Showing posts with label reading list. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reading list. Show all posts

Monday, June 6, 2011

Read, Remember, Recommend!

Read the Printed Word!

In my humble opinion, the best bookstores and libraries have posters, newsletters, and displays to give browsers suggestions on new books to read. For years, the independent booksellers’ association has published regular “Book Sense” (now known as “IndieBound”) newsletters with recommendations on recent releases, children’s book lists, book club suggestions, and more. The Green Free Library always has wonderful displays, enticing patrons with books on a monthly theme, such as National Poetry Month in April or Banned Book Week in September. I’ll never forget my favorite used bookstore from the time I lived in Denver, CO: their lists of award-winning books informed me of categories like the Hugo Award, the Agatha Award, and the PEN/Faulkner Award, leading me into excellent writing in various genres.

In addition to flyers and displays at book places, now more than ever, there are thousands of resources online to discover book recommendations. All the “major” awards, such as the Pulitzer Prize or the National Book Award, have their own, detailed websites, as well as not a few of the smaller awards. Moreover, bibliophiles by the score have taken to their computers to tell the world about the books they love. If you are at all tech-savvy, there is a world of book blogs out there now, where you can read literally millions of suggestions and critiques of books. My only advice is this: use these sites as tools, and don’t get so lost on your computer, reading about others’ experiences with books, that you lose the time to go read for yourself.

Thus we come to my recommendation(s) for this week: Read, Remember, Recommend and Read, Remember, Recommend for Teens, by Rachelle Rogers Knight. Always a voracious reader, as well as an active book blogger herself, (www.bibliobabe.com), Knight found that after having her second child, her reading notes become completely disorganized. On her website, she shares how she had little clippings from magazines, half-finished reviews scrawled in various notebooks, and award websites bookmarked on her computer. Knight wanted a place where she could keep her own lists of books she wanted to read, books she’d lent out to friends, notes she’d taken while reading a new favorite, while still having handy access to many lists of award winners and book association recommendations.

Certainly, there are plenty of “reading journals” on the market – mostly blank books that direct the reader to fill in notes about books they’ve read – as well as books filled only with suggested reading, such as the fantastic Book Lust series by Nancy Pearl. Knight, however, couldn’t find anything that combined all of the these elements in one place, so she created her own.

Brightly colored covers, spiral bound for easier writing access, with tabbed sections, commentary and explanations for various awards, a list of literary terms, and some recommendations for reference websites, the Read, Remember, Recommend journals are a bibliophile’s dream. The rave reviews continue to rain in from bookstores, librarians, writers, parents, teachers, students and book people everywhere.

After buying and pouring over both books, my only criticism is this: the teen edition, published second, is far superior in breadth of recommendations. Read, Remember, Recommend for Teens offers much more diversity with awards from many genres, and more styles of recommendation lists including “Read-Alikes”, such as “if you liked the book Eragon, you’d like….” While the original, adult edition does include book club recommendation lists from organizations as diverse as Oprah’s Book Club to Penny’s List at Costco Connections, nevertheless, almost every list is either classic or contemporary fiction which has won some erudite prize. In the teen book, there are lists such as the Modern Library’s 100 Best Books of the Century, but there are also recommendations for books written in verse, westerns, GLBT, reluctant readers, action-driven style, paranormal romance, science fiction, mystery, fantasy and more. These categories hardly seem to exist in the adult world, which makes me a little sad. Obviously, I enjoy many of the Great Works of Literature (emphasis added, with only very slight sarcasm), but there’s nothing wrong with reading across the genres, since there are great writers in many styles, nor is there anything wrong with reading a ‘lighter’ book once in a while. I hope your summer reading brings you both!

Read to remember or read to forget? Tell Hobo your reading reasons, recommendations, and reflections by emailing him at from_my_shelf@yahoo.com. To see past recommendations of Hobo’s, check out his blog at http://frommyshelf.blogspot.com. Need someone to agree with your reading reviews? Look for the new Hobo bobblehead figure, coming soon to a bookstore near you!

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Reading Deliberately in the New Year, Part One

For many bibliophiles, New Year’s Resolutions are not so important as is a plan of action for reading in the coming year. Just in the past week, I’ve had five different people come to the bookstore to ask for suggestions to populate their upcoming book club calendars. Just like athletes devising a training schedule, or business owners aiming to diversify their customer base, many book lovers scheme a reading plan for the months to follow.

In her popular blog, www.thebookladysblog.com, the passionate bibliophile Rebecca Jones Schinsky recently mused on her reading goals for 2011. For 2009, she tried to read 100 books in a year; in 2010, she made a list of specifically-chosen books, so that she might read “more deliberately”; for 2011, her goal is to become a more well-rounded reader, by reading at least one book from every section of her favorite independent bookstore. In her endeavor for 2011, I believe “the Book Lady” is taking practical steps to meet her more loftily stated goals of “expanding her literary horizons” by “exploring new genres.”

I had been pondering a more “deliberate” list for myself, since I feel as though I end up recommending many of the same books over and over. They are certainly excellent books, all of which I’ll continue to recommend, but I need some new fodder for my “recommended” list as well as new challenges in my own reading life. I sorted through books in my huge “TBR” (to be read) pile, slid in a couple of classics I want to challenge myself to read, mixed in several genres, borrowed a few from the newsletters of other independent bookstores, and, voila, the reading list I’ve set for myself for 2011. My goal is to read as many on list as possible before year’s end; hopefully, I’ll read all of them and more. I haven’t set too many “rules” for myself, except the following: I really have to hate it to quit a book on the list; I can only quit after getting at least halfway through it; that if I quit a book, I need to try to pick it up at least once more during the year; and there’s no specific order in which I need to read them. Brief reasons for each selection follow each title.

The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie by Alan Bradley: came highly recommended from all over the book world, even when it was in hardcover. The main character is a plucky eleven year old chemistry nerd, determined to solve a murder mystery which lands in her backyard. A book written for adults yet featuring a child as the narrator; a British period piece written by an American who had never been to England; a debut novel from a 70 year old author; a well-written novel that just happens to be a mystery novel – there are so many aspects of this book which call to me. This has been on my “TBR” pile for over a year, so it’s definitely time.

Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand -- the newest book from the acclaimed author of Seabiscuit brings us the incredible story of one American man’s wild journey of a life through a hell-raising youth during the Great Depression to the track in the 1936 Olympics in Berlin, on to the skies above the Pacific in World War II, to the depths of a Japanese POW camp, and the silent torments of recovering from all the trauma this man, and so many other soldiers like him, had to face. Hey, I’m a sucker for stories of resilience and survival, and for World War II history. In the gifted hands of a writer and researcher like Hillenbrand, no wonder folks are raving.

The Watchmen by Alan Moore: I find graphic novels harder to read, because I am someone who processed so predominantly through words, and graphic novels require the reader to process a story via words and pictures. Although we process story visually and auditorily by watching movies, which I also enjoy, when it comes to the page in front of me, I find it more difficult to process with the visual images and the words. I have a growing admiration for storytellers who are giving us their complicated, elaborate stories in this visual and literary format, and want to challenge myself to be more comfortable in this genre. Although there are many excellent graphic novels available, The Watchman was the only graphic novel listed by Time magazine as one of the top 100 books written in the U.S. since the 1920s.

Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance by Robert M. Pirsig: one of the “new classics”, originally written in 1974 as a novel exploring, among other things, our philosophical heritage, why our technology often leaves us feeling separate from the world, the quest to balance our lives between disparate experiences by being feeling present to them. This book is commonly given to people to pave the way more gently into the “big” questions of philosophy and all the tomes of philosophic rhetoric that attempt to address those questions. It is one of my sister’s favorite books, and she even documented her struggles with it in a gigantic mixed-media painting that became part of the collection of works she presented for her college senior showing. Philosophy intrigues me a great deal, as I have long been interested in “THE BIG QUESTIONS”, but have been afraid of reading too much, for fearing of falling too deeply into the rabbit hole. This seems a safe way to begin.

Tune in next week for the rest of the list! With the introduction of said list out of the way this week, there will be much more room for the actual listing and describing of the rest of the books. For a cheat peek, check our blog at http://frommyshelf.blogspot.com, where you’ll find the entire list now, but not the description or reasons. Can’t steal Hobo’s fire for next week! By the way, Hobo’s hat wasn’t stolen by a grinch, but was returned by a good Samaritan who found it run over in the street.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Kasey's "Intentional Reading Plan" for 2011

Books I Plan to Read in 2011: list only; descriptions, explanations, and book review column stuff to come later!! :)

The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie, by Alan Bradley

Unbroken, by Laura Hillenbrand

The Watchmen, by Alan Moore

The Undertaking, by Thomas Lynch

Everything that Rises Must Converge, by Flannery O’Connor

A Visit from the Goon Squad, by Jennifer Egan

The Help, by Kathryn Stockett

Anna Karenina, by Tolstoy

The Corrections, by Jonathan Franzen

Death Comes for the Archbishop, by Willa Cather

A Fine Balance, by Rohinton Mistry

Seek the Living, by Ashley Warlick

Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, by Robert M. Pirsig

Conquer the Chaos: How to Grow a Successful Small Business without going Crazy, by Clate Mask, Scott Martineau, Michael Gerber

Where We Lived, by Christina Fitzpatrick

Light in the Forest, by Conrad Richter

Unless it Moves the Human Heart, by Roger Rosenblatt

Murder in the Marais, by Cara Black

Wide Sargasso Sea, by Jean Rhys

The People of the Book, by Geraldine Brooks

The entire book of “Psalms” in the Bible, preferably in more than one translation

The only Narnia book I never read: The Silver Chair, by C.S. Lewis