#readathon: 12 hours!

I finished Patient Zero… awesome. Took me longer because I kept stopping to think about which of these characters are in the YA Rot & Ruin series I’ve already read. I need to go back and read the last book again, I think. Lol

So — 962 pages, so far (I’ve been reading Bleak House off and on a bit, too.) Moving on to graphic novels and children’s non-fiction/poetry from the Cybils shortlist.

I’ve eaten all of the foods… more pimento cheese, some brie & fig wonton things. Some sort of mushroom phyllo things. ALL the foods.

Now I’m off to cheerlead a bit (and do a little work since I am working today.)

Read on!

Updated: I forgot about the mid-event survey so here are my answers:

1. What are you reading right now? — Still reading Bleak House, moving on to graphic novels, children’s poetry and non-fiction.
2. How many books have you read so far? — I’ve finished two.
3. What book are you most looking forward to for the second half of the Read-a-thon? — If I have some energy, I’m going to read a book written by a friend. It’s called Winter: Cricket & Grey.
4. Did you have to make any special arrangements to free up your whole day? I couldn’t free up the whole day, I’ve had to pull spam for work off and on all day.
5. Have you had many interruptions? How did you deal with those? Nothing big — a grouchy teen and the spam pulling. 15 minutes or so every couple of hours.
6. What surprises you most about the Read-a-thon, so far? I’m more tired than in past years — I blame the puppies and the kids.
7. Do you have any suggestions for how to improve the Read-a-thon next year? No, it’s awesome.
8. What would you do differently, as a Reader or a Cheerleader, if you were to do this again next year? Eat less, haha.
9. Are you getting tired yet? I’m very tired.
10. Do you have any tips for other Readers or Cheerleaders, something you think is working well for you that others may not have discovered? It’s working great for me to have my home page set up to open Dewey, the cheerleading page, etc. I’m glad I thought to do that yesterday.

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#readathon: 8 hours, in the weeds

Oh boy, eight hours and I’m getting tired. My stomach is also queasy — too much junk food, lol.

I haven’t finished anything else, still reading — 523 pages total, so far.

I’ve been cheering — a few readers every hour.

I’m considering a change in books for awhile. Maybe some non-fiction? Or some graphic novels? We’ll see… maybe I’ll just eat more junk food? hah

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#readathon: 4 hours, 1 down, lots of snacking

Just shy of four hours and I finished Penny Dreadful — super, super awesome middle grade fiction. I loved it. I’ve also read 26 pages of Bleak House — so a total of 330 pages, so far.

I’ve cheered for a few other readers and am on my way to cheer for some more. Totally fun.

The mini cinnamon rolls were excellent. The zucchini bread was ok, not great but not bad. TW made some sort of cinnamon biscuits from some Charleston caterer. She liked them more than I did. I’m about to move on to some sort of lunch type food… and start on Patient Zero, I think.

So far, so good.

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#Readathon, 1st Hour

I’m up, I’m up. I swear, I’m up.

Coffee in hand, here’s my stack of books and here’s my intro survey, same questions as usual:

1) Once again, stuck in Chicagoland — reading primarily from my bedroom but also from the back porch with the dogs and from my desk since I’m working today and doing some cheerleading, as well. My first time as a cheerleader (for #readathon.)

2) I’m most looking forward to Patient Zero. And, the new Christopher Moore book.

3) Snacks? All the snacks! We went to Fresh Market for snacks this time and I think it is the best place for us to find the yummy things.

4) Something about me… last year at this time, I had one puppy and two prairie dogs. This year… three puppies and three prairie dogs. Yes. Yes I am crazy.

5) I can’t even count how many times I’ve participated… my newest tip is … make your homepage the Dewey’s Readathon, that makes it faster and easier to get to the hourly mini-challenges. (If you’re really into it, make your home page all of the pages you’re going to use today. For instance: Facebook, Twitter, your blog’s dashboard, the master cheering spreadsheet, and the Dewey’s Readathon page. Throw in GoodReads if that’s how you track your books.) This year I followed my own advice from previous years and took yesterday off of work and am also taking Monday off. Not sure it is going to help since I’m also working today but hey, that’s better than nothing. I will be able to catch up on my sleep Monday. All the napping, I’m looking forward to that.

To quote Mr. Wordsworth (#TeamWordsworth!), “To begin, begin.” Shall we?

I’m kicking it off, exactly at 7am, with some light reading, Penny Dreadful and I’m going to dig into the mini cinnamon rolls. Oh what the hell, maybe I’ll have a piece of zucchini bread, too.

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Heaven Is Paved with Oreos

Sassymonkey pointed out that Heaven Is Paved with Oreos is a middle grade companion to the Dairy Queen series so I decided I should read it.

It was cute, though I find Sarah a little young to be starting high school — but then again, DJ wasn’t super wordly herself, was she? Maybe that’s a small town Wisconsin thing?

The fiasco in Rome was a little jarring but I liked it. I liked how Sarah handled it. I like the advice DJ gave her — and based on the timing, I can see DJ giving her that advice, at that moment. So it definitely worked for me. I suspect it will not be a good book if you haven’t read the Dairy Queen series. The lesbian storyline makes almost no sense there, without the Dairy Queen storyline to clear things up. Heck, Curtis probably makes no sense if you don’t have some awareness of his character to start with.

So — I liked it but can see why others might not. I still say Murdock should go back to the whole Princess Ben thing.

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Ready for #Readathon!

We have our snacks, oh lord do we have snacks. There’s a reason we rarely go to Fresh Market — it sucks more money from us than a trip to Trader Joe’s and Whole Foods combined!

I have my books ready to go:

I’m surfing the blogs of my cheerleader teammates right now, Go #TeamWordsworth. (I’m also downloading Wordsworth poems to read tomorrow. Hah.) The cheering makes me almost as excited as the snacks and full day of reading. Seriously. If you’d like to visit my teammates, here are there blogs:

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Bleak House Is Bleak

OK so I decided to re-read Bleak House after seeing one of Raych’s posts about re-reading it. She made me laugh so I decided what the hell. I haven’t read it in more than 30 years, I only barely remember it, I should read it again. Others should read it with me. It will be fun.

I reserved it from the library and started reading it during jury duty. Bad decision since I was already pretty grouchy about the jury duty.

I read a few more pages and then just put it down in favor of all the other books. Then, it had to go back to the library and I found I was sad about that.

So, I downloaded a free copy to my Kindle and I’ve been reading a page or two here or there… only to find that I had downloaded only a PARTIAL copy of the fucking thing. I wasn’t even all the way through the chapter telling us about The Ghost Walk when the book ended. WTF.

So I went and found another free copy and installed that on my Kindle. Kind of depressing though because not only is Bleak House very bleak, though it does have it’s good moments, I’m only on page 98 of … 788. Talk about bleak. I might finish this by Christmas.

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Time: Too Much, Not Enough

I don’t spend a lot of time on Pinterest because I don’t have the time to spend on Pinterest. But, I do visit every day and scroll a few scrolls through the new stuff and occasionally search for timely topics or topics of interest and scroll a few scrolls through those results.

I might share a few things or re-pin a few things and then I leave and never think of Pinterest again, until the next day when I do it all over again.

Today, I’m staring sullenly at Pinterest wondering why so many people seem to have so much time on their hands to do weird and wondrous things. And also wondering why I do not have so much time on my hands that I, too, can do weird and wondrous things.

I think I might be having a personal crisis of some sort.

Not to worry, it will pass.

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Segregating New Arrivals

I love my library, the Glenview Public Library. I don’t know how many times and how many ways I’ve said it since we arrived in Chicagoland just under six years ago.

My library is large. It’s a brand new facility, opened not too long after we moved here. At first, we missed the tiny little building it used to be but we’ve grown to love the big space — plenty of room for new books!

The librarians are outstanding. Really excellent. They’re friendly and helpful and go out of their way to resolve the occasional problem. When we leave this godforsaken place in a little more than two years, our library and our librarians will be missed.

Which is all why it pains me to write this blog post.

I am really disappointed with the recent decision to segregate the new arrivals — the non-fiction new arrivals have been moved upstairs, with the other non-fiction. The reading club books have been moved to the shelves that used to hold the non-fiction new arrivals.

This pains me. In more ways than one.

We go to our library at least twice a week. We check out dozens of books, of all kinds — and I do mean all kinds — every time we go. Almost every time we visit, we peruse the new arrivals and almost every time, we pluck at least one non-fiction book from the new arrivals shelf. Biographies, poetry, cookbooks, craft books, self-help, travel guides — you name it, we’re interested in it. (Those who read my blog fairly regular know how often I say, “I don’t know how this ended up on our library cart.” — or “I plucked this from the new arrivals shelf.” SO OFTEN. This happens because we peruse the new arrivals shelves so often.)

Because we often visit our library early in the morning or during a lunch break, we have very little time to peruse the stacks. We grab our holds from the holds shelf, we walk to the new arrivals shelves and then we check out. In and out in 15 minutes, which includes chit chatting with our favorite librarians.

With the non-fictions all the way upstairs … we just do not have time to go all of the way up those stairs and back down again, (even if my knee could handle all of the stairs), or deal with the elevator to get up there to look at the non-fiction new arrivals.

And lest you think this is all about me — In this time of library budget cuts, we’re lucky that we’ve got a fairly strong budget — you want to keep that budget, don’t you? Think about those who aren’t heavy library users. The occasional visitor. You want those people to be able to see the wealth of resources and entice them to check out a wide variety of books, just as quickly as you possibly can. You do this by having really interesting displays in easy to access areas. Like the new arrivals shelves. By hiding the new arrival non-fictions upstairs, you’re doing a bloody good job of keeping those books out of circulation. Shouldn’t one of your biggest goals be to get books circulating?

I polled my friends and family members about their libraries, assuming I was over-reacting. None, not a single person, said that their new arrivals were segregated in this way. None. They aren’t all in exactly the same area but they are all very in visible browsable spaces and absolutely not segregated to different floors!

Come on Glenview Public Library — think this through. You’re a big library but you’re not Chicago Public Library or New York Public Library big. There’s no need for this.

You’ve removed highly circulated books from a high visibility, browsable area in favor of non-browsable and low circulated books being in a browsable, highly-visible area. Nobody wandering around the library is going to decide to a) join a book club b) choose books for their book club via those shelves. That’s just now how book clubs work. Shouldn’t you know that?

I was trying to give the Glenview Public Library the benefit of the doubt — maybe they need more space for new fiction that’s coming in? But I took a look at the shelves where the book club books used to be and those are empty. Completely empty. And even if this decision was made to help free up space downstairs for fiction — I think there are better ways to do that.

– Move the book club books upstairs, maybe? Wouldn’t that seem like a smarter move?
– Reduce the number of new arrivals you display — though I’d be disappointed, that would at least make some sense.
– The first row of new arrivals is not a very eye-catching display. Just do away with it or move it to the area by the rental books, that frees up an entire shelf right there.

I need to run to the library and pick up some reserves, as well as books for this weekend’s #readathon and the very idea depresses me. It’s only been a couple of weeks since the non-fictions moved and it just makes me sad every time I go in, now.

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