Tuesday, January 5, 2021

How My Reading Is Progressing:

 Hello, all! Gretchen and Mags, it's a happy thought that you might be joining me in this reading endeavor, however far any of us get in it. I imagine I will get distracted, and at some point decide I'd rather paint or garden than read ... but that's life!

Gretchen, yes, you DO have a small poetry volume: Knock at a Star. You recommended it strongly on your blog at some point, and I ordered a used copy, and I just read it through the other day as the top book on this challenge list. Hooray! I think a book of children's verse is a good way not to get bogged down in that category. In fact, children's books in general might be wise. I'm like a person who had a reading catastrophe/wreck in the past few years, and is just back into rehab and learning how to read again, if you know what I mean. I need short and easy.

So for the "Letters" category, I chose Helene Hanff's adorable, tiny book, 84 Charing Cross Road. I read it many years ago, and finished it last night.

I knew right away that I'd want to read Antigone as my Greek item, but I don't think I have a copy anymore. (I used to teach is often from an anthology.) So I found a nice copy translated by Fitzgerald online and will read it there. I ADORE Antigone.

But first, I needed a book from my To-Be-Read stack, so I launched into The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society. You may recall that I read that only a few years ago. You man recall it ... but sadly I did not, AT ALL. In fact, as I read the first few letters (-- it would qualify in the "Letters" category, btw --) I was certain I had never, ever read this book before. It was not vaguely familiar; the movie, yes, it was familiar. And then I went to check on my blog and found that I had indeed read it before and had a lot to say about it! Sheesh. Might as well read it again then, since my memory is non-existent!

I just returned from the thrift store, where I found these:

These were all half off! Wait ... did I promise to read only from my own shelves, and not buy more books? Surely not.

I've never read Wilkie Collins, but he would qualify as a Victorian novelist. The Woman in White is well-known. Lost Laysen is a novella by Margaret Mitchell -- who knew? And the category "Literary Biography" should allow for autobiographical writing too, right? That's where the William Styron comes in. A passage he wrote about Nat Turner's rebellion captured my mind many years ago, and has never let go. How someone can write so beautifully about such a terrifying event, is a miraculous skill, so I knew I'd appreciate this short book.

That's the key. So many of the books I'm finding for my challenge list are very short, manageable, not-intimidating. And like you Mags, if somehow I find myself unable to complete it, I shall turn from the list without a pang. 

The A. M. Smith is just for fun. His Botswana books are sheer delight. He doesn't need a category.

Here's the challenge list again:




9 comments:

Pom Pom said...

What I really want to read and enjoy, delve into and stay there, is my Bible. I've been enjoying Elisabeth Elliot.
I don't have that English teacher "well read" drive anymore and I've never made reading goals because I love to read anyway. I did love 84 Charring Cross Road so very much! I so enjoyed the The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, but I read it so long ago. I liked the film!
I like Alexander McCall Smith! I have The Woman in White. I should read it.
I think I'll read some John Donne and T.S. Eliot. I don't read poetry that much but I so enjoy it!
I hope your challenge is fun and encouraging! (BIG HUG!)

gretchenjoanna said...

I think that is rapid progress, M.K., considering we're barely into January.

The idea of short books very much appeals to me. Around the time of my husband's illness and death I also felt mentally too feeble to commit to a long book, but I needed the sustenance of reading. Maybe I feel that way now for two reasons: The added mental/spiritual work required to get through 2020, and the fact that I finally got to the end of a 1,000+ page book that I've been working on for many years. Some sort of rest/vacation is in order.

As in all vacations, one must be careful not to work too hard, and end up needing another holiday in which to recover.

Retired Knitter said...

Well I applaud your desire to put reading goals on your 2021 to-do list. Like you said you may drift from that effort, but it is ok. I joined a reading challenge a few years back. It was just setting a numbered goal and reaching that at the end of the year. I far surprised that - not knowing really how much I read during a single year. But since that challenge I haven’t been able to knuckle down to a reading challenge of any kind.

melissa said...

The William Stryon book is amazing, I own it too, and funny thing, just this week downloaded The Woman in Whitw at Gutenberg. 😉

magsmcc said...

I have ordered Cymbeline and am going to start with it, unless one of the two books I am reading anyway fit one of the categories - I'll look again now! I have my favourite godmother aunt's copy of Gone with the Wind, but have always been too daunted to start! I LOVE 84 Charing Cross Road - book and movie. And I watched the movie of Guernsey etc over Christmas - I hhad avoided it because I generally do avoid the movies of books I love, but I did enjoy it. So, in short, I have nothing to report - yet!! But I'll blog as soon as I do xxxxx

magsmcc said...

Actually, I have just finished a detective novel - a very original detective novel by TV presenter Richard Osman, so there's one from a genre I don't usually read. Hoorah!

Kezzie said...

Ok, I'll join in! Funnily enough, you have named some of my most favourite boots in there -84 Charing Cross road, Guernsey Literacy, AmCS, Wilkie Collins! Funny! Another good letter book is called Ella Minnow Pea, the story of letters.

gretchenjoanna said...

My Greek or Roman book is The Children's Homer, which I listened to on my trips to the beach. I loved it!

The high school Sunday School class I teach is reading The Screwtape Letters by C.S. Lewis so that will count as a book of letters.

I'm going to read Cymbeline because of Mags inspiring me. :-)

and I have more ideas I'm working on. There are SO many options in the categories of Avoided, Not a Usual Genre, and Left Unfinished Till Now, I shouldn't have any trouble fitting those in by the end of the year.

gretchenjoanna said...

I think I've checked off three as Already Read :-) 1) The Children's Homer for "Greek/Roman" 2) The Amazing Mrs. Pollifax (The Genre I Don't Normally Read is "Light and Silly Spy Novels Featuring Unlikely Women") and 3) Excellent Women by Barbara Pym for "Light Comedic Novel."

I loved The Children's Homer by Padraic Colum, and also found Excellent Women to be very enjoyable.

I'm now rereading Rosemary Sutcliff's Blue Remembered Hills for "Literary Biography," and will count The Eucharist by Alexander Schmemann for "Started but Never Finished," as I've started back at it three times now and am getting close to the end.

I'm planning to read A Christmas Carol during Advent, for my "Victorian Novel," and it will be my first time. Maybe An Experiment in Criticism by C.S. Lewis for "A Book on...Literature."