Getting through my bookshelves, one volume at a time...

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

I lied

Apparently I DID stay up until 1:45 am to read the last 100+ pages of Cutting for Stone. Sigh. It was so worth it. More on that later, I do have to sleep sometime soon.

The magical random number generator from random.org (a real website, I swear) says the next book is:

#52: Wives and Daughters by Elizabeth Gaskell

Here we go...

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

almost done...

Alright, it's been one week so far.
I'm almost done with Cutting for Stone, which means I'm not quite making my goal of one book per week, but since this book is 658 pages long, I think that's ok. Sadly, I'm not going to finish the last hundred pages tonight, since my thesis update is tomorrow and I should probably at least pretend to be well rested and prepared.
But I would gobble it up right now if I could. This book is just SO good. My mother-in-law recommended it, so if Bev Lu ever gives you reading suggestions, do as she tells you. The woman knows her literature. (Hi Bev!)
I will post a thoroughly gushing review as soon as I'm actually done with this book.
Now back to my thesis...

Monday, February 20, 2012

Day One

I own too many books. WAY too many books. And still I keep buying more. It's an addiction, I guess. But now the guilt has gotten to me. I have resolved that before I can buy a SINGLE NEW BOOK, I have to finish all the ones I already own.
Here's the loooooong list of books I own but have not read:

  1. Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant - Anne Tyler
  2. The Amateur Marriage - Anne Tyler
  3. The Accidental Tourist - Anne Tyler
  4. The Bean Trees - Barbara Kingsolver
  5. Animal Dreams - Barbara Kingsolver
  6. Animal, Vegetable, Miracle - Barbara Kingsolver
  7. The Lacuna - Barbara Kingsolver
  8. Midwives - Chris Bohjalian
  9. Bluebird, or the Invention of Happiness - Sheila Kohler
  10. Good in Bed - Jennifer Weiner
  11. Certain Girls - Jennifer Weiner
  12. I Know This Much is True - Wally Lamb
  13. Reading Lolita in Tehran - Azar Nafisi
  14. Girl, Interrupted - Susanna Kaysen
  15. Kitchen Confidential - Anthony Bourdain
  16. The Carbon Age - Eric Roston
  17. Motiba's Tattoos - Mira Kamdar
  18. Like Water for Chocolate - Laura Esquirel
  19. March - Geraldine Brooks
  20. Pope Joan - Donna Woolfolk Cross
  21. China Men - Maxine Hong Kingston
  22. Rut - Scott Phillips
  23. The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency - Alexander McCall Smith
  24. Stones From the River - Ursula Hegi
  25. A Short History of Nearly Everything - Bill Bryson
  26. The Piano Teacher - Janice Y. K. Lee
  27. The Midwife - Jennifer Worth
  28. Summer - Edith Wharton
  29. Short Stories - Edith Wharton
  30. The Ruins of Us - Keija Parssinen
  31. The Memory Keeper's Daughter - Kim Edwards
  32. A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius - Dave Eggers
  33. Mennonite in a Little Black Dress - Rhoda Janzen
  34. Cutting for Stone - Abraham Verghese
  35. Minaret - Leila Aboulela
  36. The Clan of the Cave Bear - Jean M. Auel
  37. The Tombs of Atuan - Ursula K Le Guin
  38. Dragonflight - Anne McCaffrey
  39. Wicked - Gregory Maguire
  40. The Lost Daughters of Happiness - Geling Yan
  41. White Ghost Girls - Alice Greenway
  42. Empress - Shan Sa
  43. The Good Earth - Pearl S Buck
  44. Dream of the Red Chamber - Tsao Hsueh-Chin
  45. Tears of the Cheetah - Stephen J. O'Brien
  46. The Canon - Natalie Angier
  47. The Common Thread - John Sulston and Georgina Ferry
  48. Zorro - Isabel Allende
  49. Silas Marner - George Eliot
  50. Wuthering Heights - Emily Bronte
  51. North and South - Elizabeth Gaskell
  52. Wives and Daughters - Elizabeth Gaskell
  53. Cranford - Elizabeth Gaskell
  54. Possession - A.S. Byatt
  55. Agnes Grey - Anne Bronte
  56. Servants of the Map - Andrea Barrett
  57. The Picture of Dorian Gray - Oscar Wilde
  58. Silent Spring - Rachel Carson
  59. The Man who Mistook his Wife for a Hat - Oliver Sacks
  60. Nickel and Dimed - Barbara Ehrenreich
  61. The Bone Woman - Clea Koff
  62. Rosalind Franklin: The Dark Lady of DNA - Brenda Maddox
  63. Incantations - Anjana Appachana
  64. Love is a Mix Tape - Rob Sheffield
  65. The Friday Night Knitting Club - Kate Jacobs
  66. London - Edward Rutherfurd
  67. The Dancing Girls of Lahore - Louise Brown

It's a fairly random mix of fiction and non-fiction and, in my defense, I did not buy all of them. I did purchase the vast majority, though. I wonder how much of my total net worth (however meager it may be) is tied up in my substantial library.

There are a couple authors who show up a lot on the list. I have a habit of reading one book by an author and, if I like it, trying to read everything else the person has ever written. I've read the complete works of Isabel Allende, Amy Tan, Jane Austen and Matt Ridley by this method. I'm going to guess Mr. Ridley never thought his name would show up on a list right after Ms. Austen. This is what happens when a book worm goes into science for a career.

Of course, if I like an author and buy her other works without actually reading them... they end up on this list. Oops. I read Digging to America and A Patchwork Planet by Anne Tyler and really liked them, so I rapidly accumulated books by her... and haven't read them yet. Shame on me. The same pattern was followed for Jennifer Weiner (based on In Her Shoes) and Barbara Kingsolver (based on The Poisonwood Bible).

There are also some books that I purchased with the intent of "improving myself" through reading... or at least making myself sound better in conversation with my better-read friends. These include Reading Lolita in Tehran and Girl, Interrupted. I can't pretend to be intellectually rigorous just by having them gathering dust... though it is tempting.

And then there are some books that I bought simply because they were on sale at a used book store. I have a serious weakness for used books. For examples, see: The Carbon Age, Motiba's Tattoos and Pope Joan.

So, now I have to read all these books. I think one book per week sounds reasonable. I'll give myself two weeks for particularly long books like I Know This Much is True (897 pages... eek!) and hopefully take less time to finish up short reads like Love is a Mix Tape. If I absolutely hate a book, I'm not going to force myself to finish it. But I must make it at least halfway through before deciding to move on. I will use a random number generator to pick each new book, using the numbers in the list above, but I'm going to start with Cutting for Stone, since I'm already well into that one.
Ok, I think that sufficiently sets up the ground rules. Here goes the grand experiment!