The first book I remember loving reading was Walt Disney's World of Nature at age four. Go on, act surprised.
'The Killer In Me'
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."
Really, BT? I'm shock---nawww, can't do it with a straight face.
I love book junkie weekends. During the school year, I don't have enough time, but I love going to the used bookstore buying a shitload of books, and just laying in bed, reading. I eat in bed, I carry the book with me while I'm nuking something, and then when I'm done, I immediately grab into the bookbag and grab another novel. Read till I can keep my eyes open no more, usually about 6 a.m, sleep like the dead, wake up, make coffee...and dive back in.
I think Erin is me. Of course, I'm also known to go straight after work to the Barnes and Noble, and sit there reading until they close. On a fairly regular basis. Which is what I did tonight (though only from 6-9pm, not until they closed)
I don't read the way I used to, partly because I am pickier and partly because there are so many other things I like to do. but I still read about 8 books a month.
my remember reading books are Little Women which I read in the living room on the couch - which was very hot, but it was our formal room - so no one went in there. and then I remember reading Watership Down durring the summer while sitting in a vinyl bean bag chair. Yellow. that I was sticking to , and I could hear the beans shift. and one of the last big memories was Anne of Green Gables. I remember wishing I had found it when I was younger. I also vaguely remembering being somewhere where I couldn't really read it - maybe my sister's softball game? and being frustrated that I couldn't give my book 100% of my attention
one final reading story. I always went every where with a book. When i got my driver's license - 14 years after we had moved into the area, at age 21. I couldn't go anywhere without directions - because I never looked to see how we were getting anywhere.
Thirsty was a really good book. the ending was really really good.
My favorite reading experiences are:
Reading Persuasion in a 15th house that had been turned into a hotel on my first trip to England.
Reading Middlemarch the summer before my junior year of high school. I picked it because it was the biggest book on the shelf, and I wanted a challenge. It took me a great deal of the summer to get through it, meticulously reading all of the footnotes, and I loved every minute of it. George Eliot is still my favorite author of all time.
Reading Jane Eyre for the first time in my second college English course and picking apart every detail of it that I could in class.
and then when I'm done, I immediately grab into the bookbag and grab another novel
I can't usually do this. I usually need to give my brain a day or two to let go of the last book I read before I can start another one.
I remember reading The Two Towers in the back bench of our old station wagon, by the light of the cars behind us on the highway.
Lots of memories of reading musty historical hardbacks from the library in Moultonboro, NH, either at the beach or crashed on my bed in the loft at our old summer house. I remember spending a whole summer reading James Bond novels, when I was about 14.
And there's a certain album and a certain book that are linked too
Well, there's that Poe album and House of Leaves, but I'm going to guess you aren't talking about that.
Gus' Frankenstein experience is like mine - I read it during a hot summer and it was coolth.
For me, Watership Down and Cheetos are linked, from hiding in my sister's camper shell with what provisions I could scrounge.
my experience with The Illuminatus Trilogy. I read that during a day of getting a government physical, having fasted for 12 hours when the day started and not eating all day, sitting by myself in the corner of a waiting room, and by 5 pm I seriously had a contact high going.
Reading Illuminatus! while fasting and isolating yourself--of course you got weird mind things going! I expected to hate Illuminatus! when it started flipping POVs and timelines and everything, but it was one of the basic texts of something I was just discovering--the multi-layered world of Discordianism--and I realized the twists were the point. Plus there's porn! I wonder where my copy is.
Most revelatory reading moment--the moment when Dernhelm rips off "his" helmet and cries, "I am no man! You face a woman!" and the Witch King hesitates . . . see, I didn't get that it was Eowyn. I had no clue until that very moment. I was young, and I trusted authors completely. I remember sitting bolt upright from where I was laying and reading, staring at the page as the hair on my arms stood upright. It was the very first moment I realized that girls were allowed to kick ass, that a girl could stare evil in the face and make evil take a step back. Until then Eowyn was just the poor girl with the embarassing crush, but there on Pellenor Fields . . . damn Peter Jackson for leaving out "Begone, if you be not deathless!"
I wish I knew how that scene was received back when it was first published.
So I finished Foucault's Pendulum and wrote about it, in a fashion, and coincidentally enough, the post also features Watership Down, because Raq is awesome.
BF and I are already excitedly planning our reading list for our vacation, which is not 'til August. Vacations are all about reading for us (well, reading , eating and Teh Sex) and deciding which books to take is one of the most fun parts of planning.