Beginnings

Welcome friends! I have started this entry in the global technosphere because I have been in love with books since the age of 2. Among the busy business of being a new teacher, this is my outlet for sharing thoughts on a love of reading a wide variety of books. My inspiration can be summed up with a yearbook quote from a teacher written when I was 8: "To the only girl at recess I see reading a book. Good for you!"
My blog title is quoted from a classmate who asked me this once. Believe it or not, I've also heard it as a teacher :D

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Literary Blog Hop


A weekly meme hosted @ The Blue Bookcase.

This week's topic is from Mel u @ The Reading Life:

If you were going off to war (or some other similarly horrific situation) and could only take one book with you, which book would you take and why?

What a powerful question that brings up so many issues: what is something I would read that I could easily carry around with me, want to re-read (potentially over and over again) if I finished it, either allowed me to escape from my situation or be further educated about it (though that could be awfully depressing), and did not discourage or disappoint me, but was instead a friend, a comfort, and a pleasure, all necessities that would be rare in a situation such as this.  Also, would I want to read this book for the first time in this situation or would I want a favourite book that I can rely on?  If I were to die in this situation, would I want this book to be the last I ever read?  Would I want to die not knowing how it ended?  As I mentioned at the onset...a powerful question.


When it's all said and done, I would want a book that I've read before, cherish for many reasons, would be willing to possibly re-read several times, and would be honoured to have been the last book I ever read.  Stephen King may be known as a horror writer, but The Green Mile is his deepest book on many levels--it explores themes of humanity, trust, truth, friendship, and perhaps spirituality; it maintains a strong impact throughout and allows the reader to give it considerable afterthought; and it emits a mysterious quality that at once fascinates, inspires, and grips you.  As for its practicality, The Green Mile is long but compact in my paperback edition so that I could easily carry it with me wherever I may go.

I have previously reviewed this book here.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Some Bookish Questions

Adapted from "How to Be a Perfect Reader" by Adam @ Roof Beam Reader

I love these reading questionnaires!  Feel free to post your own responses.

Do you snack while you read? If so, favorite reading snack?
Typically, no, but a nibble of chocolate while reading is a great treat :)

What is your favorite drink while reading?
A steaming hot cup of coffee.  Mm-mm!

Do you tend to mark your books as you read, or does the idea of writing in books horrify you?
I used to mark up books for my English courses to find key ideas & discussion points, and I probably still would if I was in a book club, but not recently.  If I want to re-read a book just for fun, I don't want a lot of highlights & margin notes to distract me.

How do you keep your place while reading a book? Bookmark? Dog-ears? Laying the book flat open?
I have several bookmarks (all too short!) and always place it at the exact point where I left off.  I hate dog-earring pages--it makes the book look beaten up.  I sometimes lay the book down cover side up if I'm going away from it for just a short while but I sure don't like cracking the spines, especially on cheaper paperbacks where the pages fall out!

Fiction, non-fiction, or both?
Definitely both!  I'm open to reading most anything.  If I had to break it down, I'd say I read about 1 nonfiction for every 3-4 fiction.  I tend to go in spurts, depending on my mood.  I rarely read more than 1 nonfiction before flipping back to fiction, usually because a nonfiction book's page count is long.

Are you a person who tends to read to the end of a chapter, or can you stop anywhere?
It depends on the book, but more often than not, I feel my time spent reading is more valuable in the end if I make it to the end of a chapter.  Or two.  Or three.  Or...you get the picture :)

Are you the type of person to throw a book across the room or on the floor if the author irritates you?
Oh, no!  Well, maybe in my mind :D  I simply close it & file it in the closet for donation to amity, and dive into a new book pronto so that I'm not discouraged.

If you come across an unfamiliar word, do you stop and look it up right away?
Only if the word sounds intriguing & I must know or I can't understand the sentence without knowing its definition.  Most of the time, the word's meaning comes through in the context.

What are you currently reading?
The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini (just a couple of days ago--really liking it!) and My Life by Bill Clinton (started back in August 2010, still plugging away at it).

What is the last book you bought?
A few challenge books:  Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides, The Gunslinger (Dark Tower series book #1) by Stephen King, and A is For Alibi by Sue Grafton.

Are you the type of person that reads one book at a time, or can you read more than one?
I like concentrating on one book at a time, but sometimes I'll jump back and forth between them if one is not quite jiving with me at the moment but I don't want to give up on it.

Do you have a favorite time/place to read?
Time:  Any time I can squeeze it in!  Place:  My couch or bed, where the seating is comfy :)  If I'm bussing to work (like I did as a student), I'll read en route.

Do you prefer series books or stand alone books?
Interesting question!  I think I prefer stand-alone books because a series, when prolonged to near infinity, can run its course and peter out in quality as the books continue to be churned out.  Or you might just burn out on them yourself.  It's a rare series (like Harry Potter) that stays fresh from beginning to end, and at least that series reached its end when the time was right.

Is there a specific book or author you find yourself recommending over and over?
Do I really need to recommend Stephen King?  Doesn't he get enough press? :D  I tend to read a variety of authors, but I will read & highly recommend anything by him, Jane Hamilton, Audrey Niffenegger, Barbara Kingsolver, Margaret Laurence, Margaret Atwood...almost anyone I've given an A or A+ to in my reviews.

How do you organize your books?
I have a bookcase with 3 long shelves that are almost full to brimming.  I keep my favourites on the middle shelf organized randomly but with like authors together (all fiction).  Nonfiction, classics, postcolonial fiction & Stephen King books on the top shelf (no particular order within those categories).  Bottom shelf has a small TBR stack, my Folger Shakespeare editions, a Webster's dictionary, a Roget's thesaurus, and my wish list (books from the TBR list I want to read next) for my next shopping excursion.  My TBR list is too long & ever-changing to have a hard copy anymore, but I keep a copy on my computer & the blog.  I also have a row of TBR books on the top shelf of my desk unit with my silver READ bookends, and a couple of small yellow candles.  On my nightstand, I keep my current reads, though they don't stay there long as I lug them around with me to work or to a comfy reading spot in the house :)  I also have about 5 boxes of children's books in the guest bedroom closet for a future classroom of students to enjoy.

There you have it!

Wonderful Wednesdays- Guilty Pleasures


A weekly meme hosted by Sam @ Tiny Library.

This week's topic is:

Guilty pleasures


 John Grisham and James Patterson

I don't read many of these anymore because I've practically exhausted every title they ever wrote, but in high school and college, I loved reading John Grisham and James Patterson books.  Grisham made law & order exciting, if sometimes utterly preposterous, and Patterson had an eerie but electrifying way of writing from the point-of-view of a mad killer.  Fascinating page-turners, both of them!


I've written a series of reviews on the books I've read by both of them:

My James Patterson reviews post covers books #1-6 of Women's Murder Club series, #1-13 of Alex Cross series, and #1-2 of "bird children" series).

My John Grisham reviews post covers his first 12 law-thriller books, including my 3 favourite books of his (The Firm, A Time to Kill and The Pelican Brief).

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Rabbit, Run- John Updike

Purchase:  Amazon | Chapters

Published:  1960
Pages:  264
ISBN:  9780449911655
Genre:  Literary Fiction, Series (book #1)

Start Date:  Feb. 4, 2011
Finished Date:  Feb. 12, 2011

Where Found:  Xmas 2010 gift from my dad (on my wish list)
Why Read:  I've always been interested in John Updike, given his consideration in the literary world as one of the greatest American writers ever.

Read For:  1st in a Series challenge

Summary:  A former high school basketball phenom still clinging to his days of glory contemplates leaving his pregnant wife and young son when he falls in love with his saucy mistress while a local priest tries to repair the damage.

Review:

John Updike is often listed as one of America's greatest writers, and one that I've wanted to read at least one book by, even if it was just to say I did, and, if I'm really lucky, to say that I did and I loved it or even that it's a newfound favourite.  Well...like the Meat Loaf song goes, "two out of three ain't bad."

Once I finished the book and allowed it to settle with me, I didn't mind it but was far from tops.  I had an on-and-off reaction to it, stopping & starting like a stalled motor.  The characters can be rather nervy and self-centred without a smidge of empathy or restraint but the irresistible prose paints quite a symbolic picture of bleak 1960s suburban life.  The character of Harry Angstrom is like an adult Holden Caulfield from The Catcher in the Rye stuck in the symbolic setting of The Great Gatsby, and contemplating an escape reminiscent of On the Road, all works written during or as an allusion to the Beat Generation, but with more dire consequences.  Apparently, Updike's purpose was to show how one person's actions for their own self-benefit or self-desire affects those invested in the person, such as family, friends, and colleagues.

The bottom line is I wasn't too impressed by it but I'm glad I read it.  At the moment, I'm not interested in continuing the series, though I may give it a try if I get stuck for reading suggestions...though that's not likely to happen with the size of my TBR list :D  The 3rd and 4th books won Pulitizers, so perhaps it would have been better to try one of those rather than reading the intial book of the series.  It must be the type-A side of me coming through :D  I will try The Witches of Eastwick some time as I hear that it's very different in style from the Rabbit series.

Rank:  (C)- Okay, Maybe Try It

Top 10 Love Stories

A weekly meme hosted @ The Broke and the Bookish.

I couldn't resist the topic this week!  I'm going to keep it short & include some movie couples as well.  This is in no particular order.  I watched #6 last night--one of my favourite movies :)

1)  Anne Shirley & Gilbert Blythe- Anne of Green Gables series by L.M. Montgomery
2)  Elizabeth Bennet & Fitzwilliam Darcy- Pride & Prejudice by Jane Austen
3)  Morag Gunn & Jules Tonnerre- The Diviners by Margaret Laurence
4)  Henry DeTamble & Claire Abshire- The Time Traveler's Wife by Audrey Niffenegger
5)  Cecilia Tallis & Robbie Turner- Atonement by Ian McEwan

6)  Harry Burns & Sally Albright (Billy Crystal & Meg Ryan)- When Harry Met Sally...
7)  Rick Blaine & Ilsa Lund (Humphrey Bogart & Ingrid Bergman)- Casablanca
8)  Shrek & Fiona (voices of Mike Myers & Cameron Diaz)- Shrek
9)  Grusinskaya & Felix (Greta Garbo & John Barrymore)- Grand Hotel
10)  Edward & Kim (Johnny Depp & Winona Ryder)- Edward Scissorhands

I also can't help but mention a few (ha!) more:
Wall-E & Eve- WALL-E
Phil & Rita (Bill Murray & Andie MacDowell)- Groundhog Day
Walter Burns & Hildy Johnson (Cary Grant & Rosalind Russell)- His Girl Friday
Paul Verrall & Billie Dawn (William Holden & Judy Holliday)- Born Yesterday
Harold & Maude (Bud Cort & Ruth Gordon)- Harold & Maude
David Huxley & Susan Vance (Cary Grant & Katharine Hepburn)- Bringing Up Baby
Mickey & Holly (Woody Allen & Dianne Wiest)- Hannah and Her Sisters
Joel Barish & Clementine Kruczynski (Jim Carrey & Kate Winslet)- Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
The Tramp & the Blind Flower Girl (Charlie Chaplin & Virginia Cherrill)- City Lights

Monday, February 14, 2011

It's Monday! What Are You Reading?


A weekly meme hosted by Sheila @ Book Journey.

<3 Happy Valentine's Day! <3

Sorry this is a bit late.  I had a bit of a rough weekend health-wise but am doing fine now & need to catch up on everyone's posts, as well as get some of my own going.

I'm planning to do an Oscar-themed post this week & do a fun reading questionnaire I saw at Roof Beam Reader.  Stay tuned!

Books Read This Week (1)
Rabbit, Run- John Updike (review to come)--for the 1st in a Series challenge--it was slow-going & I stalled on it for a couple of days.

Currently Reading (2)
The Kite Runner- Khaled Hosseini--for the Back to the Classics challenge--21st century classic book--liking it so far!
My Life- Bill Clinton--still on-the-go...

Next to Read
Middlesex- Jeffrey Eugenides--for Back to the Classics challenge--Pulitzer Prize winner/nominee
The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe- C.S. Lewis--for 1st in a Series challenge

Reviews Written This Week
None :(

Friday, February 11, 2011

Friday Blog Hop!

A weekly meme hosted by Jennifer @ Crazy For Books.

This week's topic is:

Tell us about one of your posts from this week & give us a link so we can read it (review or otherwise)!


I'm currently finishing up Rabbit, Run by John Updike, which has taken a week or so to read, so the last review I posted was for Wonder Boys by Michael Chabon.  I enjoyed the story a lot--it was so unique & interconnected with fascinating characters.  The language was sharp & crisp, sometimes rather intellectual (consult a dictionary on some words) but overall a wonderful read.  Hope you enjoy!

What have you read & reviewed recently?  Comment with a link & I'd love to visit you :)

Have a great weekend!


Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Wonderful Wednesdays-- International Reading


A weekly meme hosted by Sam @ Tiny Library.

The theme this week is:
Novels set in another country

Sam touched on a brilliant novel:  The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver, set in the Congo and also partially in Georgia, U.S.A.  I would have chosen this one instantly as well but for the sake of not repeating titles, I'll go with...



The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, the first book in the Millennium trilogy by the late Stieg Larsson is set in Sweden in the middle of a frigid winter.  Being from Canada, you would think I could relate to the sub-Arctic temperatures & massive snowstorms, but it's probably much worse in Sweden than it is here.  And despite our fabulous reputation for health care & education, Sweden is tops in both.  I'd love to visit the country sometime (in fact, all of Europe would be wonderful), but for now, I'll settle for finishing off the Millennium trilogy.

For interest's sake, I have read & reviewed at least 26 novels or nonfiction memoirs/autobiographies set in full or in part in another country outside of the U.S. and Canada.

Here's the breakdown of the ones I can spot from my list of book reviews sorted by continent:

Europe: (16--14 in England, 1 partially in France, 1 partially in Switzerland)
84 Charing Cross Road- Helene Hanff (England/U.S.)
Atonement- Ian McEwan (England)
Brighton Rock- Graham Greene (England)
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time- Mark Haddon (England)
High Fidelity- Nick Hornby (England)
The Hours- Michael Cunningham (England/U.S.)
The Importance of Being Earnest- Oscar Wilde (England)
Julie & Julia- Julie Powell (France/U.S.)
My Autobiography- Charles Chaplin (England/U.S./Switzerland)
Pride & Prejudice- Jane Austen (England)
Regeneration- Pat Barker (England)
A Room of One's Own- Virginia Woolf (England)
A Room With a View- E.M. Forster (England)
Scenes From a Clerical Life- George Eliot (England)
A Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde- Robert Louis Stevenson (England)
What's It All About?- Michael Caine (England/U.S.)

Africa: (4--2 in Congo)
Heart of Darkness- Joseph Conrad (Congo)
Nervous Conditions- Tsitsi Dangaremba (Rhodesia)
The Poisonwood Bible- Barbara Kingsolver (Congo/U.S.)
Things Fall Apart- Chinua Achebe (Nigeria)

Asia: (4)
Balzac & the Little Chinese Seamstress- Dai Sijie (China/U.S.)
Funny Boy- Shyam Selvadurai (Sri Lanka)
The God of Small Things- Arundhati Roy (India)
Obasan- Joy Kogawa (Japan/U.S.)

South & Central America:  (1)
Autobiography of my Mother- Jamaica Kincaid (Antigua)

Australia & Antartica:  (0)
None :(