August 18, 2020
top ten books i think should be adapted for netflix
posted by soe 12:07 am
Today’s Top Ten Tuesday topic at That Artsy Reader Girl is Top Ten Books That Should be Adapted into Netflix Shows/Movies.
With one glaring exception, I am opting not to include anything that, to my knowledge, has already been adapted, even if I haven’t yet seen it (the Cormoran Strike series and The Last Dragonslayer, for instance). By and large, I’ve also excluded novels I absolutely adore, because they’ll just never be done well enough to suit me (the Lady Sherlock series, The Night Circus, Thursday Next, and others).
- Pumpkinheads by Rainbow Rowell and Faith Erin Hicks (imagine how adorable this graphic novel would be as a Halloween romance!)
- Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen (because as much as I love the BBC version and like the other versions, there is always room for another adaptation)
- Two Boys Kissing by David Levithan (sweet but also serious — think of all the famous gay people they could get to be the chorus!)
- The Marvels by Brian Selznick (of his three illustrated novels, I think this is the one that would scale best to the small screen)
- Killers of the Flower Moon by David Grann (a documentary obviously)
- The Vanderbeekers of 141st Street by Karina Yan Glaser (this and its sequels are just begging to be turned into an ongoing family tv series)
- Moxie by Jennifer Mathieu (I think someone (Reese Witherspoon, maybe?) is adapting this feminist YA novel to film and I want it NOW)
- The Port Chicago 50 by Steve Sheinkin (another documentary — I don’t know why I think that nonfiction that makes me furious should be adapted, except that I guess I want more people to be angry, too)
- The Great Greene Heist by Varian Johnson (a multicultural middle-grade caper — this is just waiting for someone to option it)
- The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield (how has Masterpiece not grabbed this gothic mystery as an adaptation already?)
Come back another day and I could probably give you a completely different list. I could probably give you a week’s worth of Christmas books that should be adapted…
How about you? What books would you like to see come to the small screen near you?
August 13, 2020
mid-august unraveling
posted by soe 1:55 am
I’m half a repeat from being done with the pattern on the foot. I’d hoped to finish it tonight (and yesterday and this past weekend), but such is the way things goes these days.
Oona is still jumping from year to year. Her most recent jump is to the year before the one she just lived. I don’t know if I jumped to 2019 how I’d handle it knowing that no matter what I did the events of the following year had already been written. If I knew I’d spend so much of this year stuck in my apartment (and, yes, I’m wholly lucky to have shelter and to be allowed to work from it, when I know so many people don’t have either option), would I try to combat that with outdoor picnics and time with friends and visits to my family?
Head over to As Kat Knits to see what others are working their way through
August 11, 2020
books i loved but didn’t review: top 10 reads of 2013
posted by soe 1:32 am
Longtime readers may have noticed that while I start out my book reviewing game strong each year, it fades as the months pass by. Usually, by summer, I’m so behind I give up and just wait until the end of the year and hope that I can get my act together to give you a top ten list.
While there are many books to share for this week’s Top Ten Tuesday topic from That Artsy Reader Girl, Top Ten Books I Loved But Never Reviewed, I thought I’d wander into my half-finished draft posts and see what could be updated to post here. Since it was going to more work than I felt like putting in to finish last year’s best-of post, instead I’m giving you the ten best books I read in 2013. (No, this is not the oldest post in my draft folder.)
The best books of 2013, none of which I bothered to review at the time and most of which I will now give inadequate attention to in exchange for a little more sleep. Rest assured, you’d do well to read any of them:
- Two Boys Kissing by David Levithan
Narrated by a Greek chorus of early gay AIDS victims, this book tells the story of 30 hours in the lives of several gay teen boys. The titular characters have decided to set a new world record for kissing, in part to raise awareness after a classmate had been beaten for being gay. Other characters whose perspectives we get include the classmate (who is dj’ing the event), two boys exploring a new relationship, a boy who is suddenly outed to his conservative parents after they find he spends time in explicit chat rooms,
This book is the first I’ve read that I felt spoke for my spot in Generation X, sandwiched between being too young to have avoided the specter of HIV and too old to have missed the ability to be an out, openly gay teen. Levithan’s language is poetic and heartbreaking and increasingly tense and real, and my heart bleeds just a little bit thinking about it, even after all this time.
- Eleanor & Park by Rainbow Rowell
This was the first Rainbow Rowell novel I read, and I picked it up because of the cover. Set in an era when one could share headphones in a rather intimate gesture of friendship (no, not February), this book tells the story of an abused girl and the boy who comes to love her. One of the most niggling cliffhangers in all of the books I’ve read. (No, not in a “The Lady, Or the Tiger?” kind of way.)
- Fangirl by Rainbow Rowell
While attending an author event for Eleanor & Park (do check out Rainbow’s author events — she’s just as funny live as she is on the page and she has a fun style — the bookseller told me that they’d just finished Rainbow’s upcoming Fangirl and they liked it even better than her first y.a. novel. In this one, a budding writer (and lover of a Harry Potter meets Twilight fantasy series that’s getting ready to conclude) sets off to college with expectations of how the year will go — including that she’ll room with her twin sister — and it all goes sideways pretty quickly. Possibly a great book to read if one is starting college this fall with all of its inherent question marks. Plus, it’s inspired Rainbow to write now three books telling that fantasy story.
- Just One Day by Gayle Forman
I loved the whimsy of this book, which looked at how just one day can change your entire life. In it, the main character is on a post-high school graduation trip to Europe, meets a random guy in England, and agrees to temporarily run off to Paris with him. Then things get challenging. There is a companion novel, Just One Night, which is not as good, but which does answer lingering questions you’ll have at the end of this one as you hug it to you.
- Wonder by R.J. Palacio
Everyone pretty much read this middle-grade novel back in 2013, about a boy with a cranial condition that causes him to have a distinctive facial disfigurement. (I’m certain there’s a less ableist way to put that, and I’m sorry that I can’t think of what it is.) In the story, he’s heading to school (5th grade) for the first time ever. This is his journey and that of his classmates.).
- Dr. Bird’s Advice to Sad Poets by Evan Roskos
I’ll be honest: I don’t remember a ton of details about this book. There are some conversations with an imaginary pigeon. There’s a lot of depression and anxiety on the part of the main character, a teenage boy who’s an aspiring poet and who’s trying to survive in an abusive household in the wake of his beloved older sister’s absence.
- The One and Only Ivan by Katherine Applegate
This is the other middle-grade novel that everyone read back in 2013, and was the winner of the Newbery that year. Its main character is a gorilla has lived in a cage inside a small, run-down shopping mall for more than a quarter-century. When a young elephant joins him in the enclosure, Ivan is spurred to take action to protect his new friend from unkind behavior.
- Better Nate Than Ever by Tim Federle
In the first of a heartwarming series of middle-grade novels, Nate takes off from his confining Pennsylvania hometown to audition for a Braodway show (E.T: The Musical) and to see his aunt, who lives in the City. A charming adventure story for those who want more reads in the same vein as The Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler.
- Flora & Ulysses by Kate DiCamillo
A young girl, who loves comic books and who is struggling in the wake of her parents’ divorce, pairs up with a squirrel who gets vacuumed up, a near-death experience that, as in so many other instances, results in superpowers. This was another Newbery winner — this time for 2014.
- A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness
Yet another award winner (the Carnegie and the Greenaway). In this illustrated dark novel, a young teen who must deal with a horrible tree-monster who shows up at his house every night to tell him terrible stories. He then tells the main character that he, too, must share a story — a true story from the boy’s own life. This book is beautifully crafted, but prompts ugly crying from time to time.
August 6, 2020
dusky unraveling
posted by soe 1:49 am
The dusk really shows the pooling on my second sock! I was going to say I didn’t think it was that obvious in normal light, but I just went back and looked at previous week’s photos, and it is. That’s fine. I’m getting closer to being done. If tomorrow and Friday’s multi-hour Zoom calls allow for knitting, I could be done by the weekend! (I will definitely be done by the weekend after the next few days of calls. It is possible my sock may not be.)
Oona Out of Order is overdue to the neighboring library system, so I decided to focus on it more heavily. I’m also nearing the end of The Library Book — something ridiculous like 15 months have passed since I started it. On my phone, I’m not crazy about the reader (accents) for my current audiobook, The Gilded Wolves, so I’m thinking I’ll ditch it for a print copy. I already have another one checked out and ready to go — Sonya Lalli’s The Matchmaker.
Head over to As Kat Knits to see what else is going on with the Unraveled crew.
August 4, 2020
top ten colorful books on my tbr list
posted by soe 1:02 am
My (ahem) 3000+ tbr list on Goodreads includes, as you might imagine, more than a few books with colors in the title. Here are ten of them I’d like to read sooner rather than later, per this week’s Top Ten Tuesday from That Artsy Reader Girl:
- White Oleander by Janet Fitch (I’ve owned this for two decades…)
- White Teeth by Zadie Smith (Ditto to this one. Hardcover from the year it came out.)
- Overground Railroad: The Green Book & Roots of Black Travel in America by Candacy A. Taylor (I’ve read two novels in the past couple years where The Green Book has played a role, and I feel like I’d like to know more.)
- Black and White by Jackie Kessler and Caitlin Kittredge (Superheroes and superfrenemies)
- Black Widow: Forever Red by Margaret Stohl (My favorite Avenger!)
- Red at the Bone by Jacqueline Woodson (Everything she writes is great.)
- Bluecrowne by Kate Milford (A prequel to the events of the Greenglass House series.)
- Marilla of Green Gables by Sarah McCoy (raidergirl, do I want to read this one?)
- The Girl with the Red Balloon by Katherine Locke (Time travel back to the 1980s — I am old.)
- The House in the Cerulean Sea by T.J. Klune (Potentially dangerous magical orphans and a middle-aged introvert set in his ways.)
Have you read any of these books?
July 30, 2020
final unraveling of july
posted by soe 1:35 am
As you can see, I’ve been knitting! I have at least one and a half more repeats of the pattern, I think, before I decrease for the toe. But I’m definitely nearly there!
I recently finished both print and audiobooks, so technically I’m less in the midst of reading Stacey Lee’s The Downstairs Girl and more that I’m about to start it. Set in Atlanta in the late 1800s, the novel focuses on an Asian American teen who works as a lady’s maid by day and an anonymous advice columnist by night.
Head to As Kat Knits to see what else folks are working their way through.