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You are here: Home / Archives for book chat

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Reading Challenges 2011

13th January 2011 By Julianne 6 Comments

I used to set myself a challenge to read 50 books every year. This didn’t work very well. The first year I didn’t read enough. In 2009 I read over 90. Last year I sort of set myself the same challenge again, but having read over 90 in the previous year the pressure was off. I knew that as it was no longer my official ‘job’ to read and write books all day long (in 2009 I completed my MA), I had no chance of beating my previous total. I read 44 books in 2010. Well, if I counted all the picture books that I read whilst checking for scribbles and torn-out flaps (one of the perks of volunteering in a charity shop), I’d probably have read over 60. But I’m not counting picture books.

I’m not concerned by the drastic drop in numbers. I’m just bored with the 50-book thing. It’s vague, but at the same time, too restrictive. For one, I always end up trying to find really short novellas and poetry books and graphic novels to read in the last 6 days of December. This used to work, but last time I found that I didn’t have any left in my TBR, having used them all up in the previous years!

This year, I have decided to do several reading challenges instead, to make it all a bit more exciting. Not that reading books isn’t exciting on its own, kids! I signed up for one challenge last year, the POC Reading Challenge. And I failed. I only read two out of the four books that I planned to read. So it will not be surprising to see that I am signing up for it again. All the challenges except for the POC Challenge, the GLBT Challenge and the British Books Challenge, were found via A Novel Challenge (though I’m sure the others are on there anyway), so the blogs that host them are new to me as well. Lots of new reading for the new year, yay!1

I am signing up for Level 2 again, but am going to try to read the maximum six books.

1. Born Confused, by Tanuja Desai Hidier
2. Monsoon Summer, by Mitali Perkins
3. Noughts & Crosses, by Malorie Blackman

Entering in the Home Grown category – 12 novels, one a month ideally. This should be the easiest challenge ever because I have 27 to choose from already on my TBR, plus I find novels by British authors slightly easier to read than all other books. I will probably read more than 12 though, may even go for that 50 books Crown…what am I saying? No more 50 books goals! The books I currently plan to read are:

1. Festival, by David Belbin (it’s on top of a pile on the floor, calling to me)
2. Girl Meets Cake, by Susie Day
3. We Had It So Good, by Linda Grant
4. Five Miles from Outer Hope, by Nicola Barker (one for my ‘teenage protagonist in literary fiction’ tag)
5. The Butterfly Tattoo, by Philip Pullman
6. Candy, by Kevin Brooks
7. Noughts & Crosses, by Malorie Blackman

GLBT Challenge 2011

You can set your own goal for this challenge, so I am planning to finish Swordspoint and read the four books (I think? There may be more lurking subtly) I have on my TBR that qualify, which are:

1. Swordspoint, by Ellen Kushner
2. Dramarama, by E. Lockhart
3. Empress of the World, by Sara Ryan
4. grl2grl, by Julie Anne Peters
5. Valencia, by Michelle Tea

A Year of Feminist Classics

Not strictly a challenge, described as a ‘project’ by the creators, this is a good excuse for me to read the feminist books that I have lurking on my shelves. I’ve already read A Room of One’s Own (it’s awesome, by the way, and really short), and I don’t think I’ll be able to read all of the others, but I own copies of three of them, and should be able to get another three from my local library.

I am going to aim for level 1 – Curious, and read three books. This should not be difficult as I have 27 fantasy novels on my TBR to choose from!

1. Swordspoint, by Ellen Kushner
2. Tithe, by Holly Black
3. Valiant, by Holly Black 

I am actually going to aim to complete the “Fun Size” YA Reading Challenge (20 books), because although I only have 15 YA books on my TBR, there is, of course, the library, and re-reads count for this challenge. There are a few YA books that I read in 2009 and haven’t gotten around to reviewing because, although I remember that I thought they were really good books, I can hardly remember anything else about them. These include Love and Other Four Letter Words, by Carolyn Mackler, and Saving Francesca by Melina Marchetta. I remember thinking that Saving Francesca, in particular, was really amazing, but I can’t remember anything about it that I wasn’t reminded of by looking at the blurb or flicking through my copy!

1. Festival, by David Belbin
2. Girl Meets Cake, by Susie Day
3. If I Stay, by Gayle Forman
4. The Boyfriend List, by E. Lockhart (re-read)
5. The Butterfly Tattoo, by Philip Pullman
6. Born Confused, by Tanuja Desai Hidier
7. Dramarama, by E. Lockhart
8. Empress of the World, by Sara Ryan
9. Monsoon Summer, by Mitali Perkins
10. Tithe, by Holly Black (re-read)
11. Valiant, by Holly Black
12. grl2grl, by Julie Anne Peters
13. Ironside, by Holly Black
14. Candy, by Kevin Brooks
15. A Great and Terrible Beauty, by Libba Bray
16. Noughts & Crosses, by Malorie Blackman
17. The Book Thief, by Markus Zusak

New Author Challenge 2011

This should be another easy challenge, most of the books on my TBR are by authors I haven’t read before. Authors I have read before I tend to get more excited about, so they’re less likely to languish on my TBR piles. I am planning to read 15 new authors, but I will hopefully manage more than that!

1. Swordspoint, by Ellen Kushner
2. Festival, by David Belbin
3. Girl Meets Cake, by Susie Day
4. We Had It So Good, by Linda Grant
5. If I Stay, by Gayle Forman
6. Five Miles from Outer Hope, by Nicola Barker
7. Born Confused, by Tanuja Desai Hidier
8. Empress of the World, by Sara Ryan
9. Monsoon Summer, by Mitali Perkins
10. grl2grl, by Julie Anne Peters
11. Candy, by Kevin Brooks
12. Valencia, by Michelle Tea
13. A Great and Terrible Beauty, by Libba Bray
14. Noughts & Crosses, by Malorie Blackman
15.The Princess Bride, by William Goldman
16. The Book Thief, by Markus Zusak

2011 Book Blogger Recommendation Challenge

My method for choosing challenges for this year involved going through the A Novel Challenge blog, opening the pages for challenges that sounded interesting in tabs, and then going onto Goodreads and working out whether I had enough books – or almost enough books – on my TBR to complete them. This one was actually one of the quickest to check, because all I had to do was read through the list of titles, no fiddling around with tags or shelves was involved. I am signing up for Level I – to read five books from the list. Although I only own 4 books that are on the list, I can get one of the others from the library. Plus, the books I have are:

1. (9 on the list) The Book Thief, by Markus Zusak
2. (70) The Princess Bride, by William Goldman
3. (264) Swordspoint, by Ellen Kushner
4. (344) A Great and Terrible Beauty, by Libba Bray
5. (30) If I Stay, by Gayle Forman (purchased after I wrote this post)

and I read most of Swordspoint last year. I’ve actually finished the novel now, but I still have two short stories in the edition I have to read, and I don’t count a book as read until I’ve read everything except the blurb, and the copyright page. Sometimes I read those too, but usually not. If it’s a novel by a celebrity, I usually only read the copyright page. 😉

1 I’ve taken to reminding myself regularly of all the books I don’t want to read, so that I feel less overwhelmed. Legal thrillers. Amish romance. Mills and Boons. New Moon, Eclipse, and Breaking Dawn. Anything by Todd McCaffrey.

Filed Under: Challenges Tagged With: book chat, books, British, challenge, fantasy, feminism, I ramble on for a couple of paragraphs, LGBT, LGBTQ, POC, YA

Monday Amusements: The Book Edition

4th October 2010 By Julianne Leave a Comment

Over on this second’s obsession, I, somewhere between regularly and occasionally, post a Monday round-up of relevant links, and it struck me a couple of months ago that I could do the same thing here. I’ve finally got around to it, hurray!

Isn’t this bookplate awesome? It was made by Michel Fingesten (1884 – 1943) for Gianni Mantero, and you can see more from the same artist at A Journey Round My Skull.

How do you feel about bookplates? Although I did like being able to write my name on the This book belongs to… pages of books I had as a kid, I don’t think I could bring myself to stick a bookplate into a book now. However, I could happily put them on or inside the front cover of notebooks. If you like them, draw! pilgrim has provided some bright, modern bookplates to download for this post at Frecklewonder (via How About Orange). Alternatively, Design*Sponge has a tutorial and printable bookplates of a more intricate and old-fashioned, slightly macabre style.

I usually find it partly horrifying and partly hilarious when a general news website or paper publishes anything about teen/YA literature. You know the articles. The writer has read no more than three, maybe five, YA books published in the last decade, and has decided to write an opinion piece about how bad they thought they all were, lamenting the ‘fact’ that nothing decent is being written for that age group. Twilight’s feminist backlash has a terrible title, implying that all the books recommended were written as a response to The Saga (as I’ve taken to calling it) when I’m sure none of them actually were. But it does have interesting suggestions. Don’t read the comments though, they’ll make you want to hit things.

If you like reading about great historical women, enter the f word‘s competition to win a free online subscription to HerStoria magazine. All you have to do is leave a comment about your favourite under-recognised woman in history, but hurry, the contest closes tomorrow!

Bored of plain MDF bookshelves? WebUrbanist suggests 15 (More!) Unusually Brilliant Book Shelving Systems. I like the multi-functional shelf.

If apostrophe misuse really frustrates you, open the video for The Apostrophe Song in a tab, then look at something else whilst you listen.

Having gone to see Andrea Levy speak whilst at university, I really enjoyed this interview at Words Unlimited.

Finally, the national children’s charity Bullying UK faces closure due to a funding crisis. Their website describes many easy, low-cost ways to help them.

Filed Under: Monday Amusements Tagged With: Andrea Levy, book chat, bookplates, books, bullying, grammar, Monday Amusements, teenage fiction, YA, young adult

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