The Best Reader:
silence

  • It's Monday 12.4.11

    It's Monday 12.4.11

    Hosted by Sheila — Thank you!
    Last week was probably my most productive in a long time! I finished "Crossed" by Ally Condie, "Silence" by Becca Fitzpatrick, and "Replication: The Jason Experiment" by Jill Williamson! I'm feeling on fire!:) This week I'd like to finished "Cinder" by Marissa Meyer and "The Night Circus" by Erin Morgenstern.

    "Humans and androids crowd the raucous streets of New Beijing. A deadly plague ravages the population. From space, a ruthless lunar people watch, waiting to make their move. No one knows that Earth’s fate hinges on one girl... .

    Cinder, a gifted mechanic, is a cyborg. She’s a second-class citizen with a mysterious past, reviled by her stepmother and blamed for her stepsister’s illness. But when her life becomes intertwined with the handsome Prince Kai’s, she suddenly finds herself at the center of an intergalactic struggle, and a forbidden attraction. Caught between duty and freedom, loyalty and betrayal, she must uncover secrets about her past in order to protect her world’s future."

    "The circus arrives without warning. No announcements precede it. It is simply there, when yesterday it was not. Within the black-and-white striped canvas tents is an utterly unique experience full of breathtaking amazements. It is called Le Cirque des Rêves, and it is only open at night.

    But behind the scenes, a fierce competition is underway—a duel between two young magicians, Celia and Marco, who have been trained since childhood expressly for this purpose by their mercurial instructors. Unbeknownst to them, this is a game in which only one can be left standing, and the circus is but the stage for a remarkable battle of imagination and will. Despite themselves, however, Celia and Marco tumble headfirst into love—a deep, magical love that makes the lights flicker and the room grow warm whenever they so much as brush hands.

    True love or not, the game must play out, and the fates of everyone involved, from the cast of extraordinary circus per formers to the patrons, hang in the balance, suspended as precariously as the daring acrobats overhead. "

  • Silence — Becca Fitzpatrick

    Silence — Becca Fitzpatrick

    "When I think of 'Silence' this is what I remember: a grown woman hiding out in closet-sized Study Room with a book about Fallen Angels and not being able to put it down." — Miss Remmers

    Release Date: October 2011
    Publisher: Simon and Schuster
    Challenges: 100+ Challenge

    "The noise between Patch and Nora is gone. They've overcome the secrets riddled in Patch's dark past... bridged two irreconcilable worlds... faced heart-wrenching tests of betrayal, loyalty and trust... and all for a love that will transcend the boundary between heaven and earth. Armed with nothing but their absolute faith in one another, Patch and Nora enter a desperate fight to stop a villain who holds the power to shatter everything they've worked for—and their love—forever."

    I read "Hush Hush " two summers ago and "Crescendo " less than a month ago. Between "Hush Hush" and "Crescendo " I lost my enthusiasm for this series. After reading "Hush Hush " I was just amazed and astounded — wanting more! Do to all the other books that needed reading, I didn't get to "Crescendo " until recently. As I opened "Crescendo " for the first time I wasn't really sure how I felt about it. I didn't remember the characters. I didn't remember the plot. I didn't remember Fitzpatrick's created reality. In retrospect, I think that's why I didn't really care for "Crescendo " — I was spending most of my time trying to figure out what was going on.

    "Silence," on the other hand, reminded me what I love about this series. While I wasn't as lost as Nora, I loved rediscovering this reality along with her. As her memory returned in fragments and flashes — so did mine! "Silence" is exactly what I needed to rekindle my love of Nora, Patch, and even Scott!

    This book was a complete page turner. While at school during my plan period and lunch I kept sneaking away to find a quiet place to read. I felt like I was back (actually attending) at high school again! I found a little study room that was nice, but it's between two classrooms and I was so nervous about being caught! I may (or may not) have even hid out in the staff bathroom during passing time between classes waiting for the other teachers to clear out. Finally, my nerves were spent and I couldn't take feeling like a rebel anymore so I settled for the school library (which isn't nearly as relaxing or quiet). I can't explain it, but I felt as if I were breaking the rules or doing something I shouldn't be when all I was doing was reading! It was the most peculiar thing! It's not as if I didn't get my work done but I didn't want to be chastised either.

    Anyway, when I think of "Silence" that is what I will think of: a grown woman hiding out in closet-sized Study Room with a book about Fallen Angels. Like the other novels, "Silence" is fast paced and a book that, right when I had it all figured out, the plot twisted. It was fantastic! I ended up reading it in two days and cannot wait for the fourth installment (I hope my memory holds).

    -Visit Becca around the web here: Website | Blog | Goodreads | Twitter
    -BUY THE BOOK: Amazon | Kindle | Barnes and Noble | Nook

    To the FTC, with love: Library Loan

  • Thanksgiving Food and Friendship Article

    The authors of The Recipe Club have written a Thanksgiving article that, thanks to Caitlin from FSB Associates, I am able to post for your Thanksgiving holiday taste buds. I hope you are all gearing up for a wonder Thanksgiving Holiday!

    Tales of Thanksgiving Food and Friendship By Andrea Israel and Nancy Garfinkel, Authors of The Recipe Club: A Tale of Food and Friendship

    For some people, Thanksgiving evokes warm feelings triggered by memories of a close-knit family gathering, where relatives share traditions and a home-cooked meal.

    For others... it's the beginning of a holiday season stuffed with lunatic relatives, family dysfunction, bitter recriminations, and heartburn.

    We heard a wide range of Thanksgiving Tales this year while traveling around the country for our Recipe Clubs. Inspired by the plot and structure of our book, Recipe Clubs are storytelling and friendship circles in which women gather to share true-life food-related stories along with recipes. Recipe Clubs are not about cooking; they're about creating community and fostering friendship... they're about laughing and crying... they're about honoring our own lives and the lives of others. They show us how the simplest, sweetest, or funniest tales about food can turn into deep revelations about our lives.

    Just about everybody has at least one quintessential Thanksgiving food memory that perfectly captures the complicated feelings surrounding the holiday. Here are some of our favorites:

    GIVING THANKS One Recipe Club friend recalls the first time she ever cooked a Thanksgiving meal on her own. Her mother, who traditionally did the meal, was recovering from surgery. Her father was working. And her sister was flying in just in time for the meal, but not early enough to help cook.

    So our friend rose to the challenge, proclaiming that she would do the entire meal, on her own. No problem — until reality set in. She woke at dawn, shopped, chopped, and soon realized her oven was half the size it needed to be. By the time the turkey wanted basting the chestnut stuffing required baking — and the brussel sprouts were definitely not cleaning themselves!

    But things really went south when it came time prepare her grandmother's famous pumpkin pie. This was the pie recipe that had been handed down through generations. If it didn't come out perfectly, our friend knew she'd feel like a failure.

    Of course, nothing went right. The pie crust was too wet, then too dry. There was too much nutmeg, not enough ginger. With every crimp of the dough her head swam with the imagined voice of her southern grandmother: "A woman is judged not just by who she is, but by what she can bring to the table."

    When the pie came out of the oven, the crust was too brown, and there was a giant crack running down the middle of the filling. Our friend fought back tears, took a deep breath, and set the pie out to cool, knowing more clearly than ever that neither it — nor she — was, or would ever be, perfect.

    But when it came time for everyone to gather at the table, something shifted. Her parents and sister praised her hard work and loved the meal. And our friend realized she had somehow been carried on the wings of the generations of women who had cooked before her, without complaining, to serve a Thanksgiving meal to their family. She felt truly thankful for all the work that her mother, grandmother, aunts — indeed all the women she'd known through her life — had accomplished each holiday. Triumphant, connected, and happy, she understood that food cooked with love is its own kind of perfection.

    FINALIZING THE DIVORCE One Recipe Club friend recalled her first Thanksgiving after her divorce.

    Since carving the bird had always been her ex-husband's job, she delighted in finding a new, turkey-free recipe. She settled on an apricot-glazed ham, and went to work cooking a glaze of brown sugar, cloves, and apricot nectar (an ingredient that gave her extra pleasure knowing her ex-husband detested it.)

    When her grown children came for dinner, they were childishly upset not to have their usual 12-pound bird. But it was delicious, and in the end each one complimented the chef. On her way out, the youngest daughter told her mother, "maybe we all need to learn how to gracefully accept change."

    For this new divorcee, serving ham became a way of asserting her independence, showing her children there was life after marriage, and teaching the whole family to find new ways to be together.

    IT'S ALL RELATIVE The truth is, we don't pick our relatives. So if the Thanksgiving gathering of the clan is an annual emotional challenge, you aren't alone.

    In a recent Recipe Club circle of old friends and new acquaintances, we met a woman who admitted that for most of her life she dreaded Thanksgiving; all it evoked for her were memories of family fights. The contrast of what she knew Thanksgiving was "supposed" to be, versus what it was in her home, always made her feel ashamed and disappointed. And yet every November she felt compelled go home for a family Thanksgiving meal.

    But one year, that changed, when her parents and brother decided to have Thanksgiving away from home. They journeyed together to Nantucket, where they ate dinner at a seaside inn. The inn served a New England clam chowder, rich with cream and warm on a cold autumn night. And they discovered that a new location, with new foods, away from the house where memories were often more fiery than the jalepeno cornbread, turned out to be just what the family needed.

    Now, every year, back at home, they have a new tradition: serving New England Clam Chowder at their Thanksgiving feasts, each spoonful bringing back fond memories of a peaceful and loving family holiday.

    A FAMILY OF FRIENDS Finally, a little tale of food and friendship.

    A reader of our book told us that she had a choice this year. She could invite Uncle Tim and Aunt Zoe, the way she does every year, and spend the entire holiday worrying about whether or not the perpetually complaining couple were happy. She could include cousins Beth and Sean, knowing they would be competitive, putting down her choice of food, her way of cooking, her table setting. She could extend an invitation to her brother and dreaded sister-in-law, who would sit in silence the entire meal and pick at the food.

    Or... she could shake things up and do something entirely different: invite only friends. True friends. People she enjoyed being with. Who made her laugh. Who spoke truthfully. Who shared her passions for good books, good wine, and good music.

    She took the leap. She dumped the whiners, broke with tradition, irritated several family members — and never looked back. The moral: good food and good friends are the perfect combination. Sometimes it's a good idea to trim the guest list before you serve the bird with all its trimmings.

    ©2009 Andrea Israel and Nancy Garfinkel, authors of The Recipe Club: A Tale of Food and Friendship

    Author Bios for The Recipe Club: A Tale of Food and Friendship

    Andrea Israel is a producer/writer for ABC's Focus Earth. She was a producer/writer on Anderson Cooper 360, Dateline, and Good Morning America (which garnered her an Emmy Award). Her story In Donald's Eyes was recently optioned for a film. Ms. Israel is the author of Taking Tea. Her writing has appeared in many publications.

    Nancy Garfinkel is co-author of The Wine Lover's Guide to the Wine Country: The Best of Napa, Sonoma, and Mendocino(Chronicle Books, 2005). A creative strategist, design consultant, writer, and editor for magazine, corporate, and non-profit clients, she has won a host of graphic arts and editorial merit awards. She has written extensively about food and graphic arts.

    For more information please visit www.therecipeclubbook.com

  • Thankfully Reading

    Thankfully Reading

    Once the school bells ring, signalling that Thanksgiving Break has finally started, I will be Thankfully Reading. While I can't devote my entire weekend to reading as my family will be here tonight and tomorrow, I do want to rejuvenate and hopefully kick over my TBR where it needs to be (doubtful).

    Tonight, for instance, my family will be visiting from Northern Minnesota. As I prepare dinner and clean the house I'll be listening to "Torment" by Lauren Kate. On Thursday as we relax/cook before the feast I'll be reading "Crossed."

    So between books and audios, this weekend I'd like to complete:

    1. Crossed by Ally Condie
    2. Torment by Lauren Kate (audiobook)
    3. Silence by Becca Fitzpatrick

  • A Duty to the Dead — Charles Todd

    A Duty to the Dead — Charles Todd

    From TowerBooks...

    "England, 1916." Independent-minded Bess Crawford's upbringing is far different from that of the usual upper-middle-class British gentlewoman. Growing up in India, she learned the importance of responsibility, honor, and duty from her officer father. At the outbreak of World War I, she followed in his footsteps and volunteered for the nursing corps, serving from the battlefields of France to the doomed hospital ship "Britannic."
    On one voyage, Bess grows fond of the young, gravely wounded Lieutenant Arthur Graham. Something rests heavily on his conscience, and to give him a little peace as he dies, she promises to deliver a message to his brother. It is some months before she can carry out this duty, and when she's next in England, she herself is recovering from a wound. When Bess arrives at the Graham house in Kent, Jonathan Graham listens to his brother's last wishes with surprising indifference. Neither his mother nor his brother Timothy seems to think it has any significance. Unsettled by this, Bess is about to take her leave when sudden tragedy envelops her. She quickly discovers that fulfilling this duty to the dead has thrust her into a maelstrom of intrigue and murder that will endanger her own life and test her courage as not even war has."

    "A Duty to the Dead" is an absolutely phenomenal book. I finished it in a week, which many would think is no small task, but really, for a college senior — that's saying something.

    The plot is riveting and exciting — incomparable to anything I've ever read. Characterization and plot were flawless in this first Bess Crawford Mystery. I immediately felt for and related to Bess Crawford after the first chapter. I was drawn into the story on the first page. I just had to find out what Arthur Graham's message meant. The message is so entirely simple and seemingly uncomplicated — but it amasses to a deeply rooted conspiracy surrounded by lies.

    This past week I have been charged in creating an entire year's curriculum map and a lesson plan (two separate classes) — I chose to do eleventh grade American Literature for the map and because I'm lazy and I don't like reinventing the wheel, for the lesson plan I did "The Examination of Sarah Good." I then, for another class, was assigned to create a webquest (more to come on that later) and I chose to continue my lesson on Sarah Good and the Salem Witchcraft Trials. Because I spent so much of my week reading about the Trials, I couldn't help but compare this book and its message to that of the Salem Witchcraft Trials. So much pain and hurt as a result of foolish little children. I don't want to say too much — and I don't think I have — but I had better stop here.

    While the ending came quick, I wouldn't have had it any other way — it just worked. This book is absolutely wonderful. I feel so very lucky to have received this book from Goodreads as a First Reads Winner. I will definitely be looking for more of Bess Crawford.

    Because I so much enjoyed this book I will not be offering it up for giveaway. I will definitely be taking this book to my classroom next year. I may have to purchase another copy so that when my students inevitatably read it to pieces, I'm not left without. Anyone could enjoy this novel — adults and advanced young adult readers. There's no sex, no massive swearing, and enough blood to keep high school boys interested — a perfect book for a young teacher looking for books to give her students (especially males!).

    Favorite Quotes:

    • "Truth is a very illusive thing." "I'm not sure that truth exists. Perhaps we only think it does. But in reality it's only what you believe" (202).
    • "You were ever taking pity on the halt and the lame and the lost" (259).
    • "That was what hurt the most. That I would have been drawn into the conspiracy of silence, unwittingly and therefore unwillingly" (326).

  • Crescendo — Becca Fitzpatrick

    Crescendo — Becca Fitzpatrick

    "'Crescendo' was a decent sophomore novel and if you didn't really "connect" with the exposition or rising action, that climax will definitely bring you back for more!" — Miss Remmers

    Release Date: October 2010
    Publisher: Simon & Schuster
    Challenges: Audiobook Challenge, Off the Shelf, 100+ Reading Challenge

    "Nora should have know her life was far from perfect. Despite starting a relationship with her guardian angel, Patch (who, title aside, can be described anything but angelic), and surviving an attempt on her life, things are not looking up. Patch is starting to pull away and Nora can't figure out if it's for her best interest or if his interest has shifted to her arch-enemy Marcie Millar. Not to mention that Nora is haunted by images of her father and she becomes obsessed with finding out what really happened to him that night he left for Portland and never came home.
    The farther Nora delves into the mystery of her father's death, the more she comes to question if her Nephilim blood line has something to do with it as well as why she seems to be in danger more than the average girl. Since Patch isn't answering her questions and seems to be standing in her way, she has to start finding the answers on her own. Relying too heavily on the fact that she has a guardian angel puts Nora at risk again and again. But can she really count on Patch or is he hiding secrets darker than she can even imagine?"

    Because it had been over a year since I read, it took me a few chapters to rediscover the plot and characters. I'm not sure if it's due to the time difference or the place I'm in currently, but this book just didn't hit me the same way "Hush, Hush" did. It's not that I disliked the book, it's just that I wasn't in a hurry to finish. Maybe I'm having a case of the Audio Blues — does this happen to anyone else?

    Anyway, Vi, the best friend, annoyed me during the audio because I felt like the narrator was out of voices. But the actual character really impressed me — what an awesome friend! If I had to pick any recent book BFF for my real life friend I think it would be her. What she would do for Nora was absolutely endless and the girl definitely has spunk.

    Patch was a bit more predictable and right from the get-go I was like, "Oh no," in regards to Nora's actions and reactions in love. I mean, this girl just needs to stop, let the hormones relax, think, and then act. There was a bit of a surprise at the end, and despite the predictability throughout the novel there were the moments (especially towards the end) where I was like "WHAAAAT!?" That alone was enough to get me excited for "Silence."

    All in all, "Crescendo" was a decent sophomore novel and if you didn't really "connect" with the exposition or rising action, that climax will definitely bring you back for more!
    -Visit Becca around the web here: Website | Blog | Goodreads | Twitter
    -BUY THE BOOK: Amazon | Kindle | Barnes and Noble | Nook

    To the FTC, with love: Library Loan Audiobook

  • Thirteen Reasons Why — Jay Asher

    Thirteen Reasons Why — Jay Asher

    "This topic is so important to me as an educator. Because of how wonderfully written it was, this will be a book that I must have in my classroom." — Miss Remmers

    From Amazon.com...

    "Clay Jensen returns home from school to find a mysterious box with his name on it lying on his porch. Inside he discovers cassette tapes recorded by Hannah Baker--his classmate and crush--who committed suicide two weeks earlier.

    On tape, Hannah explains that there are thirteen reasons why she decided to end her life. Clay is one of them. If he listens, he'll find out how he made the list."

    This book was absolutely fantastic. I loved this book because it grabbed my attention with the first sentence. An original story that I think anyone can relate to, "Thirteen Reasons Why" really made me reevaluate my actions. I'd like to think I always do the right thing and that I'm nice to everyone — but after reading this book I'm going to try so much harder.

    I hardly found a flaw in this novel, but if I had to pick (I know this is superficial) it would be the cover. The girl on the cover isn't how I pictured Hannah and, while yes, the swing is kind of important, I feel like the cover doesn't scream "READ ME!" And a novel like this needs to be read. I knew that, but it took Sheila's review for me to finally pick it up and read it. While minimal, I wish this book had a better cover. A cover that, like "Hush Hush" (for example), demanded to be read. Although I've yet to read "Hush Hush."

    This novel really touched me; this past year I started the "Yellow Ribbon Campaign" on our campus and organized several different speakers and activities to raise awareness about suicide and depression. This is topic is so important to me as an educator and because of how wonderfully written it was, this will be a book that I must have in my classroom. I'm not sure when I'll get around to purchasing it, but I will. The first day I enter my classroom to set it up, this book will be tucked in my bag. Anyone would devour this book and everyone should read it. If I could find enough copies, I'd make it mandatory to be read in class. Maybe it will have to be something I read aloud. This topic cannot be silenced any longer.

    This book reminded me that my actions do have consequences, not matter how minimal they may seem. Thank you Sheila for encouraging me to read this book; I highly recommend it.

    Originality: 10/10
    Ending: 8/10
    Characters: 10/10
    Plot: 10/10
    My reaction/enjoyment: 10/10
    Theme: 10/10
    Imagery: 10/10
    Setting: 5/5
    Voice: 5/5
    Style: 5/5
    Tone: 5/5
    Cover: 5/10
    Overall Grade: 93/100 A

    To the FTC, with love: Library Loan

  • The Rights of the Reader — Daniel Pennac (Translated — Sarah Adams)

    The Rights of the Reader — Daniel Pennac (Translated — Sarah Adams)

    For the second week in a row, I'd like to welcome this week's Guest Reviewer Kath.

    **********************************

    From Amazon.com...

    "First published in 1992 and even more relevant now, Daniel Pennac's quirky ode to reading has sold more than a million copies in his native
    France. Drawing on his experiences as a child, a parent, and an inner-city teacher in Paris, the author reflects on the power of story and reminds us of our right to read anything, anywhere, anytime, so long as we are enjoying ourselves. In a new translation with a foreword and illustrations by Quentin Blake, here is a guide to reading unlike any other: fresh, sympathetic, and never didactic, it is a work of literature in its own right."
    Cast your mind back. You're seven years old and you've just got your very own library card. Surrounded by silence and the smell of words and promised adventures, you run giddily towards the children's section. You run your hand over the shelves of books, some smooth, some bumpy, all tagged with some weird and unfathomable code. Before you know it, you've picked up something that has caught your attention and you've settled into the bright red beanbag for the long haul. You forget where you are, consumed by the voices and exploits of Asterix or the Famous Five and you can't believe it's time to go already when, an hour later, your Mum comes round the corner to find you.

    Every week you come back and you always leave with a pile of books, one of which you're usually half way through by the time you get home. The need to read consumes you: you sneak off to the toilet to get in a few pages, you read late at night with a torch under the bedcovers. You are, in fact, a veritable addict, looking feverishly along the shelves to find your next hit.
    Then, somewhere along the line, something happens. Reading loses some of the joy it once held — it becomes, unthinkably, a chore. A task that has to be completed by next Monday, with an 800 word essay to boot. High school literature studies have come home to roost. English class is now peering over your shoulder, pointing out that you shouldn't be reading that book, you should read this one, the required text. You know, the one sitting ominously on your desk, unreadable and daunting.
    This is where the education system, according to Daniel Pennac, fails our kids. I recently read his amazing book The Rights of the Reader (translated by Sarah Adams) as part of a bookring through Bookcrossing and was very pleasantly surprised. I was expecting something completely different — a fun and lighthearted look at reading as a hobby — but was met with an entertaining and brilliantly written manifesto on the importance of teaching our future generations to love reading and not make it a "should" — a word sure to kill any desire to do something.
    Pennac points out that as kids, we loved to hear stories and would beg our parents again and again to read us our favorite books. It is in this tradition of oral storytelling, he argues, that reading is based. It's our desire to hear new stories and follow new heroes on new adventures that drives us from one finished book to the next new one. But as soon as interfere with our child's relationship with books and we disturb the private "alchemist's voice" in their minds, we start to suck their joy out of their reading experience. This, claims Pennac, is a crime of epic proportions. A relationship with books is one of the most consistent and satisfying ones that most people will have in their lives, after all.
    The solution? Simple, claims Pennac. Take it back to the basics — oral storytelling. Read to those who have become disenchanted by the hard slog of required textbooks and compulsory reading. Re-introduce that spark. Draw them back in. Before you know it, they'll have rediscovered that "alchemist's voice" and they'll be off in their own private world of books again.
    This book was a really fascinating read for me as I recognized that I had suffered a period of book fatigue until pretty recently. As a kid, I was the one hiding under the sheets with a book and a torch. I read an insane amount of books from all sorts of genres, right up until the age of 15 — that's when it started for me. Required reading to be completed within a ridiculously short period of time, essays to write and not to mention maths homework and geography study... Luckily, I've rediscovered that old spark and have come back to the ranks of the voracious reader — one "right" at a time. If there's anyone out there that has lost their spark, or knows someone who is struggling with reading — I highly recommend this book. It'll surely help you bring them back from the brink of a world without books.

    ************************************

    Big thanks to Kath for this wonderful review. Please stop by, share some book love, and read the original review.

  • My Last 20 Books 2.8.12

    My Last 20 Books 2.8.12

    In true "Last 20" fashion — it has been forever since my last post (August 2011) . This year I hope to keep better track because it is kind of fun to see where my books come from as a whole.

    1. Double — NetGalley
    2. Dead to You — ARC
    3. Fever — ARC
    4. Escaping Titanic — NetGalley
    5. Fallen in Love — NetGalley
    6. Passion — Library
    7. A Million Suns — ARC
    8. Torment — Own (Library Audio)
    9. Cinder — NetGalley
    10. The Night Circus — Library
    11. Replication: The Jason Project — NetGalley
    12. Silence — Library
    13. Crossed — Own
    14. Between Shades of Gray — Library
    15. Pandemonium — ARC
    16. The Pledge — NetGalley
    17. Ashfall — NetGalley
    18. Crescendo — Own (Library Audio)
    19. Fallen — Own (Library Audio)
    20. The Awakening — Own (Library Audio)
    7/20 NetGalley 4/20 (1/5) ARC from Publisher 5/20 (1/4) Own 8/20 (2/5) Library
    I know that my numbers don't match up perfectly; this is due to the fact that I own quite a few of the books but I received the audio books from the library. I'm pretty happy with these numbers; I feel like for the most part the last twenty books I've read have been pretty well rounded in regards to where I received them from. From August (when I hadn't read a single books that I owned), I'm especially proud that a fourth of what I've read/listened to came from my own shelves. I think this goes without saying but — THANK YOU NETGALLEY!!!:)
    For my next 20 books I hope to see numbers like these — well rounded and opportunistic!
    Where have your last twenty books come from? It's a great way to reflect on your "numbers" if you will and if you're a stat person like me it's always fun to look at reading trends. If you do your own post, let me know so I can visit and see your reading trends!

  • 100+ Reading Challenge

    100+ Reading Challenge

    Rather than just keep track on my own, I decided to join the 100+ Reading Challenge hosted by My Overstuffed Bookshelf.

    1. Delirium
    2. Wake
    3. Change of Heart
    4. Inside Out
    5. Outside In
    6. Nocturne
    7. Cryer's Cross
    8. When the Stars Go Blue
    9. How to Say Goodbye in Robot
    10. The Iron King
    11. Definitely Dead
    12. Across the Universe
    13. The Iron Daughter
    14. If I Stay
    15. The Iron Queen
    16. Wither
    17. Jane Austen: A Life Revealed
    18. Enclave
    19. Stay
    20. Bumped
    21. The Goddess Test
    22. Invincible Summer
    23. Shift
    24. Mercy
    25. Between Here and Forever
    26. Summer's Crossing
    27. Spellbound
    28. Eragon
    29. Wintergirls
    30. Forever
    31. The Giver
    32. All Together Dead
    33. Entwined
    34. The Iron Knight
    35. The Beginning of After
    36. The Maze Runner
    37. The Power of Six
    38. Speak
    39. The Adoration of Jenna Fox
    40. The Juliet Spell
    41. Glasshouses
    42. The Awakening
    43. Fallen
    44. Crescendo
    45. Ashfall
    46. The Pledge
    47. Pandemonium
    48. Between Shades of Gray
    49. Crossed
    50. Silence
    51. Replication: The Jason Project
    52. The Night Circus
    53. Cinder

  • Fall 2011

    • Cinder
    • The Night Circus
    • Replication: The Jason Project
    • Silence
    • Crossed
    • Between Shades of Gray
    • Pandemonium
    • The Pledge
    • Ashfall
    • Crescendo
    • Fallen
    • The Awakening
    • The Juliet Spell
    • The Adoration of Jenna Fox

Random for life: