Sparrow (
sweet_sparrow) wrote in
books2011-02-05 11:11 pm
January Reads
I promised you all a best-of post ages ago, didn't I? I failed miserably at compiling one of my own.
The year has... not been off to the best possible start. (It's not been off to the worst possible starts either, though.)
I've managed to read a decent amount of books in January, though not as many as I'd have liked. Books I remember reading are...
The Last Light of the Sun by Guy Gavriel Kay
Ballet Shoes by Noel Streatfeild (where have her books been all my life?!)
Whispers of the Cotton Tree Root edited by Nalo Hopkinson
The Way of All Flesh by Samuel Butler
The Princess and the Goblin by George MacDonald
Flegling by Octavia Butler
Trickster edited by Matt Dembicki
I'm probably missing some, but I'm doing this from memory. I feel like I'm coming across as this whirlwind of activity, but I'm really not. Just disorganised and out of my element. (I'd like the universe to restore my laptop now, please.) I spent today curled up with Anna of the Five Towns. I'm so much further behind on my course reading than I'd wanted to be... (I've also been managing to stick to my TBR acquisition rules, though. Yay!)
Anyway! How's the new year been treating you reading-wise? Do you have any reading goals this year? Any challenges you've decided to participate in? Read any books that you can't get off your mind now that you've read them?
The year has... not been off to the best possible start. (It's not been off to the worst possible starts either, though.)
I've managed to read a decent amount of books in January, though not as many as I'd have liked. Books I remember reading are...
The Last Light of the Sun by Guy Gavriel Kay
Ballet Shoes by Noel Streatfeild (where have her books been all my life?!)
Whispers of the Cotton Tree Root edited by Nalo Hopkinson
The Way of All Flesh by Samuel Butler
The Princess and the Goblin by George MacDonald
Flegling by Octavia Butler
Trickster edited by Matt Dembicki
I'm probably missing some, but I'm doing this from memory. I feel like I'm coming across as this whirlwind of activity, but I'm really not. Just disorganised and out of my element. (I'd like the universe to restore my laptop now, please.) I spent today curled up with Anna of the Five Towns. I'm so much further behind on my course reading than I'd wanted to be... (I've also been managing to stick to my TBR acquisition rules, though. Yay!)
Anyway! How's the new year been treating you reading-wise? Do you have any reading goals this year? Any challenges you've decided to participate in? Read any books that you can't get off your mind now that you've read them?

no subject
Did you finish the Flewelling book this month? How're you finding the exercise itself? (I'm sure I've asked before, but I'm afraid my memory is a sieve.)
no subject
I'm at about 50% of Hidden Warrior. It's a good exercise, esp. for longer speeches (and Hidden Warrior always drags me at least one chapter further than I planned, because I want to know how the story continues). Flewelling's prose also includes enough descriptive text to make reading aloud feasible. If the text-to-speech ratio is too low, it doesn't work as well for some reason.
no subject
*pokes these sites* Oooooooooh... They look dangerous... And fun!
Huh. How curious that it gets harder. Maybe it's easier to read certain types of text?
*goes poke websites some more*
no subject
Oops, I meant it gets more difficult to find the good and/or intriguing books on the fantasy shelf (virtual or not) in all that's getting published in the genre right now. At least here in Germany the book stores are literally littered with books that are rarely more than retellings of the same few themes: inherently good vampires (with a few bad habits and high sex appeal), Lord of the Rings characters revisited (and renamed to avoid being too obvious) and a few more. Trying new paper-books has become almost frustrating business at the moment. There are a few gems, finding new aspects or features or themes, but it feels as if there's a lot more sand to sieve through before finding them. Probably it's a thing of the commercialized German book market: publishers are playing it save. A story like that sold well, so the next ten books in the genre better not be too different (a.k.a innovative) from that one.
no subject
Oh, no. My fault. I meant the texts being easier to read aloud. I've never actually tried it, but it sounds so curious. There must be some criteria for a book to be easy or difficult to read aloud.
Our situation is much the same, though. (Except that the Dutch market is much smaller so publishers are even more likely to play it safe. It appears to be worst in the YA section and in much the same way.) I think the situation in the English-speaking world is similar. It's just that, being so much bigger there's also a bigger market for niche and innovative stories. I think. I speculate. I wish I knew. That'd be useful.
no subject
I guess it depends on the reading habits. For me, texts with less direct speech work better, because I tend to mimic different speakers with different voices.
The YA section... *sigh* the last really good book I found there was Catherine Webb's Waywalkers (Link goes to Amazon.de for lack of proper review source at work) and even that I preferred in its German translation (which was geared towards an older audience than the original). Regarding innovative stories... yes, they exist, but I think their number doesn't really increase with more books being published in a genre, because the publishers will to take a risk aren't the ones flooding the market with do-overs. But maybe I'm just the pessimist in this. :)