1. Utopic / Dystopic fantasy 2. Historic fiction (19th century and older or ancient) 3. Medieval (knights, dragons, castles, set in real or fantasy world) 4. Paranormal romance (romantic plot with paranormal surrounding) 5. High school (characters actively attend high school) 6. Vampires / werewolves (separately or both at the same time) 7. Shapeshifters (shifters, were-animals) 8. Undead (zombies, dead, undead, living dead, necromancers, afterlife) 9. Magic (witches, wizards, warlocks, wiccans) 10. Fairyland (fey, Seelie and Unseelie, pixies) 11. Sci-fi (aliens, space ships) 12. Psychics (premonitions, mind readers, special psychic powers) 13. Time travel (past and future, other worlds) 14. Water creatures (mermaids, sirenes, water sprites) 15. Horror (books which intend to scare) 16. Demons (hero as: demon, demon hunter, shadow hunter) 17. Angeles (flying, fallen) 18. Criminals (thieves, smugglers, deceivers, pirates, mafia) 19. Contemporary nonfiction (no supernatural elements) 20. Miscellaneous (anything extraordinary or unsuitable for other categories, preferably fiction)
(text in brackets is just for your information, you don’t have to copy that in your posts, copy just the bold text along with the row number)
How to start:
• Add yourself as a member of the group • Create a post with your name • Use that post to update your challenge´s progress • Study the "Theme table" so you know which category stands for what • Every time you want to add some book(s) you´ve finished, copy the appropriate row(s) of “Theme table” into new post along with the title of the book and it´s author along with the row number. Mark your additions in bold letters. In brackets you can specify the theme.
Rules:
• To put a book in a certain category, the theme which fits the category must prevail or dominate (Mundungus Fletched indeed stole the locket from Sirius Back, but that´s not a reason to put it under category Criminals - thieves) • Don´t put one book in multiple categories, 1 book = 1 category. What would be the fun otherwise? • You can split one category into subcategories; for example if you want to indicated that you have read separate books both about travelling into past and into future, just duplicate appropriate row (it´s number stays the same) and distinguish the themes in brackets.
Example:
First post: 9. Magic - Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – J.K. Rowling (wizards, witches)
Second post: 9. Magic - Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – J.K. Rowling (wizards, witches) 15. Horror – Carrie – Stephen King
Third post: 9. Magic - Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – J.K. Rowling (wizards, witches) 11. Sci-fi – The Host – Stephenie Meyer (aliens) 15. Horror – Carrie – Stephen King
1. Utopic / Dystopic fantasy
2. Historic fiction (19th century and older or ancient)
3. Medieval (knights, dragons, castles, set in real or fantasy world)
4. Paranormal romance (romantic plot with paranormal surrounding)
5. High school (characters actively attend high school)
6. Vampires / werewolves (separately or both at the same time)
7. Shapeshifters (shifters, were-animals)
8. Undead (zombies, dead, undead, living dead, necromancers, afterlife)
9. Magic (witches, wizards, warlocks, wiccans)
10. Fairyland (fey, Seelie and Unseelie, pixies)
11. Sci-fi (aliens, space ships)
12. Psychics (premonitions, mind readers, special psychic powers)
13. Time travel (past and future, other worlds)
14. Water creatures (mermaids, sirenes, water sprites)
15. Horror (books which intend to scare)
16. Demons (hero as: demon, demon hunter, shadow hunter)
17. Angeles (flying, fallen)
18. Criminals (thieves, smugglers, deceivers, pirates, mafia)
19. Contemporary nonfiction (no supernatural elements)
20. Miscellaneous (anything extraordinary or unsuitable for other categories, preferably fiction)
(text in brackets is just for your information, you don’t have to copy that in your posts, copy just the bold text along with the row number)
How to start:
• Add yourself as a member of the group
• Create a post with your name
• Use that post to update your challenge´s progress
• Study the "Theme table" so you know which category stands for what
• Every time you want to add some book(s) you´ve finished, copy the appropriate row(s) of “Theme table” into new post along with the title of the book and it´s author along with the row number. Mark your additions in bold letters. In brackets you can specify the theme.
Rules:
• To put a book in a certain category, the theme which fits the category must prevail or dominate (Mundungus Fletched indeed stole the locket from Sirius Back, but that´s not a reason to put it under category Criminals - thieves)
• Don´t put one book in multiple categories, 1 book = 1 category. What would be the fun otherwise?
• You can split one category into subcategories; for example if you want to indicated that you have read separate books both about travelling into past and into future, just duplicate appropriate row (it´s number stays the same) and distinguish the themes in brackets.
Example:
First post:
9. Magic - Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – J.K. Rowling (wizards, witches)
Second post:
9. Magic - Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – J.K. Rowling (wizards, witches)
15. Horror – Carrie – Stephen King
Third post:
9. Magic - Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – J.K. Rowling (wizards, witches)
11. Sci-fi – The Host – Stephenie Meyer (aliens)
15. Horror – Carrie – Stephen King
etc...