Sep 12 2007

35/50 Stardust by Neil Gaiman

35 / 50 books. 70% done!

Stardust

Sometimes, I will see a movie trailer and the movie will look good but the reviews are terrible. When that happens, I see if said movie is based on a book (most movies are) and seek that book out. This is one of those cases. (Mind you, the movie might be very good for all I know. I am just going on heresay.)

Stardust the book (have not seen the movie) was excellent. I love the writing style and it has a great balance of cute, romantic, dramatic and laugh out loud funny parts. The characters are very lovable and the world itself is interesting. I would say that it is worth a read.

One point of confusion for me: My library had this book labeled as children’s lit. However, the awards that the book has won list it as being an adult book. To that end, the first scene in the book is a sex scene and there is a sex scene later that has some slightly sketchiness. The “f” word (not the one for homosexuals, the other one) also appears within the first chapter.

Other than those three moments, I would assume that this book was meant for children as my library said. This is just something I wanted to mention as if you have kids you might want to read it first to decide if it is for them.

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Sep 12 2007

34/50 The High King by Lloyd Alexander

34 / 50 books. 68% done!

The High King (The Chronicles of Prydain)

Lord of the Rings is 3 books that are really just three parts of the same story. Harry Potter is 7 mini stories that are each a part of a main story, but stand on their own to an extent.

This series, though 5 books, is really three main stories. Books 1 and 2 are really just one story that we take a break in the middle of. Book 3 is a story all its own but it leaves a lot of loose ends which we then later deal with in other books. Book 4 was a bit annoying as a reader as it was pretty much all character development and set-up without a lot of actual anything happening. But the last book was glorious, making it feel like all the other books had only just been a set-up for the conclusion. Lloyd Alexander did a good job with making the story heartwarming and tense at the same time and, while the ending certainly wasn’t a surprise, he handled it with flair. Definitely one to check out if you haven’t read it.

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Sep 04 2007

Some Reflections on the 50 Book Challenge at the (almost) half way point

When I the librarian first mentioned this little exercise to me, I poo-pooed it. Fifty books, I scoffed, I read that in a month, let alone a year. Why is that even a challenge?

In fact, nearly every one of my friends that I mentioned it to had the same reaction. One friend said to me, condescendingly, You don’t understand. I read a lot. Like 50 books wasn’t even worth entertaining as an idea. Even my 10 year old cousin informed me that she had already read 50 chapter books this year in February (a claim I think involved fuzzy math since it has taken her 2 months to finish Prisoner of Azcaban).

Feeling much like all of these people, I decided to keep count of how many books I read in a year, just to be able to scoff at the librarian next time she brought it up. Mostly, because so many people scoffed, I started to suspect that we were all using fuzzy math and really had no idea of how many books we read in a year.

Here I am at 33 books read. I am a few chapters into book 34 (Prince and the Pauper) and books 35 and 36 are on my desk (The High King and Stardust). It’s September and I have 17 books left. That’s more then 4 books a month just I have to read and we are going into the busy holiday season.

I am always reading a good two books at a time as I keep one downstairs to read during solitary meals and another upstairs to read when my computer is taking too long. I am also usually working an audio book at the same time. With all due respect to the friends and family who scoffed, I read a lot, certainly an above average amount of books, and I also read very fast which lets me whip through more books in less time. Yet here I am at only 33 done in September. I am genuinely not sure if I am going to be able to meet the goal I set out.

I suppose I could have picked shorter books (my average book is about 400 pages), included all the books I had to read for work or included things like the two Tick graphic novels that I read twice each they were so funny. I suppose I could have cheated and padded my roster with books I read years ago. But I wanted to do this legit. I wanted to genuinely see how many real books I read for leisure in a normal full time, working year because I, like the people I talked to, felt that 50 was a pathetic number of books to read in a year. Boy, was I wrong.

As I sit here on my 33, I feel like the people who scoffed at me owe me an apology. Or at least owe it to own up and try it for real next year. If they really and truly meet their 50 in February, then awesome, but I don’t see how that is possible unless you are unemployed, have no friends and family to speak to and only read 3 chapter kids books, to be honest. I am not saying that the 50 is an impossible number. But its certainly not something to poo-poo and dismiss as being too pathetically easy to be worth your time.

There was a study that came out a few weeks ago that 1 out of every 4 people don’t read a single book in a year. Even the people who do read, read an average of 4 books a year. Here is the article about it if you want to see for yourself.

Now, I know I run with a much more intellectual crowd then most people. My aunt reads books that are way over my head even and even the least brainy of my friends reads well over the average number of books. I am not trying to sell you guys short at all and, yell, maybe you’ll kick my butt. But, I am suggesting that, next year, you pony up and keep count. I think you will be surprised with the results.

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