offbalance: (booky by isis grey)
offbalance ([personal profile] offbalance) wrote2007-01-02 09:18 pm
Entry tags:

And [livejournal.com profile] alcestis for the win.

One of my goals for this year (notice how I'm avoiding the "r" word) is to read more. Between 3-4 books a month, at least. All across genres, and maybe some more nonfiction, if I can find things that appeal to me. (Please leave any recommendations for consideration in the comments). Since I was starting this big initiative where I'd even keep track of what I was reading in some place somewhere (like here, even though I could even use my poor, poor neglected Vox account or even my Blogspot for it. But first things first.)

In terms of reading, 2006 was a great year. I ran across some things that I consider to be classics, and aside from those, there were some things I just really, really loved. Reading Like A Writer (one of the best writing-related books I've ever, ever read.). Motherless Brooklyn. To Kill a Mockingbird. Strangers in Paradise (I just finished Pocket Book #3, and am running out of excuses as to why I shouldn't run out RIGHT RIGHT NOW and get #4). Those were simply the best of the best - I know there were quite a few others that were up there as well. And it ended well, too - the last book I finished in 2006 was The Ghost at the Table, which I recommend to all and sundry - it was a really compelling narrative, and even though I wasn't completely thrilled with the ending, I admired the way that the author got me there, and how all of the minutiae of the days leading up into this Thanksgiving dinner and all of the tension that was riding just beneath the surface was so engrossing.

I wanted the first read of 2007 to grab me as much. I had a few titles up for consideration, all of which will get read soon. I decided to go about what to read democratically - I'd sample a portion of each, and whichever held more of my attention would be the winner. To be honest, I completely expected this winner to have been More Home Cooking by Lori Colwin. I'd read Home Cooking a few years ago and loved it (it's a terrific collection of recipes and essays about food). Instead, More Home Cooking came in a fairly distant second to a book that YA Librarian Extroadinaire [livejournal.com profile] alcestis thrust into my hands before Christmas and practically demanded I read immediately: Just Listen by Sarah Dessen.

I was a bit dubious. Although I frequently read and enjoy many YA titles, many of the ones I'd read recently were disappointing. The description of the heroine and the things she was to encounter sounded like the writer aimed for Season 1 Veronica Mars (minus the whodunit murder plot), but missed and landed in a big pile of after school special. Oh, how wrong I was. 10 pages in, I was intrigued. 20 pages in, I was interested. And now at 64 pages, I'm pretty sure it's not going to take me long to finish the remaining 320. More on that when I get to the end.

Oh, and even though this is a smidge late, many happy returns to the fabulous [livejournal.com profile] infinitehippo, celebrating a birthday today. Hope it's terrific, and thanks again for a terrific party on New Year's Eve.

[identity profile] penmage.livejournal.com 2007-01-03 03:10 am (UTC)(link)
I love Sarah Dessen. I don't even bother to read the descriptions or blurbs of her books any more - I just trust her, automatically. She is one of those writers who Just. Gets. It. Right.

Read everything she's written. It's all worth it.

[identity profile] offbalance.livejournal.com 2007-01-04 01:09 am (UTC)(link)
If I like this (and I reserve final judgment until I see how it all ends) I'll throw her on the list of people I'll read again. Which is looong.

[identity profile] calieber.livejournal.com 2007-01-03 02:21 pm (UTC)(link)
Laurie Colwin gave me the courage to bake my own bread. The last batch came out kinda dense, but I think I know why and I'm going to try again undaunted. And I just went out and got The Bread Bible by Rose Levy Beranbaum.

[identity profile] offbalance.livejournal.com 2007-01-04 01:10 am (UTC)(link)
I'll keep that in mind. I adored her first book, so I'm excited about this one. Which recipe did you use?

[identity profile] calieber.livejournal.com 2007-01-05 01:27 pm (UTC)(link)
Not so much the recipe (which I adapted from Alton Brown) as Colwin's philosophy, that one can bake bread at home without being a slave to it.

I'm studying the Beranbaum book, but I think I want to work out straight-up white bread to my satisfaction before trying anything fancy.

[identity profile] offbalance.livejournal.com 2007-01-06 03:36 am (UTC)(link)
Mark Bittman had a great low-involvement bread recipe in the Times a couple of months back, if you're interested.

[identity profile] herrsprengstoff.livejournal.com 2007-01-05 05:02 am (UTC)(link)
babel-17/empire star by Delany is a great 'literary' sci-fi novella pair (I only ever see it sold as a dual novella edition).