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Tuesday, December 16, 2008

A to Z Challenge Completed


Joy sucked me into this one. In 2006, way back before I started my blog and joined my first reading challenge, I did my own alphabetical challenge. I read (in order) an A to Z by title list of books, followed by an A to Z by Author list. It was fun and I said I probably wouldn’t do it again. Then last year, Joy posted that she was hosting an A to Z reading challenge for 2009. I wavered back and forth for a while and finally decided to give it a shot. I liked the idea of not limiting myself to reading the 52 books in order, but just filling in my list as I finished the books. The requirements really weren’t that strict.

~ align the author's last name or the title of a book (excluding "the", "a", etc.) with its corresponding letter in the alphabet
~ enter a different book for each author and title (total of 52 books)
~ complete the alphabet lists anyway that suits your fancy (i.e.: complete each list separately in alphabetical order, read both "A" entries, then "B" entries, fit whatever you're reading into either list, etc.)
~ complete the challenge in the year 2008
~ enjoy the experience!
Doing this for a second time was a fun experience. I enjoyed most of the books I read. I was able to include many books I was reading for other challenges and only had to really search for a few authors or titles to fill in the blanks.

My list of completed books is here (links are to the reviews on this blog)


Author List
  1. Atkins, Ace - Leavin’ Trunk Blues
  2. Barnes, Linda - The Snake Tattoo
  3. Cussler, Clive - White Death
  4. Dorsey, Tim - Florida Roadkill
  5. Ephron, G.H. - Amnesia
  6. Forster, E.M. - A Room with a View
  7. Gruen, Sarah - Water for Elephants
  8. Hammett, Dashiell - The Maltese Falcon
  9. Ishiguro, Kazuo - The Remains of the Day
  10. Jordan, Hillary - Mudbound
  11. Koryta, Michael - Tonight I Said Goodbye
  12. Levin, Ira - Rosemary’s Baby
  13. Macomber, Debbie - 74 Seaside Avenue
  14. Notaro, Laurie - The Idiot Girls’ Action-Adventure Club
  15. O’Farrell, Maggie - The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox
  16. Pasternak, Boris - Doctor Zhivago
  17. Quinlan, Patrick - Smoked
  18. Rosenfelt, David - Dead Center
  19. Schein, Elyse - Identical Strangers: A Memoir of Twins Separated and Reunited
  20. Tarkington, Booth - The Magnificent Ambersons
  21. Uruburu, Paula - American Eve
  22. Van Ryn, Don and Susie - Mistaken Identity: Two Families, One Survivor, Unwavering Hope
  23. Wood, Patricia - Lottery
  24. Xi, Xu - The Unwalled City
  25. Yarbrough, Steve - The End of California
  26. Zellnik, M.J. - Murder at the Portland Variety

Title List
  1. Aunt Dimity’s Good Deed by Nancy Atherton
  2. Black Wind by Clive and Dirk Cussler
  3. City Boy by Herman Wouk
  4. The Diamond by Julie Baumgold
  5. Echo Burning by Lee Child
  6. Faithless by Karin Slaughter
  7. A Great Deliverance by Elizabeth George
  8. The House at Riverton by Kate Morton
  9. The Inimitable Jeeves by P.G. Wodehouse
  10. The Jasmine Moon Murder by Laura Childs
  11. The Kitchen Boy by Robert Alexander
  12. London Bridges by James Patterson
  13. The Monkey’s Raincoat by Robert Crais
  14. Nineteen Minutes by Jodi Picoult
  15. Out of the Deep I Cry by Julia Spencer-Fleming
  16. Peter the Great by Robert K. Massie
  17. Queen Victoria: A Personal History by Christopher Hibbert
  18. Rueful Death by Susan Wittig Albert
  19. Smonk by Tom Franklin
  20. Them Bones by Carolyn Haines
  21. Undercurrents by Ridley Pearson
  22. Vanishing Acts by Jodi Picoult
  23. The Winter Queen by Boris Akunin
  24. X-Treme Dating by Cathy McDavid
  25. The Yellow Lighted Bookshop by Lewis Buzbee
  26. The Zookeeper’s Wife by Diane Ackerman

It was enjoyable to do this alphabetical challenge a second time. I probably won’t do it again any time soon since I’ve now done it in slightly different formats twice within 3 years. For those who haven’t tried this yet, I’d encourage you to give it a shot at least once. You’d be surprised how many you’d get just by random selection of your normal reading and you never know when you’ll discover a very good title or author you wouldn’t have read without needing “that letter”.


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