The County Library discussion
note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
Reading Challenges
>
2024 March Reading Challenge
date
newest »

I'm excited to see what people think of as "green." Maybe someone will read a political book about a politician in the green party? Maybe someone will read a book about Ireland, it is after all the Emerald Isle, maybe someone will read a book that takes place in Greenland.
So many different options!
So many different options!

JoAnn wrote: "Ooooh! I have two very good options: I have a beautiful green penguin clothbound Persuasion, as well as the Owlcrate Exclusive version of The Hazel Wood which has a ..."
Persuasion is my favorite Austen, so... I lean towards that one, but the other one sounds lovely too. decisions.... decisions....
Persuasion is my favorite Austen, so... I lean towards that one, but the other one sounds lovely too. decisions.... decisions....





Carolyn wrote: "Assuming I leave some or all of this for March, I am probably going to use From Badger to Worse for this challenge. A green cover and the author's name. If not that, I'll see what ..."
Ooh, I love the Investigators, I didn't realize they were doing another series. It looks super fun. :D
Ooh, I love the Investigators, I didn't realize they were doing another series. It looks super fun. :D
Brittany wrote: "This month I'm going to re-read one of my favorite Shakespeare plays, The Merchant of Venice. My copy has this green cover:
"
Perfect!

Perfect!
Clancy wrote: "I think I'm going to read Anne of Green Gables. It meets one of my other reading challenges. :)"
I should reread these. I love them, but haven't read them in ages.
I should reread these. I love them, but haven't read them in ages.

I have been buddy reading InvestiGators and the spin off series with one of my nephews. I think I like the original series best of the two.

I also read the new Caldecott Medal winner Big by Vashti Harrison. Through most of it the main character wears a green outfit, which is core to the story. A most thought provoking book.


It was really good for my book settings map.






It's also my first 5 star read from the current Readers' Choice list!


I love Anne of Green Gables. It is one of my favorite books.
Clancy wrote: "Finished Anne of Green Gables. I'm not sure I've ever read it, but it was good."
Clancy, you should keep going. My favorite books are Anne of the Island (Book 3) and Anne's House of Dreams (Book 5) - Well... she wrote it fourth, so sometimes it'll show up as book 4, but Anne of Windy Poplars takes place in between book 3 and 5, so when I was growing up, that one was always labeled as book 4.
Clancy, you should keep going. My favorite books are Anne of the Island (Book 3) and Anne's House of Dreams (Book 5) - Well... she wrote it fourth, so sometimes it'll show up as book 4, but Anne of Windy Poplars takes place in between book 3 and 5, so when I was growing up, that one was always labeled as book 4.
Can you guys believe that it's already March 20th? Only 11 more days to tell me what you read, and how it relates to being green. :D
Now I'm gonna have Kermit's voice stuck in my head all day.
It's not easy being green
Having to spend each day
the color of the leaves
When I think it could be nicer
being red, or yellow, or gold
or something much more colorful
like that
Now I'm gonna have Kermit's voice stuck in my head all day.
It's not easy being green
Having to spend each day
the color of the leaves
When I think it could be nicer
being red, or yellow, or gold
or something much more colorful
like that

And there are clovers on the cover!




Maya’s Laws of Love by Alina Khawaja (green cover)
Honey Witch by Sydney Shields (green witch magic)
Build your house around my body by Violet Kupersmith (green cover)
Carolyn is our prize drawing winner for March’s reading challenge for reading From Badger to Worse by John Patrick Green.
Congratulations!
Congratulations!
This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
Books mentioned in this topic
From Badger to Worse (other topics)The Merchant of Venice (other topics)
We Are the Brennans (other topics)
Garlic and the Witch (other topics)
Emily Wilde’s Map of the Otherlands (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
John Patrick Green (other topics)William Shakespeare (other topics)
Vashti Harrison (other topics)
Elizabeth Kolbert (other topics)
Elizabeth Kolbert (other topics)
More...
In the spirit of Saint Patrick's Day, you need to read a green book. What does this mean? Well, it can have the word green in the title, or Green(e) can be the author's last name. It can have a green cover. It can be about something green, like plants, or the forest, the environment, or money. If it's not super apparent why it's green, please let us know how it relates to green for you. There are some suggestions below, but have fun searching for the type of green book you want to read!
Green in the Title:
Green by Laura Vaccaro Seeger
Simply Color: Green: A Crayon Box for Quilters by Vanessa Christenson
Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery
Green by Jay Lake
Green: The Beginning and the End by Ted Dekker
Go Away, Big Green Monster! by Ed Emberley
Author's last name is Green(e)
Looking for Alaska by John Green
The Unquiet Englishman: A Life of Graham Greene by Richard Greene (this one's got both the title, and author!)
Once Upon a Time I Lived on Mars by Kate Greene
Until the End of Time: Mind, Matter, and Our Search for Meaning in an Evolving Universe by Brian Greene
The Third Man by Graham Greene
Cover is green:
A Is for Alibi by Sue Grafton
The Boy in the Field by Margot Livesey
Fake Accounts by Lauren Oyler
Little Fires Everywhere by Celeste Ng
Tom Clancy Target Acquired by Don Bentley
Plants or Forest:
Observing the Plants of the Forest with Hansel & Gretel by Sabina Konečná
Look What I Found in the Woods by Moira Butterfield
Footsteps in the Forests: Biome Explorers by Laura Perdew
The Overstory by Richard Powers
Comfort & Joy by Kristin Hannah
Green Environment:
Sea of Greed by Clive Cussler
Renewable Energy Made Easy: Free Energy from Solar, Wind, Hydropower, and Other Alternative Energy Sources by David Craddock
Sustainable Energy - without the hot air by David J.C. MacKay
Infographics: Renewable Energy by Alexander Lowe
What on Earth Is Renewable Energy? by What on Earth Is Renewable Energy?
Money or Finance:
Basher Money: How to Save, Spend, and Manage Your Moola! by Jacob Field
Make Your Own Money by Ty Allan Jackson
Not-So-Common Cents: Super Duper Important Facts About Money You Can't Afford to Miss by Sarah Wassner Flynn
Alexander Hamilton on Finance, Credit, and Debt by David Cowen
A First-Class Catastrophe: The Road to Black Monday, the Worst Day in Wall Street History by Diana B. Henriques
How Money Works: The Facts Visually Explained by Beverly Blair Harzog