray (228 pp.)
48. Read a book that is your favorite genre – The Hooker and the Hermit by L.H. Cosway & Penny Reid (contemporary romance)
49. Read a book with a cover that is at least 50% your favorite color – The Other Miss Bridgerton by Julia Quinn (blue)
50. Read a book where the MC has the same job/career as you or one that you wish you had. – Dr. Strange Beard by Penny Reid (vet)

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51. Read a book from any Goodreads lists that has “Can’t Wait” in the name of the list. – Shadow and Bone by Leigh Bardugo
52. Read a book from any Goodreads lists that has “Best” in the name of the list – Grave Witch by Kalayna Price (Best Urban Fantasy)
53. Read a book a friend of yours rated 5 Stars – Red, White & Royal Blue by Casey McQuiston
54. Read a book another friend of yours rated 5 stars – Fix Her Up by Tessa Bailey
55. Read a book a friend of yours rated 4 stars – Megan’s Mark by Lora Leigh

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56. Read a book another friend of yours rated 4 stars – Salvage the Bones by Jesmyn Ward
57. Read a book any member of Vampire Book Obsession Rated 5 Stars – Archangel’s Consort by Nalini Singh
58. Read a book any member of Vampire Book Obsession Rated 4 Stars – Her Perfect Mate by Paige Tyler
59. Read a book by any author from any Muse in 2020 or any Author that gets picked as a Muse for 2021Love Hard by Nalini Singh
60. Read a book by any author from any Muse in 2019 or 2018 – Grave Dance by Kalayna Price

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The Amazing Arcane Race

Duration: 1st January – 31st December 2021
Number of books: 78
Hosted by: My Vampire Book Obsession

the Amazing Arcane Race
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Welcome to the Amazing Arcane Race! To win this race you must travel to the Arcane Realms and explore their lands.
Each realm you visit represents a series. To explore the realm, read as many books as you want/can from the series of your choice. Each realm has a specified number of books. You can visit a realm as many times as you want. You do not have to visit every realm.

Rules
‣ Books must be part of a series.
‣ You do not need to start at the beginning of a series.
‣ The aim is to complete series, not read a whole series in one go so whichever book is next for you is your starting point.
‣ Novellas and short stories count as well though you do not need to read them to consider a series completed.
‣ The series does not need to be finished for you to complete it here. Just read as far as the last published book.
‣ You can read a series from start to finish if you want to e.g. read the three books of a trilogy.
‣ All genres welcome
‣ Read a minimum of 5 books to get the Vampire Heart

Duration
January 1st – December 31st

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The Realm of Knowledge
Necromancer by Lish McBride
1 One book from a Series

  1. Necromancing the Stone by Lish McBride
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The Realm of Nature
Hard Play by Nalini Singh
2 Two books from a Series

  1. Rebel Hard by Nalini Singh
  2. Love Hard by Nalini Singh
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The Realm of Love
Rokesbys by Julia Quinn
3 Three books from a Series

  1. The Girl with the Make-Believe Husband by Julia Quinn
  2. The Other Miss Bridgerton by Julia Quinn
  3. First Comes Scandal by Julia Quinn
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The Realm of Ice
Marriage of Convenience by Anne Gracie
4 Four books from a Series

  1. Marry in Haste by Anne Gracie
  2. Marry in Scandal by Anne Gracie
  3. Marry in Secret by Anne Gracie
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The Realm of Fire
Winston Brothers by Penny Reid
5 Five books from a Series

  1. Beard in Mind by Penny Reid
  2. Dr. Strange Beard by Penny Reid
  3. Beard with Me by Penny Reid
  4. Beard Necessities by Penny Reid
  5. A Beardy Bonus by Penny Reid
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The Realm of Fae
Grishaverse by Leigh Bardugo
6 Six books from a Series

  1. Shadow and Bone by Leigh Bardugo
  2. Siege and Storm by Leigh Bardugo
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The Realm of Monsters
Alex Craft by Kalayna Price
7 Seven books from a Series

  1. Grave Witch by Kalayna Price
  2. Grave Dance by Kalayna Price
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The Realm of Shadows
World of the Lupi by Eileen Wilks
8 Eight books from a Series

  1. Blood Challenge by Eileen Wilks
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The Realm of Night
Virgin River by Robyn Carr
9 Nine books from a Series

  1. Promise Canyon by Robyn Carr
  2. Wild Man Creek by Robyn Carr
  3. Harvest Moon by Robyn Carr
  4. Bring Me Home for Christmas by Robyn Carr
  5. Hidden Summit by Robyn Carr
  6. Redwood Bend by Robyn Carr
  7. Sunrise Point by Robyn Carr
  8. My Kind of Christmas by Robyn Carr
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The Realm of Vampires
Guild Hunter by Nalini Singh
10 Ten books from a Series

  1. Archangel’s Consort by Nalini Singh
  2. Angels’ Flight by Nalini Singh
  3. Archangel’s Blade by Nalini Singh
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The Realm of Beasts
Chesapeake Shores by Sherryl Woods
11 Eleven books from a Series

  1. A Chesapeake Shores Christmas by Sherryl Woods
  2. Driftwood Cottage by Sherryl Woods
  3. Moonlight Cove by Sherryl Woods
  4. Beach Lane by Sherryl Woods
  5. An O’Brien Family Christmas by Sherryl Woods
  6. The Summer Garden by Sherryl Woods
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The Realm of Chaos
Breeds by Lora Leigh
12 Twelve books from a Series

  1. Kiss of Heat by Lora Leigh
  2. Soul Deep by Lora Leigh
  3. Megan’s Mark by Lora Leigh
  4. Harmony’s Way by Lora Leigh
  5. Tanner’s Scheme by Lora Leigh
  6. Jacob’s Faith by Lora Leigh
  7. Aiden’s Charity by Lora Leigh
  8. Dawn’s Awakening by Lora Leigh
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