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You are here: Home / Archives for book chat

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Ten Things I Love About Libraries

9th February 2013 By Julianne 2 Comments

Photo by Daniel2005. The King’s Library was collected by George III and given to the nation
by George IV. The rules set out at the time of the gift state that the
books in the library have to be kept together, and away from any other
collection. The King’s Library is currently stored in The King’s Library
tower, at the British Library, as seen in the above photograph.

 

Today is National Libraries Day. I have always loved libraries, having had a library card since I was just two years old. As a child, I couldn’t afford to buy enough books to satisfy my love of reading, so I relied on libraries to provide an endless supply of new material. As an adult, I have used libraries when studying but also, as always, to find new worlds to visit through novels, short stories, plays and poetry.

Recently, many libraries have been closed or threatened with closure, due to council budget cuts. Some people think that libraries are unneccessary, because books can now be bought cheaply online, but I do not agree at all. Not only do libraries have more to offer than just books, but as cheap as buying books can be, nothing is less expensive than free. I believe that anyone with a voracious appetite for reading should be encouraged to keep at it, and not every reader can afford to keep buying books, or wants to download them illegally, paying authors nothing. Libraries allow everyone to educate themselves, no matter their income or their parents’ income.

I think it is important that we make the most of what libraries have to offer, and make sure that other people are aware of what libraries have to offer them. To celebrate National Libraries Day, here are some of my favourite things about libraries:

1. Libraries provide books for free! An obvious one to start with, but although libraries also have many other resources available, books are the heart of libraries.

2. They are fantastic places to browse. Before I started book blogging, I used to choose books just by going to the library and checking out what was on the shelves and in displays. I like bookshops, but there isn’t the same freedom to browse that you experience in libraries, where you can spend as long as you like reading a book before you decide to borrow it or not.

3. They are comfortable places to read and work. Libraries are usually quiet, and often have large tables that you can work on, and squishy chairs to relax in whilst reading.

4. Libraries host a whole range of events, from book groups to author readings. These activities are often free or low-priced, so why not investigate what your local libraries have to offer?

5. Increasingly, libraries also offer e-books and downloadable audiobooks from their websites. I don’t have an e-reader but I have downloaded a few audiobooks to listen to whilst cleaning, crafting, or travelling.

6. I can use online library catalogues to track down the books I want and request them, so that I can pick them up from my local library.

7. As well as books, libraries have computers for patrons to use and a huge range of other research materials, such as local history collections and newspaper and magazine archives.

8. Three important words: inter-library loans. If my local library doesn’t have the books I want, I can request them from other libraries in the system for a small fee. 15 of the London boroughs are members of the London Libraries Consortium, which means that if you belong to one library in the Consortium, you can borrow books from all of the others – and request them online. All libraries in the UK are able to order any book you’d like from the British Library, but this does cost more.

9. When books have reached the end of their library lives, they often go on sale. I’ve enjoyed many great books that I bought from the library for 20p!

10. Libraries pay authors! In the UK we have a Public Lending Right scheme which means that many authors get paid when their books are borrowed. 27 other countries have their own versions of PLR.

What do you love most about libraries? If you’re on Twitter, you can use the hashtags #lovelibraries and #NLD13 to share your words of appreciation for libraries. @readingagency have been retweeting mini love letters to libraries all day.

Filed Under: Book Chat Tagged With: book chat, books, libraries, National Libraries Day

Top Ten Most Frustrating Characters Ever

29th January 2013 By Julianne 8 Comments

Time to let out the rage! My enthusiasm for this topic is such that I’ve made it one point per book, so I can get 12 characters in. I’m sneaky like that. I have tried to put the list in order going from least frustrating to most frustrating, but it was quite difficult, and it’s not perfect.

This is my fifteenth Top Ten Tuesday post! Top Ten Tuesday was created and is hosted by The Broke and the Bookish. Be warned: minor swear words ahoy!

This cat represents how I feel about Bella Swan. Yeah, I went to the Flickr Creative Commons page and searched for ‘angry cat’. What of it. Photo by Captain Pancakes, who also has a blog.

Top Ten Most Frustrating Characters Ever

1. Kim Yamamoto from The Boyfriend List, by E. Lockhart – Why would you start dating your best friend’s ex-boyfriend days after they broke up and decide she has to be okay with it because he’s your “soulmate”? Facepalms all round…

2. Dylan Kowalski from the Diary of a Crush trilogy, by Sarra Manning – This one is a good kind of frustrating. If Dylan wasn’t frustrating, there would be no plot. But my god, is that boy frustrating‽ He only gets more frustrating in each book. I love it.

3. Mr Sheridan from Nobody’s Family Is Going To Change, by Louise Fitzhugh – Some more necessary frustration. The point of the whole book is that he stubbornly refuses to consider what would actually make his children happy.

4. Mr Bennet from Pride and Prejudice, by Jane Austen – Most people seem to think that Mr Bennet should be in the ‘Top Ten Best Dads in Literature’ list, but they are wrong. He belongs on this list! His wife and all his daughters will become homeless when he dies unless at least some of them get married, and does he give the tiniest shit about it? Does he do anything to try to prevent this? I’m not saying he should be obsessed about it like his wife, but some concern would be, well, parental…

5. Meghan Chase from The Iron Fey, by Julie Kagawa – Oh, Meghan. Why do you keep running into dangerous situations without asking for more information about them?

6. Dolores Umbridge and Ron Weasley from the Harry Potter series, by J. K. Rowling – Musical interlude! This Harry and the Potters song says it all re: Umbridge. Though Imelda Staunton does not look like a frog.

Now, Ron, why are you so jealous that Harry has to risk his life over and over? And why do you keep pretending that you’re not madly in love with Hermione? Oh well, he does grow and change and I love him.

7. Stephen from We Had It So Good, by Linda Grant – He just goes along with life and never seems to actually make a decision or take action for himself.

8. Sephy and Jude from Noughts & Crosses, by Malorie Blackman – I really only mean child-Sephy, because she doesn’t have the imagination to understand why Callum and the other Noughts find some things she says offensive. I like her once she grows up, whereas Jude turns out to be horrible. He doesn’t seem to care about anything at all, not even the cause he’s supposedly fighting for. I think he just enjoys it all.

9. Bella Swan from Twilight, by Stephenie Meyer – So you start at a new school, and almost everyone is nice and welcoming. Are you a) nice back or do you b) not give a crap, only being interested in the pale people who sit together in a boring little clique? Think about it for approximately two seconds and you’ll agree, Bella is a dickhead. And don’t get me started on how she suddenly becomes really clumsy in chapter six, or whatever it is. Based on the film and reviews, I think she only gets more frustrating in New Moon, but I won’t be reading it, because she was barely sufferable in Twilight.

10. Amy March from Little Women, by Louisa M. Alcott – She burnt Jo’s manuscript. If someone burnt my only copy of the novel that I had been working on for years, they would be dead to me. Of course she does actually almost die, which leads Jo to forgive her, but that just goes to show how wonderful Jo is. Amy’s still a bumface.

Filed Under: Recommendation Lists Tagged With: book chat, books, Top Ten Tuesday, why I won't review Twilight

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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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