Monday, June 20, 2005

The Book Meme Has Struck

The Number Of Books I Own

I own a lot of books. A lot. I love books. I buy books I never plan to read just because I love the way they look. When I was moving, the teenage girl that helped me counted 100, but that’s only the books I have at home. I probably have another 50-60 in storage and at the office.

The Last Books I Bought

Quidditch Through the Ages and Magical Beasts and Where to Find Them by JK Rowling. They were the only of the series that I’m missing. At JK’s site (we’re tight), she suggests that there are clues to the storyline in these books. I think she just likes money, but I bought them anyway.

Last Book I Read

Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix. With the 6th book due in July, I need to remember the backstory. Unfortunately, my limited intellect only grasps one more paragraph per reading. Therefore, I will actually be able to speak intellectually about the books in 20-30 years (JK mentions some very good sites where people smarter than me discuss the novels. I love Mugglenet.)

Five Books That Mean A Lot
**I’ve left out works of scripture to maintain a general audience. For my religious readers, you know which books I would place here**

A Flower Pot Is Not a Hat by Martha L. Moffett

My first book of philosophy. From its opening statement (“A flower pot is not a hat. If you put it on your head it is.”) to its closing encouragement (“Little brother is not a chair. If I sit on him, he is.”), I learned that utility not form define an object. My mother regrets reading that book to her children. We spent a lot of time quoting it while we sat on our brother.

Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen

This book contains my literary doppleganger, Marianne Dashwood. Jane Austen wrote it early in her career, so its tone is bitter but romantic. Kinda like me. I think there’s a lot of truth about family, relationships, sacrifice, and the beauty of women in this book. It doesn’t get near the recognition it deserves.

The Complete Works of John Donne

He’s the only romantic poet I read. His words take my breath away, just like love should. He’s not silly, or excessive, or immature about love. And that defines my experience of the emotion.

No Doubt About It
by Sheri Dew

In my opinion, Sheri Dew is the voice of reformed feminism. This is a religious book, but it’s also a book about embracing womanhood. Sheri expresses the things that make women unique – our open hearts, our drive to experience beauty, our need to excel, and our emotional brand of communication. She encourages women to build their talents as they accept every aspect of their lives, and to shun the voices in the world that degrade or disillusion. Too few people say that stuff to women.

How to Get Your Kids to Eat But Not Too Much by Ellyn Satter

This book could put me out of a job if parents would only read and apply it. Ellyn’s advice is so simple yet perfect that nearly every child will respond. I have based my entire practice on its principles and have never been disappointed.

Honorable Mention: Enchanting Pleasures and Fool for Love by Eloisa James. Few people can write funny romance and funnier sex. Eloisa is a miracle in this genre. She writes “normal” people and could make the world’s greatest cynic sigh with hope for these “average” romances..


One Book That Meant A Lot to Burn

The Biochemical and Physiological Aspects of Human Nutrition. Yeah, I know. I got grabbed by the title, too. But it didn’t live up to the hype. I thought the discussion on cellular metabolism overdone and the lengthy list of each vitamin and its purpose - who hasn’t read that a million times? The ending was so ridiculous, I laughed outright – antioxidants can prevent cancer! Come on! Who believes this tripe?! Just another example of the dumbing down of popular literature.

After the final, we held a book burning. (Every good Christian should attend at least one, don’t you think?) Unfortunately, I needed it for the next semester, so I learned a lesson about freedom of the press as I chinked down another $150 for the most boring book ever written. Now I don’t dare burn the thing.


People I Think Deserve This Kind of Trouble (Generally, people who owe me money.)

Sorry to ping you if you’ve been pinged before, but…

Cate – I look forward to seeing you try and whittle down the list to 5 as I’ve never heard you list fewer than 5 books you’re currently reading.

Jon – You supposedly have an English degree. Here’s your chance to put that degree to good use.

Scroob – I know Myth of Beauty will be on there somewhere (and I plan to read it soon as HP obsession has passed) and I can’t wait to see the rest.

20 comments:

Bill C said...

Greetings from Limited Capability Land, physically located in TX (Oh the Irony!).

Before I forget, nice profile pic. Worth the wait (imo).

Hmm, guess I'll need something parenthetical for each sentence now. Or not. Either way, apologies to Scroobious The Parenthetical Master; I make no claim to even apprenticeship, here. Or anywhere else for that matter.

I was going to say "But I digress" because (1) I like the phrase, and (2) I do. Since this entire comment is shaping up as an extended digression...never mind.

And (finally) (oops I did it again) (Augh! that was a Britney thing, wasn't it? Sorry!) (Where was I...?) books: only the top five? For real? (Whining mode on) Does like, a trilogy count as one or three? What about Douglas Adams' Hitchhiker's Guide trilogy?

Are we there yet?

(And G.Lo - thanks (snif)) :>

ScroobiousScrivener said...

Ah, the meme bites. Will get right on it, ma'am.

Jam: I say HHGG definitely counts as a single work. I don't think that applies to all trilogies, but that one, and Lord of the Rings, absolutely.

Jon said...

Mother %*##&@, Are you trying to expose me? Now everyone is going to know that I obtained an English Degree without ever really reading anything. Alright, I’ll do it. But don’t be surprised when my list of influential books includes nothing above a 1st grade level of reading….

Kristin said...

I loved Harry Potter until the 4th book and then it became too dark for me. It's nothing against the book (or the author...she rocks!) it's just that I hate watching Harry go thru sooo much, time after time...it becomes too much and I have to go find something stupid and silly to read. It's all in my head, I know, but I spend a lot of nights awake worrying about my own son and wondering how he'll deal with the challenges life throws me.
I am #1986 in line for #6 at the library...whoo hoo!
I love Sheri Dew too...she's an awesome person...and her name is fun to say too! (it's the stuff nursery rhymes are made of!)
I use to buy books all the time too...half of my debt was from the 6 or 7 book clubs I had joined...I just loved getting a new book in the mail. Ironically enough I'm now giving them all away because I don't have enough room for everything...and I collect paperbacks.
(I'm sorry I'm rambling so much about myself...suppose to do that on my own blog...duh!)

Kristin said...

Um, that is suppose to say "challenges life throws HIM not ME"...I'm not totally self-centered :)
But I am a spazz!

glo said...

Ramble away. When you write a semi-interesting list of books, the comments are the only hope you have of reader draw.

Happy meming, o thou pegged (and pay up or further trouble could ensue...)

Sarah Cate said...

Pay up? I suppose for that I would require your new address, hmm?

And thanks for pinging me with a meme that now requires me to go home and realize how long it's actually been since I updated my personal book catalog.

Kristin said...

It's official...I've gotta read more blogs...half the stuff you guys talk about is like Greek to me...ugh.
PS Cate...I have a bunch of books I'm getting rid of, if you want to take a peak...most of it isn't your taste but ya never know :)

glo said...

(Restraining from Cate ridicule over book catalog...)

glo said...

Forgot to mention that Jam-Jam is now my favorite poster for mentioning my profile pic.

As the rest of you apparently pay no attention whatsoever to my blog improvements, I am *harrumphing* in your general direction.

Sarah Cate said...

P.S. Quite enjoy your new profile pic - in fact, am quite jealous - where did you find it? Also, profound thanks for the dedication. Such exalted company you have put me in!

Eric said...

I'm impressed that Sheri Dew made your list. While I've never read that book, I have had the opportunity to listen to her speak and the woman is brilliant.

Bill C said...

(Stunned into near-embarrassed near-silence) :-#

Bill C said...

Hmm, stunned - why this suddenly makes me think of catching fish via dynamite I do not know.

Kristin said...

So Glo...love the changes, I'm all about the profile pic, you rock!

glo said...

cate - you deserve it. You and Aunt Patty saw me through some tough times.

Jam - you deserve the recognition. All the way in Texas and STILL took time to notice the little things.

sam - thanks for the approval. Very important to me.

Aargh. I have no time to build both a social life and a blog. Can you guys pass along the word again? I will be more blog-social soon, but in the meantime, I am swamped at work and at home. Once I have some pals in Real-Land, I will be able to increase readership again.

That is in no way meant to diminish my adoration for the faithful reader. You guys make my day.

Jon said...

Refresh my memory… do I owe you money?

glo said...

Well, someone owes me money. I was hoping it was one of you guys...well, off to search again.

Sarah Cate said...

CATE'S APPLICATION TO BE G-LO'S WEDDING DATE:

For your convenience, I have wittled the rather lengthy application down to these most important points:

1. I immediately recognized the Alanis lyrics for what they were. No help needed.

2. I have bowhunting skills.

3. I am willing to spend three days in two different states pretending to be a lesbian. Caveat: This willingness extends to acceptable public behavior only. Lying is, of course, a perfectly acceptable public behavior.

glo said...

Go ahead. Hate me. It was too funny to leave hidden.

You're hired. See you this summer!