The 52 Book Club: 2025 Challenge discussion
2025 Challenge
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48 -- Related To The Word "Puzzle"



Another option is more Agatha…..Poirot does like to remind us to use our brain cells to puzzle out the solution




I will be reading:

The House Across the Lake by Riley Sager
HAPPY READING!!




Zachtop lachen by Malou Holshuijsen





https://titlesurfingwithtraci.blogspo...
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Is Earth Exceptional?: The Quest for Cosmic Life

She Doesn't Have a Clue
I've read She Doesn't Have a Clue and it was really cute. I also have The Puzzle Box on my TBR.



This was on my TBR list - I read over the weekend with another book. (I enjoyed the other book a lot more)
27/52

I read it not knowing it would fit the challenge.

pg. 91...Then it came to her. All the pieces to the puzzle came flying together. And the answer was right there.






Books mentioned in this topic
Mapping the Interior (other topics)We Used to Live Here (other topics)
What the River Knows (other topics)
The Crossword Century: 100 Years of Witty Wordplay, Ingenious Puzzles, and Linguistic Mischief (other topics)
The Playful Brain: The Surprising Science of How Puzzles Improve Your Mind (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Marcus Kliewer (other topics)Isabel Ibañez (other topics)
Alan Connor (other topics)
Amanda Lohry (other topics)
Adrienne Raphel (other topics)
More...
Every year, The 52 Book Club votes on a select few prompts for the following year’s challenge. Prompts 48-51 on this year’s challenge were chosen by you!
For this prompt, we gave 52 Book Club members ten different words to vote on. (Everything from “opulence” to “intergalactic” to ” wanderlust.”) The two words that received the most votes were then put into a random draw on YouTube live and we picked one winner — “Related to the word ‘puzzle.'”
Any book related to the word puzzle will fit this prompt. A puzzle may be a game, toy, or problem designed to test ingenuity (for example: a crossword puzzle, logic puzzle, etc) or it may also relate to the state of being puzzled or in a situation that is difficult to understand. (Ex: “That situation was a puzzle to us all!”)
Examples of ways a book might relate to the word puzzle:
* The puzzle may appear as part of the cover design (Ex: a puzzle piece on the cover)
* The word “puzzle” or the name of a specific type of puzzle may be a part of the title, subtitle, or series title (Example: The Crossword Murder or The Puzzle Box.)
* Character related: A character who loves to solve puzzles, a character who expresses feeling “puzzled,” a character named Puzzle (The Last Battle), a detective, etc.
* Plot related: Almost any mystery novel could be considered a puzzle and fit this prompt.
* There may or may not be actual puzzles within the book for readers to solve.
Click here for our Goodreads List of suggestions