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You are here: Home / Archives for Monday Amusements

Monday Amusements

Monday Amusements 9

20th May 2013 By Julianne Leave a Comment

My reading journal, with my current favourite pen.

Happy Monday! A strange greeting, perhaps, but just think, you could read something really brilliant this week. And on that subject…

Keris Stainton wrote a beautiful post for Author Allsorts, I love libraries. I would love to know that my local library had a book that I’d written in stock. I really do love that place. I haven’t gotten any new fiction books out of my local library in months but every time I visit to renew something I find it impossible to resist walking around for a little while to soak up the atmosphere. Then I tell myself that I must get through my TBR so that I can fully enjoy discovering new books in the library like I used to. Not sure that will happen any time soon, but it’s a lovely thought!

I enjoyed reading Jo’s write-up of her experience speaking on a London Book Fair panel at Once Upon a Bookcase. It sounds like such an amazing event.

I was excited to read that SisterSpooky will be hosting another Geek Week! I caught up with the last one a bit late but it was really fun to read all the posts revelling in geekdom.

It seems like every book blogger has been posting about the state of their TBR piles recently. I loved seeing Clover’s pictures, and Lynsey of Narratively Speaking posted asking for ideas for TBR organisation. Last year I used a spreadsheet to help me calculate how many books I had left to read to help me finish each reading challenge I was participating in, but I haven’t set it up for this year yet. It’s not easily customisable because you’d need to change all the categories and numbers to fit your plans, but if anyone is interested in seeing it, I might upload it somewhere when I’m done.

I really enjoyed this video post by Paula at The Broke and the Bookish about learning to give people better quick reviews, though honestly I admire her for being able to openly enthuse to people about the books she loves! I’ve never been entirely comfortable expressing my opinions about anything cultural other than things that are really mainstream, like television and fashion. Talking about music makes me really anxious that I’ll be judged for my tastes and when I do have the opportunity to talk about books, sometimes I freeze up and don’t say anything because I don’t think the person I’m talking to would have any interest in reading the books I like, or because I’m worried I’ll bore them with my enthusiasm or criticism. It can be tough being an adult with a serious, academic interest in YA! (And this is why I blog)

I love a good list, and my recent favourites are Books I’d Like To See As Film Adaptations, at Fluttering Butterflies, Unlikable Female Characters in YA Fiction: A Reading List, at Stacked, and Stylist‘s 50 best books of the 1920s. I want to read my way through all three of these lists!

Did you ever stop to think and forget to start again?‘s Confessions of a Book Nerd (via @cloverness) made me giggle. I have gotten the bus to another library so that I can get out a specific book that I looked up on the online catalogue. Several times. Happily this bus ride only takes me about 20 to 30 minutes, not an hour, but I usually go straight to the library, get the book, and go home again, only spending about 20 minutes there in total.

On to reviews, and Michelle at Fabbity Fab Book Reviews made Cadillac Couches by Sophie B. Watson sound like an absolute must read. A coming-of-age book about twenty-somethings? With a road trip and music festivals? Yes please!

After reading Sophie’s review of Gail Carriger’s Etiquette & Espionage I thought, yet again: right, that’s it, this year I MUST read something by this author. I’ve had Soulless sitting on my TBR for years now, so I have no excuses.

Finally, Writing from the Tub and SisterSpooky both covered You Don’t Know Me by Sophia Bennett and made it sound amazing – it’s going straight on my wishlist for sure.

Do subscribe if you enjoy my link selections, and feel free to explore the archive! No Monday Amusements here next week, but Friday is the first day of my Diary of a Crush theme week (aka, my cunning plan to force myself to review this series)!

Filed Under: Monday Amusements Tagged With: book chat, books, links, Monday Amusements

Monday Amusements 8

6th May 2013 By Julianne 2 Comments

Photo by JaimeMorrow

Exciting (and amusing) news: I’ve decided to make Monday Amusements a regular feature on both this fleeting dream and its sister blog, this second’s obsession. I’ll be posting bookish Monday Amusements here every other week, starting today, and doing the same (only fashion and make-up themed) on this second’s obsession starting next Monday. Therefore you can expect my next Monday Amusements post here on the 20th May.

Also, I am going to try to credit my sources when I didn’t just find a post or article myself via RSS feed or e-mail newsletter, or the publisher’s twitter. Previously, I’d just bookmark the piece and by the time I got around to putting my Monday Amusements post together, I’d have forgotten how I discovered it. From now on I will bookmark the relevant tweet or Facebook post instead, so that you can find and follow interesting people too!

Now, onto today’s link selection! I’m afraid I don’t have any favourite reviews this week as I’m very behind on my RSS feeds, but this means that in a fortnight I will have a bumper selection!

I don’t go to performance poetry events very often, but I’ve enjoyed every one I’ve attended. ‘Is poetry the new comedy?’ (The Telegraph) is not a particularly original piece (I’m sure the Evening Standard publishes something similar about once a year) but I chose to include it as it includes a couple of videos that are a great entry point to exploring the range of poetry videos on YouTube.

’10 Literary Board Games for Book Nerds’ includes some games that sound interesting, and others that just sound surreal (the Animal Farm one). I’m kind of sad that it doesn’t include A Game of Thrones, because that’s what I’m probably playing right now as you read this. No really, I scheduled this post on Saturday so that I wouldn’t have to interrupt my game plans (pun intended).

Jo visits the place where YA love interests are grown, in On Writing: The Boy is Mine, a hilarious and thoughtful post! Make sure you read the comments, as lots of people have added interesting opinions. The same goes for the responses to SisterSpooky’s brilliant post about the relationship between bloggers and publishers. I’m not just saying this because I commented on both. Other people have said good things too!

‘Jane Austen: Strictly Ballroom’ is a really interesting piece with a terrible title, which describes the social rules and types of dance at Regency balls. I didn’t realise that the dances were so energetic!

As someone who found 14 notebooks in one cupboard during one clearout session a few weeks ago (REALLY), I can appreciate Liz De Jager’s post showcasing notebook collections. (Via @cloverness)

The ladies behind Makeshift Bookmark have now retired from blogging, but I would like to share one of their best discussion posts, All My Reviews Sound the Same. I know I will be referring to the comments over and over again for ideas to keep my reviews from getting stale, and for a good laugh.

This now fully-funded Indiegogo campaign will fund the production of the manga series of Julie Kagawa’s The Iron King, which I reviewed recently. You can still contribute to receive the pretty cool perks.

Finally, ‘Lovesick and Tired: Unnecessary Romance in YA‘, an incredibly excellent article which I discovered thanks to a link posted by E. Lockhart on Twitter. It led to some really interesting discussions on Twitter, which I would recommend reading if you can get over to @elockhart quickly enough! As much as I love a good romance, I’ve read some books in which the romance seems tacked on because the author thought they had to include one. If the characters are dating but barely seem to have two thoughts about their developing relationship, I don’t think the book is really doing it justice, and it would have been better not to include the romance at all, or perhaps to just hint that it happens after the end of the book. YA books shouldn’t have to involve romance. Real teenagers are not always involved in a romance. Some teenagers are never involved in a romance! We should be trying to show them that their lives can be fun and interesting and meaningful too.

What did you think of this week’s list? Do you agree with my thoughts on YA romance? Do subscribe if you enjoy my link selections, and feel free to explore the archive!

Filed Under: Monday Amusements Tagged With: book chat, books, links, Monday Amusements, teen fiction, teenage, teenage fiction, YA, young adult

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Hi! I'm Julianne and this is my book blog. Click my picture to read more about me.

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