The 52 Book Club: 2025 Challenge discussion

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2025 Challenge > 17 -- Told In Verse

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message 1: by Lindsey (last edited Nov 23, 2024 12:51PM) (new)

Lindsey Rojem (lrojem) | 1882 comments Mod
17. Told in verse

Books told in verse are novel-length stories written using poetry instead of prose (the usual sentence and paragraph form.) Books told in verse can be any genre as long as it is a narrative told through poetry. Authors often choose this format to create a very strong emotional connection with the reader.


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message 2: by Crystal (new)

Crystal (thebookunicorn) | 14 comments Chlorine Sky by mahogany brown


message 3: by Denise (new)

Denise | 554 comments Depending on my mood it’s going to be a YA Ellen Hopkins (she has a couple newer ones I haven’t read) or the difficult Eugene Onegin or Divine Comedy


message 4: by Tania (new)

Tania | 54 comments Denise wrote: "Depending on my mood it’s going to be a YA Ellen Hopkins (she has a couple newer ones I haven’t read) or the difficult Eugene Onegin or Divine Comedy"

I love Ellen Hopkins, I will be looking to see what she's put out since I last read her.


message 6: by Ash (new)

Ash | 52 comments Star Fish by Lisa Fipps


message 7: by Kerie Lynn (new)

Kerie Lynn Jelks (nee McAfee) | 58 comments Long Way Down


message 8: by Aquaria (new)

Aquaria | 286 comments I have so many on my list this year to choose from...

Hm...

I'll put Joy McCullough's Blood Water Paint here.


message 9: by Kimberley (new)

Kimberley (kimberleydoyle) | 1 comments Just devoured Crank by Ellen Hopkins so next for this prompt continues the story in Glass


message 10: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Deere (lisadeere) | 4 comments I highly recommend A Long Way Down


message 12: by Andrew (new)

Andrew Bysterveldt | 21 comments I’ve just reserved The Divine Comedy by Dante from the library. It may arrive before 1 January but I’ll wait to start reading it to New Year’s Day. I am a fan of the classics so this was an easy choice for me.


message 13: by TReads (new)

TReads | 4 comments home is not a country by Safia Elhillo.


message 14: by Thomas (new)

Thomas This one is excellent


message 15: by TReads (new)

TReads | 4 comments I read 'home is not a country' yesterday afternoon, cover to cover. Agree, Thomas- Loved it. I will be reading more of Safia Elhillo in 2025.


message 16: by Lisa Marie (new)

Lisa Marie Kemmerer (readingwithlisamarie) | 283 comments I have these two on my TBR list - will either of them work??

*Doggerel: Poems by Reginald Dwayne Betts
*Three-Martini Afternoons at the Ritz: The Rebellion of Sylvia Plath & Anne Sexton by Gail Crowther

Any help would be greatly appreciated!!

HAPPY READING!!!


message 17: by Laura Z (new)

Laura Z | 46 comments I've chosen Audacity by Melanie Crowder to start on January 1. It's a novel in verse about Clara Lemlich and the fight for labor rights in Manhattan's Lower East Side following the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire.


message 18: by Kelly (new)

Kelly Anderson (mrsandersonreads23) | 3 comments Louder Than Hunger by John Schu is excellent


message 19: by Debi (new)

Debi Raves & Rants | 20 comments I am going to read: Clap When You Land


message 20: by Brother Stephen (new)

Brother Stephen | 168 comments The Iliad by Homer translated in verse by Alexander Pope


message 22: by DeAnn (new)

DeAnn | 7 comments Does poetry count? I am reading Remember Love, a mix of poetry and verse.


message 23: by Anna (new)

Anna Moore (annamo_85) | 116 comments I read Inside Out and Back Again.


message 24: by Jessica (new)

Jessica (jessicaoc81) | 2 comments House Arrest by K.A. Holt is what I decided on. I read Starfish by zlisa Fipps last year and loved it


message 25: by Kate (new)

Kate | 52 comments Why Fathers Cry at Night A Memoir in Love Poems, Letters, Recipes, and Remembrances by Kwame Alexander Why Fathers Cry at Night by Kwame Alexander


message 26: by Syd (new)

Syd | 22 comments I read Odder, by Katherine Applegate for this prompt. It's a YA/kids book, but I enjoyed it and I wouldn't have picked it up if not for this prompt.


message 27: by Debbie (new)

Debbie Phillips (debbie_phillips) | 22 comments Do you guys think a book of the Bible would count? I listen to the Bible every year and just finished Job..,. though I could wait until I finish Psalms or Proverbs. It would be nice to count the Bible for something this year as I didn't count it last year.


message 28: by Anna (new)

Anna (annafrommontana) | 413 comments Debbie wrote: "Do you guys think a book of the Bible would count? I listen to the Bible every year and just finished Job..,. though I could wait until I finish Psalms or Proverbs. It would be nice to count the Bi..."

I think using the bible and specifically Job for this prompt is a great idea.


message 29: by Megan (new)

Megan (booktraveller4life) | 174 comments I read Starfish by Lisa Fipps. 3.5 stars


message 30: by Sarah (new)

Sarah (sarahzack) | 3 comments The Ghosts of Rose Hill by RM Romero. I read this a few years ago and it was wonderful. It definitely fits this prompt.


message 31: by Kara (new)

Kara Owens | 27 comments I read Finding Baba Yaga , I didn’t really enjoy it but maybe I’m not the right audience


message 32: by Kami (new)

Kami Neely | 34 comments I’m reading The Iliad, translated by Emily Wilson.


message 33: by Kelly (new)

Kelly (booklover70) | 105 comments Since I had already read all of Shakespeare (English Major in college), I chose Cyrano de Bergerac by Edmond Rostand. It is so funny and yet tragic too! Loved it!


message 34: by Jessica (new)

Jessica Paglia | 1 comments I’m reading Starfish by Lisa Fipps


message 35: by Kim (new)

Kim Gross | 1 comments Finding Baba Yaga by Jane Yolen is written in verse. The poetry is full of imagery and rich language.


message 36: by Kel (new)

Kel G | 4 comments I read Me (Moth) by Amber McBride. I really liked it, 4*


message 38: by Trace (new)

Trace | 44 comments I read Alone by Megan E. Freeman


message 39: by Nike (new)

Nike | 51 comments I choose to reread a children's story from my childhood, a classic.


message 40: by Kayla (new)

Kayla Woodson | 23 comments I chose The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer


message 41: by Anna (new)

Anna (annafrommontana) | 413 comments I read Brown Girl Dreaming by Jacqueline Woodson. The audio was read by the author and listening made this book better in my opinion.

I was dreading told in verse but I am so glad I read this book.


message 42: by Ana (new)

Ana (tublave) | 23 comments The Complete Poems Of Emily Dickinson 🤍


message 43: by Tamara (new)

Tamara Evans (bamalibrarylady) | 264 comments I read "I Am Water" by Meg Specksgoor

I Am Water (West 44 YA Verse Identifiers) by Meg Specksgoor


message 44: by Sharan (new)

Sharan King | 78 comments Tales of Whimsy, Verses of Woe
Tales of Whimsy, Verses of Woe by Tim DeRoche

book 7/52

A little book I found at the bottom of my TBR very funny


message 45: by Renee (new)

Renee Hoile | 85 comments Read A Slip of a Girl by Patricia Reilly Giff


message 46: by Krista (new)

Krista Dockery  | 52 comments I'm reading Alone


message 48: by Zoë (last edited Apr 09, 2025 02:04PM) (new)

Zoë (escapinginpaper) | 59 comments I read (S)Kin by Ibi Zoboi.


message 49: by Phil (new)

Phil | 99 comments I read Fredy Neptune by Les Murray for this topic (Read April 11th; 4*)


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