dkc_button2Couldn’t resist this one being a fan of all things Gaiman, though I’m sure I’ll come to regret signing up for all of these challenges! Anyhow, I would love to finally commit to re-reading the whole of The Sandman series alongside the companion by Hy Bender, and I might yet do so, but at the moment that seems a step too far. So I’m currently planning to read as an Acolyte, which means reading three works from three different categories, plus watching one movie. My list is:

Novel = The Graveyard Book

Young adult/Children’s = The Dangerous Alphabet [actually turned out to be Blueberry Girl, though I might read both…]

Graphic = Neverwhere or Murder Mysteries

Movie = Coraline or Stardust (depending on when the former comes out in the UK) [turned out to be Coraline]

filmavt_christineblake62btinternetcom_largeSo did Star Wars  – The Clone Wars make me cringe or am I ready to pick up the lightsaber and padawan mantle once again?

Did WALL-E leave me an emotional wreck humming selections from Hello Dolly?

Head here to find out……

btt2

“So … any Reading Resolutions? Say, specific books you plan to read? A plan to read more ____? Anything at all?

Name me at least ONE thing you’re looking forward to reading this year!”

I tend to shy away from resolutions as I am normally so poor at keeping them, but I have been thinking a lot about my reading recently, having hit a bit of a lull. So plans for this year:

  • Complete the challenges I’ve signed up for while being honest about the ones I’m not going to make and stepping back from those without feeling guilty (not sure that makes sense…)
  • Read more of my collection of sixteenth century history books (I love this period so much and have a huge backlog)
  • If I do nothing else I must read Blonde by Joyce Carol Oates.

Happy New Year!

shots-logo_180So the final part of my grand master plan to get reading again is to sign up for Rob’s 100 Shots of Short challenge. Really straightforward – just read 100 short stories as and when possible.

I have always enjoyed short stories; I know that they aren’t everyone’s cup of tea but I think they can be very rewarding, and I go back to some of my genre favourites in particular quite often. One thing I’ve never really got to grips with is the best way to read a collection – read one story and put the book down, or plunge in as if it was a novel. I’ve done both over the years and really can’t decide…..

But I’m sure, however I decide to do it, that 2 stories a week over a year is a manageable target, don’t you think?

scifiexp09150So Carl has announced his Sci-Fi Experience for 2009, which will run from January 1 until February 28. I had already decided to sign up for the 42 Challenge and I think the two will sit very nicely together.

No lists but reviews of any sci-fi stuff I happen to read or watch, linked appropriately. I don’t really need much encouragement to read in this genre; as well as my own stash I have the Book God’s extensive collection built up over many years which I can dip into, and there are already some intriguing possibilities beginning to emerge.

One thing I would like to do as part of these two challenges is read more sci-fi written by women; I’m thinking of Octavia Butler, Kathleen Ann Goonan, Kate Wilhelm, Sherri S Tepper to name a few – any other suggestions in this area gratefully 42challengebigreceived.

And as for TV and movies, well the Dr Who Christmas special will be worth watching again and pondering on, and we’ll just have to see what other delights come across screens big and small between now and next December……..

Stainless Steel Droppings » Blog Archive » The Sci Fi Experience 2009.

art-history-reading_button_1So I thought another way to kick-start my reading habit after the current lull was to sign up for some new and interesting challenges, and this one (which I found via Eva at The Striped Armchair) really appealed.

My six books are:

  1. Duncan Grant: A Biography by Frances Spalding
  2. The Underpainter by Jane Urquhart
  3. Dante Gabriel Rossetti: Painter and Poet by Jan Marsh
  4. Aubrey Beardsley: A Biography by Matthew Sturgis
  5. William and Lucy: The Other Rossettis by Angela Thirlwell
  6. The Holland Park Circle: Artists and Victorian Society by Caroline Dakers

I’m really looking forward to this one; I’ve had some of these books kicking around for a while, just looking for the right moment to be picked up.

It’s about time I owned up about the abject failure that was the Fall Into Reading Challenge, so here’s how it all panned out.

I meant:

  • to read the following books left over from RIP III challenge:
    • Duma Key by Stephen King [failed]
    • Something Wicked This Way Comes by Ray Bradbury [completed – hurrah!!]
    • Come Closer by Sara Gran [failed]
    • Midwinter of the Spirit by Phil Rickman [failed]
  • to finish Jigs and Reels by Joanne Harris which I started reading way back when? [failed]
  • to finish The Mandlebaum Gate which I abandoned earlier this year, and kick-start my Muriel Spark readathon once again [failed]
  • to read The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman as soon as I get my sticky paws on it [failed]
  • to find enough books in addition to these, and make the time to read them, so that I hit my 52 books in 52 weeks goal [not anywhere likely to succeed – may get to 40 if I try really, really hard]

Oh well, better to have tried and failed……..

literarylifeposysimmonds51154_f1So the first of the Christmas present reads has already been completed, and what good fun it was. I used to read Posy Simmonds’s cartoons in the women’s pages of The Guardian when I was a student, and I have several of her collections, as well as a number of her excellent children’s books, but this was a new one on me.

Literary Life is a collection of strips and other cartoons, again from The Guardian, with a focus on the literary world. There are very recognisable author types, the struggling independent bookshop and (my favourite) Ask Doctor Derek, where a number of common author ailments are dealt with (critical mauling being a good example). The book rounds off with a couple of really good Christmas stories – Murder at Matabele Mansions and a new version of Cinderella.

I love Posy Simmonds and this is a good addition to my collection; it had me giggling all through Boxing Day!


You’re Watership Down!*

by Richard Adams

Though many think of you as a bit young, even childish, you’re
actually incredibly deep and complex. You show people the need to rethink their
assumptions, and confront them on everything from how they think to where they
build their houses. You might be one of the greatest people of all time. You’d
be recognized as such if you weren’t always talking about talking rabbits.


Take the Book Quiz
at the Blue Pyramid.

* Thanks to Lizzy’s Literary Life for pointing me in the direction of this quiz, which resulted in me being identified with a book I could never finish (despite two attempts) although I quite liked the movie and have a soft spot for Art Garfunkel. Perhaps I should have gone with the armadillo…….

 
  

death-of-lady-macbethIf I can put it like that. I haven’t posted for a bit (although looking at my stats it hasn’t been quite as long as I thought) for the simple reason that I haven’t actually been reading – and not just not reading very much but not reading at all. This is awful, and can mainly be put down to two things:

  • an incapacitated Book God (back injury plus bronchitis) which has meant all the chores falling to me (the poor thing has really been in the wars so I shouldn’t complain!)
  • what feels like a horrendous workload (especially so close to Christmas)
  • all the Christmas preparations themselves

And all of this has made me think – what can I do to get myself back in the reading habit again?  First thoughts are that I should try and carve out some dedicated reading time for myself and not rely too much on my daily commute, which is going to change significantly later in 2009 anyway, but I’m sure there is more that I can do…..

Suggestions welcome from anyone who has been through this themselves!

Bride of the Book God

Follow brideofthebook on Twitter

Scottish, in my fifties, love books but not always able to find the time to read them as much as I would like. I’m based in London and happily married to the Book God.

I also blog at Bride of the Screen God (all about movies and TV) and The Dowager Bride, if you are interested in ramblings about stuff of little consequence

If you would like to get in touch you can contact me at brideofthebookgod (at) btinternet (dot) com.

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