The Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge is hosted by Long and Short Reviews. They offer this blog hop as a weekly prompt to help you gain new friends and visitors. You don't have to participate every week, but consistent blogging seems to be the key to success. I can say that when I participate in weekly memes and challenges, I see the most traffic and comments at The Book Connection.
If you decide to post and join the blog hop for a week, Long and Short Reviews asks that you share your link on their weekly post on their website (it will be the top post on the home page each Wednesday morning). The link list remains open for new links for 48 hours. Then visit the other bloggers participating to see what they are talking about that week. Comments are appreciated.
I've known about this weekly blogging challenge for years, but I haven't tackled it yet. I'm never sure how much time I'll have to visit folks, and being supportive of the blogging community is important.
At this point in my life, I'm pretty sure the only places I want to visit are ones that are beautiful, by the water, abundant in nature, and don't have any creatures that can kill me. That means these worlds are totally nowhere near my bucket list.
Post-apocalyptic Chicago is so not a place I would visit. Danger. Nasty people trying to kill you. Way too industrial looking.
This alternate history novel set in 1962 with the United States ownership carved up, a contaminated Washington D.C. thanks to an atomic bomb, and regular assassinations is really not for me.
Scary, creepy, dangerous demons. Need I say more?
This place is named Dark Island. Nothing good is going to happen there. Strange herbal remedies, trails filled with alligators and snakes, and a vampire doesn't exactly say vacation to me.
Let's just face it, a world with an ongoing battle of good versus evil where only some will survive, is not the place for me. A deadly virus, trekking across the country to meet other survivors, reinventing society... what would I do? Too scary for me.
Which part of Panem is good for the average person? Living in poverty? Dying in the games pitted against creatures created by a government who loves to play with you, your emotions, and your family or being pursued by people from other districts whose survival is dependent upon your death? There is nothing appealing about Panem, and even the people working in the government aren't totally safe.
How did you enjoy this trip through the fictional worlds I would rather not visit? Do we share some of the same choice?