Reading Lists

Books for Girls

The New York Times has this interesting list of books for "girls" to read.  I really hate gendered reading lists like this but that’s a blog for another day.  Looking at the list, I think I’ve read four.  All four were very good. 

Interesting to see Luna on the list – I wonder if it makes the list of books for boys to read, ha! 

Flipped, also very good.  I think Michelle read this before we did.  Maybe right after we brought her home for school.  Or maybe it was Chris’s ex g/f who recommended it?  I don’t know, I just know we’ve all read it and we enjoyed it quite a bit.

The Earth, My Butt and Other Big Round Things was good but not something I’d recommend off the top of my head. 

Speak was a tough read, I’m surprised it’s got the 14 and up label.  I thought parents were more conservative than I am…

Oh wait, I’ve read 5 – Tiger Eyes, sort of boring actually.  I think I’ve outgrown Judy Blume or something.  Which now that I think about it, is really very sad.  I sound like my mother!  Ack!

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That’s So Gay!

It seriously stinks that the majority of books on Out.com’s Best in Books list are GAY and not LESBIAN.  What is with that?  It’s always been that way but it seems to get worse with each passing year.  Queer lit might be here to stay but it’s pissing me off.  I mean HOW doggone GAY?! (Not that I want to turn this into an us/them sort of thing, I just want a little equality in the list.)

Another thing that is annoying is my library only has one of these (besides the entirely too mainstream "What do you mean those dudes were gay?" Son of a Witch).  And as much as I like a good gay boy book (Have I ever told you about my Robert Rodi fixation???) I don’t like them well enough to BUY them.  Toss some lesbian books on the list and I might spring for a few.  Ya know?

I’m going to have to do some research and make my own BEST of LESBIAN LIT list!  Anyone want to help?

Thanks to Daily Dose of Queer for pointing out the OUT list!

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2006 Healthy Wealthy & Wise

This evening I noticed the Penguin UK list of books to read in 2006. I noticed it first because I saw it on Reading Matters and within minutes saw it on Sassymonkey Reads.



I love the idea of choosing one book a month in each category, “Healthy, Wealthy & Wise” plus one “Must Read” but I’m not thrilled with the Penguin UK list. This has me wondering which books I’d recommend in each category. And it has me wondering, how would an American list differ from the UK list? How would a Canadian list differ from both?



Very interesting. I think I’ll see if I can do four a month in those categories. It will help me with my non-fiction/classics stuff from my 101 Things in 1001 Days list.



What would you choose for each category?



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Brilliant Women Redux

I was chastised.  By the owner of the book I was telling you all about last month.. umm in August (time flies)   Sniff, Sniff.  No, I still haven’t finished my entry which means I still haven’t sent it on its way to the next person in the ring.  I’ve thought about it a lot.  I even bought some cool things to decorate my pages with.  I’ve come up with some Brilliant Women I want to write about and I’ve jotted some ideas about said Brilliant Women.  But no, I have not actually WRITTEN anything in the doggone journal.

I’m bad.  I know.  I’m sorry.  Sort of.  Brilliance is hard to write about.  I feel like I need to write brilliantly about these brilliant women and I’ve been just a little too "off" to come close to writing anything brilliant.  Heck, I can’t even manage to successfully log into my email account half the time because I can’t seem to type my own name!  See?  How can I be expected to write about brilliant women under this type of cloud?

Yes, I’m just making excuses.  I’m good at making excuses.  When it comes to excuse making, I’m a brilliant woman. 

So here’s the list of women I’m going to write about, in no particular order, I think…

  • Audre Lorde
  • Jodi Piccoult
  • Virginia Woolf
  • Jeanette Winterson
  • Sylvia Plath
  • Jane Austen

Making the list is the hardest part, right?

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I Need Penguins

TW and I spent some time daydreaming about the complete set of Penguin Classics but as of yet, we haven’t won the lottery so the 25 boxes that they are shipped in (and take 12 hours to unpack) aren’t clogging up ur already clogged office. (not that 77 linear feet would fit in this office…but that would motivate me to clean it) I am afraid that ownership of these will always be an unfulfilled dream, just like having my very own library. Sigh.

Penguinpock
But this little set is totally doable, don’t you think??? Free delivery in the UK. I don’t live in the UK. What do you think delivery would be to the US????

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I love banned books

I don’t really want to ban that stupid Modesty book because then that will just make it more beloved to the masses. We all know that’s what happens when a book is banned or challenged. It’s certainly happened for me. If we’re just talking about books and someone mentions Ordinary People, I’m likely to say “It was ok but no big deal” but as soon as I see it on the Banned/Challenged List I get all sentimental about it. Absence or the potential for absence makes the heart grow fonder, right?

I’m thrilled that three of the most challenged books last year had gay themes or undertones. (Yippee! Next year let’s get four!) Not because I’m all that thrilled with the books themselves, (though The Perks of Being a Wallflower is a favorite around here), but because those gay and not really all that great books are getting more attention than if folks had just kept their mouths shut about them. I mean really, “King & King”? Who would have given that a second look if folks hadn’t made such a stink. It certainly wasn’t going to replace Grimm’s Fairy Tales in the classic Prince and Princess love story genre, was it?

And since I’m on the topic of Banned and Challenged Books, can someone explain to me how Song of Solomon is porn? Because I don’t get it. At all. It’s not even erotica. If I handed Song of Solomon to Michelle and told her it was porn, she’d laugh her rear end off. And I’m glad.

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Ten Books That Say Something

OK I am going to give this “Ten Books” thing a try. Remember, these are ten books that say something about me. It was hard. It is still hard, even as I sit down to write the list. I could easily add ten more. Maybe it should be an every Tuesday Meme. Zillions of books say SOMETHING about us, right?

1) Little Women – actually the entire Alcott series. I loved those books. I don’t remember exactly which year I got these as a gift or for what special occasion but I do remember how excited I was to have received an entire set of hard bound, no jacket, books. I loved those books, did I mention that?

When I left NJ, I somehow did not get all of my boxes returned to me. I got a few boxes over the first year after the move but the Alcott books never appeared. I thought the dirtbag sold them. Hope is renewed though, Jenn says she has a box that the dirtbag found in the attic…with some old books and Plain Gramma’s old radio… next weekend, these may be back in my possession. Fingers crossed, please.

Nancy
2) Nancy Drew – I was a loyal Nancy Drew reader for many years – long after I was of Nancy Drew reading age. I’m still a loyal Nancy Drew fan and am often tempted to pick one up just for fun.

I was sad that my daughters didn’t develop a taste for the greatest girl sleuth of all time. But also relieved because upon reflection I can only imagine my parents frustration at having me buy a new book on Saturday morning and within two hours be begging for extra chores so I could make more money … and then money in hand, beg to be taken back to the store to buy another book.

My parents were good, they often indulged me in this and made trip after trip to the store on a weekend or a summer’s day.

3) Return to Modesty – This is the book I want to burn. This is the book I need to ban. That need says just about anything you need to know about me, doesn’t it?

4) A Tree Grows in Brooklyn – I use to go to the library with my mom. We didn’t go every single week so it always felt like a treat – no, an adventure – to go. I remember wandering the children’s section and finding not much of a selection. I had a couple of books but I was of age that Nancy Drew wasn’t holding my interest and even if she was, I needed to buy those – not check them out. So I wandered into the adult section to find my mom. She saw the small number of books in my hands and decided we’d go in search of something better.

The gods and goddesses were smiling upon me that day because she took me to the “S” rather than the stupid “C” section and pulled out Betty Smith rather than Wilkie Collins. I should really believe in a higher being for that simple act of kindness he or she showed me.

My mom said that Betty Smith had been one of her favorite authors and she suggested I start with A Tree Grows in Brooklyn… I did, finished it fast, and we headed back to the library for more of Smith’s work.

collier.jpg 5) Collier Encyclopedias – As a child, we had the World Book Encyclopedias, 1963 and those were great but the creme de la creme were the Collier’s. We had the 1967s. My brother and I loved them. The human body transparencies, woohoo that was fun. The paper, the quality of the paper, so much better than the World Books. The gold on the spine. The black and red. The embossed feeling.

TW reads the dictionary just because it catches her eye. I spent many a childhood rainy day in the living room not practicing the stupid piano but reading the encyclopedias instead.

I wonder if my dad sold those in the garage sale. I bet he did. HMPH.

6) Velveteen Rabbit – This is the book my mom had to read to me, over and over and over again. Long into the years when I could quite easily read it to myself. It wasn’t the same though. And I don’t recall my father ever reading it to me. Just mom. She read it a lot. Even though she was sick of it. She still read it. Not nearly as often as I wanted her to. But often enough.

7) My Darling, My Hamburger – Man the stir this caused in my middle school. There was one copy and it got circulated around the entire school. There were waiting lists and stuff. Sort of look bookcrossing rays or something. Today, I don’t understand why we (or at least I) didn’t just go to the darn Barnes & Noble and buy a copy for myself. Or why didn’t I go to the public library (our library did not have a copy, I do remember checking) and get it there? Probably because it somehow seemed elicit… a book our parents (and teachers, obviously since there was no copy in the library) would want banned. I made darn sure my kids had a copy of their own – and I don’t think any of them ever bothered to read it. What was elicit back in the 70’s certainly isn’t now.

8) Millions of Cats – This is my children’s version of “Velveteen Rabbit”. I have read this so many times, I have it memorized even today. Though I have not read it to a child in a good long time.

We moved to the Philippines when I was pregnant with Christopher and Jennifer was not yet 3. There were no bookstores off of the air base and the Stars & Stripes, as valuable as it was (is) and as much as I appreciated it, it just did not cut it. Picture a bookstore the size of a typical 7-11. A bookstore that couldn’t specialize in any one genre. A bookstore that had to meet the needs of a lot of different types of people. Did I mention it just couldn’t cut it? (and let’s not talk about the library… sigh)

So my mom signed Jenn up for a book of the month club for kids. Great club. Great books. And Millions of Cats arrived in our postal service center.

I remember when I opened it, I said “Oh, I remember this. Cool.” Famous last words. There have been many times when I have said “Ugh, not that again!”

But I love it, I really do. And I often buy it for kids that I know and love and kids that I don’t really know or love. And, we own 4 copies at the moment…2 hard back and 2 paperback. 😉

9) The Red Tent – Menstruation! The Red Tent! I love it. Is there any book that treats menstruation as wonderfully as this one? Any book that treats women gatherings as wonderfully as this one? I don’t think so, and that’s a shame.

10) Anthem – Forget The Fountainhead. Ignore Atlas Shrugged. Anthem is all you need. Short. Sweet. Right to the point. Ego is everything. Free will is all there is. Everything else is secondary. Reading Anthem was sooo what I needed at the time. It’s still a favorite, just because it was exactly what I needed in those rough years.

As I was writing this, I realized that I can’t do just 10… my list grew to 11 and then 12 and then… so expect to see additions to this every now and then. It was fun to do, once I actually got going on it.

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In Search of Geometry….


We went to Barnes & Nobles this evening in search of some geometry books to help Michelle. She’s struggling a bit and really hates calling her teachers to say “I’m struggling a bit”. Considering she’s a teenage girl, she really doesn’t like talking on the phone very much. Weird kid. Anyway, we walked out of BN with a few geometry books and a bunch of other stuff. But what I like most about our once in awhile visits to BN is grabbing their New Discoveries flyer! My library reserve list is about to grow by leaps and bounds!

Another fun find at BN was their flyer about the Quill Book Awards. We’ve actually read a lot of these! I’m excited about voting for one of my favorite writers in the Science Fiction/Fantasy/Horror category. I love, love, LOVE Christopher Moore! The Stupidest Angel is not my favorite but I’m happy to give it a vote in this category – especially since I am probably the only person on earth who really did not enjoy Jonathon Strange & Mr Norell.

I’m troubled by the best fiction category though. The only one I haven’t read is A Long Way Down and it’s probably the one I’d vote for if I had. I was so disappointed in The Mermaid Chair and only barely liked Gilead (TW didn’t even finish it). I hated The Plot Against America (TW really liked it) and I struggled to get through Allende’s Zorro, though once I get past the first 150 pages I didn’t struggle as much. Sigh, who to vote for …

Go over to the Quill Book Awards page and cast your votes… and tell me who you voted for!

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Never Let Me Go


I haven’t read the other books on the short list for the Booker Prize but if Never Let Me Go wins, I won’t be surprised.

This is an interesting take on the cloning idea that avoids the science fiction feel that too many cloning novels take on, (I’m not a huge Sci-Fi fan). What’s really interesting is that I didn’t know it was about cloning, lol. It took me pages and pages to realize that was how these children were “created”. I understood why they were created but it never hit me that they were clones. Once it hit me I said “duhhhhh”. 😉

There was one section in part three that felt wrong to me. Kathy H is talking about sex and the voice no longer sounds like hers, at least not to me. It’s a brief section, maybe a page at best, but it bugged me.

If you’re interested in another cloning novel that doesn’t stretch into science fiction a whole lot, Cast of Shadows was pretty good. There’s a computer gaming aspect to it that was really interesting as well.

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Reveal Yourself

Mental Multivitamin is revealing herself with ten books – not her ten favorites, which any good bookie will tell you is impossible to come up with – just ten books that reveal something about who she is, define her or have shaped her. She has a great list and I’ve been thinking about my ten. I’m not quite ready to share them because it’s HARD and I want it to be the RIGHT ten.

Start thinking about your ten and post them, I’d love to see what you reveal!

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