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Sunday, September 29, 2024

BW40: October Spooktacular


 

Happy Sunday! Are you ready for our October Spooktacular? What spooks you, gives you goosebumps, sends a chill up your spine, keeps you up reading late into night?  Horror, thrillers, dark comedy, science fiction,  supernatural thrillers, speculative fiction, true crime stories, books with morally grey characters.  Perhaps cozy reads or paranormal reads with ghosts, vampires, werewolves, or mummies. There is something for everyone, even if you like spooky lite. Boo!

16 Spooky Halloween Books for Adults

Spooky Books to Read Every October

31 Halloween Books to Read This October

Goodreads all inclusive Spooky Book Lists

And for those who aren't into the spookiness, our fall reading challenge will be ongoing until Winter. Plus I think we should extended banned books week through October because I still want to read Grapes of Wrath along with Steinbeck's Working Days: The Journal of the Grapes of Wrath. I also want to read Isabel Allende's The House of the Spirits which is also on the Top 100 Banned Books List

Which brings us to our letter of the week - M- which stands for magical realism, memoirs, motifs, marginalia, and metaphors.  

Happy reading! 



Sunday, September 22, 2024

BW39: I have a Notion it is Fall!

 


Happy Sunday! I've got a notion it's Fall. Well, in the Northern Hemisphere at least. Those of you in the Southern Hemisphere are ushering in Spring.  Either way, nature is painting the landscape with vivid and vibrant colors.  Which means, it's time for our Fall Reading Challenge or mission or journey or whatever you want to call it. 

Read a book with, which is, or about (But not all inclusive)

  • Leaves, trees, or nature of some sort on the cover. 
  • Fall colors on the cover. 
  • Fall in the title.
  • Set in Fall or Autumn
  • Someone who could possibly fall, whether physically or metaphorically.
  • Released in September, October, or November.
  • A cozy full of murder and mayhem.
  • Full of pumpkins
  • About someone who transforms.
  • Is magical or mystical.
  • About Halloween, Samhain, Octoberfest, Día de Muertos, Diwali, Veterans Day, Thanksgiving, 

The Ultimate Fall 2024 Reading List which is a round up of list from around the internet.   Haruki Murakami's latest - The City and Its Uncertain Walls will be out on November 19th. Louise Penney's #19 in the Gamache series - The Grey Wolf - will be out on October 29th.  Nora Roberts 2nd book in The Lost Bridge Trilogy - The Mirror - will be out on November 19th. 

The Queen's Reading room - Season 15 includes Geraldine Brooks Horse, E.F. Benson's Mapp and Lucia, Tan Twan Eng's The House of Doors, and Robert Harris's Archangel.  

Have fun filling up your TBR stacks. 

Oh! And it's Banned Book Week so read some challenged books 

Happy reading! 




Sunday, September 15, 2024

BW38: O is for Oulipo

 



Happy Sunday!  O is for Oulipo and also stands for odd so bear with me.   

I was introduced to the form of Oulipo in a writing class years ago and found it quite intriguing.  Ouvroir de Litterature Potentielle or OULIPO was founded by French Mathematician Francois de Lionnais and writer Raymond Queneau in 1960.   Basically it is introducing a constraint such as not using a certain letter, and other oddities, while writing a poem, creating a short story, or a lipogram.  

A few years back I experimented with creating an OULIPO using Robert Frost’s The Road Not Taken which took an interesting turn.   I tried the N + 7 route which is to replace the major nouns with another noun which is the 7th one below it in the dictionary.   However the first line ending up being 

Two Robbers diverged in a Women

Hmmm! Once I quit laughing, I got the bright idea to take book titles and transform them into a story, but got as far as a weird poem.

Figured I'd better stick to reading books by authors using the technique.  

Italo Calvino is one author who liked to experiment with his stories.  In "if on a winter's night a traveler"  is written in both second person so the you is the reader, yourself, and an alternative narrator in alternating chapters which makes for an intriguing and creative story. 

"if on a winter's night a traveler is a feat of striking ingenuity and intelligence, exploring how our reading choices can shape and transform our lives. Originally published in 1979, Italo Calvino's singular novel crafted a postmodern narrative like never seen before—offering not one novel but ten, each with a different plot, style, ambience, and author, and each interrupted at a moment of suspense. Together, the stories form a labyrinth of literature known and unknown, alive and extinct, through which two readers pursue the story lines that intrigue them and try to read each other. Deeply profound and surprisingly romantic, this classic is a beautiful meditation on the transformative power of reading and the ways we make meaning in our lives."

I've read "if on a winter's night" as well as "Invisible Cities" and will be delving into "The Complete Cosmocomics" soon. 

"Italo Calvino’s beloved cosmicomics cross planets and traverse galaxies, speed up time or slow it down to the particles of an instant. Through the eyes of an ageless guide named Qfwfq, Calvino explores natural phenomena and tells the story of the origins of the universe. Poignant, fantastical, and wise, these thirty-four dazzling stories—collected here in one definitive anthology—relate complex scientific and mathematical concepts to our everyday world. They are an indelible (and unfailingly delightful) literary achievement."

Hopscotch by Julio Cortázar is another strange one with two ways to read the book - straight forward or in a Hopscotch manner jumping into 'expendable' chapters the author had written which are supposed to add to or explain some of what was going on.  I hopscotched around, letting the number at the end of each chapter tell me what to read next.  But you have to pay close attention if you want to find the end of the story. 

Explore some books using Oulipo constraints from Goodreads round up of Oulipo Books or Literary Salon's Index

Blogatini – The Adventurous Writer – The Oulipo Movement

Who Are the Women of Oulipo?


Have fun exploring! 


  


Sunday, September 8, 2024

BW37: Pseudonym

 




Happy Sunday!  Big P, little p, what begins with P.   Passion, poetry, peace, patient, parallels, park, progress, and pseudonym to name a few.  Your task this week is to find a book written by an author under a pseudonym or pen name. 

I'm currently reading Passion in Death by J.D. Robb which is another pen name for Nora Roberts.  I just stumbled upon Rules of Engagement written by Selene Montgomery which happens to be the pen name for Stacey Abrams who previously served as a state representative for Georgia. Dean Koontz is another favorite author who wrote under several pen names including David Axton, K. R. Dwyer, Richard Paige, and others. Stephen King used Richard Bachman as another pen name while Anne Rice used A.N. Roquelaure or Anne Rampling.   Fantasy author Charles De Lint wrote dark fantasy novels aka horror under the name of Samuel Key which were scary good. 

It's always fun to search out books written under a different pen name by authors because you'll never know what amazing stories you'll find.  

10 Contemporary Authors Writing Under More Than One Name

12 Modern Writers who use a Pen name

10 Famous Author Pseudonyms And Why They Were Chosen

Have fun!



Sunday, September 1, 2024

BW36: September Author of the Month - Steve Berry




Happy Sunday!  Welcome to September in which we celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month, Classical Music Month, Baby Safety Month, as well as National Courtesy Month.  This month we celebrate Labor Day, anticipate the beginning of Fall, and commemorate 911 and those we lost as well as the heroes of the day. 

Our author of the Month is Steve Berry who writes action packed mystery thrillers mixed with history.   He is best known for his Cotton Malone series consisting of 19 books so far. He also has written several stand alone books, plus has teamed up with different authors including M.J. Rose in the Cassiopeia Vitt adventure series as well as Grant Blackwood in the Luke Daniels historical adventures. 

Our letter of the week is Q which is appropriate since Berry's books take us on different quests.  Q is also for question, quagmires, queens, and quotes. 

Happy reading! 


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