History is Not Boring discussion
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History trivia questions
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message 1:
by
Eric_W
(new)
Mar 03, 2009 05:53AM

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I added a history-related question - but it related directly to the theory in the book cited. (Queen Isabella, by Alison Weir.)


That's a great book (Adams). As a companion, or soon after reading it, I recommend "Henry Adams and the Making of America" by Wills. I don't agree with everything he says about Adams's work, but it's an exceptional companion piece. I read the abridged (two-volume) version of the Adams, not the nine-volume one.

Ah, yes. The unavoidable "Twilight"..... :(
There may be nearly as many questions about Pride and Prejudice, but somehow I don't find them nearly as annoying!

message 10:
by
Susanna - Censored by GoodReads, Crazy Cat Lady
(last edited Jun 15, 2009 09:45AM)
(new)

I think as many adults have read it as kids, so I don't think trivia questions can be separated that way. The whole 'Young Adult' tag is so flexible as to be useless.
I loved the Harry Potter books & got my daughter, who was in special ed due to dyslexia & a learning recall disorder, to start reading for fun in second or third grade by handing her the first one. She worked her way through it, got hooked & was suddenly out of special ed & reading above her grade level. (Thanks J.K. Rowling!!!)
I've never hear The Hobbit called a Young Adult book, but I'd read it half a dozen times before reading it in school in the 6th grade. Too many books cross the poorly drawn lines for reading ages.
I'm with Jim on the age thing. Questions are just well written or not - I'm not sure age has much to do with it.
I also had read The Hobbit multiple times by the time I finished sixth grade, though I don't think we were ever assigned it.
I also had read The Hobbit multiple times by the time I finished sixth grade, though I don't think we were ever assigned it.

"Do you have a color monitor?" was a question I asked. I was amazed that so many people answered that they did. So I did some research & found out that many people with monochrome monitors were answering that they did because their background color was green, not black. Whoops!

Find out in an exclusive interview with the author of
Empire of the Summer Moon at http://stephaniebarko.com/2011/05/01/...

That place was Texon, Texas, and that was where I actually was raised until I was ten. My parents ran the grocery store there.
Things happen that make history books incredible books to read. I write historical fiction, so I read about 8-10 non-fiction books before I ever write my book. I never realized until then that I was completely ignoring one of the most interesting fields of books on the shelves. It's amazing to find out what real people go through during our days, whether it's an English Tudor book or about WW2. History could never, ever be boring. Joyce Shaughnessy

My feelings exactly!

The question has to refer directly to a book, which can make it challenging for the non-fiction ones.

I think that is a great idea. I don't get why you got flack about putting up facts about history though. As long as you get them from a specific book I think they should not have had a problem.

My favorite thing to kill time by is collecting old almanacs, enclyopedias and history books and compare the info in them :D
My favorite set of encylopedias is from 1940 (The book of wonder) I inherited from my granny. Ah, good times...

I've also added a few quizzes that are very specifically history related and some that are tangentially history.
If you like, you might try these...
Abraham Lincoln
https://www.goodreads.com/quizzes/238...
U.S. Civil War
https://www.goodreads.com/quizzes/176...
Lewis & Clark
https://www.goodreads.com/quizzes/143...
This one pretty tangential to history...
https://www.goodreads.com/quizzes/247...