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- I love the art of creating an entire book without any words. And this was was unexpectedly affecting at times. I recommend it. Without words, it won't take you long.
before leaving the library
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- My apologies to Katya. She went to all that effort to recommend some nonfiction to me and, well, I can't remember where my copy of Boggs
Which makes this book so apropos, I suppose. According to the book, Science Agrees that middle-age starts at 45. Well, I can't find my glasses now. Or Boggs. Or a whole lot of things.
I checked out this book mostly to make Lady Steed laugh and hear her tell me, yep, you need that. I would probably skim the interesting parts, but mostly I got it so my wife would laugh at me (does that sound desperate?). But I ended up reading the whole thing. Well, not reading reading, but I did "read" the whole thing, even if it was in a way that means it'll never sink into my longterm storage. Crap.
Is that ironic?
Anyway, the book was interesting. Lots of fun science and anecdotes. Breezy.
Oh, and if you want to share your own "Most Embarrassing Memory Lapse", Lear is working on a second book now and she wants to know. Email WhereDidILeaveMyGlasses@hbgusa.com. Or, you know, leave it in the comments here. Even better.
about couple weeks but i don't remember exactly
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- I can't speak with authority on the original French, but in translation, Bouillier is a lovely writer with his page-long sentences and little refrains. All the same, if this book hadn't been a mere 126 pages, I don't know that I would have finished it.
It's 1990 and the woman who up and disappeared on him four years ago calls up, apropos of nuthin, and invites him to a party. Bouillier recounts his thoughts through that call, through the party, through moments over the next fourteen years; he draws analogies and parallels between himself and space probes; defines himself with the aid of wine bottles and novels and turtlenecks.
This book was evolutionary for me [sic]. It has reshaped my thoughts on what memoir can be, in terms of voice and scope and purpose. And if his fir
four days
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- Fun read. I hadn't read any of Mr Colfer's better known books and I needed something to read on the way home from the library that wouldn't get added to the stack. Enter evil librarian. (Isn't it always the case?)
maybe half an hour
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- I should note that many of my comments here should not be generalized to Margaret Atwood's entire oeuvre but confined to this book; I do not choose, however, to demarcate between which should and which should not. So ha.
She sure can be a ponderous writer, can't she? She'll take a harmless little joke and force it to be a deep consideration of all things human. Each and every comma screams I AM GREAT ART! I'm not joking: the punctuation is clearly arranged to effect a sense of Importance.
Atwood is impossible to discuss without mentioning feminism. So much of so much ends up being on the battle of the sexes, with the men never coming off to well, even if they do tend to win. But I wouldn't have you dismiss it as that kind of feminism because that would be taking it too far. Sometimes. Sometimes it would be taking it about the right far.
None of which to say Atwood isn't a fine artist. I like a lot of her work and some of the bits of this book-of-bits I liked as well--or at least appreciated. Sometimes that's all you can really ask of me.
(All of which reminds me: I want to reread The Handmaid's Tale
couple weeks
Previously:
050) Created in Darkness by Troubled Americans: The Best of McSweeney's, Humor Category
049 Bikeman
048) Fool Moon
047) The Invention of Hugo Cabret
046) Sixty Poems
045) Replay
044 The Age of the Conglomerates: A Novel of the Future
043) W;t
042) Halo and Sprocket Volume 1: Welcome to Humanity
041) Storm Front
040) 20th Century Ghosts
039) I Am the President of Ice Cream by Geoff Sebesta, finished May 4
038) On Chesil Beach
037) The Meaning of Everything: The Story of the Oxford English Dictionary
036) The Drifting Classroom Vol. 1
035) The Complete Peanuts 1965 - 1966
034) Nextwave: Agents Of H.A.T.E Volume 1: This Is What They Want
033) Batman: Hush, Vol. 2
032) Batman: Hush, Vol. 1
031) Chéri
030) Wyrd Sisters
029) Animal Farm
028) Macbeth
027) On the Road to Heaven
026) The Great American Citizenship Quiz: Can You Pass Your Own Country's Citizenship Test?
025) Long After Dark
024) The Lies of Locke Lamora
023) Robot Dreams
022) The Complete Peanuts 1963-1964
021) Spoon River Anthology
020) Unorthodox Practices
019) Happy Hour at Casa Dracula
018) A War of Gifts: An Ender Story
017) Watership Down
016) Old Boy Volume One
015) Case Histories
014) Ultimate Spider-Man: Ultimate Collection, Vol. 1
013) Trusting Jesus
012) Fables: 1001 Nights of Snowfall
011) Spook: Science Tackles the Afterlife
010) The Lovely Bones
009) American Born Chinese
008) Zombification: Stories from National Public Radio
007) Marriage Lines: Notes of a Student Husband
006) Northanger Abbey
005) The Salmon of Doubt: Hitchhiking the Galaxy One Last Time
004) Lord of the Flies
003) Rising Sun
002) The Marketing of Sister B
001) Animal Farm
Oh how I love reading your blog...I see how many books you read and it motivates me. To do something. Read more? I love it - yet I never make the time to do so. I play on f.acebook to freaking long.
ReplyDeleteOr, maybe it's because my eyes are getting funky and I've been using reading glasses more and more.
I don't know.
I just must change something!
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ReplyDeleteAudiobooks?
Wouldn't work for Fox Bunny Funny though.....
Yes...good point. I think about that quite often - but then I remember my iPod and all I have on there to occupy my time instead of the BLASTED internet!
ReplyDeletePlus, I have a hard time understanding your posts - TRY AS I MIGHT - so I continue to come back hoping that ONE DAY I will get it.
;)
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ReplyDelete:)