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book clubbing in May

I was looking forward to this month's book club discussion. Jasper Fforde's The Eyre Affair was on the agenda and I knew that most of my book club members hadn't been exposed to Fforde or Thursday Next before. The Eyre Affair is the first book in one of my favorite series and I was wondering how everyone would react to Fforde.

My initial reaction to The Eyre Affair:
"I'd heard great things about this series and I was not disappointed. I loved the literary references, the crazy 'history,' and the all-round zaniness of the book. Not to mention the dodos!" (journal entry 10).

In preparation for the meeting I read my Illustrated Jane Eyre (blog post) and reread The Eyre Affair. It's a good thing that I did because I'd forgotten how different The Eyre Affair is from the other books in the series (it's much more self-contained) and exactly where Thursday's story left off at the end of the novel (to some extent, the books in the series do run together for me and it just would not do to spoil something from a book later in the series).

Only one other person in the book club had read the book before. And, I'm happy to report that all the others did seem to like the book (a few of them are planning on getting book 2!). I think some of Fforde's zaniness and side-stories were a bit much for some of them, but they all seemed to like the main plot line, the way Fforde envisions the world of books, and interaction-with-text aspect of the story.

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  • The Illustrated Jane Eyre

    Charlotte Brontë’s sweeping Victorian romance is reborn through the striking illustrations of the inimitable Dame Darcy.

    This month my book club will be discussing Jasper Fforde's The Eyre Affair. What a perfect excuse to read The Illustrated Jane Eyre, which I've had on Mt. TBR since September 2006, and that's exactly what I did this weekend.

    First of all, I should say that I'm pretty sure I'd never read Jane Eyre before. I thought I had, way back in high school, but now I think I'd only read Wuthering Heights (by younger sister Emily).

  • What new books are you looking forward to most in 2008? Something new being published this year? Something you got as a gift for the holidays? Anything in particular that you're planning to read in 2008 that you're looking forward to? A classic, or maybe a best-seller from 2007 that you're waiting to appear in paperback?

    Hmm... this is a hard one. I haven't really thought too much about what I'll be reading in 2008. I'm sure I'll read quite a few (my goal is to read 175), but I usually play it by ear (excepting review assignments, of course, which I try to read sooner rather than later; things went to pot in the second half of this year, but I'm getting back on track now).

  • This month I was the person-of-the-month for one of our exchange groups. No big deal really, it just means is that everyone else in the group has to send me a book.

    You can imagine how much fun it is to check the mail every day during "your" month.

    Anyway, here's what I got:

    The American Boy by Andrew Taylor

    The Curer of Souls by Lindsay Simpson

    Definitely Dead by Charlaine Harris

    Ghosthunters and the Gruesome Invincible Lightning Ghost & Ghosthunters and the Totally Moldy Baroness by Cornelia Funke

    Goetz and Meyer by David Albahari

    LionBoy: The Chase by Zizou Corder

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  • Vanishing Acts by Jodi Picoult was chosen as a filler when it took longer to set up our voting than we expected.

  • It seems like I've been waiting forever to finalize and post this list, but the wheels of democracy turn slowly...

    In any case, it looks like we have a nice variety of books on the schedule and I'm looking forward to discussing them.

    The Blind Assassin by Margaret Atwood
    To be discussed: February 27, 2008

    Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies by Jared Diamond
    To be discussed: March 26, 2008

    Room with a View by E.M. Forster
    To be discussed: April 23, 2008

    The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde
    To be discussed: May 28, 2008

  • I recently read Jodi Picoult's most recent novel, Nineteen Minutes.

    Note: This blog post does not contain any spoilers, but it also doesn't include my full reaction to the book. If you'd like to read it all, check out my BookCrossing journal entry.

  • It's that time of the month again. My book club met today and we discussed Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman.

    Richard Mayhew is a young businessman with a good heart and a dull job. When he stops one day to help a girl he finds bleeding on a London sidewalk, his life is forever altered, for he finds himself propelled into an alternate reality that exists in a subterranean labyrinth of sewer canals and abandoned subway stations below the city. He has fallen through the cracks of reality and has landed somewhere different, somewhere that is Neverwhere.

  • Heather/errantdreams tagged me for a meme today. I'll answer some of the questions, but I'm also going to create a few of my own to keep the meme on topic for the blog.

    What are five places where you have lived?
    In order: Ossining, NY; Uelsen, Germany; Chicago, IL; Athens, Greece; Ann Arbor, Michigan

    What are five jobs you have had?
    Babysitter, Lifeguard, Shoe salesperson, Intern, Archivist

    What are five things on your to-do list for today (not in any particular order)

    - Work on a Digital Library Collection proposal
    - Pick out some finding aids for Isadore to encode tomorrow
    - Read Truth & Beauty by Ann Patchett
    - Research Louis Kahn
    - Work on the J.J. catalog

    Five books I've most recently completed:
    - The Bride Stripped Bare, Anonymous
    - The Illustrated Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte/Dame Darcy
    - Eclipse by Stephenie Meyer

  • The Blind Assassin by Margaret Atwood

    Last month's book club selection was Margaret Atwood's The Blind Assassin. I actually didn't finish the book in time for our discussion on Wednesday (I only finished yesterday), but I was rereading and remembered enough that I wasn't going to worry about spoilers.

    We had a full and lively discussion on the book, hitting on topics like
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    - how would we have reacted to the book if we were older and had lived through more of the time period described in the book
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    - the fairy tale aspects of the book (this came from one of those sets of discussion questions put out by publishers and we completely disagreed with the question-author about the story being at all fairy tale-like)

  • This month my book club tackled its first classic,
    A Room with a View by E.M. Forster

    I don't think I'd ever read A Room with a View before (the only Forster I remember reading is A Passage to India). I knew we'd have a good discussion, though, especially after I saw the new film adaption that aired on PBS earlier this month.*

    We did indeed have a nice discussion. We talked about the novel as well as the 1985 and 2007 films. We discussed Forster himself, the subtleties and class distinctions in the novel, our feelings about the various characters, the proper pronunciation of "Beebe", and the novel's possible connection to Howards End among other things.

  • Truth and Beauty: A Friendship by Ann Patchett

    I picked up Truth and Beauty and Lucy Grealy's Autobiography of a Face around the same time after hearing that they were both fantastic books and should be read together. I read Autobiography of a Face in February (see this post), but only just got around to reading Truth and Beauty this month.

  • I received a lovely bunch of books over the past few days. In fact, I feel like I'm swimming in knitting books - not that that's a bad thing ;)

    Some wishlist books for Christmas:

    • Weight: The Myth of Atlas and Heracles by Jeanette Winterson (I've been trying to collect all the books in The Myths series);
    • The Best of Interweave Knits: Our Favorite Designs from the First Ten Years (I think I'm going to use some of my Christmas money to get a subscription to Interweave Knits);

  • I had my mail held while I was away in Chicago last week.
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    I received two BookCrossing books:

    • Among the Belivers: An Islamic Journey by V.S. Naipaul
    • What the Body Remembers by Shauna Singh Baldwin

  • Today may be Google's 9th birthday, but September 27th was mine long before.

    I haven't received all my presents yet, but I have gotten a few books so far.

    • Accomodating Brocolli in the Cemetary: Or Why Can't Anybody Spell? by Vivian Cook
    • Firestorm by Rachel Caine, the fifth book in the Weather Warden series (now I have a great excuse to buy books 2-4)
    • Piratica by Tanith Lee

  • Sally Lockhart Trilogy by Philip Pullman
    I recently read Philip Pullman's Sally Lockhart trilogy: The Ruby in the Smoke, The Shadow in the North, and The Tiger in the Well. The Tin Princess is a related title; I have it on Mt. TBR. Set in Victorian England, the books tell the story of Sally and her various adventures as an independent woman. Chock full of mystery, they offer murder, kidnapping, and an occasionally happy interlude.

  • Stephenie Meyer's Twilight Saga seems to be getting a good deal of press lately. I was introduced to the books by a friend before I'd heard any of the hype.

    I read New Moon and Eclipse just this week, though I'd read Twilight in September.

    Twilight has a very different feeling than the other books in the series so far. Maybe that's because Meyer didn't set out to write a series. In any case, when I read Twilight I liked the relationship between Bella and Edward, its slow build-up and all the difficulties inherent in it, but wasn't crazy about the violent, action-packed ending of the book. I had no strong feelings about the series, but I knew I'd read the other books when my friend got around to loaning them to me.

  • I've been really hard to please lately, so I guess that's why I'm so backlogged with my real reviews. So, here's my critical look at some of the books I've read recently.

    Glass Houses by Rachel Caine

  • It's probably quite obvious that I haven't been getting a lot of serious (read: assigned) reading done lately. I've been a bit of an escapist and I've been drowning myself in quick, untaxing reads many of them series books. So here's a look at what I've been reading lately.

    Maggie Sefton's Knitting Mysteries.
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  • Two more birthday books arrived in the mail yesterday:

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    - Domiknitrix: Whip Your Knitting Into Shape by Jennifer Stafford
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    Melinda Sordino busted an end-of-summer party by calling the cops. Now her old friends won't talk to her, and people she doesn't even know hate her from a distance. The safest place to be is alone, inside her own head. But even that's not safe. Because there's something she's trying not to think about, something about the night of the party that, if she let it in, would blow her carefully constructed disguise to smithereens. And then she would have to speak the truth.

    Needing a book to read this evening, I plucked Speak off my BookCrossing bookcase (yes, I have a bookcase dedicated to BookCrossing books) almost at random. But, oh am I glad I did. What a wonderful, compelling book. After reading it, I can assure you that Speak deserves any award that it has received.

  • So, yesterday after work I got wrangled into going to the Scholastic warehouse sale. I didn't want to go. Last time I went I spent lots of money and our place is overflowing with books as it is. But, I did end up going and I was actually very good. I only bought five books (strangely enough they had computer games, though, and I ended up buying three of those for Russell).

    The Artemis Fowl Files by Eoin Colfer.
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    Princess Academy by Shannon Hale.

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    48. A Mortal Glamour by Chelsea Quinn Yarbo
    47. River Secrets by Shannon Hale
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  • It’s an old question, but a good one... What were your favorite books this year?
    List as many as you like - fiction, non-fiction, mystery, romance, science-fiction, business, travel, cookbooks - whatever the category. But, really, we’re all dying to know. What books were the highlight of your reading year in 2007?

    In the beginning of the new year I'll be posting my list of books read in 2007 and discussing whether I've met my reading goals, but I am more than happy to "talk" about some of my favorite books from the past year right now.

    I'll focus on fiction because that's what I read most.

    Best fluffy read

  • What's your favorite book that nobody else has heard of? You know, not Little Women or Huckleberry Finn, not the latest best-seller . . . whether they’ve read them or not, everybody "knows" those books. I’m talking about the best book that, when you tell people that you love it, they go, "Huh? Never heard of it?"

  • It's the end of November, I can hardly believe it. Where has this year gone?

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  • My Name is Red by Orhan Pamuk

    At once a fiendishly devious mystery, a beguiling love story, and a brilliant symposium on the power of art, My Name is Red is a transporting tale set amid the splendor and religious intrigue of sixteenth-century Istanbul, from one of the most prominent contemporary Turkish writers.

  • My friend Breeni of Breeni Books tagged me for the What are you reading? meme.

    I'm supposed to -
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    I'll cheat and do this for the two books that I'm most actively reading at the moment and not tag five people.

    First - Tobacco particulate thickens the air.
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  • Writing guides, grammar books, punctuation how-tos... do you read them? Not read them? How many writing books, grammar books, dictionaries–-if any-–do you have in your library?

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    Let's see... I have style guides, Struck & White and Chicago (yes, I bought the new edition as soon as it came out) as well as APA (required for grad school) and MLA.

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    96. The Many Lives and Secret Sorrows of Josphine B. by Sandra Gulland
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