BBAW: Reading Meme

 Posted by Anastasia on September 16, 2009  No Responses »
Sep 162009
 
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BBAW DBTBBAW is hosting daily blogging topics and I wanted to do at least one! Here’s today’s topic, a shorty reading questionnaire thing. We were supposed to pick one question or answer them all in short sentences, and so I picked this one:

Do you snack while you read? If so, favorite reading snack?
I love bagels, though they can get a bit crumb-y. Popcorn is good, if I make sure not to actually touch the pages with the fingers that have been touching the popcorn!

How would you answer this question?

Also! Birdbrain(ed) Book Blog is one of the questions for BBAW’s YA Scavenger Hunt! Win nifty stuff by finding facts. It ends tonight at 11:59PM (EST, I assume), so get cracking!

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Beyond Heaving Bosoms Beyond Heaving Bosoms: The Smart Bitch’s Guide to Romance Novels by Candy Tan and Sarah Wendell
Publication: Fireside (April 14, 2009), Paperback, 304 pages / ISBN 1416571221
Genre: Non-Fiction, Humor
Rating:
Find @ Amazon or IndieBound
Challenge: 2009 Pub Challenge (#5)
Read: July 2009

In one sentence: It’s like a really detailed blog post about nearly everything you need to know about romance novels.

I don’t actually read a lot of actual romance books– I’m more of a chick lit person– but I do read a lot of romance review blogs, including Candy Tan and Sarah Wendell’s blog, Smart Bitches, Trashy Books. I think theirs was the first romance blog I read, even, and so of course I pre-ordered their book last spring. I didn’t manage to read it until the summer, and took even longer to review it, but that’s pretty par for the course here at Birdbrain(ed) Book Blog. Ahem.

Please don’t let the fact that I took forever to review it as a bad thing. I loved Beyond Heaving Bosoms! It’s a wonderful guide for what one can expect with romance books, both the good and the bad. It has things about the different genres within romance, an interview with a cover model (no, not Fabio), why reading romance is actually good for people, the truth behind romance reader misconceptions (practically none of them are cat ladies), and it even has a little bit on the romance fandom and why it’s so fun (and crazy).

For sure my favorite thing about Beyond Heaving Bosoms is that it made me realize that, no, there isn’t anything wrong with reading romance, or chick lit, or even YA fantasy. Sometimes I forget that and I feel bad for my reading choices– like I should be reading something else. Dickens, maybe, or Proust. No offense to people who like Dickens or Proust (I love me some Joyce, myself), but it’s not my first go-to choice for reading material. And because I more often than not don’t read those books, and instead read supposedly frilly, fluffy books, people can sometimes make me feel sad and stupid.

After reading Beyond Heaving Bosoms, I felt much better about just reading whatever the heck I wanted and forget whatever anyone else says! I’m not alone in my love of frilly, fluffy books and that’s a wonderful feeling to have. Self-confidence, you know?

Anyway, Beyond Heaving Bosoms is less scholarly and more like a night out at a pub with some friends. If you’re already a romance fan and want a little validation for your reading habit, get this book. If you don’t read romance but want to figure out why so many people love it and read it, get this book. If you just want to have a good time and laugh a lot, get this book! You won’t be disappointed, and maybe we can both feel good about what we read.

What book has made you feel good lately?

Buy your own copy from Amazon or your favorite indie bookstore!

Extras: Interview with Bitch Magazine | Video promo for the book

Other reviews: Errant Dreams Reviews | Feminist Review | Miscellaneous Mumblings | Experiments in Reading

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Book Trailer Tuesday: Leviathan

 Posted by Anastasia on September 15, 2009  No Responses »
Sep 152009
 
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Book Trailer TuesI have made a fancy button. This meme is now Official.

It’s very simple. Find a particularly awesome book trailer, embed it in a post, then proceed to coo all over it. Or, y’know, talk about whatever you want to talk about. Why did this book trailer catch your eye? Why do you want to share it with people?

It’d be pretty tough for me to be any more excited about Scott Westerfeld’s new book than I already am, but this new book trailer for Leviathan is making it happen! (It’s actually been out since the 1st of September, but I didn’t check Mr. Westerfeld’s blog until today and so it’s still new to me. Ha.)

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PYiw5vkQFPw]

I love the illustrations (you can see some of them on Mr. Westerfeld’s blog), the narrator, and how everything moves like a paper theater.

Eek, so excited! There are lots more interesting videos here, by the way, including behind-the-scene kind of stuff!

Which book trailer has caught your fancy this Tuesday?

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Trying out something new. Instead of regular old mini reviews, it’s haiku reviews! That’s much more fun, right? Well, I had fun.

I went with the 5-7-5 set-up, and since one haiku seemed too little for some of them, I did at least two for each book. So, read each review as a whole, not each haiku as separate poems.

Last DaysThe Last Days by Scott Westerfeld
Publication: Razorbill (August 2, 2007), Paperback, 272 pages / ISBN 1595141286
Genre: Paranormal, Teen
Rating:
Find @ Amazon or IndieBound
Read: June 2009

Improvement on Peeps
Rock and roll saves the planet;
Romance, action, fun.

Creepy vampires,
Still hate them and their bug eyes.
Glad this is last book.

Good book, but I
Prefer my vamps virus-free;
(And with smaller eyes).

Fanboy Goth GirlThe Astonishing Adventures of Fanboy and Goth Girl by Barry Lyga
Publication: Houghton Mifflin Books for Children (October 2, 2006), Hardcover, 320 pages / ISBN 0618723927
Genre: Fiction, Teen
Rating:
Find @ Amazon or IndieBound
Read: June 2009

Hated everyone,
Worried ’bout them anyway;
Won’t read sequel, though.

Why did I care then?
The writing made me do it.
Would read another.

Just not one with them.
Too much like 90′s teen film;
I’ve moved on from that.

FlygirlFlygirl by Sherri L. Smith
Publication: Putnam Juvenile (January 22, 2009), Hardcover, 256 pages / ISBN 0399247092
Genre: Historical Fiction, YA
Rating:
Find @ Amazon or IndieBound
Read: June 2009

Excellent story;
Good discussion about race
And gender inside.

Tries a little hard
To get the point across, but
Would be good for schools.

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TSS: September 13 (Roald Dahl Day)

 Posted by Anastasia on September 13, 2009  No Responses »
Sep 132009
 
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The Sunday Salon.com I haven’t done a Sunday Salon post in a while, but that’s just because I was lazy. I wasn’t even going to do one today, except that I just found out it’s Roald Dahl Day!

Roald Dahl is one of my very favorite authors. I’ve only read his children’s books, but what lovely books they are: The BFG, The Witches, James and the Giant Peach, Matilda, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (and its sequel)! And many more that I have yet to get to. My favorite of all the Dahl books I’ve read is probably The BFG, though Matilda is a close second.

To celebrate Roald Dahl Day I’m going to read two Dahl books I haven’t read before: George’s Marvelous Medicine and Going Solo. Going Solo is actually nonfiction, and it’s the second part of Mr. Dahl’s autobiography. I haven’t read the first part of his autobiography (called Boy), but I’m hoping that won’t be a big problem. How are you celebrating Roald Dahl Day? What are some of your favorite Dahl books?

Books read this week:
175. Power of Three – Diana Wynne Jones [rating: 5/5]
176. So Below: Key to the City – Matt Whyman [rating: 3/5]
177. The Ghost Writer – John Harwood [rating: 4/5]
178. The Uninvited – Tim Wynne-Jones [rating: 4/5]
179. Faerie Wars – Herbie Brennan [rating: 4.5/5]
180. Feathers – Jacqueline Woodson [rating: 5/5]
181. The House You Pass on Your Way – Jacqueline Woodson [rating: 4/5]

Books reviewed this week:
Her Wiccan Wiccan Ways DNF: Lonely Werewolf Girl Andromeda Klein - HB

And:
- A Post Full of Links #2
- New challenge: Countdown 2010
- New meme: Library Loot (#1)
- Another new meme: Book Trailer Tuesday (Sense & Sensibility & Sea Monsters)
- An old meme: Thursday Tea (King Dork)

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APFOL: Sept 6-12

 Posted by Anastasia on September 12, 2009  No Responses »
Sep 122009
 
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Interesting posts and other things that have caught my eye this week. It isn’t actually everything, since I didn’t want to kill myself copy-pasting, so for the entire link collection check out my Delicious page.

And now, I present to you, my readers: Awesome Post Full of Links #2: September 6-12!

Books in General

  • Story collection soars after Fry Tweet | theBookseller.com
    “A book of short stories has leaped up Amazon’s book charts to become second only to Dan Brown after Stephen Fry endorsed it on his Twitter feed.”
  • What YA Lit is and isn’t / Tor.com
    Mary Pearson explain what YA is and why you should be reading it. “The bottom line is that YA books are not meant to raise children. They are everything any adult book is. They are entertainment. They are a place to see ourselves. They are a place to get lost for a few hours. They are a place to make us think and wonder and imagine. They are a place to evoke anger, disagreement, discussion, and maybe tears.”
  • Die, Gothic, Die | Romancing the Blog
    “I’m positive other readers share my gravitation toward the lush language, the oblique heroes, the suspect situations of the gothic romance. More, I’m positive the right agents and editors are on the look out – especially given the publishing world’s continued craving for dark paranormal novels.”
  • Embargoed books, or why book publicists have white hairs « The Book Publicity Blog
    Explaining what exactly an embargo on a book means, and why you should be horrified the NY Times ignored it.
  • IT’S A CRIME! (OR A MYSTERY…): A revolutionary new book concept from the Netherlands.
    “Called the dwarsligger – which translates as “sleeper” – the book is a hard copy and was described by Sean French as “the size of a match box, almost”. The aim is to make the book much smaller and therefore more portable. The average weight comes in at 145 grms.”
  • Childish Things / Tor.com
    My favorite bit: “No-one can have a story truly their own if a responsible adult will come and sort everything out for them. Parents are rarely permitted to get involved. They don’t necessarily need to be eaten by a crazed rhinoceros (Roald Dahl’s distinctive method from James and the Giant Peach), but the child must be allowed to overcome their own obstacles. The parents must be absent, incapacitated or, occasionally, given their own plot.” ABSOLUTELY YES.
  • This Could Be the Year of Digital Textbooks, if Students Accept Them | The Chronicle of Higher Education
    “The increased awareness and availability of e-textbooks could make this a watershed year for the format—which has held only 2 to 3 percent of the market until now, according to the National Association of College Stores—as publishers learn whether or not enough students like the new titles and features to make them worth selling.” (via @bookoven)
  • The English Teacher’s Companion: Remember to Read
    “If we do not read–a poem here, some portion of a book or article there–we will find ourselves drying out and beginning to resent our work, our kids, our life–all that prevents us from doing what we love, from being ourselves.” (via SophisticatedDorkiness.com)
  • Using POD to Make Shelf Worthy Books | Dear Author
    “With POD technology, readers can create their own selection of limited edition hardcovers for their favorite authors. They can choose from a selection of covers or upload their own. Designers can proffer their own suggestions for covers, taking a small royalty for each sale. Penguin held a contest to design the cover of the next Donna Tartt novel. Readers could choose which, out of the winning designs, they would put on the cover. Readers could include a custom flyleaf, pick their own font, chapter headings, and color of binding.”

Publishers & Authors

(Book) Blogging

Meta: Delicious | Google Reader

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Challenge: Countdown 2010

 Posted by Anastasia on September 12, 2009  No Responses »
Sep 122009
 
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Countdown 2010Well, why not? And since I can count YA books, I should be able to complete this challenge much more easily than my Pub 2009 challenge!

Here are some of the rules:

1. The goal of this challenge is to read the number of books first published in a given year that corresponds to the last digit of each year in the 2000s — 10 books from 2010, 9 books from 2009, 8 books from 2008, etc. The total number of books required, therefore, is 55.
2. This challenge lasts from 9/9/09 through 10/10/10.
3. Crossovers with other challenges are allowed and your lists may change at any time.

To read the rest and sign up yourself, check out 1morechapter!
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