Category: Calendar Items Page 11 of 25

Thanksgiving 2021

Happy Thanksgiving/Turkey Day/Thursday

On this day that has been set aside for us in the U.S. for expressions of gratitude, it’s been my custom take a moment and mention a few of the things that The Irresponsible Reader is thankful for.

bullet The readers of this blog, the authors who’ve corresponded with me/provided books for me to read/encouraged me—even promoted this here project.
bullet Books—the stories, characters, and/or things I’ve learned are what keep me sane, entertain, and inspire me.
bullet Authors! If not for them, I wouldn’t have the above.
bullet Audiobooks and talented narrators—ditto
bullet Coffee (and other beverages both caffeinated and adult)
bullet Time to read
bullet The Nampa Public Library (and The LYNX! Consortium)
bullet Rediscovered Bookshop, Rediscovered Bookshop – Caldwell, and Libro.fm
bullet My supportive, understanding, and encouraging wife and kids. They all do a pretty decent job pretending to care when their old man drones on and on about what he’s reading or what’s going on with the blog. They’ve also done a good job on the brainstorming front lately.
bullet Again, all of you who read, follow, like, tweet, comment, email, etc. this page—you have no idea how much every little bit is appreciated.

For my fellow Americans, I hope you have a pleasant day with your friends and/or family. Non-US types, I hope you enjoy today and that you enjoy having the same pant size tomorrow as you do today.

October 2021 in Retrospect: What I Read/Listened to/Wrote About

October in a nutshell: 31 books, 8,079 pages (or the equivalent), 3.5 average—even with more 3 Stars than I’ve had in a dog’s age. All the 3s make me feel better about things, I’ve wondered if I was being too free with 4’s lately. All said, I’m pretty satisfied with this month—I’m terrified by the number of things I haven’t written about, though. I should read some bigger books to help me catch up.

So, here’s what happened here in October 2021.
Books Read

Nothing Like I Imagined (Except for Sometimes) See Her Die Beast Boy Loves Raven
3 Stars 3 Stars 3 Stars
What God Has to Say about Our Bodies Dead Mercy Pug Actually
4 Stars 4 Stars 3.5 Stars
Pure How to Resist Amazon and Why The Ninja Betrayed
4 Stars 3 Stars 4 Stars
But For The Grace A Good Day for Chardonnay The Church: An Introduction
4 Stars 4 1/2 Stars 2 Stars
Tear It Down Grenade Bouquets Based on a True Story
4 1/2 Stars 3 Stars 3 Stars
Abandon All Hope Junkyard Bargain Everything Happens
3 Stars 3 Stars 3 Stars
Dark Heir The Case of the One-Eyed Witness Breaking Silence
4 1/2 Stars 3.5 Stars 3 Stars
Bodacious Creed and the Jade Lake The Trinity and the Bible Dark Arts and a Daiquiri
3.5 Stars 5 Stars 3 Stars
The Conjuring of Zoth-Avarex Squirrel Do Bad Finlay Donovan Is Killing It
4 Stars 3 Stars 3.5 Stars
Gated Prey Dust & Grim Fallen
4 1/2 Stars 3 Stars rating305 Stars
The Glorious Feast of the Gospel
3 Stars

Still Reading

Things Unseen The Appeal

Ratings

5 Stars 2 2 1/2 Stars 0
4 1/2 Stars 4 2 Stars 1
4 Stars 6 1 1/2 Stars 0
3.5 Stars 4 1 Star 0
3 Stars 14
Average = 3.5

TBR Pile
Mt TBR October 21

Breakdowns
“Traditionally” Published: 12
Self-/Independent Published: 19

Genre This Month Year to Date
Children’s 0 (0%) 2 (1%)
Fantasy 2 (6%) 18 (7%)
General Fiction/ Literature 4 (13%) 17 (7%)
Horror 0 (0%) 0 (0%)
Humor 2 (6%) 7 (3%)
Mystery/ Suspense/ Thriller 11 (35%) 98 (39%)
Non-Fiction 2 (6%) 17 (7%)
Science Fiction 2 (6%) 17 (7%)
Steampunk 1 (3%) 1 (0%)
Theology/ Christian Living 4 (13%) 30 (12%)
Urban Fantasy 3 (10%) 44 (17%)
Western 0 (0%) 0 (0%)

Review-ish Things Posted

Other Things I Wroteotherwriting (and a few things others wrote)

Other than the Saturday Miscellanies (2nd, 9th, 16th, 23rd, and 30th), I also wrote:

What about you, how was your month?

Happy Birthday, Archie!

My annual tribute to one of my favorite fictional characters (if not my all-time favorite). I’ve got to do an overhaul to this soon, but it is slightly updated and tweaked from last year.

On Oct. 23* in Chillicothe, Ohio, Archie Goodwin entered this world—no doubt with a smile for the pretty nurses—and American detective literature was never the same. He’s the narrator (and, I’d argue protagonist) of the questionably named Nero Wolfe mysteries. While the eccentric and overweight genius might be what brings people to the series, it’s Archie’s wit, attitude, and snappy narrative voice that brings people’s back.

* About 34 years ago, no matter what year it is that you read this.

When my aunt first gave me a Nero Wolfe book to read, she sold me on the Wolfe character, but when I read it, I wasn’t so sure that I liked the guy. But his assistant? He was cool. Sure, it didn’t take me long to get into Wolfe, but Archie’s always been my favorite. Since I was in Middle School, if I was suffering a slump of any kind (reading, emotional, physical), time with Archie Goodwin could get me out of it. There were a few years that when I got sick, I’d grab a Nero Wolfe novel to help me get through it (along with the Vitamin C and Chicken Noodle soup), and you can’t tell me it didn’t work. Noted critic Jacques Barzun says it well:

If he had done nothing more than to create Archie Goodwin, Rex Stout would deserve the gratitude of whatever assessors watch over the prosperity of American literature. For surely Archie is one of the folk heroes in which the modern American temper can see itself transfigured. Archie is the lineal descendant of Huck Finn.

While Archie’s about as far from a teetotaler as you can get, to commemorate his birthday, I’m toasting him in one of the ways I think he’d appreciate most—by raising a glass of milk in his honor.

Who was Archie? Archie summed up his life like this:

Born in Ohio. Public high school, pretty good at geometry and football, graduated with honor but no honors. Went to college two weeks, decided it was childish, came to New York and got a job guarding a pier, shot and killed two men and was fired, was recommended to Nero Wolfe for a chore he wanted done, did it, was offered a full-time job by Mr. Wolfe, took it, still have it.” (Fourth of July Picnic)

Long may he keep it. Just what was he employed by Wolfe to do? In The Black Mountain he answers the statement, “I thought you was a private eye” with:

I don’t like the way you say it, but I am. Also, I am an accountant, an amanuensis, and a cocklebur. Eight to five you never heard the word amanuensis and you never saw a cocklebur.

In The Red Box, he says

I know pretty well what my field is. Aside from my primary function as the thorn in the seat of Wolfe’s chair to keep him from going to sleep and waking up only for meals, I’m chiefly cut out for two things: to jump and grab something before the other guy can get his paws on it, and to collect pieces of the puzzle for Wolfe to work on.

In Too Many Women, he’s a bit more concise and describes himself as the:

heart, liver, lungs and gizzard of the private detective business of Nero Wolfe, Wolfe being merely the brains

In Black Orchids, he reacts to an insult:

…her cheap crack about me being a ten-cent Clark Gable, which was ridiculous. He simpers, to begin with, and to end with no one can say I resemble a movie actor, and if they did it would be more apt to be Gary Cooper than Clark Gable.

Over at The Thrilling Detective, he’s described this way:

If Goodwin hadn’t gone to work for Wolfe, he’d certainly have his own agency by now (and temporarily does, in one novel). Far more of the traditional eye, Goodwin is a tough, handsome guy with a photographic memory, a .32 under his well-tailored suit (and sometimes an extra .38 in his overcoat pocket), and a well-developed appreciation for the ladies. And, in the opinion of more than a few cops, officials and stuffed-shirt executives, a mouth that ought to be nailed shut permanently. (Wolfe isn’t immune either – part of Goodwin’s job, as he sees it, is needling the fat man into taking cases, if only to make sure the bills get covered.) He’s not the deductive genius that Wolfe is, but a smart and tenacious op with a good right hook, and a decent and personable man. Most of all, in his narration of the books, he’s a helluva storyteller; it’s his view of the world, and his interaction with Wolfe, that keeps us coming back for each new mystery.

The Archie Goodwin FAQ is less succinct but does a good job of laying out the facts.

I’m not the only Archie fan out there:

  • Someone pointed me at this post, The Wit and Wisdom of Archie Goodwin. There’s some really good stuff here that I was tempted to steal, instead, I’ll just point you at it.
  • Robert Crais himself when writing an introduction to a Before Midnight reprint, devoted it to paying tribute to Archie—one of the few pieces of anything written that I can say I agree with jot and tittle.

In case you’re wondering if this post was simply an excuse to go through some collections of Archie Goodwin quotations, you wouldn’t be totally wrong…he’s one of the fictional characters I like spending time with most in this world—he’s the literary equivalent of comfort food. So just a couple more great lines I’ve quoted here before:

I would appreciate it if they would call a halt on all their devoted efforts to find a way to abolish war or eliminate disease or run trains with atoms or extend the span of human life to a couple of centuries, and everybody concentrate for a while on how to wake me up in the morning without my resenting it. It may be that a bevy of beautiful maidens in pure silk yellow very sheer gowns, barefooted, singing “Oh, What a Beautiful Morning” and scattering rose petals over me would do the trick, but I’d have to try it.

I looked at the wall clock. It said two minutes to four. I looked at my wrist watch. It said one minute to four. In spite of the discrepancy, it seemed safe to conclude that it would soon be four o’clock.

Description:I shook my head. “You’re flattering me, Inspector. I don’t arouse passions like that. It’s my intellect women like. I inspire them to read good books, but I doubt if I could inspire even Lizzie Borden to murder.”

She turned back to me, graceful as a big cat, and stood there straight and proud, not quite smiling, her warm dark eyes as curious as if she had never seen a man before. I knew damn well I ought to say something, but what? The only thing to say was ‘Will you marry me?’ but that wouldn’t do because the idea of her washing dishes or darning socks was preposterous.

“Indeed,” I said. That was Nero Wolfe’s word, and I never used it except in moments of stress, and it severely annoyed me when I caught myself using it, because when I look in a mirror I prefer to see me as is, with no skin grafted from anybody else’s hide, even Nero Wolfe’s.

If you like Anglo-Saxon, I belched. If you fancy Latin, I eructed. No matter which, I had known that Wolfe and Inspector Cramer would have to put up with it that evening, because that is always a part of my reaction to sauerkraut. I don’t glory in it or go for a record, but neither do I fight it back. I want to be liked just for myself.

When a hippopotamus is peevish it’s a lot of peeve.

It was nothing new for Wolfe to take steps, either on his own, or with one or more of the operatives we used, without burdening my mind with it. His stated reason was that I worked better if I thought it all depended on me. His actual reason was that he loved to have a curtain go up revealing him balancing a live seal on his nose.

It helps a lot, with two people as much together as he and I were, if they understand each other. He understood that I was too strong-minded to add another word unless he told me to, and I understood that he was too pigheaded to tell me to.

I always belong wherever I am.

September 2021 in Retrospect: What I Read/Listened to/Wrote About

September has come and gone, and what’s happened here? Well, I completed 30 books—8,240 pages (or the equivalent)—with a 3.7 average (thanks to a lot of 5-Star reads). I posted something every day, too. NOt necessarily something good, but something—and that’s a start. I did not accomplish my big goal of the month, which was to finish posting about my 20 Books of Summer books, I’ve got to get going on that (if only so I can read a sequel or two). But basically, it looks like a pretty good month.

I was really looking forward to looking at how far Mt. TBR had shrunk this month—I knew I’d done good work on that front. Annnnnd…it’s exactly the same height—one smaller in Audiobooks and one larger in hardcopy. Maybe in October?

Anywho…now for what happened here in September.

Books Read

True Dead The Treadstone Exile The Genius' Guide to Bad Writing
4 1/2 Stars 2 Stars 3.5 Stars
Holier Than Thou Headphones and Heartaches Nine Nasty Words
3 Stars 5 Stars 3 Stars
Stalker Stalked Yearbook Suburban Dicks
4 Stars 3 Stars 5 Stars
Bound Best in Snow Shots Fired
5 Stars 4 Stars 4 Stars
It's a Wonderful Woof Broken Soul How to Slay a Dragon
4 Stars 4 Stars 2 1/2 Stars
When Sorrows Come In Conclusion, Don't Worry About It Meadowlark
5 Stars 3 Stars 3 Stars
The Path of Faith Word by Word The Chronicles of Iona: Exile
4 Stars 3.5 Stars 3 Stars
Marked Once Upon a Time in Hollywood The Case of the Missing Firefly
4 Stars 3 Stars 4 Stars
Deeper The Thursday Murder Club https://www.hachettebookgroup.com/titles/jennifer-lynn-barnes/the-hawthorne-legacy/9780759557642/
3.5 Stars 4 1/2 Stars 3.5 Stars
Daughter of the Morning Star Out of House and Home Fan Fiction
4 Stars 3.5 Stars 4 Stars

Still Reading

Things Unseen See Her Die Blank Space

Ratings

5 Stars 4 2 1/2 Stars 1
4 1/2 Stars 2 2 Stars 1
4 Stars 10 1 1/2 Stars 0
3.5 Stars 5 1 Star 0
3 Stars 7
Average = 3.7

TBR Pile
Mt TBR September '21

Breakdowns
“Traditionally” Published: 23
Self-/Independent Published: 7

Genre This Month Year to Date
Children’s 0 (0%) 2 (1%)
Fantasy 0 (0%) 16 (7%)
General Fiction/ Literature 3 (10%) 13 (6%)
Horror 0 (0%) 0 (0%)
Humor 1 (3%) 5 (2%)
Mystery/ Suspense/ Thriller 12 (40%) 87 (39%)
Non-Fiction 4 (13%) 15 (7%)
Science Fiction 0 (0%) 15 (7%)
Steampunk 0 (0%) 0 (0%)
Theology/ Christian Living 3 (10%) 26 (12%)
Urban Fantasy 6 (20%) 41 (18%)
Western 0 (0%) 0 (0%)

Review-ish Things Posted

Other Things I Wroteotherwriting
Other than the Saturday Miscellanies (4th, 11th, 18th, and 25th), I also wrote:

How was your month?

August 2021 in Retrospect: What I Read/Listened to/Wrote About

So I finished 30 books for the month, with a total of 9,998 pages (or the equivalent)–although 598 pages of that belongs to a book I’ve been chipping away at since January, so that number is arguable. Either way, those are some decent numbers. A 3.65 average rating is nothing to sneeze at. As usual, I’m less than impressed with the writing output but I like the variety–let’s call that a win.

Eh enough of that…here’s what happened here in August.
Books Read

Why I Still Believe Solomon vs. Lord Paper & Blood
2 Stars 4 1/2 Stars 4 Stars
The Ninja’s Blade Black Arts Twice Cursed
4 Stars 4 Stars 3.5 Stars
A Reason to Live Faith Among the Faithless The Wonderful Works of God
3 Stars 3.5 Stars 5 Stars
A Beginner's Guide to Free Fall The Dead House Moses and the Burning Bush
3 Stars 3.5 Stars 3.5 Stars
The Deep Blue Alibi The Far Empty Pray for Silence
3.5 Stars 3.5 Stars 3 Stars
Stone's Throw Burned Love
4 Stars 4 1/2 Stars 4 Stars
Kill All the Lawyers The Mermaid's Pool Cold Wind
3 Stars 4 Stars 4 Stars
The Good Byline In a Sunburned Country Fools Gold
3 Stars 2 Stars 4 Stars
Warping Minds & Other Misdemeanors The Dime The Person of Christ: An Introduction
3 Stars 4 Stars 4 Stars
Long Black Curl The Run-Out Groove The Word is Murder
5 Stars 4 Stars 4 Stars

Still Reading

Things Unseen True Dead

Ratings

5 Stars 2 2 1/2 Stars 0
4 1/2 Stars 2 2 Stars 2
4 Stars 12 1 1/2 Stars 0
3.5 Stars 5 1 Star 0
3 Stars 7
Average = 3.65r

TBR Pile
Mt TBR Aug 21

Breakdowns
“Traditionally” Published: 22
Self-/Independent Published: 8

Genre This Month Year to Date
Children’s 0 (0%) 2 (1%)
Fantasy 2 (7%) 16 (8%)
General Fiction/ Literature 2 (7%) 10 (5%)
Horror 0 (0%) 0 (0%)
Humor 0 (0%) 2 (4%)
Mystery/ Suspense/ Thriller 16 (53%) 75 (39%)
Non-Fiction 1 (3%) 11 (6%)
Science Fiction 0 (0%) 15 (8%)
Steampunk 0 (0%) 0 (0%)
Theology/ Christian Living 5 (17%) 23 (12%)
Urban Fantasy 4 (13%) 35 (18%)
Western 0 (0%) 0 (0%)

Review-ish Things Posted

Other Things I Wroteotherwriting
Other than the Saturday Miscellanies (7th, 14th, 21st, and 28th), I also wrote:

How was your month?

July 2021 in Retrospect: What I Read/Listened to/Wrote About

“Only” 24 books this month—I got off to a strong start, and then I started a period of readjustment thanks to returning to the office. I’m not sure I’ve got my feet under me when it comes to reading/listening to audiobooks yet. That’s 6,412 pages (or audio-equivalent), plus I’m guessing another 350 or so—there was one audio short story and one to-be-published novel that I can’t find page counts for. Which is not terribly shabby when I think of it in those terms. My average rating was 3.9, a tenth of a point higher than most months this year (4 tenths higher than my worst), so that fits.

Part of what use these posts to do is spur myself to action on various fronts—or that’s the intent, anyway. Am rethinking the Mt. TBR portion of these posts, because it’s sure not working too well.

Enough monologuing, I’m not a supervillain about to leave the hero to die in an (doomed) elaborate contraption—here’s what happened here in July.

Books Read

Blood Trade Foundations of Covenant Theology In Plain Sight
4 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars
Small Bytes Sir Thomas the Hesitant and the Table of Less Valued Knights A Bad Day for Sunshine
3 Stars 3 Stars 4 1/2 Stars
An Accidental Death Know Your Rites Off the Grid
4 Stars 3.5 Stars 3 Stars
The Attributes of God Tales from the Folly A Good Day for Chardonnay
4 Stars 4 Stars 4 1/2 Stars
August Snow Finding Hope in Hard Things Veiled
5 Stars 3.5 Stars 4 Stars
Dead Man’s Grave The Drifter The Heathens
4 Stars 4 1/2 Stars 4 Stars
Church History 101: The Highlights of Twenty Centuries Lessons from the Upper Room In 10 Years
3 Stars 3.5 Stars 5 Stars
Wisp of a Thing The Magnificent Nine All
5 Stars 3.5 Stars 4 Stars

Still Reading

The Wonderful Works of God Things Unseen Solomon vs. Lord
Paper & Blood

Ratings

5 Stars 3 2 1/2 Stars 0
4 1/2 Stars 3 2 Stars 0
4 Stars 9 1 1/2 Stars 0
3.5 Stars 4 1 Star 0
3 Stars 5
Average = 3.9

TBR Pile
I’m strongly considering renaming this to Tsundoku (積ん読), so I can celebrate the size of some of these bars rather than shaking my head at myself…What do you think?
Mt TBR January 20

Breakdowns
“Traditionally” Published: 16
Self-/Independent Published: 8

Genre This Month Year to Date
Children’s 1 (5%) 2 (1%)
Fantasy 3 (16%) 14 (9%)
General Fiction/ Literature 3 (16%) 8 (5%)
Horror 0 (0%) 0 (0%)
Humor 0 (0%) 2 (4%)
Mystery/ Suspense/ Thriller 6 (32%) 59 (36%)
Non-Fiction 1 (5%) 10 (6%)
Science Fiction 0 (0%) 15 (9%)
Steampunk 0 (0%) 0 (0%)
Theology/ Christian Living 0 (0%) 18 (11%)
Urban Fantasy 4 (21%) 31 (19%)
Western 0 (0%) 0 (0%)

Review-ish Things Posted

Other Things I Wroteotherwriting
Other than the Saturday Miscellanies (3rd, 10th, 17th, 24th, and 31st), I also wrote (okay, mostly compiled):

That was my month…how was yours?

June 2021 in Retrospect: What I Read/Listened to/Wrote About

I don’t think I’ve ever been this delayed at assembling and posting one of these since I started, but it’s been that kind of week. It looks like June was a pretty good month overall. I finished 26 books, 8,102 (or the equivalent) pages, with an average rating of 3.8. Nothing to complain about there, is there?

Compiling this was a strange experience—a combination of “I read that in June? It feels longer ago” and “How have I not written about that yet?” (a couple of times about the same book). My “to write about” list is getting truly terrifying, and I need to address that somehow. But that’s my issue. I think September is going to be all door-stopper novels just to give me the opportunity to catch up (I’d do it in July, but…well, I’ve got that 20 Books Challenge).

The other thing that jumped out at me this morning was that my charting of the books I buy and haven’t read hasn’t really helped the problem a whole lot—I’d figured seeing that chart once a month would be a push I need. Looking at my plans for the month, I think July’s should be interesting, though.

This introduction has gone on longer than it should have, so on with the show—here’s what happened here in June.
Books Read

Runaway Train Lycanthropy and Other Chronic Illnesses Raven Cursed
4 Stars 3.5 Stars 3 Stars
On God and Christ Million Dollar Demon Nowhere to Run
5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars
Creature Feature The Penny Black The Hum and The Shiver
4 Stars 3 Stars 4 Stars
Meat is Murder Ink & Sigil A Good Kill
4 Stars 4 1/2 Stars 4 Stars
The Mostly Invisible Boy The Keepers 99 Poems to Cure Whatever's Wrong with You or Create The Problems You Need
3 Stars 4 1/2 Stars 3.5 Stars
Death in Adam, Life in Christ Scarface and the Untouchable Till Morning is Nigh
4 Stars 3 Stars 4 Stars
Dead Ground Hidden Dog Eat Dog
5 Stars 4 Stars 4 Stars
Death's Rival Tender is the Bite Dad is Fat
4 Stars 4 Stars 4 Stars
OCDaniel The Watchman
3.5 Stars 4 Stars

Still Reading

The Wonderful Works of God Things Unseen In Plain Sight

Ratings

5 Stars 2 2 1/2 Stars 0
4 1/2 Stars 2 2 Stars 0
4 Stars 14 (!!) 1 1/2 Stars 0
3.5 Stars 3 1 Star 0
3 Stars 5
Average = 3.86

TBR Pile
Mt TBR June 21

Breakdowns
“Traditionally” Published: 19
Self-/Independent Published: 7

Genre This Month Year to Date
Children’s 0 (0%) 1 (2%)
Fantasy 2 (8%) 12 (9%)
General Fiction/ Literature 3 (12%) 4 (6%)
Horror 0 (0%) 0 (0%)
Humor 1 (4%) 4 (3%)
Mystery/ Suspense/ Thriller 8 (10%) 51 (37%)
Non-Fiction 1 (4%) 10 (7%)
Science Fiction 1 (4%) 14 (10%)
Steampunk 0 (0%) 0 (0%)
Theology/ Christian Living 2 (8%) 13 (9%)
Urban Fantasy 6 (23%) 25 (18%)
Western 0 (0%) 0 (0%)

Review-ish Things Posted

Other Things I Wroteotherwriting
Other than the Saturday Miscellanies (for the 5th, 12th, 19th, and 26th), I also wrote:

That’s my June in a nutshell—how was your month?

May 2021 in Retrospect: What I Read/Listened to/Wrote About

May 2021 saw me complete 22 books for 6,238+ pages or the equivalent (I don’t have a page count on one of the unpublished books yet, and there as a DNF in there, too, so that’s where the + comes in). Not my strongest month, but given things going on in Real Life, I’m pleased with that. 3.5 Average Stars—read a couple of let-downs, and a decent number of books that were good, but not great. Which is fine with me, viva le 3 Stars! (and a couple of things blew me away, too—not going to complain about that!)

I posted something every single day in May—a feat I haven’t accomplished in years. Sure, some of the posts were a little on the lame side, but I still feel like I accomplished something there. Not a solid month, but it could’ve been worse, I’m satisfied.

So, here’s what happened here in May.

Books Read

Goodbye to the Sun Taken The Miracle Pill
2 1/2 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars
Red Widow Mercy Blade The Tales of Beedle the Bard
2 1/2 Stars 4 Stars 2 Stars
A Wanted Man Time and Tide The Writer's Library
3 Stars 4 Stars DNF
A Tale of Wonderful Whiffs Moonlighting: An Oral History R. C. Sproul A Life
3 Stars 4 1/2 Stars 3 Stars
A Man With One of Those Faces Not Awkward All Creatures Great and Small
3 Stars 4 1/2 Stars 3 Stars
The Jigsaw Man The Data Detective Three Mages and a Margarita
4 1/2 Stars 3 Stars 3 Stars
Morte Point Blank SpaceChosen The Bounty
3 Stars 4 1/2 Stars 3 Stars
The Authorities I Will Judge You
3 Stars 3 Stars

Still Reading

The Wonderful Works of God Things Unseen On God and Christ
Death in Adam, Life in Christ Runaway Train

Ratings

5 Stars 3 2 1/2 Stars 2
4 1/2 Stars 1 2 Stars 1
4 Stars 3 1 1/2 Stars 0
3.5 Stars 5 1 Star 0
3 Stars 7
Average = 3.5

TBR Pile
Mt TBR May 2021
Incremental decrease! I’ll take it 🙂

Breakdowns
“Traditionally” Published: 13
Self-/Independent Published: 9

Genre This Month Year to Date
Children’s 1 (5%) 2 (2%)
Fantasy 1 (5%) 10 (9%)
General Fiction/ Literature 1 (5%) 3 (3%)
Horror 0 (0%) 0 (0%)
Humor 1 (5%) 3 (3%)
Mystery/ Suspense/ Thriller 8 (36%) 41 (37%)
Non-Fiction 4 (18%) 9 (8%)
Science Fiction 1 (5%) 13 (10%)
Steampunk 0 (0%) 0 (0%)
Theology/ Christian Living 1 (5%) 11 (10%)
Urban Fantasy 4 (21%) 19 (17%)
Western 0 (0%) 0 (0%)

Review-ish Things Posted

Other Things I Wroteotherwriting
Other than the Saturday Miscellanies (1st, 8th, 15th, 22nd, and 29th), I also wrote:

How was your month?

How Has Book Blogging Changed the Way I Read? (Blogiversary ruminations)

I started this thing on May 29, 2013, with no real idea of what I was doing—or getting myself into. At this point, I’m still not sure what I’m doing. But, I’m apparently doing it for a while.

A few months ago, one of the blogger prompt/meme things asked “How has book blogging changed the way you read?” As per my norm, I over-thought it and didn’t get around to writing anything for that particular day/week’s prompt. But that question has lingered in the back of my mind. So here are some thoughts about it—I’d have preferred to polish this some more. But I’m pretty sure if I polished/reworked this to the extend I want, there’s no way it’d go up today. It might be ready for my 9th Blogiversary (almost certainly my 10th).

How Has Book Blogging Changed the Way I Read?

I think about what I’m going to read more

I decide to read a book largely by whim (or I picked a book in a series or by an author months/years/decades ago by whim and have to keep going), but the question of when is given thought. But it’s kind of the same thing—did I just read something in a similar genre? Do I have time due to library due dates, blog tour, publication date?

Pros: Thinking about reading is almost as good as actually reading, and I generally enjoy the thinking.
Cons: I feel a little silly when I think about how much effort I put into this. Also, I can slip into spending too much time on this to the neglect of other things—like a youtube hole. I’m not talking about hours or anything. But I can spend a ridiculous amount of time on it. Deciding what to put for the “What are You Going to Read Next” part of a WWW Wednesday post can easily take 3-5x longer than assembling the post itself.

I’m better informed about selecting what I read

I almost never go into a book blind anymore—I know something about the book, the author, or the publisher. Someone—not an algorithm—has done something to bring it to my attention.

Pros:  Forewarned is forearmed, right?
Cons: Even before the pandemic eliminated this possibility, it’s been forever since I just browsed my library’s New Release shelf (or any other shelf) just to see if something caught my eye. I’ve stumbled onto real gems that way.

I think about what I read more

The origin story of this blog focuses on this point. I used to just read constantly, one book from the next, and would barely give what I read any thought. Just put one book down and pick up the next. It bugged me, but I couldn’t do much about it. My family would only put up with so much book talk from me—my eldest was a young teen when I started this and my youngest was in early elementary school, just not the right ages to talk about most of what I read, and my wife did/does listen to me prattle on, but even her eyes glaze over at a point. So writing about every (or almost every) book I read helped me stop, think about, consider, evaluate, and spend more time in each book.

I should note that there are now four people in “Real Life” I can chat with about books—which is nice. Thanks, Paul, Nicole, Tony, and Adrianne.

Pros: I stopped feeling like I was short-changing myself and the effort the authors put into what I read. Sure, I’d think about what I read a little, but not much—at least not enough to satisfy myself. I know I’m getting a lot more out of what I read.

I read more widely

Sure, if you look at my genre breakdowns, it may not look like it. But from my point of view, I’m reading a greater variety of things than I think I would’ve. For example, I can’t imagine I’d have heard of, much less purchased from, 95% of the indie presses/authors I follow now. That goes for a lot of non-indie authors, too. This goes along with the being better informed—I’m reading other readers’ blogs/tweets and whatnot, and people I’ve never heard of are asking me to read their stuff (I’m still getting used to this idea, and that’s been happening for 7 years). Sub-genres, perspectives, settings, you name it—there’s a greater variety to my menu. (even bigger if I throw in the “I should get into that one day” list)

I re-read less

I have a hard time spending time with a book unless I can think of something to do with it for the blog. Which means fewer re-reads. No one wants to read bi-annual posts about Some Buried Caesar by Rex Stout—and I probably can’t find things to say about it every few months.

Pros: I’m sure there are some.
Cons: I miss re-reading. I’d do it because I love the world, the characters, the author, whatever. And I like revisiting them. I like getting to know them better, understanding more, finding details I’d missed and/or forgotten. It used to be when I got sick, I’d grab a random Nero Wolfe book for some comfort to go along with the chicken soup, but I haven’t done that in, well at least 6 years (hmmm, that’s 2 Wolfe references on this point, I think my subconscious is trying to tell me something).

The best part

When I actually get to the reading. When I get the couple of minutes-a few hours to read, all of the above stops mattering. I don’t think about blogging, I don’t think about my reading schedule, or any of the other paraphernalia. I’m just lost in a book, I’m really no different than the seven-year-old kid on his first out-of-state road trip with his parents who didn’t realize how mind-numbingly dull riding in a car would be so didn’t bring anything to read. He ended up complaining so much that his parents stopped, bought a couple of books at a grocery store, and shut him up for the next week or so as he read the two books—Encyclopedia Brown: Boy Detective and Sugar Creek Gang: Screams in the Night*—multiple times, perfectly content to be lost in the worlds created by Donald J. Sobol and Paul Hutchens**, while his family was having fun in this one***.

At the end of the day, that’s what counts, right?

* More than four decades later I still have both of those books.
** Mysteries and a thriller. Pretty easy to see the effect of that on me, isn’t it?
*** Make no mistake, when we got to Disneyland, Universal Studios, etc.—I put the books down and had fun. Even I’m not that strange.

Towel Day ’21: Do You Know Where Your Towel Is?

(actually updated and slightly revised this 5/25/20!)

The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy has a few things to say on the subject of towels.

A towel, it says, is about the most massively useful thing an interstellar hitchhiker can have. Partly it has great practical value. You can wrap it around you for warmth as you bound across the cold moons of Jaglan Beta; you can lie on it on the brilliant marble-sanded beaches of Santraginus V, inhaling the heady sea vapors; you can sleep under it beneath the stars which shine so redly on the desert world of Kakrafoon; use it to sail a miniraft down the slow heavy River Moth; wet it for use in hand-to-hand-combat; wrap it round your head to ward off noxious fumes or avoid the gaze of the Ravenous Bugblatter Beast of Traal (such a mind-bogglingly stupid animal, it assumes that if you can’t see it, it can’t see you); you can wave your towel in emergencies as a distress signal, and of course dry yourself off with it if it still seems to be clean enough.

More importantly, a towel has immense psychological value. For some reason, if a strag (strag: non-hitch hiker) discovers that a hitch hiker has his towel with him, he will automatically assume that he is also in possession of a toothbrush, face flannel, soap, tin of biscuits, flask, compass, map, ball of string, gnat spray, wet weather gear, space suit etc., etc. Furthermore, the strag will then happily lend the hitch hiker any of these or a dozen other items that the hitch hiker might accidentally have “lost”. What the strag will think is that any man who can hitch the length and breadth of the galaxy, rough it, slum it, struggle against terrible odds, win through, and still knows where his towel is is clearly a man to be reckoned with.

Hence a phrase that has passed into hitchhiking slang, as in “Hey, you sass that hoopy Ford Prefect? There’s a frood who really knows where his towel is.” (Sass: know, be aware of, meet, have sex with; hoopy: really together guy; frood: really amazingly together guy.)

Towel Day, for the few of who don’t know, is the annual celebration of Douglas Adams’ life and work. It was first held two weeks after his death, fans were to carry a towel with them for the day to use as a talking point to encourage those who have never read HHGTTG to do so, or to just converse with someone about Adams. Adams is one of that handful of authors that I can’t imagine I’d be the same without having encountered/read/re-read/re-re-re-re-read, and so I do my best to pay a little tribute to him each year, even if it’s just carrying around a towel.

Some time in 7th or 8th grade (I believe), I was at a friend’s house—his brother let us try his copy of the text-based Hitchhiker’s Guide game, and we were no good at it at all. His brother had a copy of the novel, however, and we all figured that the novel held the keys we needed for success with the game (it did not). It was decided that I’d be the one to read the book and come back in a few days as an expert. Adams’ irreverent style rocked my world—could people actually get away with saying some of these things? His skewed take on the world, his style, his humor…and a depressed robot, too! It was love at first read. One of those experiences that, looking back, I can say shaped my reading and thinking for the rest of my life (make of that what you will). If carrying around a (massively useful) piece of cloth for a day honors his memory? Sure, I’m in.

One of my long-delayed goals is to write up a good all-purpose Tribute to Douglas Adams post, and another Towel Day has come without me doing so. Belgium.

Next year . . . or later. (he says for at least the 7th straight year, a work ethic I like to believe Adams would recognize).

In the meantime, here’s some of what I’ve written about Adams. A couple of years back, I did a re-read of all of Adams’ (completed) fiction. For reasons beyond my ken (or recollection), I didn’t get around to blogging about the Dirk Gently books, but I did do the Hitchhiker’s Trilogy:
bullet The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
bullet The Restaurant at the End of the Universe
bullet Life, The Universe and Everything
bullet So Long, and Thanks For All The Fish
bullet Mostly Harmless
bullet I had a thing or two to say about the 40th Anniversary of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
bullet (this link will go live later in the morning of 5/25/21) I took a look at the 42nd Anniversary Illustrated Edition of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
Also, I should mention the one book Adams/Hitchhiker’s aficionado needs to read is Don’t Panic by Neil Gaiman, David K. Dickson and MJ Simpson. If you’re more in the mood for a podcast, I’d suggest The Waterstones Podcast How We Made: The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy—I’ve listened to several podcast episodes about this book, and generally roll my eyes at them. But this is just fantastic. Were it available, I’d listen to a Peter Jackson-length version of the episode.

I’ve only been able to get one of my sons into Adams, he’s the taller, thinner one in the picture from a few years ago.

TowelDay.org is the best collection of resources on the day, recently posted this pretty cool video, shot on the ISS by astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti.

Even better—here’s an appearance by Douglas Adams himself from the old Letterman show—so glad someone preserved this:

Love the anecdote (Also, I want this tie.)

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