Aren’t librarians “bookies”?
CRAP IT’S DECEMBER.
Anyway.
So it’s been like six decades since I’ve read for pleasure*, which really blows ’cause I love to read for pleasure. My 200 Books list has idled unedited for far too long.
I actually found this really cool list that was a concatenation of 13 different “Top 100 Books” lists. As I was reading it over, there were quite a few books that I think should also be on my “200” list.
So here’s the plan:
I think I’m going to re-vamp my list, then start it all over again. Which I think would be a good thing. I seriously doubt I got a whole lot out of War and Peace when I read it as a 13-year-old. And this time I’ll give a review of each book upon completion.
Yay reading!
*The Calculus Wars doesn’t count. That wasn’t for pleasure. That was for stalking studying. Yeah. It was an…assignment. I had to read it. I totally didn’t go through it and creepily highlight a bunch of key stuff about Leibniz. That’d be wrong. I just read it for an assignment. That’s my story and I’m sticking to it.
It’s a Bird! It’s a Plane! It’s a Cumulonimbus!
I found the coolest book at Bookmans this evening. It’s called The Cloudspotter’s Guide by Gavin Pretor-Pinney and it’s a half-serious, half-hilarious guide to the grey skies above us.
Using altitude as an organization factor, Mr. Pretor-Pinney discusses each cloud type, where they’re found on earth, variations of the main types, and provides awesomely-captioned photos. In what other book would you find the phrase “cloud pornography”? Or the caption, “Just as it is wrong to draw Christmas trees with the branches pointing downwards, it is also wrong to draw raindrops in the shape of tears. Children who insist on doing so should be severely punished”?
If you’re at all interested in the floating puffs of water vapor hovering above us, I’d give this book a read. It’s pretty freaking great. Totally recommend it!
Happy Mother’s Day!
Shoutout to my super awesome amazing mom! I love you so much!
On a related note: I don’t know how many of you out there watch the Colbert Report, but a few months ago Stephen did an interview with the (now late, RIP) Maurice Sendak, author of Where the Wild Things Are. I highly advise you watch part 1 and part 2 if you haven’t yet, ‘cause they’re hilarious.
Anyway, in the second part of the interview, Stephen read Mr. Sendak a children’s book he himself wrote entitled I Am A Pole (And So Can You!). He got a blurb from the children’s author (“The sad thing is, I like it!”) and promised that as soon as he got a publisher, the book would be out for purchase.
Well, Stephen Colbert being Stephen Colbert, he announced a week or so ago that IAAP(ASCY!) would be released on May 8th.*
My mom and I both thought Stephen’s book hilarious, so I decided to buy her a copy for Mother’s Day. It’s longer and has more illustrations than the version he read on the air, and the little extras on the jacket sleeves and the additional pages are pretty great as well. Plus, all proceeds from the sale of his book (and the audiobook version) go to USVETS, a non-profit organization dedicated to returning troops.
So if you’re looking for a cool little gift for someone or think Stephen Colbert is awesome, go get a copy of this book. It’s pretty rad.
*Coincidentally, this is the day that Mr. Sendak passed. Freaky, eh?
Claudia’s Big Blog o’ Books
So I’ve seen about seven of my Facebook friends post something along the lines of “what book should I read next?” as their little status update thingy. Even though maybe two people from Facebook check out this blog on a semi-regular basis, I’m posting here my top 10 favorite/most highly recommended books with little itty bitty one-sentence synopses. I know I’ve done this a couple times before, but the list keeps changing ever-so-slightly and hell, it’s always good to have book recommendations close at hand, right?
Right.
ONWARDS!
10. Waiting for Godot by Samuel Beckett
One-sentence synopsis: Vladimir and Estragon wait…and wait…and wait…
9. Watership Down by Richard Adams
One-sentence synopsis: a colony of rabbits set out in search of a new warren and face many perils on their journey.
8. On The Beach by Nevil Shute
One-sentence synopsis: In a post-WWIII world, we get a glimpse into the slow suffering of those living in Australia as they wait for the atmospheric winds to bring the nuclear fallout down from the north.
7. The Ox-Bow Incident by Walter Clark
One-sentence synopsis: A group of justice-seeking townspeople (and two drifters) set out to find and punish three men presumed to be cattle rustlers and murderers.
6. Around the World in Eighty Days by Jules Verne
One-sentence synopsis: Wealthy (and badass) Londoner Phileas Fogg wagers that he can travel around the world in 80 days.
5. Watchmen by Alan Moore, illustrated by Dave Gibbons
One-sentence synopsis: In this graphic novel, an ex-super hero is murdered, his fellow ex-super heroes speculate about his death, and we are privy to an intricate tale of their past and present lives in an alternate 1980s time.
4. Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov
One-sentence synopsis: through a confessional outpouring, we learn of lit professor Humbert Humbert’s romantic obsession with 12-year-old Lolita.
3. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
One-sentence synopsis: Nick Carraway becomes a neighbor to the wealthy, party-happy, mysterious Jay Gatsby and learns more about him and those he associates with through a series of social and private encounters.
2. Candide by Voltaire
One-sentence synopsis: A sheltered young man, influenced by his teacher, is convinced he lives in the best of all possible worlds (LEINBIZ REFERENCE ZOMG), even as he experiences all sorts of exciting disasters.
1. The Caine Mutiny by Herman Wouk
One-sentence synopsis: US Navy Ensign Willie Keith finds himself on a WWII US minesweeper ship that has happened to fall under the command of an insane captain.
Now, don’t those sound good? Pick one, dear blog-follower, and read!
“Don’t be afraid. I’m only a toaster. Plug me in. Go on. You’ll like it.”
I found The Brave Little Toaster on YouTube. That movie is such a trip.
[Insert frantic Wikipedia research here]
DUDE IT WAS A BOOK TOO:
The blanket looks alarmingly like a serial killer in the cover illustration. One of those calculating, quiet types who smothers children in their sleep.*
Wiki: “The Brave Little Toaster was well-received by critics. Anna Quindlen, writing for the New York Times, called it ‘a wonderful book for a certain sort of eccentric adult. You know who you are. Buy it for your children; read it yourself.'”
Hahahahaha.
Its full title is The Brave Little Toaster: A Bedtime Story for Small Appliances, which leads me to believe that author Thomas M. Disch is pretty freaking great. Must…acquire…copy…
*NaNoWriMo 2012 idea: rewrite The Brave Little Toaster as a horror book. Call it Burnt. The five appliances are bitter to the point of extreme revenge over being left at the cabin by their master. They set out to seek revenge on him. Along the way, Blanky’s initial harmless hallucinations about the master soon give way to his psychopathic tendencies. Because we all know it’s the quiet, innocent-seeming ones who are apt to snap and turn on their friends in the middle of the woods.
Dude. This is so happening.
Edit: Mr. Disch and I share a birthday. It’s a sign.
Oh my
The Time Machine by H. G. Wells is absolutely fantastic. And this is coming from a person whose enjoyment in the world of science fiction used to come solely from Jules Verne.
Sexy, sexy Jules Verne.
After a rather innocuous beginning—in the sense that I thought it would end up to be similar in style and tone as Verne, since Wells apparently idolized the dude (who wouldn’t?)—it took a very different turn than I was expecting and I actually got a bit of an adrenaline rush reading through the 3rd quarter of it. Read it.
And now I’m reading Lolita, which is amazingly well-written but is so similar to some sort of twisted pedophilic tell-all that it’s actually kind of creeping me out. And the 30-minutes bus ride to campus (WITHOUT A TRANSFER, SCREW YOU #7) = excellent reading time, now that I don’t get motion sick anymore.
Today’s song: The Mummers vs. Passion Pit, a mash-up by Stayloose
Caterpillars? In MY broccoli? It’s more likely than you think…
Yeah. Finding a decapitated caterpillar in a frozen bag of broccoli = fun times. I’m actually surprised it took me so long to find something…for some reason it seems like poor little dudes getting accidentally chopped up thrown into broccoli bags just because they wanted some broccoli would be a more common occurrence. I wonder how chopped up broccoli is inspected and/or classified, anyway? (Edit: dude…)
Anyway. Just thought it was interesting.
SPEAKING OF INSPECTIONS…
Ever read Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle? Good lord, that is the most depressing book ever. I’m only about 2/3 of the way through it and after every chapter so far I’ve felt like I needed Prozac. Sinclair does a beautiful job of depicting utter despair (and deplorable working conditions). This poor Lithuanian family who went to the US to find work/fortune just keeps getting screwed over at every turn. The last chapter I read ended with the main character’s son dying and I pretty much had to stop reading for the night.
Maybe it’s just me, but holy crap.
Today’s song: Bruises by Chairlift
[insert shriek of happiness here]
HOLY CRAP look what I got!!!

I completely forgot I asked for this, so it was a very pleasant surprise upon opening the box. It also made for a very amusing few minutes during which I was screaming with glee and my mom had to explain to her freaked out boyfriend that this reaction was natural.
Yay.
I don’t know why I never put this up here before
Hello to everyone yet again. Since I’m incredibly bored and since I finished a lot of books over the summer (at work, haha), I’ve decided to provide you all with the book list I’ve been working through. Books in red are one’s I’ve read (makes sense, doesn’t it?). Asterisks denote books I would recommend HIGHLY.
(Edit: this list is now located under the “200 Books” tab up above. Click that instead!)
Freaking Dostoyevsky
The Brothers Karamazov: another book to add to the favorites list. The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail isn’t bad, either.
Also, how come every book character I really like is either insane, going insane, or is a Jules Verne character?
OH JESUS IT’S BLOG TIME
I either want to be Phileas Fogg or marry him. With very few descriptions of physical characteristics, he is still the freaking sexiest character I’ve ever read about.
I need to read more Verne. I really like his characters.
Waiter! There’s a hippocampus in my zoo!
Leon Uris’ QB VII.
Read it. Seriously. You:
1) won’t be able to put it down, and
2) will change your mind about the main characters like 20 times.
That is all.
Top 10 influential books
Hello ladies and gentlemen. There’s this note that’s been going around on Facebook where people list the top 10 books that have influenced them the most, or will stay with them the most. I decided that instead of posting this on Facebook (which I’m beginning to hate more and more), I’m putting it here.
The books I chose I chose because of their impact on me—be that from their emotional impact, their intellectual impact, the story itself, or the style of the writing. I explain in each case. It was hard to choose books that influenced me rather than choosing my favorite books, but I think I did this as unbiased as possible. Plus, the two overlap quite a bit.
Ranked from most influential to…well, 10th most influential, I guess. Haha.
1. Watchmen – Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons
This might be first because it’s the one I’ve read most recently, but it’s also first because it’s freaking awesome. The story’s intense, it’s very intellectual, and the art is superb. Read it!
2. The Monadology – Gottfried Leibniz
No, I’m not just putting this on here because Leibniz is a smoldering sex pot. Despite the “out-there” factor that is so high with the Monadology, the general idea of determinism that he expresses throughout it (and a lot of his other stuff) actually kind of lines up with how I see things.
3. Candide – Voltaire
I FREAKING ADORE Voltaire. This book is very funny if you know what it’s making fun of (hint: pretty much everything). And even though Voltaire makes fun of Leibniz, I still love this book.
4. The Caine Mutiny – Herman Wouk
YAY! This is my favorite book of all time, but it’s also on here because the story is AMAZING. Wouk is very good at building tension (just wait until you get to the actual mutiny; good luck putting the book down). It’s also freaking hilarious in parts.
5. The Chosen – Chaim Potok
I can’t remember when it was I read this, actually—I only remember the plot and the characters that have stuck with me since. This was one of two books that left me crying at the end. Very emotionally impactful. It’s about two Jewish boys, one of which does not want to follow in his father’s footsteps, if you want to know the very summarized plot.
6. The Great Gatsby – F. Scott Fitzgerald
Beautiful, beautiful writing style. I love Fitzgerald’s way of creating a story, and I love Gatsby.
7. On the Beach – Nevil Shute
The premise of this book is very intriguing: it examines a post nuclear war world from Australia’s point of view as the country sits and waits for all of the fallout from the northern hemisphere to drift through the atmosphere down to them. That’s really all you need to know.
8. Crime and Punishment – Feodor Dostoyevsky
Hooray for deeply psychological books!
9. An American Tragedy – Theodore Dreiser
This is a long book and seems kind of boring at the beginning, but once the “tragedy” happens, it really picks up. You get into Clyde’s head and feel his desperation.
10. Age of Reason – Jean Paul Sartre
I read this awhile ago and for some reason I still really like it. Probably because it’s existential.
POW
So today on Project Gutenberg I looked up the top 100 EBooks for yesterday. Some of these results, in order, are pretty funny.
The Kama Sutra (4th most popular) is only one slot ahead of the Illustrated History of Furniture. War and Peace is only three slots ahead of All About Coffee. This tells you exactly how exciting War and Peace is.
Finally, The Communist Manifesto was more popular than The Bible.
A graphic novel you HAVE to read
“A graphic novel?” you’re thinking. “Seriously?”
Yes.
Watchmen, by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons, is probably the best thing I’ve read in a long, long time. It’s about a group of retired heroes who are sort of forced back into action in a sense. I know it sounds like a stereotypical graphic novel about superheroes and such, but it’s really, really good. The characters are freaking amazing, and so is the artwork.
It’s quite philosophical. It’s now going on my “favorite books list.”
Yeah, I had that high of an opinion of it—it’s an amazing piece of fiction.
Go.
Read it.
Anybody read any of the Goosebumps series when they were kids?
Hahaha, oh my god, these are freaking great. The only Goosebumps book I remember reading as a kid was Go Eat Worms! but all these reviews are amazingly hilarious. I NEED to read Chicken Chicken and How I Learned to Fly now.
Another one off the list
So now three books have made me cry upon completing them: Watership Down, The Chosen, and For Whom the Bell Tolls.
I didn’t think Hemingway could ever make me cry, but it did in a totally unexpected fashion.
Very cool.
Book? Sale! (this is boring and short. Why waste your time? Read yesterday’s blog instead!)
Today I got a hardback, three paperbacks (one was the DSM-IV-R, which is huge), and three audio books for a total of $7. Then I bought a lottery ticket for $3 and won $15. Total net gain: $5. I feel special.
Not much else, today.
It’s Da Bomb!
You know what’s a friggin’ good book? On The Beach by Nevil Shute. Read it. Then you’ll think twice before participating in nuclear war. It’s basically about the southern hemisphere’s views on the nuclear war that basically wiped out the entire northern hemisphere. This is one of the few books I strongly recommend–it’s almost scarier than “Outbreak”. Have you seen that movie? Dang–I hate monkeys even more now.
…stupid monkeys…
By the way, I do greatly apologize for my late blogging (what am I, a month or so behind? Dork.)–I do write all this crap down, it’s just the process of logging in and copying and pasting and inserting all the punctuation (because, for some reason, it all disappears when I paste these things from Microsoft Word into the blogging area) that makes me…”hesitant“, I guess, is the right word.
Meh.
New book! GOOD book!
Woohoo! I just started reading Cyrano de Bergerac and it has to be the best play I’ve ever read. I recommend it to all of you people!!
Other good books I strongly recommend:
~An American Tragedy by Theodore Dreiser
~The Caine Mutiny by Herman Wouk (of course!)
~Crime and Punishment by Dostoyevsky
~Madame Bovary by Gustav Flaubert
~Watership Down by Richard Adams
Also, why don’t you people comment anymore? Have I lost the magic?
Disappointment
I just finished reading The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood, and I have to say that it has the most disappointing ending of any book that I’ve ever read. It was a good book, but once I finished it, I down-graded it to a “so-so” book.
I hate when books have crappy endings.
“Average American”
I’m 59% an average American–at least according to Kevin O’Keefe. He wrote a book called The Average American, in which he documents his compiling a bunch of statistics about Americans that he had gotten from the Census Bureau.
Here are some reasons why I’m average:
– I use the Internet
– I live within 3 miles of a McDonald’s
– I wear glasses
– I have visited the ocean
– I can walk under my own power (hooray!)
And here are some reasons why I’m NOT average:
– I don’t drink soda
– I don’t have all 5 senses
– I’m not between 5’3″ and 5’10” tall (too short! Nooo!)
– My community doesn’t mirror the racial/ethnic makeup of the country (it’s Idaho—so white we glow!)
– I don’t believe in God
There you have it. Fun fun! I love statistics and facts.
Reading!
Since I’m finally finished with all my writing and project stuff for school, I could finally start reading for pleasure again this weekend. I just finished All Quiet on the Western Front—the 56th read book on my “College Recommended Books” list.
I’m so well read.
Makes you wonder why a certain someone won the “most likely to read every book in the library” award thingy in the yearbook and not me. It’s kinda strange, considering this person:
a) is someone I’ve never seen in the library…ever (and I’m always in there),
b) is one of those people who pronounces “library” as “lie-berry”, and
c) is incapable of operating a Xerox machine (see “Incompetent people suck” blog).
Eh. Oh well. I have light-up shoes.



