Reading Challenge 2022
I have received a challenge to read books that satisfy certain criteria. I hope this post helps me track my progress in meeting that challenge.
By a female author of colour:
Loung Ung. “Lulu in the sky: A daughter of Cambodia finds love, healing, and double happiness”.
By a Singaporean author:
Alfian Sa'at. “A history of amnesia: poems”.
By a South-east Asian author:
Loung Ung's “Lucky child: A daughter of Cambodia reunites with the sister she left behind”.
A book in translation:
Written by Antonio Iturbe. Translated by Lilit Zekulin Thwaites. “The librarian of Auschwitz”.
A graphic novel:
Arakawa Hiromu's “Silver Spoon”. Volumes 1 to 15. (Translated by Amanda Haley).
A book of essays:
George Orwell. “Such, such were the joys”.+
A book of short stories:
Rebecca Otowa's “The mad Kyoto shoe swapper, and other short stories”.
An author unfamiliar to you:
Ray Bradbury. “Fahrenheit 451”.
A book set in a country you've never been to:
Tuomas Kyrö. Translated by David McDuff. “The beggar & the hare”.
Over 400 pages:
Harriet Beecher Stowe's “Uncle Tom's cabin”.
Under 200 pages:
L. Frank Baum's “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz”.
Published in 2022:
Tyus D. Williams. Illustrated by Chaaya Prabhat. “A day in the life of big cats: What do lions, tigers and panthers get up to all day?”
Published before you were born:
William Shakespeare's “The tempest”.
A book you have read before:
Roald Dahl. “Charlie and the chocolate factory “.
A book you've tried to read but did not finish:
Charles Eisenstein's (2021) book, titled “Sacred economics, revised: money, gift & society in the age of transition”.^
A book about changing the world:
Mark E. Thomas's “99%: Mass impoverishment and how we can end it”.+
A book about self-improvement:
Willie Cheng's book, (published in 2009): “Doing good well: what does (and does not) make sense in the nonprofit world”.^
A book you judged by its cover:
“Thinking about democracy”. (1989). Edited by Cedric H.C. Pan.+
A book that challenges you:
Cryan, Shatil, and Piero. “Capitalism: A graphic guide”.
An author's debut:
Jean Rhys. “Quartet”.
With the word “moon” in its title:
“Eric Moon: The life and library times”. Written by Kenneth F. Kister. +
A well-known book you never got around to reading:
Viktor E. Frankl. “Man's search for meaning”.
A book that's been adapted to a movie or TV show:
Charles Dickens. “A Christmas Carol, and other Christmas writings”.
Borrowed from a friend:
Elisabeth Kübler-Ross' “The tunnel and the light: Essential insights on living and dying”.
Legend:
^: I've only read it in part.
+: I've not read it yet. (As of 16 July 2022).
This reading challenge was inspired by a book-store called The Moon.