Around the Year in 52 Books discussion
Weekly Topics 2019
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18. A book related to one of the elements on the periodic table of elements

I have a short list of books that are mostly overlapping with other prompts, so I need more suggestions on this one.
Gold by Chris Cleave [Au]
Spinning Silver by Naomi Novak [Ag]
Yes Please by Amy Poehler [Ne]
The Silver Linings Playbook by Matthew Quick [Ag]
Salt to the Sea by Ruta Sepetys [NaCl]
I'm looking for more content-driven books for this one, because I think it would be interesting.
A Discovery of Witches is a good book (and series) to read for this prompt -- the main character is an alchemy history professor and they talk a lot about the elements. (It also has witches and vampires and a love story and lots of action!)
Gold by Chris Cleave [Au]
Spinning Silver by Naomi Novak [Ag]
Yes Please by Amy Poehler [Ne]
The Silver Linings Playbook by Matthew Quick [Ag]
Salt to the Sea by Ruta Sepetys [NaCl]
I'm looking for more content-driven books for this one, because I think it would be interesting.
A Discovery of Witches is a good book (and series) to read for this prompt -- the main character is an alchemy history professor and they talk a lot about the elements. (It also has witches and vampires and a love story and lots of action!)

The others I have so far are Silver Sparrow and House of Gold.
Salt is probably stretching the prompt just a little... you could include water as being H2O as well, I guess? (Although after this year, I'm way over water-based books!) I'm planning on reading Salt to the Sea for the first prompt so I won't be using it for this prompt, but I left it on this list in case I decide to change what I read for the first prompt last minute haha!


Yeah, re-reading the prompt, it does specify "one element" so salt probably doesn't really fit.
Oh well, I like the two others I have and good call on chloring Dalex! Swimming Lessons is on my TBR as well so I'll probably make that my third option.




The Golden Notebook - Doris Lessing
Swimming Lessons - Claire Fuller (Thanks for the suggestion dalex!)
Tracy wrote: "I think Gold by Chris Cleave. I loved Little Bee so I'd like to try something else that he's written. I also stole Salt to the Sea off Emilys ideas b..."
I'm thinking I'm going to read Gold as well! I own it (random library book sale, I think), and this is the perfect prompt for it!
I'm thinking I'm going to read Gold as well! I own it (random library book sale, I think), and this is the perfect prompt for it!



There is a GR Giveaway starting today for this book.


That's the one I plan to read, too!

Gold by Chris Cleave [Au]
Spinning Silver by N..."
Silver Linings Playbook is one of my favorite reads and movies of the last few years! I think the fact that it's set in the area of South Jersey in which I live is a driving factor, too! But I really enjoy Matthew Quick's writing style.


Other ideas:
The Swimming-Pool Library
The Golden Bough
The Golden Bowl
Oxygen
Diary Of An Oxygen Thief
The Golden Tresses of the Dead
Love and Hydrogen: New and Selected Stories (the title story refers to the Hindenburg)

I found one book on my TBR with two elements: gold and silver:
Låna är silver, råna är guld by Catharina Ingelman-Sundberg so that is my pick (for now).
But in english the title doesn't contain any elements: The Little Old Lady Who Struck Lucky Again!

LOL that is clever!! (but I think their swimming lessons are in open sea water, not a pool. I cant' remember now because the actual swimming lessons were not a big part of the plot.)


I also have this one on my TBR. Would be great for this task.

And if I don't go with one from the series, I'll probably read either Spinning Silver, The Silver Linings Playbook, Helium, or David Copperfield.


Periodic Tales: The Curious Lives of the Elements
Deadly Sunshine: The History and Fatal Legacy of Radium -- Ra
Uranium: War, Energy and the Rock That Shaped the World and Uranium Wars: The Scientific Rivalry that Created the Nuclear Age -- U



Ooooh nice choice. I want to read that book too, especially because I work in a lab testing patient blood.


That's ok though, isn't it? Because hydrogen + oxygen = water?
Some people mentioned that since the prompt says "...related to ONE of the elements..", things like water and salt wouldn't work.
That being said, it's your challenge and you can interpret the prompt as you'd like!
That being said, it's your challenge and you can interpret the prompt as you'd like!

Here are some ideas which I stole from my dad's new 2019 calendar:
• The word carbon is derived from the Latin carbo or “coal” / “charcoal” (Internet says both coal and charcoal).
• The word sodium is derived from the Arabic word suda which means headache. (Because “sodium compounds were used in early periods for its headache relieving properties”.)
• The word phosphorus comes from the Greek word "phosphoros", meaning "bringer of light". So potentially a book with religious themes (Lucifer?) or Venus (the planet), would fit this prompt.
• For Venus the goddess, “copper gets its name from the Latin word Cuprum, meaning from the island of Cyprus. In the Ancient Roman world (whose common language was Latin), most copper was mined in Cyprus. Copper used to be the symbol for the Roman goddess Venus, to whom the island of Cyprus was sacred.”
• For platinum: “the metal looks like silver, and the Spaniards at first thought it an inferior sort of silver, hence the name platina . It was first obtained from Spanish colonies in Mexico and Colombia, brought to Europe in 1735, and identified as an element 1741.” — so perhaps a book set in Mexico, or in Colombia.
Some more word origins here.
I may crosspost this to the making the prompt easier / harder thread.
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For this prompt I'm probably going to read The Disappearing Spoon if I can get my hands on it. Love me some pop science.



[bookcover:The Go..."
what is middle grade month? sounds interesting. too late for me though, my oldest is in 7th grade now!

it's a goodreads group where you read as many middle grade books as you can in one month. My kids are now freshmen in high school and I still read middle grade books. I work in an elementary school. That's how I have read harry potter. I have one book left and I'm done with the series.

I got on here to specifically recommend this one! It was such an informative and poignant read! Every single person in our book club loved it!


I loved that book. The movie wasn't good.

A book set in location that is sort of like a periodic element (Americium = America, Indium = India, Californium = California)
A book by an author whose initials are the same as a periodic element (Pb = Pearl Buck, At = Anne Tyler, As = Anita Shreve)
A book with a title that contains a word similar to a periodic element (calcium = milk, sodium = salt)
A book with a color in the title that relates to a periodic element (cobalt blue, cadmium yellow)
A book with a word in the title that connects to an element (When Breath Becomes Air for oxygen [you breathe oxygen], Slaughterhouse Five for nickel [a nickel is 5 cents], The Ocean at the End of the Lane for iodine [seawood is in the ocean and seaweed contains iodine])
Books mentioned in this topic
The Duchess: Camilla Parker Bowles and the Love Affair That Rocked the Crown (other topics)Iron Gold (other topics)
World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War (other topics)
Xenon Phobia (other topics)
The Disappearing Spoon: And Other True Tales of Madness, Love, and the History of the World from the Periodic Table of the Elements (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Penny Junor (other topics)Mary Doria Russell (other topics)
Lindsey Davis (other topics)
Naomi Novik (other topics)
Hugh Aldersey-Williams (other topics)
More...
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Suggestions:
Goodreads: Periodic Table Elements in Titles
Ranker: The Best Books With Silver in the Title
Goodreads: Romance Novels with Silver in the Title
Ranker: The Best Books With Gold in the Title
Goodreads: Romance Titles with Gold in the Title
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Optional questions:
- What are you reading for this category?
- Which element did you use?
- Do you enjoy science?