Wednesday, November 7, 2012

My Kindle: Six Months Later


It's been six months since I joined the ranks of ebook reading and so I thought I'd give a little progress report.

First of all, let me point out what I thought about the idea of a Kindle back when I first heard about it. I was skeptical to say the least. I figured nothing could take the place of holding a book. Or smelling it. I figured the idea just really wouldn't take hold. I figured it would be a long while until I jumped in.

That post, the first time I heard of a Kindle, was back in late 2007. In May 2012 I found myself with one in hand! (So, yes, it took awhile.) And all through those years, I maintained the idea that I just wasn't sure about the whole digital book thing. I was nervous about it, I worried about it.

So, six months later, I have to now admit.. I LOVE THE THING!

I have had a blast with this device so far! I find it absolutely magic to hit a button and instantly have a book at your disposal, to read whenever you want. It literally makes me giggle in delight. The technology is SO COOL. You know? Do you agree?

I worried that I wouldn't feel justified in spending money on digital objects. With songs, I could always burn a CD and have a hard copy, so that idea never bothered me there. But with books, it's not like I'm going to go print them, right? Well, so far, I've spent very little money. All the books I have on my Kindle at this point have been very cheap, or free, or have been "given" to me for review and etc. I can handle cheap ebooks! I have yet to "really" buy a book, but I'm finding that so far, this approach works for me. I love the fact that the $25 dollar gift card I got with the Kindle has managed to get me probably 15 to 20 books, whereas that amount would have only purchased maybe 2 or 3 physical ones at the most.

As far as reading it, I have to admit it's actually easier than a book. It's easier to hold, to turn pages, to see even, especially in the dark!

Another thing that's been happening that I didn't expect, I will be browsing through my books, trying to remember what I've got and what I need to read soon, and I'll just start reading one, and suddenly I'll find that I've read a bunch and might as well keep going! This never really happens with my print books, those only get read on purpose  not "on accident." I'm thinking this is both fun and annoying.... that I'll just so easily jump into reading one of these books.

I don't normally write or mark up my physical books, but highlighting on my Kindle has been really fun! I have't done it a ton, but when I do, I have a blast with it.

Besides reading books, I've enjoyed using my Kindle to read blogs, browse Twitter, check email, watch TV shows on Amazon Prime streaming (lately I'll do this while walking on the treadmill which really works well!),  and all sorts of other things.

So, bottom line, I'd say I've been converted. Ebook reading is fun. I'll take it. I'll still buy the "real" books, but I'll keeping reading the e ones too!

My only sadness is that if I read a book on the Kindle that I love (Under the Never Sky or Raven Boys for instance) then I'll want that book on my shelf too. So... there's the rub. It means I spend more and more money to feed the habit. But maybe someday it will be that if you buy the print version, you get the e one too, or if you buy the ebook, you get a print one. Do you think? I don't know. I guess we'll see.

Also, I don't like that I can't pass the book along to someone else in my family to read, or a friend, or whoever. Yeah,  I know there's a lending thing for Kindle owners, but we are not to that point yet in this household, and still, it won't work for ARCs and other such books. So. That's a bit of  a sad thing too.

I'm guessing most of you have embraced the technology  Did it take you awhile to warm up to the idea? Are you still holding back? Or are you fully converted? Where do you stand on this issue these days?





Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Top Ten Tuesday: Popular Books from 1965


Today's list prompt over at The Broke and the Bookish is... FREEBIE! So, I wanted to do something very self-centered since my birthday is coming up this next week. I vetoed everything I thought of until I thought of listing popular books the year I was born. I liked that idea! (But just promise me don't do the math, you already know I'm old, let's leave it at that!)

Top Ten Most Popular Books in 1965
(according to Wikepedia, complete with their links intact)

The Source by James A. Michener
Up the Down Staircase by Bel Kaufman
Herzog by Saul Bellow
The Looking Glass War by John le Carré
The Green Berets by Robin Moore
Those Who Love by Irving Stone
The Man with the Golden Gun by Ian Fleming
Hotel by Arthur Hailey
The Ambassador by Morris West
Don't Stop the Carnival by Herman Wouk

Or perhaps you'd rather this list:

The New York Times FICTION Best Seller List.... Week of November 14, 1965
(not my birthday date, but the week of)

1 THE SOURCE, by James Michener.
2 UP THE DOWN STAIRCASE, by Bel Kaufman.
3 AIRS ABOVE THE GROUND, by Mary Stewart.
4 THOSE WHO LOVE, by Irving Stone.
5 THE GREEN BERETS, by Robin Moore.
6 HOTEL, by Arthur Hailey.
7 THE HONEY BADGER, by Robert Ruark.
8 THOMAS, by Shelley Mydans.
9 THE MAN WITH THE GOLDEN GUN, by Ian Fleming.
10 THE RABBI, by Noah Gordon. 

I haven't read a one... NOT A ONE!! I'd like to read The Source, Up the Down Staircase, The Looking Glass War, Hotel, Those Who Love... for starters.

Have you read any? Do you recommend any them? Which one do you suggest I for sure add to the TBR pile? What books were popular the year you were born? Go on, look it up and then come tell me!

Monday, November 5, 2012

Book Review: The Twelve by Justin Cronin

Book: The Twelve by Justin Cronin
Genre: Horror
Rating:★★★☆☆
For: Fun and RIP Challenge
From: Borrowed from the library

I loved the first book, The Passage. Yes, it was long, yes it was detailed, and yes it was pretty graphic, but yes I was very much looking forward to finding out what happened to all these people! In the first book we learn about a virus that has been developed to supposedly create a super human fighting machine, but something goes terribly wrong and instead, the infected become a sort of vampire-like creature. We meet most of our cast members nearly 100 years after the Virals are first set loose on the country and find out how they've managed to survive the apocalypse and what they intend to do about it now.

However, this book starts out back in the beginning when the virus is first let loose. We meet several new groups of people and learn how they get through the initial attack of the Virals. I kept wondering why I needed to know about them, when I so wanted to go back to our familiar set of characters.

Well, it all makes sense eventually when the stories of these new guys intersect with the stories of the people from the first book. Ah, and it's so very violent and brutal! Beware those of a queasy stomach! Some people, it appears, when infected by this virus instead of turning into a full vampire creature, they become a sort of half breed. Some (one or two I should say) even have the ability to control the Virals. They've used this ability to create a society safe from the creatures, but on the other hand, they have become monsters themselves.

And now the people not only have to face the Virals, but these other monsters that are even worse. It gets absolutely crazy!

The Twelve, by the way, refers to the original guys that were infected with the virus, and each of those guys now control vast communities of the Virals who are under them. The idea is that if you can kill on of the originals, you will then sever the tie they have to their subjects and all of those under them will die. The goal, then is to seek out these twelve, kill them, and thus finally take back the country.

One issue I had was that I'd forgotten much of the detail from the first book, and while I didn't want to go and re-read it (hello!) I did pick it up and skim some spots to remember a few things. Often sequels will sufficiently remind you what's gone on in a previous book, but I found that not to be the case with this one. It just assumes you remember.

Anyway, in the end, I enjoy the writing, I enjoy the story and I enjoy the investment I feel to these characters. But, I don't enjoy reading about torture and brutality, that's for sure.

Bottom line: I didn't find myself as sucked into it as I did with the first book, but I still enjoyed the story as a whole.

Other Reviews:

This is Cronin’s dystopian-apocalyptic-sci-fi-woo-woo-vampire-horror follow-up to The Passage. Okay, maybe not so much sci-fi, but I’m pretty sure everything else made it’s way in there. From Fizzy Thoughts

Cronin keeps the action moving, keeps the characters busy and moves the plot to a heart-pounding climax with everyone on stage. From Boston Bibliophile

Cronin is in complete control of this masterpiece and I was spellbound. Not since Stephen King’s The Stand have I been so blown away. From Kimba the Caffeinated Book Reviewer

Cronin’s post-apocalyptic world is so well created that I forget that it’s not real. From Chrisbookarama

I can’t say that I’m thrilled with The Twelve, but I’m not disappointed either. The book definitely feels like a bridge to the last of the trilogy. From From Left to Write

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Currently: Falling Back!



C  U  R  R  E  N  T  L  Y

(as written on Saturday evening)


Listening: someone watching The Walking Dead in the background and let me just say, it is NOT  a pretty sound!

Eating:  The in-laws took us out to Thai food this evening. It was for a joint celebration of our birthdays. It's been a nice evening.

Loving: that it's sweatshirt weather! And I can still drive with the windows down!

Reading: I've been trying to read Insurgent, but it's just not happening. So I may switch to something else for the time being. I don't know what though... strange feeling.

Feeling: a pain in my shoulder. Sometimes it's just subtle and other times it's very intense. Today it's been bad! I'm falling apart guys!

Watching: Lots of Parenthood this week. And a bit of Revenge. Loving both of those shows. 

Wanting: the election to be over. And hoping the lines aren't long on Tuesday.

Needing: to put away the candy. Hide it maybe, or just throw it away. I can't be in the same house with it, I just can't do it.

Thinking: "It's not time to think about Christmas already, is it? No way!"

Enjoying: the thought that tonight, we get an extra hour! It's going to be a good morning! But when the evening comes? Not so cool.

Stalking: Jennifer from The Relentless Reader... because she is my official blogger buddy! :) Besides that, she has an awesome blog!


Saturday, November 3, 2012

Book Review: Dante's Girl by Courtney Cole

Book: Dante's Girl by Courtney Cole
Genre: YA romance
Rating:★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆
For: fun
From: Amazon for the Kindle

So this is one of those books I bought, spur of the moment, for the Kindle.. which means it was free, or at least very very cheap. I had heard nothing, knew nothing, had no idea about it whatsoever. It just...  you know... looked cute! And fun.

I started reading it just to see what it was like, not intending to really read it yet, and suddenly, I found myself many pages in. Then, it ended up that I was reading it along side that crazy Jeffery Deaver book, which was good because I needed to read something very light afterwards, so I could actually sleep and all. It made for a great companion book that way!

Okay, so let me sum up the story. Reese is on her way to visit her father in London when she bumps into, literally, this guy... Dante, during a lay over. Turns out, they are on the same flight! The flight has problems, he takes her under his wing, pulls some strings and gets them on another flight (or maybe it's his helicopter?) and takes her to his country. Yes, he is the prime minister's son of some fictional  country. (At least I think it is... what if it isn't? How embarrassing for me!) And then she hangs out there for awhile waiting for her bags, but then they offer her a job so she ends up there for a summer.

Meanwhile, love is in the air. Much of the book is ..... "He is so beautiful! Oh, I wonder if he likes me?? Oh, I hope he likes me! There's no way he can like me, I'm just a farm girl from Kansas! Oh, he's SOOOO hot, he's so perfect. How can he like me when he's so perfect?" On and on and on... and on! While it's not really in a diary form, it's basically her uncensored thoughts... we are so very much in her head. Thus, the going on and on and on I suppose.

But still, I kept reading. The plot was very very simple, and in fact I kept wondering where the conflict was. I mean, she did get in a bit of tiff with her friend at home. And Dante has a suspicious mean friend which is a little mysterious and sinister, and then there's the fact that a perfect girl from his country already has dibs on him. So there's the conflict I guess.

But still, I kept reading!

I think, as I said before, I just needed this fun little (mostly clean, even) romp, and to heck with the complicated plots and the gazillion characters and the deep meanings. It's a fun little summer romance love story, and.....

Bottom line: I really quite enjoyed it for that!

P.S. And yes there's another book, a sequel of sorts, with different side characters as the main characters this go around. If it's free or cheap on Kindle, I'll read it. :) (Mia's Heart it's called, and comes out December 1.)

Other Reviews:

Okay this was an adorably cute and incredibly frustrating novel at the same time. But it worked! From Buried in Books

This book is fluffy but the good kind. From Books with Bite

I think a lot of girls dream about meeting a hot guy with a sexy accent from a foreign country, and spending time with said hot boy in Paradise. From Ramblings of a Daydreamer

If you are prepared to embrace the drama, Dante’s Girl is worth giving a shot. From Rather Be Reading

Friday, November 2, 2012

Two Mini Book Reviews and Book Club Reports


I feel bad. I've neglected the book club books for the past two months. This is a post to try and fix that!

Book Club September: The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood
Genre: Dystopian
My Rating:★★★★☆

This book, about a young woman surviving a new government regime that has taken over, was a re-read for me. I was surprised how much of the detail I didn't remember. I think on re-reading, I felt pretty much the same as the first time through. It's a shocking and disturbing story (women are assigned different roles in society, including the handmaids, who's job it is to have the babies) but fascinating at the same time on how this character (we never learn her real name) deals with it.

What the book club thought: A lot of readers wanted to know more about this new society and what made them the way they are, we needed more background or something. Also, we wondered if the author was trying to make a statement and we couldn't decide if it was pro-feminist or anti!

For more book club member thoughts, check out Jenni Elyse's review here, and Jenny's review here.

Book Club October: The Bone Collector by Jeffery Deaver
Genre: Mystery/Suspense
My Rating: ★★★☆☆

We read this book for a member in our club who loves these sort of thriller/suspense/detective stories. (She has to deal with our love for fantasy, dystopian and classics all the rest of the year!) So, for many of us, it was very much out of our comfort zone. In fact, many book club members (even the diehards!) decided to forgo this book in the end. But I ended up reading the whole thing, and found it to be suspenseful enough to keep me turning the pages.

It's about a famous criminologist (I can't even remember if that's the right term!) who has suffered an injury three years prior that left him a quadriplegic. At the opening of the book, he hopes to find someone to help him end his life. Before that happens, however, his friends have come to him for help in a fascinating case. Along with them they bring newcomer, Amanda Sachs. He (Lincoln) trains her how to do his job... be his eyes and ears and legs so to speak, and within a day or two they solve it all, together. But the question remains, is it enough to make Lincoln think his life is worthwhile?

While I found the graphic descriptions of the murder scenes a bit too much to stomach, and being inside the head of the murderer a bit too creepy,  and the detail of the crime scene investigation a bit too detailed, I did enjoy the human parts of the story... the connection between Lincoln and Amanda  the struggles Lincoln faces , and the all the thought process parts of actually figuring out the mystery.

What the book club thought: Those that actually read it, enjoyed it for the most part! Though many said that's enough of that author for them for now. (There's several more books about this character.) We talked about if we had figured out "whodunit" by the end. I don't think many did. And I asked the question, is the culprit of a mystery ALWAYS someone you've already been introduced to in the course of the story? And is it almost ALWAYS someone the solver of the mystery knows already? I'm just wondering....

We also did a lot of comparing this one to the movie (which I for one have not seen.) Apparently, they changed things up a lot for that. Good thing though, because then those that HAD seen the movie where still surprised by the ending!

Also, we agreed, there were too many F bombs in this book for our level of tolerance.

For more book club member thoughts, check out Jenni Elyse's review here.

Up next for book club: Mrs. Mike by Benedict and Nancy Freedman


What's your book club read lately that everyone enjoyed? Or even something they didn't?

Thursday, November 1, 2012

October Reading Recap and RIP VII Wrap Up



Hey everyone! It's been a pretty good reading month! I'm still no where close to being on track for 100 books this year, but hey, there's still time, right? I need some fast, fun, easy books!

October Reads:

Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut: A strange story about a guy who survived some perilous events during WWII and how his mind has chosen to cope with it in a very peculiar way.

The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood by Howard Pyle: Robin Hood becomes an outlaw, gathers together his merry men, and has awesome adventures.

Sulan by Camille Picott: Sulan, living in a futuristic society, joins a virtual club to learn how to fight like her mother.

Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children by Ransom Riggs: A young boy Jacob, goes to an island off Wales to investigate the strange stories his grandpa has told him all his life.

Feedback by Robison Wells: Benson escapes the school only to find a village where more kids are being held against their will.

Under the Never Sky by Veronica Rossi:  Aria, from an advanced future society, meets Perry, from a "savage" future society, and now things will never be the same.

The Bone Collector by Jeffrey Deaver: Lincoln wants to kill himself, but first he must solve the strange case of the bone collector!

Dante's Girl by Courtney Cole: Reece bumps into Dante during a flight layover and then suddenly finds herself flying to his country where he is the son of the Prime Minister! No way!

The Twelve by Justin Cronin: Those we met in the first book (The Passage) continue to fight the virals, but now there's a new threat that's even worse.

Favorites of the month would be Under the Never Sky, Robin Hod and perhaps Sulan also. I liked Dante's Girl for its silliness, and The Twelve for its insane-ness. And Feedback was fun too, but didn't wow me. (Reviews to come soon for those without links.)


Also these past two months some of us have been working on reading things for Carl's RIP. Here's what I managed to read for that event:

RIP VII Wrap

In September I read:

The Little Stranger by Sarah Waters: an atmospheric slow burn ghost story

The Raven Boys by Maggie Stiefvater: psysics and magic combine

In October I read:

Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children by Ransom Riggs: time travel mixed with a bit of Xmen type kids and WWII.

The Bone Collector by Jeffrey Deaver: graphic murder scenes and smart CSI work

The Twelve by Justin Cronin: this supernatural post apocalyptic world is intensely brutal

I had planned to read UnWholly by Neal Shusterman, but decided to wait on that one and read it after I re-read Unwind for book club in December. Still, I'm anxious for it! But it will be soon. But anyway, I accomplished my four book goal and my group read goal, but I never did watch a spooky movie.... unless you count a few Buffys. I love RIP reading!

Plans for November:

  • read Mrs. Mike for book club
  • read Insurgent finally (started it and I have say, it's not grabbing me)
  • re-read A Tale of Two Cities.. or at least work on it.
  • finish The Worst Hard Times
  • read Not Exactly a Love Story for review
  • read Son by Lois Lowry
  • read some fast fun easy books so I can make my 100 goal! Yeah, we'll see how that goes!

How'd the month turn out for you?

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