Showing posts with label read. Show all posts
Showing posts with label read. Show all posts

09 October 2016

The Reading Paradox

Not the latest Dan Brown, as I'm sure you all thought, but the conundrum I've found myself in over the past few weeks.

Normally, the warmer months are a great time for me.  What reader can resist a pleasant summer afternoon outdoors, sunscreen-covered nose in a book? (That's how we bookworms preserve our appropriate pallor - industrial quantities of factor 50.)  For some reason, this year hasn't quite panned out like that.  In June/July/August 2016, I only read four books, compared with eight in 2015 and a whopping 11 in 2014.  Not only was it very odd, but it also left me without much to say to you!

September was a bit more successful, but led to the opposite problem.  While other years have seen a lull around the end of summer, this year I got through five and a half books.  "Really?"  I hear you cry "Why haven't I heard about this?!"  Well, it turns out that if I read too much, I don't have time to blog!  Who'd have thought it?

I think what I'm trying to say is, yes, I am still here, I am still reading and I am still blogging.  I've got a handful of posts in the pipeline about some of the great things I've read recently, plus I've had some trips to bookish places that I'd love to tell you all about.

So, let's get cracking!

Coming soon (hopefully)...

  • A glamorous French empress!
  • Two secret missions!
  • And a peregrine on a Welsh island!

31 December 2015

Review of the Year 2015

Early happy New Year everyone!  How has 2015 been for you?  Bit too exciting if you ask me - marauding vikings on and off the page, Poldark showing off his pecs in the Cornish countryside (don't remember THAT in the books!), Bond getting up to his old tricks and tonnes of fab new fiction and non-fiction to get me all distracted.

I did manage to read the minimum target 24 books (yay!), but 11 of those were either freshly published or new acquisitions (boo!). Such a shame when I got the balance right in 2014, reading an extra 10 or so books, but still finishing 24 from the list.  Definitely want to try and do better in the coming months.

Hopefully you've found something interesting among what I've read in 2015.  I'm quite pleased that there's a good variety in what I've covered, but classics are still rare.  After my fascinating trip to Haworth, the Bronte Parsonage Museum and the surrounding moors ('In Search of Wuthering Heights'), I'm hoping to get in some novels by the famous sisters in 2016.  And visit some more literary locations!

James Bond and historical fiction are still making regular appearances and I'm close to finishing both Ian Fleming's books and Philippa Gregory's Cousins War series.  Hopefully I can do this next year too and move on to another great series.

A few favourite genres and writers have disappeared completely recently, though, including Science Fiction and Daphne Du Maurier.  Perhaps in getting distracted by some great new publications I've missed the brilliant books already on my shelves.  Something to be careful of in 2016!

Almost unbelievably, next year will mark the fifth anniversary of this blog and my project.  A big thank you to all the friends, readers, writers and publishers who have given such great feedback and support here and on Twitter (@500_Books) over the years.  A special mention has to go to the lovely and glittery Lucy Porter, who thoroughly embarrassed me by looking at my Twitter feed while I was stood in front of her at a literary festival event.  Nearly as embarrassing as when I met Nigella Lawson at a book signing and couldn't think of anything to say... but that's another story.

Anyway, big love, bookworms!  Wishing you all a fabulous new year and I look forward to seeing you again in 2016!

Reviews of the Year

2012
2013
2014

2015: A Year in Books

January
'The Empty Throne' by Bernard Cornwell

February
'So, Anyway...' by John Cleese
'From Russia with Love' by Ian Fleming (Audiobook)
'The Victorian Chaise-Longue' by Marghanita Laski

March
'Goldfinger' by Ian Fleming
'Living Dolls: The Return of Sexism' by Natasha Walter

April 
'When I Met You' by Jemma Forte
'So, You've Been Publicly Shamed' by Jon Ronson

May
'Marie Antoinette: The Journey' by Antonia Fraser

June
'In Town' by Mark Steel
'Be Brilliant Every Day' by Andy Cope and Andy Whitaker

July
'It's All in Your Head' by Suzanne O'Sullivan
'My Grandfather Would Have Shot Me' by Jennifer Teege
'Diamonds are Forever' by Ian Fleming (Audiobook)
'The Spy who Loved Me' by Ian Fleming (Audiobook)

August
'A Book for Her' by Bridget Christie
'The Kingmaker's Daughter' by Philippa Gregory

September
'The Library of Unrequited Love' by Sophie Divry

October
'Just a Phrase I'm Going Through' by David Crystal
'Jeremy and Amy' by Jeremy Keeling

November
'Warriors of the Storm' by Bernard Cornwell
'Pet Sematary' by Stephen King

December
'Animal QC: My Preposterous Life' by Gary Bell
'Little Tales of Misogyny' by Patricia Highsmith - Coming Soon!

17 May 2015

Happy Birthday and So Forth

You may have noticed that I've been a bit quiet lately. I know what you're thinking.  "Good fourth blog birthday bash, eh?  Suffering more than a book hangover afterwards?  Nudge, nudge, wink, wink?"  Well, tut, tut and how dare you!  There's only so much jelly and ice cream one person can eat and the clown was rubbish (Bit too Stephen King perhaps..?)!

After a really good year last year, I suddenly went through a bad patch, finding it hard to settle and flitting from book to book like a moth with a paper penchant.  I couldn't get into anything and in the end I had to accept I needed to take a bit of a break so I didn't inadvertently lose my love of reading by making it a chore.

But all that seems to have changed now and the episode has given me the impetus to work on a new mini-project.

As you know, I've been trying to read sets of books so I can reach mini-goals and feel like I'm making progress even though reading all 500ish books seems a long way away.  This has been quite successful and I've now read most of Philippa Gregory's Cousins War series (although she keeps ruining it by writing more. Surely that's cheating?).  I've also read all of Bernard Cornwell's Anglo Saxon books and I'm a good way through Ian Fleming's James Bond novels, which I'm enjoying very much.  I would've started reading the fifth Poldark by now, but got a bit distracted by the BBC series.  I kept accidentally giving away the plot, which didn't go down too well with my co-viewers, so decided to not make it any worse.  I'm unlikely to hold out until the next series though!

In a pile by the bookcase is another set of books, but one with a very specific link.  They're by different authors, of various genres and, on the face of it, have no particular connection.  Open one at random, however, and you'll find they're being used to store bookmarks.  Or, to put it another way, I started but didn't finish reading them.  So I've decided the next 'set' of books I should tackle are these, the Ones that Got Put Away.

They include Alexandre Dumas' 'The Three Musketeers', a feminist book called 'Wifework', Robert Harris' 'Lustrum', 'Angels and Demons' by Dan Brown, Charles Dickens' 'Little Dorrit' and a biography of Queen Isabella by Alison Weir.  Unlike the books I've given up on, I really do want to finish these and can't actually remember why I stopped reading them.

So, earlier this month I made a re-start on 'Marie Antoinette: The Journey' by Antonia Fraser.  The last time I remembered reading this was seven years ago and it's bloomin' massive, so it could've been arm strain that made me stop reading it,  Anyway, yesterday, I made it to the end (also known as page 548), so my next post will be all about that.

I hope that you'll be happy to join me on this new stage of my journey towards book 500. Then we can party!

Previously from the Girl Who Loves Books...

May
'Mr Briggs' Hat: A Sensational Account of Britain's First Railway Murder' by Kate Colquhoun
'Live and Let Die' by Ian Fleming

June
'A Host of Voices' by Doris Stokes
'Dr No' by Ian Fleming
'The Psychic Tourist' by William Little
'The Essential Marx' by Groucho Marx, selected by Stefan Kanfer

July
'All My Friends are Superheroes' by Andrew Kaufman
'The Art of Being Brilliant' by Andy Cope and Andy Whittaker
'Warleggan' by Winston Graham
'My Baby Shot Me Down' by Blinding Books

August
'Wake' by Anna Hope
'Octopussy, the Living Daylights and Other Stories' by Ian Fleming
'Moranthology' by Caitlin Moran

September
'The Illustrated Man' by Ray Bradbury
'Thunderball' by Ian Fleming
'Love and Treasure' by Ayelet Waldman
'Warm Bodies' Isaac Marion

October
'Office Politics' by Oliver James
'We Bought a Zoo' by Benjamin Mee
'The Tiny Wife' by Andrew Kaufman

November
'How to Read a Graveyard' by Peter Stanford
'Moonraker' by Ian Fleming

December
'The Miniaturist' by Jessie Burton

January
'The Empty Throne' by Bernard Cornwell

February
'So, Anyway' by John Cleese
'From Russia with Love' by Ian Fleming
'The Victorian Chaise-Longue' by Marghanita Laski

March 
'Goldfinger' by Ian Fleming
'Living Dolls' by Natasha Walter

April
'When I Met You' by Jemma Forte
'So You've Been Publicly Shamed' by Jon Ronson

Birthday Blogs
2014
2013
2012
The First Post