Book Riot's Read Harder Challenge discussion
2025 Read Harder Challenge
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Task 9: Read a book based solely on its setting.
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Some of my current contenders include Bad Girls by Camila Sosa Villada (Cordoba, Argentina), Last Rituals by Yrsa Sigurdardottir (Reykjavik, Iceland), It Would Be Night in Caracas by Karina Sainz Borgo (Caracas, Venezuela), The Impatient by Djaïli Amadou Amal (North Cameroon), Island Witch by Amanda Jayatissa (Sri Lanka), The Golden Hairpin by Ce Ce Qing Han (Xi'an, China), and Last Night in Nuuk by Niviaq Korneliussen (Nuuk, Greenland).

Angels of the Universe
Icelandic Folk Tales
Touch
These are possibilities because they are set in Iceland, a country in a 10-country read around the world challenge I'm doing

Someone in a FB book group I was in (I don't remember which one at this point as it was years ago) shared that they did it, and I adapted my map off of theirs. The layers on the map are sorted by global region, and I use different coloured tabs for each year of marking. I honestly came to kind of regret this method because why would I sort by global region when it's a map and I can see the regions, so I'm actually working at transferring the data to a second map (which is a very time-consuming process, so I'm not nearly done). I've been keeping both maps updated with the new reads as I go until I finish transferring all the information over. The new map has layers based on the year so that I can narrow down the time frame of when I read it visually, but they still are sorted by colour so that when I have multiple visible layers I can still distinguish. There are a limited number of layers that Google Maps lets you use though, so older stuff is a single layer with the colours still present to distinguish. The new one is being set up this way specifically because I like the idea of being able to see if maybe I have previously read a lot or at least some from one region but it's been awhile since I have. It also made areas where a lot of books are set (I'm looking at you NYC and London) a lot less visually cluttered when I'm only looking at one year at a time. If Maps would let me just merge all the layers, I would probably have done that and just logged each new year as a new layer, but there are a lot of limitations.
Places that have multiple settings, I usually just log the most significant or longest lasting setting, but if multiple settings are significant or equally represented then I will sometimes include multiple tabs for it. Some nonfiction ones (like collections of short biographies) have too many settings to include any, but I usually try to include a few based on where people were clustered. Sci fi and fantasy settings that are not our world are not included. Picture books and short stories are included. Poetry is included if it has a strong sense of place, but not if it's more about non-place things. Things that don't have a specific setting but it's implied to be where the author is from are marked as the author's hometown. Things that are set in a fictional town but located in a real area are marked as being a random place in that area. If the place isn't in the book but it's based on a true story, I mark it where the real events took place. If it has a country specific setting but not a specific place in that country, I usually set it to a capital city, the hometown of the author, or in a random spot that is within the region of where it's set. If there's absolutely no indication of setting, I exclude it.
The original map: https://www.google.com/maps/d/edit?mi...
The new, in-progress map: https://www.google.com/maps/d/edit?mi...



OMG THIS SOUNDS AWESOME!

Someone in a FB book group I was in (I don't remember which one at this point as it was years ago) shared that they did it, and I..."
Wow, thanks Elizabeth! These maps are great.


Yesss! Ever since it came out I've been stoked to read it, so I'm glad this challenge is the perfect opportunity. The cover is just BEAUTIFUL. The whole book sounds right up my alley.


If you do double dippers (or if not) I recommend checking out Jeannie Lin's romance novels (which don't have illustrated covers) as most of them are set in Tang dynasty China and very good.
I would also recommend checking out She Is a Haunting by Trang Thanh Tran, which is set in Vietnam and is a ghost/haunted house story that deals with the legacy of colonialism in Vietnam.

If you do double dippers (or if not) I recommend checking out Jeannie Lin's r..."
Thank you so much for these recs!

So am I. I don't get it - do I essentially pick a book based in a place I like the sound of, without reading the blurb or looking at the cover?




Would you mind coming back and telling us (me) how you liked it? I'm doing 2 full-world challenges and I have this one on my list for the Seychelles. Thanks!



I ended up reading The Sun Walks Down. It's set in colonial Southern Australia in the 1800s. The audiobook was terrific!



Some of the previously mentioned books sound great too and I look forward to getting around to those books as well.


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Authors mentioned in this topic
India Holton (other topics)Narine Abgaryan (other topics)
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Task 9: Read a book based solely on its setting.