Sunday, July 29, 2012

Coming in August

Looking for some reading events to participate in this summer? Here's a few I plan on participating in:

The True Book Addict and Fiction State of Mind are hosting a readalong of Hillary Mantel's Wolf Hall. Check out the schedule and sign-up here.

Wallace of Unputdownables is hosting a readalong of Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest.

Estella's Revenge & Capricious Reader are hosting a readalong of Elizabeth Gaskell's North and South. I'd love to reread this with my audiobook copy, but I had recently binged on downloading audiobooks from the library, so it might not be possible for me.



Bout of Books Read-a-Thon
I may do this one, not sure if two back to back will be a good thing or not.


And remember, I'll be hosting a readalong for The Hobbit. I'll be getting together a page and a shiny graphic for it, but for now you can read about it at the interest post here

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Review: Kindred by Octavia Butler

Kindred by Octavia Butler
Publisher: Beacon Press
Science Fiction-Time Travel, Historical Fiction
My own purchase
4 stars

Dana, a modern black woman, is celebrating her twenty-sixth birthday with her new husband when she is snatched abruptly from her home in California and transported to the antebellum South. Rufus, the white son of a plantation owner, is drowning, and Dana has been summoned to save him. Dana is drawn back repeatedly through time to the slave quarters, and each time the stay grows longer, more arduous, and more dangerous until it is uncertain whether or not Dana's life will end, long before it has a chance to begin.

I first was introduced to Butler's writings when one of my college English classes assigned her Parable of the Sower to the class. Although we never got to reading it for class, I read it anyways, and I loved it. I've been on the look out for more of her books ever since. Kindred has the same easy to jump into writing that I remember from Parable of the Sower.

Butler is known for being a science fiction writer, but this book is fairly light on the science fiction aspects. The only science fiction aspects is going back and forth in time, and worrying about whether something she does in the past will change the future. The vast majority of the novel takes place in antebellum Maryland, so it very much reads like historical fiction. If you like historical fiction but aren't big on science fiction, this would be a good book for you to try.

The depiction of slavery in this is a bit unusual, when compared to a book like Gone with the Wind for example. Rufus's father is not a rich man. Nothing is said as to just how many slaves he owns, but the house is described as modest sized. And neither are the Weylin men exceptionally cruel masters, or treated their slaves like one of the family. Rufus's father takes a rather Machiavellian approach- making the punishments for disobeying significantly harsh so other slaves would fear disobeying. Its not a portayal I am used to seeing. Especially since the slave experience is seen through the eyes of someone living as a slave.

I really enjoyed the novel, and couldn't stop reading it.

Monday, July 23, 2012

High Summer Readathon Wrap Up


Saturday and Sunday I read 274 pages of The Lost Hero by Rick Riordan. Didn't finish it, but should today. This brings my total pages for the Readathon to 639 pages. And I finished one book- Kindred by Octavia Butler. Pretty good on page count. I'll tackle the TBR pile in another readathon in August.

Saturday, July 21, 2012

Snapshot Saturday

Snapshot Saturday is hosted by Alyce of At Home with Books



I got my pummelo tree for this past Christmas. Finally got drip to it, and the tree got a bit of new growth and a few more flowers. Well some of those flowers have little starts of fruits! I am so glad I won't have to hunt down people seeling them at the farmers market this winter!

High Summer Readathon, start Day 6



Still reading The Lost Hero by Rick Riordan. Not living up to my past history reading his books (Got through the entire Percy Jackson series in one week), Put then I wasn't exploring the strange world of making preserves. Or sitting in front of the tv.

Day 1 (June 16):
  • # pages read: 65
  • # books finished: --
  • WTD pages: 65
  • WTD books: --
Day 2 (June 17):
  • # pages read: 75
  • # books finished: --
  • WTD pages: 140
  • WTD books: --
Day 3 (June 18):
  • # pages read: 54
  • # books finished: --
  • WTD pages: 194
  • WTD books: --
Day 4 (June 19):
  • # pages read: 77
  • # books finished: 1
  • WTD pages: 271
  • WTD books: 1
Day 5 (June 20):
  • # pages read: 94
  • # books finished: 0
  • WTD pages: 365
  • WTD books: 1
Day 6 (June 21):
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Day 7 (June 22):
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Friday, July 20, 2012

High Summer Readathon, Start of Day 5



I finished Kindred by Octavia Butler Thursday morning before I left for work. I really enjoyed it. Started The Lost Hero by Rick Riordan after I got back. Its been sitting on the shelf much too long.

Day 1 (June 16):
  • # pages read: 65
  • # books finished: --
  • WTD pages: 65
  • WTD books: --
Day 2 (June 17):
  • # pages read: 75
  • # books finished: --
  • WTD pages: 140
  • WTD books: --
Day 3 (June 18):
  • # pages read: 54
  • # books finished: --
  • WTD pages: 194
  • WTD books: --
Day 4 (June 19):
  • # pages read: 77
  • # books finished: 1
  • WTD pages: 271
  • WTD books: 1
Day 5 (June 20):
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Day 6 (June 21):
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Day 7 (June 22):
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Thursday, July 19, 2012

Start of Day 4, High Summer Readathon



Not very productive yesterday. Got sucked into computer things and tv shows. Just a few pages shy of finishing Kindred last night.

Day 1 (June 16):
  • # pages read: 65
  • # books finished: --
  • WTD pages: 65
  • WTD books: --
Day 2 (June 17):
  • # pages read: 75
  • # books finished: --
  • WTD pages: 140
  • WTD books: --
Day 3 (June 18):
  • # pages read: 54
  • # books finished: --
  • WTD pages: 194
  • WTD books: --
Day 4 (June 19):
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Day 5 (June 20):
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Day 6 (June 21):
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Day 7 (June 22):
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Wednesday, July 18, 2012

High Summer Readathon day 3



I should finish up Kindred by Octavia Butler tonight. I've got less than a hundred pages left on it and her style always reads quickly. Not sure what will be up next, will know later on.

Mini-challenge hosted by Lara the Book Snob


Picture from the listing for this house on Oldhouse.com

The Weylin house in Kindred is described as "It was a red-brick Georgian Colonial, boxy but handsome in a quiet kind of way, two and a half stories high with dormered windows and a chimney on each end. It wasn't big or imposing enough to be called a mansion." (p.67 in my edition) When I saw this house listing,the original brick portion of the house look as I'd imagine the Weylin House to be. This residence is also located in Maryland, where Weylin House is supposed to be.
Day 1 (June 16):
  • # pages read: 65
  • # books finished: --
  • WTD pages:65
  • WTD books: --
Day 2 (June 17):
  • # pages read:75
  • # books finished:--
  • WTD pages: 140
  • WTD books: --
Day 3 (June 18):
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Day 4 (June 19):
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Day 5 (June 20):
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Day 6 (June 21):
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Day 7 (June 22):
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Tuesday, July 17, 2012

HS Readathon Start Day 2


My quick work project for the day took longer than I thought. Still reading Kindred by Octavia Butler.
Day 1 (June 16):
  • # pages read: 65
  • # books finished:--
  • WTD pages: 65
  • WTD books: --
Day 2 (June 17):
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Day 3 (June 18):
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Day 4 (June 19):
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Day 5 (June 20):
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Day 6 (June 21):
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Day 7 (June 22):
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Monday, July 16, 2012

High Summer Read-a-thon Starting line



Its time for the High Summer Read-a-thon. Since I've been having trouble keeping with my MT. TBR challenge, I'm going to work on that. The other day I went through my books and pulled out some I want to aim for trying to read over the summer.


And Delirium, which I forgot to include. This is enough for several of the summer read-a-thons, I'm sure.


But first, I am going to work on finishing Kindred by Octavia Butler (I think i started the day on page 58). I'm not going to count audiobook hours for this, but will probably keep listening to those, since i've several checked out.

Day 1 (June 16):
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Day 2 (June 17):
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Day 3 (June 18):
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Day 4 (June 19):
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Day 5 (June 20):
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Day 6 (June 21):
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Day 7 (June 22):
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Sunday, July 8, 2012

Would anyone be interested in joining me for a #Hobbitreadalong ?



This December, the first part of The Hobbit movie hits theaters, and since the last time I read it was just before The Two Towers hit the theaters. So I am determined to have a reread before the movie opens. Would anyone care to make it a read-along of it with me?

Based off the mass market paperback that I have (0-345-33968-1), if it was broken into around 45 pages a week, it could be done in 7 weeks. By around 45 pages, its what chapter that 45th page since the end of the previous end chapter falls that would be read through. In most cases 2-3 chapters a week. Seems reasonable, and provides time for other reading. And easy for anyone using an audio or ebook version to keep track.

If this is a go, I am thinking about starting it the beginning of October. At seven weeks, this would put the last discussion at the end of November. The other option would be start in September and finishing around Halloween.

If you'd be interested in joining, please leave a short note, and if you have a preference of October or September (either way, stuck in the wake of some holiday or the other). And please share the post to anyone you think will be interested. I'll use the hashtag #Hobbitreadalong on Twitter to keep an eye on interest.

Review: The Tiger's Wife by Tea Obreht

The Tiger's Wife by Tea Obreht
Publisher: Random House
Orange Prize winner 2011
Contemporary/Literary Fiction, Magical Realism
Recieved via Goodreads First Reads
3.5 stars

In a Balkan country mending from war, Natalia, a young doctor, is compelled to unravel the mysterious circumstances surrounding her beloved grandfather’s recent death. Searching for clues, she turns to his worn copy of The Jungle Book and the stories he told her of his encounters over the years with “the deathless man.” But most extraordinary of all is the story her grandfather never told her—the legend of the tiger’s wife.

I had a bit of trouble getting into this novel. I liked her writing style, but not necessarily the "plot". I use the quotes because it is no means a straight forward plot as the blurb might lead you to think. Natalia is on a medical run to an orphange when she learns that her grandfather died, supposedly on his way to meet her. Interspersed between the present day accounts of the aid trip and recovering her grandfather's belongings, she tells the readers various stories. Growing up during the civil war. A tiger escaping the City Zoo during World War II, who made its way to the village Natalia's grandfather grew up in and met the woman who would be known as the Tiger's Wife. Her grandfather's repeated encounters with the deathless man.

I didn't find these stories terribly interesting at first (probably due to my lack of interest in contemporary set novels), but then a quote on the back of the book caught my eye. This quote from the Washington Post reviewer mentioned magical realism in the novel, and that gave me a bit of an 'A-ha!' moment. Once as I started to think of it more like a magical realism novel, I enjoyed the story a little bit better. Don't expect to find the kind of magical realism in this like in an Alice Hoffman novel, or in a Sarah Addison Allen novel. Only really one of the story lines can really be said to have magical elements to it. But its not a strong enough magical element to balance out my feelings towards contemporary set novels.

Being a contemporary novel aside, one thing that didn't work for me was all of the stories feel disjointed. The Red Garden is made up of a collection of stories centered around the garden. The stories in The Tiger's Wife either happened to or had a minor involvement of Natalia's grandfather. It was rather like when my grandmother starts telling stories from her youth- they could include her, ones she saw or ones she was told, but they bounce around at will, drop off at any time, and she picks them back up later. The stories might be interesting, but they kind of lose me being broken up so much.

I would definitely try more from Obreht, especially if she ventures into the historic period.