Booking Through Thursday - Recent Big

This week's Booking Through Thursday's question is:

What’s the biggest book you’ve read recently?

(Feel free to think “big” as size, or as popularity, or in any other way you care to interpret.)

At about 560 pages, I think Sarah Waters' Fingersmith would have to be it (just finished it last week). It's not the biggest book I've ever read/I'll ever read, but it is "recent".

If I think in terms of popularity, I'd say The Time Traveler's Wife, specially with the movie release. Unfortunately, this was one book I just couldn't get into.

How about you? What's the BIGGEST book you've read recently?

Booking Through Thursday - Recent Best

Today's Booking Through Thursday asks : What's the best book you read recently? After the horror of last week's The Other Hand, I've managed to read two great books this week: Samantha Harvey's The Wilderness, which is longlisted for the Booker Prize this year, and Antoine De Saint-Exupery's The Little Prince, which is a must-read, I think, for every child and adult.

Now, I don't know what your definition of "recent" is, but, I've just given you two of my last three books.

How about you? What's the best book you've read in the last month or so?

Booking Through Thursday - Recent Worst

Today's Booking Through Thursday asks: What’s the worst book you’ve read recently? This one is really easy for me, as I just finished writing one of my most negative reviews for this year. I won't beat around the bush, or faff around, building it up, but I'll just say it: Chris Cleave's The Other Hand was one of the most annoying books I've read in a long long long time.

I know loads of you have the best things to say about this book, so I'd really like to know how unfair you think I'm being. I did read the book with an open mind, and I was really excited to read it, but, the excitement just waned, and while I did finish the book, I was less than impressed.

PS: To find out more about my thoughts on this book, click here. Thanks.

Booking Through Thursday - Preferences

btt2 Which do you prefer? (Quick answers–we’ll do more detail at some later date)

Reading something frivolous? Or something serious?

Mostly serious. If I'm in the mood for something 'frivolous', I normally go for Young Adult/Children's literature.

Paperbacks? Or hardcovers?

Hardcovers (although they're a pain to carry).

Fiction? Or Nonfiction?

Fiction.

Poetry? Or Prose?

Read more prose, love good poetry. Tough one.

Biographies? Or Autobiographies?

Autobiographies.

History? Or Historical Fiction?

Both.

Series? Or Stand-alones?

Standalone - it's less daunting.

Classics? Or best-sellers?

Classics.

Lurid, fruity prose? Or straight-forward, basic prose?

Straightforward, albeit lyrical.

Plots? Or Stream-of-Consciousness?

Both. Don't do preachy though.

Long books? Or Short?

A good book is a good book, irrespective of length. I do both.

Illustrated? Or Non-illustrated?

Mostly non-illustrated. However, I love encyclopedias, or those glossy art books ('coffee table' books).

Borrowed? Or Owned?

Owned. I hate feeling pressured to finish a book quickly, as opposed to reading it at my own pace. Plus, I love waking up and seeing a crowded bookshelf.

New? Or Used?

New, or at least it has to look new! Or, have a funky cover! Or, be one of my all-time favorites which has been signed by the author. Or, be a limited edition.

Happy Thursday, folks!

Booking Through Thursday - Unread

btt2 Booking Through Thursday presents an idea from 'The Toddled Dredge':

So here today I present to you an Unread Books Challenge. Give me the list or take a picture of all the books you have stacked on your bedside table, hidden under the bed or standing in your shelf – the books you have not read, but keep meaning to. The books that begin to weigh on your mind. The books that make you cover your ears in conversation and say, ‘No! Don’t give me another book to read! I can’t finish the ones I have!’

I wish I could cover my ears and say "No! I can't finish the ones I have." However, me and books is like moths to flames, or, bees to honey. I just can't say no! My stack isn't too bad right now (umm, it's been worse).

So, from left to right, you have:

  1. Carlos Ruiz Zafon - The Angel's Game. I absolutely loved Shadow of the Wind, so when I saw his new book was out, and Waterstones was selling the hardback for half price, I had to buy it. I just couldn't say NO.
  2. Nancy Huston - Fault Lines This was shortlisted for the Orange Prize in 2008, and it's part of my self-imposed challenge to read all major prize-winners and nominations.
  3. James Ellroy - LA Confidential Ok, I can see the eyes rolling, but, sometimes, all you need is a good fast-paced easy read.
  4. Linda Grant - When I Lived In Modern Times About three people have recommended this book to me, so I ended up borrowing it from a friend. Is it wrong that because of the cover and the print, I don't really want to read it?
  5. Wally Lamb - The Hour I First Believed I've never read a Wally Lamb novel before. Time I started to?
  6. John le Carre - A Most Wanted Man I really enjoyed A Murder Of Quality, which I read last month. Also, The Constant Gardener was great. So, when Waterstones was selling this for £3.49, how could I walk away?
  7. Angela Carter - The Magic Toyshop I loved the cover, and I loved the name of the book. How often do you see a book with that kind of a title in the 'adult' section of a bookstore?
  8. Jeffrey Eugenides - The Virgin Suicides I'm actually reading this right now. Loads of people rave about Middlesex, so, I thought I'd introduce myself to his writing with the debut novel.
  9. Orhan Pamuk - My Name Is Red This has been lying on my book shelf since early March. I quite liked The White Castle, so it made sense to get this book. I really don't know why I haven't started reading it yet.
  10. Catherine O'Flynn - What Was Lost I started reading this, and forgot it at a friend's place. By the time I met him next, I was already well into another book, and it just kind-of slipped lower in the list.

How about you? Is your stack within the 10 book mark, or, is it way beyond? Or, are you more pragmatic, and have only books you can finish?

Also, have you read any of the books above? Any you recommend I bump up the list?

Booking Through Thursday - Celebrity Memoirs

btt2

This week's Booking Through Thursday asks:

Do you read celebrity memoirs? Which ones have you read or do you want to read? Which nonexistent celebrity memoirs would you like to see?

I haven't read very many, to be honest. Most of the times, it feels like a money-making gimmick. Take some of the footballers in their early twenties, for example. They've barely peaked, but they all have a memoir. On the other hand, if the likes of Zidane or Cantona had a proper memoir, I'd be rushing out to get it. (I'm a bit of a sports buff!)

The one book that I did really enjoy was Lance Armstrong's It's Not About The Bike. I thought it was well-written, and interesting... and he did have something to write about! Battling cancer, and then going on to win Tour de France. That's quite commendable, don't you think?

Not sure if these count as 'memoirs' (dictionary definition-wise), but Irving Stone wrote Lust for Life (about van Gogh) and The Agony and The Ecstasy (about Michelangelo). I think it was those two books that got me into art, and both remain my favorite artists. I forced my parents to take me to Rome as a graduation present, just to see the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, and I dragged a couple of my friends to New York last year, predominantly to go to the Met and MoMA. Again, were they celebrities, or, do we glorify them now, for they weren't appreciated in their time? Well, van Gogh wasn't.

I would really like to read Syd Barrett's memoir, but there are so many versions out there, that I'm scared I'll end up picking one up which doesn't justify the genius he was at any level. I've got an image of him in my head, where he's some kind of music god, and I don't want that to get ruined.

Oh, and as a special treat, this is my favorite painting by van Gogh. Isn't it amazing? Don McLean even wrote 'Starry Starry Nights' as an ode to the genius.

Booking Through Thursday - Sci-Fi/Fantasy

btt2This week, on Booking Through Thursday: One of my favorite sci-fi authors (Sharon Lee) has declared June 23rd Fantasy and Science Fiction Writers Day.

As she puts it:

So! In my Official Capacity as a writer of science fiction and fantasy, I hereby proclaim June 23 Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers Day! A day of celebration and wonder! A day for all of us readers of science fiction and fantasy to reach out and say thank you to our favorite writers. A day, perhaps, to blog about our favorite sf/f writers. A day to reflect upon how written science fiction and fantasy has changed your life.

So … what might you do on the 23rd to celebrate? Do you even read fantasy/sci-fi? Why? Why not?

Considering 23rd is a Tuesday, I'll probably be working, and the day will pass me by. I am reading a fantasy book at the moment (Terry Pratchett - A Hat Full Of Sky), but I reckon I'll be done with it by tomorrow. I do have a couple of books of Garth Nix's The Abhorsen Chronicles lined up (only read Sabriel), so I might end up reading that. I also intend to read Orson Scott Card's Ender's Game, as part of the Take A Chance challenge.

I don't read as much sci-fi/fantasy as I'd like to, to be honest. It's a genre I enjoy, and it's incredible to lose myself in a fantastic world, of endless possibilities and infinite magic. Of course, at the same time, you have a full range of dystopian/post-apocalyptic books, which is something I'm quite fascinated by. From Orwell's 1984 to Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451, from Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale to McCarthy's The Road.

My dabble with fantasy has not been extensive; focusing mostly on the usual suspects, like Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials, The Chronicles of Narnia, The Hobbit, and Harry Potter. As a teenager, I loved RL Stine, Enid Blyton and the like; and like any child, adored fairy tales, which are essentially fantasy, no?

Sci-fi, again, there's The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy, which I absolutely adored, from the first page. I quite like the Star Wars series, and there was a time I used to read Michael Crichton religiously. Of course, you've got Arthur C. Clarke and Carl Sagan as well. Unfortunately, I don't think I've done much experimental reading here, so.... it's a shame. Maybe something I should do?

How about you? Do you have any favorite sci-fi/fantasy book? Do you enjoy the genre? And, are you planning on doing something special to celebrate the Science Fiction and Fantasy Day?

Booking Through Thursday - Niche

btt2 There are certain types of books that I more or less assume all readers read. (Novels, for example.)

But then there are books that only YOU read. Instructional manuals for fly-fishing. How-to books for spinning yarn. How to cook the perfect souffle. Rebuilding car engines in three easy steps. Dog training for dummies. Rewiring your house without electrocuting yourself. Tips on how to build a NASCAR course in your backyard. Stuff like that.

What niche books do YOU read?

So, some of you might already know I'm a geek. Subsequently, this might not come as a very big surprise, but, please, bear with me. I've tried to make this post bright and colorful, with pictures, to make it slightly less 'geeky'. Here goes... My 'niche' books are on.... Java! Nope, not coffee. Nope, not the island. Yes, you got it - the programming language.

Those are the books I have at hand right now, at home. While some of them are purely for reference, I do tend to read some of them, just to get a better understanding of the best coding practices. I absolutely hate EJB - and if you've ever had the traumatic experience of dealing with them, you'll probably agree with me!

However, I've been teaching myself multithreading, and concurrency, in the recent past. Both important, right - I mean, you wouldn't want a single-threaded application for everything, right? 'Taming Java Threads' is probably one of the best books I've ever read, both, in terms of understanding java threads, and in terms of best practices.

What remains one of my favorite things, is Spring! I've done a couple of really cool projects using the Spring framework, and I bought a book on it, just to see how it fits together. Now that I'm relatively comfortable with Spring, it's time to move on to Hibernate?

Note: need to learn more about the Spring GUI framework as well. I did want to use that for something a year or so back, but it didn't quite pan out. :(

Aside from java (and other geekery), I love reading books on:

  1. Photography
  2. Travel - either travel journals or travelogues
  3. Art (and Sculpture)
  4. Philosophy

How about you? Do you have a geek side? Or, are there any books that you tend to read which no one else around you does?

Happy Thursday, and roll on weekend.

Booking Through Thursday - Sticky

btt2 “This can be a quick one. Don’t take too long to think about it. Fifteen books you’ve read that will always stick with you. First fifteen you can recall in no more than 15 minutes.”

Ok, going to make this a really quick one, and stick to 'adult' books (i.e. no Enid Blyton!)

  1. Catcher In The Rye - J.D. Salinger
  2. The Fountainhead - Ayn Rand
  3. A Fine Balance - Rohinton Mistry
  4. Lust for Life - Irving Stone
  5. An Equal Music - Vikram Seth
  6. A Clockwork Orange - Anthony Burgess
  7. We Need To Talk About Kevin - Lionel Shriver
  8. The Road - Cormac McCarthy
  9. 1984 - George Orwell 
  10. To Kill A Mockingbird - Harper Lee
  11. Schindler's Ark - Thomas Keneally
  12. One Hundred Years Of Solitude - Gabriel Garcia Marquez
  13. The Secret Garden - Frances Hodgson Burnett
  14. Fahrenheit 451 - Ray Bradbury
  15. Lord of the Flies - William Golding

Took me under eight minutes, and the list is in no particular order. How about you? Which books will you never forget?

Booking Through Thursday - Second First Time

btt2

 

 

 

What book would you love to be able to read again for the first time?

Loads, to be honest.  20, off the top of my head, in no particular order:

  1.  The Fountainhead - Ayn Rand
  2. The Catcher In The Rye - J.D. Salinger
  3. We Need To Talk About Kevin - Lionel Shriver
  4. Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban - J.K. Rowling
  5. The Hobbit - J.R.R. Tolkien
  6. A Clockwork Orange - Anthony Burgess
  7. The Road - Cormac McCarthy
  8. Disgrace - J.M. Coetzee
  9. The Client - John Grisham
  10. Where are the Children - Mary Higgins Clark
  11. The Great Gatsby - F. Scott Fitzgerald
  12. Macbeth - William Shakespeare
  13. A Fine Balance - Rohinton Mistry
  14. 1984 - George Orwell
  15. Lust For Life - Irving Stone
  16. To Kill A Mockingbird - Harper Lee
  17. Schindler's Ark - Thomas Keneally
  18. The Boy In The Striped Pajamas - John Boyne
  19. The Faraway Tree series - Enid Blyton
  20. Peter Pan - J. Barrie

Wow! I started off planning to have three, then before I knew it, I had eleven, and then, in the blink of the eye, it was twenty! I think this is not only a list of some of my favorite books, but also books that I honestly believe have changed my life in some way or the other. 

So, how about you?

Booking Through Thursday - Gluttony

btt2  

 

Book Gluttony! Are your eyes bigger than your book belly? Do you have a habit of buying up books far quicker than you could possibly read them? Have you had to curb your book buying habits until you can catch up with yourself? Or are you a controlled buyer, only purchasing books when you have run out of things to read?

It's like a rhetorical set of questions; the answers are a given, but I must own up to them, and confess, with a twinge of guilt. Guilt, not because I buy too many books, but because I don't peruse them fast enough. I try... I really do, but I only read for about two hours a day, which isn't much at all, considering the number of books I want to read is inversely proportional to the time I have to read them. 

So yes, I purchase books compulsively, and I call it an addiction, so I concede: I am a glutton! I comfort myself (and my parents) by saying, it could be worse: I could be splurging on cocaine. In a bookstore, some books just sit on a shelf, seducing me: Buy me, and I will make you very happy. And weak that I am, I succumb to this, and please both, the book and my library. As a certain Oscar Wilde once said: I can resist anything but temptation. 

On the flip side, my wallet isn't too happy, and my 'TBR' list silently judges me, as I add another name on. Ironically (or typically) enough, these 'seductive' books rarely exist on my TBR list prior to entering the shop. For example, Zusak's The Book Thief just lay there, and I swear, I half-imagined it doing a little jig singing, come to me (and for the record, that's not the only book that's flirted with me like that!). 

So, the number of books on my TBR list rapidly increase, and I just stare at it, swaying from feeling overwhelmed to feeling happy. Odds are, if I possess the book, I'll get 'round to reading it - eventually. Guess that means I'm not a controlled buyer. I always have about ten books on my shelf, just waiting to be picked up one fine morning (I'm one of those people who only reads one book at a time). Lately though, I'm trying to be sensible, as I order books on my TBR list on Amazon, just because it's more affordable. Of course, it has to be about four books, to qualify for super-saver free delivery!

However, I love entering bookstores, and just being surrounded by so many books. It's like my personal heaven... and of course, if I enter a bookstore, it's wrong to leave without buying at least one book (in my case, it's normally three-four). 

In my defense, I blame my mum, who used to buy me multiple books every time we went down to the local bookstore; and, allowed me to take out six books from the library in one go. I'm just so accustomed to always having a book at hand... talk about being a spoilt brat! 

So, how about you - do you just indulge yourself when it comes to books, like some people do with clothes and shoes (or ice-cream and chocolates!), or are you more controlled? Any other addictions you care to share? 

Oh, and Happy Thursday everyone! :)

Booking Through Thursday - Worse?

btt2

Which is worse: Finding a book you love and then hating everything else you try by that author, or  Reading a completely disappointing book by an author that you love? 

I really like the question. It's a tough one, for, in an ideal world, we'd be able to have our cake and eat it too. However, as the only thing ideal around here are the thoughts in my head, I'd have to go with "reading a completely disappointing book by an author you love". I'm waiting for the applause from the audience, and my grand prize now... 

Let me take a second to explain the why. As in, why I think that's worse.

When a new book is released by any of my favorite authors, I get really excited, and hype it up to be this big thing. I can't wait to run to the store, purchase the book, and then immerse myself in the book completely. And that's mostly because I expect it to be good. How many books by an author would you read, before you'd shortlist the author as one of your favorites? Five, maybe six? If all the books you've read prior to elevating the author to this god-like state have been unputdownable, it's really frustrating when you come across a bad book. But... you know what's even worse? A spate of bad books. 

I was a massive Grisham fan. I've read practically everything by him. Then, he came out with the autobiographical A Painted House. Just because it was a Grisham book, I actually read it, hoping it would come good. It didn't. That was then followed up with Skipping Christmas, Playing For Pizza, and Bleachers. That was the end of my Grisham love affair. I know he's published a new legal thriller recently, but... I just can't bring myself to read it. Disappointment with books really get me down.

On the other hand, if you've read one book by an author, and you've loved it, you're tempted to try another for purely exploratory reasons. Does the second book live up to the expectations you had of it, based on the first book? Or, does it make you want to drop it like a hot potato? The thing is, even if the second book is not great, the reader doesn't tend to feel that disappointed. I normally just think: So much potential

Of course, if the first book by the author has blown the reader away well and truly, it's a dilemma. What if the first book you read was amazing? What if it was one of those that won the Booker or the Pulitzer or something? What if it was, in reality, the author's best work. Are the readers bound to be disappointed then, by reading the author's most popular works first, and then not being that impressed with the next few works? Or, are they just supposed to take it in their stride?