I searched for blog challenges and came across Shelf Reflection’s book reading prompts. We take a prompt and find a book that fits the prompt. Or the other way around.

I have included my post links in the titles of the books I have read and reviewed here in this blog or elsewhere. As you can see, I still have my TBR pile.

I had been reading authors with surnames and first names from A to Z, in order to write blog posts for April’s A to Z Challenge 2026. You can read about this at the link.

Fan art on Esther Vincent
Fan art on Esther Vincent Xueming.

Shelf Reflection 2026 Reading Challenge:

  1. A book with a city on the cover: Childhood, Youth, Dependency by Tove Ditlevsen
  2. A book with a character who has a pet thatโ€™s not a cat or dog: The Cat by Georges Simenon; Marguerite has a pet parrot.
  3. A book with a serial killer: (If you have a hard time with these kinds of books, read a book with more than one death)
  4. A book by your auto-read-author:
  5. A book you saw recommended on a social media platform: East of Eden by John Steinbeck. (unfinished)
  6. A book with a main character who works a blue collar job: Animal Farm by George Orwell. Mr Jones is a farmer.
  7. A book about resilience: The Wax Child by Olga Ravn. Christenze was resilient unto death and even beyond. She also didn’t give up trying to help Elizabeth, who had betrayed her.
  8. A book with โ€˜firstโ€™ in the title:
  9. A book with โ€˜lastโ€™ in the title:
  10. A book with a medical professional:
  11. Two books by the same author (1): The Book Of Lives by Margaret Atwood
  12. Two books by the same author (2): The Handmaid’s Tale by M Atwood.
  13. A book you had to wait for its release: The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny, by Kiran Desai, released in September 2025.
  14. A book your 12-year-old self would have hated:
  15. A book with a title you would want on your gravestone:
  16. A book with a title you would NOT want on your gravestone:
  17. A book about a historical event thatโ€™s not from WWII: Flashlight by Susan Choi. (unfiniished)
  18. A memoir by a person youโ€™ve seen as a villain:
  19. A book with sacrificial love: Bye Bye Big Kiss by Claire-Louise Bennett (TBR)
  20. A book recommended by an author (thatโ€™s not their own): Anne of Green Gables by L. M. Montgomery, recommended by Margaret Atwood.
  21. A book that takes place in 3+ countries:
  22. A book with a title that would make a good excuse for being late:
  23. A book with a character with a unique nickname: Dune (TBR)
  24. A book with a storm: Wild Dark Shore by Charlotte McConaghy (still reading)
  25. A book without swearing:
  26. A book with a door on the cover: The Shining by Stephen King.
  27. A book authored by a celebrity youโ€™ve seen in a movie:
  28. A book with a cover youโ€™d blow up and hang on your wall:
  29. A book featuring a character pretending to be someone else:
  30. A book that takes place in the Middle East:
  31. A book with food on the cover: Ayam Buah Keluak and the Art of Writing by Josephine Chia.
  32. A book about memory/memories: Non-fiction
  33. A nonfiction book about something that means a lot to you: The Interpretation of Dreams by Sigmund Freud.
  34. A book with a sports term in the title:
  35. A book reviewed on Shelf Reflection:
  36. A book with a workplace romance: On Beauty by Zadie Smith; the affairs of Howard Belsey with his female colleague and his male competitor colleague’s daughter.
  37. A book with a character with a compound name: Transcendent Kingdom by Yaa Gyasi; her mom was nicknamed The Black Mamba.
  38. A book with a clock on the cover:
  39. A locked room mystery:
  40. A book with a character named Jack or Lucy:
  41. A book by an author using three names: Womb Song by Esther Vincent Xueming. (poetry)
  42. A book that takes place on a boat:
  43. A book thatโ€™s less than 150 pages: Ice Palace (TBR)
  44. A book you picked by browsing library shelves: Burning Questions by Margaret Atwood.
  45. A book with a direction in the title:

I hope readers will join me in this reading challenge. If you have any challenge, please leave your post url in a comment below.

Related posts:

This reading challenge by prompts, was written by Shelf Reflection. The post link is there. Thank you to Shelf Reflection for this challenge.


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