Tag: Saturday Miscellany Page 15 of 54

Saturday Miscellany—2/26/22

Another week where I didn’t spend much time online (and then when I did, I was reading things I don’t talk about here). This may be a shorter collection, but I think it’s a really good one.

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 Get reading: this is how books can impact your mental health—if you’re reading this post, you likely know this/live this, but it’s always good to have the reminder.
bullet American Literature is a History of the Nation’s Libraries: Ilan Stavans on One of Democracy’s Bedrock Institutions—This one really resonated with me.
bullet When the Novel Was Dangerous
bullet If I Don’t Remember What I Read, Did I Really Read It At All?—Templeton asks an important question
bullet My Worst Books of All Time (books I hate so much they make me feel like I’ve reached rock bottom)—an interesting list, and (as usual with The Orangutan Librarian) now I can’t stop thinking about what books would make mine.
bullet Fantasy Focus: Romantic Fantasy—Witty and Sarcastic Book Club follows up their series on comedic fantasy with a series of posts on Romantic Fantasy

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet The Blood Tide by Neil Lancaster—When the first book came out, I called the series Your New Favorite Police Procedural, this is the second book and it’s better than that one. I spent a little time talking about it last week.
bullet Man Down by Mark Pepper—An Everyman struggles to keep his family out of danger, and things go horribly, horribly wrong at every turn. I blogged about this the other day.
bullet The Misfit Soldier by Michael Mammay—a SF Heist novel that looks like a lotta fun

Saturday Miscellany—2/19/22

Today was one of those days where I realized, “I really didn’t spend that much time online this week, did I?” I’m not sure what I did instead (work, read, spent time and attention on those people/dogs in my house, I guess). So, this is on the briefer end, hope you still find something worth the pageview 🙂

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 Support for book bans spreads across Tampa Bay
bullet Amateur sleuths help solve 160-year mystery by decoding Charles Dickens letter—apparently, Dickens had an idiosyncratic shorthand code that it took a crowd-sourced effort to decode.
bullet Are Screens Robbing Us of Our Capacity for Deep Reading?—Like most things Hari writes, I appreciate reading it, even if I wonder about his conclusions/theses. And worry that I’m wrong-headed in quibbling with him. This is worth a read, if only for the final paragraph.
bullet The Power of Music in Fiction: A Reading List—Haven’t—probably won’t—read any of these books, but this is a fun list to read and then come up with your own list along these lines.
bullet 9 Fantasy Books from the 1980s You Might Not Have Heard Of—I’ve only read (and reread and re-reread and re-reread) one off of this list, but looked at/considered buying most of the others. You?
bullet A Comparison of Goodreads vs. The StoryGraph—good breakdown
bullet A Sobering (but not suprising) Twitter Thread About Audible’s Royalty practices
bullet A Fantasy Blogger’s Guide to the Trees of Europe—Alex asks, “How often have you read a book that mentions a specific species of tree, or even a whole forest, and you breeze on past, vaguely picturing a bit of greenery as you go?” Every single time. And that’s not going to change, despite Alex’s very impressive post. But it should.
bullet On Redemption Arcs—I’ve been toying with my own thing about Redemption Arcs—approaching it from a different perspective entirely, I should add—but I’m rethinking/reframing it after this post. Thoughts, they were provoked by Peat.

Things I learned from reading this week (that I can’t imagine finding a use for):
bullet Before filming To Have and Have Not, Howard Hawks had Lauren Bacall to see a vocal coach, transforming her high-pitched, nasal voice into the low, husky voice we all know. That boggles my mind–like the first time you hear Stephanie Beatriz out of character as Rosa Diaz, but more extreme. Source: The Goodbye Coast by Joe Ide

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet All At Sea by Chris McDonald—in the 6th Stonebridge Mystery, Colin and Adam find plenty of trouble on a cruise to Italy. I talked about it yesterday.

Lastly, I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome to Friendly neighborhood introvert and Kelly, who followed the blog this week. Don’t be a stranger!

Saturday Miscellany—2/12/22

Today’s post feels a bit further over on the miscellany spectrum than others. And I can never decide if that’s a good or a bad thing. I think I prefer the more scattershot lists. Prefer it or not, it’s what I have today. ¯_(ツ)_/¯

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 Has Literature Ever Changed the Course of History?
bullet I assume many of you, like me, have been seeing plenty of chatter about book lengths recently. I thought John Scalzi’s reply on a reddit thread pretty useful
bullet 8 Unique Libraries in the United States—poor use of “unique” and lack of links/pictures aside, this is an interesting look at some notable U.S. libraries
bullet Humor in Books, and Other Places, Too! An Interview with Peat Long
bullet The Gaiman Guide—a handy-dandy guide to Gaiman for those looking for a way into his oeuvre
bullet How Non-Librarians Imagine a Librarian’s Typical Workday—This isn’t really how it is?
bullet How Lee Child’s Killing Floor Was Transformed Into “Reacher”—Child’s biographer takes a look at the first season
bullet Tips for Writing a Good Book Review—Some handy tips/reminders from NetGalley’s blog
bullet What Should I Write About?—A question most bloggers have asked themselves.
bullet Why Should You Reread Books?—a few thoughts from Ramona Mead.
bullet What really happens after rom coms…—Just in time for Valentine’s Day

Things I learned from reading this week (that I can’t imagine finding a use for):
bullet The first recorded use of “easy peasy lemon squeezy” was from 1983. How is that possible? Doesn’t that seem generations late? (from Jumping Sharks and Dropping Mics by Gareth Carrol)

Lastly, I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome to Alphabet Ravine, who followed the blog this week. Don’t be a stranger.

Saturday Miscellany—2/5/22

I watched the first two episodes of Reacher yesterday—they weren’t perfect, but they were fun. Also, they used a song by Naked Blue’s album in the second episode, which almost makes up for not using one of their songs as the theme. I probably would’ve inadvertently binged the whole thing, but I have things to do today.

But you didn’t come here for that (maybe in a week or two, I will talk at length about it), you came here for this:

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 Print Sales Likely to Fall in 2022—The reasoning behind the prediction makes it seem less glum than the headline, but still…
bullet The Inside Story of the Banning of “Maus.” It’s Dumber Than You Think.: I read the minutes of the McMinn County, Tennessee, school board so you don’t have to.—there’s nothing to make this less glum
bullet Or this: Book Bans Are Targeting the History of Oppression
bullet How To Get Teenagers To Read Important Books—Whatever issues I may have with the author (and there are plenty), this was a fun read. Probably optimistic, but I’ll take it.
bullet Growing Up Surrounded by Books Could Have Powerful, Lasting Effect on the Mind: A new study suggests that exposure to large home libraries may have a long-term impact on proficiency in three key areas—I keep telling my kids they were lucky to be raised by me…
bullet Synthetic Voices Want to Take Over Audiobooks—this could really be a dystopic list this week…
bullet Here’s something fun: Sleuth Youths: Enduring lessons from three great junior detectives of literature
bullet Fantasy Focus: Comedic Fantasy- Featuring Claire Buss—there was one in this series yet to post when I pointed to the rest last week, might as well get this one in, too
bullet Humor in Books, and Other Places, Too! An Interview With H.C. Newton—This will not be the best entry in this series on Lockhaven’s blog, but it’s near and dear to my heart.
bullet Alternatives to Goodreads: TheStoryGraph
bullet Reading Tastes Evolve
bullet Part of your evolution may be seen in your take on this: Books Set in the Pandemic- yay or nay?!—I’ve heard authors opine on writing one, but little about readers wanting them. What do you think?
bullet You Don’t Have To Finish That Book You Aren’t Enjoying
bullet Anatomy of a Reading Slump—been a while since I’ve been in one, but there’s little worse (for a reader, that is—there are plenty of things objectively worse)

A Book-ish Related Podcast episode (or two) you might want to give a listen to:
bullet Fiction Fans The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams—Every time I’ve listened to a podcast episode about this book, I’ve been annoyed/irritated/cheesed off by some/much of the discussion (well, except the Waterstones episode about the making of it)—and I usually end up talking back to the episode, frequently quoting the book to refute it. I clearly need a different hobby. But Lilly and Sara avoided that, and provided an interesting take on the book.

Things I learned from reading this week (that I can’t imagine finding a use for):
bullet The world’s first ATM was installed in 1967 in London. The US would get one two years later. I was under the impression those came around 15 or so years later.
Source: Go Back to Where You Came From by Wajahat Ali (verified because it made me curious)

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet The Goodbye Coast by Joe Ide—Ide reimagines Philip Marlowe in a contemporary LA. Color me curious.
bullet Finlay Donovan Knocks ‘Em Dead by Elle Cosimano—Finlay has to keep her husband alive, keep her shenanigans out of sight from the hunky detective, and finish her next book. Should be fun.
bullet The Employees by Olga Ravn, translated by Martin Aitken—The novel “chronicles the fate of the Six-Thousand Ship. The human and humanoid crew members complain about their daily tasks in a series of staff reports and memos. When the ship takes on a number of strange objects from the planet New Discovery, the crew becomes strangely and deeply attached to them, even as tensions boil toward mutiny, especially among the humanoids.”

Lastly, I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome to EmmabBooks.com, who followed the blog this week. Don’t be a stranger!

Saturday Miscellany—1/29/22

  1. This post is brought to you by “hey, I remembered to proofread (seconds before I hit publish)!” Something I frequently forget to do (and only caught out of the corner of my eye while moving the mouse to the button). So this isn’t going up with the 4 missing links and 8 glaring formatting errors that it almost featured.
  2. I’d picked the graphic for this far before I read the last post I mention, there’s no connection between them.

Hope everyone had a decent week, and that it ends on a relaxing note—and, hopefully, with a good book.

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 ‘I always be sneaky’: Boise eight-year-old hides self-made book on library shelf—an insanely cute story from a library nearby
bullet The Comics Cavalcade: The rise of a medium—a very brief history of Comic Books
bullet Humor in Books, and Other Places, Too! An Interview With Susana Imaginário—the latest installment in Lockhaven’s series. (I’m really enjoying these, can you tell?)
bullet Witty and Sarcastic Book Club had another fun series this week, Fantasy Focus: Comedic Fantasy, you should check it out.
bullet An Interview with Andi Ewington, coauthor of Campaigns and Companions
bullet An Interview with Sean Gibson, author of The Part About the Dragon was (Mostly) True
bullet A guest post by Kyle Lockhaven, the aforementioned interviewer
bullet An Interview with Bjørn Larssen , author of Why Odin Drinks
bullet A Guest Post by D.H. Willison, author of things like Love, Death, or Mermaid?
bullet Where to start with: Agatha Christie—Janice Hallett provides this handy guide for people like me, who haven’t actually read one of the genre’s greats and want to start.
bullet 21 Phrases You Use Without Realizing You’re Quoting William Shakespeare
bullet A Reading Spreadsheet Doesn’t Have to Be Complicated—they don’t?
bullet 10 Book Series I Loved Growing Up—a fun post over on FanFiAddict, even if it makes me feel really old because I literally couldn’t have read most of these as a kid
bullet Blogging to Get Free Books: Sometimes Necessary, not Evil—Once again, I have missed a blogging controversy (and I’m fine with that), still a good post.
bullet What I’ve learnt from reading fiction – part 7—I really like these posts
bullet To binge read or not to binge read?

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet The Appeal by Janice Hallett—came out in the U.S., and should not be missed. I talked a bit about it last year.
bullet Accomplice by Lisa Lutz—will get under your skin. I posted about it recently.
bullet Light Years From Home by Mike Chen—a family drama and UFO abduction story, that just might involve an intergalactic war. I hopefully dive into this next week.

Saturday Miscellany—1/22/22

I apparently had one of those weeks where I did more reading than blogging/blog prep, I didn’t realize it, but apparently, that was the case. STill did get a post or two up every day, and found some good stuff for this post, just not what I expected to produce at the beginning of the week. Oh, well. Read some good stuff, plugged away at a couple of projects I’m excited to share with you, and…well, I don’t know, there should be a third thing, but who has the energy to write a whole list?

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 are back in style
bullet For Booksellers, the Crystal Ball Stays Cloudy: Indie booksellers saw solid sales in 2021 but wonder what 2022 will bring
bullet 30 years of Harry Bosch—that’s a mind-boggling number
bullet Humor in Books, and Other Places, Too! An Interview with Armanis Ar-Feinial—I’m really digging this series from K. R. R. Lockhaven.
bullet The Deeply Personal Art of Organizing Your Books—Molly Templeton weighs in on book organization
bullet 5 Years of Blogging—Suckerforcoffe looks back on five years of blogging—no mean feat.
bullet What You Need to Know Before You Return a Book on Audible in 2022
bullet I read City of Lies…all of them—I don’t know how I left this off of last week’s list, but I’m glad I did, I’m a little short on material for this week. The Fantasy Inn’s Kopratic read every book called City of Lies around. Brilliant idea for a project

A Book-ish Related Podcast episode (or four) you might want to give a listen to:
bullet Tales From The Bridge: All Things Sci-Fi Ep.27: A Conversation with Seanan McGuire—I’ve heard a few interviews with McGuire—she’s always entertaining, but she’s in rare form here. Great stuff.
bullet The Thriller Zone Nick Kolakowski, Pulp Thriller Writer—this was a good interview that inspired me to dip into the archives, the episodes with Ace Atkins and Tori Eldridge were worth noting, too. This podcast is going to be in the rotation for a while.

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet Robert B. Parker’s Bye Bye Baby by Ace Atkins—This is the tenth and final book in this series for Atkins, and he goes out strong in this story of Spenser protecting a politician from threats and harassment. I tried to get my post up about this yesterday, but it needed a little more time in the oven. Hopefully early next week.

Lastly, I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome to Celeste L and Eweto Ovie who followed the blog this week. Don’t be a stranger!

Saturday Miscellany—1/15/22

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 Americans Reading Fewer Books Than in Past—pretty sure this is news to no one. Still depressing to see.
bullet Book bans in schools are catching fire. Black authors say uproar isn’t about students.
bullet The 23 most popular books of the past year, according to Goodreads members—huh.
bullet Have We Forgotten How to Read Critically?—Um, yeah?
bullet Ace Atkins bids Robert B. Parker’s Spenser farewell
bullet The Future of Robert B. Parker’s Sunny Randall—I meant to include this last week, but it fits the theme of the previous item.
bullet Some Books That Inspire Me—On the eve of his first novel’s publication, Adam Shaw talks about some books that got him to that point.
bullet Maybe Reading Goals Are Good, Actually—Templeton has some good ideas about reading goals for a self-described “free range reader”
bullet How BOOK IT! Made Reading Delicious—from Mental Floss
bullet Bookish Bucket List—Now this is a good idea…
bullet Misrepresentations of Autism in Fiction—good stuff from The Coycaterpillar Reads.
bullet StoryGraph vs. Goodreads – The Good & the Bad
bullet The importance of book reviews

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet The Jackals by Adam Shaw—Jack Dotson returns to his hometown for a funeral and has to deal with the past he tried to leave behind—and doing so may cause trouble for the rest of his life. (oof, that sounded lame…go read the link, it’s better when not summarized in a sentence)

Lastly, I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome to Rabhya Maini who followed the blog this week. Don’t be a stranger!

Saturday Miscellany—1/8/22

(really quick—I could still use a recommendation or two for the 12 Books Challenge, if you’re in the mood to help a guy 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 Never Donate These Books to Little Free Libraries (or Anywhere Else)—Some of this seems like common sense. Probably those parts need to be emphasized.
bullet Public Domain Day 2022—a list of some of the works that hit Public Domain this year, it’s not just Winnie-the-Pooh.
bullet Noah Hawley Keeps Changing Lanes—a profile of Hawley and his new novel
bullet #R3COMM3ND3D2021 The After Show Party—A look back at #R3COMM3ND3D2021 (a truly impressive number of books got mentioned in these posts—if you’re looking for a 2022 TBR list, you could do worse than working your way through these.
bullet Humor in Books, and Other Places, Too! An Interview with Darran Handshaw—Lockhaven’s series continues—and includes a fire safety tip!
bullet These are probably the last of the 2021 Wrap Up posts (although I might not be the only one taking too long to do theirs), those that caught my eye:
bullet Raven’s Yearly Round Up 2021 and Top 10 Of The Year—plenty of good recommendations here
bullet Bookworm Blues lists their 25 Best Books of 2021
bullet Bookforager’s 2021 Progress Report
bullet The Bookwyrm’s Den brings us something from the other end of the spectrum comes To All the Books I DNF’d (2021 Edition), which is a much nicer way of dealing with this idea than I’d come up with.
bullet 2022 Reading Challenge for Overwhelmed Book Readers—for those who need something like this
bullet Why I’m ditching star ratings in 2022—I keep circling back to this idea myself
bullet 10 Reasons to Read Indie and Self-Published Books

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet And Your Enemies Closer by Rob Parker—the first (fairly disturbing) book in this Audible Original series was my introduction to Parker, and this follow-up is just as riveting as the predecessor. Former detective DI Foley kicks off a war between criminal factions. (I almost wrote my post about the book right here…oops. No one has time for that right now)
bullet Where the Drowned Girls Go by Seanan McGuire—a non-reading/blogging project this week sucked up more time than I expected, which is the only reason I didn’t start (and likely finish) the 7th Wayward Children book two days ago.
bullet Anthem by Noah Hawley—”An epic literary thriller set where America is right now, in which a band of unlikely heroes sets out on a quest to save one innocent life—and might end up saving us all.” Yeah, that’s pretty vague, but it’s as good as I can do right now.

Lastly, I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome to MaureenBaks who followed the blog this week. Don’t be a stranger!

Saturday Miscellany—1/1/22

Happy New Year, readers!

I don’t have a lot to say this week—so let’s just get on with things, okay?

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 What’s the Best Book of the Past 125 Years? We Asked Readers to Decide.—From the NYT. I can’t argue with the results, I guess I could, but I won’t.
bullet The 36 Best (Old) Books We Read in 2021—Not your typical year-end post.
bullet Humor in Books, and Other Places, Too! An Interview with L.L. Stephens—another in Lockhaven’s series on humor.
bullet Building a fantasy world map using Adobe Illustrator—never read Jackson’s work, but this was fascinating
bullet Speaking of maps, this is impressive: Alex Verus Map Project—a valiant Alex Verus fan has created a google map of every location in the Verus novels.
bullet Alcoholic Drinks to Pair With Favorite Fantasy and Horror Books—I attempted a post like this a couple of years ago, this is the way to do it.
bullet The Simple Guide to Netgalley—A Handy Guide from Tales from Absurdia.
bullet Of the making of Year-End Posts There Is No End (well, it just seems that way—there probably will be an end in a couple of weeks). Here are a few more that I found interesting:
bullet The Best Reviewed Crime Novels of 2021—From CrimeReads
bullet The Fantasy Hive 2021 Year-End Awards
bullet FanFiAddict’s Justin’s Top 10 Reads of 2021
bullet Ben from Literature & Lofi’s Favorite Books From 2021
bullet Yearly Roundup & Favourite Books: 2021—from Spells & Spaceships
bullet Reader Voracious has released their 2022 Ultimate Book Blogger / Reader Spreadsheet Template—if you’re looking for a tracker, you should give it a shot
bullet 2022 “Support Book Bloggers” Challenge—this seems like a really neat idea
bullet What Book Series Did I Finish Reading in 2021?—quite the feat.
bullet Out of Order Reading Methods—clearly, this is the work of a monster. This is not the kind of thing that should be normalized! (just kidding, this is a fun post)

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

Saturday Miscellany—12/25/21

I cannot believe anyone’s actually reading this today, but stranger things have happened, I guess.

Eh, maybe you need a break from the festivities, here’s a little to occupy your mind. It’s not much, I think everyone was lightening up on content this 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 Libraries enlist states in fight over ebook rules
bullet The Most Popular Books and Audiobooks on NetGalley in 2021
bullet The most popular US library books of 2021
bullet 2022 Ultimate Book Blogger / Reader Spreadsheet Template—2022 will be my third year using this template from Reader Voracious—I still don’t use all the features, but those that I do are more than worth it. Even if I wasn’t blogging, I think I’d prefer this to what I came up with on my own.
bullet It was the last week for The #R3COMM3ND3D2021 series over at Damp Pebbles. The posts over the last week were by:
bullet Podcast Audiobookish
bullet BookBlogger Karen Cole
bullet BookBlogger Rae
bullet Author Joy Kluver
bullet BookBlogger Emma—the proprieter of Damppebbles herself chimes in to wrap up the series
bullet A few more installments of this year’s Best Of Lists…
bullet 12 Authors Share the Best Books They Read in 2021—from the We Are Bookish blog
bullet from FanFiAddict: Tom’s Top 10 Reads of 2021
bullet Witty and Sarcastic Book Club declares the year a win: Operation 2021: Success! (or Favorite Books from this Year)
bullet Why I’m not seeing a numbered reading goal for 2022…
bullet Blogging VS. Social Media: why having a book blog still matters—I’ve seen a little of this conversation online, but this is a pretty full response to the idea that book blogs are obsolete.
bullet Why Book Blogs are Relevant & Valuable Marketing Tools—okay, the above was a full response, this is…um…fuller I guess.
bullet The Die Hard Book Tag—a holiday-season Book Tag I can get behind.

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