I must confess to some cheating as I've been reading the first two Poldark novels which I borrowed from my local library (use your libraries kids or they'll be gone tomorrow!) and they are great fun and highly recommended. However I don't own them so I can't talk about them. What I can talk about is Eclipse the third (and I thought final but apparently not) part of Stephanie Meyer's paranormal romance the Twilight Saga. These books get slated a lot though I doubt Meyers cares as they've made her a fortune. I like them generally but they're not in the least sophisticated - I get the impression that they're aimed at kids as Meyers doesn't seem able to engage in a higher level than that of an angsty teen. And I challenge anyone to not want to punch Bella in the face were she real. Her main problem is which hunky supernatural being she should spend eternity with, and boy does she whine about it. I was hoping someone would mercifully finish her off so the plot would just get going again. But she survives, as usual, and through no fault of her own. The book was okay, it shouldn't win anything (and I hope it hadn't) but it helped while away some lunch breaks and was thick enough to wedge open a door when needed. Result! And to you doubters who think I've been making up genres, I've been reliably informed that paranormal romance is a genuine genre so there.
AC x
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Tuesday, 2 August 2011
Cheating and Eclipse
Posted by The Allotment Cat at 14:27 0 comments
Friday, 22 July 2011
Update
Only three weeks until we move house. We are packing our books first as they take up the most space. We haven't finished the cataloguing yet (nearly) and so far we have 1,200 books! We haev some duplicates but not too many and mostly classics. Doing the cataloguing has also highlighted some old friends (Dave Eggers anyone) and has reignited my love for some forgotten authors. I am very much looking forward to moving our booky friends (ie books) in their new home and reading them all again!
AC x
Posted by The Allotment Cat at 06:17 0 comments
Wednesday, 13 July 2011
And we're back...
It's been a busy old time for us - I, Allotment Cat, am now married to him, Madrigal Boy, and as such we have been super busy well getting married. We are now in the middle of moving house and as such I suggested we make a note of all our books as we packed them and then we would actually know what we had. Madrigal Boy set to work writing a catalogue system for us (as a computer scientist he has never been happier) and he even bought a scanner. Now we are packing books into boxes and scanning them as we go. The catalogue is broken into two collections and his (that's right, we don't share) so we can actually see what we have and stop buying duplicates of things! So far I am up to about 300 books while MB is up to about 100 (but only because we started on my shelves first). I think we will hit abou 700 books before we are finished. How many books does it take to make a Library I wonder?
And now to start reading them!
I will be back soon!
Love TAC
Posted by The Allotment Cat at 04:44 0 comments
Thursday, 20 May 2010
Wells Tower - Everything Ravaged Everything Burned
Madrigal boy bought me this a while ago (he will make an appearance I promise, but he's quietly welshing on our deal and reading a HUGE library books so he's a bit behind) and I wasn't sure about it because, frankly, the title scared me a bit. I don't want nightmares when I select a bedtime book. However I'm a big fan of good short stories (Raymond Carver and the like) and this was great. It's the type of book that makes you want to start writing straight away, but you won't be able to write as well as he can. I tried. I'll definitely be finding out more about him, and I was especially excited to discover he is part of the McSweenies clan which is a badge of honour to wear with pride. Get the book, and read it, right now. Go. I'm not writing any more so off you pop...
Posted by The Allotment Cat at 08:40 0 comments
Labels: Everything Ravaged Everything Burned McSweenies Raymond Carver, Wells Tower
Friday, 23 April 2010
Some Country Houses and Their Owners - James Lee-Milne
This was a great book. I have Lee-Milne's full diaries for that era knocking about on the shelves (unread, naturally) but now I wish I hadn't as I have a sneaky suspicion that all the good bits are in this tiny tome. My particular favourite was the section when a particular country house owner offered their house to the National Trust before commenting how she thought the Nazi's actually had the right idea. Ho hum.
It certainly spurred me on to actually visit some of these homes as to read about their last owners and the circumstances under which they were donated adds a poignancy which comes from knowing that the War had impoverished the upper classes and ended an era of luxury. Elder sons were also scarce leaving distraught parents with no heir and so in their grief they choose to leave their estate, their family history, to the National Trust, to be absorbed into the national consciousness and become a monument instead of a loved family home. Recommended.
Posted by The Allotment Cat at 14:37 0 comments
Pondering
Now, I'm a massive fan of public libraries. I feel it's an amazing privilege to have a service whereby we can borrow books for free. We can educate ourselves for free. We can entertain ourselves for free. We can try before we buy. What's not to like?
TO the end of furthering the cause of public libraries I decided not to put an online seller link in under any of the books we mention as I'd much rather people borrowed the books from their library. If we don't use these services then Councils will take them away - so use your public libraries people, they're great. And free. And warm. And did I mention they're free?
Now, if I love libraries so much then why, you may ask, do we have so many unread books on our shelves? That is a valid question my friend, and one which I believe I can answer. We (well, definitely me) are idiots. We buy new books, second hand books, we are given books, books multiply under our very eyes. And I still have the maximum number of books i can from the library each week. So, if you don't buy loads of new books at once, then hopefully you won't have to follow in our footsteps and be forced to write a blog about your reading habits in order to force yourself to read everything you own!
That is all.
Love TAC x
Posted by The Allotment Cat at 14:30 0 comments
The Grass is Singing - Doris Lessing
Ta-da! The first book of the blog - I was determined to beat Madrigal Boy to it - is by Nov(b)elist Doris Lessing and was her first novel. I enjoyed it very much. The heat, the dust, the conflicting emotions of the characters were all evocatively described and it was a great read. By chance I was reading it at the time of Pierre Terreblanche's murder, and it was interesting to see how racial tensions were portrayed in fiction compared to the stark reporting of the recent killing.
The miscommunication in the book was heartbreaking, and I couldn't help but feel for the main characters who seemed to sink deeper into inevitable disaster when a simple word of comfort from the other could potentially have saved them. Background characters were also interesting, and by the end the social and institutional divides were so blurred a tragic ending seemed inevitable. It was certainly a great read, even better would be to read it in the scorching sunshine, and I look forward to reading more of her work soon (considering we have about 6 of her novels, unread, on the shelves I'm sure they'll be mentioned in this blog).
Au revoir ma petite bibliophiles TAC x
Posted by The Allotment Cat at 14:09 0 comments
Labels: Doris Lessing Rhodesia