December 14, 2021
top ten books on my winter tbr list
posted by soe 5:08 am
This week’s Top Ten Tuesday post from That Artsy Reader Girl is a seasonal favorite. Which ten books do I hope to read this winter, now that it’s nearly arrived?
- What If It’s Us? by Becky Albertalli and Adam Silvera (The sequel is out.)
- Serendipity, edited by Marissa Meyer (a collection of YA romance stories just in time for Valentine’s Day)
- An Impossible Imposter by Deanna Raybourn (the next book in the Veronica Speedwell series)
- The Great Troll War by Jasper Fforde (the final book in the Last Dragonslayer series isn’t available in the U.S., so I’ll have to track down a copy from the U.K.)
- Call Us What We Carry by Amanda Gorman
- One Last Stop by Casey McQuiston
- A Swim in a Pond in the Rain: In Which Four Russians Give a Master Class on Writing, Reading, and Life by George Saunders (I waited to start the copy I’d checked out from the library until it was due, but I liked the first essay that I read.)
- The Unsinkable Greta James by Jennifer E. Smith
- Crying in H Mart by Michelle Zauner
- The Maid by Nita Prose
How about you? Are there any books you’re particularly looking forward to reading this winter?
November 30, 2021
top ten bookish memories
posted by soe 1:21 am
Today’s Top Ten Tuesday topic from That Artsy Reader Girl is bookish memories. I don’t know if these are my top ten or just the first ten that came to me, but either way…
- My grandmother took The Secret Garden out of the library to see if it was the sort of book I might like if she gave it to me. The only problem is that I discovered it at her house, started reading, and then took it out of the library to finish. Luckily, it was a great gift, and I have reread it a number of times.
- My first grade teacher gave each of us a book for Christmas that year. Mine was The Littlest Angel.
- When I was very small, my dad left me in the basement of the library to run upstairs and pick out some items for himself. By the time he’d returned, I’d pulled about 100 picture books from the shelves for us to take home, including some that we owned.
- When the new town library was ready to reopen, a children’s librarian came to our school and read the first chapter of The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe to us to tempt us into getting our own cards.
- In high school, I got the opportunity to be part of a group interview of Beverly Donofrio about her book Riding in Cars with Boys at our local library.
- Nearly a decade ago, I was a Cybils Award judge. It remains one of the coolest things I’ve done, but was such hard work.
- My parents used to periodically drag us to Whitlock’s Book Barn, a used bookshop, when we were kids. Rudi and I would return willingly many times as young adults.
- Eliot Schrefer recognized me when I attended his book signing a few years ago. I loved his first y.a. book, Endangered, and had talked it up on the blog. I was carrying a knitting bag with my blog name on it and he noticed it.
- We attended midnight release parties for the final three Harry Potter novels. The first was at Kramerbooks, which was really less of a party and more of a line since they used to be open pretty much 24 hours a day on weekends back then. We walked home and immediately started reading. The second was at Olsen’s in Bethesda, and we read on the train home. The final was at Politics and Prose, and I dressed up as Professor McGonagall. There were hundreds of attendees, and eventually they had us line up out in the parking lot for our copies.
- At the very first ALA Convention that I worked, my table was in the very last aisle. It soon became very clear to those of us shunted out to this territory that this was a ridiculously low-traffic area. The guy across the aisle from me was selling the first collection of his web comic set in a public library (Unshelved), and I was trying to give away health books, but we were both working every person who came down the row. After a couple hours, we could give each other’s spiel and were sending anyone we managed to snag across the way to the other’s booth. I don’t remember if we went out after that meeting or if we just caught up at future meetings, but Bill (and his co-author, “Gene”) was often kind enough to invite me to join in the cool graphic novels group at the library conventions. (Writers and editors of health books do not travel in cool packs.)
Hey, bookish readers, would you be interested in taking part in the Virtual Advent Tour that I run? Holiday book reviews are welcome, as are other topics! Details and signups are here.
November 23, 2021
top ten characters i’d like an update on
posted by soe 2:35 am
This week’s Top Ten Tuesday topic from That Artsy Reader Girl invites us to share fictional characters we’d like to check in on. Here are some of mine:
- Isola Pribby from The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Schaffer and Annie Barrows
- Felicity from A Snicker of Magic by Natalie Lloyd
- The teen protagonists of The Illuminae Files series by Amie Kaufman and Jay Kristof
- Will from Long Way Down by Jason Reynolds
- Starr from The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas
- Ruth from Housekeeping by Marilynne Robinson
- Claudia from The Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler by E.L. Konigsburg
- Charles Wallace from A Wrinkle in Time by Madeline L’Engle
- Mary from The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgsen Burnett
- Miranda from When You Reach Me by Rebecca Stead
How about you? Are there characters whose lives you’d like to peek into even after the happily ever after takes place?
November 18, 2021
pictureless update
posted by soe 1:11 am
I’ve reached the final slip stitch rib section of the shawl! I just wish I were more confident that the shawl is big enough.
I’ve been taking Sonya Lalli’s A Holly Jolly Diwali with me on excursions. I started Allie Brosh’s graphic memoir Solutions and Other Problems in the bedroom. I’m down to the final two chapter of Michelle Obama’s Becoming, which I mostly listen to while washing dishes. But since Rudi is away, I guess I’d better start listening to it at other times, too, in order to wrap it up before it expires in four days.
November 16, 2021
top ten memoirs i’d recommend
posted by soe 1:16 am
This week’s Top Ten Tuesday from That Artsy Reader Girl asks us to share recommendations. In keeping with Nonfiction November, I’ve opted for the top ten books I’d share with someone who loves memoirs:
- A Year in Provence by Peter Mayle
- March by John Lewis and Andrew Aydin and illustrated by Nate Powell
- My Family and Other Animals by Gerald Durrell
- Good Talk: A Memoir in Conversations by Mira Jacobs
- Yes Please by Amy Poehler
- Becoming by Michelle Obama
- My Mother Was Nuts by Penny Marshall
- No Time Like the Future by Michael J. Fox
- Hunger: A Memoir of (My) Body by Roxane Gay
- Becoming Duchess Goldblatt by Anonymous
How about you? What memoirs have you enjoyed?
November 14, 2021
no regrets
posted by soe 4:41 am
I stayed up late to finish a book and I have no regrets. (But, also, now I’m going to bed.)