I'm a double nerd, because not only do I make a packing list when taking a flight anywhere, "BOOKS!!" is the first thing on the list.
I hate carrying books. So I need to finish my outgoing book before I get on the flight back. And leave it there, wherever there is. And buy another one for the way back. And read borrowed books while I'm there.
I hate to think how many books I will be taking along on my honeymoon.
What? All I meant was, there will be a few long plane trips and train trips between cities. I read quickly, so many books need to be taken.
I usually take either one huge one (one time it was
A Problem from Hell: American and the Age of Genocide
- that got me left alone.
Blackhawk Down,
nsm. And I never even left the airport that time...) or several thin ones. Compilations of short stories or essays work well too. I get a little ADDish when I'm travelling.
I just got a huge box of new-to-me books from the parents. There's a theme happening. Read
Naked in Baghdad
the other night. And then there is
Bookseller of Kabul, Kite Runner
and
Storyteller's Daughter.
Don't remember if
Reading Lolita in Tehran
is in this shipment. Pretty sure
The Hemingway Book Club of Kosovo
is.
I have plenty to choose from for the next trip.
I'm debating hauling either Gravity's Rainbow or Infinite Jest on the plane with me next week. On the one hand - both are very heavy books. On the other - 5.5 hour flight, both ways, direct. I'll need something to occupy my brain.
I took a bunch of books with me on a business trip that was supposed to last a month. The trip got extended to two and a half months. Was I panicked at the thought of being away from Hubby that long? Nope, I panicked at the idea of running out of books. I shipped a separate box home, because I'd found books I'd been meaning to buy for my library. I left a grundel load for the boarding house's loaner book shelf.
I usually figure out what books I'm taking on a trip before I think about clothes.
Gravity's Rainbow is definitely a time-eater, Juliana. I'm a fast reader, and I usually take weeks to read it.
juliana, Gravity's Rainbow makes Finnegan's Wake look like a lightweight; it eats the brain as much as it eats the time. I don't know if you've read Pynchon before, but if not, be warned: he's very much a love it or hate it proposition. I've never met anyone who was lukewarm about him.
And I just got a birthday prezzie from Kristin T, and it's on now sitting on my incunabulae shelf, where I can not only keep the cats away from it, but where I can drool over it at a safe distance without risking spotting it with my own saliva.
So what is the prezzie? Is it incunabula?
after having read many older people books since then.
Hee hee Polter-Cow, you mean books such as
Harry Potter
(I - V), anything by Tamora Pierce, and the
Anne of Green Gables
stuff? (Read in the past six months at least). Not that I haven't read any older people books, or anything.
I enjoyed
The Weekend
because of
the mysterious hottie who turned out to be a long-lost twin brother, the mysterious poisoning by a friend, Mexico, the heroine was enjoyable, the whole first true love thing, and the bitchy sister.
Although in general I will agree that Pike's books tend to run together in my memory of them.
I forgot to add
Remember Me
to the list, as well as
The Last Vampire
although the sequels to both weren't as enjoyable.