Posts tagged books
Posts tagged books
Dublin - Trinity College Library by Irish Welcome Tours on Flickr.
Aside from being absolutely gorgeous, with two story dark wooden arches, this is also the largest library in all of Ireland. It serves as the country’s copyright library, where a copy of all new books and periodicals must be sent when they apply for copyright protection. The library is also home to the famous Book of Kells, an illuminated manuscript created by Celtic monks around the year 800.
Two of my favorite things; books and buildings that keep them dry.
If the regulators are right, and the big publishing houses really did get together with Apple to plot a price hike, it would seem to be a clear violation of antitrust law — old fashioned price-fixing conspiracies are the sort of corporate skullduggery that can get an executive tossed in jail. Justice’s suit could also mean a return to the wholesale system that gave Amazon its free hand to whittle down prices.
But one has to wonder if, in this instance, the law is really serving the best interest of the public. Consider this question: are readers really better off in a market dominated by the whims of one large company, even if it means they get to pay a little less for the new Tom Clancy novel?
Read more. [Image: Reuters]
It looks like no-one at Amazon has noticed and taken their American Gods Kindle Special down yet. It’s http://say.ly/Qrj1i92 and was only meant to have been a 24 hour special, so may not last for very long.
(via wilwheaton)
(via BabyLit Board BooksFudge Banana Swirl)
WANT!
How cute it this? Super cute.
(via robot-heart)
I already had this book queued up on my Kindle to read when I joined the Reading with Style group, so I tried to fit it into one of the task that was lined up for the Winter Challenge. I was able to use it for the Play the Numbers task and some Style points as well. I am starting the challenge a month into it, but that’s ok. The people in this reading group are serious readers and I really don’t think I’ll come anywhere close to the top, but it is fun nonetheless. There are people with 400+ points so far and it’s only been a month into the three month challenge.
On to the point of this post, I read The Tiger’s Wife by Tea Obreht. I was expecting that it would be a bit of a disappointment because the novel has been so hyped up. I was not disappointed at all. It is beautifully written. I mean that as the whole kit and caboodle. There are so many themes at work it this book, the most prominent being how people deal with death. The weaving of the real and the mythological makes the story more enticing to read.
It is about a woman coping with the grief of losing her grandfather. She is searching elements of his past and reminiscing on the stories he told her in order to figure out what brought him to the place where he passed away. I was drawn to the authors depiction of how the individual characters rationalized their actions by moving back and forward through the characters histories.
Also, part of the story is from the point of view of the Tiger. How fun is that? It also shows how people turn things that they can’t explain or don’t understand into fantastical mythologies that become a history. A very interesting history.
“Come on, is your heart a sponge or a fist?” - Tea Obreht, The Tiger’s Wife.
I have been trying to find a book club for quite some time that would suit me. Most of the ones I have looked into or briefly been a part of haven’t included much variety in their selections. It seems to me that many book clubs focus on chick lit far more than any other genre. I am not knocking chick lit, I am ok with reading books outside my main interest. I just don’t want it to be all the books I read.
In comes Goodreads and the user group Reading with Style. It’s like a game. A GAME OF BOOKS! There are task set for points. The group does the challenge seasonally, so you have three months to read up and tally up points on however many books you want to read during that time frame.
What I think is interesting (translate as OMG this is going to be so much fun) is that in the process of finding books that fit the different task and styles (the styles are the bonus points) you are being exposed to different genres and types of books. You can strategize to read books that will earn you more points. I cannot thank the organizers of this group enough for making a “book club” just for me that is crazy organized and competitive.
Jane Austen Novel. I love this woman.
My feelings summed up.


A New Jersey school district has pulled two novels from its required reading list after parents complained about the works. Haruki Murakami‘s Norwegian Wood and Nic Sheff‘s Tweak: Growing Up on Methamphetamines were both pulled from the list after parents complained about their gay sex scenes.
Fox News has more: “The books were on a required summer reading list for middle school and high school students. The district decided to pull the books off the list, with the start of school just days away. ‘There were some words and language that seemed to be inappropriate as far as the parents and some of the kids were concerned,’ said Chuck Earling, superintendent of Monroe Township Schools in Williamstown, N.J.”.
In other censorship news, last week a Sir Arthur Conan Doyle book was banned from a Virginia school district for its depiction of Mormons. In response, we provided you the link to the free download of the banned book A Study in Scarlet.
To fight against book censorship, Banned Books Week, which is happening September 24 to October 1 this year, encourages readers to pick up banned books. Check out our Haruki Murakami playlist on Spotify when you pick up a copy of his books…
(Source: shelftalkersanon)