This is a perpetual challenge I just found when I discovered a fairly new blog, Lost In Books: the Banned Or Challenged Books Challenge. And the goal is to read 50 banned books.
So, I will keep a list here once I've found a page for reference:
1) Aldous Huxley: Brave New World
2) Harper Lee: To Kill A Mockingbird
3) George Orwell: 1984
4) George Orwell: Animal Farm
5) Dan Brown: The DaVinci Code
6) Stephen King: Carrie
7) Lois Lowry: The Giver
8) J.K. Rowling: Harry Potter
9) John Steinbeck: Of Mice And Men
10) Roald Dahl: The Witched
11) Alice Sebold: The Lovely Bones
12)
13)
14)
15)
16)
17)
18)
19)
20)
21)
22)
23)
24)
25)
26)
27)
28)
29)
30)
31)
32)
33)
34)
35)
36)
37)
38)
39)
40)
41)
42)
43)
44)
45)
46)
47)
48)
49)
50)
5 comments:
thank you for the link. I joined the 999 challenge and one of my categories is banned/challenged books. I only have to read 9 for it but I feel that reading banned/challenged books will keep them alive. I'd like to read more of them and this is a great way to remind me to do it.
Always a pleasure! So you're also doing the 999 challenge? :) I love reading banned and challenged books. It's interesting to find out what urges people to try to get rid of a book.
I am excited you are participating in this with me, Kathrin! Reading should always be a right, not a privilege! I look forward to seeing what you choose next. :)
Hi Kathrin,
I started out with one challenge (TBR) because my list/pile had grown out of control. Then I thought it would be nice to visit others on the list and it opened a whole new world for me. I'm up to 14 challenges now, plus my own.
It's weird that some bloggers duplicate the rules/guidelines but don't make a clear link to the host of the challenge! I'm glad you did.
Now I'm finding so many great book blogs, I'm going to have a hard time doing much else!
@ Rebecca: It is my pleasure to join you in that one! I don't believe in book-banning at all. Books are there to be read, each and every one of them, IMHO, has a right to exist and be read. They show us different worlds, different opinions, and teach us a lot.
@ Book Dragon: I am with you! I started with the Alpphabet Challenge and the Book-A-Week Challenge a couple years ago, then I discovered the TBR challenge last year and ever since then I stumbled over more and more challenges. It is amazing how many challenges are out there, but I only sign up for challenges I might have a chance at completing.
I always try to give a link to the original post for the challenge. Sometimes I forget that, I just have to admit it, but it is also a big help for me. After all, I want to check back with the host of the challenge to see how she (let's face it, most challenges are hosted by women ;) )and the others are doing and to inform the host that I've completed a book or the whole challenge.
As for all the book blogs out there: I'm lucky to use the Google reader. There I can read them all at once and mark each post read. That way I don't miss out on anything, and if I only have the time to read, but not to comment, I'll just keep the post unread for another day or later that day. I don't know how many blogs I have on my blog roll there, but it's a nice amount and if I would try to stay up-to-date with each one of them 365 days a year, I also would get anything else done...
Post a Comment