31 Days – 31 Books (day 3)

Day3 – Your favourite Book

Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator by Roald Dahl. Considering the number of series books that I read, I could also give you favs from the series. In Doctor Who books, The Left-handed Hummingbird by Kate Orman. In Terry Pratchett’s Discworld series, Wyrd Sisters (with Night Watch being my favorite of the City Watch stories and Interesting Times being my favorite Rincewind story). It’s a lot harder to pick a favorite in J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series, but I think I’ll go with the first book, Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone. Every time I read it, I get so excited about Harry’s new world.

So I’m pretty OK about finding a favorite book, but trying to get me to rank much beyond that, I’m not so good at. I love an awful lot of books!

The rest of the 31 days:

Day1 – Book you are reading right now
Day2 – The book you want to read next
Day4 – Book you hate
Day5 – A Book you can read again and again
Day6 – A book you can only read once (no matter you love or hate it)
Day7 – Book that reminds you of someone
Day8 – Book that reminds you on a certain place
Day9 – The first book you ever read
Day10 – Book from your favourite author
Day11 – Book you once loved and now hate
Day12 – Book that a friend recommended
Day13 – Book that makes you laugh
Day14 – Book from your childhood
Day15 – 4. book from the left on your shelf
Day16 – 9. book from the right on your shelf
Day17 – Close your eyes and get any book from your shelf
Day18 – Book with the most beautiful cover
Day19 – Book, that you ever wanted to read
Day20 – Book that you read at school
Day21 – most stupid book you read at school
Day22 – Book on your shelf with the most pages
Day23 – Book on your shelf with the least pages
Day24 – Book where nobody would expect you read/loved it
Day25 – A book where the main character is almost like you
Day26 – Book you would read to your children
Day27 – A book where the main character is your idol
Day28 – Thanks God this book was made into a movie
Day29 – Darn, why did they make this book into a movie?
Day30 – First erotic book you ever read
Day31 – Book series you are collecting

31 Days – 31 Books (day 2)

Day2 – The book you want to read next

Well, I’d love to be able to finish reading SacreΓ© Bleu, but I’m #5 on the waiting list. I’ve got The Devil in the White City waiting beside my reading chair, so intend to crack it open soon. I definitely want to reread The Hobbit before December’s movie comes out. (And maybe read The Simarillion before then too.) And after that, there are many, many other books I wish to read. πŸ™‚

The rest of the 31 days:

Day1 – Book you are reading right now
Day3 – Your favourite Book
Day4 – Book you hate
Day5 – A Book you can read again and again
Day6 – A book you can only read once (no matter you love or hate it)
Day7 – Book that reminds you on someone
Day8 – Book that reminds you on a certain place
Day9 – The first book you ever read
Day10 – Book from your favourite author
Day11 – Book you once loved and now hate
Day12 – Book that a friend recommended
Day13 – Book that makes you laugh
Day14 – Book from your childhood
Day15 – 4. book from the left on your shelf
Day16 – 9. book from the right on your shelf
Day17 – Close your eyes and get any book from your shelf
Day18 – Book with the most beautiful cover
Day19 – Book, that you ever wanted to read
Day20 – Book that you read at school
Day21 – most stupid book you read at school
Day22 – Book on your shelf with the most pages
Day23 – Book on your shelf with the least pages
Day24 – Book where nobody would expect you read/loved it
Day25 – A book where the main character is almost like you
Day26 – Book you would read to your children
Day27 – A book where the main character is your idol
Day28 – Thanks God this book was made into a movie
Day29 – Darn, why did they make this book into a movie?
Day30 – First erotic book you ever read
Day31 – Book series you are collecting

So, Summer, decided to come here early like Spring did, eh?

31 Days – 31 Books

alryssa posted this meme in her LJ today, and I thought “oooh books, I like writing about books!” So I’m going to see if I can use this to get myself writing more regularly in my LJ. Here’s hoping!

Day 1 – Book you are reading right now

I never have just 1 book going at a time. I’m currently reading (almost done with) Londoners by Craig Taylor, just started DVD Extras Include: Murder by Nev Fountain (book 2 of his Mervyn Stone mysteries – glad it’s finally out as eBooks), and on my phone, vol 1 of The Arabian Nights. Oh, and I’m 13 chapters into Christopher Moore’s latest book, SacrΓ© Bleu, but I didn’t get it done before my alloted time, so I’m back in the queue from the digital library.

The rest of the 31 days:

Day2 – The book you want to read next
Day3 – Your favourite Book
Day4 – Book you hate
Day5 – A Book you can read again and again
Day6 – A book you can only read once (no matter you love or hate it)
Day7 – Book that reminds you on someone
Day8 – Book that reminds you on a certain place
Day9 – The first book you ever read
Day10 – Book from your favourite author
Day11 – Book you once loved and now hate
Day12 – Book that a friend recommended
Day13 – Book that makes you laugh
Day14 – Book from your childhood
Day15 – 4. book from the left on your shelf
Day16 – 9. book from the right on your shelf
Day17 – Close your eyes and get any book from your shelf
Day18 – Book with the most beautiful cover
Day19 – Book, that you ever wanted to read
Day20 – Book that you read at school
Day21 – most stupid book you read at school
Day22 – Book on your shelf with the most pages
Day23 – Book on your shelf with the least pages
Day24 – Book where nobody would expect you read/loved it
Day25 – A book where the main character is almost like you
Day26 – Book you would read to your children
Day27 – A book where the main character is your idol
Day28 – Thanks God this book was made into a movie
Day29 – Darn, why did they make this book into a movie?
Day30 – First erotic book you ever read
Day31 – Book series you are collecting

One down, 30 to go!

First Walk in the Woods for 2012

The weather of late has been VERY lovely. Warm, breezy, beautiful. Little rain. So today, I took my first walk at Brukner Nature Center. It was a 50 minute walk, up and down hills, under trees that haven’t quite started blooming and beside wildflowers that have.

I was going to walk the Swamp Boardwalk, only on the hill up toward it (it goes up, then back down to the swamp), I saw that the boardwalk had sunk halfway along the path. So I took an alternate path that had a steep climb (for me) and got around to one of the main paths. It was very pleasant.

Along with the spring flowers that I saw on my walk, I’ve just finished reading The Secret Garden for the first time. πŸ™‚

The 2011 Book Review

Hey, I had Christmas almost 2 weeks late – can’t I be late with my 2011 Book Review? Heh.

2011 was one of my worst years on record for reading books. I’ve been keeping track of my books read since 2001, and from 2006 on, I’ve managed to read over 50 books in a year. 2008 was my highest with 65. This year, I only finished 51. World of Warcrack was mostly to blame, because in April & May, I only finished 1 book and instead was heavily into the game. I can also blame A Song of Ice and Fire for being such long books…

This was the year I finally purchased an eBook reader. Though I’ve been reading books on my phone for awhile (since 2008), I decided to buy a BeBook Neo reader. And the reason I bought it was a bit, um, unusual. Many of my friends were excited about The Game of Thrones coming to HBO and so I decided to try reading the series. The waitlist from my library was long, but the eBook wait wasn’t as big. So I decided I’d finally break down & buy an ereader. (redstarrobot‘s reviews helped me decide what I wanted.)

The Neo went on sale at just the right time, so I ordered it, put in the request for the 4-book set from my library (they didn’t have individual eBooks, alas). And after the BeBook arrived, I was in love. I loaded it full of free eBooks and bought a couple of eBooks and checked out books from the library. There’s just something nifty about sitting at home in your comfy chair and ordering a book from the library – and reading it minutes later!

I managed to get the first two books read before the time ran out, so I got myself on the waiting list again, only to be too impatient and buy the 4-book set online. Heh. A Dance with Dragons, OTOH, I’ve only eborrowed from the library. (When it’s cheaper, I’ll get it.)

Thanks to recommendations from gregmce, I bought a few eBooks from a small press publisher, Small Beer Press. And discovered the Armitage family (down, judiang!) in The Serial Garden by Joan Aiken. I found her stories about this somewhat magical family delightful. Many were funny, some were quite sad, all were entertaining. I also bought a couple of eBooks from A Book Apart, which focuses on short books about web development. Here’s hoping I can support more small book publishers in 2012.

This was the year when Ben Aaronovitch got his first two non-Doctor Who books published (Midnight Riot/Rivers of London and Moon over Soho), and I enjoyed them. Looking forward to book 3 (and beyond). There were some new Pratchett books this year and some new books by my favorite webcomic artists. I even finally read the Albert Campion novels I never got around to reading. (Just have the ones by Allingham’s husband to read. And probably rereading the short story collections in case I missed any of those.)

So, although it wasn’t my best reading year by far, I’d say it was a success. Many more hits than misses, which is always a good thing. Discovered a few new (to me) authors which I’ll revisit in the future. And this year is already off to a good start with 4 books read already (though two were VERY short books). Arriving tomorrow should be 2 new children’s books (well, they’re 40+ years old, but new to me) along with CDs of Sylvester McCoy reading them. Plus I received quite a few books for Christmas. So the future is bright when it comes to books!

It’s the simple things…

Today was quite a lovely day. Firstly, there was the perfect weather. Secondly, I got to do some training in chemistry (yes, that’s lovely). Thirdly, I got to sit outside and read in peaceful surroundings.

Yesterday, I drove to Bloomington, IN, and checked into the Biddle Hotel inside of the Indiana University Memorial Union. Then I drove around looking for food and went to the Scholar’s Inn Bakehouse. I had a Reuben and a caramel Italian soda. The Reuben was OK and the soda tasty. I picked up a chocolate cupcake to eat back at the hotel.

The hotel is interesting. It looks like a hotel in the lobby and rooms, but when you get into the stairwell, it’s very much a dorm stairwell. Look, smell, and sound. Heh.

This morning, I went to the Maple room and picked up my bag with my packet, a copy of the college text that IU uses, and their lab manual. I had a blueberry bagel vit schmear. The admissions people talked with us first, then our chemistry coordinator walked us though the Chem 105 (and Chem 101) topics. I figured out that there’s quite a few topics I’ll need to brush up on.

We all walked over to Nick’s (an IU institution, apparently) for lunch. I had the fish & chips. Pretty nice. Once we returned, she covered the rest of Chem 105 and they realized that they could finish up tomorrow, so I should be able to go home early.

After the workshop ended, I wound up walking around the shops and restaurants near campus. I had decided on Thai food for supper, and there were a few Thai places to pick from. I eventually went to Siam House. The Crab Angel appetizer was interesting and tasty and the pad Thai was merely adequate. It had a nice spice to it. πŸ™‚

I was stuffed after supper, so I returned to the hotel room and read my BeBook. And then decided why read indoors when there was such a lovely campus to read at. So my BeBook and I took a walk to People’s Park (I think is what it’s called) and sat under the trees and read. (Sadly, IU recently had lots of wind damage from a storm at the end of May and lost over 300 trees.) Near 8pm, I walked over to Hartzell’s for ice cream. They had dark chocolate and sweet basil ice cream, which was an interesting and tasty flavor. So I had it and some mint Oreo (made with creme de menthe) ice cream. And I sat & read my BeBook. A nice moment of bliss which was slightly spoiled with a bum who cadged $2 from me. πŸ™‚

Anyhoo, now I’m talking to elsaf and judiang via Skype. So the bliss continues. πŸ™‚

Dicks Update

Since I last posted about my quandary on which Detective TV series to watch, I’ve managed to watch ’em all.

I started by freebasing on seasons 7 and 8 of Monk. It was great to finally get some closure on the whole Trudy (Monk’s deceased wife) mystery. They did a great job on tying up any loose ends by the last episode. It will be fun revisiting the series again one of these days.

Turns out the batch of Columbo stories had two of my favorites and another ep I’ve always regarded highly. My favorite story will be in the final batch (I just love “Columbo: Undercover”), but this batch had the delightful (and sad) story written by Peter Falk: “It’s All in the Game”. This one had Faye Dunaway and Claudia Christian as the conspirators, with Dunaway making a play for Columbo and Columbo seeming to play the game. Only the second time where he lets someone off (Christian, not Dunaway). The other episode from the batch that’s a favorite is “No Time to Die” which is remarkable for not actually having a murder in it. Instead, Columbo and his nephew have to race to clock to find out who kidnapped his nephew’s brand new bride.

I’d also mentioned that I’ve been rereading my Campion novels. So now that I’m done with watching those other mystery series, I’m revisiting the Peter Davison series now. Watching Mystery Mile right now and I’m quite impressed with the translation from the novel to the TV version. (Currently rereading Police at the Funeral and I remember that story very well.)

Oh, and Moon over Soho, the sequel to Midnight Riot (both by Ben Aaronovitch) is now out in the US, so I’ve been reading that each night. Enjoying it much as I did the first book.

Reading Overview for 2010

Since 2001, I’ve been keeping track of books which I have read (but not reread – that would be too much work!) For 2010, I wound up reading 61 books, which is lower than I had hoped I would (64 is the most since I started this record-keeping) but still on the upper level of yearly scores.

One of the things that probably took a bit away from my reading was that I was rereading the entire Vorkosigan saga by Lois McMaster Bujold in anticipation of Cryoburn coming out. It was my first time rereading and I almost got the books in the right order (messed one up – whoops!) I enjoyed the reread as much as the initial read, and then capped it all off with Cryoburn, which continued the excellence.

This year had me discovering two wonderful trilogies: the Millennium Trilogy (by Stieg Larsson) and the Hunger Games Trilogy (by Suzanne Collins). Lisbet and Katniss are both women who kick ass (and are on fire, heh) and it was fun getting to read about their adventures.

The year started with me reading the books for my Masters thesis, so I guess I can blame the thesis for not getting more than 61 books read. Heh. But despite the required reading and writing, I got a few classics read, including Treasure Island (Robert Louis Stevenson) and The Time Machine (HG Wells). I didn’t get any new Dickens read, but I intend to rectify that this year.

Other notables were the discovery of Poppie Z Brite’s foodie books, Liquor and Prime. I bought the rest which I’ll probably get read this year. Thanks to gregmce for recommending her and for recommending The City and the City by China Mieville.

Chemistry got a good showing this year in popular nonfiction. The Poisoner’s Handbook (Deborah Blum) was excellent and both dad and I finished it while we were visiting my sister this summer. I got about half of The Disappearing Spoon (Sam Kean) read before I had to return the book to the library. But both of those books will be going into my collection when they become paperbacks.

I’ve noticed that many of the books that I read this year came recommended by friends IRL and virtual – thank you for your recs and keep ’em coming! I’m now using the library again (thanks to my Masters program and being able to order books online) and can expand past the books in my own library. Still, I have far too many unread books in my library which I hope to fix (and not by selling ’em!)

(Already for 2011, I have two books read. Plus there’s a partially read one from 2010 that I should finish up. Didn’t get too many books for Christmas, but that’s OK. I have lots to read as it is!)

Book Meme 2010

1. Which book has been on your shelves the longest?

Hmmm, I have several books from my childhood still in my collection, such as The Real Mother Goose, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, and others. I know for a fact that the oldest Charlie that I have still in my collection is not the original. That one fell apart. As did its replacement. Heh. (Indeed, the oldest Charlie is falling apart. I’ve got a few more versions of it, including a nice hardback edition with the original illustrations.)

2. What is your current read, your last read and the book you’ll read next?

Currently reading Treasure Island on my phone and rereading The Hogfather in my bedroom. I just finished Dyes by Ruth Kassinger, one of the books I’m reading for my thesis project. I really liked it and want a copy, but it’s only been released as a Library hardback. Bummer. I’ll pick another one of my thesis books once I finish evaluating Dyes, I’ll start on the next Discworld book when Hogfather is done (been rereading the Discworld books for awhile) and also pick another eBook (probably a classic, cuz they’re free) to read on the phone if I ever finish Treasure Island. (Good book, just haven’t found the time to finish it.)

3. What book did everyone like and you hated?

Hmmm, trying to recall a book that I hate. Probably one of the Eighth Doctor Adventures. I rarely found any of those to like.

4. Which book do you keep telling yourself you’ll read, but you probably won’t?

Good question. Probably the various & sundry cookbooks in my collection. I have every intention of reading them, someday…

5. Which book are you saving for “retirement?”

My cookbooks? Heh. The Frugal Gourmet isn’t going to read itself, you know!

6. Last page: read it first or wait till the end?

Read the last page first? What kind of silly talk is that?

7. Acknowledgments: waste of ink and paper or interesting aside?

I usually read ’em.

8. Which book character would you switch places with?

None of ’em, really, though I must admit to being jealous of Harry Potter while reading Philosopher’s Stone. It was so exciting all the new stuff he was encountering. Made me feel like a giddy kid again.

9. Do you have a book that reminds you of something specific in your life (a person, a place, a time)?

Oh yeah, quite a few. Dancing the Code (a Past Doctor Adventure) makes me think of B-WISER camp. Transit (of the New Adventures of Doctor Who) makes me think of laying in bed at my college dorm staying up too late reading it. The Tripods trilogy (John Christopher) reminds me of reading in bed under the covers. Rereading the Narnia books in my old green rocking comfy chair in my old bedroom. Places often imprint themselves on the books I read.

10. Name a book you acquired in some interesting way.

Well, I managed to read Roald Dahl’s The Gremlins originally thanks to a friend who copied it (from a book in his library) for me. I now have the reprint they eventually reprinted. πŸ™‚ I still have the copy too. (He laminated the pages and everything – what a wonderful friend!)

11. Have you ever given away a book for a special reason to a special person?

Oh, I’ve done that before a few times. After reading The House at Awful End (which was wonderfully silly and is even better when read by Sylvester McCoy) I bought several copies for some relatives. Gave one of Amy’s then-girlfriends a copy of Wyrd Sisters since she was asking for books which we enjoyed.

12. Which book has been with you to the most places?

Hmmmm, dunno. I used to carry books around with me in my purse, but now I read eBooks on my phone while away. I’d have to look in journals I’d written to see what I was reading when I was abroad. I have quite a few Discworld books which I purchased in Australia and then brought home. That’s a fur piece to be traveling…

13. Any “required reading” you hated in high school that wasn’t so bad ten years later?

Never hated Dickens, but just didn’t appreciate him like I do now. Haven’t reread A Scarlet Letter, but I’m pretty sure I’ll think it as dire now as I did then. Hawthorne just didn’t have a sense of humor. (Dickens, OTOH, did.)

14. What is the strangest item you’ve ever found in a book?

Dried flower in an A encyclopedia. I likely put it there. (It was the only book I had from that particular encyclopedia set. Free sample, with the hopes that we’d buy the rest. We didn’t.)

15. Used or brand new?

I much prefer new. Used are OK in a pinch.

16. Stephen King: Literary genius or opiate of the masses?

Never read any King.

17. Have you ever seen a movie you liked better than the book?

Holes – saw the movie, then read the book. Preferred the movie, though I enjoyed the book. Also, The Colour of Magic was a great improvement over the two books it covered (The Colour of Magic and The Light Fantastic). Still read Rincewind as Eric Idle, however. (Though David Jason does an excellent Rincewind in the movie, I think.) Oddly enough, I read Cut Me Own Throat Dibbler as Eric as well…

18. Conversely, which book should NEVER have been introduced to celluloid?

Fantastic Mr Fox. Heh – not really. (Need to see it again to see if I like it or not.) Can’t think of any at the moment.

19. Have you ever read a book that’s made you hungry, cookbooks being excluded from this question?

Oh yeah. The Murder She Wrote series is notorious for making me hungry. Jessica Fletcher (or rather her ghost writer) describes food rather well. πŸ™‚

20. Who is the person whose book advice you’ll always take?

My own. I’ve rarely steered me wrong. Heh.

BTW, my lap is full of cats. I am my UserPic today. πŸ™‚

…and they lived happily ever after.

Without intending to, I apparently got onto a Fairy Tale kick. Early today I finished watching all of the Faerie Tale Theatre stories, ending on “The Dancing Princesses,” one of the many stories I’d not seen the original time around. But more than that, I just finished reading Fitcher’s Brides by Gregory Frost. “The tale of Bluebeard, re-envisioned as a dark fable of faith and truth,” as the cover says.

It was when I’d reached disc 3 of the 4 disc set that I was looking for a new book to read and remembered Fitcher’s Brides. I’d bought the book knowing little about it except that it was used, only $2 (or maybe free with a coupon), and looked unread. It had looked interesting enough at the Bookery Fantasy (which is where I’d seen it) that I got it. Years ago I’d read a book of reimagined fairy tales called Red as Blood by Tanith Lee, which I had liked well enough. So I thought I’d probably enjoy this novel.

Thing is, as I was reading the introduction to the story, I realized I’d never actually read or heard the tale of Bluebeard. And while I was reading the intro, I remembered “Hey, I have a book of Grimm’s Grimmest fairy tales. I should read that too!” So while Fitcher’s Brides was my bedroom book, I read Grimm’s Grimmest in the library. (Only took 3 days for it – it’s a pretty short book.) It had a version of Bluebeard in it – “Fowler’s Fowl” – which, along with the introduction, pretty much educated me in the general Bluebeard lore.

Despite knowing what basically would happen by the end of the story, I found Fitcher’s Brides a good read. Indeed, I think I liked the book even more because I knew, generally, what would happen later. For one thing, it made the grimmer bits a bit less grim. πŸ™‚

As for the remainder of Faerie Tale Theatre – the latter half was a bit easier to swallow than the earlier stuff I’d talked about before. Perhaps because I was less familiar with the stories (I’d seen very few of the third and fourth disc stories), but also because the stories weren’t quite as misogynistic as the earlier ones. (More Andersen, fewer medieval tales.) There were still a few surprises. I guess I had never known the original ending to “The Little Mermaid” before – I found myself teared up at the end of it. (And then read about Hans Christian Andersen’s even more religious version after watching the story.)

I found “Rip Van Winkle” (as directed by Francis Ford Coppola) to be far too stylized for my liking. Actually, it looked too much like a pantomime than anything. (I wonder if it was the inspiration for Duvall’s other children’s series, Tall Tales and Legends. I never cared much for that series – not like Faerie Tale Theatre. Probably because of the lack of Eric Idle and/or Jean Stapleton.) Oh, and in other director coups, they had Tim Burton directing “Aladdin.” (That one wins simply for having Leonard Nimoy as an evil magician and James Earl Jones as the Genie of the Ring and the Genie of the Lamp. Heh.)

Although I’d not seen “The Dancing Princesses” as done by Shelly Duvall & co, I knew the story from another telling of it. I liked how they tackled it and I think it could go up there with Eric Idle’s “Pied Piper” and Jean Stapleton’s “Cinderella” (she was the fairy godmother, if you’re curious) as favorite Faerie Tale Theatre stories (despite Peter Weller’s stupid mustache).

I could probably continue my fairy tale trend – I’ve got an eBook of Hans Christian Andersen’s stories which I might read. I don’t think it has “The Little Mermaid,” however. (It wasn’t in the table of contents, but then again, neither was the first story in the book. Just what one needs – an eBook that’s been coded incorrectly.)

Anyhoo, Lucy’s sleeping on the chair arm beside me. Linus is who knows where (probably in the living room chair). I’m still fighting my cold. (Hey, when I get a cold, I know how to hang on to it!) And tomorrow’s a family reunion. Good times, good times. πŸ™‚