Except for Book Bitches - I now get a message that you have to be invited to read the blog! So I'm taking that one down - no point in pointing to it if folks can't really access it! :-/
SylvieB's Book Journal
Sunday, January 16, 2011
I checked all my BOOK BLOG AND LITERARY SITES I LIKE links...
And was happy to find that they are all still up and mostly posting!
It's been a long time...
Since I posted here!
My goal to increase my reading didn't quite work out the way I planned. I haven't read nearly as many books as I had hoped - but hope does spring eternal!
So I hope to be blogging here again - but not just about books I've read, but books I want to read, book design, book stores the book business...anything and everything bookish!
It's going to be a wild ride....
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Wednesday, August 02, 2006
Well I guess the party is over.....
Looks like the wild 4 for 3 sale that been going on at Borders most of the summer is over!
So I'm REALLY glad now I took one more drink from the well when my July 10% day was about to expire and picked up 4 more...
The Probable Future by Alice Hoffman (of Practical Magic fame - a book I thoroughly enjoyed, by the way).
Kindred by Octavia E. Butler (I should have read something by Octavia a LONG time ago -- so I was doggoned if I was going to pass on this chance!)
Zorro by Isable Allende (I loved The House of the Spirits and I've always loved the character of Zorro -- so I'm looking forward to this one!)
The Odyssey by Homer, Translated by Robert Fagles - (I have always liked The Odyssey much more than The Iliad - which to me is just another story of men behaving badly and I can get that on the news every day.
I've never had the chance to really read the whole thing -- just abridged prose versions. And I have a real soft spot for the clever Odysseus - love a man that can think on his feet! So I'm looking forward to this!)
And while the party may be over, the after party appears to be rockin' on -- last time I was in the store, the 3 for 2 sale was still on! So check it out -- there's still a chance for a deal on a new read!
So I'm REALLY glad now I took one more drink from the well when my July 10% day was about to expire and picked up 4 more...
The Probable Future by Alice Hoffman (of Practical Magic fame - a book I thoroughly enjoyed, by the way).
Kindred by Octavia E. Butler (I should have read something by Octavia a LONG time ago -- so I was doggoned if I was going to pass on this chance!)
Zorro by Isable Allende (I loved The House of the Spirits and I've always loved the character of Zorro -- so I'm looking forward to this one!)
The Odyssey by Homer, Translated by Robert Fagles - (I have always liked The Odyssey much more than The Iliad - which to me is just another story of men behaving badly and I can get that on the news every day.
I've never had the chance to really read the whole thing -- just abridged prose versions. And I have a real soft spot for the clever Odysseus - love a man that can think on his feet! So I'm looking forward to this!)
And while the party may be over, the after party appears to be rockin' on -- last time I was in the store, the 3 for 2 sale was still on! So check it out -- there's still a chance for a deal on a new read!
Tuesday, July 18, 2006
Anatomy of a Rose: Exploring the Secret Life of Flowers by Sharman Apt Russell
Delphinium.
Red Skyrocket (or it's formal name: Ipomopsis Aggregata).
Philodendron Selloum (The only plant I've ever been able to grow!).
La Reina de la Noche (Queen of the Night).
Monkshood.
Pale Lousewort (Wait a minute - didn't I date him once?).
Elephant's Head.
I like to think that a person is a reader because they simply love words. (As a child, I used to read the dictionary as if it were a novel - an illuminating mystery of words.) And with such delicious words for the waving stems we so often pass with hardly a notice how can a reader not fall head first into Anatomy of a Rose: Exploring the Secret Life of Flowers by Sharman Apt Russell.
Words aside, in a collection of sixteen essays ostensively about plants, Sharman reminds us that we are not the center of the universe, no matter what we think.
The life of flowers she gently lays bare for our blind eyes to see (the second essay titled "The Blind Voyeur" in fact instructs the reader on how much we will never see - because there is a whole spectrum of colors that we literally cannot see - intended for the sight of bees) exist not to delight us but to accomplish that most important of tasks in an organism's life - reproduction.
And oh what a task that is. Enticement. Deception. Destruction. Dissolution. Delight. (Sounds familiar, doesn't it?)
Sharman's descriptions of the "romantic" strategies of plants, is delightfully and resolutely scientific. But reading the facts of a plant's life brought to my mind the last line L.L. Cool J. says in his song "Back Seat of My Jeep" - the question "Everything is sexual?".
Oh yeah.
No wonder the lecture on the parts of the flower is school's first tentative attempt at the birds and the bees.
Sharman brings back the memory of that old school days lesson in her essay on the parts of the flower (I love the Parts of a Flower illustration in the book -- I recognized it at once from grade school!), gives a quick lesson on vision or the lack there of, speaks of time, competion and cooperation.
And it's not just botany. Zoology, paleontology, climatology all get a turn in the sun the sunflowers turn to. (Speaking of climate - she caught me off guard with her reference to that terrible summer here in the Midwest a few years ago when so many died.) Sharman's pose is so accessible that you pause sometimes surprised to realize that you're reading science - and plenty of it!
It gets 5 roses from me (or 5 thorns if you're that kind of person). Do yourself a favor this summer, grab a copy and settle down for a glimpse of that secret world all around us.
Ideally in a garden.
(An absolute aside: I LOVED the feel of this book! As you can see above it has a lovely cover and, at only 4 3/4 inches by 7 1/4 inches, fits the hand like a glove. But the feel of the cover is absolutely lux! I don't know how they did it, but the cover has a soft feel that makes you just want to hold it. A lovely plus!)
Wednesday, July 12, 2006
I've been bad....
VERY bad!
However, it had to happen. I just could not resist that 3 for 2 /4 for 3 deal that's going on at Borders right now! So yesterday I went buckwild and left with 8 books!
And what did I buy?
3 for 2: I let my frustrated inner physicist go free and brought the following:
A Brief History of Time - Stephen Hawking
The Elegant Universe - Brian Greene
The Fabric of the Cosmos - Brian Greene
4 for 3: Ranging the world:
The Secret Life of Bees - Sue Monk Kidd
Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress - Dai Sijie
My Name is Red - Orhan Pamuk
Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed - Jared Diamond
Now it was not a total triumph. I had intended to by Beloved by Toni Morrison - but there were no copies left!
So am I done buying? Come on, you know better!
However, it had to happen. I just could not resist that 3 for 2 /4 for 3 deal that's going on at Borders right now! So yesterday I went buckwild and left with 8 books!
And what did I buy?
3 for 2: I let my frustrated inner physicist go free and brought the following:
A Brief History of Time - Stephen Hawking
The Elegant Universe - Brian Greene
The Fabric of the Cosmos - Brian Greene
4 for 3: Ranging the world:
The Secret Life of Bees - Sue Monk Kidd
Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress - Dai Sijie
My Name is Red - Orhan Pamuk
Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed - Jared Diamond
Now it was not a total triumph. I had intended to by Beloved by Toni Morrison - but there were no copies left!
So am I done buying? Come on, you know better!
Tuesday, July 11, 2006
And the next book is...
After all my angst about picking my next book, it actually turned out to be a no brainer.
As I was restacking my books, I picked up Salt: A World History by Mark Kurlansky, opened it and started reading the first few pages almost without thought.
I heard an interview with the author back when the book was first published and he made the topic sound so interesting I always wanted to read the book. When I saw that the paperback was being offered as one of the 3 for 2 choices as Borders, I couldn't help snapping it up.
So Salt it is. I'll remember not to look back.
As I was restacking my books, I picked up Salt: A World History by Mark Kurlansky, opened it and started reading the first few pages almost without thought.
I heard an interview with the author back when the book was first published and he made the topic sound so interesting I always wanted to read the book. When I saw that the paperback was being offered as one of the 3 for 2 choices as Borders, I couldn't help snapping it up.
So Salt it is. I'll remember not to look back.
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