Tag: Saturday Miscellany Page 12 of 54

Saturday Miscellany—9/24/22

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet EveryLibrary Poll Finds Book Bans Are Broadly Unpopular With Voters
bullet The Enduring Allure of Choose Your Own Adventure Books—a tribute to and look at the origin of the series
bullet S. A. Cosby: Interview and Cover Reveal—a nice (but quick) interview with Cosby and a look at the fantastic cover of his upcoming book.
bullet How to Get Books For Free – Legally—a quick, but potentially valuable, list
bullet Misconceptions People May Have About Book Blogging
bullet CANON: It’s Not What You Think It Is—quibbles with some of the details in the first paragraph of “Definitions” aside, I appreciated these thoughts on Canon in SF. (Hat Tip to Peat Long for this one)

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet The Bullet That Missed by Richard Osman—It’s the third Thursday Murder Club book, I really don’t think more needs to be said.
bullet Wealth Management by Edward Zuckerman—Financial shenanigans, international crime, and terrorism mix in this thriller. I talked a bit about it.

Lastly, I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome to ominousthespirit, who followed the blog this week. I hope you enjoy the content and keep coming back.
Mencken's definition of bibliobibuli

Saturday Miscellany—9/17/22

How does being a parent of adult children take so much time? I’m not complaining about (actually enjoyed and would welcome more of) the interruptions they brought this week, but I had pages to read and posts to write, fer cryin’ out loud! It was far easier to claim my own time and send them to bed when bed wasn’t in a differnt building 7 miles away.

Still, I did manage to get a bit done, and even find a few things for this collection. Hope you enjoy.

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet Was It Ever Possible For One Person To Read Every Book Ever Written (in English)?—Randal Munroe tackles this ever-so pressing (or not) question
bullet You Can Procrastinate Anything If You Have Enough Books—Well, yeah…
bullet The Books That Made Me – The First Law by John Palladino—another fun installment of this series from Before We Go Blog (although it could use a quick fact check in the first paragraph).
bullet An Ode to Reading—a nice (and fairly relatable) memoir of a reader/introduction to a blog
bullet Have You Ever Suffered from Book Blogger Imposter Syndrome?
bullet The Best Way to Track Your Reading: 18 Bullet Journal Spread Ideas for Readers—I’ve tried Bullet Journaling a couple of times over the last few years, and it really seems like a good idea and I wish I could stick to it. Although I seem to enjoy reading about it more than actually doing it.
bullet Some Research to Ponder about Book Piracy—some good stuff on this regrettably evergreen topic

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon (after last weeks handful, only finding one this week makes me think I missed several—fill me in!):
bullet A Death in Door County by Annelise Ryan—a bookstore owner/cryptozoologist looks into a series of deaths that might indicate there’s an actual lake monster living nearby.

Definition of Bibliotaph

Saturday Miscellany—9/10/22

This is the 4,010th post to this blog—the ol’ odometer rolled over on 4,000 on Monday. I wasn’t prepared for that, and probably should’ve done something to commemorate it. I’ll have to try to remember to do something big for number 5,000 in 2025(??).

This was a rough week on the reading front—3 books I’d planned on reading on Release Day* came out (ignoring that 2 of them came out the same day), but I’m so behind on Review Copies that I’d also planned on prioritizing them. And then I literally grabbed the wrong book off the pile Thursday and didn’t realize it until I was 100 pages in. I’m glad I’m not getting paid for this stuff, because I’m such a disorganized mess right now.

Super-short list this week, but there’s hopefully something you’ll enjoy reading.

* Nothing against the fourth, I just needed a little break from that series after reading the initial trilogy this summer.

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet In 2022, a New Urgency for Banned Books Week
bullet Library 101: Everything You Need to Know to Utilize Your Library—not sure any of this is news to anyone, but…who knows, you might pick up something new here
bullet Classic literature, rewritten for kids.
bullet Subtlety, Ideological Novels, and Me
bullet If you didn’t like this, try that…—This is a fun take on the tried-and-true method of recommendation (their more traditional list wasn’t bad either)
bullet How Do You Choose Your Next Read? (& 100 Reading Prompts!)—this post feels like it should forever eliminate take care of the “what do I read next question” (maybe I spent too much time going through the 100 prompts)

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet Final Heir by Faith Hunter—The final book in the Jane Yellowrock hit the stands this week (although, how much actually stays dead in Jane’s world?). I went on and on about it a couple of weeks ago.
bullet Robert B. Parker’s Fallout by Mike Lupica—Lupica’s third Jesse Stone novel shakes Paradise from a couple of directions. I had a good time with this and should have a few things to say about it next week.
bullet Hell and Back by Craig Johnson—This looks like it picks up a dangling string from the last book and gives it a good yank. Looking forward to diving in ASAP.
bullet The Night Watch by Neil Lancaster—a vigilante killer on the team investigating murders. DS Max Craigie has his work cut out for him.
bullet A Grimm Sacrifice by Jeffrey H. Haskell—Grimm has to contend with training new officers while helping an unlikely ally against a common foe in a Cold War that isn’t that chilly anymore.
Problems of a Book Nerd 952

Saturday Miscellany—9/3/22

It was 20 years ago today that I started blogging—not this one, I’ve been involved in five blogs before I gave up trying to do other things before just embracing my particular brand of nerd and did this. It’s a little odd thinking that I’ve been practicing this particular hobby that long.

This is the second week in a row where I’ve felt like I was running on fumes, and barely got anything posts together (and I didn’t find a lot for this post, either—but that’s likely a function of this being the end of the month). I’m very glad this is a 3-Day Weekend, I need some time to regenerate.

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet Forgotten treasures: the stranger things people leave in library books—Over the years, I’ve linked to a handful of pieces about odd things found in library books, but a library making an exhibit out of them? It’s almost enough to make me want to travel…
bullet Who is the real “Queen of Crime”? Agatha Christie’s estate sends a stern letter to Val McDermid.—This is stupid. I’m willing to bet McDermid didn’t tag her self with this title, in the first place. In the second place…never mind—it’s not worth me duplicating what LitHub said.
bullet The Psychology of Fandom—Jennifer Lynn Barnes talks about writing a series while thinking about what will inspire fandom.
bullet 5 Ways To Drop Book Recommendations Into A Conversation—there are strategies for this? Huh. I just open my mouth and it happens.
bullet The thing about ‘must read’ lists
bullet 10 (Not So) Easy Steps to Cure A Book Hangover—I think this is my favorite of the Book Hangover posts I’ve linked to over the years.
bullet 5 Tried and Tested Ways to Get Yourself Out of A Reading Slump!
bullet 5 Fantasy or Science Fiction Books With a Character Named Bob—I’m sure there’s a reason for this post and probably a good story to go with it. But I (almost) don’t want to know it, I really like the apparent randomness of the topic.

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet Be the Serpent by Seanan McGuire—The last book in the series was all about joy. Now it’s time for the reader to pay for that. Personal/work life has prevented me from finishing it this week—and I both resent it and am a little glad, I think it’s going to rip my heart out (okay…it broke my heart before page 60, I think it’s going to get worse).
bullet Amari and the Great Game by B.B. Alston—The sequel to Amari and the Night Brothers. No need to know more than that, is there?
bullet The Final Gambit by Jennifer Lynn Barnes—The third book in the Inheritance Games trilogy promises several reveals, a conclusion or two, and an interesting puzzle or two along the way.
bullet The Ink Black Heart by Robert Galbraith—this sixth installment in the series is longer than complete trilogies I’ve read. Cormoran and Robin are on the hunt for the killer of someone whose life parallels a certain children’s author. I honestly don’t know when I’ll muster the endurance to get through this thing. But I am curious.

Lastly, I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome to Ann, who followed the blog this week. I hope you enjoy the content and keep coming back.

Saturday Miscellany—8/27/22

I’ve got a hort list this week—it must be near the end of the month.

I’ve had three nights this week where I’ve shrugged off my plans (including writing) and just read—it hurt the blogging, but it was good for the reader. Hopefully, I get back on track next week.

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet Game of Thrones effect fires up reissues of ‘lost’ fantasy fiction classics: With big-budget TV series about to hit streaming services, publishers hope a string of cult novels will find a new audience
bullet The Organization of Your Bookshelves Tells Its Own Story
bullet How to read the longest classic books—Strategies/tips for tackling those big, intimidating classics
bullet Almost Two Centuries of Impossible Crimes: Locked Rooms in Detective Fiction—Another good piece from CrimeReads on Locked-Room Mysteries
bullet Finally, we have a Confess, Fletch Trailer—I’m mildly apprehensive, but I’m in.
bullet The 50 Best Fictional Dragons, Ranked: Thousands of Years of Dragon Lore, from the Rig Veda to Beowulf to the Hobbit—As with every list like this, there are omissions, odd inclusions, and dubious ranking. Still a good list.

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet Hell of a Mess by Nick Kolakowski—The fourth Love & Bullets installment—and this time, it’s full novel. This heist-in-a-hurricane is a wild ride, and nothing but fun. As I said (less succinctly) recently.
bullet Soul Taken by Patricia Briggs—Wulfe is missing, and for some reason, Mercy has to find him rather than celebrate his disappearance.
bullet The Marauders, the Daughter, and the Dragon by K.R.R. Lockhaven—A sweet and humorous Fantasy about Pirates (who aren’t really Pirates), a Father and Daughter relationship on the rocks, a dragon, and what happens when you throw all of them in the way of a power-hungry politician. (I should have a link to a full post from me on it, but I haven’t finished it yet)

Lastly, I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome to Zsolt Zsemba, who followed the blog this week. I hope you enjoy the content and keep coming back.

Saturday Miscellany—8/20/22

There are a lot of good book recommendations in the posts/articles/essays below, but none are hot off the presses this week. This likely means I missed a few things, feel free to enlighten me.

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet ‘Books bring us into being’: how writing about reading became an inspiring literary genre of its own—A nice little piece on bibliomemoirs
bullet Interview with Author Wesley Chu—Beth Tabler talks to Wesley Chu about his new book and a few other things. Not that anyone asked, but I’m 150 pages or so into the new one and it’s likely ending up in my top 5 for the year…
bullet What’s Your Process?—I was pointed to this chat with various authors about their process because of the Reed Farrel Coleman segment (which was great), but the whole thing is fascinating. I love reading these kind of things.
bullet What’s In a Name? For crime fiction writers, few questions are more important.—a piece on naming characters two weeks in a row? Apparently.
bullet Five Essential Lad Lit Novels—If I’d compiled a list with that title, it’d look eerily similar to this one (I’d probably have used a different Tropper novel). Been too long since I’ve re-read these…
bullet The 50 Greatest Fictional Deaths of All Time—This list from Slate does involve several non-bookish deaths, but there’s enough literary content here that I don’t feel like it’s cheating to include it.
bullet Sometimes, Only the Most Heart-Crushing Book Will Do
bullet Why I Love To Read… Middle Grade
bullet Do you really have to pay for books?—It’s beyond tragic that this is a question that has to be answered (and that so many disagree)
bullet Why Men Avoid Fantasy Books By Women: Personal Thoughts and Theories—this is a thing I’ve never understood, but maybe I’m closer to it now Peat’s got some good things to say about it.
bullet Alternatives to Goodreads: BookSloth—another good look at a Goodreads alternative
bullet Where do you review?—wowzers…this is an impressive list. I feel tired just thinking of the labor involved.

Saturday Miscellany—8/13/22

It’s Left Hander’s Day and I should have a list of characters to mention here, but I can only think of Kvothe and Arya Stark when it comes to fiction. Anyone out there know of any notable sinistral characters? There has to be a bunch of them…

I don’t have a long list today, apparently I wasn’t the only one not feeling incredibly creative this week. (or with time on our hands). More time for our Weekend Reads, right?

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet Where Are Mass Market Paperbacks Headed?
bullet The Fine Art of Naming Characters in Crime Fiction
bullet Anne Rice and the making of a modern vampire
bullet The Five Great Novels of Dashiell Hammett—for years I’ve told myself I need to read Hammett…this might have pushed me over the edge.
bullet NetGalley’s blog, We Are Bookish, had a couple of handy posts this week:
bullet NetGalley’s Guide to Who to Tag in Book Reviews
bullet Tips for Battling Reviewer Writer’s Block
bullet The Books that Made Me – The Once and Future King by T.H. White—Inexplicably, I’ve never been able to finish this book, I need to give it another shot.
bullet Different Ways To Categorise Fantasy—another helpful post from Peat Long
bullet Reading & Book Collecting
bullet 10 Years, 10 Favorite Books—Great idea for a post, but I have no idea how Caitlin was able to limit it to just one book for each year without at least one tie. (then again, I do, what 5 or 6 best of lists each year, I clearly have trouble limiting myself)
bullet How Reviewing Changed the Way I Read?

A Book-ish Related Podcast episode (or two) you might want to give a listen to:
bullet The Thriller Zone Episode 83: Eli Cranor, author of Don’t Know Tough—Cranor sounds and talks just like you’d expect, this was a great chat.

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet Bark to the Future by Spencer Quinn—Chet and Bernie are back for novel #13, and it’s a doozy. Bernie tries to help an old high school teammate and gets into a lot of trouble. I blogged about it couple of weeks ago
bullet The Art of Prophecy by Wesley Chu—What do you do when the prophecy about the Chosen One who will save the country is wrong? Taishi, the greatest war artist of her generation, decides to mold the object of the prophecy into who the kingdom needs him to be.
bullet The Deal Goes Down by Larry Beinhart—a retired PI is hired as a hitman and ends up working to save women from abusive marriages—and make money at the same time. (that’s a lousy job of summarizing the description, but without reading the book, it’s as good as I’m going to get…click the link)

Lastly, I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome to tinareadsallthebooks who followed the blog this week. I hope you enjoy the content and keep coming back.
Late Night Reading

Saturday Miscellany—8/6/22

Programming Note: If I seemed quieter than usual this week, it’s because I’ve pretty much caught up on my backlog of posts and read a couple of things I need to delay writing about. Whoops. I’ve got some extra-curricular things going on next week that will interfere with both blogging and reading, too. I’ve prepped a couple of things so things won’t go silent here, but it still feels to me like I’m taking a break.

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet How to fall back in love with reading. Even when your brain feels like mush.
bullet Publishing is eating itself…(again)—this week’s newsletter from Fahrenheit Press (in addition to trying to sell some great books/merch) offers a great perspective/recap on the state of publishing/book buying.
bullet Bookish Hunger Games!—is a great idea and post from The Orangutan Librarian. My inability to come up with something half as inventive as this haunts me.
bullet Dragonlance Reading Order 2022—Witty & Sarcastic Book Blog gives us a recommended reading order for The Dragonlance books. The first six of these were so formative to me that it does my heart good to see all the interest in this series today.
bullet More Author Influences: Founders of Urban Fantasy—Peat Long looks at the roots of Urban Fantasy
bullet Critical Reading as a Book Blogger & How It’s Fun
bullet On Writing Negative Book Reviews—the conclusion is the kicker here. I’ve found similar things.
bullet Did you know you could get book blogger’s block?—I don’t know why I never put this label on the experience that I’m all-too-familiar with.
bullet Why I Think Reading and Blogging Slumps Can Be Beneficial
bullet Is Readerly a Good Alternative to Goodreads?—Word Wilderness follows up their Goodreads and StoryGraph comparison with a look at Readerly

A Book-ish Related Podcast episode (or two) you might want to give a listen to:
bullet The Thriller Zone Episode 81: Fabian Nicieza, author of The Self-Made Widow—this was a fun interview
bullet WTF Episode 1353: Neil Gaiman—books, comics, TV, and more. Great convo.

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet The Suitcase Clone by Robin Sloan—a Sourdough prequel novella that ties it into the Penumbra universe? Sure, why not?
bullet The Devil Takes You Home by Gabino Iglesias—Am seeing a lot of people talking about this one: “Buried in debt due to his young daughter’s illness, his marriage at the brink, Mario reluctantly takes a job as a hitman, surprising himself with his proclivity for violence. After tragedy destroys the life he knew, Mario agrees to one final job: hijack a cartel’s cash shipment before it reaches Mexico. Along with an old friend and a cartel-insider named Juanca, Mario sets off on the near-suicidal mission, which will leave him with either a cool $200,000 or a bullet in the skull. But the path to reward or ruin is never as straight as it seems. As the three complicated men travel through the endless landscape of Texas, across the border and back, their hidden motivations are laid bare alongside nightmarish encounters that defy explanation. One thing is certain: even if Mario makes it out alive, he won’t return the same.”
bullet Shutter by Ramona Emerson—The premise for this–a forensic photographer gets helps from the ghosts at crime scenes to take photos that reveal clues could be the setup for a lighter UF series, but Emerson seems to have gone for a gritty suspense direction instead. Looks good.
bullet The Prince of Infinite Space by Giano Cromley—an early 90s coming-of-age story. I had a little to say about it a couple of weeks ago.

Lastly, I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome to nokbew and Jen Porter, Author who followed the blog this week. I hope you enjoy the content and keep coming back.

Saturday Miscellany—7/30/22

I’m going to start this week with a shout-out to Bookstooge for a comment he made to last week’s post (unpublished, because it doesn’t need to be broadcast)–it led to me to me making a tweak to this template that I’ve been meaning to get to for years, and typically did on a weekly basis. I hear ya, man–I appreciate the constructive criticism, and am working on it. Readers, if you haven’t checked out Bookstooge’s Reviews on the Road, you should.

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet Book Bans? My School Doesn’t Even Have a Library: How underfunding is its own form of censorship—I do wonder about some of the points here, but the overall argument is something we all need to wrestle with as we talk about what books belong in schools.
bullet Where do library books go to die?
bullet How Do Algorithms Help (and Hinder) Book Sales?—Yeah, this is more for the writer/seller than the reader—but I’m always interested in how the sausage is made.
bullet Speaking of that, this week the Libro.fm blog posted Have you ever wondered how audiobooks get made?
bullet Shop Talk: Dwyer Murphy on Writing Routines, Superstitions, and Reading Elmore Leonard Like a Bible
bullet Why none of my books are available on Audible
bullet The Kickstarter for Anatomy of Dinosaurs launched this week. It promises to be absolutely worth it (as are the two previous books in the Anatomy of series). If nothing else, it’s got the best Kickstarter video I’ve seen.
bullet Molly Templeton tries to answer Why Do We Read What We Read?—”I don’t have anything resembling a scientific answer for this, and if there is one, quite honestly I don’t want to know.”
bullet If you’ve looked at this blog at since Monday, you’ve noticed that it’s Self-published Authors Appreciation Week—Be sure to look at the SPAAW ’22 Hub for oodles of great stuff. I’d especially point you to the Before We Go Blog “…To Add to your TBR” posts (not all are currently on the Hub, but will be added soon)
bullet Reading Science-Fiction: An Experiment and Reading Project (Part 1)
bullet On Comfort Reading
bullet The Books That Made Us: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet Spider-Man’s Social Dilemma by Preeti Chhibber—looks to be a fun, MG, Spider-Man novel. And no, this didn’t get added to my list because of the cover. Well, not just because of the cover.
bullet An Honest Living by Dwyer Murphy—”An unwitting private eye gets caught up in a crime of obsession between a reclusive literary superstar and her bookseller husband, paying homage to the noir genre just as smartly as it reinvents it.”

Lastly, I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome to Sonam Tsering and Susan Grossey who followed the blog this week. I hope you enjoy the content and keep coming back.
That moment when: you realize  your happy place doesn't have walls, it has pages

Saturday Miscellany—7/23/22

I’m going to start this week with a hearty Thank You to Peat Long for the shoutout in their Friday Five post yesterday. If you’re not following that blog, now’s the time to fix that.

No New Releases caught my eye this week—so I won’t be trying to add on to your TBR (or mine)—but that likely means I missed something. Anyone want to point something out?

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet Why inappropriate books are the best kind—An Op-Ed from the LA Times.
bullet 14 ways to get out of a reading slump—Some advice from Washington Post readers. A couple of these don’t show up on every reading slump advice piece I’ve seen.
bullet Librarian Alex Brown provided a list of ways non-library people can help your local library
bullet 7 Fiction Books That Change The Way You Think—some good TBR fodder and a great last paragraph.
bullet Author Commentary on the Ending of the Alex Verus Series—Benedict Jacka starts to look back at how he ended the Alex Verus series and a couple of ways he considered ending things.
bullet A Quickie With…. M.W. Craven—a fun Q&A with M. W. Craven
bullet Maps and Mapping in Fantasy by W.P. Wiles—W.P. Wiles dropped by FanFiAddict this week to talk about maps in Fantasy novels in general and his new novel in particular
bullet Coincidentally, Sheldon Comics posted this comic about Fantasy Novels the other day
bullet Book Twitter Will Always Be at War With Itself: To read or not to read? That is the question
bullet The Vampire Chronicles: Experts Weigh in On Literature’s Best Vampires—It looks like a decent list overall (not familiar as I could be with all the entries), but I’m including this solely for the last vampire.
bullet An off-the-cuff comment by Jennings on a correct response on Jeopardy! reignited the debate about Narnia reading order
bullet The Anarchism of the Dresden Files by CT Phipps—Might be the best thing I read this week.
bullet Audiobooks vs Reading Print/Ebooks: Are Audiobooks good for you or what?—The fact this comes from Lovely Audiobooks probably gives away the answer…
bullet Reading and Its Effects on your Emotions
bullet Self-published Authors Appreciation Week 2022—is next week. Be sure to keep your eye on the SPAAW 2022 Hub to read all the good posts. I’ve got one post ready, need to get crackin’ on the rest.

A Book-ish Related Podcast episode (or two) you might want to give a listen to:
bullet Libro.fm has recently started a podcast to talk all things audiobook. This week, I listened to Episode 01 “Meet the Founders”. I’d never wondered about how they started, but it hooked me. Looking forward to seeing where it goes from there.

Lastly, I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome to tinareadsallthebooks and Kimberly who followed the blog this week.

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