Flippy - I Rant, You Read
Monday, December 08, 2008
the wee hours
I finally decided to put the library employees to work
Since we got our library cards a month or so ago, I’ve just been ambling around the stacks, choosing books that strike my fancy, and not liking a whole lot of them. Leigh-Ann has been smarter and has been going through her Amazon wishlist and requesting those books at the library. She also sent me the NY Times list of top books for 2008, so I went through those and through my wishlist, then I put the library to work. It’s great, you sit at your computer at home and request books and they find them for you (even at other branches), label them with your name, and then they shelve them in the room where you check-out. So, I had all of these books waiting for me yesterday.
Beautiful boy: a father’s journey through his son’s addiction by David Sheff. Patient by patient: lessons in love, loss, hope, and healing from a doctor’s practice by Emily R. Transue, M.D. (I really liked her first book) Black fliesby Shannon Burke. My custom van: and 50 other mind-blowing essays that will blow your mind all over your face by Michael Ian Black Celebrity detox: (the fame game) by Rosie O’Donnell. There’s nothing in this book that I meant to say by Paula Poundstone. Netherland by Joseph O’Neill. His illegal self by Peter Carey. Bright lights, big ass: a self-indulgent, surly ex-sorority girl’s guide to why it often sucks in the city, or who are these idiots and why do they all live next door to me? by Jen Lancaster Such a pretty fat: one narcissist’s quest to discover if her life makes her ass look big, or why pie is not the answer by Jen Lancaster The night of the gun: a reporter investigates the darkest story of his life, his own by David Carr. Are you there, vodka? It’s me, Chelsea by Chelsea Handler (these last two are waiting to be picked up today) Tweak: (growing up on methamphetamines) by Nic Sheff (this matches up with his father’s book, Beautiful Boy - I thought the different perspectives would be interesting)
Now, I had a wealth of books to choose from, but didn’t know what I wanted to read first. It was between Paula Poundstone, Rosie O’Donnell, and Michael Ian Black, whose book I hadn’t requested, but just saw on the new books shelf. Rosie O’Donnell won out, but I’ve been kind of sleepy on this wild and weird rainy day today. Other than getting icky cramps and praying for a hysterectomy.
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
the wee hours
I can no longer judge a book by its cover
Either I’ve gotten pickier or they’ll let any old author publish a book these days. I used to be able to go to the library and pick out a bunch of books and never be wrong about whether or not I’d like them. However, lately I’ve been picking some really boring books. Maybe I’m just more willing to give up on a book than I used to be. My time is limited, no need to spend it reading something that doesn’t interest me. Like, for instance, multiple award winner, The Corrections - I got maybe 50 pages into the book, and that was it for me. It was tossed back on to the library book pile to be returned. Instead, I’m going to read about Diablo Cody’s life as a stripper. Just for the heck of it, she decided to strip. People are weird. I think I could get enough of the atmosphere just by hanging out at a strip club and talking to the other strippers. Perhaps that’s why I don’t have an Academy Award for writing Juno. Maybe there are a few other reasons, but I can’t think of them, can you?
Wednesday, August 29, 2007
terribly early in the morning
Check Out “The Amateur Gourmet”!
The other day, I was reading our new issue of “The Advocate” and saw a little blurb about Adam Roberts’ blog and his new book (just published!). Being that I sign bloggers to syndication contracts for work and enjoy entertaining blogs just in general, I went to his site. It’s a fun blog about food, and even if you don’t cook (I don’t, Leigh-Ann does), it’s just a nice well-written blog. You’ll like it. I promise. Go check it out. Start with my favorite entry so far, the picture of his proud mom holding up his book.
Thursday, July 26, 2007
terribly early in the morning
Operation Trust Stephen King w/ Your Reading Future
I was reading a recent issue of Entertainment Weekly, the one where Stephen King praises a new author’s book and laments its ending, and talks about saying goodbye to characters you love. He was also talking about saying goodbye to Harry Potter, a series of books that will probably never be surpassed in a pop culture event way. The midnight releases, the parties, the adults devouring supposed children’s books, even though we all know they weren’t written for children. However, it’s good to know that there will always be books worth waiting for, even if it’ll never be another Harry Potter book. Stephen King raves about Lauren Groff‘s first novel, The Monsters of Templeton. I’m sure Stephen will forgive me if I quote liberally from his column. At least I hope so. “I’m having a day of mixed feelings: happy because I’m reading the manuscript of a novel that’s full of magic, mystery, and monsters; sad because it will be finished tomorrow and on my shelf, with all its secrets told and its surviving characters set free to live their own lives (if characters have lives beyond the end of a novel — I’ve always felt they do). It’s called The Monsters of Templeton, by Lauren Groff, and it will be published early next year. Admit it, he has you hooked already, huh? And he continues on, “The sense of sadness I feel at the approaching end of The Monsters of Templeton
isn’t just because the story’s going to be over; when you read a good one — and this is a very good one — those feelings are deepened by the realization that you probably won’t tie into anything that much fun again for a long time.”
Dear blogging friends, the author that Stephen King so loves, is not the #1 search result for her own name. I want to try a quick-fix of that situation. Let’s show her web person that it can be done…and it can even be done the hard way, by not touching the website itself. If you could do me a favor, in one of your next blog entries, say a couple o’ words about The Monsters of Templeton author, Lauren Groff, and then hyperlink her name to http://www.laurengroff.com - I’d much appreciate it.
Here’s Stephen King’s review of the novel too. “Lauren Groff’s debut novel, The Monsters of Templeton, is everything a reader might have expected from this gifted writer, and more. Willie is a funny, sexy, plucky, heroine; her Mom—a once-upon-a-time hippie who’s gone Baptist but not square—is a hoot; her family history is a funhouse through which Willie must wander in order to find her father. Best of all is Templeton, a town that will remind readers of Ray Bradbury at his most magical. There are monsters, murders, bastards, and ne’er-do-wells almost without number. I was sorry to see this rich and wonderful novel come to an end, and there is no higher success than that.”—Stephen King, Entertainment Weekly
I don’t think I’m going to win any awards for style with this blog entry, but we’re going for complete function today. Plus, it’s 6am and I’ve had a long long day, and I need to get some sleep. Maybe I’ll come back and pretty this baby up.
Saturday, May 19, 2007
terribly early in the morning
Kristine’s Meme ‘Bout Books
Total # of books owned - Lots and lots. More than a thousand, less than ten thousand. I don’t like to give away my books, and in general, I don’t even like to loan them out. Last book read - I can’t remember the last book I read. Since we started working on our commission tier, we’ve done a lot less reading. It’s kind of crappy, because I miss reading every night before bed. Anyway, I started a new book today that Leigh-Ann already read. So far, I’m really enjoying it. Duh, just remembered the last book I read. It’s a good one too! Five Books that mean a lot to me - Replay doesn’t really mean a lot to me, it’s just a lovely fantasy that I don’t mind reading over and over.
Hmmm, I thought this meme seemed familiar. I did it two years ago, and shockingly (No!), my answers are pretty much the same. When I realized that it was seeming awfully familiar, I stopped, and I shall now link you to the original. If any of you would like to do this meme, and you haven’t done it yet, by all means, do it. It’s always interesting to read about people’s favorite books. Go read about Kristine’s.
