July 15, 2005
off to see the wizard…
posted by soe 10:05 pm
Y’know, it never struck me until right now, that both one of my favorite books and one of my favorite movies feature wizards. How odd.
Of course, Dumbledore is a very good wizard, and the Wizard of Oz was “a bad wizard,” although bad in another way.
Heading up to Bethesda now…
July 14, 2005
one day, one hour, one minute
posted by soe 10:58 pm
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince arrives at midnight tomorrow night. I have just completed my re-read of the first five books and thought I’d share my thoughts in anticipation of my weekend readathon. But in deference to anyone who has not caught up on the series yet, I’ll do it on the other side of a jump. (more…)
July 6, 2005
fun with classics
posted by soe 11:42 am
You may have noticed that periodically my inherent lit geekiness comes through. This is one of those times.
But this fun tool can might help you decide which great classic work of literature to pick up next:
Handicapping the Great 20th Century Novels
Interestingly, the way I ultimately handicapped them all put The Sound and the Fury at the top of the list. I started reading TSatF in grad school, but ultimately ran out time to finish it. But I really liked the part of it I read and meant to get back to it. Now if too many people aren’t reading it for Oprah’s book club (and, thus, using all the library copies), maybe I’ll finally get back to it.
(Via Bookslut.)
June 9, 2005
literary manhattan
posted by soe 11:12 am
This is when you understand why computer codes were invented — just to give you a really cool, computer-friendly map of the Manhattan of literature. Covers everything from Fitzhugh, Salinger, and Blume to Wolfe, Kerouac, and Fitzgerald. Use the outline map at the right to negotiate your way through the city.
(Via bookslut.)
May 31, 2005
what to read
posted by soe 4:09 pm
I admit to being in a bit of a reading funk. I want something new, something good. I want a series of somethings that will take me through the 46 days until the new Harry Potter book comes out. And then something else to read two days later after I’ve devoured it and am impatiently waiting around for someone else to finish so I can discuss the mindblowing (or not) things that will come to pass in the penultimate book in the series.
I will re-read the HP series before the new one comes out. J.K. Rowling has said there are clues in the earlier books — and I’m trying to figure out what they are. If you have already figured them out, please don’t tell me (unless we’re actually having a conversation about the books, in which case it’s okay). Book one is already done. Only one piece of information I think might be important. It might not be, though. It’s hard to say. Well, only for 46 more days…
But if you have any suggestions of good reads I’d love to hear about them. I’m up for pretty much anything that doesn’t fall into the horror or blood-bath (this lets out war literature) categories.
May 12, 2005
kids’ books
posted by soe 11:34 am
Dear Karen,
I have an exciting idea: Let’s buy a children’s book house!
You see, in my trawling of blogs, I found this exciting piece of news: “The Chrysalis Group has announced its intention to dispose of its children’s and promotional books businesses.”
I have to admit, I’ve always thought the idea of owning or running a bookstore would suit me well. This seems to go just one step beyond that.
Just picture it. Day after day of just reading fun YA books. Or leafing through picture books. Or learning about dinosaurs or history or science. We wouldn’t have to go into the office. We could just take the books home with us once a week and do our work from our respective reading nooks! And then get together over tea and discuss what we thought of them and which new authors we should sign. We could go to the beach and still be working!
To be frank, I probably can’t afford to buy a publishing house on my own. I looked through my wallet this morning and I think the guy busking at the top of the Metro escalator had more spare change than I do right now. But a mutual love of kids’ books has long been a theme of our friendship. And I also like spending time with you, and we don’t get to do nearly enough of that these days since I moved. So I was thinking this would be a nice remedy to that problem.
Just so you don’t think I’m being rash about this idea, I thought I’d better share with you a few drawbacks I’ve thought of:
- We’d have to convince them to split up the promotional book business and the children’s book business, because I don’t want the promotional half. According to Chrysalis’ web site, the promotional books are remainders. You and I both already have enough remainders in our collections. Warehouses full of them just don’t appeal.
- Chrysalis’ book selection sucks. I would definitely keep the classics line (I mean, you’ll never run out of new readers for Kipling, Alcott, Stevenson, or Barrie). Their “Leap through Time” books also look interesting. But I could happily ditch books that come with stickers in them. And some of their titles just seem like they were created by people who talk baby-talk to five-year-olds — or to their yappy dogs. We could definitely find better writers than that.
- Neither of us has any experience running a business, and I, at least, am very lazy. I do not like to work hard. I want to be paid to read books, and I’m guessing there will be more to the job than doing that. I don’t mind going to bookseller and library conferences. And I could probably learn to steel myself enough to talk to prospective writers. And we’re both good editors. But maybe buying a publishing house means it comes with employees already who would do the rest of the work — especially the bill paying part?
- Chrysalis is located in London. The cats would have to go into quarantine. You’d have to sell or sublet the condo. I’d have to pack all my boxes up again — this time without the kindness of old friends and my folks — and convince Rudi that he wants to give up his seat on the DCDSC. But, on the other hand, to quote Joey from Friends, “It’s London, baby!”
So, let me know what you think. In the meantime, I’ll start looking in the chair cushions for quarters and will trade in some unused Metro cards. You start going through your winter coat pockets to look for forgotten $10 bills.
Talk to you soon!
love,
soe