Join the Year's Definitive Book Event: The 2024 POPSUGAR Reading Challenge Starts Now!
The best time of year has arrived. And no, we're not talking about the holidays — the 2024 POPSUGAR Reading Challenge is here. For a decade now, our annual Reading Challenge has delighted our community of readers across the globe with 50 book prompts, driving loyal fans and new readers alike to discover the magic of the written word.
This year, we have a fun theme you'll see pop up throughout our prompts — in keeping with embracing the magic of words, you'll find subtle references to dictionaries. Maybe you'll learn the proper definition of a literary genre or look up a new word in the process. You'll also see several prompts related to the number 24, given this is our 2024 challenge.
Download our printable list of book prompts here, which allows you to easily check them off as you go. This year, we're also introducing an awesome new element: a tracker that allows you to paste your chosen book covers to each corresponding prompt.
And as you embark on reading, be sure to join the POPSUGAR Book Club on Facebook, a community of POPSUGAR editors and readers from around the world who delight in the challenge each year. You can discuss challenging prompts, swap picks, and more.
Without further ado, keep reading for the 2024 POPSUGAR Reading Challenge prompts and tracker, along with book suggestions courtesy of our editors.
2024 POPSUGAR Reading Challenge Prompts
- A book with the word "leap" in the title
- A bildungsroman
- A book about a 24-year-old
- A book about a writer
- A book about K-pop
- A book about pirates
- A book about women's sports and/or by a woman athlete
- A book by a blind or visually impaired author
- A book by a deaf or hard-of-hearing author
- A book by a self-published author
- A book from a genre you typically avoid
- A book from an animal's POV
- A book originally published under a pen name
- A book recommended by a bookseller
- A book recommended by a librarian
- A book set 24 years before you were born
- A book set in a travel destination on your bucket list
- A book set in space
- A book set in the future
- A book set in the snow
- A book that came out in a year that ends with "24"
- A book that centers on video games
- A book that features dragons
- A book that takes place over the course of 24 hours
- A book that was published 24 years ago
- A book that was turned into a musical
- A book where someone dies in the first chapter
- A book with a main character who's 42 years old
- A book with a neurodivergent main character
- A book with a one-word title you had to look up in a dictionary
- A book with a title that is a complete sentence
- A book with an enemies-to-lovers plot
- A book with an unreliable narrator
- A book with at least three POVs
- A book with magical realism
- A book written by an incarcerated or formerly incarcerated person
- A book written during NaNoWriMo
- A cozy fantasy book
- A fiction book by a trans or nonbinary author
- A horror book by a BIPOC author
- A memoir that explores queerness
- A nonfiction book about Indigenous people
- A second-chance romance
- An autobiography by a woman in rock 'n' roll
- An LGBTQ+ romance novel
Advanced Prompts
- A book in which a character sleeps for more than 24 hours
- A book with 24 letters in the title
- A collection of at least 24 poems
- The 24th book of an author
- A book that starts with the letter "X"
2024 POPSUGAR Reading Challenge Tracker
A book with the word "leap" in the title
Fun fact: 2024 is a leap year. "Sappho's Leap" by Erica Jong ($25), author of bestseller "Fear of Flying," would cross this prompt off the list.
A bildungsroman
In case you need a definition (I know I did), Merriam-Webster defines "bildungsroman" as "a novel about the moral and psychological growth of the main character." "Americanah" by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie ($13) would work nicely here. Centering on a young Nigerian woman named Ifemelu, the story follows her journey to America and the complicated questions about identity and home awaiting her there.
A book about a 24-year-old
Twenty-four is an interesting age. You're old enough to be placed firmly in the "adult" category, but also not very far removed from adolescence and all the chaos that comes with it. Need a starting point? "Hana Khan Carries On" by Uzma Jalaluddin ($11) comes highly recommended from our editors.
A book about a writer
Write about what you know, as they say. For this prompt, read a book about a writer. (Any kind of writer counts!) "Romantic Comedy" by Curtis Sittenfeld ($15) would fit the bill, for example.
A book about K-pop
If you're a fan of K-pop, don't miss "Fireworks" by Alice Lin ($10). It follows a 17-year-old girl named Lulu Li whose neighbor and childhood friend Kite Xu grew up to become a member of the K-pop group Karnival. And for more books for K-pop fans, check out our list.
A book about pirates
I personally don't have any stories about pirates on my TBR pile, but hey, that's what this challenge is all about, right? Join me in uncharted waters, if ye dare, and pick up a book about pirates — perhaps "Fable" by Adrienne Young ($12)? And if you want other suggestions, check out our list of books about pirates.
A book about women's sports and/or by a woman athlete
First, POPSUGAR defines "woman athlete" as anyone who identifies as such. Second, our team is very passionate about giving women athletes the platform and respect they deserve. We are thrilled to dive into a story written by or about a woman athlete for this year's reading challenge. One suggestion of the many wonderful books that would fit this prompt: "Money, Power, Respect" by Macaela MacKenzie ($22).
A book by a blind or visually impaired author
A classic by one of America's preeminent authors, "The Color Purple" by Alice Walker ($12) should be on everyone's reading list. The novel follows sisters Celie and Nettie, who sustain their love for each other other across time, distance, and silence.
A book by a deaf or hard-of-hearing author
"Deaf Utopia" by Nyle DiMarco with Robert Siebert ($11) is an empowering memoir and celebration of deaf culture, culling from the experiences of DiMarco, an actor, model, producer, and reality-show winner.
A book by a self-published author
Many bestselling authors self-published to get their work into the world. But "Milk and Honey" by Rupi Kaur ($8) has found success beyond the physical book; you've likely seen her beautiful poetry on social media.
A book from a genre you typically avoid
Personally? I am not a horror reader. Enter: "The Luminous Dead" by Caitlin Starling ($14), a frightening tale following a caver trying to survive on a foreign planet.
A book from an animal's POV
Perhaps the most famous story told from the perspective of animals, "Animal Farm" by George Orwell ($6) is a scathing satire of totalitarianism.
A book originally published under a pen name
Mary Ann Evans is better known by her pen name, and "Middlemarch" by George Eliot ($11) is her best-known novel. The masterpiece explores a fictional 19th-century English town.
A book recommended by a bookseller
I recently won a surprise bundle of books from a local bookstore and discovered a new favorite: "The Rabbit Hutch" by Tess Gunty ($17). It's a multi-perspective story that follows one very dramatic week in the lives of one building's residents, culminating in an act of violence.
For this prompt, we recommend popping into a local bookstore and investigating current staff favorites. Maybe you'll be introduced to your new favorite read. At the very least, you'll know another book lover in the neighborhood.
A book recommended by a librarian
We're proud of this challenge because, above all, it brings book people together. (Have you joined our POPSUGAR Book Club Facebook group yet?) For the 2024 edition, we're encouraging you to seek out a librarian (local or from afar; in person or online!). Let them surprise you with a recommendation to fulfill this prompt. We can't be certain which shelf your librarian will pull from, but "Beloved" by Toni Morrison ($10) — a fervent supporter of libraries — seems like a good bet.
A book set 24 years before you were born
As a child of the early '90s, "The Outsiders" by S.E. Hinton ($6) works for me. Dial back the clock and find a book published 24 years before your birth year.
A book set in a travel destination on your bucket list
Japan is at the tip-top of my personal travel bucket list. If it's on yours, "Fault Lines" by Emily Itami ($16) works. Where are you dreaming of visiting someday? Travel there via literature for this prompt.
A book set in space
Oftentimes, books set in space reflect more about our own planet than we could ever imagine. "An Unkindness of Ghosts" by Rivers Solomon ($12) follows Aster, who lives in the slums of a space vessel that's organized much like the Antebellum South.
A book set in the future
"How High We Go in the Dark" by Sequoia Nagamatsu ($15) begins in 2030 — when an ancient virus is unleashed in melting permafrost — but it ends up spanning continents, centuries, and celestial bodies.
A book set in the snow
Any Olympics lover should rush to read "Rise" by Lindsey Vonn ($15), an Olympic gold medalist and two-time world champion. The memoir charts Vonn's pursuit of greatness on the slopes and reveals her decades-long depression and struggles with self-confidence.
A book that came out in a year that ends with "24"
"The Magic Mountain" by Thomas Mann ($16) was originally published in 1924. It's a hallmark of German literature, taking place in a tuberculosis sanatorium in the Swiss Alps, which functions as a fictional microcosm of Europe in the days before World War I.
A book that centers on video games
If you're one of the few POPSUGAR Book Club members who hasn't already finished "Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow" by Gabrielle Zevin ($14), now's your chance. Even if you're not a gamer, you'll love this story of friendship, life, and love.
A book that features dragons
2024 is the Year of the Dragon, according to the Chinese calendar. Dive into a fantasy narrative featuring these mythical winged creatures. We suggest "Fourth Wing" by Rebecca Yarros ($17), which takes you into the elite world of a war college for dragon riders. We also have more suggestions for books with dragons here.
A book that takes place over the course of 24 hours
A lot can happen in the course of a day. Such is the case in "The Sun Is Also a Star" by Nicola Yoon ($9), which follows two teenagers in New York City who meet on a fateful day and spend the next several hours together.
A book that was published 24 years ago
I'm still wrapping my brain around this one, but "The Princess Diaries" by Meg Cabot ($7) is already 24 years old. Despite the decades since this book was released, Mia Thermopolis will forever be our favorite unlikely princess.
A book that was turned into a musical
From "Wicked" by Gregory Maguire ($12) to Alison Bechdel's "Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic," many fan-favorite musical productions started out in book form. Get to know the source material of Broadway hits for this prompt — love of musical theater not required.
A book where someone dies in the first chapter
Sometimes a death is required to really get a book going. In "A Court of Thorns and Roses" by Sarah J. Maas ($11), huntress Feyre kills a wolf in the woods, setting off a mystical (and frightening) series of events. And for more fantasy picks, see our list of books like "A Court of Thorns and Roses."
A book with a main character who's 42 years old
In "The Good Part" by Sophie Cousens ($13), 26-year-old Lucy Young makes a wish to be older. When she wakes the next morning as a 42-year-old, she has to figure out: is this what she really wants?
A book with a neurodivergent main character
A seminal novel, "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time" by Mark Haddon ($8) follows Christopher John Francis Boone, a boy with autism who sets out to solve the murder of a neighbor's dog.
A book with a one-word title you had to look up in a dictionary
I'd never heard the word "zazen" before, but it turns out it's a word for seated meditation. Perplexingly, "Zazen" by Vanessa Veselka ($17) isn't a calm, meditative book at all; it takes place in a dystopian America that feels far too familiar.
A book with a title that is a complete sentence
Ah, sometimes a full-sentence book title is just so satisfying. Take "Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine" by Gail Honeyman ($8) as an example. It's a book beloved by Reese Witherspoon and editors alike.
A book with an enemies-to-lovers plot
Enemies-to-lovers plots have been everywhere this year: just think this summer's popular movie "Red, White & Royal Blue," which was adapted from a novel. "Yours Truly" by Abby Jimenez ($12) is also a good fit for this prompt. It follows Dr. Briana Ortiz, who has just been eclipsed for a promotion by Dr. Jacob Maddox.
A book with an unreliable narrator
Although they're unsettling, books with unreliable narrators offer so many intriguing twists and turns. If you haven't yet read the crime thriller "Gone Girl" by Gillian Flynn ($13), now's your chance. The narrative alternates between the perspectives of married couple Nick and Amy. Nick's narration begins when he finds Amy is missing from their home on their fifth wedding anniversary; Amy's narration, meanwhile, comes in the form of her diaries.
A book with at least 3 character POVs
Highly recommended by celebrities and PS editors alike, "Alice Sadie Celine" by Sarah Blakley-Cartwright ($24) follows one woman's affair with her daughter's best friend — and we get insight into each character as we move through a mesmerizing portrait of three women.
A book with magical realism
Merriam-Webster defines magical realism as "a literary genre or style associated especially with Latin America that incorporates fantastic or mythical elements into otherwise realistic fiction." It's a mind-bending, magical genre, and "Gods of Jade and Shadow" by Silvia Moreno-Garcia ($10) is a great example. In it, a young woman opens a wooden box and accidentally frees the spirit of the Mayan god of death.
A book written by an incarcerated or formerly incarcerated person
In her memoir "The Many Lives of Mama Love" by Lara Love Hardin ($27), Hardin takes the reader on her journey of going from soccer mom to opioid addict to convicted felon to ghostwriter.
A book written during NaNoWriMo
If you're a writer, you've likely heard of National Novel Writing Month, which happens each year in November. Thousands of people sign up for the challenge — to write 50,000 words of a novel in 30 days — every year. NaNoWriMo paid off in the form of "Water For Elephants" by Sara Gruen ($11), which tells the tale of workers in a Depression-era circus.
A cozy fantasy book
"Cozy fantasy" has quickly become one of the most popular niches within fantasy, and it's perfect for winter. Might we suggest starting out with "Keeper of the Enchanted Rooms" by Charlie N. Holmberg ($12)? It centers on a magic remote estate in Narragansett Bay, RI, as writer Merritt and the Boston Institute For the Keeping of Enchanted Rooms's Hulda try to tame the house. For more cozy fantasy books, check out our list here.
A fiction book by a trans or nonbinary author
"Manhunt" by Gretchen Felker-Martin ($12) is a gruesome modern take on the postapocalyptic novel, in which a trio must navigate murderous TERFs, feral men, and more. For more books we love by trans and nonbinary authors, check out this list.
A horror book by a BIPOC author
BIPOC authors often nail the horror genre by incorporating the real-life horrors of racism. Such is the case in "Jackal" by Erin E. Adams ($16). After a young Black girl goes missing in the woods outside her white Rust Belt town, another Black woman starts noticing a pattern: that Black girls have been going missing in these woods for years.
A memoir that explores queerness
In "Hijab Butch Blues" by Lamya H ($23), the author recounts her journey as a queer hijabi immigrant. Tracing her coming-of-age story, she makes sense of her struggles and triumphs by comparing her experiences with some of the most famous stories in the Quran.
A nonfiction book about Indigenous people
Indigenous perspectives deserve to be heard in mainstream media. "Braiding Sweetgrass" by Robin Wall Kimmerer ($13) is a beautiful, genre-bending book that traces Kimmerer's life as an Indigenous scientist and woman. In it, she passes down wisdom about how other living beings offer us gifts and lessons.
A second-chance romance
Who doesn't love another shot at love? In "Love and Other Words" by Christina Lauren ($11), childhood sweethearts reconnect by chance after a decade apart. And the romance doesn't end there: you can check out more second-chance romance books here.
An autobiography by a woman in rock 'n' roll
The memoir "Just Kids" by Patti Smith ($12), who was at the center of rock 'n' roll in the late '60s and '70s, paints a picture of that pivotal time and recounts the love story between her and photographer Robert Mapplethorpe.
An LGBTQ+ romance novel
Who doesn't love a good romantic comedy? In "Iris Kelly Doesn't Date" by Ashley Herring Blake ($16), Iris is convinced she doesn't want dating, love, or romance. But then she goes to a bar in Portland and happens to meet Stefania — and despite a terrible one-night stand, everything changes.
Advanced: A book in which a character sleeps for more than 24 hours
If a book featuring a mostly asleep protagonist doesn't sound like a page-turner, "My Year of Rest and Relaxation" by Ottessa Moshfegh ($9) will surprise you. According to IndieWire, a film adaptation of this bestseller is in the works.
Advanced: A book with 24 letters in the title
This romance might have exactly 24 letters in its title, but it promises a lot of steamy scenes, too. "Things We Hide From the Light" by Lucy Score ($12) follows Nash, a police chief recovering from being shot, and Lina, his new next-door neighbor.
Advanced: A collection of at least 24 poems
In 2022, Ada Limón became the first Latina Poet Laureate of the United States, and if you haven't read her poetry yet, it's high time. Thankfully, "The Carrying" by Ada Limón ($16) has far more than just 24 of her poems to peruse.
Advanced: The 24th book written by an author
"Layla" by Colleen Hoover ($9) might not be her most popular title, but it's the prolific author's 24th published novel. See all of Hoover's books in order to see what else she's written.
Advanced: A book with a title that starts with the letter "X"
You guessed it, "X" is the 24th letter in the alphabet, so it goes along perfectly with our 2024 theme. Why not try "Xingu" by Edith Wharton ($16)? First published in 1916, it's a collection of short stories that are as relevant as ever.