Tuesday, October 19, 2010

MML

I'm thinking of making Elegance of the Hedgehog part of the MML...in the hopes that doing so will make me finish reading it. Thoughts?

The other book I wanted in there is Franny and Zooey (which I'm in the middle of right now).

Friday, September 24, 2010

MML

My second submission to the MML category: The Perks of Being a Wallflower, by Stephen Chbosky. Lots of highly mature themes, but just so amazing. The main character is absolutely wonderful. (It's short, too--Mike read it in one night, and I read it in two days at work.) I hope you love it as much as I do!

Saturday, September 4, 2010

Easily Distracted

I feel like maybe I won't make it to 100...but I will definitely make it over 50 easy. I just keep getting distracted by things like Doctor Who and Veronica Mars and beach trips and getting a job (eeek!).

Also, The Hunger Games was added to my list months ago (recommended by my friend, Rebecca) and I found it on sale at Wal-mart last month so I bought it. Then I noticed everyone getting all excited about Mockingjay and thought, "Huh. Guess I could start reading The Hunger Games now." So I did. Like four days ago. And I just finished Catching Fire. And now I'm waiting (rather impatiently) for Rebecca to bring me Mockingjay so I can finish that and avoid more precious sleep. I didn't expect to get so sucked in, but am thoroughly enjoying the read. I love it when I do get sucked into books and I'm happy I've came across so many this year where that has happened.

The problem with getting sucked in is that the next book I read always seems to fall a little short and then I see something shiny and forget all about reading and it takes a month and a half to read 100 pages. Still, I'm doing better than I thought I would so that's something, right?

Thursday, July 29, 2010

thirty-eight

I slacked off during the month of July because I spent two weeks watching Doctor Who. I don't feel bad about that, but that's the reason all the same.

So, since my last update, I've read the following:

Stardust (Neil Gaiman - great, but loved the movie more)
A Little Bit Wicked (Kristin Chenoweth - LOVED it, especially since it was audio and she was reading it.)
Georgia Nicolson #10 (Funny, as always, loved the ending)
Little Children (meh. not worth it)
Diary of a Wimpy Kid (recommendation actually, funny and quick)
Me Talk Pretty One Day (Good one, again, probably liked it more since it was audio and read by David Sedaris)
Peter and the Shadow Thieves (liked the first one better, but this one is still good.)

That covers June and July. Considering I read 20 books in April and May (man, I was on a roll!) I really did slack off. But whatever. I have a pile of books to finish for August and I'm sure I'll add to it - including Franny and Zooey, which is one of the books I picked for our joint category. Also, maybe The Simeon Solution which might be another choice from me for that category.

Friday, July 23, 2010

Aw, Crap.

I just discovered that what I thought was the last book in a series I'm reading is, in fact, not. There are two more coming out in the next two years, which means that I won't be able to finish the series for my 10/10/10 challenge. Boo. 

Progress! ...Sort Of.

books I own but haven't read
1984--George Orwell


[Main Street--Sinclair Lewis]
[The Three Musketeers--Alexander Dumas]
[Villette--Charlotte Bronte]
[Jude the Obscure or The Return of the Native--Thomas Hardy]
[Billy Budd, Sailor--Herman Melville]
[The Bonesetter's Daughter--Amy Tan]
[Jane Eyre--Charlotte Bronte]


recommended by others
Abarat--Clive Barker (Joseph)
Running with the Demon--Terry Brooks (Mike)
The Alchemyst--Michael Scott (Nathalie)
Wicked--Gregory Maguire (Talia)

[Same Kind of Different as Me--Ron Hall and Denver Moore] (Lori)
[Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close--Jonathan Safran Foer] (Megan)
[A Thousand Splendid Suns--Khaled Hosseini] (Meredith)
[Mistborn--Brandon Sanderson] (Mike)
[The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake--Aimee Bender] (Lori)


adult fiction
The Gathering Storm--Robert Jordan/Brandon Sanderson
The Lacuna--Barbara Kingsolver
Prodigal Summer--Barbara Kingsolver
City of Dragons--Kelli Stanley
Shanghai Girls--Lisa See


[Bel Canto--Ann Patchett]
[The Elegance of the Hedgehog--Muriel Barbery]

books adapted to movies 
(this category is allowed to overlap other categories)
[V for Vendetta--Alan Moore]
[Jane Eyre--Charlotte Bronte]

foreign
Say You're One of Them--Uwem Akpan
Pandora in the Congo--Albert Sanchez Pinol


[Rooftops of Tehran--Mahbod Seraji]
[Absurdistan--Gary Shteyngart]
[Mendelssohn is on the Roof--Jiri Weil]



authors I've never read
The Road--Cormac McCarthy
The Handmaid's Tale--Margaret Atwood
Mrs. Dalloway--Virginia Woolf


[The Naked and the Dead--Norman Mailer]
[The Catcher in the Rye--J.D. Salinger]
[After Dark--Haruki Murakami

award-winners
March--Geraldine Brooks
The Good Earth--Pearl S. Buck
The Bridge of San Luis Rey--Thornton Wilder


[Interpreter of Maladies--Jhumpa Lahiri]
[The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay--Michael Chabon]

Megan/Lindsey/Miri
The Enchantress of Florence--Salman Rushdie
The Book Borrower--Alice Mattison (Miri)
The Perks of Being a Wallflower--Stephen Chbosky (Miri)


[Franny and Zooey--J.D. Salinger] (Lindsey)

nonfiction
Animal, Vegetable, Miracle--Barbara Kingsolver
NurtureShock: New Thinking About Children--Po Bronson and Ashley Merryman
Dreams from My Father--Barack Obama

Going Rogue--Sarah Palin
Fast Food Nation--Eric Schlosser 
Female Chauvinist Pigs: Women and the Rise of Ranch Culture--Ariel Levy
The Omnivore's Dilemma--Michael Pollan


[Lies My Teacher Told Me--James W. Loewen]
[Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions--Gloria Steinem]

miscellaneous
Mockingjay--Suzanne Collins
Inferior--Peadar O Guilin




As you can see, I still have quite a ways to go. I've been getting a teensy bit carried away with "extras"... as in, I've read 70 books so far this year and only 22 of them were for the challenge. Yeah... It's time to buckle down. 


I'm in the middle of three books right now, one that will finish up the Michael Scott series, one Nonfiction, and one for the Recommended section. Once I finish one of these three I'll be picking up The Road, and then I think I'll get started on the Books as Movies category with The Mists of Avalon... which is, of course, really long. Hoo boy.


Okay, also, one more thing. Any more thoughts about the MML category? So far I've picked one... That leaves three for Lindsey and Megan to choose, and two for me. Plus we have to actually read them. :) Let's find some good ones to pick!

Saturday, June 5, 2010

Three More

I finished The Mysterious Benedict Society, The Lovely Bones and The Actor and The Housewife. Go me!

The point of this post, though, is mostly to talk about The Lovely Bones. I held out reading it because I knew it was about the rape and murder of a teenage girl and I felt like I had to read it at the right time. Considering my stress levels this week, I don't know what possessed me to read it now, but I did and I loved it. It's a new top ten favorite. I love the characters and the story and the writing and everything. It could have gone to weird places, but it didn't really. There were a few overly supernatural parts, but I actually liked having them there because it tied up loose ends I desperately wanted to be tied up and thought would be left undone. It was heartbreaking and beautiful and even though I've been reading a lot of emotionally heavy books lately (The Book Thief, The Wednesday Letters, even The Glass Castle and, surprisingly, The Actor and The Housewife), this one just seemed to speak to me more than the others. I love the Salmon family and how broken they are. I guess the best word for it is that it's honest. It's a terrible story to tell, but everyone reacts the way real people do.

The strangest part about the book, though, was definitely the fact that the two sisters are named Susie and Lindsey, both names that belong to me. Haha. It just took a little bit more work to look past.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Keep on Keeping on

So, I'm pretty sure Miri is so far ahead of me, but that's okay. I read 28 books in Jan-Apr! I'm pretty impressed with myself actually. haha.

So, to add to my list, here's what I've read since my last update:

All You Need to Be Impossibly French
Percy Jackson 1-5
Dead and Gone (A Sookie Stackhouse novel. Don't judge. haha)
The Book Thief
The Wednesday Letters
Nine Stories
Jane Eyre
The Glass Castle
The Outsiders

So I bawled during The Book Thief and The Wednesday Letters - probably didn't help that I read them together. J.D. Salinger's short stories were kind of heavy, but that was expected. Jane Eyre was actually not terrible. I listened to it mostly driving to and from Indiana and I was very happy with the ending. When I started it, I had a hard time getting Wuthering Heights out of my head. I kept expecting the worst, but then was pleasantly surprised when things would turn out okay. The Glass Castle was also kind of heavy, but a great book and The Outsiders made me cry as well. I didn't bawl like with Book Thief and Wed. Letters, but it had it's moments.

So I don't know what to read next. Probably The Elegance of the Hedgehog, maybe A Lion Among Men (3rd in the Wicked series). I may have to look around and try to find something a little more light hearted.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

You Couldn’t Ignore Me if You Tried

I just finished reading You Couldn't Ignore Me if You Tried: The Brat Pack, John Hughes and Their Impact on a Generation. I read it because Pioneer Woman read it and because I love all of those movies.

I loved getting some of the background info about the movies and the actors and about John Hughes. There were a lot of interesting little pieces of information that I was fine not knowing, but love that I know it now. It talked about the music of the movies (which I love just as much) and the impact of the name "The Brat Pack" on the careers of the actors who were unlucky enough to have it hoisted upon them.

Anyway, I really liked it and now I have to go make a John Hughes inspired iTunes playlist and maybe also have a movie marathon.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Miri's Update

Finished so far:

nonfiction
Going Rogue--Sarah Palin
Animal, Vegetable, Miracle--Barbara Kingsolver
NurtureShock: New Thinking About Children--Po Bronson and Ashley Merryman
Dreams from My Father--Barack Obama

recommended
Running with the Demon--Terry Brooks
The Alchemyst--Michael Scott
Abarat--Clive Barker

foreign
Say You're One of Them--Uwem Akpan

award-winners
March-- Geraldine Brooks

adult fiction
Prodigal Summer--Barbara Kingsolver
The Lacuna--Barbara Kingsolver
The Gathering Storm--Robert Jordan

MML
The Enchantress of Florence--Salman Rushdie
The Book Borrower--Alice Mattison

series
The Chronicles of Narnia--C.S. Lewis

self-improvement
Forced to be Family--Cheryl Dellasega

15 from my 1o/10/10 challenge, plus 15 extras (17 with the two that I'm reading now)

Some of them have taken a long time (AVM, Sarah Palin) but hopefully I'll be able to pick up the pace a bit now. I'm starting to question that self-improvement category, by the way... It's a good one and I probably should make myself do it, but I'm envisioning a November/December cram to fit them all in because I neglected them the whole year because they're boring... So we'll see. :)

Sunday, March 28, 2010

On a roll...

I finished six more books! Go me! It helps that four of them are technically children's books, but they were all at least 200 pages so that's got to count for something. They were:

Duty and Desire
These Three Remain
Coraline
The Book of Three
The Black Cauldron
The Castle of Llyr

The first two went with An Assembly Such as This to finish up the Fitzwilliam Darcy novels. They were actually pretty good. Duty and Desire was my least favorite since it's mostly made up, new stuff filling in the time when Darcy isn't around in Pride and Prejudice. It's not terrible, I enjoyed it, just not my favorite of the three books.

Coraline is a great little book that scared the dickens out of me even though I have already seen the movie and knew the whole story. Something about the way Neil Gaiman writes just gets to you. I had freaky dreams while reading this book, and my dreams are rarely effected by things I read or watch. I loved the book, though. Coraline is a great character and I want to name something after her. A child or a puppy or a kitten or something. And now I am going to watch the movie again so I can get the full effect. We'll see if the creepy dreams come back.

The Book of Three, The Black Cauldron and The Castle of Llyr (all by Lloyd Alexander) were all good, I enjoyed them each for different reasons. I am looking forward to watching The Black Cauldron even though I hear it's crap. I've never seen it, and I want to see how they butcher a good book. That has always interested me. haha. I really love the characters in the books. They are simple and sweet and heroic and brave for all kinds of different reasons. All three books are quick and easy to read, they capture your attention and hold on to it, and they each offer a great little adventure that could stand individually.

And now I'm up to 15 or 16 books, I think. Still so far behind, but doing much better than I thought I would be. I'm about to start on Percy Jackson and the Lightning Thieves, then I'm on to a biography about the Brat Pack that I'm reading because The Pioneer Woman read it and because I love the Brat Pack.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

As of today...

Okay. Here's a list of what I have finished as of today.

The Enchantress of Florence
Through the Wardrobe
The Magician's Nephew
The Silver Chair
Forest Born
Stop in the Name of Pants
Are You There, Vodka? It's Me, Chelsea
Julie and Julia
An Assembly Such As This
Inkheart
Ender's Game

That's 11 books in January and February.

I'm half way through Duty and Desire (book two in the Fitzwilliam Darcy novels) and I've started several others (Coraline, The Actor and the Housewife, The Book Thief and The Outsiders). I'm pretty happy with my pace, but hoping to get the ones I've started already finished this month.

Inkheart was great, although I don't know if I could have read the whole thing for this challenge. I'm glad I found it on audio.

I LOVED Ender's Game. I shouldn't be surprised by this since I'm pretty sure I know a lot of people who at least really liked it. It was another audio book, but I think that enhanced it a lot for me. I found myself sitting in my car after arriving to where ever I was going and listening. I loved the narrator's voice for Ender and I loved that they used several different narrators for which ever character's point of view was being read. I got a little frustrated toward the end, but still loved the book.

Monday, March 1, 2010

Sunday, February 28, 2010

Supsense and Sensibility

So... I'm not really a fan of the classic literature fanfic stuff--Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, Mr. Darcy Takes a Wife, The Secret Diaries of Charlotte Bronte--that kind of thing. It doesn't appeal to me.

However, I was at the Allen library and on a shelf across from me, I saw this, and it made me laugh:
Apparently it's the sequel to Pride and Prescience, and since they were both there on the shelf, I grabbed them. I'm sure they'll be ridiculous, but I can't help wanting to check them out. I don't know if I'm going to include them in a 10/10 category or if they'll just be extra, but either way I wanted to share. :)

Monday, February 22, 2010

March

Finished March, by Geraldine Brooks, in my Award-Winners category (it won the Pultizer in 2006). In other news, I think this book was given to me by Sam and Jennie for my birthday one year while we still lived at Glenwood.
But I digress. It was a pretty intense book, and I would have liked it a lot if the protagonist hadn't been the father from Little Women. I had very mixed feelings about him and ended up not liking him all that much, which was a little sad because of how I love Little Women. But judging it independently, it's an amazing, heartbreaking book; one of those horrible war books that just makes you wonder how anyone can ever live through such a thing.

Monday, February 15, 2010

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies

 So in idea form, this book is hilarious. It's even funny for the first 100 pages or so. But then I got stuck - for 5 months.
The problem is that the zombie parts just aren't written that well and aren't incorporated well either. I know that they made a big deal about it being 85% Jane Austen, but maybe it shouldn't have been. What it mostly did was remind me how good Jane Austen was and how not good this other guy is. While it was funny to have the final confrontation between Elizabeth and Lady Catherine be an actual fight, and while it was funny to have Charlotte's reason for marrying Mr. Collins be that she had been infected by zombies, overall it wasn't well-crafted enough to really pull it off. I've read better spoofs and better serious zombie books. (Serious zombie books - does that work? Either way, World War Z put all of the zombie action in this to shame.)
It was also disappointing because I'd read some really good reviews and knew some people who really liked it. I was sad to come away being so unimpressed. It honestly wasn't any kind of self-righteous indignation about the desecration of Jane Austen either. It was just a big meh for me.
So yeah. A for effort, C for execution.

On the bright side, it wasn't Mr. Darcy, Vampyre, which I saw in the book store the other day and which made me throw up a little in my mouth.

Sunday, February 14, 2010

One Series Down

Yay for finishing books! I finished my first series, the Narnia books (started over and read books The Magician's Nephew through The Horse and His Boy so I could say I'd read them all in 2010), and now I'm in the middle of a Nonfiction, an Adult Fiction, and an Award-Winner. It's taking me longer than it should to read them, but I'm really enjoying them all so it's okay.

And Two More!

I think I'm at three more. I am losing track, which is bad when I'm only at the beginning, right?

I finished Are You There, Vodka? It's Me, Chelsea, #9 in the Georgia Nicholson series (which I loved loved loved) and Julie and Julia. I am just over half through with Inkheart (which is a 15 hour audio book) and half through An Assembly Such As This, which is going in my recommended books category along with the other two books in that trilogy.

I also decided to add the Book of Mormon to my reading. I know it's something I should be reading in addition to this challenge, but I just don't read it as regularly as I should and I want to try to take this time to change that. So I'm adding it to my list, not sure where. haha. Non-fiction?

Friday, February 12, 2010

Two more

I just finished These is My Words by Nancy E. Turner. It was lovely and romantic and sad and funny - and also a very quick read. I recommend it.

I also read The Long Way Home by Joss Whedon, which was, in fact, a Buffy comic book. So . . . yes.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

The Lacuna, by Barbara Kingsolver

Just finished The Lacuna for my Adult Fiction category. It is amazing. If your "recommended" categories aren't filled yet, feel free to add this one on there as a recommendation from me! I think you will love it.

Monday, February 1, 2010

Two!

I finished Julie and Julia for my recommended category. Even though I was sometimes highly annoyed by Julie's whining, I enjoyed it thoroughly. I think one of the things I liked most about it was that at its core, it's about two women who are drowning and find a way to save themselves by finding something worthwhile and difficult to do. Plus, you know, the Buffy stuff. :)

Thanks for the recommendation, Miri!

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Category Update

I'm thinking we should say the end of January is the cutoff for changing categories or else this could go on forever and ever. haha.

I changed my last category to fit miscellaneous books I come across. Maybe that goes against "the rules" but I like being a rebel.

Mostly, as I look for the books I have decided to read or as I read the books on my list, I come across others that look good. Some of them fit into a category and some of them probably won't. Since J.D. Salinger didn't write 10 books, I'm combining the last category. It's basically books I want to read that won't or can't fit in a category. The Narnia books will be in that category since they are books I've read several times before but I just wanted to read some of them again.

Also, J.D. Salinger died. That is sad. I love Franny and Zooey and Catcher in the Rye (Franny and Zooey first) but I didn't read them till I was in the middle of college so maybe that made a difference. I have been wanting to read his other stuff since I finished Franny and Zooey but I just haven't gotten to it. No better time than the present I guess.

I wrote this in a comment, but I'm thinking maybe Franny and Zooey as a MML book? Thoughts? Comments? Concerns?

Miri's Final Categories

I finally figured it out! My tenth and final category is going to be Series(...es). That is how the Narnia books will fit into the challenge; I'm just going to go back and read the first three now, so I can say I did them all in 2010 (I was going to do The Magician's Nephew now anyway since I haven't read that in a while), and then it will be counted. Plus, this fixes the problem in which I was concerned about there not being enough books in the challenge. So, my final categories are:
  • Award-Winners
  • Recommended
  • Adult Fiction
  • Foreign
  • Self-Improvement
  • Authors I've never read
  • Megan/Miri/Lindsey
  • Nonfiction
  • Books I Own/Unfinished Business
  • Series
That said, I would like to mention how much I love The Chronicles of Narnia. I first read The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe in second grade, and while I don't remember my first time reading the other books, I do remember reading the whole series over and over, countless times in my childhood. C.S. Lewis has such a beautiful way of writing, and--I know this is silly but it's a big thing for me--I just love the font in the versions I've been reading, and overall it was just a wonderful pleasure reading them again.

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

A Small Detour...

I may have accidentally interrupted my 10/10/10 reading to reread the Narnia books. I started with Prince Caspian, since I have read the first three books more times than I can count, and the last four not nearly so many; I am now in the middle of The Silver Chair and will probably go ahead and finish the last book before I get back to The Lacuna (which I am enjoying, but is easy for me to get distracted from).

Anna Karenina

I FINALLY FINISHED!!!

And it was good. I have some mixed feelings about the secondary characters, because a lot of times it seemed like Tolstoy was just using them to put forth his political or religious agenda for pages and pages. On the other hand, it was nice to see some semi-functional but still imperfect people to contrast the despair and craziness of the main characters - it just got in the way of story flow sometimes and then I would hate the Levins and their peasants.

Anyway. It was good, and I feel very accomplished. Now I can hurry through some shorter and half-finished ones to catch up. :)

Monday, January 25, 2010

Three!!!

My count is up to three (almost four) completed books!

The Enchantress of Florence (Salman Rushdie)
Through the Wardrobe (an interesting collection of essays about The Chronicles of Narnia)
The Magician's Nephew (C.S. Lewis)

I have one CD left on The Silver Chair so that will soon be finished as well.

Another thing I started doing is keeping a journal dedicated to this year of reading. There was a paragraph in Enchantress that stuck out to me enough that I typed a note on my cell phone with the page number. I figured if I would do that, why not keep track of things like that so as to actually retain something from each book, whether I like the book or not. I also had some thoughts with the essays I read, some of which pertained to the religious symbols and whatnot in the Narnia books and a note about why I read (listened) to The Magician's Nephew again and what I thought of it this go round.

I also started my own rating system (1-10) so as I get more into books and genres I don't actually read as much, I can look back and quickly see what I thought of things in case I want to go with something similar or something completely different.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Progress Report

Finished: Adult Fiction, The Gathering Storm; Recommended, The Alchemyst, Abarat; Self-Improvement, Forced to be Family; MML, The Enchantress of Florence

In the works: Adult Fiction, The Lacuna

Up next: Award-Winners, Interpreter of Maladies, March

New categories:

  • Award-Winners
  • Recommended
  • Adult Fiction
  • Foreign
  • Self-Improvement
  • Authors I've never read
  • Megan/Miri/Lindsey
  • Nonfiction
  • Books I own/Unfinished Business
  • _________
I am pretty sure picking the categories is going to end up being the most difficult part of this challenge for me. I just cannot come up with ten I like!

Current Progress

I was planning on this post mostly just to make myself feel better. Then Megan posted hers and I feel like I'm way behind. haha. Here we are anyway.

I'm 3/4 of the way through Through the Wardrobe (which is a collection of essays about The Chronicles of Narnia). Unfortunately, it's mostly making me want to just re-read Chronicles. We'll see about that.

I started reading Alice in Wonderland out loud to my nephew and figure I'll just go through that one over the course of the year with him for the most part. It will be slow going, but why not introduce him to reading bigger books out loud? It should certainly help his vocabulary and he seems to be enjoying it so far.

Forest Born. I read one page. It's the next one I'll get to when I'm finished with Through the Wardrobe.

I'm about 1/4 of the way through The Actor and The Housewife. Hopefully I will finish it up after Forest Born.

I'm jumping on the comic bandwagon and will be reading the Buffy season 8 comic as well as the Dr. Horrible comic. Not sure what category they will fit into.

I'm heading down to visit my parents this weekend and plan on renewing my library card and trying to get a bunch of books to last me through till Valentines day (the next time I'll get down to MD to return them). Or, you know, one or two books since I'm already so far behind.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Still Going!

I just want to post so you know I'm working on this even though I haven't checked anything off yet. Here's where I am right now:


  • 200 pages from the end of Anna Karenina. I have about a week and a half to finish it in time for book club, and if I get a few low key days this weekend I should be golden. 
  • 65 pages into Julie and Julia and enjoying it. 
  • About halfway through Enchantress of Florence (haha - remember how I picked this book? Yeah. Distractions.) 
  • Almost through with Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. It's fun, but the novelty wears off after awhile. I think I have 50 pages or fewer at this point. 
I've also decided that something in the "genres I don't normally read" category is going to be a Buffy comic book or the Dr. Horrible comic book or both. (And by the way, I think the Dr. Horrible comic book could be a great one for the combined effort if we can get our hands on it. Thoughts?) 

Categories

I'm editing my category list; I'm going to combine two of them, which means that I have to come up with another one now. The "I can't believe I've never read this" category is bugging me, because there's a reason I haven't read a lot of those books, and that is that they haven't appealed strongly enough to me yet. I don't want to have an entire category of books that I avoid until the end of the year because I don't feel like reading them, so I'm going to combine that one with the "Unfinished Business" category and take out the ones that are really holding me up. Consequently... what should my last category be now? Should I do the one with books that have been adapted to movies? Or should I think of a totally new one, and just watch the movies associated with the books I read, which I was planning on doing anyway?

Friday, January 15, 2010

Reading List: Updated

Okay. First of all, technically one of the rules of this challenge is that you are allowed to overlap between categories (I think the rule was up to 9 books may overlap, which for our purposes would be adapted to 10). I mention this because some of the books I own but haven't read also fit into the books I can't believe I've never read category; in the interest of making this challenge actually a challenge, I'm not going to let myself do any overlaps (if you'll remember, one of my original concerns about this was that the total number of books comes to 100, which is fewer than I read this year). All right. End of disclaimer, on to lists.

Books I own but haven't read:
  1. Villette, Charlotte Bronte
  2. Slaughterhouse-Five, Kurt Vonnegut
  3. All Quiet on the Western Front, Erich Maria Remarque
  4. The Voyage Out, Virginia Woolf
  5. The Divine Comedy, Dante Alighieri
  6. Jude the Obscure, Thomas Hardy
  7. The Winds of War, Herman Wouk
  8. Main Street, Sinclair Lewis
  9. Howard's End, E.M. Forster
Adult fiction:
  1. *The Gathering Storm, Robert Jordan/Brandon Sanderson
  2. possibly one of the Dresden files, by Jim Butcher
  3. The Lacuna, Barbara Kingsolver
  4. Dandelion Wine, Ray Bradbury
  5. Water for Elephants, Sara Gruen
  6. The Alchemist, Paolo Coelho
  7. Serena, Ron Rash
  8. The Postmistress, Sarah Blake
Recommended
  1. Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close, Jonathan Safran Foer (Megan)
  2. Mistborn, Brandon Sanderson (Mike)
  3. *Abarat, Clive Barker (Joseph)
  4. *The Alchemyst, Michael Scott (Nathalie)
  5. The Lost Symbol, Dan Brown (Dan)
I can't believe I've never read this...
  1. Jane Eyre, Charlotte Bronte
  2. A Tale of Two Cities, Charles Dickens
  3. Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry, Mildred C. Taylor
  4. The Outsiders, S.E. Hinton
  5. The Color Purple, Alice Walker
  6. The Screwtape Letters, C.S. Lewis
  7. Great Expectations, Charles Dickens
  8. A Separate Peace, John Knowles
Unfinished Business
  1. The Glass Castle, Jeanette Wells
  2. Crime and Punishment, Fyodor Dostoevsky
  3. The Rise of Silas Lapham, William Dean Howells
Authors I've never read
  1. Neil Gaiman
  2. Norman Mailer
  3. Cormac McCarthy
  4. Ken Follett
  5. John Milton
Award Winners
  1. The Good Earth, Pearl S. Buck
  2. March, Geraldine Brooks
  3. The Road, Cormac McCarthy
  4. Interpreter of Maladies, Jhumpa Lahiri
  5. Ironweed, William Kennedy
  6. A Confederacy of Dunces, John Kennedy Toole
Foreign
  1. The Bonesetter's Daughter, Amy Tan
  2. Pandora in the Congo, Albert Sanchez Pinol
  3. Arrow of God, Chinua Achebe
  4. The God of Small Things, Arundhati Roy
Self-Improvement
  1. *Forced to be Family, Cheryl Dellasega
  2. Feelings Buried Alive Never Die, Karol Truman
  3. The Four Agreements Companion, Miquel Ruiz

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Finished:

Forced to be Family, by Cheryl Dellasega, in my Self-Improvement category. It wasn't very good.

5 - 5 - 10

Having two small children, I know that there's no way I would get 100 books read in a year. Not without some serious neglect, which would lead to even more serious mommy guilt. But I think this is an awesome idea. So upon mulling it over I've decided that I'm going to try for 5 books in 5 categories in 2010. I'm pretty sure this is a goal I can reach without feeding my kids cold cereal for weeks or letting them repeatedly watch Thomas for hours at a time. If I do reach my goal, I might go for 5 books in 10 categories. We shall see.

So here's my list of categories:
1. Authors I've never read before
* Heat Wave (done)
2. Books I should have read, but haven't
3. Young Adult
I'm sure I'll come up with a list soon - there are a bunch I want to read
4. Comic Books (maybe this one is cheating, but I really want to read these!)
* Rapunzel's Revenge
* Calamity Jack
* Dr. Horrible
5. Books suggested by other people (since comic books is kinda cheating)
6. Books I've been wanting to read but haven't made the time
* The Host
* How to train your puppy

Obviously this needs some work because 7 is obviously not 5, but some of the books on the list could fall into multiple categories. And the "Books I should have read, but haven't" will probably be more difficult to read and will take more time, so a catch all category is probably a good thing. Anybody else want to try the "slimmed down" version of the 10-10-10?

Monday, January 11, 2010

Take one down, pass it around...

99 left to go!
One down for me too. I finished The Gathering Storm, the twelfth Wheel of Time book, which went in my adult fiction category. (Megan, you should read this, by the way--it was sooo good.)

Saturday, January 9, 2010

One down...

I just finished The Enchantress of Florence so I get to cross one off my list! I won't say much yet, but the ending kind of comes out of nowhere. I still haven't decided how I feel about the ending but I really liked the book overall. Rushdie's writing is beautiful.

Friday, January 8, 2010

Some math.

Has anyone realized that this is like a book every 3.6 days? And than I'm still in the middle of Anna Karenina? I'm going to need some short books in there to catch up. Yikes.

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

More potentials

I'm going to organize these later when I've decided for sure what my categories are going to be, but for now I need to get them down so I don't forget.

Additions to my reading list based on a conversation I just had with Elise Crane:

Dante's Inferno - it's just inexcusable that I've never read this.
Erasmus, "Praise of Folly," translated by Robert M. Adams.

I'll also finally finish Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, and one of my nonfictions (or one of the things that has been on my shelf forever) has to be Testament of Youth by Vera Brittain. Which kind of makes me want to do 10 WWI-related books - Jacob's Room, Goodbye to All That, The Seven Pillars of Wisdom Tender is the Night, All Quiet on the Western Front . . . it has a lot of potential to be awesome.

Animal Farm - I enjoyed my first Orwell, and this one is much shorter.

For nonfiction (which I am really excited about) I want to try something by Bill Bryson - A Short History of Nearly Everything, Bryson's African Diary, I'm a Stranger Here Myself. There's also an Erik Larson I've been meaning to read called Isaac's Storm. (I almost have my nonfiction section filled out already. If I throw in one of the Shakespeare books on my shelf I'll be golden!) There are a few NPR writers I kind of want to check out as well, namely AJ Jacobs and David Sedaris. I'll be looking into some of their books to see what I want to read.

I have Crime and Punishment on Audiobook, so that's probably how I'll finally finish that one. I also have a great audiobook of A Clockwork Orange, which will either go in my "things I don't normally read" or "recommended" category, because I'm probably not going to watch the movie. The clips on AFI freak me out. (Audiobooks aren't cheating, right? Because I think that's how I'm going to make it work with some of the longer ones. I have 1776 and Atlas Shrugged (abridged - there is no way I will ever care enough to get all the way through that book) as well.)  

Also for recommended: Angle of Repose by Wallace Stegner (or whatever Stegner Katherine was just reading) and Seven Gothic Tales by Isak Dinesen. I'll be raiding Ann's shelf for sure.

It occurs to me that I run a book club, so if books don't fit into any of the categories, I may have to form a book club category. Hmm.

I just noticed that Miri has Norman Mailer on her list - I have The Castle in the Forest on my shelf and am excited to read it (I think it's about a Nazi?) so that might go into one of my categories. I also want to read Middlemarch, but we'll see how many big long books I get through after the Tolstoy.

I'll be adding to this post I'm sure, but I had to get down the right translation of Erasmus from Elise before it got lost in my facebook inbox.

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Lin: Reading List

Here's what I have as possibilities so far:

Books I own but haven't read

Through the Wardrobe (A collection of writings from different authors about the Chronicles of Narnia)
The Wednesday Letters
The Glass Castle
Mansfield Park
Sense and Sensibility
Pride & Prejudice & Zombies
Sense & Sensibility & Sea Monsters
Madame Bovary
The Picture of Dorian Gray
Cranford

The above list is mostly coming from the set of beautiful Penguin classics I got last year for my birthday. I hadn't read most of them (hence the reason for buying them) so now I'm going to do it. This list may change, although it's the most set in stone due to the nature of the category.

Books with movie adaptations
The Road
Stardust
The Black Cauldron
The Outsiders Jane Eyre The Lovely Bones
Derby Girl
The Princess Bride
The Thin Man
The Iron Giant

That's what I've tentatively settled on for the movie/book category. I took most of these from lists found over at the A.V. Club, although the three in bold are on there because I also already own them. The Black Cauldron is the one I'm most excited about because I always thought that movie was so strange and the A.V. Club tells me the source material is much better than the movie. The Princess Bride is on there because I have never read it and I somehow feel like less of a girl for not having done so before this point.

10-10-10

Okay, I guess it's my turn to post my category list. I think I'm also going to include a few books that I've already listed in those categories so that I can remember them, and then I'll refer back or add things.

My tentative categories are as follows:

-Books I own but haven't read.
-Books I'm embarrassed that I haven't read or that I started and haven't finished.
This includes a couple of Jane Austens, Crime and Punishment, Les Miserables, Heart of Darkness, Invisible Man, Brave New World and a few others.
-Books written by authors who aren't British or American.
Yes, I'll be counting Anna Karenina.
-Nonfiction (including biographies and memoirs)
Includes the Wilberforce biography I just got, Endurance, possibly a biography of Victoria and Albert, something by David McCullough, and The Year of Magical Thinking.
-genres I don't usually read
This will give me an excuse to read Interview with a Vampire. 
-Megan/Lindsey/Miri category
-Recommended books
This will include These is My Words, which at least 3 different people have drooled about to me.
-Books adapted to movies
I want to read The Painted Veil and could always through those Jane Austens in there. Plus I always have the option of throwing in some Agatha Christies if I run out of time at the end.
-Authors I've never read
-Either award winners or something in a category like postmodern or modernist books.


 I reserve the right to change these or juggle things into other categories at any time to serve my own nefarious purposes. I also reserve the right to pad things with short stories if I come up short at the end, but I'm hoping Tolstoy won't put me behind enough for that to be an issue.

Monday, January 4, 2010

10/10/10 Challenge

For my New Year's "resolution" I decided to complete the 10/10/10 challenge--ten books in ten different genres in 2010--and I am really excited to do it. Megan and Lindsey read my post and have expressed an interest in it as well, and we've been discussing possible categories with each other. For right now, here is my tentative list.

--books I own but haven't read yet
--recommended by others
--adult fiction
--nonfiction
--self-improvement
--foreign
--authors I've never read (this is one that I just remembered was on that list online)
--genres I don't usually read
--Megan/Lindsey/Miri category (a predetermined list of ten books that all three of us will read)
--award-winners (?)
or, books adapted to movies?

I am deciding between the last two categories, since one of them will take me over ten. I like the idea of books that have been adapted to movies (which came from Lindsey) because it adds the extra element of watching those movies and comparing them with the books, and I'm sure that would be interesting; however, that also means I have to find the movies, and that isn't always easy.

Lindsey's Challenge Categories

When Miri mentioned doing this on her own blog and then later asked Megan for category suggestions, it got me interested. Granted, it doesn't take much to get me interested in anything these days. Also, I hardly read any books in 2009 - in fact, I think the grand total is like 15 or something. I haven't read that little since I was in college. Mostly I was all depressed and retreated into a world of TV and movies, which wasn't bad, but I'm ready for my brain to get some more exercise.

So here we go. 100 books. 10 categories. The categories I have chosen are as follows:
  • Books I own but haven't read
  • Recommended by others
  • Young Adult/Children's Lit
  • Adult Fiction
  • Biographies
  • Authors I have never read
  • Megan/Lindsey/Miri (a predetermined list of 10 book we will all read)
  • Books with movie adaptations
  • Books for the blogject (self-improvement)
  • 10 things written by J.D. Salinger
That last one is a little bit of a cheat because I will probably count his Nine Stories as 9 actual books...mostly, it's been on my list of things I would like to read and I think this is a good way to finally cross that one off. Also, I'd like to re-read Catcher in the Rye and Franny and Zooey. But it's all in the spirit of accomplishment and I'm sure there will be other things that will balance it all out.

The first book that I will finish will fall under the Megan/Lindsey/Miri category as we have all been reading The Enchantress of Florence by Salman Rushdie since this summer. I've got 30 pages left and will be moving on to read Forest Born by Shannon Hale which will either count as a YA book or a book I own but haven't read.

I really hope I can stick to this and get it done. I'm excited about branching out and also getting through the books I already own but haven't had the time or patience to read.

Changes

Changes have quite obviously been made. I am going to use this blog for our 10.10.10 challenge.

Megan and Miri and I are going to be reading 10 books in 10 categories (of our choosing) in 2010. This is mostly for us to keep track of everything.
 
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