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You are here: Home / Archives for book chat

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Top Ten Books I Would Want On A Deserted Island

13th November 2012 By Julianne Leave a Comment

This is my eleventh Top Ten Tuesday post. Top Ten Tuesday was created and is hosted by The Broke and the Bookish. This week’s theme is:

Top Ten Books I Would Want On A Deserted Island

 Photo by Jo@net


I decided immediately that size matters. I need to not get bored on this island by myself.

1. Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, by J K Rowling

It’s the biggest Harry Potter. End of.

2. The RSC Shakespeare: The Complete Works

Because there are so many of Shakespeare’s plays and poems that I haven’t read, and on the deserted island, I might finally have the time. Hopefully not though, because I’d still really miss the internet.

3. Burning Your Boats: Collected Short Stories, by Angela Carter

I own this, it’s large, and I’ve yet to finish it. Angela Carter is one of my favourite authors and I could happily read the stories from The Bloody Chamber over and over again.

4. War and Peace, by Leo Tolstoy

I enjoyed Anna Karenina, so why not?

5. Ash: A Secret History, by Mary Gentle

I’ve been meaning to re-read this for ages. Oh, and it’s the longest fantasy novel ever published in a single volume.

6. Adorkable, by Sarra Manning

Longest YA Sarra Manning book.

7. SAS Survival Guide: How to survive in the Wild, on Land or Sea

Obviously. Gotta live so that I can get back to the internet. Oh, and my human loved ones…

8. Cloud Atlas, by David Mitchell

So I’d have to finish it. Plus it is quite long.

9. In Search of Lost Time, by Marcel Proust

Longest novel ever. I had to read the first volume, Swann’s Way, at university and I enjoyed it. I don’t remember very much about it but it is beautifully written, even if I did skip those six pages describing a church. I’m sure someone must have published it in one volume…

10. The Writer’s Idea Book by Jack Heffron

I can’t just spend my time on survival chores and lying around reading fiction. I have to work on my own career. And I need something to keep me going, lest I resort to ‘Memoirs of a Shipwrecked Blogger’.

Which of my suggestions would you prefer to have on a desert island?

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

Monday Amusements 5

17th September 2012 By Julianne Leave a Comment

 Read. Or else. Photo by Ben Newcomer

Note: This post doesn’t have as many yesterday-recent links as I’d like. I’ve suffered with migraines for the past few days so pretty much just stuck the first link in today, the other links were ones-I-collected-earlier. Hopefully next week’s post will be ‘fresher’. ‘Til then, there are still plenty of great links here, but many of them are a couple of weeks old.

Raimy is running a Malorie Blackman themed week to celebrate the new cover designs. I’m pretty sure it’s also a slight rebundling of the series as well – I think ‘An Eye for an Eye’ was included in the last edition of Noughts & Crosses, and now it’s included with Knife Edge. I like the new cover designs, they’re very similar to the old ones but give the series a fresher, more up-to-date look.You can read my review of Noughts & Crosses here.

I’ve been thinking a lot about reading speed for quite a while now, as mine seems to have slowed considerably over the last few years. I have a theory that I’m reading slower because I’m reading more books by different authors than ever before. I used to stick with one author for a while and devour their entire ouvre before moving onto another, and I think this helped me to read more quickly. When I pick up a book by an author I’ve read before, I seem to read it faster than I would a book by an author that is new to me. It’s like my brain is used to their style and the rhythm of their words, and I just slip back into it. Books by Sarra Manning and E. Lockhart fly by (pun intended…get it? No?), and I just finished the second in Libba Bray’s Gemma Doyle trilogy, which seemed a faster read than the first. Read what Jen at Makeshift Bookmark has to say on the subject of reading speed, and contribute your own thoughts to the discussion.

‘Is There Any Sense Left In The World (Of YA Fiction)’ by Cicely is partly a personal post but I think it does make a good point about YA heroines. I do get a bit fed up if I read too many books in a row that feature protagonists who are well, a bit silly. When I was a teenager I was overdramatic and sarcastic and romantic in the way that’s not quite healthy but I was also quite sensible and cautious. I just couldn’t relate to fictional girls who would drop everything for the first boy to smile their way or fail to notice when somebody they trusted was actually clearly evil.

The Bookette asks: Do you remember learning to read? I taught myself to read before I started school and I can’t actually remember a time when I couldn’t read. I can remember being very competitive abiout it and wanting to move up the reading bands as fast as possible at school. I also used to read the dictionary to learn new words and write them down in my notebooks, with definitions. I still go through phases of doing this from time to time!

Y is for Young Adult is a cute poem about the joys of being a YA reader, by Jo at weartheoldcoat.

Red Riding Hood and Wolf, in Lego form!

This has been all over Twitter, but in case you haven’t seen it: The Publishing Process in GIF Form

Atom are holding a launch for Libba Bray’s new novel, The Diviners, this Thursday 20th September at Waterstones Oxford Street Plaza. I would be there in a heartbeat if I didn’t have to work.

Jo at Once Upon A Bookcase is seeking recommendations for her LGBTQ YA theme month.

Now onto the most intriguing reviews I’ve read over the last couple of weeks! Jen at Makeshift Bookmark is surprised by the ‘amazingness’ of the self-published Angelfall, whilst I was surprised by how interesting Clover at Fluttering Butterflies found Ghost Flower, a book I’d left languishing on my TBR (and will now have to try soon). I’m also looking forward to getting my hands on a copy of What’s Left of Me by Kat Zhang, thanks to another of Clover’s reviews.

Mel at Chicklish reviewed The Raven Boys by Maggie Stiefvater, which sounds excellent, as does Russian Winter, as featured by Kelly at The Broke and the Bookish. I love reading about dancers, I secretly wanted to be one for a while when I was a kid. From one kind of performance to another, Raimy’s review of Five Flavors of Dumb, by Antony John, makes it sound like a really interesting twist on the teenagers-form-a-band novel.

Finally, a review of a book I’ve already read – The Wee Free Men by Terry Pratchett, reviewed by Jo at weartheoldcoat, included because her book heroine maths – “Hermione Granger + Mildred Hubble + Matilda Wormwood = Tiffany Aching” – made me laugh. Also, I loved that book, but have yet to get around to reviewing it myself.

Filed Under: Monday Amusements Tagged With: book chat, book covers, books, links, Monday Amusements, teen fiction, teenage, teenage fiction, writing, 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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