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Showing posts with label Weekly Geek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Weekly Geek. Show all posts

Saturday, June 19, 2010

Weekly Geeks

























Gosh, I haven't done a Weekly Geeks for ages! Topic here: http://www.weeklygeeks.com/2010/06/weekly-geeks-2010-22-hoarding-behavior.html

Now; I'm not going to talk about my TBR specifically, because basically all of my bookcases contain TBR books and if I ever counted them ... let's just say the resulting fall out would not be pretty.

A couple of nights ago - completely coincidentally - I took pictures of my books that I keep nearest to my bed. My mosst immediate TBR pile if you will.

So. There you go, Geeks, that is my immediate TBR pile ...


Hmmmm


Live long, and prosper, Geeks <3

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Weekly Geeks


Gosh, I haven't done a Weekly Geeks in a while! I feel as though I've fallen off blogger a little bit lately, and I do apologise for that.

I'm not reading very much either, but I'm hoping to change that over the next two and a half weeks that I have off work.

What were we talking about? Oh! Weekly Geeks! The question, as always, is here: http://www.weeklygeeks.com/ and we're talking about our favourite authors.

I always go a bit blank when asked this question, but overall my favourite authors are Tolkien, Neil Gaiman, Agatha Christie, Stephen King ... and there's a bunch that I'm forgetting; that I know I will remember as soon as I post this.

What I go for _ always _ is story. If someone can tell me a good story, then I'm basically theirs for life. And those four authors can tell a hell of a story.

As always, Weekly Geeks (and gosh, it's fun to play in the sandbox again!) live long and prosper!

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Weekly Geeks


Your mission, Weekly Geeks, is here:
Um ... I have no tools. No, really. Lately it feels like I've hardly been blogging at all and as of now, I have two reviews to write up.
I do have a Library Thing page, but I never seem to use it. I'm not even sure what it's for!
Probably I use www.twitter.com the most to connect with other bloggers. I'm a chatty bird over there, you may have noticed.
Other than that ... I'm extremely boring!
Happy Weekly Geeks!

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Weekly Geeks




We're looking for recommendations from each other this week, geekers. Assignment here:
I love recommendations. Mostly because I always think I'm missing something - some kind of awesomeness that all of the other readers are in on that I'm not. And apart from hysterical romances and westerns, I'll read nearly anything.
If it has a good story, I'm in like a tabby in a box of cat biscuits. Genre-wise, like I say, I'm not fussy, although I'm having a bit of a dystopic moment, with The Knife of Never Letting Go, and The Year of the Flood.
I'm also - thanks to Her Fearful Symmetry - in the mood for some good spine-tingling ghost stories. And I'm always in the mood for a well-written fantasy novel, or suspense novel, or horror novel, or general fiction novel, or ... you get the picture.
As for what I can recommend ...
Well.
Here's my post from January, looking back on the 2008 reading year:
http://justaddbooks.blogspot.com/2009/01/just-add-books-yearender.html
For this year's reads so far:
The Knife of Never Letting Go by Patrick Ness, obviously. Which, if you haven't read, and found to be awesome ... I can't help you.
Her Fearful Symmetry by Audrey Niffenegger.
The Adoration of Jenna Fox by Mary E. Pearce Which. I can't even tell you. So, so good.
Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman. In general.
Soldier in the Mist by Gene Wolfe - I'd nearly forgotten about that one!

The Strain by Guillermo del Toro and Chuck Hogan
And ... The Source by James Michener. I read it a few years ago, but it's a really, really good book. Oh. And the Masters of Rome series by Colleen McCullough.
That ought to do, right?
Happy Weekly Geeks. :)

Saturday, September 12, 2009

Weekly Geeks




The topic, Geeks, is here as always:
I never plan my reading. I sort of stumble over books in a clumsy and graceless fashion and read whatever smacks me in the face the hardest.
I should be doing better with challenges, but as always, I'm ... not. I've accidentally nearly finished the Neil Gaiman one, I think I only have one more book to read for that. The rest of them ... uh ... never mind.
I do try, every so often. In a worthy fashion, I pile the books I want to read next on my bedside table. But, inevitably, I'm distracted by something shiny in the corner.
Happy Weekly Geeks! :)

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Weekly Geeks





Ooooh … good one, Weekly Geeks. :)
Your description is here: http://www.weeklygeeks.com/
Okay On to the questions:
Find a negative review that you have written. In your post, link to or include the original review and then rewrite it to answer these questions:

I'm going to use Handle With Care by Jodi Picoult for these questions.
Review here: http://justaddbooks.blogspot.com/2009/03/handle-with-care-by-jodi-picoult.html
Why did you react negatively to the book?
Because it felt like a rehash of My Sister's Keeper, the ending was manipulative and the storyline didn't make sense to me.
What was it about the story or characters or style that hit you so strongly?
I think it was that the story was repetitive, mostly. I thought the characters in themselves were fine, but it was like they were reading off someone else's script. (My Sister's Keeper).
Are you reacting to any fears or insecurities?
I don't think so, no.
2. Write a new review about a book you loved, keeping in mind these questions:
What was it about the story that resonated?
Would you have loved this book as much ten years ago? Five years ago?
Will you keep loving it in the future?
Where are you in your life that this is the story you wanted and needed?
Okay, I'm not sure if all these questions were answered, but I've reviewed The Graveyard Book, because I didn't do it properly first time around. It's a short review, though, because it's late and I'm sliding into incoherency :)
The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman
Bod is a very unusual boy. It's not that he survives the man Jack with the sharp knife who murders
his family that's unusual, but being raised by a graveyard full of ghosts.
Riffing off The Jungle Book, The Graveyard Book is a wonderful fable about growing up, and family, and the nature of good and evil, and what it means just to be human.
I didn't review this properly when I read it – I pretty much just said I wanted to keep it as a pet and take it with me everywhere. Oh. And make every single person I know read it. I loved it that much. It was my favourite read for 08, and is now one of my favourite books.
Each chapter reads like a little self-contained story, although the whole comes together extremely well to add up to a charming, and scary wee book. The themes of the book – family, growing up, leaving home, are timeless, and in Gaiman's skilled hands, they feel new all over again.
I would have loved this book when I was 12, and I'm pretty sure I will love it forever. Timeless tales well told will always be welcome. :)
At the end of her post, Ms. Hale posed six questions for those who review books on their blogs or other sites. Write a letter to Ms. Hale explaining your position on each of these questions, then return to her post and leave a comment with a link to your post. And remember her request to speak freely, but kindly and respectfully!
Do you find that the anticipation of reviewing the book has changed your reading experience?
I don't think so, no. I like to think I approach all the books I read in the same way, although I do anticipate some more than others.
Are you rating the book even as you read? Or do you wait until the end to sum it all up?
I wait until the end. Because the end of a book is what can make or break it – it can validate everything that's gone before, or shatter it, strengthen it, or weaken it. So I always wait until I've read the last pages before rating.
Does knowing you'll be reviewing it (or rating it) publicly affect which books you pick up in the first place?
No; not at all. I read almost anything, and generally speaking what I read shows up on my blog reviewed. I have little reading shame :)
Does the process of writing the review itself change how you felt about the book?
No; never. I get frustrated with myself sometimes if the words aren't coming out the way I want them to, but I can't blame the book for that.

What is your motivation to assign a rating to a book and declare it to the world?

I only recently developed a rating system for reviews, one that I felt good about, which ranges from 10-1 and each has their own comment. 1, for example, is “blind rage at the time stolen from my life”.
If you review a book but don't rate, why not? What do you feel is your role as reviewer?
If I review a book on my blog and it doesn't get a rating, it's probably just because I've forgotten to put it on the end. My role? To read and enjoy, and then get as many people as possible to read the books that turn me into a babbling fangirl. :)

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Weekly Geeks




The theme, Geekers, is here as always:
Oh. Sigh ... the 'mean to reads'. I have so many of them, that I've forgotten most of them.
Generally speaking, I'll say something like "Oh, I've been meaning to read that," and then totally forget what the book was.
I started this blog at the end of 2007 with the lofty intention of reading one (1) classic novel a month for a year - and many of those were mean-to-reads. I made it to seven, which wasn't bad.
This year ... I've read two. How do you say ... epic fail. Yeah. But all of the unread books on that list are on my mean-to list. My shiny optimistic post about that is here:
The one book on that list I'd really like to read is A Suitable Boy, by Vikram Seth. I've had that book for years and I've never read it. The other 'mean to reads' I have on my mental list are some Graham Greene - I read three of his books back at uni - The Power and the Glory, The Heart of the Matter, and The Honorary Consul, all of which I really enjoyed. So I go past A Suitable Boy, and my Graham Greenes and I think "I really must read those ..." and then I spot the piles of books overflowing nearly every surface in my room. And really, most of them are 'mean-to-reads.'
As for why I haven't read them ... I don't know. Sigh.
I'll be under my bed, hiding from the judgemental books.
Happy Weekly Geeks!

Saturday, August 15, 2009

Weekly Geeks





The question, Weekly Geeks is here as always: http://www.weeklygeeks.com/


Well, now, what a coincidence. Of sorts.




I was tweeting with http://www.pussreboots.pair.com/%20,%20andhttp://www.fizzythoughts.com/ and http://www.booksidoneread.blogspot.com/ about Margaret Atwood's new book The Year of the Flood that's due out next month, that we're all looking forward to (which may or may not be an understatement), and I mentioned that I had read The Blind Assassin twice, and actually liked it better the second time around. The first time I read it, I kind of went “huh?” and it's not an easy read, by any means.


However, after many, many months, I went back and read it again, thinking perhaps I had missed something, and found the story I was looking for in the first place. Which is sort of hard to explain, because The Blind Assassin is one of those story-within-a-story books, and you really do have to concentrate. However, it's worth persisting with. And then reading again, because there's always more to find. :)


Happy Weekly Geeks :)

Sunday, August 2, 2009

Weekly Geeks




Topic here:
Oh, and sorry. Couple of swears ahead...
Okay, songs never remind me of book titles, so I've done this a little differently, borrowing somewhat from http://eclectcentric.blogspot.com/2009/08/weekly-geeks-book-theme-song.html
However, what I did was this: I put my iTunes on shuffle, and stopped when a song made me think of a book. I'm aiming for 10. Let's see.
1) I Am the Highway by Audioslave (links only, sorry; I have no idea how to put YouTube videos on here):
Which made me think of American Gods, by Neil Gaiman. They're both ... road-trippy in a way.
2) Why Does Love do This To Me? by The Exponents, which was, like, my soundtrack when I was at university (or jam? What do the kids say these days? I'm going to stick with soundtrack):
Hmmm ... not one specific book. Let me direct you to this post, though:
3) The Show Must Go On by Queen:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRE0slFf4Zg&feature=related made me think of Slash's autobiography. Rock n Roll, right?
4) Bar-Ba-Sol by David Cook:
Two books tied for this song: Soldier in the Mist by Gene Wolfe, because both the book and the song are epic, and Breaking Dawn because IT SHOULD HAVE BEEN EPIC AND WASN'T
6) I Want to Come Over by Melissa Etheridge
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0UjWpHgbXVs&feature=fvst
Made me think of The Passion, by Jeanette Winterson. And no, I haven't started on any of my Gilbert! books yet. Um. Moving on.
7) Whatever by The Butthole Surfers (there's Bad Language, but it's one of my favourite songs)
Smoke and Mirrors by Neil Freaking Gaiman. They're both weirdly .... dreamlike
8) You Belong to Me by Tori Amos. From the Mona Lisa soundtrack:
Murder on the Nile by Agatha Christie. Cos :)
9) Set it Off by Audioslave (second appearnce, I know):
The Stand by Stephen King. Because the line "Set this fucker off" fits the book. Heh.
10) Ring of Fire by Adam Lambert (What? Yes, I'm still a fangirl. Shut up.):
The Heretic Queen by Michelle Moran. Um. Yeah. It's late here.
But yay, look! Ten!
Happy Weekly Geeks everyone :)

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Weekly Geeks





The Geeks are talking movie adaptations: http://www.weeklygeeks.com/ Our favourite ones, to be precise. And I have to own up to a deep, dark secret here: I have no problem with adaptations, unless they are extremely, excruciatingly bad. For example, I haven't seen The Seeker, the movie based on The Dark Is Rising, and I never will because the trailer alone makes me blind with rage.
I get changes for narrative purposes, but gratuitous changes for no reason anger me.
Um. My favourite adaptation is probably Lord of the Rings. And I'm not going to link to any trailers, because I haven't figured out how to do it properly.
Anyway. I will love Peter Jackson forever for making Lord of the Rings, and making it so … mere words fail me on my love for those films.
I also think the Harry Potter adaptations have been pretty good, although I'm not the biggest fan of No 5, Order of the Phoenix, but it's not my favourite book either. Half-blood Prince, however, rendered me nearly speechless. It's that good.
I'm probably going to think of a ton more later on, but a couple of others that spring to mind are Fight Club, and Stardust. And both for the same reason, oddly enough. I liked the endings of the films better than the endings of the books. Even though, in the case of Stardust, I liked the book better than the movie.
I can't express myself properly today. I keep forgetting that I'm too old to stay up until 3am.
I love books, and I love movies. And when one is turned into another, 99 times out of 100 I'm happy with the outcome. Or, I'm way too easy to please.
And as for books I'd like to see as movies ... the only one I can think of is American Gods. And I don't want it to be a movie. I want it to be an epic TV series because the book feels episodic to me.
Anyway.
Happy Weekly Geeks everyone.

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Weekly Geeks



The explanation, as always, here:

http://www.weeklygeeks.com/

I've, er, been to Melbourne. That's it. I honestly thought I read a bit more worldwide than that; what with living in New Zealand and all. Huh.

But my map is an epic fail of worldwide reading. I've dug through my archives, and my memory, and to be honest, I'm not coming up with much more than what I already have. The thing is, intellectually, I love the *idea* of reading about other cultures. Obviously, I have no follow-through.

H'm. This must be corrected. Shameful.

Here is the link to my Map of Shame

http://www.world66.com/myworld66/visitedCountries

Happy Weekly Geeks everyone :)


Friday, July 3, 2009

Weekly Geeks answers - it's still Friday somewhere


Yay for chocolate!!!! And highchairs, come to think of it.
Here are the answers to my Weekly Geeks Gilbert! questions:
1) Who wrote the short story Brokeback Mountain?
Annie Proulx
2) What is Oscar Wilde quoted as saying on his deathbed in Paris?
Either this wallpaper goes, or I do
3) In the Vintner's Luck, a winemaker falls in love with …?
A fallen angel
4) Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit is a supposed semi-autobiographical novel by …?
Jeanetter Winterson
5) The movie My Beautiful Laundrette starred which future Oscar winner?
Daniel Day Lewis
Thanks for playing :)

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Weekly Geeks





Yay, trivia! I love trivia. Explanation here: http://www.weeklygeeks.com/
Okay; in honour of the fact I joined yet another challenge, here are five Gilbert (GLBT) questions. Totally random. And there's only five, because we're going out soon, and I want to get this posted ;)
1) Who wrote the short story Brokeback Mountain?
2) What is Oscar Wilde quoted as saying on his deathbed in Paris?
3) In the Vintner's Luck, a winemaker falls in love with …?
4) Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit is a supposed semi-autobiographical novel by …?
5) The movie My Beautiful Laundrette starred which future Oscar winner?
Leave your answers in the comments, and I'll make another post on Friday. Happy Weekly Geeks :)

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Weekly Geeks and Once Upon a Time III is finished




Weekly Geeks seen here: http://www.weeklygeeks.com/
We're talking about reading challenges this week. I actually (accidentally) finished one this year. I finished Once Upon a Time by accident by virtue of reading the Mortal Instruments trilogy. Which didn't enrage me like Twilight did, but it made me sort of tired. However, it led to me finishing a challenge, so yay.
I don't know whether I'm going to answer this question right or not.
As for keeping me organised and goal-oriented ... uh .... no. I kind of have a hate/hate relationship with reading challenges. I join them, when they're all new, and shiny and I'm young and optimistic and full of hope, then the next thing I know, I'm a 50-year-old man in a convertible with an inappropriately young blonde. Weary, in other words.
And yet ... you know how there's one food that's totally bad for you but you just can't resist? For me, it's chocolate-covered pretzels. There's something about that sweet, salty goodness that turns me into Homer Simpson. Anyway. In terms of blogging, it's reading challenges.
I shouldn't do it, I know I shouldn't do it, but .... sigh. I still have the Dream King challenge, Dewey's Reading Challenge and the Art History Challenge, in terms of specifics. Then there's the 100+ Books challenge (SO not going to happen _ I'm not even to 50 for the year) and the Support Your Local Library Challenge. Oh, and my personal classics challenge, which is going so badly this year I might as well be reading cereal packets.
And then ... did you SEE the button for the Challenge That Dare Not Speak Its Name? Hosted here: http://zenleaf.blogspot.com/ I am so, so, so tempted. Partly because it gives me an excuse to read The Picture of Dorian Grey, which was one of last year's classics that I didn't get to, and partly because the Oscar Wilde button is so pretty. Shallow, I know.
The only reason I join reading challenges is because my hind-brain goes "Shiny!!!" and it all depends on whether I can talk it down or not.
Sigh.
"Dammit Jim, I'm a reading blogger, not a superhero!"
Happy Weekly Geeks everyone :)

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Weekly Geeks





Your explanation, Weekly Geeks is here: http://www.weeklygeeks.com/
Now, in order to have reviews to catch up on, I would have had to finish a book. However, before today, I hadn't even picked one up since … Tuesday?
Uhm … I'm still reading Pawn of Prophecy, and I have a feeling that my Belgariad re-read is going to take a while; but that's okay. Other than that, I picked up The Strain by Guillermo Del Toro and Chuck Hogan, and as much as I wanted to sit and finish it because it's shaping up to be made of awesome, and win, and all the rest, I had to, like, take care of Patrick and stuff.
So, as I don't have any outstanding reviews, feel free Geeks, to ask me questions about any of the books I have reviewed here. If you hit the review tag, you'll get most of them. Ask in the comments, I'll post answers in a blog post.
I've seen the June mini-challenge at
http://deweysbooks.wordpress.com/2009/06/02/time-for-the-june-mini-challenge/ and I actually completed Once Upon A Time III, so go me! I'm sadly and badly behind with the Dewey reading challenge, though, and I need to go and look at my list to see what's still on my list for that one.
So I'm in the same boat for Natasha's bloggiesta:
http://blog.mawbooks.com/2009/06/12/bloggiesta-the-unveiling-of-a-new-upcoming-blogging-event/
But I might crash the Twitter party, to cheer you all on.
Live long, and prosper, Weekly Geeks!

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Weekly Geeks


It's summertime Weekly Geeks … somewhere. Not here, obviously. Here it's been cold, and wet and cloudy and dark most of the time. Having said that … the sun is shining and the sky is blue today. Which is a nice change from yesterday, which was so cold, wet and miserable it was practically a cliché.
Our summer is December-February, so Christmas time falls smack in the middle of that. And I didn't think that pine trees, tinsel, fake snow and Santas in red suits were incongruous when I was a kid. Our Christmas traditions pretty much came with the British settlers, so that's what we're used to.
So turkey dinners are common; as are barbecues for some. Some head away – mostly to beaches and run-down cribs (or baches, if you live further North) – basically small, rundown houses. Although that's changed now and some “cribs” go for hundreds of thousands of dollars.
The grand Kiwi summer holiday tradition is endless hot days near water, if possible. For me, as a kid, we spent most of our holidays in a tiny little spot called Garston, in a free, rundown farmhouse on the land of a farmer my Dad worked for after coming back from World War 2. He was the kindest, most generous man ever. I don't even know what we did, really. Picked peas, and mushrooms, and gooseberries. Hung out at the dried out creek bed.
On Saturday nights, when my parents would go to the pub, they'd take me sometimes, and the barman would make me Shirley Temples.
We'd travel up the road a bit some days to a rest stop at Lake Wakatipu, not far past Kingston. We had our favourite spot _ a large rock with a natural slide. Or we'd travel to Queenstown, at the head of the lake.
The lake's freezing, and the beach is pretty much rocks, and small stones. But it was our spot. We'd stick our Coke bottles in the shallows and just … I don't know how to describe it.
I'm the youngest by six years in my family, so I felt like an only child a lot of the time, even on holiday. I did have a holiday-friend _ the youngest son of the aforementioned farmer was a year older than me and we sort-of almost became real world friends until I totally lost contact, which I kind of regret.
The hottest month is always February, and I have never got used to that. I was always the kid my parents tried to make go outside on nice days. The heat down here where I live is usually a dry kind of heat, which I find easier to deal with than humidity _ it was one of my least favourite things about living in Auckland.
I've gone off-course, again, I think. But my Kiwi summer experience is fairly typical. Take one (1) rundown crib, add sunshine and water, sit back, relax, and enjoy.
That's a not-very-good pic of the spot at the top there. :)
Live long, and prosper Weekly Geeks. :)

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Weekly Geeks





Check it out here: http://www.weeklygeeks.com/

Tis mine, so come and play, please? Attention = love, as we all know.

Um. On to the question. As I said, some comments in a previous post got me thinking about guilty pleasures. Mine at the time was American Idol, and is now, quite frankly, stalking Adam Lambert on the internetz. But that's not the only one. And it's also not important right now. Ahem.

Overriding that, or riding alongside it more accurately, is my fairly recent obsession with reality TV. Not all reality TV. I have never, for example, watched an episode of The Hills _ I truly, truly don't get that one.

But I do watch Survivor. And The Amazing Race. And Hell's Kitchen. And Top Model, Project Runway, Top Chef ... I could go on.

Why, you may ask. Well, for one thing, I love TV. I really, truly do. That shiny box in the corner is the soulmate of the tiny, dark, venal part of myself that celebrates when Bad Things happen to characters on TV shows. I can't help it. Most of the time, I'm a nice person, I think. I work hard, I'm a good Mum and try to be a good wife. But TV brings out the worst in me. And you know what? I like it.

Oh, and if you happen to watch reality TV as well, please, please ... no spoilers. We are literally a year behind with some shows here.

Happy Weekly Geeks, everyone. What scratches your dark side?

Saturday, May 23, 2009

Weekly Geeks




Description here: http://www.weeklygeeks.com/
Of course, it's not summer here, but most emphatically winter. And although our war rememberance dates are different, that doesn't really matter, does it, because when is it inappropriate to remember those who serve or who have served?
So happy Memorial Day weekend, America; drive safe and I hope it's all fine and sunny for you.
I don't really read war-themed books, and it's not my favourite movie genre either, however, I do have to mention Schindler's List, and The Pianist. I hadn't categorised them as "war movies" but saw them on a couple of other blogs, and of course, they are war movies. Moving, painful and incredibly sad war movies. The end of Schindler's List, where the survivors and ascendants come on screen still makes me cry.
Second question:
I have to admit, I don't read seasonally. Sometimes, a particularly fine and sunny day will lend itself to something lighter _ some Marian Keyes perhaps, or Agatha Christie. On the other hand, they're good books to read in the winter, too; to go somewhere lighter and more sunny even if it is just in your head.
Otherwise I base my reading on what my mood is at the time; or what I already have on the go.
Happy Weekly Geeks everyone; live long, and prosper :)

Saturday, May 16, 2009

Weekly Geeks







The photos are, from left, the signpost at Bluff, which is a very small coastal town just outside the city _ it's pretty much literally at the bottom of the South Island _ Invercargill from the air, and a random gratuitous shot of the street where my office is. :)
We're taking a literary tour this week, Geeks. Details here: http://www.weeklygeeks.com/
I live in a relatively small city _ Invercargill _ right at the bottom of the South Island of New Zealand. It's a pretty place to live overall; I was born and raised here, but a literary tour will take about two minutes.
The only author I can think of from here is Dan Davin:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dan_Davin about whome I know almost nothing. It's a terrible thing to say, probably, but I'm not a great fan of New Zealand short stories. Novels, yes, but Kiwi short stories make me itchy for some reason. I have no idea why.
However, that's possibly another post some time. Or not.
Other than that … the closest literary figures to me geographically would have been Janet Frame
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janet_Frame who was born in Dunedin, a city about two and a half hours up the road, and where I went to university. I have read some of Janet Frame's novels, and she is Made of Awesome. Her last novel, Towards Another Summer, was published posthumously, and honestly contains some of the most beautiful writing I have ever read. It was almost painful to read, it was that good.
One of the things that's important to understand about where I live, is the sheer space that surrounds it. Invercargill sits on the edge of the South Island pretty much, at the bottom of a pretty large, flat farming province. In New Zealand terms, I live in the Deep South. So if you drive out of town (which takes about five minutes) you're immediately surrounded by nothing but sky, and fields. It's either isolating, or inspiring. Sometimes both, come to think of it.
I often think that if I do get off my lazy ass and start writing, it will be heavily informed by the landscape around me _ I believe it heavily influenced Janet Frame.
That was a bit of a digression, but I don't talk much about where I'm from on here, so what the hell. I'll ramble.
The other Kiwi literary great who lived sort-of in my neighbourhood was poet Hone Tuwhare ,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hone_Tuwhare who lived in the small seaside resort of Kaka Point. I've talked about him here before, and put up a couple of his poems.
Dunedin is very much a university town, and runs at least one literary fellowship, but the older I get, the more I realise that while those three years I spent at uni there certainly informed my reading, they wouldn't really inform any writing I might do _ Dunedin is built up on hills, and winding streets, which is kind of the polar opposite of where I'm from. On the other hand, its mindset is a bit more open, and that can be a hard thing sometimes _ to realise just HOW provincial my hometown is.
Which is my way of saying: thank whoever is out there for the internets. And my fellow book bloggers. Without you guys … I hate to think.
That wandered a bit off-topic, didn't it?
Oh well. Happy Weekly Geeks
Warm fuzzies :)

Saturday, May 9, 2009

Weekly Geeks




We're talking bookmarks this week, Geeks. Description here: http://www.weeklygeeks.com/ :)
I can't really say I have a collection. I keep coming across old ones that I don't remember buying, and I have more than one with cat-teeth marks. The nicest one I have is the one I got from Jessi at
http://www.casual-dread.blogspot.com/ which you can see on this post: http://justaddbooks.blogspot.com/2008/12/book-bloggers-christmas-swap.html
It's the lovely green leather one. And … I can't find it :( I know it's here, and I'm hoping it's hiding in a book, but I'm gutted that I can't find it because it's the nicest one I have _ it's lovely and long, too.
Otherwise I have some battered veterans of many books, and failing that, scraps of paper, or envelopes. Sometimes I even go commando, and don't use a bookmark at all _which is a bad idea by the way _ and just vaguely try and remember the page number I was up to.
The weird thing is, with only having a motley crew like that, I love bookmarks. I look at them in bookshops all the time, but for some reason it never occurs to me to like, you know, BUY one!
Anyway.
Happy Weekly Geeks!