British designer M.S. Corley has designed a set of Harry Potter covers in the style of classic Penguin Books.
Category: Reading
Book review bugaboos
Some years back, I did quite a bit of book reviewing for January Magazine; I miss that, and am looking forward to doing a small book reviewing project for Publishers Weekly this spring.
This piece by Bob Harris in The New York Times was a painful reminder about some of the hackneyed adjectives book reviewers too often find themselves using. I’ve been able to avoid “poignant” and “eschew.” But I have to admit, when it comes to “intriguing” — guilty!
On reading and health
At my annual checkup today, my doctor asked me if I watched TV. I said my TV isn’t even hooked up to broadcast sources — I only use it to watch DVDs when friends come over to visit.
He laughed, admitted that he doesn’t watch broadcast TV, either, and commented that he sees a direct correlation between lots of of TV watching and poor health among his patients, particularly the elderly. He said the problem isn’t just sitting and watching TV instead of exercising; it’s letting the mind slip into passivity instead of engaging with games, discussions, puzzles, writing, and reading.
I love reading, but recently have been spending what used to be my reading time writing instead. And instead of reading new books, I’ve been working my way through science fiction classics (such as Cordwainer Smith’s Norstrilia) to get a better understanding of that genre.
Thus, I have yet to read any of the books on Publishers Weekly’s Best Books of the Year list. But, seeing the list made me realize how much I want to get to some of these, particularly Michael Connelly‘s latest, The Brass Verdict, Donald Ray’s Knockemstiff, and Greg Bear’s City at the End of Time.
(cross-posted on Food, Fitness, Fashion)
The open-book test
You can’t judge a book by its cover, but the middle page is a whole other story.
I have four books to review for a publication. For the heck of it, I opened one book to the middle and read a page.
Ugh.
I opened the second book to the middle and read a page.
Ugh again.
I opened the third book to the middle and read a page and thought “Not bad.”
And then I opened the fourth book, read a middle page, read another page, and thought “Nice. Really nice.”
Tonight I’m sitting in the living room reading that fourth book, and it’s pure joy. I can’t believe people pay me (a modest amount) to do this.
Of course, I do still have to go back and read and review the other three. I guess that’s why they have to pay me.