2011

Monstrumologist

TW was alllllll excited about The Monstrumologist and not just because Yancey mentions Devil’s Millhopper in the beginning. (We love Devil’s Millhopper and if we ever leave this godforsaken place I would be happy to live very close to the Devil’s Millhopper again – but that’s another post entirely.)  I almost took it back to the library unread because I had a whole bunch of books due back and I needed to be really selective about which books I chose in order to get through as many as possible and The Monstrumologist isn’t exactly a short book. Also, sometimes when TW is really really enthusiastic about a book, I don’t love it. Heh.

But, it was the last book due back on Monday (which is today) and I had nothing else I was dying to read instead – so I picked it up. It was late and it started slowly, well after the Devil’s Millhopper part. I had a hard time sticking with it for the first 50 pages. I really think it was just because I was tired because shortly after that, I was hooked. I was cursing out loud at “the monstrumologist” and cursing even more loudly out loud at “Corey”.

And now I’m dying to read the second book (which TW already read but I had to take back UNREAD.) I think I’ll reserve book two sooner, rather than later. I wonder what these would be like on audio… scary or not so much? Hmmm maybe we’ll find out when we get to book three.

Also, Mr. Yancey, if you stumble across this… TW wants to know if you live in Gainesville. Or at least in Alachua County. I think she might want to meet you in person. Maybe at  Devil’s Millhopper if we ever leave this godforsaken city we live in now.

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Anna and the French Kiss

This was something I picked up after seeing it on a book blog – I just wish I remembered which book blog.  I almost didn’t read Anna and the French Kiss because of the damn cover. It looks a little to YA pretty girl romance-y for me. I decided I’d give it a try after reading the first couple of chapters over TW’s shoulder one night – I got sucked into the idea of a story about a girl whose parents send her to Paris to attend the School of Americas in Paris for her senior year. She doesn’t want to go. She wants to stay home. In Atlanta. With her friends. Doing normal things. Watching her brother.

Once she arrives, she starts out a little too timid for me. She doesn’t leave the school for a week. She doesn’t order hot food at the cafeteria for ages because she doesn’t speak French. Wah. Poor thing. Your situation is what you make of it.

Good thing she found nice people who forced her to go out, I guess. I’d have liked it better if she’d have grown her own backbone and made her way like a strong young woman but whatevs.

It’s not that I didn’t like her friends – I did. It’s not that I didn’t like the guy she falls for – I did. All of those things could have happened with Anna being just a wee bit stronger and a wee bit more self-sufficient. I’d like to think young women who read this are going to read Anna’s character and roll their damn eyes at her wimpyness – while still enjoying the cute love story.

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Forge

Yay! Our first audio book of 2011 – we started it in 2010 and finished it today. Forge is the second book in Laurie Halse Anderson’s Seeds of America series. We listened to Chains a few months ago and while we didn’t love, love, LOVE it – we liked it. I figure we’ll read along until we decide we don’t like them at all. After listening to Forge, we aren’t anywhere near that point. We liked Forge much better than we liked Chains. Curzon is a good character – and his storytelling and thinking process is stronger than Isabel’s was in the first book. Or, maybe the storytelling was tighter? Halse Anderson found her way and simply improved? I don’t know what it was but it was excellent and I’m dying for a book three.

When I went off looking for book three, I saw Fever 17 – I believe I read that but am not 100% sure and since the main character is mentioned in very brief passing, in an amusing way, towards the end of Forge, I decided to go ahead and reserve this one on audio while we wait for book three. I think we’ll be amused by it.

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Wildthorn

This is another one of those books, reserved at my library when I was on a search for lesbian fiction. I was very pleased that my library had Wildthorn – I don’t read much historical romance-y lesbian fiction, which is too bad. I should see if I can scare up some more!

Louisa is her father’s daughter – she’d like to be a boy, because boys have toy trains and get to play marbles and they go to school and learn real things as opposed to the things girls go to school to learn. Her father, a doctor, indulges her and keeps her home, hires a tutor and even takes her on rounds with him after she’s old enough to handle such things. Louisa wants nothing more than to be a doctor. She’s also in love with her cousin – Grace.

Which is all well and good until her father dies, leaving her brother head of the household. And her brother has issues. Issues with Louisa – a young woman who “apes men” – and personal issues that drive him to… well I won’t spoil it for you.

Before she knows it, Louisa is in an asylum and the staff is calling her Lucy. There are some nice twists at the end and an ending that I didn’t love because it was a little big predictable and too close to happily ever after for my tastes. Even though it wasn’t happily ever after in the same way it would have been if Louisa wasn’t a lesbian.

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The Diamond of Darkhold

Good grief, I didn’t even know The Diamond of Darkhold existed! If it hadn’t been for chatting with Val about books her daughter might like or had read, I’d have never known. Thank goodness C liked the series and read them all and Val was smart enough to mention that last one. Sheesh.

I really liked it – thankfully. The Prophet of Yonwood bored me so I was concerned it would be more like that. It wasn’t. I love what was hidden for the People of Ember – brilliant and perfect choice. LOVE it.

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The Improper Life of Bezellia Grove

I never expected to read The Improper Life of Bezellia Grove in one sitting but it was a super fast read. No idea why since I think it was just as long (page-wise) as Packing for Mars. It just flowed nicely so even when I thought I’d put it down and go to bed – I didn’t, I just kept on reading and before I knew it… done!

I also didn’t expect to enjoy it quite as much as I did. It looked like a fluffy story about a girl growing up privileged in Nashville in the 60s-70s with all of the typical race issues you’d expect. But I did enjoy it, a lot. And the ending wasn’t one of those happily ever after endings. The ending made sense. I like that.

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Packing for Mars

Heh. I like Mary Roach and I’m glad Packing for Mars is the first book I read in 2011. Even if the space budget appears to have been cut so much that a lot of the programs she talks about have probably suffered an awful lot. I think we NEED to go to Mars. Seriously – and I’m not even a NASA/space program geek like TW is.

I think we NEED to go to Mars because it’s human nature to push the boundaries – to go where no people have gone before – to learn new things, think about things in different ways. Mars is a beautiful example of that kind of drive. Not to mention all of the amazing scientific discoveries made along the way that will improve our lives on earth.

Let’s go to Mars. Dammit.

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Queer Books? Why the Hell Not?

I know, I know. I just finished posting my 2011 challenges and the GLBT Challenge wasn’t on it. I thought about joining, decided I wouldn’t because it’s not really a challenge for me to read queer books, but when I saw the challenge again just now in my feedreader, I felt compelled to join. So… I joined.

Maybe the challenge for me will be to actually REVIEW the queer books I read? Yea, that’s it. I’ll try to do a real review rather than one line of I liked it and one line of I hated the ending.

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Reading Challenges for 2011

I’ve already posted about the Cybil’s Shortlist Challenge – that’s a given for me. I enjoy these books too much to ever stop doing this one. And, I didn’t even come close to finishing the Nancy Drew Challenge that I started on the spur of the moment last year (I’m glaring at @Sassymonkey now) so I’ll be reading the Nancys all year long and hope to get much closer to finishing – if not completely finished by the end of the year.  So that’s two challenges but what else?

Well of course I’m going to do my From the Stacks by Color Challenge but I’m going to do it a bit differently this year. Every year I have a ton of trouble with it because I just wander around on the last day of the old year or the first day of the new year and pick a book, by color, that I have not read. I don’t take the time to really look at the books and so I end up with short stories that I don’t love – fiction that I really disliked – non-fiction I was bored with. I find myself looking longingly at books on my shelf that I DO want to read and wishing I had chosen those instead. And, of course I do also read books that I buy or am given throughout the year that aren’t on my challenge list at all. (In 2010, I read a total of 53 books that I own. That’s not a lot and many came from my Challenges but it’s still not bad…)

So this year I’m going to do this a little differently. I’m still going to read books from the stacks, by color, but I’m going to be more selective about it – and I’m going to make it harder because I love setting myself up to gripe about challenges.  Here are the new rules:

1) I will read 40 books from my shelves (that I haven’t already read) – preferably a few every month rather than waiting ’til the last six months of the year to read them all. (Not counting Nancy Drews – those are separate!)

2) I will read at least one book in each color (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple, black, brown, white). (Again, not counting Nancy Drews since they’re all yellow!)

3) At least one book will be short stories. At least one book will be poetry. At least one book will be a re-read of a novel I loved. At least one book will be a memoir or a biography.

So that’s that… what else?

Oh, @Firemom’s Adoption Reading Challenge. I have absolutely no idea about what I want to read for this challenge – I often read books with adoption themes, not necessarily chosen because they have adoption themes, so I’m sure I won’t have trouble. BUT, I’d like to choose some based on recommendations by others who are taking the challenge. I’d like to choose some specifically because they have adoption themes. Let’s see how I do…

Besides specific challenges, I’d like to do more books on audio. I’m a little surprised that I only have eight from last year (though we’re about halfway through a ninth) – I’d like to try for ten… let’s see how we do with that…

Oh – one more, I almost forgot. During the holidays, Sassymonkey wrote a post about Christmas books and I thought I might have some fun with those this year. If someone leads Christmas in July, I might join it. Otherwise, I’ll just make it a mini-challenge for myself to read three Christmas (or Christmas-y) books in 2011.

Alrighty, I think that’s enough, don’t you?

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*UPDATED Four Hours Later* – I felt oddly compelled to join the GLBT Challenge even after deciding against it last week. I know, I have a sickness. You feel sorry for me, don’t you?

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Cybils Shortlist Challenge – 2011

Yippee! It’s that time of year again and one of my most favorite things about January 1st – the Cybils Shortlist is up and I’m ready to start reading! (I’ve learned my lesson and will reserve those sometimes hard to get children’s non-fiction books FIRST.)

Easy Readers & Early Chapter Books

Cowgirl Kate and Cocoa: Spring Babies – 2.5.11

Fly Guy Meets Fly Girl – 2.5.11

National Geographic Readers: Ants – 2.5.11

The Babysitters: Cork and Fuzz – 7.1.11

We Are In a Book (An Elephant and Piggie Book) – 2.5.11

Anna Hibiscus – 3.13.11

Frankie Pickle and the Pine Run 3000 – 4.9.11

Home on the Range (Down Girl and Sit) – 7.1.11

Princess Posey and the First Grade Parade (Book 1) – 3.13.11

Zapato Power: Freddie Ramos Takes Off – 5.12.11

Fantasy and Science Fiction (Middle Grades)

The Call (The Magnificent 12) – 2.8.11

The Dead Boys – 7.3.11

Dragonbreath: Attack of the Ninja Frogs – 4.9.11

Fever Crumb – 9.29.11

Ninth Ward – 9.15.11

Reckless – 12.13.11

The Shadows (The Books of Elsewhere Volume 1) – 3.27.11

Fantasy and Science Fiction (Young Adult)

Brain Jack – 2.15.11

Guardian of the Dead – 10.30.11

Plain Kate – 9.23.11

Pod – 11.25.11

Rot & Ruin – 3.27.11

Ship Breaker – 11.29.11

The Wager – 12.2.11

Fiction Picture Books

A Beach Tail – 9/11/11

Chalk – 9/11/11

The Cow Loves Cookies – 9/11/11

Flora’s Very Windy Day – 9/11/11

Interrupting Chicken – 9/11/11

Shark vs Train – 11.4.11

A Sick Day for Amos McGee – 10.23.11

Graphic Novels (Middle Grade)

Athena: Grey Eyed Goddess – 7.1.11

Guinea Pig, Pet Shop Private Eye:  Hamster and Cheese – 7.2.11

Meanwhile: Pick Any Path. 3,856 Story Possibilities – 5.12.11

Smile – 5.12.11

The Unsinkable Walker Bean – 3.13.11

Graphic Novels (Young Adult)

Ghostopolis – 3.4.11

Mercury – 7.2.11

The Night Owls (Vol. 1) – 12.29.11

Twin Spica (Vol. 1) – 2.5.11

Yummy: The Last Days of a Southside Shorty – 6.9.11

Middle Grade Fiction

Because of Mr Terupt – 4.10.11

Belly Up – 10.14.11

Betti on the High Wire – 3.1.11

Crunch – 10.16.11

Milo: Sticky Notes and Brain Freeze – 11.20.11

The Kneebone Boy – 11.14.11

The Strange Case of Origami Yoda – 3.28.11

Nonfiction (Middle Grade and YA)

The Dark Game: True Spy Stories – 3.7.11

The Hive Detectives: Chronicle of a Honey Bee Catastrophe – 11.26.11

Kakapo Rescue: Saving the World’s Strangest Parrot – 11.25.11

Secret of the Yellow Death: A True Story of Medical Sleuthing – 10.22.11

Spilling Ink: A Young Writer’s Handbook – 11.19.11

Under a Red Sky: Memoir of a Childhood in Communist Romania – 11.18.11

An Unspeakable Crime: Persecution and Prosecution of Leo Frank – 11.27.11

Nonfiction (Picture Books)

Bones – 11.4.11

Dinosaur Mountain: Digging into the Jurassic Age – 11.5.11

Henry Aaron’s Dream – 10.22.11

Pop! The Invention of Bubble Gum – 10.22.11

Sit-In: How Four Friends Stood Up by Sitting Down – 11.5.11

Skit-Scat Raggedy Cat: Ella Fitzgerald – 10.23.11

The Extraordinary Mark Twain (According to Susy) – 10.22.11

Poetry

Borrowed Names: Poems About Laura Ingalls Wilder, Madam C.J. Walker, Marie Curie and Their Daughters – 2.5.11

Dark Emperor and Other Poems of the Night – 11.3.11

Mirror Mirror: a Book of Reversible Verse – 10.23.11

Scarum Fair – 10.9.11

Sharing the Seasons: A Book of Poems

Switching on the Moon: A Very First Book of Bedtime Poems

Ubiquitous: Celebrating Nature’s Survivors – 10.9.11

Young Adult Fiction

Dirt Road Home – 3.23.11

Harmonic Feedback – 9.17.11

I Now Pronounce You Someone Else – 10.11.11

Scrawl – 11.09.11

Some Girls Are – 9.14.11

Split – 10.09.11

Stolen – 2.7.11

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