• QFTCIMM24 Game 1, Rounds 7-8: eponymous places, foody titles

    From Mark Brader@21:1/5 to All on Sat Feb 17 07:30:54 2024
    These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2024-01-29,
    and should be interpreted accordingly.

    On each question you may give up to two answers, but if you give
    both a right answer and a wrong answer, there is a small penalty.
    Please post all your answers in a single followup to the newsgroup,
    based only on your own knowledge. (In your answer posting, quote
    the questions and place your answer below each one.) I will reveal
    the correct answers in about 3 days.

    All questions were written by members of the Misplaced Modifiers
    and are used here by permission, but have been reformatted and may
    have been retyped and/or edited by me. The posting and tabulation
    of current-events questions is independent of the concurrent posting
    of other rounds. For further information please see my 2023-05-24
    companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian Inquisition
    (QFTCI*)".


    * Game 1, Round 7 - Geography - Places Named After Famous People

    1. Besides Washington, DC, there's only one other capital city in
    the world that's named after an American president. It's located
    in West Africa. Name either the city or that president.

    2. Let's go the other way. What is the only US state capital
    which is named for a foreign statesman? It was done in an
    attempt to attract German capital for railway building.

    3. This beautiful Upper-Midwest US state capital, situated on an
    isthmus separating two lakes, was named in late 1836 after
    the 4th US president, who had died just 5 months earlier.
    He was president during the War of 1812. Name the capital.

    4. The next one is not a state capital, but rather the largest city
    within this US state in the Pacific Northwest. The city is
    named for the chief of the Duwamish and Squamish people, a chief
    who is better remembered for his environmentalist speeches.
    Name the city.

    5. John Montagu, a British earl, lent his hereditary title to a
    group of central Pacific islands (since renamed), as well as
    a suburb of Windsor, Ontario. What was he the Earl of?

    6. Another British statesman and famous military leader lent his
    family name to a downtown street and subway station in Toronto;
    however, he lent his hereditary title to the capital of a nation
    in Australasia. Name that capital.

    7. This city, the second largest in Afghanistan, was named in 330 BC
    after a foreign conqueror. The second-largest city in Egypt is
    also named for this leader, but we want the Afghan city name,
    which is a local variant of the leader's name.

    8. During colonial times, this capital city in Africa was named
    after the king of the colonizing country. In fact, the colony
    was considered his private kingdom. Since independence, the
    capital city has been renamed. It has the largest number of
    French-speakers in the world. Give either the old colonial
    name or the new name.

    9. It was Tsaritsyn until 1925, and then Stalingrad from 1925
    to 1961. Finally, Nikita Kruschev removed that name as part of
    his de-Stalinization process. What is the city's current name,
    referencing the river it lies on?

    10. The longest river in Canada is named for this Scottish
    fur-trading businessman, who in his 1789 journal named it "River
    of Disappointment" because it led to the Arctic instead of the
    hoped-for Pacific Ocean. Name the river.


    * Game 1, Round 8 - Literature - Food for Thought

    Terrible pun aside, food -- and food metaphors -- figures large
    in literature. From Proust's madelines to Joyce's grilled
    mutton kidneys, food can symbolize any number of things. In this
    round, all books mentioned will have food or drink in the title.
    There will be no plays, and no wordplay, so don't expect "Hamlet"
    "The Three Musketeers" to come up.

    1. John Steinbeck's towering work of social commentary is the story
    of the Joad ["Jode"] family, travelling across the Dust Bowl
    in the 1930's. It was hugely successful, winning the Pulitzer
    Prize and National Book Award in 1940 and adapted into an
    Oscar-winning film the same year. What is the title?

    2. The bold and brilliant 11-year-old detective Flavia de Luce
    made her debut in this, Alan Bradley's first novel for adults,
    in 2009. Bradley sold the book and two follow-ups based only
    on a chapter and a synopsis. What is the title of this period
    mystery?

    3. This children's author, one of the world's most famous, described
    food with gusto. From the names of characters like Henry Sugar
    and Veruca Salt to books about giant peaches and chocolate
    factories, there's simply too many food-titled books and
    stories by this British-Norwegian writer to name just one.
    Who is the *author*?

    4. This much beloved British author's best-known series contains
    five novels and is known as "the increasingly inaccurate
    Hitchhiker's trilogy." The one that fits our category is
    book #4 -- "So Long, and Thanks For All the Fish". But who is
    the author?

    5. "The Price of Salt", a lesbian romance published in 1952, was
    written by "Claire Morgan" -- a pseudonym for Patricia
    Highsmith of "The Talented Mr. Ripley" fame and based, loosely,
    on incidents from her own life. It wasn't until 1990 that the
    book was republished under her own name -- and with a new title.
    In 2015, it was adapted into a prestige film starring Cate Blanchett
    and Rooney Mara. The movie's title does not mention food or drink --
    what is it?

    6. Mexican author Laura Esquivel's novel of romance, family,
    tradition, and magical realism was a hit both in her native
    country and internationally in 1989. Each chapter concludes
    with a recipe, carrying the food theme even further. The title
    refers to turbulent, bubbling feelings ready to boil over.
    What is the title (in English)?

    7. This 1987 novel by Fannie Flagg is a classic of folksy Americana,
    but with a same-sex romance among its entwined stories of
    friendship and love. The novel's profile was boosted by the
    phenomenal success of the 1991 film adaptation. Give *either*
    the title of the book or the movie.

    8. British author Jeannette Winterson's 1985 coming-of-age novel
    straddles fiction and memoir. The title, which states that
    there is more than one type of healthy snack, is a metaphor
    for the different choices and different directions children
    can take from their parents. What is the title?

    9. This Hunter S. Thompson novel never achieved the notoriety of
    "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas", possibly because, although it
    was written in the early 1960s, it wasn't published until 1998.
    The manuscript was found among Thompson's papers by none other
    than actor Johnny Depp who produced and starred in the 2011
    film adaptation, to mixed reviews.

    10. This modern children's classic was written in 1978, but it
    really took off when it was loosely adapted into a successful
    animated children's movie in 2009. Its plot centers around
    an eccentric inventor who accidentally creates a machine that
    creates storms not of rain, but of food. What's the title?

    --
    Mark Brader, Toronto | "You don't SIT IN the traffic jam;
    [email protected] | you ARE the traffic jam." -- Werner Icking

    My text in this article is in the public domain.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Erland Sommarskog@21:1/5 to Mark Brader on Sat Feb 17 12:55:21 2024
    Mark Brader ([email protected]) writes:
    * Game 1, Round 7 - Geography - Places Named After Famous People

    1. Besides Washington, DC, there's only one other capital city in
    the world that's named after an American president. It's located
    in West Africa. Name either the city or that president.

    Liberia

    2. Let's go the other way. What is the only US state capital
    which is named for a foreign statesman? It was done in an
    attempt to attract German capital for railway building.

    Bismarck

    4. The next one is not a state capital, but rather the largest city
    within this US state in the Pacific Northwest. The city is
    named for the chief of the Duwamish and Squamish people, a chief
    who is better remembered for his environmentalist speeches.
    Name the city.

    Seattle

    6. Another British statesman and famous military leader lent his
    family name to a downtown street and subway station in Toronto;
    however, he lent his hereditary title to the capital of a nation
    in Australasia. Name that capital.

    Canberra

    7. This city, the second largest in Afghanistan, was named in 330 BC
    after a foreign conqueror. The second-largest city in Egypt is
    also named for this leader, but we want the Afghan city name,
    which is a local variant of the leader's name.

    Kandahar

    8. During colonial times, this capital city in Africa was named
    after the king of the colonizing country. In fact, the colony
    was considered his private kingdom. Since independence, the
    capital city has been renamed. It has the largest number of
    French-speakers in the world. Give either the old colonial
    name or the new name.

    Leopoldville (old), Kinshasa (new)

    9. It was Tsaritsyn until 1925, and then Stalingrad from 1925
    to 1961. Finally, Nikita Kruschev removed that name as part of
    his de-Stalinization process. What is the city's current name,
    referencing the river it lies on?

    Volgograd

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Dan Blum@21:1/5 to Mark Brader on Sat Feb 17 14:58:07 2024
    Mark Brader <[email protected]> wrote:

    * Game 1, Round 7 - Geography - Places Named After Famous People

    1. Besides Washington, DC, there's only one other capital city in
    the world that's named after an American president. It's located
    in West Africa. Name either the city or that president.

    Monrovia

    2. Let's go the other way. What is the only US state capital
    which is named for a foreign statesman? It was done in an
    attempt to attract German capital for railway building.

    Bismarck

    3. This beautiful Upper-Midwest US state capital, situated on an
    isthmus separating two lakes, was named in late 1836 after
    the 4th US president, who had died just 5 months earlier.
    He was president during the War of 1812. Name the capital.

    Madison

    4. The next one is not a state capital, but rather the largest city
    within this US state in the Pacific Northwest. The city is
    named for the chief of the Duwamish and Squamish people, a chief
    who is better remembered for his environmentalist speeches.
    Name the city.

    Seattle

    5. John Montagu, a British earl, lent his hereditary title to a
    group of central Pacific islands (since renamed), as well as
    a suburb of Windsor, Ontario. What was he the Earl of?

    Sandwich

    6. Another British statesman and famous military leader lent his
    family name to a downtown street and subway station in Toronto;
    however, he lent his hereditary title to the capital of a nation
    in Australasia. Name that capital.

    Wellington

    7. This city, the second largest in Afghanistan, was named in 330 BC
    after a foreign conqueror. The second-largest city in Egypt is
    also named for this leader, but we want the Afghan city name,
    which is a local variant of the leader's name.

    Kandahar

    8. During colonial times, this capital city in Africa was named
    after the king of the colonizing country. In fact, the colony
    was considered his private kingdom. Since independence, the
    capital city has been renamed. It has the largest number of
    French-speakers in the world. Give either the old colonial
    name or the new name.

    Brazzaville

    9. It was Tsaritsyn until 1925, and then Stalingrad from 1925
    to 1961. Finally, Nikita Kruschev removed that name as part of
    his de-Stalinization process. What is the city's current name,
    referencing the river it lies on?

    Volgograd

    * Game 1, Round 8 - Literature - Food for Thought

    1. John Steinbeck's towering work of social commentary is the story
    of the Joad ["Jode"] family, travelling across the Dust Bowl
    in the 1930's. It was hugely successful, winning the Pulitzer
    Prize and National Book Award in 1940 and adapted into an
    Oscar-winning film the same year. What is the title?

    The Grapes of Wrath

    3. This children's author, one of the world's most famous, described
    food with gusto. From the names of characters like Henry Sugar
    and Veruca Salt to books about giant peaches and chocolate
    factories, there's simply too many food-titled books and
    stories by this British-Norwegian writer to name just one.
    Who is the *author*?

    Roald Dahl

    4. This much beloved British author's best-known series contains
    five novels and is known as "the increasingly inaccurate
    Hitchhiker's trilogy." The one that fits our category is
    book #4 -- "So Long, and Thanks For All the Fish". But who is
    the author?

    Douglas Adams

    5. "The Price of Salt", a lesbian romance published in 1952, was
    written by "Claire Morgan" -- a pseudonym for Patricia
    Highsmith of "The Talented Mr. Ripley" fame and based, loosely,
    on incidents from her own life. It wasn't until 1990 that the
    book was republished under her own name -- and with a new title.
    In 2015, it was adapted into a prestige film starring Cate Blanchett
    and Rooney Mara. The movie's title does not mention food or drink --
    what is it?

    Carol

    6. Mexican author Laura Esquivel's novel of romance, family,
    tradition, and magical realism was a hit both in her native
    country and internationally in 1989. Each chapter concludes
    with a recipe, carrying the food theme even further. The title
    refers to turbulent, bubbling feelings ready to boil over.
    What is the title (in English)?

    Like Water for Chocolate

    7. This 1987 novel by Fannie Flagg is a classic of folksy Americana,
    but with a same-sex romance among its entwined stories of
    friendship and love. The novel's profile was boosted by the
    phenomenal success of the 1991 film adaptation. Give *either*
    the title of the book or the movie.

    Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistlestop Cafe

    10. This modern children's classic was written in 1978, but it
    really took off when it was loosely adapted into a successful
    animated children's movie in 2009. Its plot centers around
    an eccentric inventor who accidentally creates a machine that
    creates storms not of rain, but of food. What's the title?

    Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs

    --
    _______________________________________________________________________
    Dan Blum [email protected]
    "I wouldn't have believed it myself if I hadn't just made it up."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Dan Tilque@21:1/5 to Mark Brader on Sun Feb 18 00:23:44 2024
    On 2/16/24 23:30, Mark Brader wrote:


    * Game 1, Round 7 - Geography - Places Named After Famous People

    1. Besides Washington, DC, there's only one other capital city in
    the world that's named after an American president. It's located
    in West Africa. Name either the city or that president.

    Monrovia, Liberia


    2. Let's go the other way. What is the only US state capital
    which is named for a foreign statesman? It was done in an
    attempt to attract German capital for railway building.

    Bismarck ND


    3. This beautiful Upper-Midwest US state capital, situated on an
    isthmus separating two lakes, was named in late 1836 after
    the 4th US president, who had died just 5 months earlier.
    He was president during the War of 1812. Name the capital.

    Madison WI


    4. The next one is not a state capital, but rather the largest city
    within this US state in the Pacific Northwest. The city is
    named for the chief of the Duwamish and Squamish people, a chief
    who is better remembered for his environmentalist speeches.
    Name the city.

    Seattle WA


    5. John Montagu, a British earl, lent his hereditary title to a
    group of central Pacific islands (since renamed), as well as
    a suburb of Windsor, Ontario. What was he the Earl of?

    Sandwich


    6. Another British statesman and famous military leader lent his
    family name to a downtown street and subway station in Toronto;
    however, he lent his hereditary title to the capital of a nation
    in Australasia. Name that capital.

    Wellington, New Zealand


    7. This city, the second largest in Afghanistan, was named in 330 BC
    after a foreign conqueror. The second-largest city in Egypt is
    also named for this leader, but we want the Afghan city name,
    which is a local variant of the leader's name.

    8. During colonial times, this capital city in Africa was named
    after the king of the colonizing country. In fact, the colony
    was considered his private kingdom. Since independence, the
    capital city has been renamed. It has the largest number of
    French-speakers in the world. Give either the old colonial
    name or the new name.

    Leopoldville


    9. It was Tsaritsyn until 1925, and then Stalingrad from 1925
    to 1961. Finally, Nikita Kruschev removed that name as part of
    his de-Stalinization process. What is the city's current name,
    referencing the river it lies on?

    Volgograd


    10. The longest river in Canada is named for this Scottish
    fur-trading businessman, who in his 1789 journal named it "River
    of Disappointment" because it led to the Arctic instead of the
    hoped-for Pacific Ocean. Name the river.

    MacKenzie



    * Game 1, Round 8 - Literature - Food for Thought

    Terrible pun aside, food -- and food metaphors -- figures large
    in literature. From Proust's madelines to Joyce's grilled
    mutton kidneys, food can symbolize any number of things. In this
    round, all books mentioned will have food or drink in the title.
    There will be no plays, and no wordplay, so don't expect "Hamlet"
    "The Three Musketeers" to come up.

    1. John Steinbeck's towering work of social commentary is the story
    of the Joad ["Jode"] family, travelling across the Dust Bowl
    in the 1930's. It was hugely successful, winning the Pulitzer
    Prize and National Book Award in 1940 and adapted into an
    Oscar-winning film the same year. What is the title?

    The Grapes of Wrath


    2. The bold and brilliant 11-year-old detective Flavia de Luce
    made her debut in this, Alan Bradley's first novel for adults,
    in 2009. Bradley sold the book and two follow-ups based only
    on a chapter and a synopsis. What is the title of this period
    mystery?

    3. This children's author, one of the world's most famous, described
    food with gusto. From the names of characters like Henry Sugar
    and Veruca Salt to books about giant peaches and chocolate
    factories, there's simply too many food-titled books and
    stories by this British-Norwegian writer to name just one.
    Who is the *author*?

    4. This much beloved British author's best-known series contains
    five novels and is known as "the increasingly inaccurate
    Hitchhiker's trilogy." The one that fits our category is
    book #4 -- "So Long, and Thanks For All the Fish". But who is
    the author?

    Douglas Adams


    5. "The Price of Salt", a lesbian romance published in 1952, was
    written by "Claire Morgan" -- a pseudonym for Patricia
    Highsmith of "The Talented Mr. Ripley" fame and based, loosely,
    on incidents from her own life. It wasn't until 1990 that the
    book was republished under her own name -- and with a new title.
    In 2015, it was adapted into a prestige film starring Cate Blanchett
    and Rooney Mara. The movie's title does not mention food or drink --
    what is it?

    6. Mexican author Laura Esquivel's novel of romance, family,
    tradition, and magical realism was a hit both in her native
    country and internationally in 1989. Each chapter concludes
    with a recipe, carrying the food theme even further. The title
    refers to turbulent, bubbling feelings ready to boil over.
    What is the title (in English)?

    7. This 1987 novel by Fannie Flagg is a classic of folksy Americana,
    but with a same-sex romance among its entwined stories of
    friendship and love. The novel's profile was boosted by the
    phenomenal success of the 1991 film adaptation. Give *either*
    the title of the book or the movie.

    8. British author Jeannette Winterson's 1985 coming-of-age novel
    straddles fiction and memoir. The title, which states that
    there is more than one type of healthy snack, is a metaphor
    for the different choices and different directions children
    can take from their parents. What is the title?

    9. This Hunter S. Thompson novel never achieved the notoriety of
    "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas", possibly because, although it
    was written in the early 1960s, it wasn't published until 1998.
    The manuscript was found among Thompson's papers by none other
    than actor Johnny Depp who produced and starred in the 2011
    film adaptation, to mixed reviews.

    10. This modern children's classic was written in 1978, but it
    really took off when it was loosely adapted into a successful
    animated children's movie in 2009. Its plot centers around
    an eccentric inventor who accidentally creates a machine that
    creates storms not of rain, but of food. What's the title?


    --
    Dan Tilque

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mark Brader@21:1/5 to All on Wed Feb 21 20:11:27 2024
    Mark Brader:
    These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2024-01-29,
    and should be interpreted accordingly... For further information
    please see my 2023-05-24 companion posting on "Questions from the
    Canadian Inquisition (QFTCI*)".


    * Game 1, Round 7 - Geography - Places Named After Famous People

    This was the easiest round in the original game.

    1. Besides Washington, DC, there's only one other capital city in
    the world that's named after an American president. It's located
    in West Africa. Name either the city or that president.

    Monrovia (Liberia), after James Monroe. 4 for Dan Blum, Stephen
    (the hard way), Dan Tilque, and Joshua.

    2. Let's go the other way. What is the only US state capital
    which is named for a foreign statesman? It was done in an
    attempt to attract German capital for railway building.

    Bismarck (North Dakota, after Otto von Bismarck). 4 for everyone --
    Erland, Dan Blum, Stephen, Dan Tilque, and Joshua.

    3. This beautiful Upper-Midwest US state capital, situated on an
    isthmus separating two lakes, was named in late 1836 after
    the 4th US president, who had died just 5 months earlier.
    He was president during the War of 1812. Name the capital.

    Madison (Wisconsin). 4 for Dan Blum, Stephen, Dan Tilque, and Joshua.

    4. The next one is not a state capital, but rather the largest city
    within this US state in the Pacific Northwest. The city is
    named for the chief of the Duwamish and Squamish people, a chief
    who is better remembered for his environmentalist speeches.
    Name the city.

    Seattle (Washington). 4 for everyone.

    5. John Montagu, a British earl, lent his hereditary title to a
    group of central Pacific islands (since renamed), as well as
    a suburb of Windsor, Ontario. What was he the Earl of?

    Sandwich. (The Sandwich Is. are now the Hawaiian Is.) 4 for
    Dan Blum, Stephen, Dan Tilque, and Joshua.

    6. Another British statesman and famous military leader lent his
    family name to a downtown street and subway station in Toronto;
    however, he lent his hereditary title to the capital of a nation
    in Australasia. Name that capital.

    Wellington (New Zealand, after Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of
    Wellington). 4 for Dan Blum, Dan Tilque, and Joshua.

    The *current* Duke of Wellington came up in a Daily Double on
    "Jeopardy!" on 2024-02-09. It was in a category "(blank) of (blank)",
    in the $1,600 slot. The player bet $4,000. They showed the man's
    photo, mentioned that he's in the House of Lords and his name is
    Arthur Charles Valerian Wellesley, and asked what title he's the 9th
    holder of. The player clearly didn't know, but guessed correctly,
    and went on to win the game.

    7. This city, the second largest in Afghanistan, was named in 330 BC
    after a foreign conqueror. The second-largest city in Egypt is
    also named for this leader, but we want the Afghan city name,
    which is a local variant of the leader's name.

    Kandahar (after Alexander the Great, like Alexandria). 4 for Erland,
    Dan Blum, Stephen, and Joshua.

    8. During colonial times, this capital city in Africa was named
    after the king of the colonizing country. In fact, the colony
    was considered his private kingdom. Since independence, the
    capital city has been renamed. It has the largest number of
    French-speakers in the world. Give either the old colonial
    name or the new name.

    L�opoldville (after King L�opold II of Belgium), now Kinshasa
    (Democratic Republic of the Congo). 4 for Erland, Stephen,
    Dan Tilque, and Joshua.

    9. It was Tsaritsyn until 1925, and then Stalingrad from 1925
    to 1961. Finally, Nikita Kruschev removed that name as part of
    his de-Stalinization process. What is the city's current name,
    referencing the river it lies on?

    Volgograd. 4 for everyone.

    10. The longest river in Canada is named for this Scottish
    fur-trading businessman, who in his 1789 journal named it "River
    of Disappointment" because it led to the Arctic instead of the
    hoped-for Pacific Ocean. Name the river.

    Mackenzie R. 4 for Stephen and Dan Tilque.


    * Game 1, Round 8 - Literature - Food for Thought

    Terrible pun aside, food -- and food metaphors -- figures large
    in literature. From Proust's madelines to Joyce's grilled
    mutton kidneys, food can symbolize any number of things. In this
    round, all books mentioned will have food or drink in the title.
    There will be no plays, and no wordplay, so don't expect "Hamlet"
    "The Three Musketeers" to come up.

    1. John Steinbeck's towering work of social commentary is the story
    of the Joad ["Jode"] family, travelling across the Dust Bowl
    in the 1930's. It was hugely successful, winning the Pulitzer
    Prize and National Book Award in 1940 and adapted into an
    Oscar-winning film the same year. What is the title?

    "The Grapes of Wrath". 4 for Dan Blum, Stephen, Dan Tilque,
    and Joshua.

    2. The bold and brilliant 11-year-old detective Flavia de Luce
    made her debut in this, Alan Bradley's first novel for adults,
    in 2009. Bradley sold the book and two follow-ups based only
    on a chapter and a synopsis. What is the title of this period
    mystery?

    "The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie". 4 for Stephen.

    3. This children's author, one of the world's most famous, described
    food with gusto. From the names of characters like Henry Sugar
    and Veruca Salt to books about giant peaches and chocolate
    factories, there's simply too many food-titled books and
    stories by this British-Norwegian writer to name just one.
    Who is the *author*?

    Roald Dahl. 4 for Dan Blum, Stephen, and Joshua.

    4. This much beloved British author's best-known series contains
    five novels and is known as "the increasingly inaccurate
    Hitchhiker's trilogy." The one that fits our category is
    book #4 -- "So Long, and Thanks For All the Fish". But who is
    the author?

    Douglas Adams. 4 for Dan Blum, Stephen, Dan Tilque, and Joshua.

    5. "The Price of Salt", a lesbian romance published in 1952, was
    written by "Claire Morgan" -- a pseudonym for Patricia
    Highsmith of "The Talented Mr. Ripley" fame and based, loosely,
    on incidents from her own life. It wasn't until 1990 that the
    book was republished under her own name -- and with a new title.
    In 2015, it was adapted into a prestige film starring Cate Blanchett
    and Rooney Mara. The movie's title does not mention food or drink --
    what is it?

    "Carol". 4 for Dan Blum, Stephen, and Joshua.

    6. Mexican author Laura Esquivel's novel of romance, family,
    tradition, and magical realism was a hit both in her native
    country and internationally in 1989. Each chapter concludes
    with a recipe, carrying the food theme even further. The title
    refers to turbulent, bubbling feelings ready to boil over.
    What is the title (in English)?

    "Like Water for Chocolate". 4 for Dan Blum, Stephen, and Joshua.

    7. This 1987 novel by Fannie Flagg is a classic of folksy Americana,
    but with a same-sex romance among its entwined stories of
    friendship and love. The novel's profile was boosted by the
    phenomenal success of the 1991 film adaptation. Give *either*
    the title of the book or the movie.

    "Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe", "Fried Green
    Tomatoes". 4 for Dan Blum, Stephen, and Joshua.

    8. British author Jeannette Winterson's 1985 coming-of-age novel
    straddles fiction and memoir. The title, which states that
    there is more than one type of healthy snack, is a metaphor
    for the different choices and different directions children
    can take from their parents. What is the title?

    "Oranges are Not the Only Fruit". 4 for Stephen and Joshua.

    9. This Hunter S. Thompson novel never achieved the notoriety of
    "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas", possibly because, although it
    was written in the early 1960s, it wasn't published until 1998.
    The manuscript was found among Thompson's papers by none other
    than actor Johnny Depp who produced and starred in the 2011
    film adaptation, to mixed reviews.

    "The Rum Diary". 4 for Stephen. 3 for Joshua.

    10. This modern children's classic was written in 1978, but it
    really took off when it was loosely adapted into a successful
    animated children's movie in 2009. Its plot centers around
    an eccentric inventor who accidentally creates a machine that
    creates storms not of rain, but of food. What's the title?

    "Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs". 4 for Dan Blum, Stephen,
    and Joshua.


    Scores, if there are no errors:

    GAME 1 ROUNDS-> 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 BEST
    TOPICS-> Can Spo Ent Aud Sci Geo Lit FIVE
    Joshua Kreitzer 16 9 20 40 10 36 35 147
    Dan Blum 24 4 8 0 4 32 28 96
    Dan Tilque 12 4 4 4 28 36 8 88
    Stephen Perry -- -- -- -- -- 36 40 76
    Erland Sommarskog 4 0 0 8 4 20 0 36

    --
    Mark Brader | "...being permitted to propel a ton of steel through
    Toronto | public places at speeds of up to 33 m/s is not a
    [email protected] | fundamental human right in my book" -- Paul Ciszek

    My text in this article is in the public domain.

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