Ultimate Popsugar Reading Challenge discussion
2020 Challenge - Regular
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26 - A book with a pun in the title

A Red Herring Without Mustard is up next.

Also written by a WOC, so Book 1 (Check, Please! Book 1: # Hockey) could count under that category. AND it also has over 4 stars on Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ, AND it won an Ignatz in 2019.


A Red Herring Without Mustard is up next."
I was thinking the same thing ;)


A Red Herring Without Mustard is up next."
These are best enjoyed on audio as the writing fluctuates throughout the series if you count audiobooks for this. :)
I am not sure if every title works as a pun, but this one you have listed absolutely does. I am in the middle of the last one.

It's not precisely what I think of as a pun, but then neither are some of the books I've found on "punny titles" lists. Maybe I just don't "get" them? If switching out a word in a common phrase counts as a pun (Books Can Be Deceiving), then adding a word to a common phrase to transform its meaning would too?

I am considering this one too.

That's at least 3 people who agree (us, plus a friend who is not doing the challenge, but is a connoisseur of puns). I'm going to use it too.


Since you all agree, I think I'll use this one too. It's been on my list!


(After looking at the cozy mysteries list, there are a ton more cat books I want to read.)
For those who read comics, all the Squirrel Girl collections usually have a name that is a pun on squirrel/girl. I highly recommend the series!
The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, Vol. 1: Squirrel Power
The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, Vol. 2: Squirrel You Know It's True
The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, Vol. 3: Squirrel, You Really Got Me Now
The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, Vol. 4: I Kissed a Squirrel and I Liked It

I think I'm going to read this one as well, as it's already on my TBR.


Yes, it does and they are funny. Well, I laughed the most at the first one I read which I think was The Crepes of Wrath, but am not sure (it wasn't book 1). After a few books I was too used to the humour but I'm thinking about reading one of the later ones in the series for this because the jokes will be fresher for me again.


License to Quill
Does anyone think any of the following would count?
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Seek
A Study in Scarlet Women
The Spaceship Next Door



Downton Tabby
Raiders of the Lost Bark
The Girl with the Dachshund Tattoo
Desperate Housedogs

I feel like that makes a lot of sense! I've always thought of it in that way and I also need a good reason to actually read it.

I feel like that makes a lot of ..."
I agree with both of you.

License to Quill
Does anyone think any of the following would count?"
That is a brilliant choice!
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Seek - Not in my opinion. Dr. Jekyll and Miss Terhide - that would be a pun.
A Study in Scarlet Women - It sounds more like a Before and After (such as Ugly Betty Boop) on Wheel of Fortune.
The Spaceship Next Door - I don't think so. If you wanted a pun on The Boy Next Door, you could have The Goy or Koi or Poi Next Door.
But that's JMHO. Maybe other people will think differently.

OMG, I just got that, after seeing that title for years.

So then does Let Sleeping Rogues Lie work also? I really struggle with puns, it seems like they are supposed to be funny but sometimes are just a play on words? A lot of the examples seem to be just switching out a rhyming word, so I guess this one is dog - rogue...

I do have Unconventional on my TBR, it's set at a con, so the pun would be along the lines of "some might say people who attend conventions, are unconventional, haha". Think bad dad joke level!


Dachshund through the Snow, Deck the Hounds, Outfoxed, etc.!

No idea what I'll read but when scrolling through my library's recent acquisitions list I came across this beauty: A Case of Syrah, Syrah. Don't know if that is what I'll read but I thought was was particularly groan worthy and totally is on the list of possibles!


Thank you for reminding me about this book!! It's been on my TBR for years.


Why is tennis such a noisy sport? Because every player is always raising a racket. (Racket means noise, and it's also something tennis players play with.)
Why were the Dark Ages called the Dark Ages? Because there were so many knights. (Knights sounds like nights.)
In the movie "Animal Crackers," Groucho Marx's character discussed having shot an elephant while on safari. He said, "Then we tried to get the tusks out, but they were embedded too tightly. Of course, in Alabama, the Tuscaloosa." Tuscaloosa is in Alabama, and it sounds very much like "tusks are looser."
In your case, I have no idea which word in the title Love with a Chance of Drowning is supposed to sound like or very much like another word so as to be funny. Now, if there were a book called Tennis with Love or Tennis without Love, those titles would be puns, because love means love, and it's also a tennis term (meaning zero).

Great idea!! I'm currently reading Beard with Me, I'll wait until closer to the end of December to start Beard Necessities.

I'm also going to read some of these for this category! I'm not a big romance reader, but they sound fun (and I have a weakness for men with beards!)
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