Wednesday 30 November 2011

What Would Nancy Do? (WWND)

If you are heavily involved or interested in the literary world you have probably at one time or another heard of Nancy Pearl.  American librarian, best-selling author, and literary critic; Nancy has done it all and made quite a name for herself in the book world.  One of my favourite Nancy facts is that she is the only librarian to have her only action figure.

I wanted to share this article from the Globe and Mail that I just read.  It is written by Nancy and describes her "Rule of 50", a rule for dropping a bad / disappointing/etc...book.  As someone who often has a hard time putting down a book that I'm not enjoying (I always feel that I should finish what I started!) I find this to be quite the helpful and informative read (Yay! Other people face this problem too!).

Nancy Pearl's Rule of 50 for Dropping a Bad Book

Tuesday 29 November 2011

Welcome to Fiction Island!

As I've mentioned in a previous post, I love Jasper Fforde's 'Thursday Next' series.  I have just started reading the most recent installment, One of Our Thursday's is Missing.  I'm only a few chapters in so I don't have a lot to write about yet, however, I did want to share this amazing map that is at the front of the novel.  This is Fiction Island and it is wonderful with so much to look at and discover. Enjoy!  Please note I have included a link to Fforde's website where you can see a larger version of the map.

Thursday 24 November 2011

"May The Odds Be Ever In Your Favor"

One of my favourite teen novels, The Hunger Games, is being made into a movie and I am so excited to see it! I just finished rereading the entire series and it is just as amazing as when I first read it.  If you haven't read this series yet you still have time to do so before the movie comes out in March 2012!

Wednesday 16 November 2011

"Oh I wish I had a river I could skate away on "

I just finished my first Massey Lecture and it was excellent.  Every year I see them in bookstores and I always pick them up, read the back, and think to myself 'sounds interesting'....but I never manage to get to the next step of actually reading the lecture.  This year, I was at work unpacking boxes and boxes of books when I got my first look at this years Massey Lecture, Winter: Five Windows on the Season by Adam Gopnik.  I had several reaction upon holding this book in my hands.  First of all, in honor of the fiftieth anniversary of the Massey Lectures, this particular lecture has 5 different covers, all pertaining to the topic, and they are all lovely and very much embody the theme of winter.  Second, the name of the author, Adam Gopnik, rang a bell.  Gopnik has written several non-fiction works, a couple novels for children, and is a staff writer for The New York Times.  Third, the theme appealed to me in a way that none of the other Massey Lectures up to this point had.  I love winter.  I love when it gets cold outside and we are forced to bundle up in sweaters and scarves in order to trek around the city.  I love sitting in my home drinking a hot cup of tea and watching the snowy (or more likely here, rainy) weather pass by through the window.  I love the holiday season in December where we all take time out of our busy lives to make more time for family and friends.  This list can go on and on.

Gopnik's lecture is fasinating in that it combines history and science with personal narrative.  His writing style is very readable, informative, and humourous; reading this makes me want to read more by him in the future. 

Winter is divided into 5 chapters.  Chapter one is entitled 'Romantic Winter'.  This section looks at, in Gopniks words, "winter as a poetic act - winter in mind rather than winter in matter." (pg. 7)  He discusses paintings, music, poetry, and literature and how this idea of winter has influence these cultural areas throughout history. 

Chapter two, 'Radical Winter' talks about how "winter is a place as much as a tiem, a season tht comes heaving into sight while we sit....and so we go to find it, we go towards...the North! And, for that matter, the South.  The search for that spatial winter, the search for the poles...." (pg. 54)  In this section we learn about the many explorations to discover the poles and how that has affected us as culture.

' Recuperative Winter' is the subject of chapter 3.  Gopnick explores the "making of the modern Christmas - winter's holiday" (pg. 93).  He walks us through the history of the holiday and how it is that we arrived to the point that we are today.  Being a big fan of the holiday season, I found this section particularly interesting, especially the history behind it.

Chapter 4 deals with a subject that, as a Canadian, is very close to my heart: ice hockey.  'Recreational Winter' talks about winter sports in general but spends a great deal of time discussing hockey in particular.  He asks the question "Why do we love it?  Why is this game so good when it's not being degraded and diluted by greed, violence, and stupidity?" (pg. 162)  As someone who has read lots of different perspectives on the game, I found Gopnik's essay to be really interesting and definetly a reminder on why I love the game.

The final chapter is entitled 'Remembering Winter'.  One line in particular stands out to me in this section: "Winter stress makes summer sweetness - and the stress of warm times makes us long for the strange sweetness of cold ones" (pg. 179). A lovely retrospect on why it is that we love winter, focusing on the idea of winter and memory.

If you love winter as I do, or you are simply curious on learning more about this season, read this book.  If you love the Massey Lectures, or are simply a fan of Adam Gopnick, read this book. Whatever your reason is, this is a book to read.

Sunday 13 November 2011

"History is Very Serious"

I have discovered a new comic love and that my friends is the delightful Kate Beaton.  I picked up her newly published book, Hark! A Vagrant, which is a fabulous collection of her Webcomic.  Oh my goodness did I laugh!  And learn! Her comics cover a large range of topics but mainly focus on history and literature.  I picked this up at random because I liked the cover and boy am I glad I did!  Her website has officially been added to my growing list of sites I check on a daily / weekly basis.

For your enjoyment (and mine!) here are a few of my favourite comics of hers:
http://www.harkavagrant.com/index.php?id=250

Friday 11 November 2011

“If my life wasn't funny it would just be true, and that is unacceptable.”

I love love love Carrie Fisher; and this is not just because I'm a huge 'Star Wars' fan.  I knew that she was not only an actress but also an author, however I didn't get the opportunity to read one of her books until 2008.  I was at a local bookstore and I came across her recently published memoir, Wishful Drinking.  Now you tell me, if you saw this cover, wouldn't you want to pick this up to read??

Wishful Drinking was a truly amazing book.  Not only is it one of the best non-fiction books I have ever read, it is also one of the few non-fiction books I have read several times.  When people ask me why I had such a strong and positive reaction to Wishful Drinking, the one thing that pops to mind is this: I simply love how open and honest she is about her inner crazy ( As Fisher puts it, “I feel I'm very sane about how crazy I am.”)  She is so candid about everything from her family, friends, relationships, career, and her own personal issues.  I simply loved it!

Fisher's second memoir, Shockaholic, is wonderful.  This time around, she focuses on topics such as her recent extreme weight loss, going on a double date with Senator Chris Dodd and Edward Kennedy,  and her relationships with the King of Pop, Micheal Jackson; her stepfather, Harry Karl; and her father, Eddie Fisher.  Her writing is funny, honest, and addicting.  This is definetly another memoir I will be rereading sometime soon!

Books by Carrie Fisher:
  1. Postcards From the Edge (1987)
  2. Surrender the Pink (1990)
  3. Delusions of Grandma (1994)
  4. The Best Awful (2003)
  5. Wishful Drinking (2008)
  6. Shockaholic (2011)

Monday 7 November 2011

"As nerds, we have an obligation to pass on our sacred nerd knowledge to the next generation"

The blog Topless Robot often posts fun information on fantasy and science fiction books.  Here is a post they did earlier this year:

"While every adult nerd knows to give youngsters books like The Hobbit and The Chronicles of Narnia and Harry Potter, there are plenty of other great books out there that don't get the same kind of massive film-adaptation attention. Here are 14 fantasy novels, in no particular order, you might not already know but are definitely worth finding for the nerdlings in your life. "

Lots of great recommendations! Read the rest of the post at the link below:

14 Great But Lesser Known Fantasy Novels For Lil' Nerds

Tuesday 1 November 2011

A VERY Happy Halloween!


I just had to re-post this goody that was on Diana Gabaldon's website yesterday!  Enjoy!


Happy Halloween!

And many thanks to Blue Moon Magnolia for this lovely tribute to Jamie’s backside. {g} [I call it "pumpkinbuns"--it's a reproduction of the famous Page 5 scene in THE EXILE.]

Diana Gabaldon's Website

“Governments and fashions come and go but Jane Eyre is for all time.”

Jasper Fforde's The Eyre Affair is one of my favourite books and one that I am constantly recommending to people.  For those of you who are not familar with Fforde's wonderfully quirky 'Thursday Next' series, here is a quick blurb about the first book in the series:

"Welcome to a surreal version of Great Britain, circa 1985, where time travel is routine, cloning is a reality, (dodos are the resurrected pet of choice), and literature is taken very, very seriously. England is a virtual police state where an aunt can get lost (literally) in a Wordsworth poem, militant Baconians heckle performances of Hamlet, and forging Byronic verse is a punishable offense. All this is business as usual for Thursday Next, renowned Special Operative in literary detection, until someone begins kidnapping characters from works of literature. When Jane Eyre is plucked from the pages of Brontë's novel, Thursday must track down the villain and enter the novel herself to avert a heinous act of literary homicide."
  
I have reread The Eyre Affair numerous times and with each reading I find new and wonderful details that I missed before, I laugh out loud, and I generally feel smarter.  The amount of detail he puts into all his descriptions of different literary characters, figures, stories, etc...are so fantastic.  Having read many of the works he references myself, I get such joy from his parodies and satires of novels and novelists such as Jane Austen, Charles Dickens, and Shakespeare.


Jasper Fforde's 'Thursday Next' series is smart, funny, creative, and oh so enjoyable to read.  Do yourself a favour and go pick one up!


Thursday Next Series:
  1. The Eyre Affair
  2. Lost in a Good Book
  3. The Well of Lost Plots
  4. Something Rotten
  5. First Among Sequels
  6. One of our Thursdays is Missing


“Most of the time, there is no truth, only various levels of interpretation. Fact is a construct we provide to the public.”

The Ashford Affair  by Lauren Willig I really enjoyed Lauren Willig's Pink Carnation series and thought I would give one of her stan...