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TASK HELP: Fall Challenge 2023 > 20.9 - Moderator's Pet - Terri FL's Task: ChatGPT

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message 1: by SRC Moderator, Moderator (last edited Sep 09, 2023 12:05PM) (new)

SRC Moderator | 7060 comments Mod
20.9 - Moderator's Pet - Terri FL's Task - ChatGPT

I have lately been experimenting with ChatGPT, one of the new AI tools, both for work as well as personal things (it comes up with great book club discussion questions!). For this challenge, I tried to see what ChatGPT would come up with as a prompt. I had a couple weird duds at first that didn’t make sense like Genre Hop Challenge – to read only 100 pages of a book before changing to another genre, etc. After a couple attempts at explaining, I got a few interesting prompts.

No children's books. Your book must be at least 250 pages.

Choose one of the following options.
Required: state the option.

Option A: This was the first challenge that made sense and ChatGPT gave me a helpful follow-up list. Read a book that has won an obscure literary award or was a finalist in a lesser-known book prize. For this option, we will use the prizes provided, The Goldsmiths Prize, Dylan Thomas Prize, Walther Scott Prize for Historical Fiction or Charles Taylor Prize for Literary Non-Fiction. Your book may be either a winner or a nominee.

Below are the GR links:

https://www.goodreads.com/award/show/...
https://www.goodreads.com/award/show/...
https://www.goodreads.com/award/show/...
https://www.goodreads.com/award/show/...

Required: State which of the prizes your book won/was nominated for.

Option B: I live in Florida so am in the middle of hurricane season. I told this to ChatGPT, and this was its prompt – Read a book with cover art that includes any of these weather phenomena, storms, or natural disasters: rain, tidal wave, tornado, snow, or stormy skies (lightning or dark clouds).

Required: Post the cover.

Option C: I then let ChatGPT know that in my town of Sarasota, the fall means Amish/Mennonite pies for Thanksgiving! My resulting prompt was to read a book with a pie on the cover or a book set in a rural or Amish community.

Required: If using the cover option, post the cover.
Required: If using the setting option, if the setting is not obvious from the GR metadata or book description, provide a reference.

Option D: As fun as ChatGPT is, we certainly hope AI is not taking over the world, so for this option, read a book where AI is a key theme. This is a good starting place, but need not be from one of these lists - https://www.goodreads.com/genres/arti...

Required: If the AI theme is not obvious from the GR metadata or book description, provide a reference.


message 3: by Terri FL (last edited Sep 11, 2023 08:11AM) (new)


message 4: by Marie (UK) (last edited Sep 09, 2023 01:33PM) (new)

Marie (UK) (mazza1) | 3940 comments A Bird in Winter by Louise Doughty is there enough snow on the mountains to fit option B

if not would The Vaster Wilds set in the wildrness fit rural or does it have to have more people than this book suggests

A servant girl escapes from a colonial settlement in the wilderness. She carries nothing with her but her wits, a few possessions, and the spark of god that burns hot within her. What she finds in this terra incognita is beyond the limits of her imagination and will bend her belief in everything that her own civilization has taught her.

3rd option again for rural community Canticle Creek
When Jesse starts to ask awkward questions, she uncovers a town full of contradictions and a cast of characters with dark pasts, secrets to hide and even more to lose.

As the temperature soars, and the ground bakes, the wilderness surrounding Canticle Creek becomes a powderkeg waiting to explode.


message 5: by Michelle (last edited Sep 09, 2023 01:09PM) (new)

Michelle (michellesoleil) | 361 comments Hi! For C, "set in a rural community" --

I don't know if you're familiar with Outlander, but in the second half of the series, they settle at Fraser's Ridge, described as such:

"The location, now called Fraser’s Ridge, is routinely described in the books as remote, with no roads. It takes days to get there from the nearest town, on horseback or wagon." (lindamerrill.com)

Would this be acceptable? The book in question is Written in My Own Heart's Blood by Diana Gabaldon.

As a disclaimer, I have not read the book yet and therefore don't know what percentage of the book is in Fraser's Ridge compared to previous books, though I can say the preceding 4 books averaged around 50-80% in backwoods North Carolina. Let me know what you think! Thank you.

(Full link to reference is https://lindamerrill.com/2020/02/23/o...)


message 6: by Brooke (new)

Brooke | 1109 comments Can you approve this for option B: lightning on the cover?
Vampires of El Norte by Isabel Cañas


message 7: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Hickman (lbhick) | 1528 comments Would this work for Opt B?

Malibu Burning (Sharpe & Walker #1) by Lee Goldberg

It shows a fire, which I was considering a natural disaster. The book description says, "Hell comes to Southern California every October. It rides in on searing Santa Ana winds that blast at near hurricane force, igniting voracious wildfires."


message 8: by Meg (new)

Meg (megscl) | 2466 comments I love this task idea!


message 9: by Angela (new)

Angela | 919 comments For Option C, does it need to be an entire pie or could a piece work?
Example: Goodbye Earl by Leesa Cross-Smith


message 10: by Terri FL (new)

Terri FL (territhemuse) | 615 comments Marie (UK) wrote: "A Bird in Winter by Louise Doughty is there enough snow on the mountains to fit option B

if not would The Vaster Wilds set in the wildrness fit rural or does it have to have mor..."


Hi, I'm having a hard time seeing if that is snow on the mountains or mist. If it's snow, then it should work.

For the second option, wilderness alone isn't really a rural community so that wouldn't work, but your third option of Canticle Creek sounds like it should be fine.


message 11: by Terri FL (new)

Terri FL (territhemuse) | 615 comments Michelle wrote: "Hi! For C, "set in a rural community" --

I don't know if you're familiar with Outlander, but in the second half of the series, they settle at Fraser's Ridge, described as such:

"The location, now..."


Hi, I only read the first book in the series, but have watched all but the latest seasons, so familiar enough! Yes, I would say that Fraser's Ridge is a rural community so if the book is set there, that would be fine.


message 12: by Terri FL (new)

Terri FL (territhemuse) | 615 comments Brooke wrote: "Can you approve this for option B: lightning on the cover?
Vampires of El Norte by Isabel Cañas"


That is exactly the book I'm reading for this challenge so a huge approval here!


message 13: by Terri FL (new)

Terri FL (territhemuse) | 615 comments Lisa wrote: "Would this work for Opt B?

Malibu Burning (Sharpe & Walker #1) by Lee Goldberg

It shows a fire, which I was considering a natural disaster. The book description says, "Hell comes to Southern California every Oct..."


While I agree that fire can be a natural disaster, the task is limiting the approved ones to this list - rain, tidal wave, tornado, snow, or stormy skies, so unfortunately that book would not work for this task.


message 14: by Terri FL (new)

Terri FL (territhemuse) | 615 comments Angela wrote: "For Option C, does it need to be an entire pie or could a piece work?
Example: Goodbye Earl by Leesa Cross-Smith"


Hi, we didn't specify a whole pie, so yes a piece of pie should work well!


message 15: by Terri FL (new)

Terri FL (territhemuse) | 615 comments Meg wrote: "I love this task idea!"

Thanks Meg!


message 16: by Kathy KS (new)

Kathy KS | 2382 comments I was thinking option B required actual snow falling, but it appears that a snowy landscape is sufficient. Is that correct? (I found plenty with the landscape, but none on my list with actual falling snow!)


message 17: by Trish (new)

Trish (trishhartuk) | 3675 comments Morning.

Could you confirm that Pray for Silence (and, I think, the Kate Burkholder series in general: https://www.goodreads.com/series/5632...) are good for Amish setting for Option C.

Thanks.


message 18: by Terri FL (new)

Terri FL (territhemuse) | 615 comments Kathy KS wrote: "I was thinking option B required actual snow falling, but it appears that a snowy landscape is sufficient. Is that correct? (I found plenty with the landscape, but none on my list with actual falli..."

Yep, any type of snow works. It doesn't need to actually be falling.


message 19: by Terri FL (new)

Terri FL (territhemuse) | 615 comments Trish wrote: "Morning.

Could you confirm that Pray for Silence (and, I think, the Kate Burkholder series in general: https://www.goodreads.com/series/5632...) are good for Amish se..."


Yes - this is perfect for an Amish setting.


message 20: by Trish (new)

Trish (trishhartuk) | 3675 comments Cheers.


message 21: by Fiona (Titch) (new)

Fiona (Titch) Hunt (titch) Would Paradise Valley (Daughters of Caleb Bender, #1) by Dale Cramer - Dale Cramer be ok for Option C?


message 22: by Terri FL (new)

Terri FL (territhemuse) | 615 comments Fiona (Titch) wrote: "Would Paradise Valley (Daughters of Caleb Bender, #1) by Dale Cramer - Dale Cramer be ok for Option C?"

Yes, this looks to be an Amish setting.


message 23: by Fiona (Titch) (new)

Fiona (Titch) Hunt (titch) Terri FL wrote: "Fiona (Titch) wrote: "Would Paradise Valley (Daughters of Caleb Bender, #1) by Dale Cramer - Dale Cramer be ok for Option C?"

Yes, this looks to be an Amish setting."


Thank you x


message 24: by Kathy KS (new)

Kathy KS | 2382 comments Terri FL wrote: "Kathy KS wrote: "I was thinking option B required actual snow falling, but it appears that a snowy landscape is sufficient. Is that correct? (I found plenty with the landscape, but none on my list ..."

That's great! Lots more possibles.


message 25: by Inge (Inge1990) (new)

Inge (Inge1990) | 408 comments Hi, would this work for option-B snow on the cover?
Het verhaal van mijn gezicht by Kathy Page


message 26: by Terri FL (new)

Terri FL (territhemuse) | 615 comments Inge (Inge1990) wrote: "Hi, would this work for option-B snow on the cover?
Het verhaal van mijn gezicht by Kathy Page"


Yes, I see snow on this cover.


message 27: by Cathy (new)

Cathy Galloway | 1077 comments Would you consider a quiche a kind of pie?
The Quiche of Death (Agatha Raisin, #1) by M.C. Beaton


message 28: by Terri FL (new)

Terri FL (territhemuse) | 615 comments Cathy wrote: "Would you consider a quiche a kind of pie?
The Quiche of Death (Agatha Raisin, #1) by M.C. Beaton"


Yes, according to a few culinary sources, a quiche is a type of pie.

Here is what ChatGPT had to say as well!

Yes, a quiche is considered a type of pie. It is a savory pie originating from French cuisine. Quiches are typically made with a pastry crust and a filling of eggs, cream, cheese, and various other ingredients such as vegetables, meats, or seafood. The key distinction between a quiche and a sweet pie is that quiches have a savory filling, whereas sweet pies have sweet fillings like fruits or custards. So, while a quiche is a specific type of pie, it falls into the category of savory pies rather than sweet ones.


message 29: by Shelby (new)

Shelby (stang_lee) | 927 comments Would Rescue Me work for Option C, rural?


message 30: by Terri FL (new)

Terri FL (territhemuse) | 615 comments Shelby wrote: "Would Rescue Me work for Option C, rural?"

This looks to be set on a ranch rather than an actual rural community (per the task, "rural or Amish community"). Can you provide evidence on how this ranch is part of a community?


message 31: by Shelby (new)

Shelby (stang_lee) | 927 comments Terri FL wrote: "Shelby wrote: "Would Rescue Me work for Option C, rural?"

This looks to be set on a ranch rather than an actual rural community (per the task, "rural or Amish community"). Can you ..."


Without reading it I don't know how much of the town is involved. I was basing the community part of it off the descriptions line..."She finds the answer to her dreams of the future in Kyle Morgan, who’s looking for an investor in his Rocking M Ranch in Dreamwater, Oklahoma." Assuming that there would be involvement with the community of Dreamwater.


message 32: by Kathy KS (last edited Sep 18, 2023 01:34PM) (new)

Kathy KS | 2382 comments Terri FL wrote: "Shelby wrote: "Would Rescue Me work for Option C, rural?"

This looks to be set on a ranch rather than an actual rural community (per the task, "rural or Amish community"). Can you ..."


Just a comment. I didn't read your original task as meaning a rural "town" or Amish community. For those living in "rural" areas a rural community includes more than just the city limits of our towns. It's the "community" all around whose kids go to our schools, attend the churches, etc., so that would include all the farms and ranches.
So a clarification on what exactly that meant would be good, because I might have to re-look at the titles I was considering if we are talking about everything in the city limits of a town. (Many/most Amish seem to live on farms, by the way)


message 33: by Terri FL (new)

Terri FL (territhemuse) | 615 comments Ok, I see your points. I was seeing it as the ranch alone and didn't know how close it might be to others. It doesn't necessarily need to be within a town limits, but should be part of a wider community. I believe many farms are typically near other farms and are part of a community. This would be different from say a book set completely in the wilderness away from any others. As an example, I'm reading The Fox and I: An Uncommon Friendship. While she does drive into a town to teach and get supplies, her home is very isolated and she's not really part of a community. (see point 5 below)

So, if the book is in a setting where the ranch or farm is part of a community with others (even if sparsely) are around, then that would be fine. I grew up in big cities, so apologies if I did not make the connection right away!

Per ChatGPT:
A rural community is generally characterized by a low population density, limited infrastructure, and a focus on natural environments and agricultural activities. Here are some key characteristics that help define a rural community:

1. Low Population Density: Rural areas typically have fewer people per square mile or kilometer compared to urban or suburban areas.

2. Open Spaces and Natural Features: They often feature expansive landscapes, farmland, forests, and other natural elements.

3. Limited Infrastructure: Rural areas may have fewer amenities and services compared to urban areas. For example, there may be fewer hospitals, schools, and public transportation options.

4. Agricultural Emphasis: Farming and agriculture play a significant role in the local economy and culture.

5. Tight-Knit Community: Residents in rural areas often have strong community ties, and there may be a sense of familiarity and mutual support among residents.

6. Limited Access to Urban Amenities: Access to shopping centers, entertainment venues, and other urban amenities may be more restricted or involve longer travel distances.

7. Reliance on Natural Resources: Rural communities may rely on natural resources like water, timber, or minerals for their livelihoods.

8. Traditional Ways of Life: Rural areas may have a slower pace of life, and traditional customs and ways of living may be more prevalent.

As for a ranch, it can be considered part of a rural community. A ranch is a large piece of land, often in a rural or semi-rural area, used primarily for raising livestock or for agricultural purposes. It's a characteristic element of rural communities, as it aligns with the emphasis on agriculture and open spaces.

It's worth noting that rural communities can vary significantly in their characteristics depending on factors such as location, culture, and economic activities. Some rural areas may be more isolated and have limited services, while others may be closer to urban centers and have more amenities available.


message 34: by Emurphy (new)

Emurphy | 851 comments Can this cover be approved for Option B...are there enough dark clouds and rain in the distance? Every Vow You Break by Peter Swanson

Thank you!!


message 35: by Cindie (new)

Cindie | 1836 comments would you say this works for option B:

The Running Grave (Cormoran Strike, #7) by Robert Galbraith ?


message 36: by Apple (new)

Apple | 395 comments For option D, since the 4 of the top 10 books in this list
https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/1...
are part of the Murderbot series, I am thinking the new installment,System Collapse, will be okay?


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