Books I Want to Read

The list of books I want to read is growing so large, I decided to post the list just so I would have it written down somewhere.  These books are in no particular order, but I do want to start with the first, as I have already begun it, but had to put it aside.

That ought to do for a start!

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Between the Lines: The Commoner

The subject of this week’s episode of Between the Lines, a book review program broadcast on Atlanta’s NPR affiliate WABE, is John Burnham Schwartz’s The Commoner. My tastes tend to skew Western, but this book sounds very interesting. It’s definitely going on my to-read pile, which is growing quite large while I am taking two online professional learning courses — I haven’t had as much time to read fiction as I’d like.

You can listen to this week’s show and learn more about The Commoner by clicking the plus sign on the flash player below. I finally subscribed to the weekly podcast so I won’t miss any more episodes.

Download link

Do you have any literature-related podcasts to recommend?  Feel free to discuss in the comments.

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If You Liked…

If you’re looking for modern fiction to pair with classics, you might be interested in my post “If You Liked…” at my education blog.

By the way, if you have any trouble finding your way around here, let me know, and I’ll help you out. I’m moving away from categories in favor of tagging, so look for more specific information through the tag cloud in the sidebar rather than the archives page.

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This is a Literary Blog

I have decided finally that the focus of this blog will be my reading, which should come as no surprise to regular visitors, as that has been it’s unstated focus for some time. I may still share non-literary information from time to time, but I wanted to warn you in case you no longer desired to read this blog if its focus is on books. I felt a change in theme was in order in honor of this blog’s new purpose.

To do:

  • Clean up CSS so that the sidebar looks right.
  • Clean up archives and categories. New archives page and tag cloud in sidebar.
  • Widgetize sidebar and put my extras back in sidebars (Currently Reading, DailyLit, etc.)
  • Change favicon.
  • Implement WordPress tagging and do away with Technorati tagging. Tag cloud in sidebar.
  • Put credit for Literary Life theme in footer.

Not to do:

  • Delete non-literary posts.
  • Categorize old literary posts — too much work and not enough time.

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Cool Tools for Book Lovers

Ever since I became a regular user of StumbleUpon, I have been introduced to a variety of cool tools for book lovers.

The one I’m most excited about is Book Glutton (found via Sylvia’s blog), which allows you to read with a group and annotate passages as you read. Here’s a video demonstration:

[kml_flashembed movie="http://www.youtube.com/v/TkCoknkwua4" width="425" height="350" wmode="transparent" /]

I have mentioned DailyLit before, and if you’re a regular visitor, maybe you’ve even kept track of my DailyLit reading in the sidebar on the right. Tom Hand contacted me through my education blog to tell me about DailyReader.net, a similar tool. You can also browse thousands of free books online at FullBooks.com. ReadPrint is another good source for online reading.

If swapping books is your thing, you might be interested in BookMooch or BookCrossing.

Listen to audio selections from great literature at Norton’s website for their popular British literature anthology. You can also download classics on audio at Free Classic AudioBooks.

If you’re looking for suggestions, you might consult What Should I Read Next, which will guide you to a selection based on

If you’re looking for something different to read, you might choose one of the selections in “10 Books for Inquiring Minds” from BookStove.

Blurb allows you to create your own books (the samples look pretty slick) for as little as $12.95. You can also use Lulu to publish your books (I was happy with the results when I published my own book on Lulu).

If you would like to keep up with the sites in my StumbleUpon feed, you can subscribe here.

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Now playing: Tony Steidler-Dennison – Roadhouse 156
via FoxyTunes

[tags]stumbleupon, literature, books, tools, reading[/tags]

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Reading Update

Sarah chastised me for putting aside Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell in order to re-read the Harry Potter series.  It isn’t that I wasn’t enjoying the book — on the contrary, I was enjoying it quite a lot.  However, ever since I finished Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows this summer, I have been wanting to re-read the series from start to finish just to see what interesting connections I could make.  Therefore, while you won’t see Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell in my current reading list, it’s just been put on hold on my nightstand, as has The Great Mortality.  I will be reading Thomas L. Friedman’s The World is Flat as part of a professional learning course, so look for my thoughts and a review soon.

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Year in Review

In 2007, I didn’t have enough time to do all that I wanted, and that includes reading, but I read the following books (links will take you to my reviews):

That’s a little more than a book a month, which I suppose isn’t too bad. My favorite book was obviously Harry Potter, but aside from that one, the ones I am still thinking about are A Thousand Acres, Ahab’s Wife, and, surprisingly, The Myth of You and Me, which I wasn’t sure would stay with me at the time I finished it.

I also made two great musical discoveries this year: Kelly Richey and Tony Steidler-Dennison’s weekly Roadhouse Podcast. I am finding as I get older that I don’t keep up with musical trends, and I barely ever listened to music on the radio this year. I bought few CD’s. My favorite new CD is by an old band — the Eagles’ Long Road Out of Eden (only available from third party sellers at Amazon because the album is a Wal-Mart exclusive — and incidentally, I thought that was odd given Don Henley’s politics).

My favorite movie this year was Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, but I also enjoyed viewing Possession. I do like movies, but despite instituting a weekly movie night here at the Huff household, I have not found that too many I’ve seen this year really stuck with me.

I did a small amount of traveling in January, when I had the opportunity to accompany the juniors on a class trip through Birmingham, Tupelo, MS., and Memphis. I absolutely loved Memphis, and I can hardly wait to go back. During the trip, a colleague and I accompanied one of the students to ER when he broke his nose. Some of the most interesting places I saw were Elvis’s birthplace and Graceland, the Rum Boogie Café, the Rock and Soul Museum, and Sun Studio. Actually, the Rock and Soul museum didn’t so much have interesting exhibits to look at, but their musical exhibits were amazing.

Happy New Year, everyone.

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Jane Eyre

Jane EyreLast night I completed Charlotte Brontë’s classic novel Jane Eyre. As a child, I moved around quite a bit, especially in high school. Going to three different high schools has left some large gaps in my literature education, and many of the books one would ordinarily have read in high school I admit I have never read. No matter — I’m not sure I would have been ready for this one in high school, anyway.

For those of you who may be unfamiliar with the story, Jane Eyre stars the eponymous heroine Jane Eyre, who when orphaned by her parents at an early age goes to live with her cruel Aunt Reed until she is unceremoniously sent away to a harsh boarding school called Lowood. Jane eventually becomes a teacher at Lowood until a beloved mentor leaves the school to marry, at which time Jane decides to leave as well. She advertises for a position of governess and is hired by Mrs. Fairfax of Thornfield Hall, the housekeeper for one of literature’s great Byronic heroes, Edward Fairfax Rochester. Mr. Rochester falls in love with Jane, but he harbors a dark secret in his attic that nearly proves the undoing of both his and Jane’s chance at love and happiness.

Although I liked the novel, I didn’t find it difficult to put down, and indeed, one reason why it took me so long to finish is that for long stretches, I wasn’t really into reading it. However, overall I enjoyed Brontë’s writing style. I found her characters believable, with the exception of the children in the early part of the novel — who talked like no children I’ve ever heard. I admired Jane for standing fiercely by her convictions and valuing herself even when she thought no one else did. It is easy to see why so many literary admirers have borrowed Jane Eyre for inspiration, and I did enjoy the book in its entirety, if not the slower parts. I was inspired to read it after the characters in Diane Setterfield’s novel The Thirteenth Tale (my review here) admired it profusely in one of my favorite passages in the book. My daughter Sarah is reading this book right now, and Iwill be interested to get her take on it.

I am anxious to see how well this novel translated to the screen in one of its many movie adaptations. I am going to start with the 1944 production starring Joan Fontaine and Orson Welles, and I am anxious to read Jean Rhys’s Wide Sargasso Sea if for no other reason than to see a little more of enigmatic Bertha Mason.

As I predicted, I did not finish my R.I.P. Challenge by Halloween, but I am soldiering forth at any rate, and I hope to finish it by Christmas.

[tags]jane eyre, charlotte brontë, book review, literature[/tags]

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Revision

OK, I read two installments of Ulysses — I actually didn’t finish the second — and decided it’s not for me, so it’s off my list.  I decided to read Jane Austen’s Emma instead — a book I have actually been meaning to read for some time by an author I know I’ll like.  As a wise person once told me, life is too short to read books you don’t like.  If a book doesn’t grab me in 50 pages, it’s not going to grab me, and likewise, if it puts me off in one or two, it will most likely not woo me back.  Ah, one should be so wise in all matters of the heart.

[tags]literature, reading, ulysses, james joyce, emma, jane austen[/tags]

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Moby Dick

This morning DailyLit sent me my last installment of Moby Dick, which I finished reading only a few moments ago.  I don’t know whether it is because I spent about six months reading it or whether Moby Dick is such a notoriously difficult book to get through, but I feel a tremendous sense of accomplishment.  At the end of the installment, DailyLit enclosed the following message: “Congratulations!  You have finished Moby Dick.”

I do think Melville was in need of a good editor.  One of the best pieces of advice I was given as a writer was to cut anything that stopped the forward motion of the plot.  I think long passages of description are fine when it’s something the reader needs to know.  On the other hand, the whole section on cetology should be cut, in my opinion.  I can well imagine that many people who are trying to read the novel give up right there in the middle.  On the other hand, when the novel does contain action, it’s high caliber, and the writing is excellent.  My favorite passages:

After Ahab sends the Rachel away, refusing to help her captain look for his lost son, the chapter concludes:

But by her still halting course and winding, woeful way, you plainly saw that this ship that so wept with spray, still remained without comfort.  She was Rachel, weeping for her children, because they were not.

I just think that’s beautiful writing.  My absolute favorite part was in the chapter “The Symphony,” and it is easy for me to see now how Sena Jeter Naslund was inspired by this chapter to write Ahab’s Wife:

“God!  God!  God!–crack my heart!–stave my brain!–mockery! mockery! bitter, biting mockery of grey hairs, have I lived enough joy to wear ye; and seem and feel thus intolerably old?  Close! stand close to me, Starbuck; let me look into a human eye; it is better than to gaze into sea or sky; better than to gaze upon God.  By the green land; by the bright hearth-stone! this is the magic glass, man; I see my wife and my child in thine eye.  No, no; stay on board, on board!–lower not when I do; when branded Ahab gives chase to Moby Dick.  That hazard shall not be thine.  No, no! not with the far away home I see in that eye!” …

“What is it, what nameless, inscrutable, unearthly thing is it; what cozening, hidden lord and master, and cruel, remorseless emperor commands me; that against all natural lovings and longings, I so keep pushing, and crowding, and jamming myself on all the time; recklessly making me ready to do what in my own proper, natural heart, I durst not so much as dare?  Is Ahab, Ahab?  Is it I, God, or who, that lifts this arm?  But if the great sun move not of himself; but is as an errand-boy in heaven; nor one single star can revolve, but by some invisible power; how then can this one small heart beat; this one small brain think thoughts; unless God does that beating, does that thinking, does that living, and not I.  By heaven, man, we are turned round and round in this world, like yonder windlass, and Fate is the handspike.

I think Melville’s use of stage directions was novel and interesting as well, and not something I would have thought of doing.  I am very glad I read the book, but even more so that I did it through DailyLit.  I feel that because I read just a little bit every day, even if it took me six months, I was less frustrated with the parts that dragged than I would have been had I tried to read it in a much shorter space of time.

[tags]moby dick, herman melville, ahab’s wife, sena jeter naslund, dailylit[/tags]

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