Thursday, 29 November 2012

Winter's coming and the cold winds are rising...

source: xanthipa.tumblr.com
... at least that's what the weather forecast is currently predicting. Personally, I wish we could just get rid of winter altogether, but I suppose I'm not the one in power here. So, in order to prepare for a yucky weekend of sleet, hail and the occasional snowflake, I'm piling up on tea and good reading material. My "To Read Shelf" currently holds James Kelman's Greyhound for Breakfast, A.L. Kennedy's What Becomes and Alasdair Gray's Poor Things. The first two are collections of short stories and I intend to pick out a few here for a seminar on Scottish literature I'll be teaching soon. The last one is described as being about "true love and scientific daring which whirls the reader from the private operating-theatres of late-Victorian Glasgow through aristocratic casinos, low-life Alexandria and a Parisian bordello, reaching an interrupted climax in a Scottish church" (Amazon). Sounds promising, if you ask me.

Tuesday, 27 November 2012

The holiday season begins...

(c) freshdesignblog.com
So, I already set up our Christmas decorations this weekend. Yes, it's still a bit early, but so what? They make the flat cosy and homey! And don't we all love bundling up with a cuppa and a book and spending a grey afternoon reading, surrounded by x-mas lights? Gee, that makes me feel all warm and fuzzy.
But on a more Martha Stewardian note: Last year, I came across this beautiful photograph of a fellow bibliophile's Christmas tree. Isn't this wonderful?? I swear I wanted to build my own book tree this year but then we did decide against it after all. It's a pity though as I'm sure this would look great in our living room. But then... a few of our shelves would have beeen empty instead (as you sure need quite a few books for this one), which would have ruined the overall picture, I guess. So we'll stick with the good, old fir tree. But who knows... next year... maybe...?

Saturday, 24 November 2012

Creative bookshelves *swoon*

Oh yes! It's the weekend! And to get started for two days of reading, I'm providing a bit of eye candy today... in the form of creative bookshelves. Some of these did make me swoon, but look for yourselves:

Now this one's a beauty! The only things that bugs me here is the limited shelf space, but then - once I'll be rich and famous (yeah, right!) - I may have the space for something like this in my swanky loft apartment:

(c) mentalfloss.com
  This is perfect for anyone with limited space in their flat! How to turn a tiny room into a nifty library:
(c) demilked.com
 This one's for the industrical chic lovers among you. Clever and making the most out of the basics:
(c) visualnews.com
 I also like this little shelf and could easily imagine this as a place to rest all those picture books in a child's bedroom. It looks both playful and sophisticated:
(c) bookshelfporn.com
A perfect place to rest your weary literature-loving behind is this one here, I think. Pretty and convenient: All your favourite books in reach. 


(c) crookedbrains.net

 These shelves somehow remind me of Alice in Wonderland. Not exactly sure why, but the idea is great, of course.
(c) zoomdecor.com


And OMG, it's the Doctor! Or not exactly, but it's the Tardis! I am so jealous of whoever owns this beauty of a bookshelf and am still looking for someone to build me one. :)

(c) bookshelfporn.com

Tuesday, 20 November 2012

Robert McCrum on Literary Genres

(c) Süddeutsche Allgemeine Zeitung
I came across this article on the Guardian's webpage this morning. Here, Robert McCrum elaborates on new literary genres that have, necessarily, cropped up in the last few decades. I really enjoyed this list, so I'm sharing it here. For the entire article go to Robert McCrum on Literary Genres (Guardian 19/11/2012)

And these are McCrum's categories:

"1. Lit lit
Two versions here.
a) Poetry. No higher form - a straight line from Shakespeare, Pope, Wordsworth, Hardy and Hughes.
b) Fiction. Also known as "literary fiction"; a genre whose contemporary exemplars include Julian Barnes, Philip Hensher and Zadie Smith.

2. Ghost lit
A surprising number of successful books (bestselling memoirs especially) are written by ghost writers. But there are also ghosted novels, too. By definition these wraith-like creatures have no names and are known only to their fellow spooks – and the publishers who depend on them.

3. Graphic book lit
Manga novels have been a booming genre for the past 10 years. The Observer sponsors a graphic short story prize, but graphic books have yet to become an established part of the mainstream.

4. Chick lit
The motherlode. There's far more of this lit than most readers realise. If, as some suggest, it began with Bridget Jones, there's now a second or even third generation.

5. Gran lit
A new entry: see my opening comments, above [Note: Please check the article link above for this.]

6. Erotic lit
The quintessential expression of this genre is, of course, EL James's Fifty Shades of Grey, which has now begun to acquire some respectability with a nomination for a National Book award. My own guess is that it's a craze that will soon (if it doesn't already) seem embarrassing and ridiculous.

7. Booker lit
Fiction that plays well with Booker prize judges is sometimes characterised as unreadable and pretentious, with some justification. On the other hand, the Booker's track record of winners is impressive. As a prize, Booker is rivalled only by the Orange prize, now the women's prize for fiction. In a larger category – prize lit – Booker and Orange are the market leaders.

8. US lit
For me, the big names here are still Philip Roth, Paul Auster, and Don DeLillo. Of course, US fiction (and poetry) is too vast a canvas to be reduced to a single frame.

9. Commonwealth lit
The literature of the Commonwealth used to get a lot of commercial and critical attention. Changing readership patterns in the world have reduced the significance of "Commonwealth" writing, but it will probably survive, in some form, for another generation. (see also: 10 and 11)

10. Oz lit
Australian writing, a sub-genre of 9, used to be fashionable enough to deserve a category of its own. The market leader is Peter Carey, followed by Christos Tsiolkas, Kate Grenville and Thomas Keneally, among many.
(c) SC, welcometobookalley.blogspot.com

11. Indian lit
This could be seen as a subset of either Booker lit or Commonwealth Lit, and is represented by Salman Rushdie, Vikram Seth, Amitav Ghosh and many others. For a while, it seemed as if the English literary tradition would be sustained exclusively by writers from the sub-continent.

12. Kids' lit
The past 20 years have seen a wonderful flowering of writing for children, from Philip Pullman and Julia Donaldson to Michael Morpurgo and JK Rowling. Later generations will work out why this should have been so.

13. Translated lit
The British reading public's appetite for foreign prose and poetry is (compared with that of our European neighbours) patchy. There was a boom in translated fiction in the 1980s (Kundera, Vargas Llosa, Márquez etc) but that has slowed in the last decade.

14. SF/fantasy
Science fiction is the cockroach in the house of books: it survives on scraps and never goes away. Occasionally, as in the work of HG Wells and JG Ballard, it becomes sublime.

15. Blog lit
A new entry to the field. Blogs that become books. The latest is schoolgirl Martha Payne's blog, which was published last week. Payne hit the headlines with her blog on school meals, won the support of Jamie Oliver and went on to raise £120,000 for charity after her local council banned her from posting photographs and scathing critiques of her school dinners online. Her book, written with the help of her father, takes its title from her blog, NeverSeconds. A more serious example of a blog that became a book is The Rest Is Noise, by Alex Ross.
 
Book blogs, generally, remain virtual: as they should."

Monday, 19 November 2012

Dog Ears or Bookmarks?

So, I had this loooong discussion with a friend this weekend about whether or not it is okay to dog ear the pages of a book. This then also led to a debate about jotting notes into the margins of a book. Oh boy, we sure didn't see eye to eye on these ones. As someone who used to be VERY neat with her books (Bent spines? Sacrilege!), I now think that dog earing and - come to think of it - writing into the margins is okay in some situations. I suppose textbooks and low-priced editions I use when I'm teaching/researching would fall into this category. For all others I use a bookmark. 

My friend, however, didn't agree at all with this division into "work" books and "pleasure" books. She only uses bookmarks. Full stop. No discussion. I, of course, respect her opinion but I'd be interested in what my (still few) readers think? Are you a dog-earer or a bookmark-lover? Do you possibly have any unusual/interesting bookmarks that are special to you. Please post your two cents in the comments section...

Thursday, 15 November 2012

Shakespeare and Company, Paris



(c) allhallow.com

Today I would like to introduce you to my favourite bookshop in the world: “Shakespeare and Company” in Paris. Situated a mere stone's throw away from Notre Dame at 37 rue de la Bûcherie, in the 5th arrondisement, the shop was first opened in 1951 by George Whitman who originally named it “Le Mistral” but later changed the name to “Shakespeare and Company”. For decades it has served as a regular bookshop and library for readers and (quite famous) writers, but also as a place to crash for travelling bibliophiles. It is claimed that over 40,000 people have actually stayed at the shop over the years. 

Sadly, George died almost a year ago in December of 2011 at the age of 98. His lovely daughter Sylvia Beach Whitman had already taken over the shop by then and is now running it according to her father’s philosophy, but still implementing a few necessary changes, such as building a new staircase to the upper level (the old one sure was a neck-breaker), etc.  She also started the shop’s own literary festival a few years ago.

So this is my literature-related travel advice for today! Don’t miss out on this gem of a shop! Trust me, you will feel like you’ve died and gone straight to book heaven. And yes, chances are high that you may even meet one or the other author.

If you would like to check out their webpage, you can find it here: Shakespeare and Company



Tuesday, 13 November 2012

30 Minute Book Challenge

I'm sure some of you will have heard about the 30-day-book-challenge, a kind of game that has been rather popular on Facebook for a while. I always wanted to do the challenge as well, but have found it too hard to come up with an entry every single day for a whole month.

Thus, I decided to take the idea, change it to my needs and turn it into a 30-minute-book-challenge, i.e. I will try to answer this questionnaire in half an hour and may then come back to some entries in the course of the next days. Feel free to post your own lists in the comments section below. :)


01-Your favorite Book
That's a difficult one as there are just too many great books out there, but if I really had to pick one it would probably be Virginia Woolf - To the Lighthouse.

02-Least Favorite Book
Jorge Luis Borges - The Library of Babel

03-A Book that completely surprised you (bad/good)
David Nicholl's - One Day

04- A Book that reminds you of home
Grimm's Fairy Tales

05- A Non-fiction book that you enjoyed
Richard Dawkins - The God Delusion

06- A Book that makes you cry
Elizabeth Marshall Thomas - The Social Lives of Dogs

07- A Book that’s hard to read
James Joyce - Finnegan's Wake

08- An unpopular book you believe should be a Best-Seller
Peter Ackroyd - Chatterton

09- A Book you’ve read more than once
Donna Tartt - The Secret History

10- The first novel you remember reading
Leo Lionni - Swimmy, but that's not really a "novel". That would probably be one of Enid Blyton's Famous Five books

11- The Book that made you fall in love with reading

Michael Ende - The Neverending Story

12- A book so emotionally draining you couldn’t complete it or had to set aside for a bit
That actually never happened...

13- Favorite childhood book
Astrid Lindgren - Ronja, the Robber's Daughter

14- Book that should be on hs/college required reading list
Zadie Smith - On Beauty

15- Favorite book dealing with foreign culture
Teà Obreht - The Tiger's Wife

16- Favorite book turned movie
Ian McEwan - Atonement

17- Book turned movie and completely desecrated
Audrey Niffenegger - The Time Traveler's Wife

18- A Book You can’t find on shelves anymore that you love
Edda Bars - Sabinchen Nimmersatt (I LOVED this as a child!)

19- A Book that changed your mind about a particular subject (non-fiction)
John Carey - What Good are The Arts?

20-A Book you would recommend to an ignorant/racist/close-minded person
R. J. Palacio - Wonder

21-A guilty pleasure book
Susan Hill - The Woman in Black

22-Favorite Series
Sophie Kinsella - Shopaholic (easily falls under guilty pleasure as well :))

23- Favorite Romance Novel
Charlotte Bronte - Jane Eyre

24 - A Book you later found out the Author lied about
Thomas Pynchon - Gravity's Rainbow

25-Favorite Autobiographical/Biographical book
Ernst Hemingway - A Moveable Feast

26-A Book you wish would be written
The sequel to Mark Douglas-Home's The Sea Detective, but that IS actually being written right now.

27- A Book you would write if you had all the resources
campus novel

28- A Book you wish you never read
E. L. James - Fifty Shades of Grey (so pointless and dull!)

29- An Author that you completely avoid/hate wont read
Alan Hollinghurst

30 - An Author that you will read whatever they put out
Kate Atkinson

All photographs courtesy of bookporn.tumblr.com/

Monday, 12 November 2012

What are you reading this week?

(c) bookjourney.wordpress.com
Now, the weekend has come and gone again and I'm sure most of you spent some of it reading. I did and I'm also already looking forward to the coming week as I'm still waiting for a package from Amazon. Yeah, it's like waiting for Christmas, I know. 

I didn't read any longer works this weekend but actually tried to work through a French book for once. Boy, it had surely been some time since I did that and I have to admit that my French has become quite a bit rusty. I read La vie celibataire by Yvonne Bruton which is not too demanding chick lit, perfect to get back into the language. The book had little exercises at the end of each chapter which made things a lot easier. It is thus an easy and fun read and I recommend it to anyone wanting to improve their language skills.

I also started out on Ben Marcus' The Flame Alphabet until the husband snatched it away from me. Ok, it really is his copy and I kind of "stole" it from his shelf. ;-) Well, he does want to read it first now, which means that I'll just have to wait til I can read on. It looked promising though and I hope it can live up to the raving reviews it received in the TLS.

I then gave in to my current passion for gothic narratives and downloaded Stephen King and Joe Hill's In the Tall Grass onto my Kindle. It is a borderline case of novella/short story and I'm glad to announce that King seems to be returning to his original voice. I used to be a big fan in my teen years, but never really liked his most recent stories. This story, however, touches on what initially drew me to his writing and, without giving too much away, it does raise the goose-bumps on your back while triggering your most elemental instinctive fears.

So, the books I'm still waiting for (Hurry, Mr Postman, will ya?) are Libba Bray's novel The Diviners and Krystyna Kuhn's seventh installment of the Das Tal books, a German series about the strange going-ons at a remote Canadian college for gifted students. The latter has been announced forever, but is continuously being pushed back by the publisher. I do hope they manage to bring it out soon. Life is just too stressful right now and I need some not overly high-brow literary food to unwind with. :-)

Sunday, 11 November 2012

Chick Lit: Bridget Jones will be back!

The Guardian announced this week that Helen Fielding is currently working on a third novel about the world's favourite single lady, Bridget Jones, to be published next autumn. The publishers only stated that the book "explores a different phase in Bridget's life" and will be set in present-day London, i.e. roughly 13 years after the last instalment in the series. Ooooh, I'm already psyched!

The author revealed that Bridget's popular diary entries would now be focusing more on Twitter followers than on cigarettes, alcohol and weight loss or gain. "It's more like 'number of Twitter followers: 0. Still no followers. Still no followers'. But she has grownup. My life has moved on and hers will move on too," Fielding declared. "She's still trying to give up [drinking and smoking], she's still on a diet. She's trying a bit harder, and is a bit more successful, but she's never really going to change."
(c) www.desktopnexus.com

So, I'm going to pencil a big fat mark into my calendar for 2013. I know... it's comfort literature, but in my personal book that is more than enough for a cosy autumny weekend. 

Friday, 9 November 2012

Tattoos...

... are forever. Well, in most cases this holds true and, after all, this is the idea of it: that you can't just wash it off! Thus, getting one should be considered very carefully. Still, my poor little tattoo-liking and book-loving heart has just been tempted again. Want to see what did it? Really? Watch your blood pressure cause here goes:
(c) Robert Presutti, The New York Times
Tataaaaa! Isn't this lovely??? A little voice in my ear keeps yelling at me that it's just a teeny tiny one after all - psychomachia for this bibliophile! According to several articles on the internet, literary tattoos appear to be on the rise and have become a new mode of self-expression. These tattoos, in most cases, consist of short and memorable quotations or little icons like this one here.

So what about you, book lovers and loveresses? Would you wear your passion for literature on your sleeve... ahem, skin? If so, what kind of needle work would you get? Please satisfy my curiousity and post your comments below.

Thursday, 8 November 2012

This morning in the office library...

... I came across these two having a secret rendez-vous in front of an ominous looking bookshelf:
(c) SC, welcometobookalley.blogspot.de

Gotcha, Bill and Queenie!! Love seems to bridge not only space but also time. ;-) Or maybe they were merely having a quiet discussion about literature: Shakespeare defending the value of his plays and Lizzie questioning the positioning of the Norton Anthology of English literature right next to the one of American literature. Who knows? They sure didn't want to tell me. But you know what they say:
(c) Men of the Stacks calendar
Pssssssst.....
(c) bookporn.tumblr.com/

Even Mr Hunka-Hunka Librarian says so and he is always right. Yes, Sir! Now shush, and go back to your reading!   

The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr Morris Lessmore

Have any of you come across this wonderful short film already? It is called The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr Morris Lessmore and was directed by Brandon Oldenburg and William Joyce in 2011. The producers describe it as an "allegory about the curative powers of story" with the plot of the film revolving around book lover Lessmore and his becoming custodian of a magical library of flying books. It surely is every bibliophile's dream cast into a wonderful animation! You can watch it online at:

Wednesday, 7 November 2012

Books that make you go "Oooooh!"

The UK version of  
The Tiger's Wife  (Orion Books, 2011)
Well, I love books. Guilty! But you probably know that already, even though this blog is just kicking off. However, there are some books that I love really, really much. Those are the books I want to hug to my chest while caressing their covers. They are the books I would like to climb into or to wrap around me like a comfort blanket because they are so freakin' good - no - great!

One of these is a novel I just finished: Téa Obreht's The Tiger's Wife. I admit that I actually passed it in the bookshop several times, thinking "naah, not for me". Then a colleague gave me his copy and I was hooked from the very first page. The Tiger's Wife is the story of Natalia, a young doctor in former Yugoslavia, and the special relationship she had with her grandfather. The book is a matryoshka-like collection of stories (and fragments thereof) which Natalia's granddad told her, interspersed with her own quest of unravelling the mysteries of his death.

If you haven't read this yet, you definitely should. Both in my private life and in my job I come across a very large number of books every year, but this one definitely stood out! It is eloquent, poetic, poignant and full of clever images. Obreht won the 2011 Orange Prize for Fiction with this debut - a more than well-deserved award. Personally, I can't wait for her second book, but it will definitely be hard to top this one.

Congratulations, Mr President!


Yes!! Obama has been re-elected for another four years and the whole world lets out one giant sigh of relief! In view of this fortunate event, I wanted to share this picture I recently found on punditkitchen.com. See? Books are cool! :)

Tuesday, 6 November 2012

Celebrity books - seriously?

So here's this: "According to the Hollywood Reporter, Spears is currently in discussion with a division of HarperCollins about writing a novel. The plan is for Spears to write a "roman à clef", similar to Lauren Conrad's 2009 book and subsequent series LA Candy." (The Guardian)

And here follows my question: Do we really need another celebrity trying her hand at writing? As if the navel-gazing of star autobiographies (hardly any of which is actually penned by the celebrity in question him/herself) isn't enough, the belief that anyone who can decently sing into a microphone or cry convincingly in front of a camera also needs to write a novel eludes me. Why, oh why would you think so? And let's face it, even though Lauren Conrad's books sold well, they are not really worth their money. Just my humble opinion but yes.... So, Britney, please don't do it! You've got enough on your hands raising your kids and producing your records. As my grandma used to stay: Cobbler, stick to thy last.