While visiting my colleagues at the Orange Park Campus Library, I noticed that Kendall (OPC Librarian) has a fun scratch-off reading challenge hanging in her office. Since I'm always looking for fun ways to discover new books and read outside of my comfort zone, I immediately hopped online and put a version of the reading challenge poster on my Amazon wish list. 

I was very pleased when my four sweet nephews presented me with the poster as a birthday gift for my birthday in July. I'm not one to shy away from a challenge, so I was immediately motivated to hang the poster in my office so I could start scratching away!

Imagine my surprise when, immediately after hanging up said poster, I spiraled into a (minor) existential crisis. My conundrum, you ask. Do I scratch off prior reads or re-read them to meet the challenge? Is this obviously me overthinking something that should be a fun activity? Yes, of course! But it was something that I had to work out for myself to proceed with my reading fun!

Ultimately, it came down to the recency of the read and my remembrance of the book. Many of the books listed in this challenge are what you'd consider "classics." Some of which I have read, but it was long ago. Could I pass a basic knowledge quiz on this book's plot and characters? No, I think I need to re-read. Did I read this book in high school? Yes, and that was too long ago and warrants a re-read. 

There were a few books that were outliers. I've read them within the last decade, but I can only remember that I did not enjoy them. They received low ratings on Goodreads from me. I knew immediately that I would not recommend them; the only memory I could scrounge was that I didn't like them. If you want more details, I'm sorry- this book has been purged from my mind. So, what did I decide to do with these few troublemakers? I scratched their squares, and I am moving on with my life. If there’s one thing I know to be true, there will be more “classics” on this list that I’ll read and (probably) hate. No need to dwell on the past. 

Some of the books that I've already scratched: 

Animal Farm by George Orwell

The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

Brave New World by Aldous Huxley

Charlotte’s Web by E. B. White

The Souls of Black Folk by W. E. B. Du Bois

Books from the challenge on my short TBR list: 

Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell

Silent Spring by Rachel Carson

The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton

The Tropic of Cancer by Henry Miller

The Heart is a Lonely Hunter by Carson McCullers

 

Interested in the challenge? Here is a link to my poster!