mesotablar: Echidna on leaves (Default)
 So it is the start of the year and I do some annual tasks, one of them being archiving last year's book list and starting a new one. I've been tracking all the books and fanfics I've read for the past 6 years. 

Now I've picked up a book called Dopamine Nation by Anna Lembke and I've been reading many people's reviews of last year's resolutions and their goals for this years New Year's resolutions.

 
 I think I have a problem

I read too much

Seriously, 
last year's numbers were 78 books and 146 fanfics, sure I could blame the pandemic and being forced into lockdowns, but then how do I explain 2018 and the 150 books and 106 fanfics I read that year? 
My average is 100 novels a year, and maybe 5 or so are audio books but the rest were once trees. Hours and hours spent sitting and reading. If I spent that time working out I would be fittest fit person there ever was. 

Books are my happy place, they are addictive. I have a whole ritual when Anne Bishop releases a new book and I celebrate like it is Easter. 

but...
I think I need to spend time doing other things...
I already am!
I'm writing and doing challenges and carnivals
 
Now only time will tell if I'm going to relapse back into my bad reading habits.
(But of course nothing counts until after I've celebrated Anne Bishop's new book release, 9 WEEKS AND COUNTING!!!!!!!!)
 
mesotablar: Echidna on leaves (Default)
Very interesting questions on The Friday Five (https://thefridayfive.dreamwidth.org). As I was clearing shelves all weekend I am a bit later than normal posting replies.

1. Are books losing importance as a source of information and entertainment?
I think we are heading for an energy crisis, we already are in an internet crisis at the moment. Families are scheduling internet time so parents can video call for work which means around 11am most days Netflix goes down, wireless systems like mine get kicked off frequently and even streamed radio get glitchy as it cannot keep up. As for energy, well the lack of leadership is sending us back to the situation in the 1980s/1990s when the network coped by cities planning rolling blackouts. People will have to find non-digital entertainment. Boardgames, puzzles, talking and books are helping people now, and will be helping people in the future.

As the education system is so geared to reading I don't think books will ever lose their importance as information carriers, of course the higher your formal education the more experience with reading for learning so the more likely to have an information library at home. Even if your information library is made up of things you or your friends/colleges have published.


2. Are e-books the death of paper books? Will paper books disappear?
Paper books will always have their place because many need the physical object to add their own notes or electricity reasons. It is hard to predict the future because things happen in mysterious ways, many businesses find they use much more paper now than they did before email. A bad computer virus might have people flooding back to paper books.
Audio Books certainly haven't killed off the written word and they can be listened to in a much wider range of environments when books are not appropriate, like driving the morning commute.


3. Should libraries focus on improving their technological resources rather than building a larger collection of paper books?
My local library is focusing on other things. They still have books but are trending towards the more unusual, learn-to-read books or out of print, while expanding the library with powertools, specialist cooking items, gardening tools. The library is a home for items people wish to loan and our local tries to be very aware of what people want. However state and national libraries should focus on books and locally produced media, so that there is a record for the future.


4. How important are early reading skills in a child’s academic performance?
Not important at all!

There have been studies that show interaction is how babies and toddlers learn, so those early learning books have a farce of 'teaching' without actually effectively adding the information to recall memory. If the child learns from them it is because you sat down and interacted with the child while they used it, so you might as well have used a paper book anyway.

Also I am lucky enough to know of alternative teaching methods from the standard curriculum. Steiner education doesn't teach children to read until 7/8 years old, before then they focus on recall and memorising from voice. Those kids don't experience deficiencies in academic performance. Actually I would say that ultimately Steiner education more consistently creates better adults than mainstream education does.


5. Are people who spend a lot of time reading fiction wasting their time which could be better spent doing more useful activities?
If we look at what reading is, an entertainment we can rephrase the question to be wider "Are people who spend a lot of time being entertained wasting their time which could be better spent doing more useful activities?". First, what are these more useful activities? curing cancer perhaps? as for the rest of the question, well closing down entertainment is what we are living in now, and how many millions of people are out of work? Reading is an industry and it employs thousands of people around the world. Is supporting their jobs not a useful activity? Should we all just wait for the movie comes out?...but then movies are picked to be produced by the book sales.

Answering for myself.....Possibly. I know I read more than I probably should, because I know I should wash the windows or exercise or some other item on my to do list. But then reading is on my to do list. I have a 'To Be Read' pile, and yes it is mostly fiction, which is great stress relief. Is stress relief not a useful activity? Medical science things stress relief is one of the more important activities for health.
mesotablar: Echidna on leaves (Default)
For the first time in 14 years I have not ordered the new Anne Bishop book. Ordering the book in late February or early March has been a ritual for half of my life. I'm 28 so you can take that literally. 

I read a lot. My eyes happily devour books. I really need to turn it into a career because I enjoy it and find it so easy. JK Rowling brought magic into my life, but it is Anne Bishop who really got me reading. Her books have given me hope when there was none. They distracted me during periods of isolation and pain. They gave me strong yet imperfect role models that encouraged my imperfect self to be strong also. The books are stored on a shelf by my bed so that they are always at hand and under the gaze of my eye first thing in the morning and last thing at night. My love for them is immense.

I discovered Anne Bishop's books when I was 13. They are not 'age appropriate' for a 13 year old but I fell in love hard and fast. Really nothing I read was very 'age appropriate' but who cares! When you find writing that takes you into another world and gives you hours of joy you need to hold onto that. Which I have. For 14 years I guaranteed that death-grip hold by pre-ordering her publications, sometimes months in advance. (Hello 'Written In Red' when I put my name down for a pre-order in NOVEMBER)

I even took to joking that Christmas happens in March because that was when her new book would be released. Well, maybe not completely joking. Normally I would be busy at Christmas, either housework, farmwork or social work (aka keeping certain relations sober and/or entertained) but March, oh, March! I would give a weekend to myself to read books. No television. No eating things that require 2 hands. Just me and the beautiful words. I got into the habit of reading the preceding books in the series before I read the new one, so sometimes that required an entire week of reading ritual. 

So why oh why am I not ordering the newest delicacy? 

I am ridiculously neurotic about matching. When I can, I buy a box set because they are a set meant to be displayed together. I madly spend beyond my means to buy matching covers when I find out they are changing the cover on a series because I must have the matching set, nothing different will do. This drove me to second hand book stores and collecting out of print stand-alone novels because they don't set off my matchy-matchy alarms. I find visual peace in conforming unity. It triggers a sense of uplifting well-being as I gaze across series of homogeneous spines. 

Anne Bishop used to release new books as paperbacks, but she has gained popularity, upgrading to large format (seven years) then hard-covers for the past five years. This was a new series. A whole different beast. So it all fit well enough by having a shape all it's own. This year again she released in hard-cover, which is great really. Kudos. Anne Bishop you really deserve the hard-cover prestige. However, this years release is a continuation of The Black Jewels which has only been released in paperback 11x18cm format. This new book won't fit. No matchy-matchy with all the other nine Black Jewels books. I writhe in pain.  

COVID-19 has sort of taken the decision out of my hands. I will be self-isolating. I will wait for the paperback release. I will wait for the paperback release because another important part of the ritual is the pilgrimage to the loyal bookstore that always has Anne Bishop on the shelf. In the meantime I think I'll check out their website to see what other series I can finish off
:)
mesotablar: Echidna on leaves (Default)
For the past few years I have been keeping a reading list to keep track of what I read. Originally I used reading lists to keep track of what fanfics I had started, then I decided to make them more formatted and readable as well as making them public. I’ve had a public accessible reading list for the past 3 years as a constantly-being-updated post on DeviantArt. I am sort of glad it doesn’t get much attention there because I read some seriously sketchy stuff sometimes.

Thanks to dreamwidth, I very very recently found out about the PopSugar Reading Challenge. Reading challenges sound cool! They influence and structure a reading list by pushing reader to read outside what they normally would choose.

I’m not much of a reviewer, I tend to give too much away. Plus I have a ridiculously huge amount of books I still need to go through in my stacks. Plus I have already completed 51 books this year. So let me just utterly fail at participating in the PopSugar Challenge:

♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ 'Wild Country' by Anne Bishop ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥
A book: you think should be turned into a movie [All the yes!]
A book: inspired by mythology, legend or folklore [Apart from all the other stuff the Wild West could probably be argued to be mostly legend]
A book: that’s published in 2019
A book: featuring an extinct or imaginary creature
A book: recommended by a celebrity you admire [Anne Bishop is a celebrity I admire]
A book: about a family [Found family! ...well found Pack]
A book: about someone with a superpower [Cassandra Sangue, though the best is Meg who is the lead in the main series of books]
A book: told from multiple character POVs
A book: with a two-word title
A book: from a past prompt from the PopSugar Reading Challenge [From 2016: A book with a nonhuman perspective]

♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ 'Lake Silence' by Anne Bishop ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥
A book: that makes you nostalgic [for last year!]
A book: with a plant in the title or on the cover [Bits of tree in the background count right?]
A book: a reread of a favourite [All Anne Bishop’s books are favourites!]
A book: you meant to read in 2018 [I meant to and I did, then again in 2019!]
A book: featuring an amateur detective [Yeah, I don’t think normal lawyers do that much work]

♥'Selected Poems' by Gerard Manley Hopkins♥
A book: published posthumously
A book: debut novel [His first and last]
A book: with no chapters, unusual chapter headings or unconventional chapters
A book: set in an abbey, cloister, monastery, vicarage or convent [He was a priest….]

♥'My Beloved Brontosaurus' Brian Switek♥
A book: about a hobby
A book: based on a true story [It is non-fiction]
A book: with ‘love’ in the title [My Beloved Brontosaurus]
A book: ghost story [What is the memory of something that never really was, but a ghost?]
A book: read during the season the book is set in [I’m sure I matched up at some point]
A book: with an item of clothing or accessory on the cover [There are clothes present]
A book: retelling of a classic [Classic history. Dinosaur history!]
A book: revolving around a puzzle or game [Dinosaurs are the greatest puzzle there is]

So that’s 27/50 prompts done

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