On the topic of reading...

My very cool friend Megan challenged herself to read 50 books this year. I would like to do the same. I'm off to a good start. She posts reviews on her blog. Maybe I'll do that sometime in the future. For now, you'll have to make do with a list and a very simple rating from me. Five stars is a good thing. One star, not so much. Get it? See, I knew my basic readership was gifted.

2010 Reads To Date:
With a Hammer For My Heart by George Ella Lyon ***
Taft by Ann Patchett **** (Could have been five if I understood the ending)
Bel Canto by Ann Patchet ***** (WOW!)
The Time Traveler's Wife by Audrey Niffenegger ****
Smash Cut by Sandra Brown ***
The Chocolate War by Robert Cormier ***
The Heart is a Lonely Hunter by Carson McCullers ****

The only book that I would rate as a one star (or less, if I could figure out how to do that) I can't really list because I only made it through about three chapters before I determined that it was an utter waste of the paper it was printed on. I should have known that when I picked it up at Half-Price Books on the one dollar shelf and there were multiple copies of it! I didn't really give it a good once over then, just noticed that it was written by Shari Shattuck, who played Ashley Abbott on The Young and the Restless for a brief stint. Hardly a real literary credential, I know. But it was a DOLLAR....and it looked like a fun, interesting mystery about the world of geishas. WRONG. It was crap, which I would have realized had I followed my teacherly advice and read the first poorly written page, or even scanned the back of the book more carefully. Lethal, the title I selected, turns out to be just one of in a series of books by the "Naughty Girls of Downtown Press." Their motto? "Good girls go to Heaven. Bad girls go Downtown." 'Nuff said.

I have an extensive list of wanna-reads in my journal, but that is in my desk at school...where I haven't been for four whole days. I would like to branch out into different genres (cookbooks don't count!), read/reread more classics, and find some authors whose styles inspire me. Ann Patchett is pretty phenomenal. Each of her books (and I think I've read most, except The Magician's Assistant) is unique. No predictability. Her settings range from a home for pregnant teens in rural western Kentucky to an unnamed South American country's capital. Thought provoking stuff.

By the way, as I type this blog, I am wearing a crown. It is bejeweled and has purple puffy feathers and sequins. So, that means that what I say goes, right??

Comments

Megan said…
You are too kind!! And I'm waaaay jealous that you are soooo far ahead of me on the reading goal. However, I'm going to be a supportive friend and say, "YOU GO GIRL!!! WAY TO ROCK IT!!" Don't you wish we could get paid to read? I'd be the size of a small nation, but man, how fun would that job be?!?!?

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