You'll love this one...!! A book club & more discussion
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Challenges: Monthly
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January 2014 REPORTING THREAD

Alright you great guys and girls. Time to put on your best singlet (view spoiler) , very short workman shorts (view spoiler) and flip-flops, or your board shorts or your swimming costume if you're heading to the beach. Place a few sausages on the outdoor barbecue (or whatever you vegetarians want to cook the traditional Australian way of cooking things on the barbecue and cover with sauce like ketchup but tastes very different), help yourself to a large bottle of beer or a soft drink out of the portable box-shaped drinks cooler (although if it's empty you're off to the take away alcoholic bottle shop and you are paying) and pull up a seat for the January Challenge.
So no more talking about things that don't matter before you all start getting upset and making a scene. This month, in honour of the great sunburnt land who celebrates Australia Day on the 26th, you'll all have a read a very good, honest to goodness Australian book. And by that it has to fit either of these rules:
1.The book's set in Australia.
2.The author is Australian born (don't care if they are from a rural town or a city). If they've moved overseas since then, well, they're a bit stupid but still count.
I know some of you lot have been talking about having a look at our Australian writers, so now is your chance to check out some of our very good books. And I'm telling you the absolute truth, some of them are excellent.
Now remember you don't have to go to fast, you do have all month to read (just so you don't wear yourself out). But make sure you don't go to slow like a lazy person either and get it done on time (but I'm not encouraging any fake sick days off work to complete the challenge either).
Personally though, I think this challenge is going to be lots of fun and very lively.
Don't be an idiot and make sure you follow the standard challenge rules:
see above post :)["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>

Feel free to keep chatting over in the discussion thread

Set in "Straya"-(Sydney, Melbourne )-5 points
Author born in Sydney - 5 points
Author is female- 3 points
416 pages-3 points
Total 16 points

Book is set in 'Straya. - 5 pts 5 pts.
The author is Aussie born – 5 pts M.L. Stedman 5 pts.
Author:
3 pts - Is female 3 pts.
Pages:
2 pts - 300 - 399 pages 352 pp. ,2pts.
Bonus points:
2 pts – You encounter a kangaroo at any stage in your book. Only counts once. 2 pts.
17 pts.


2 pts 384 pages
5 pts Aussie born
Lives in Brisbane 5 pts
Setting Tallong 5 pts
all characters fr..."
Hmmm.... i think we have a crossing of wires. Probably my fault.
I get from the info you've given me:
2 pts 384 pages
5 pts Aussie born
Setting Tallong 5 pts
Not sure what other points you get. Cover and bonus points you'll have to answer, however, I can't find anything that says he's a Indigenous writer.
Is the all chars from Tallong for bonus points? That's only place i can see. Then we have a misunderstanding there too. Tallong is pretty close to me, and only 2.5% of the Australian population is Indigenous (Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander). Was a particular char mentioned?


Book Reqs.
5 pts - Book is set in 'Straya
5 pts - The author is Aussie born
Author:
3 pts - Is female
Title: (sub-titles do not count)
3 pts – Has an animal in the title
Cover: (based on the issue you read)
2 pts - Has a person with an obscenely large hat on it
Pages:
5 pts - 600 - 1000 pages
Bonus points:
0 pts
23 pts. total

The author is Aussie born – 5 pts
Author:
3 pts - Is female
Title: (sub-titles do not count)
0 pts
Cover: (based on the issue you read)
0 pts
Pages:
2 pts - 300 - 399 pages
Bonus points:
0 pts
Total 10 pts
Low challenge score, but a 5* read.
The audiobook read by Morven Christie is wonderful!

The author is Aussie born – 5 pts
Author:
5 pts – Is Aboriginal
3 pts - Is female
Title: (sub-titles do not count)
3 pts – Has an animal in the title
Cover: (based on the issue you read)
4 pts – Has someone back lit with the blinding Aussie sun
Pages:
0 points for pages (less than 200)
This book did not have a lot of pages but it had a lot of story packed into the ones that it did have!
Bonus points:
2 pts – One of the characters is Aboriginal or a Torres Strait Islander
2 pts – You encounter a kangaroo at any stage in your book.
----------
29 points for
Follow the Rabbit-Proof Fence


Book is set in 'Straya. - 5 pts
The author is Aussie born – 5 pts
Author:
4 pts – Has won a Booker Prize
2 pts – Has won a Miles Franklin Award (Aussie book award)
Title: (sub-titles do not count)
2 pts - Has a person's name in the title (explain if not obvious)
Cover: (based on the issue you read)
4 pts – Has someone back lit with the blinding Aussie sun
Pages:
3 pts - 400 - 499 pages
Bonus points:
2 pts – One of the characters is Aboriginal or a Torres Strait Islander
2 pts – You encounter a kangaroo at any stage in your book. Only counts once.

5 pts – author is Aussie born
3 pts – author is female
1 pts – first name and surname start with same letter
3 pts – 400- 99 pages in length
0 pts – bonus
____
17 points for American Kindle version of On the Jellicoe Road
Jellicoe Road by Melina Marchetta

Would have had 5 more pts if they'd kept original cover art (for the backlit figure in blazing sun and image of river). Oh bother!


Thanks, I enjoyed this read very much. Kind of took me by surprise because of its stripped down simplicity and yet its complexity in capturing some raw essence of real life and emotion.
Will write short review soon. Still reflecting, gathering my thoughts...

A Town Like Alice by Nevil Shute
5 pts Set in Australia (although its only about half of it)
5 pts Title has an Australian town or city in it (subjective to Rusalka's ruling due to the whole town name not being there)
2 pts Person's name in the title
1 pt 262 pages
2 pt bonus for a wallaby!!
--------------
15 pts total
edited for macropod points

Set in "Straya"-(Sydney, Melbourne )-5 points
Author born in Sydney - 5 points
Author is female- 3 points
416 pages-3 points
Total 16 points



Setting is Australia: 5 pts
Author is Australian :5 pts
Author is of aboriginal descent but I'll wait for an adjudication on the points :)
Title is one word: 1 pts
Author name is bigger than title: 5 pts
Pages: 253: 1pts
Bonus points
Mother tells son he is half Aboriginal
Kangaroos make an appearance but only of the flattened variety
Not sure if the bonus points count, but definitely 12 points otherwise!

Edited for the extra points....thanx Mum

Is that a nice way of indicating those roos that truckers and drivers manage to "aim" at rather than avoid because they are considered nuisance animals in some areas?

Is that a nice way of indicating those roos that truckers and drivers manage to "aim" at rather than avoid because they are considered nuisance anima..."
You can't avoid them. They just appear and get in the way and all of a sudden you have a roo sized dent in the side of your car. Or a written off car as they have jumped on your bonnet as you drove past (housemate). Or are in the front seat with you as they have come through your windscreen (Lexx's sister).

And sorry. Yup on the author as well.

My ex- room mate had a coyote jump down off the side if a hill and actually put a huge dent into the passenger side front fender. It got up and ran away. I would never have believed it, except I was sitting in the passenger seat!

A Town Like Alice by Nevil Shute
5 pts Set in Australia (although its only about half of it)
5 pts Title has an Australian town or city in it (subjec..."
When reading the title of this book I automatically got the song 'A town called Alice' in my head. I went to look up if this was somehow related to the book and whether the song is also about Alice Sprins, only to find out the the song is actually called 'A town like Malice'! I sang it wrong all those years...

A COYOTE!! At least we only have a few animals with teeth! I mean, yes a roo could possibly disembowel you. And the top 8 poisonous snakes, and most of the most poisonous spiders, and jellyfish that only need to touch you with 3 tentacles to stop all 3 major systems in your body, and the fish that looks like a rock that you stand on and die from a neurotoxin in 20 mins, but NONE OF THOSE HAVE TEETH!

We have coyotes in Texas, yes, in the cities. They love cats and small dogs. At least they have teeth. Unlike the scary killers in the Outback.,

Oh and kids. Have friends working about 150kms NW of Alice and all their problems have come from the local kids killing their chickens. They wanted to see what happened when they threw rocks at the chickens... /sigh



We used to go cow tipping as teenagers out at a campsite. Until a bull charged one night... never again. Terrifying.

As for coyotes - they're more scared of you. If you can get within 20 feet of one, I'll give you a medal.

I saw him carrom off, roll over and get up and run off. If someone had been behind us on the road, they would have rear ended us, because my room mate slammed on the brakes when she heard the thump, before she pulled over onto the side of the road. That was scary!!!
Can you really push a cow over? When I was a kid, we lived at the end of a country road where a big dairy and cow pasture was, but we never messed with those cows. THEY WERE BIG!!!

5 pts - Book is set in 'Straya
5 pts - The author is Aussie born
3 pts – author is female
2 pts - 300 - 399 pages
Total 15 pts


That house (we've since moved) backs up to a state armed forces base centrally located within the city limits. There's a large, brushy buffer between the houses and the base that's attractive to the coyotes. The creeks connect to other nearby nature preserves, and they're like coyote highways.
Cats were constantly disappearing in that neighborhood, including several of ours over the years before we learned that keeping them in at night wasn't enough :( The coyotes even prowl around in the day. Two of our immediate neighbors saw their small dogs attacked in separate incidents by coyotes right in their back yards.
The coyotes ran away once people showed up. (One of the dogs survived and recovered from the injuries but never from the trauma. The other dog died in neighbor's arms on the spot.) Cats and smaller (usually) dogs are like candy to the wily coyote.

Good song and band! I'm familiar with Paul Weller's later Style Council. Like them, but this band (The Jam) rocks! Thanks for the intro.

We have coyotes in Texas, yes, in the cities. They love cats and small dogs. At least they have teeth. Unlike the scary killers..."
Tejas Janet, where in TX are you?
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Books mentioned in this topic
I Am the Messenger (other topics)A Town Like Alice (other topics)
Burial Rites (other topics)
Year of Wonders (other topics)
True History of the Kelly Gang (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Hannah Kent (other topics)Peter Carey (other topics)
Colleen McCullough (other topics)
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Alright you top blokes and sheilas. Time to don your best chesty bond, stubbies and thongs, or your boardies or your cozzie if you're heading to the surf. Throw a few snags on the barbie (or whatever you vegos want to burn and cover with 'mato sauce), help yourself to a longneck or a softie out of the esky (although if it's empty you're off to the bottlo and it's your shout) and pull up a pew for the January Challenge.
So no more beating around the bush before you all start carrying on like a pork chop. This month, in honour of the great sunburnt land who celebrates 'Straya Day on the 26th, you'll all have a read a you beaut, dinky-di Aussie book. And by that it has to fit either of these rules:
1.The book's set in 'Straya.
2.The author is Aussie born (don't care if they are from the bush or the big smoke). If they've pissed off overseas since then, well, they're a bit of a drongo but still count.
I know some of you lot have been talking about having a sticky beak at our Aussie writers, so now is your chance to check out some of our heaps good books. And fair dinkum, some of it is top shelf.
Now remember you don't have to go flat out like a lizard drinking, you do have all month to read (just so you don't knacker yourself). But make sure your not a bludger either and get it done on time (but I'm not encouraging any sickies to complete the challenge either).
Personally though, I reckon this challenge is going to go off like a frog in a sock.
Don't be a galah and make sure you follow the standard challenge rules:
General rules:
1. The book may be in any format - paperback, ebook, audiobook.
2. The book may NOT be combined with the Year Long Chunkster Challenge.
3. The book must be read between January 1 and January 31, 2014.
4. The challenge is for one book. You may read more books if you chose, but only the highest scoring book will apply.
Scoring: (Count all that apply)
Book is set in 'Straya. - 5 pts
The author is Aussie born – 5 pts
Author:
5 pts – Is Aboriginal or a Torres Strait Islander
4 pts – Has won a Booker Prize
3 pts - Is female
2 pts – Has won a Miles Franklin Award (Aussie book award)
1 pts – First name and surname start with the same letter
Title: (sub-titles do not count)
5 pts - Has an Australian town or city in it
4 pts – Has a number in it
3 pts – Has an animal in the title
2 pts - Has a person's name in the title (explain if not obvious)
1 pts – Is one word
Cover: (based on the issue you read)
5 pts – Author's name is larger than the title
4 pts – Has someone back lit with the blinding Aussie sun
3 pts – Has an Australian native animal on it
2 pts - Has a person with an obscenely large hat on it
1 pts – Has a body of water on the front
Pages:
5 pts - 600 - 1000 pages
4 pts - 500 - 599 pages
3 pts - 400 - 499 pages
2 pts - 300 - 399 pages
1 pts - 200 - 299 pages
Bonus points:
2 pts – One of the characters is Aboriginal or a Torres Strait Islander
2 pts – You encounter a kangaroo (or any other macropod http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macropod...) at any stage in your book. Only counts once.