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[personal profile] skyring
I don't know exactly happened, but somehow Goodreads has sucked me in in a way that similar literary networking sites have not. Visual Bookshelf, for example.

Goodreads is fun. Besides, they list me as an author, based on one self-published travel story - about New Zealand, which, unsurprisingly, I am wholly positive about - and a couple of pamphlets masquerading as NaNoWriMo novels without the really awful bits. Just the awful bits.

But perhaps the most fun is the trivia quiz. In a neat Web 2.0 setup, users are invited to submit trivia questions for "The Neverending Quiz".

Q. Which Shakespearean character is Juliet's paramour?

A. Macbeth
B. Hamlet
C. King Lear
D. Romeo


You write the question, submit multiple answers, indicate which is correct, and the thing goes live. Other users answer (or skip) the question in their bid to get as many questions correct.

It's like a wonderful great trivia night. Best of all, you get to see how your friends fared on the same questions. Jane answered correctly, Frank fluffed it, and Ophelia skipped it.

There's also a heap of statistics for each question, for your individual progress, and for your standing within the Goodreads community. On that last point, I'll just say that a lot of people have a lot of time to read books and answer trivial questions about their contents.

Great fun!

I decided that I'd write a question or six, and I turned to that delightful saga, Tales of the City by Armistead Maupin for material.

The whole point of trivia is that questions should exercise the mind. Not too much - the answer should be something that an attentive reader will know, or that an inattentive reader will suddenly recall on being informed. Or something that a nerd might puzzle out, without having read the book itself.

Something like the Romeo and Juliet question above would be beneath my dignity:

Q. Armistead Maupin's Tales of the City series deals with straight, gay, and transgender relationships in which city?

A. Salt Lake City
B. Horton, MO
C. Springfield
D. San Francisco


But with a bit of thought, one can be fiendish. For example, one of the early scenes in the first book is set in the best supermarket in the world, the Marina Safeway. The motto of the store echoes the reputation of the place as a pickup joint:

A dozen cardboard disks dangled from the ceiling of the Marina Safeway, coaxing the customers with a double-edged message: ‘xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx.’
And friends were being made.
As Mary Ann watched, a blond man in a Stanford sweatshirt sauntered up to a brunette in a denim halter. ‘Uh… excuse me, but could you tell me whether it’s better to use Saffola oil or Wesson oil?’
The girl giggled. ‘For what?’


So I wrote a question based on this well-known motto:

The motto of the Marina Safeway, famous as a place to find a date, is quoted in Armistead Maupin's Tales of the City as:

A. "Ingredients for Life"
B. "Everything You Want from a Store and a Little Bit More"
C. "Safeway: Where You Get a Little Bit More"
D. "Since we're Neighbors, let's be Friends"


The correct answer is, of course, D, which was Safeway's slogan back in the Seventies, when the series began. However, since then, Safeway has used a number of slogans, each of which would be likely to be more familiar to contemporary American quiz-takers, as well as being faintly suggestive of getting spice with your soda.

I've written a few similar questions, each with four plausible answers. You've got to know the book, otherwise you are just guessing, or succumbing to my gentle misdirection. Notice how two of my (wrong) answers above are very similar. The temptation is to assume that the correct answer is one of the two.

The questions may be dressed up, with links to books and authors, book cover illustrations and author pictures. There's even the chance to add some explanation, revealed after an answer is chosen, as to why you got it wrong. It's all good fun.

Here are my questions. So far!

Next week: How to get 100% correct answers. Without cheating!

Date: 2010-07-18 10:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] madame-urushiol.livejournal.com
I've been hacking away at it, and am at 92.6% so far, with no cheating! Of course, I'd be very embarrassed if I missed any of the Shakespeare questions.

Date: 2010-07-18 10:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thebiblioholic.livejournal.com
I signed up on Goodreads a while ago. I had hoped to use it as a way to indicate my current reading, but I found it very cumbersome. Then I found Visual Bookshelf and it was exactly what I wanted and was even linked to Facebook in a simple way (though autopublishing to the news feed no longer works due to recent privacy changes at Facebook).

bookcrossing

Date: 2010-07-19 01:37 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] newkaligula.livejournal.com
Is BC being left behind in all of this?
Having limited time I try to stick to as few sites as possible.
Just curious, although I know you are different and gad about a gazillion sites

regards

Re: bookcrossing

Date: 2010-07-19 01:47 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] skyring.livejournal.com
This is a "what are you reading now?" site. BookCrossing isn't going to be superseded any time soon.

Like Livejournal, flickr etc. it's a place where some of my friends hang out and share stuff.

more

Date: 2010-07-19 01:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] newkaligula.livejournal.com
I guess maybe these other sites allow some more individual musings? And perhaps more privacy?
Are you able to restrict who sees and comments in these places.
Coz I think one of the "issues" with BC has become the forums and the sometimes unruly behaviour.
Once again just asking for my own education, nothing else

Re: more

Date: 2010-07-19 01:48 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] skyring.livejournal.com
I think everything's open. Even "friend" relationships don't hide anything. Apart from private messages, it all seems open to public gaze.

Goodreads

Date: 2010-07-19 02:21 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] judygreeneyes.livejournal.com
I agree with you, Goodreads is an excellent site. I spend a great deal of time on it also, and find it so useful for keeping track of what I have read, what I thought about the book, and what other people thought. I love being able to shelve my books multiple ways and create any shelves I want to create for my own purposes. I enjoy some of the clubs also. I've put in a few trivia questions of my own, and love trying to answer the questions!

Re: Goodreads

Date: 2010-07-19 02:25 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] judygreeneyes.livejournal.com
Also (after reading previous comments) Goodreads suits a different purpose for me than does Bookcrossing. Bookcrossing is this amazing and crazy community of people who leave books for other people, or who want to mail their books to each other. Goodreads is more about tracking what I have read, my book reviews and those of others. I link my Goodreads acccount to my BC profile and to Facebook also. So anytime I see one of my FB friends face-to-face, they ask me how I like the book I'm reading :) On BC the link is an easy way to show what I actually read, vs what I release.

Date: 2010-07-20 01:12 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shendoah.livejournal.com
I knew the Safeway slogan. And I've never read the books. :D

Date: 2010-07-21 07:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cathepsut.livejournal.com
The first Tales of the City was a no-brainer, but the second one I didn't know. It's been so long since I read the books! Easily 20 years... or thereabouts... Perhaps I should read them again.

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