It's Monday! What are You Reading?
It's Monday! What Are You Reading? |
The sections of this template:
Intro (here)
My Week in Review (list of books finished and links to bookish posts in the previous week)
Reading Now (my current reading list broken up into NF and Fiction)
Upcoming (scheduled reviews and blog tours and list of finished books awaiting reviews)
Recently (links to bookish posts in the last few weeks)
New Arrivals: (lists of recently acquired ARC broken up into snail mail, email and Net Gallery)
ARC in waiting (a list that is getting shamefully long)
My Week in Review:
This past week I did not read much nor post anything bookish. I had a personal lifequake going down and most of my posts for a week either touched on it or wallowed in it. I wrote enough words between journaling, posts, email and chat to have blown the mind of the NaNoWriMo word count verifier but sadly none of it was either fiction nor book reviews. I did pull some material out of the journaling and mold it into something resembling poetry. Twice:
Piles of Painted Echoes
Our Broken Valentine
For the curious, the bare bones of the story is in last Tuesday's ROW80 #69
These two reviews would have had place of pride in last week's IMWAYR? If I'd managed to get it posted:
The Eighth Wonder by Kimberly S. Young. Blog Tour Review
Before You Say I Do Again by Benjamin Berkley Blog Tour Review
Finished reading:
Losses by Robert Wexelblatt an ARC from an inde author
Reading Now:
Non-Fiction:
Most of these I plug away in at a snail's pace--a couple pages or chapters per week as that is my preferred way to read non-fic. It sticks with me longer. I'm closing in on the finish line for several but as I get close on one I tend to add two or three more. There are some not listed here because I don't read in them weekly.
Hooked: Write Fiction That Grabs Readers at Page One and Never Lets Go by Les Edgerton (Part of my ROW80 reading in craft list)
What to Do When There's Too Much to Do by Laura Stack (Part of my attempt to organize my life around my priorities. So part of my ROW80 reading list)
And So It Goes by Charles J. Sheilds a bio of Kurt Vonnegut. (I've posted about this biography of Kurt Vonnegut several time in a kind of reading journal. It is past time for another. Part of the fun I'm having reading this is in stopping to read the stories he wrote as the narrative reaches the point where he writes them. Since this is an author bio this will also be on my ROW80 reading list )
This Mobius Strip of Ifs by Mathias Freese (I've posted a reading journal post for this collection of personal essays also. It is past time for another.)
What Matters in Jane Austen? by John Muller Net Galley a NF that purports to answer many puzzles in the Austen novels. Since this discusses writing and tecniques of fiction I'll be adding this to my ROW80 reading listThis Mobius Strip of Ifs by Mathias Freese (I've posted a reading journal post for this collection of personal essays also. It is past time for another.)
Jung and the Tarot: An Archetypal Journey by Sallie Nichols Since I'm reading this for an understanding of character type and the language of symbol understood by our unconscious this will be on my ROW80 reading list
13 Ways of Looking at a Novel by Jane Smiley This was one of the 24 items I checked out of the Longview library on my sister's card last Thursday.
The Exegesis of Philip K. Dick. Who knew. Dick was a mystic. I've only read one of his novels and a few short stories but now I've got to try to find and read everything!
Before You Say I Do Again by Benjamin Berkley for Blog Tour Review Feb 8. The review is up but I'm not finished. This is a very difficult read for me at this time and irony of the events that fell on the same week I'm scheduled to review this book did not escape me.
The Fiction Writer's Handbook by Shelly Lowenkopf
Fiction:
A Discovery of Witches by Deborah Harkness (audio from library) Was listening to this while working on this Xmas crochet project and have not gotten back to it since Christmas. If I wait too much longer I'm going to have to restart it yet again. Or at least back up a ways to reorient.
After: The Shock by Scott Nicholson This is post apocalyptic horror with zombies. I anticipated enjoying this even tho zombies are not my favorite horror theme because I really enjoyed his The Red Church and I am but probably not to the same degree.
The Civilized World by Susi Wyss (another a Tree book ARC that got lost in the mix before I'd finished it. Have not posted a review for this one either and can't remember when I received it but it had to be at least a year ago before I started packing for our move and likely before 2011 NaNo when I typically stop reading fiction while I'm so intensely writing it. This is a collection of interlocking short stories set in South Africa and I remember I was quite enjoying it. I've had to start it over.)
These High, Green Hills by Jan Karon The third book in the Mitford series. I'm reading this aloud to Mom in the evenings
Against My Will by Benjamin Berkley Blog Tour Review Feb 20 by the same author as Before You Say I Do Again and even tho physical abuse was never one the issues in my marriage it is still difficult to be reading a story about a severely damaged relationship at this time.
Seriously. I need to reinstate the rule of one novel at a time. --a line I wrote weeks ago when there were several more novels on that list and in the spirit of my New Year Resolve to finish more things than I start I've resisted starting any new fiction that isn't for a scheduled review and before last week I'd been making steady gains in knocking titles off this list. But not getting the review for them written unless I had a scheduled one--tsk tsk.. I was working on knocking After off this list before having to add anything new but now my scheduled review for Against My Will has to go up Wednesday and I've not started it.
Upcoming:
___Blog Tours:
Against My Will by Benjamin Berkley Review Feb 20
Creature Features by Tim Rowland Review Mar 12
The Fiction Writer's Handbook by Shelly Lowenkopf
Whenever I'm not pinned to a date like with the blog tours I do very poorly at getting reviews written in a timely way after finishing books and the longer I wait the harder it gets. This is an issue I'm working on and hope to get a system in place to smooth the track from beginning book to posting review.
At Home in Mitford and A Light in the Window by Jan Karon (the ebook I was reading aloud to my Mom while staying there in March and April. These short little lighthearted chapters are almost like stand-alone short stories with beloved characters and make great bedtime reading for adults wanting pleasant dreams)
The Land of Decoration by Grace McCleanImagine: How Creativity Works by Jonah Leher.
The Power of Habit by Charles Duhigg Part of my attempt to organize my life around my priorities. So part of my ROW80 reading list. I discussed this in such detail in my mid-week ROW80 check-in post it was practically a review and I'll probably copy/paste much of what I said there into the review.
The Tragedy Paper by Elizabeth LaBan This was a Net Galley ARC. It will be archived on Net Galley on January 8th it's pub date and tho I finished it last week I was unable to get the review posted and now I have the two blog tour posts to put up this week so for the third or forth time I'm not going to get my feedback recorded at Net Galley before the feedback page for the item is closed to me. tsk tsk tsk.
Never Give in to Fear by Marti MacGibbon This was a NetGalley ARC but later I picked it up for Kindle when it was free on Amazon. I began it in Adobe Digital Editions and when that timed out on me switched to the Kindle for PC. This was a memoir of an addict's decent into the abyss and rise back out again and was quite engrossing.
The Monsters of Templeton by Lauren Groff
Get Your Loved One Sober by Robert Meyers (Research for a fiction WIP)
Losses by Robert Wexelblatt an ARC
Recently:
___Reviews and Bookish Posts:
Scammed by Art Maines My blog tour review for this combination personal testimony and how-to manual for helping an elderly parent recover from the depredations of a scam and protect them from future exploitation.
Encounters with Flannery O'Connor
Khanh Ha author of Flesh Guest Post:
4 Things You Should Know About Writing Fiction
My ROW80 Check-In posts have been primarily on the theme of making more room for fiction reading for the last two weeks. Saturday's is a musing of the lessons learned and applied and intentions going forward. Including protocols to be put in place that should increase the number of book reviews going up here.
ROW80 btw is a writing challenge blog hop/support group emphasizing setting goals and aiming for them but recognizing when circumstances can't be helped and learning to adapt the goals. I've made massive adjustments to my habits since I joined in April but at such an incremental pace I barely noticed.
Flesh by Khanh Ha Review posted last Wednesday.
Flesh is a very dark and disturbing story and yet, still, suffused with hope like a sandy shore on the edge of a dank jungle shimmering under a full moon....The prose often has the cadences and imagery of poetry and shifts between scenes having the surreal quality of dreams and those with fast-paced action. Khanh Ha's meticulous attention to detail in every scene, his dedication to bringing all five of the senses into play is yet another way he engages with the theme and in this way draws the reader in and tethers them by the sinews and fibers of their very flesh. This story grips and won't let go even after the last page is turned.
Friday Forays in Fiction: The Modern Word In which I shared a favorite web site devoted to modern and post modern literary fiction--meta fiction, magic realism, surrealism and other types of pushing against the envelope of form and function--the writers like Joyce, Garcia Marquez, Borges, Pynchon and Byatt who know how to put the zing in amaze.
By snail mail:
The Autobiography of Us is waiting for me in Phoenix. Will be picking it up on my quick trip down this week.
By email:
nada
from NetGalley
there were several I got access to but have not downloaded them yet so I won't count them here yet
ARC in waiting:
Tree Books:
Most of these I left behind when I left home for the five week visit at Mom's in early January but now that the visit has been extended indefinitely I will be picking the rest of these up when we go down Thursday/Friday after things I forsee needing over the next couple months.
The Variations by John Donatich
The Inquisitor by Mark Allen Smith My husband read this and loved it and is after me to read it so he can talk about it.
The Hunger Angel by Herta Muller Nobel winner!!
Skios by Michael Frayn
How Should a Person Be? by Sheila Heti
The Sadness of the Samurai by Victor del Arbo
Me, Who Dove into the Heart of the World by Sabina Berman
Winter Journal by Paul Auster a memoir from an American literary figure that really excites me.
We Sinners by Hanna Pylvaine. It's another story exploring the impact on family life of a fundamentalist religion. One of the themes I'm drawn to like Pooh to honey.
Our Harsh Logic: Israeli Soldiers' Testimonies from the Occupied Territories, 2000-2010 compiled by The Organization Breaking the Silence
A Possible Life by Sebastian Faulks
Ebooks:
____By email:
After: The Shock by Scott Nicholson
Troubled by Scott Nicholson
Losses by Robert Wexelblatt This arrived a couple months ago but I somehow neglected to put include it in this list before
____From Net Galley:
A Thousand Pardons by Jonathan Dee
What Matters in Jane Austen? by John Muller
Never Give in to Fear by Marti MacGibbon
The Secret Keeper by Kate Morton
Unloched by Candace Lemon-Scott
Sticks and Stones: Defeating the Culture of Bullying and Rediscovering the Power of Character and Empathy
by Emily Bazelon
APE: Author, Publisher, Entrepreneur: How to Publish a Book by Guy Kawasaki and Shawn Welch
With or Without You A Memoir by Domenica Ruta
The Beautiful Thing That Awaits Us All by Laird Barron
The Book of Why by Nicholas Montemarano
If anyone reading this states a preference I may let it weigh my decision as to what I begin next from the above list.
1 tell me a story:
It helps me to plan when I will publish a review as soon as I finish a book. I still end up behind in reviews, but it certainly motivates me to get writing!
I hope this next week contains no lifequakes. :)
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