Around the Year in 52 Books discussion
Archives
>
[2022] Poll 7 Results


I was neutral on the body of water but I know I'll find something.

I didn’t vote either way on body of water, so I can work with that.
I do feel bad about Soylent Green and I may have upvoted it because I do love dystopian books. I have never seen it or heard of it before, but when I asked my mom about it she was “outraged” that I had never seen such a classic and has started trying to find where I can watch it. I believe in the US it may be a generational thing.

I have so many books that I have read this year to add to the listopias.

The list is turning out nicely balanced so I'm too worried about too many of one kind of prompt. I would probably prefer a character prompt though as there have been some uncomfortable cases of publishers pushing authors to be publicly out to help their books.
I think these are great. There are plenty of options for the diverse authors in all kinds of genres.





I hope they all get resubmitted. I really want the unusual narrator, As the bird flies, and ... heck I like them all. I would also still like a dystopian prompt. There are many evocative and hopeful dystopian stories.
I might prefer a broader prompt for the Wizard of Oz, but that's just because I love 1939 movies (the best year in the golden era of Hollywood) and I love musicals. Wizard of Oz is probably more fun on its own though.
I will still vote for an LGBTQIA+ prompt, and I agree that it should be character. I would still vote for a black, indigenous or BIPOC prompt. I also like the minority/other country prompt (The Hired Man by Aminatta Forna fits). We might want to wait a couple weeks though.

Please Do! I think it has a lot of potential!

I have a lot of Asian books to add to the listopia, including quite a few in Malaysia. One of my favorites (Euphoria) isn't by an Asian author though. This might be harder than I expected.
I'm not sure which physical boundaries to use for Pacific islands, but I have some Maori authors on my list from New Zealand that should qualify. Is there anyone here who knows API author lists well?
For Latin American authors, I just read an Isabel Allende book. She is a very prolific author. I have a few others I read this year too.


Maori authors would count.

Just realized Latin American is not exactly the same as Latino/Latina/Latinx. The way I think of it is an author who is from Mexico /Central America/South America/Spanish-speaking Caribbean island. Whereas Latino could be a person of that descent whose family has been in the US for generations. My son has a friend from Colorado with a Spanish name who says, "my family didn't cross the border, the border crossed us" because they lived in US territory before the boundaries were established. In any case, there's no shortage of writers who would qualify, whichever way you define it.

A 1939 movie adaptation, a book made into a musical or any golden age Hollywood connection would all be related to Wizard of Oz :)

The wording change confused me, and I asked during the voting process. I was told that Latino/Latina/Latinx authors would count, even if they weren't born in a Spanish-speaking country. I hope that's still true because I voted for it with that explanation in mind.

That's what I thought too, but assumed I was wrong. I hope people realise they can use authors with those origins (without being born there) as that was my intention with the prompt. I think I should have edited it to 'an author of Latin American descent' to make it clear but the voting had already begun by the time I thought to change it.

I don't interpret it as that limiting. If you said Black author/character would you only consider people from/born in African countries or would you consider Blacks that live in the U.S., Europe, Asia, etc. U.S. blacks also didn't voluntarily cross any borders, but it would still count.
The origins of Latino (and therefore Latina/e/x) is someone whose descent is from Latin America. It doesn't only describes someone that lives in a Latin American country, although it can.
I think ethnicity is tough because there aren't great terms that everyone is comfortable with. In the US some people prefer to be called African Americans others Black. But you wouldn't be able to just say African, as some people from the Caribbean or Cuba may refer to themselves as Black but not African. Also, I know some people that are born and have only lived in the U.S., but their family comes from Nigeria so they consider themselves African, not African America. And that's just in the U.S. I'm not sure what correct terms are used elsewhere.
It's the beauty of the challenge. People can interpret it whichever way makes sense, but I think it's very valid to interpret it as still being a Latino/a/e/x prompt, only limited to those born in Latin America (Central and South America), those living in any North or South American continent, or living around the world.



Well Latin America is Central and South America. So if by an American citizen, you mean a citizen of North, Central or South America I'd say fine.
But if you mean American just the U.S.A., I think that would be a bit limiting, but also acceptable with the way the prompt is worded.
I think the use of "Latin American" could be seen as either an American citizen of Latin heritage, or someone from Latin America (which is traditionally considered Central and South America).
We are probably all overthinking this lol. I'm going to be aiming for a book by an author from Central America, but I think anyone who has heritage from these areas would work, no matter where they are living. (And I believe that was the spirit of the prompt when it was suggested?)
We are probably all overthinking this lol. I'm going to be aiming for a book by an author from Central America, but I think anyone who has heritage from these areas would work, no matter where they are living. (And I believe that was the spirit of the prompt when it was suggested?)

"
Emily, I absolutely agree with how you worded this! I would just add Mexico (which is part of North America) to Central & South America for the "from Latin America" part, and that they can be living anywhere in the world.
It is incredibly challenging to come up with a single inclusive term for a hugely diverse group of people, which is why I'm not always a fan of diversity prompts. I'm glad the Jewish one includes a character, because I don't particularly enjoy trying to find out an author's ethnicity/ancestry or religion. But for the Reading Women Challenge this year, I chose books from around the world and have several to recommend for the API and Latin American lists!

We a..."
The only other option would be to reword it again to "An Author of Latin American descent" or heritage, which clearly opens it up to authors who may live elsewhere in the world outside of LA and the US.


I was thinking that too. I'm not sure if it's a realistic feeling or if it's because we filled up 4 this week and 7 (?) with the multiweeks. We've only had one or two winners every other week so we must be on schedule though. 🤷♀️
We actually only get 50 from the polling, so we are over halfway. It does feel early, but I feel like the list is pretty balanced so I'm ok with where we are heading. If we only end up with 14-16 polls this year instead of 19, I think that will be fine!

More planning time 😁

We a..."
I voted for it thinking it could apply to Americans of Latin or Spanish descent, and most people in South or Central America. It seems fine to me, unless it leaves out Mexicans and Mexican Americans.
I just noticed the Jewish prompt has both author and character. Is that how it was originally? There are a lot of books out there on the holocaust with non-Jewish main characters, written by non-Jewish authors. Some of them are already on our list.
I agree it feels a little faster than last year, but I think we're about on average compared to all the years I've been in the group. Maybe we're just more on the same page this year and more in agreement.
NancyJ, that was the way the Jewish prompt was submitted. The Latin American and AAPI prompts were submitted as author only, but the Jewish one was suggested as author or character. So those books with non-Jewish main characters/authors would technically work as long as one of the side characters are Jewish.


Also, “America” is not the same as the US.


It was submitted that way, I think there was a concern that outing an author as Jewish could be dangerous for the author.
Some authors who write books with Jewish characters, but have not self-identified as Jewish, include Mary Robinette Kowal & Elizabeth Wein.
If a book has neither a Jewish character nor a Jewish author, I don't think it belongs on the list.
The Jewish people are so much MORE than just the Holocaust.
If you like historical fiction, The Red Tent by Anita Diamant is a must read! Diamant has written several other historical novels set in more modern time periods, also.
If you like mysteries, Harlan Coben is culturally Jewish, and of course Faye Kellerman's Decker/Lazarus series would be perfect, and Harry Kemelman's rabbi series.
If you like romances, start with this article: We're Obsessed with These Jewish Romance Novels
If you like SFF, check out Lavie Tidhar
I recently read Last Summer at the Golden Hotel, which features a family of characters who are Jewish, and it was so lighthearted and fun. Highly recommend if you're looking to avoid heavier books.

Latin American is only not people of Latin American descent who live in the US, it's people who live in Mexico, the Caribbean, Central, and South America, who speak languages that are derived from Latin. Now this could also be people who live in the US now who are originally from, or descended from, people who are Latin American, but they could also live anywhere else in the world. Someone from Argentina who now lives in France is still Latin American.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Mathematician's Shiva (other topics)Last Summer at the Golden Hotel (other topics)
Fleishman Is in Trouble (other topics)
The Intimacy Experiment (other topics)
Last Summer at the Golden Hotel (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Stuart Rojstaczer (other topics)Harry Kemelman (other topics)
Faye Kellerman (other topics)
Mary Robinette Kowal (other topics)
Elizabeth Wein (other topics)
More...
Top:
A book by a Latin American author
A book by an Asian or Pacific Islander author
A book with a Jewish character or author
A book set on or near a body of water
Bottom:
A book related to the dystopian film classic "Soylent Green," which is set in 2022
Listopias:
A book by a Latin American author
A book by an Asian or Pacific Islander author
A book with a Jewish character or author
A book set on or near a body of water