Showing posts with label Read List. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Read List. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 27, 2023

The End of 2023 is Nigh!

Late night, come home / Work sucks, I know

Hello, it's almost the end of 2023, and I've made as much progress over two years in Moonless than what any other serial author could have pulled off in 6 months (is that a grammatically correct sentence?). Not that you should measure yourself by the standards of others. but do it anyways, self image is a joke.

Good life news, though. After pulling off my 3rd 4.0 semester, getting 100% on finals for some of the most difficult prereqs for my degree, I'm finally entering Nursing school. Yes, I need to brag about it to somebody because do you know how hard it is to take A&P and magically be able to blindly put your hand in a dead body and know yes, this is the ileocecal valve, even though the last person displaced it to where the descending colon should be, due to the sharp angle and the squish it makes.

All that's left is the oral interview. I imagine it'll go down just as well as Andy Dwyer's police interview from Parks and Rec.


Any future progress plans for Moonless? I've got exactly 5,605 words in Moonless that need editing. Once I got some more flesh for 2 or 3 parts, I'm hoping to get all of what I got posted to Reddit before end of January. I may be slow, but I'm not giving up, I swear!

A shot of my messy workspace
to prove I am certainly not lying

Reading Updates: For the holidays, the people in my life accurately guessed I like books. As I'm trying to finish Tolkein's LOTR series yet again, my sister gifted me with On Writing and Worldbuilding: Volume III by Timothy Hicks. Doens't help I got Heart Stopper 1-3, The Vampire Lestat and The Emotional Thesaurus in the mail. A nice break from reading textbooks and angry work emails, I guess.

Sunday, December 25, 2022

READ LIST: DECEMBER 2022

 “People who cease to believe in God or goodness altogether still believe in the devil...
Evil is always possible. And goodness is eternally difficult.” -Ann Rice, Interview with the Vampire

Here's a quick summary of the more notable things I've read this last quarter of 2022 (crazy, right? My mind still thinks it's 2020). Starting with my favorite:

Interview with the Vampire (Anne Rice): I cannot, cannot, cannot freakin' stress how masterfully written Interview with the Vampire is. It's everything anyone could want from a vampire book. Dark, moody, violent, it was published in 1976, just at the start (if not a little before) of the contemporary goth movement in the 1980s.

Louis is definitely my favorite vampire of all time. Course, I still have the rest of the Vampire Chronicles to devour :)

The Last Pendragon (Robert Rice): I'm going to be honest--I picked up this book because it was directly adjacent to a book I was searching for by Anne Rice. Reading legends of Camelot has been in the background of my to-do list. As should be noted, Robert Rice's work was published in 1991, so it's a more modern interpretation of the aftermath of King Arthur's death.

I haven't finished it yet, but the prologue had me so captivated I nearly missed out on Christmas dinner freefalling chapter after chapter. It's a beautiful, descriptive, historical fiction work. Rice understands his source material exceedingly--his love of the legend shines through. If you've ever seen my Read List on Goodreads, the history and works of Britain between the 600 and 1400s AD has been a sleeper genre I'm secretly in love with. The Last Pendragon hits me with just the right mood, like a shot of Licor 43.

Beowulf: A Translation and Commentary (J.R.R. Tolkein): Before Tolkein wrote his famous Middle Earth fantasies, he was a professor and fellow of Anglo-Saxon studies at Pembroke College. It hasn't been since early college that I've read translations of Beowulf, so I don't have much to compare Tolkein's translations to. The Translation and Commentary is one of those books where the translation of the work itself is nearly less than a quarter of the book, with the introduction and notes dominating the page count.

Still, I enjoyed both the actual translation and the notes on Tolkein's word choices/style in his translation. Maybe it's just me that finds boring academic stuff thrilling

Reading Tolkein's translation, alongside the Norse Poetic Edda, is like looking into the backstages of Tolkein's fantasy productions. The name of Middle Earth has origins in Edda's "Midgarth," which happens to translate to, y'know, Middle Earth.

Massive side tangent--there's so many people out there who'll egg you on to read the Simarillion for an expanded view of Tolkein's writing. Yet, honestly, I think Tolkein's translations and commentaries on various historical works should be considered, too.

A Great and Terrible King: Edward I and the Forging of Britain (Marc Morris): Okay, okay, it's probably boring to confess that one of my favorite authors strictly does historian works (sans hobbits). But Marc Morris reminds me of an English professor I had in college who had to go through the painstaking task of teaching us Puritan History without half of us dozing off--by taking what looked like the blandest historical account and uncovering the sheer craziness going on behind the scenes.

Marc Morris' book on the Norman Conquest/William the Conqueror continues to be my favorite book by him, but this one comes in at a tight second. Morris includes his sources, dives into fun family conflicts unique to royalty (bloody wars included), and the political machinations involved in church building.


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Tuesday, May 31, 2022

READ LIST: MAY 2022

Saucebox: A saucy, impudent person
Haven't been reading as much... but I have been writing more :)

I recently went to Miscon 2022, and attended several panels led by authors new to me. In particular, Rafael Hohmann (high fantasy, SunRider series) and Rhiannon Held (werewolf stuff, Silver series). Both different spectrums of the fantasy genre. Just need to finish up what's on my reading plate before starting the next serving!

Currently Reading:
  • Winterset Hollow (Jonathan Durham)
  • From Blood and Ash (Jennifer Armentout)

Recently Finished:
  • Hush, Hush (Becca Fitzpatrick)
  • Pride and Prejudice (Jane Austin)

Want to Read:
  • Silver (Rhiannon Held)
  • SunRider(Rafael Hohmann)

Backlog:
I've given up on writing this section. It's bigger than it should be, and can be found on my GoodReads.



Sunday, February 6, 2022

READ LIST: February 2022

 "New year, new you. You have 1 week to evacuate your life and make room for your replacement." -Welcome to Nightvale

I've been on a poetry kick for Viking and Anglo-Saxon poetry. Brushed through some of the Poetic Edda and dove into the Exeter Book. Public libraries are great for boring history books only I seem to be interested in.

Currently Reading:

  • The Word Exchange: Anglo-Saxon Poetry in Translation (Greg Delanty and Michael Matto)
  • Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Ring (JRR Tolkein)
  • The Poetic Edda
  • Arms and Armour, from the 9th to the 17th Century (Paul Martin)

Backlog

  • Game of Thrones
  • On Writing and Worldbuilding, Volume II (Timothy Hicks)
  • Truth of the Divine (Lindsay Ellis)
  • Narnia Series (CS Lewis)

Wishlist

  • On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous (Ocean Voung)
  • Witchers Series





Friday, December 24, 2021

READ LIST: December 2021

It's been a busy month... for everything except reading and writing for me :(

Still, I've gotten some things done since last update. Mostly just expanding my list of things to read...

Currently Reading:

  • Wheel of Time: The Eye of the World (Robert Jordan)
  • Mistmantle: Urchin of the Riding Stars (MI McAllister)
  • LOTR: The Two Towers (JRR Tolkein, audio book)
  • Inkheart (Cornelia Funke)

Wishlist/Backlog:

  • Meetings with Remarkable Manuscripts (Christopher de Hamel, wanted)
  • Discworld Series (Terry Pratchett, wanted)
  • Song of the Forever Rains (EJ Mellow, wanted)
  • A Mage Out of Time (Neil Breault, wanted)
  • Truth of the Divine (Lindsay Ellis, wanted)
  • Game of Thrones (George RR Martin, own)
  • On Writing and Worldbuilding, Volume II (Timothy Hickson, own)
  • Narnia Series (CS Lewis, own)
  • Midnight Sun (Stephanie Meyer, wanted)
  • On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous (Ocean Voung, wanted)

Finished:

  • Breaking Dawn (Stephanie Meyer)
  • Freedom Ring (Frances Pauli)
  • Love on the Other Side (Nagabe)

Friday, November 5, 2021

READ LIST: November 2021

After getting a public library card, my books-per-month devour rate has shot up. If any of you are in Missoula, MT, definitely check out our public library! It's got a coffee shop, an entire floor devoted to a children's section, a parking garage, a 3D printer, a kitchen...

Every time I visit, I feel like I'm in Seattle.

Anyways! I wanted to share some of my recent conquests in the world of literature.

Currently Reading:

  • Breaking Dawn
  • LOTR: The Two Towers (audio book)
  • Game of Thrones
  • Truth of the Divine

Wishlist/Backlog:

  • Wheel of Time (borrowing)
  • Freedom Ring (wanted)
  • Discworld Series (borrowing)
  • Song of the Forever Rains (wanted)
  • A Mage Out of Time (wanted)

Finished (in the past month):

  • Twilight Series:
    • Twilight
    • New Moon
    • Eclipse
  • The Builders
  • Disbanded
  • Axiom's End

Wednesday, August 25, 2021

READ LIST: August 2021

 At least once a year (ambitiously, it'd be every season), I'd like to post an updated read list for books I've started, need to start, want to get, and have finished. Bonus if, at the end of each post, I can list some things I've learned about writing from the books I have finished.

 I don't know what's worse--the length of the to-do list on my kitchen table (composed of several scotch-taped sticky notes continually reminding me to see the dentist), or the number of books that have hung out on my "Read List" since college. I graduated in 2018.

But, this year, I have at least managed to evolve in terms of my reading goals. Instead of stacking to-read books around the room as tripping hazards, I converted to eBooks, so the only thing left to accidentally step on is a very expensive Kindle (:

Anyways, here it is, my shit reading list for the season:

STARTED
  • Chronicles of Narnia 1
  • Game of Thrones (George RR Martin)
  • Collection of Arsene Lupin (Maurice Leblanc)
  • The Amber Spyglass (Phillip Pullman)
  • Clarkesworld Magazine (Issue 173)
  • Fantasy & Science Fiction Magazine (Jan/Feb 2018)
  • Axiom's End (Lindsay Ellis)

BACKLOG
  • LOTR: The Two Towers (JRR Tolkein, Audiobook)
  • Chronicles of Narnia 2, 3 (CS Lewis)
  • Inkheart Trilogy (Cornelia Funke)
  • Dune (Frank Herbert)
  • Death Takes a Gander (Christine Goff)
  • LOTR: Return of the King (JRR Tolkein, Audiobook)
  • reread: On Writing and Worldbuilding 1 (Timothy Hicks)
  • reread: Elements of Style (William Strunke Jr.) 
  • Redwall Series (Brian Jacques) 
WISHLIST
  • Foundation and Empire and Second Foundation (Asimov)
  • Mage Out of Time (Neil Breault)
  • Wheel of Time Series (James Oliver Rigney Jr.)
  • Discworld Series (Terry Pratchett) 
  • Song of the Forever Rains (EJ Mellow)
  • (and more not worth mentioning yet) 

FINISHED (so far for 2021)
  • Mystic River (Dennis Lehane)
  • The Golden Compass and The Subtle Knife (Phillip Pullman)
  • Nordic Tales (Chronicle Books)
  • Celtic Tales (Chronicle Books)
  • Speculative North #2 (TDotSpec Inc) 
  • LOTR: Fellowship of the Ring (JRR Tolkein, Audiobook)
  • The Oriental Express (Agatha Christie) 
  • Redwall: Taggerung (Brian Jacques)