I lose track of how many books in a year, but probably four or six in a month. and the virtual "Nation", which I really do like, even if I do wish they had a comics section to take the edge off.
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
I have three books on my night table right now. One is None of the Above by my friend (and my dad's urologist!) Ilene. The others are The Girl on the Train, which is supposed to be this year's Gone Girl, I guess (it's already really compelling), and Handling the Truth: On the Writing of Memoir, by Beth Kephart, who's also a local here. Oh, and I picked up Anne Lamott's Travelling Mercies at the used bookstore on the way home from work the other night. It's such a dangerous place for a used bookstore to be, if you're me.
I probably read about ten books a month when I'm teaching. More during vacation. I read before bed every night, which is extremely dangerous when I'm reading an especially good book.
I read "The Song of Achilles" yesterday.
Loved Song of Achilles and picked it as one of my Top Ten reads of the last five years. It well deserved the Orange Prize.
Ooh, I have None of the Above on my kindle waiting. I still haven't read Gone Girl...sometimes i enjoy thrillers and sometimes I just want romances or young adult novels with low stakes (not to say all of them have low stakes. But dystopias aside, most are not life-and-death)
Mom just left me her copy of The Girl on the Train. My bedtime reading is non-existent at the moment because I keep falling asleep.
My mom gave me her copy, too! And I'm the same with bedtime reading right now.
So do y'all shelve Young Adult books together or by category? I've been putting them with children's books, but the children's book shelves are overloaded, and books like Code Name Verity seem more comfortable with the historical fiction. But then there are Madeleine L'Engle's books, which are all interlinked, though some are SF, some are non-SF young adult and some are adult.
I'm so confused. Also, I barely have the spoons to do the stuff I have to do, and suddenly rearranging the bookshelves seems like a fine idea. What are you thinking, brain?
All fiction by author, if I have the room. Non-fiction by category.
It would be easier if I had a long run of identical bookshelves, like a library. What I have is different bookshelves with different shelf heights.