3.0

What I Enjoyed:
1. Space to describe the who, what, where, & when as you tackle 300 bucket list ideas, as well as a section to explain whether you would do each activity again. I really liked the reflection aspect of each activity - rather than simply checking something off a list you can record the experience.
2. 100 blank entries to add your own, personal bucket list items.
3. The bucket list ideas encompass a wide range of interests (for example, #19 Start a New Business, #30 Attend a Protest, #86 Write and Publish an eBook, #206 Solve a Rubik’s Cube)

Things I Didn’t Enjoy so Much:
1. The bucket list ideas range from the general (#44 Change My Hairstyle, #237 Make a Bucket List) to the oddly specific (#24 Get a Part Time Job as Santa One December, #242 Cash in a Winning Lottery Ticket or Scratch Off) & several ideas overlapped (#19 Start a New Business and #280 Write a Business Plan for a Company I’ve Been Thinking About, as one example)
2. As a word of caution for those intending to give this book as a gift, I don’t think this is geared towards the intended audience of kids or younger teens, especially since many of the bucket list suggestions require you to be over 21 (drinking games, casino gambling, etc., although casino gambling age can vary by state).
3. I also don’t believe this book would be good for sharpening writing skills, other than guiding the reader to share their thoughts about each experience in a few short sentences.