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Reading in the Afternoon, Blogging in the Evening

7th September 2013 By Julianne Leave a Comment

I’ve been a slow reader for the last couple of years. If I remember rightly, in 2009, the year I finished my MA, I read 91 books. That’s my all-time record. I’ve hit 50 a few times, but that year I read books like it was my job, because it was my job.

My MA is in Creative and Life Writing, and for me, reading and writing are co-dependent. I’ve never been one of those writers who has to put reading on hold when they’re working on a project. Reading helps me to write. There are other things that help me write quickly – green tea, walks, anger, the sudden resurfacing of ordinarily-buried memories. But I have to keep reading too. I can’t go too long without it. I have to fill myself up with words to compensate for those I’m putting out. Writing requires reading, and reading induces writing.

Only, there’s this thing called blogging…Oh, blogging! How I love you! It’s kind of like creative writing, except with almost-instant gratification thanks to comments and retweets. It’s very easy to get carried away with it. To find yourself making schedules and other plans and ignoring the little voice that says ‘Can we PLEASE work on the novel now?’.

So I get up in the morning and do my morning pages and look at my blog schedule and go ‘Oh yes, I must write that before Friday’ and I draft whatever it is and then I go to work. I come home and finish it and post it and then I’m too tired to do anything else so I play Flash games on the internet until it’s time to go to bed. Or if I don’t have work, I fit in some procrastination and some more Flash games instead.

And I don’t read any books, and I don’t write any books.

After deleting a load of old feeds from my RSS reader a few weeks ago I reached Peak Internet. This doesn’t happen very often, but it’s a powerful state to be in. Basically, I’m bored of the internet. I can hardly bear the sight of it anymore. I don’t want to surf Wikipedia or read depressing articles on The Guardian or play Flash games for longer than ten minutes at a time. This has freed up my mind to do some problem-solving.

I need to read so I can write. I prefer not to read under the light of my yellow lightbulb, which is right above my bed so I can’t lie on my back to read without it blinding me. Therefore, I’ve started reading in the afternoons, after I’ve done some writing.

IT’S AMAZING. I still manage to blog, but now I’m forced to be more organised, and to procrastinate less. Excellent.

When do you prefer to read? Mornings? Evenings? Afternoons? Do you get most of your reading done during your journey to work, or do you read more at home in the evenings? I read a lot more during the week than at weekends, when I have more social activities competing for my attention. How about you?

Filed Under: Book Chat

Top Ten Most Memorable Secondary Characters

27th August 2013 By Julianne 8 Comments

How many secondary characters are all that memorable? Often the most important secondary characters are love interests, or parents, but I deliberately didn’t pick them, as I’m sure they’ll be popular choices. I went through my ‘read’ list and chose best friends, sidekicks, and enemies. On to the list!

Top Ten Most Memorable Secondary Characters

1. Meghan, from the Ruby Oliver Quartet by E. Lockhart – Ruby’s perception of her goes through a dramatic change. In The Boyfriend List, Meghan is just the boy-obsessed girl that drives Ruby to school, but they become closer in the following books and in Real Live Boyfriends Meghan is just awesome! I loved Meghan so much by the end of this series and when I next re-read it I will be paying much more attention to her character.

2. Scarlett, from Adorkable by Sarra Manning – Scarlett is the quiet, pretty, popular girl who (sort of) ‘steals’ Jeane’s boyfriend. She’s silly but funny and I quite liked her.

3. Felicity from the Gemma Doyle Trilogy by Libba Bray – Felicity isn’t nice. In fact, a lot of the time she’s quite horrible. But oh, she is interesting, and finding out her secrets and watching her develop is one of the best things about this trilogy.

4. Oona, from the Kiki Strike series by Kirsten Miller – Oona is a wonderfully cunning girl who runs a beauty salon where the staff all pretend they don’t speak English in order to gather lucrative gossip about their patrons’ husbands’ business deals. I am looking forward to seeing more of her in the other books.

5. Grace, from Pushing the Limits by Katie McGarry – Most people would probably choose Echo’s best friend Lila, or Noah’s friends Isaiah and Beth, and they all have their own books now. But I would love to find out more about Grace, the enemy of everything that dares to be unpopular, the girl who is so terrified of being tainted by Echo’s outcast status that she refuses to look at her in public.

6. Marron, from Under the Never Sky by Veronica Rossi – For some reason, I was not expecting a character like Marron or a place like his enclave of technology to exist in this book. He was one of the highlights for me and I’m hoping we get to see more of him in the rest of the series,

8. Jo, from Night School by C. J. Daugherty – How could anyone forget Jo and her many troubles and dramas? At first she seems quite normal, with just a few family problems, but as Allie persues the truth about Cimmeria Academy Jo starts to lose control of herself.

9. Laney, from Saving June by Hannah Harrington – Laney, Harper’s best friend and co-conspirator, was my favourite character in Saving June. Unfortunately as she wasn’t a love interest she spent a lot of time off-scene. I would love for her to get her own novel.

10. Finnick, from Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins – Finnick first appears in Catching Fire, but it’s not until Mockingjay that he really comes into his own as one of the most charismatic and tragic characters in the Hunger Games trilogy.

I’m sure half the blogosphere will pick Finnick but I’d love to know if anyone else really wants to find out more about Pushing the Limits‘ Grace! Do you agree with my choices, or would you have chosen other characters from these books?

As always, Top Ten Tuesday is hosted by its fabulous creators at The Broke and the Bookish. This is my twenty-sixth Top Ten Tuesday so please do check out the others if you enjoyed this one!

Filed Under: Recommendation Lists Tagged With: book chat, books, characterisation, characters, Top Ten Tuesday

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