Posts

Time to Alter the Plan

Image
You may or may not know this about me, but I like to have a plan. I love goals. I love things I can check off. I have a planner. And notebooks. And notepads in my purse. My obsession with lists has only deepened as I get older. During the past month my thoughts on "monthly reading plan" evolved. I don't like the feeling I get when I don't check everything off the list. I am going to try a shelf that is "books to choose from" - a little more variety, a little less pressure by expanding the choices.  I have goals for my reading. Other than reading 52 books during the year, I try not to make them numerical goals. I do not like "read one of these every month". I am trying to increase variety in my reading and giving myself room to find something that suits the mood today fits that goal. That's why I am usually reading multiple books. I have at least 2 books that need to be read during the month - book club and the online book challenge. The rest sh...

Reading through February

Image
  February started with a stack of books. Every month starts with planned reading and wishful reading. The trick is to discover how much I can actually accomplish. So many books, so little time is my long-standing mantra. I managed 5 books and they were all at least 4 stars. February's book club was a ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ favorite - The Rose Code by Kate Quinn . I love World War II historical fiction, and Quinn found an exciting piece of the struggle I hadn't read before. Britain's top secret code breaker program and the work done at Bletchley Park had been hidden for many years by the Secrecy Act the participants were required to sign. At 656 pages, it takes a commitment but at the halfway point I was reading it in every spare minute The focus on the women who were employed at Bletchley Park, the restrictions on their lives imposed by their work and how those meshed/clashed with societal rules for women in the UK during the war years drew me in. The restrictions didn't drop away fol...

Pilgrim at Tinker Creek by Annie Dillard

Image
  I began reading Annie Dillard’s Pilgrim at Tinker’s Creek many, MANY years ago. It was my companion on road trips – perfect for taking in a short piece at a time, and sometimes read aloud if I could get any other passengers interested. It lived multiple places. On the table by my bed. On the back of the end table. In the basket by the bathtub. Forever ready to divulge another slice of nature as seen through Annie’s eyes. Dillard’s writing is poetry in disguise. The language and structure of the passages makes it easy to forget you aren’t walking with her as she wanders the woods near her home. I found myself totally absorbed by the lives of water bugs and muskrat, interaction between plants and animals, the quiet violence in nature. It is a journey through the seasons with the smallest details brought large. It is "reflection and meditation on creation, creatures and Creator". A truly spiritual experience. Sometimes I would go months without picking it up but something alw...

The Point is to READ ...

Image
   There's a difference between a book that's not for you, and a book that's not for you NOW. Not all books are for you, but they are for someone. Let people read what they want to read. The point is to READ. I am just as interested in why people abandon books as why they read them. There's no shame in DNFing (Did Not Finish) a book. Sometimes I know within a few pages that a book just doesn't feel right. Maybe it's not the book I expected it to be. If I get 50 pages in and it still hasn't grabbed me, it's time to give up. So many books, so little time and why waste time reading something that doesn't bring you joy. I felt this about 1 00 Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. It had the earmarks of a book I would love - magical realism, and Latin American magical realism at that. I absolutely loved Like Water for Chocolate by Laura Esquivel and The Murmur of Bees by Sofia Segovia. It shows up on all the "100 Books You should Read If You W...

Pick a prompt, any prompt ….

Image
 ……. Well, not just ANY prompt……. In 2015 I was part of a group that started an online reading challenge. Pick a prompt for each month, challenge the members to read a book that meets the prompt, then post your thoughts on the book you chose. I fell out of the group several years ago but a chance message asking me to pick a month and a prompt for 2024 drew me back. I jumped and added 12 books to my TBR goals for the year. There is no shortage of Book Challenge groups to be found. Search the web, go to GoodReads, Reddit or Shelf Reflections. Pinterest has a board with no fewer than 470 suggested challenges! Our group - Book Lovers Club - choose monthly prompts from The 52 Book Club's 2024 Reading Challenge. That group does a challenge a week - a little difficult for me unless I didn't read anything else and that would eliminate a whole lot of my TBR shelves.  I didn't get back in until later in January so I will have to backtrack to month one. I put Lone Women by Victor La...

January reads

Image
It's already February 10th and I suppose I should review my January books before the calendar moves much further. My goal is - again - 52 books this year so I need to average one a week. In January, I read 3. Once upon a time I picked up a Robert B. Parker Spenser novel. These books start in 1973 with The Godwulf Manuscript. For me, Spenser has become a sociological study, watching him change with the times while still being true to himself. He is smart-mouthed, thoughtful, loyal,   and honorable. He doesn't stop until there is resolution. He's a hard-boiled detective in the truest sense of the word.  Parker wrote 40 Spenser novels before his death in 2010. After his death, the family chose Ace Atkinson to carry on the series and he added 10. Mike Lupica is now carrying the torch. His first in the series was released in November 2023.  I read many of them years ago then decided in 2020 to start again at the beginning and work my way through. In January, I finished #31, Ba...

the best of 2023

Image
As I am starting this adventure towards the beginning of the year, it is appropriate to share my bookish life in the previous year. I read some outstanding books in 2023, cleaned up some TBR, found some that I was happy to see donated, and bought WAY MORE than I should have. I missed my 60 book goal, only reading 49 books. but those 49 included so many wonderful adventures. Here are my 5 star reads and a little snippet on each of them. Widowish by Melissa Gould     Brought out many emotions for my own widowish journey and clarified just how different each person's story is. Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt     Most unusual narrator ever (a giant Pacific octopus named Marcellus) with a compelling story of friendship, family and growth. Station Eleven by Emily St John Mandel     One of the most beautifully written post-apocalyptic stories I've ever read. The series (Amazon Prime, Max) is worth watching. The House in the Cerulean...