Nov 132011
 
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The Sunday Salon.com I fell a bit behind in my reading this week. I got distracted by various things on Hulu, including– and this is exciting– the Magic Knight Rayearth anime! It’s dubbed, which is slightly unfortunate, but I’m just happy I found it for free. I’m planning on doing a review or something once I finish watching it; so far it’s almost exactly like the manga, both the good and bad.

Anyway, luckily I had a small surplus from last week’s reading which carried me over the days I didn’t finish a book, and so as long as I finish one today I’ll be back on track!

In other news: Thursday was my third blogoversary (woohoo!). I also went up a mountain that day. The Book Bloggers Holiday Card Exchange is still open for another two weeks or so. And…I’m really hungry, so I’m going to get breakfast now!

Here are this week’s tiny reviews. Continue reading »

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Commonplace Post (10)

 Posted by Anastasia on November 12, 2011  1 Response »
Nov 122011
 
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Click on an image to go to its source.

The New Gatekeepers: How to Query a Book Review Blogger—an Interview with Danielle Smith. @ Anne R. Allen’s Blog

How to Win the Hearts of Bloggers–Scoring the Book Review, Guest Post or Interview @ Kristen Lamb’s Blog

This is not the way to suss out a review @ Bookalicio.us

The Art of Breakfast from DannyGregory on Vimeo.

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Nov 102011
 
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The book: I don’t know if it’s because I’ve been reading so much lately or if it’s because of something else (allergies?) but I’ve been fighting headaches for the past few days, and it isn’t fun. Luckily I’m one or two books ahead of my daily goal, so I can afford to take a break and watch Jackie Chan movies on Hulu.

Today I’m going up a mountain! I’m told there’s a cafe at the top of the mountain, a cafe which serves snacks and drinks. Yay! I’m bringing an Agatha Christie book with me: And Then There Were None. I haven’t read it before, but I know the basic idea from her Autobiography. Everyone dies, right? Something like that, anyway.

I’m still in the first chapter as of the writing of this post, so I can’t tell if it’s good or not yet. I’ve been introduced to about a million characters, all of whom seem pretty distinct, but since I have a hard enough time remembering my own name sometimes, I don’t have much hope for remembering all of theirs. Luckily I think they’ll be killed off soon, so I won’t worry about it too much.

The tea: I haven’t actually been to the mountain’s cafe yet, but I’m hoping they have chai lattes or something similar. I haven’t had a chai latte in a really long time, and as it’s a perfect drink for the winter I want one now.

So, just pretend I’m drinking a chai latte.

Do they go together? I suppose I’m silly about Agatha Christie’s books in a way, because although the vast majority of them don’t actually take place in secluded country houses, that’s what I think of when I think “Agatha Christie myster.” And country houses? Go really well with Earl Grey or English Breakfast teas. I think one of our local coffee shops actually has an Earl Grey latte thing you can get, but I’ve never tried it. (To be honest, it sounds disgusting.)

Anyway, I suppose someone in an AC book might drink a chai latte, but I honestly can’t see them doing it. It doesn’t go with the whole ambiance of a country house life.

Other tea drinkers

Leave a link to your TT post in the comments and I’ll add you to the tea drinkers list!

Also!: It’s Birdbrain(ed)’s third blogoversary today! Huzzah! In blog years I think that basically means mine’s middle aged or something now, right? Haha!

Thanks to everyone who’s stuck with me throughout the years! And thank you, too, new readers, for wanting to hang out with me here. Here’s hoping the next year is just as amazing and fun and wonderful as this past one was!

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Nov 092011
 
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133. Fiction Ruined My Family by Jeanne Darst
Publication: Riverhead Hardcover (September 29, 2011), ARC paperback, 305pp / ISBN 1594488142
Genre: Non-fiction, Memoir

Read: October 26, 2011
Source: Publisher (thank you!)

Summary from Amazon:

The youngest of four daughters in an old, celebrated St. Louis family of prominent journalists and politicians on one side, debutante balls and equestrian trophies on the other, Jeanne Darst grew up hearing stories of past grandeur. And as a young girl, the message she internalized was clear: while things might be a bit tight for us right now, it’s only temporary. Soon her father would sell the Great American Novel and reclaim the family’s former glory.

The family uproots and moves from St. Louis to New York. Jeanne’s father writes one novel, and then another, which don’t find publishers. This, combined with her mother’s burgeoning alcoholism — nightly booze- fueled weepathons reminiscing about her fancy childhood — lead to financial disaster and divorce. And as Jeanne becomes an adult, she is horrified to discover that she is not only a drinker like her mother, but a writer like her father. [snipped for length. Seriously, this summary is LONG.]

Review

I feel like I’ve read a lot of books this year about weird (or abusive) families and the offspring who writes about them, and while I think I’ve enjoyed all those books they also make me really sad at the end. I don’t LIKE it when families are abusive, or weird in ways that seriously mess up their offspring, and so normally I end each weird family book thinking I’ll never read another one ever again so THERE.

But then a new weird family books shows up at my doorstep and I think that maybe this weird family book will be the book that won’t break my heart. Shouldn’t I give it a chance? Just to see. And so I do, and I did, with Fiction Ruined My Family. And huzzah! It didn’t break my little reader heart. I actually was happy at the end of it. Surprise! Continue reading »

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Nov 072011
 
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Cover of Magic Knight Rayearth 124.-126. Magic Knight Rayearth vol. 1-3 by CLAMP
Publication: TOKYOPOP (June 12, 2007), originally published 1993-1995, Paperback, 588pp / ISBN 0760793530
Genre: Fantasy, Graphic Novel (YA?)

Read: October 22, 2011
Source: Bought

Summary from Amazon:

Umi, Hikaru, and Fuu are three schoolgirls out on a field trip to Tokyo Tower, whisked suddenly away by a strange voice and light to Cephiro, a world full of spirits and sorcery. They were summoned here through the last remaining strength of the Princess Emeraude, who hopes that they are the trio destined to become the magic knights legend says can save her realm! But how are a bunch of junior-high-school kids supposed to defeat the dark might of the sinister Lord Zagato… with only an exceedingly strange bunny creature named Mokona as their guide?

Review

I’ve been wanting to read the Magic Knight Rayearth series for several years now, mostly because I’d seen an ad for the anime series on some DVD somewhere a while back and became intrigued. Women with huge swords kicking butt and being awesome! That’s what I thought Magic Knight Rayearth was about– and it IS about that, sort of. It’s also about the power of friendship and love and loyalty and stuff.

The butt-kicking is the best part, though. Continue reading »

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Nov 062011
 
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The Sunday Salon.com I’ve been worrying about how I’m going to keep up with reviewing, what with my goal of reading one book a day and still having a buttload of reviews from last month to do. I don’t want to carry any reviews over from this year into the next! So I’ve decided to try this. I’ll do really short reviews of the books I read each week. If I feel the need to expand a tiny review into a properly-sized review, I can do that later.

Tiny reviews will be five sentences or less. Here goes!

138. The Hottest Dishes in the Tartar Cuisine – Alina Bronsky [rating: 3] | Contest win.
This is a funny book, but more in a horrifying, “omg is this really happening” sort of way. I love unreliable narrators, especially ones who are obviously unreliable, and Rosa is one of the most unreliable narrators I’ve ever read. The story gets way less enjoyable when the German pedophile shows up, however, and though the (happy?) ending sort of saves the book from being completely unbearable, the second half was still miserable reading. When Rosa goes insane (more insane?) and the writing turns dreamy and surreal– that’s the best part, I think.

139. The Eye of the Warlock – P.W. Catanese [rating: 2.5] | Library book sale.
This book desperately needs a new cover! The story is fun, though, it being a fairy tale retelling/extension/etc.– of Hansel and Gretel, to boot (I don’t think they get a lot of retellings, do they?). Loved the lesson about not letting your anger control you; very Jedi-like, actually. Marusch is the best character: she’s strong and kick-butt without being stereotypical. The writing reminds me a bit of R.L. Stine’s, only fantasy instead of horror and focused more on middle school than elementary school.

140. Bright Young Things – Anna Godbersen [rating: 4] e | Freebie.
I feel like this is a guilty pleasure sort of book, and I don’t know why. There’s nothing wrong with it! It’s got great characters, a fun/exciting story, a setting in one of my favorite eras, and decent-to-really-good writing. The repetition of “oh she was naïve and new and didn’t know how to live in NYC/the 1920s without getting screwed over” was somewhat annoying, and so was how Letty’s petiteness was associated with her naïveté/innocence/etc. (and how her small hands/mouth/stature/so on was mentioned every single time she was in the scene), but it wasn’t SO annoying that I wanted to put the book down. The ending was fantastic, too! I can’t wait to read the next book.

141. Ashes – Ilsa J. Bick [rating: 4] e | Library.
Like basically everyone else who’s read this book, I didn’t like the disconnect/discord between the first half (survival in the woods) and the second half (Rule). I also didn’t like how the writing switched sometimes between “sounds like an adult” and “sounds like a teenager” (“That was sucky,” etc.)– in the SAME paragraph. But what I DID like, I liked a lot: the characters, the story, the zombies (who are smart!), the survival stuff, the end of the world/apocalypse stuff. It ended on a cliffhanger, btw, which made me want to scream. I want to read the next book NOW!

142. Bird – Rita Murphy [rating: 3] e | Library.
This book has people who are carried about on the wind like dandelion fluff (or birds, hence the title), and so it’s got that magical realism/fairy tale quality to it that I adore. It’s a short book, with little action or thrills. The best part is the psychological horror of the house that may or may not be alive and that may or may not eat people when they try to leave. I think this would be a good book to read during a cold winter’s evening, preferably in front of a fire (or at least a space heater).

143. The Battle of the Sun – Jeanette Winterson [rating: 3] e | Library.
I don’t know why, but JW’s books always make me feel sleepy after I finish reading them. I think they have something to do with having to concentrate so much harder on the story in order to understand it than I do with other books. This one is connected to Tanglewreck, mainly through the characters, and though I don’t think you have to read that one first I would guess it’d help with the understanding part. This one’s got all my favorite JW’s bits in: excellent kid characters, some fairy tale/sci-fi/fantasy stuff that only makes sense if you squint at it sideways, and lots of excitement/adventure/etc. It ends on a kind of cliffhanger, though, so I wonder if there’s a third book now in the Tanglewreck universe.

144. A Monster Calls – Patrick Ness [rating: 3.5] e | Library.
I was NOT expecting this book to make me cry. I figured, you know, it’d be scary and horrifying and maybe I’d have trouble sleeping. I wasn’t expecting it to be scary in the way that real life is scary, that the horrifying part came from something that, really, happens every day to someone somewhere. Still, for all that I was temporarily traumatized, it’s a wonderful book and a great story.

Weekly Book Stats

Books read this week:
136. There’s Treasure Everywhere – Bill Watterson [rating: 4] *
137. The Time Travelers – Linda Buckley-Archer [rating: 3.5]
138. The Hottest Dishes in the Tartar Cuisine – Alina Bronsky [rating: 3]
139. The Eye of the Warlock – P.W. Catanese [rating: 2.5]
140. Bright Young Things – Anna Godbersen [rating: 4] e
141. Ashes – Ilsa J. Bick [rating: 4] e
142. Bird – Rita Murphy [rating: 3] e
143. The Battle of the Sun – Jeanette Winterson [rating: 3] e
144. A Monster Calls – Patrick Ness [rating: 3.5] e

Books reviewed this week:
127. The Boneshaker – Kate Milford [rating: 4.5]
128. The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making – Catherynne M. Valente [rating: 5]
130. Murder at the Vicarage – Agatha Christie [rating: 4] e

Books acquired this week:
None. :(

Currently reading:
I’m currently in the early bits of Bone Rattler: A Mystery of Colonial America, and I hope to finish it today. So far it’s REALLY good; it’s the sort of historical fiction that works hard to be realistic about the downsides of living in non-modern times, so there’s lots of mention of beatings/violence/class differences (and rats and diseases and so on). There’s a lot of anti-Scottish stuff from the English characters as well (the protagonist is Scottish). Almost all of my knowledge about colonial America is centered on white American stuff, so being able to learn more about the British/Scottish/Native American (I think they show up later) things is great. Plus the mystery is very intriguing!

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Commonplace Post (9)

 Posted by Anastasia on November 5, 2011  3 Responses »
Nov 052011
 
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Some of these are relatively old– I lost my link list during the Great Computer Debacle of 2011, but then I remembered that I’d emailed a bunch to myself, and so here they are! Huzzah~ Still, there’s not a whole lot here. Oh well.

Click on an image to go to its website.

The ‘App Gap’ – a new gap between the rich kids and the poor? @ dailymail.co.uk

Publishers: Want to Improve Sales>:

When a bad cover comes in on a book we love, we must resort to all kinds of games to bypass a customer’s automatic rejection. We booktalk it before actually revealing the cover, shielding it with our hands like something radioactive or hiding it in the middle of a stack of contenders. Once the time comes that we must finally show the book to the reader, we are forced to reassure kids that the story inside is fantastic; I’d like for someone from the art and marketing departments to come to the store and just once attempt to overcome the dubious, disgusted, and/or glazed looks on the faces of kids totally turned off by bad covers.


This is a t-shirt, btw. (!!)

Can Print-on-Demand Save the Book Industry?:

In a first from a major trade publisher, HarperCollins Publishers recently announced “Comprehensive Backlist.” This program will allow all physical bookstores, from the largest to the smallest, to promote and sell the HarperCollins backlist through in-store “Digital-to-Print at Retail” (DPR) using the Espresso Book Machine (EBM). The program will enable bookstores to offer thousands of trade paperback books from the HarperCollins catalog through a mix of traditionally printed books and DPR, as space and cash flow restrictions will no longer be a factor.

Terry Pratchett’s The Color of Magic is $0.99 at Amazon (the ebook version) and elsewhere, I think. It’s not my favorite Discworld book, but it’s a really good price!

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