alaterdate: Venus at the Forge of Vulcan 1704 Francesco Solimena (Italian, 1657 - 1747) (Default)

The sum of a text is the collaboration between writer and reader. Every writer begins as a reader learning how to interpret letters, sentences, paragraphs, stories. Take these interpretations to a fresh blank page. A single line in a new work can act as a hyperlink to an interpretation of another. But it takes the mind of the reader to click onto and parse that hyperlink. The place where the reader's thoughts collide with the writer's creates a crater of depth able to be mined for precious minerals.

Part of the fun of reading is pairing your imagination with the writer's like a good wine and cheese. Part of the fun of writing is leaving broader implications to the reader's imagination. Just as one cannot articulate every little train of thought into speech, the writer cannot put down every facet of a character or world. And why should they? Sometimes it's fun to ask people to guess. Guess what I found under the seat of the bus, guess what I bought you for your birthday, guess who I saw in the park. Guess why the curtains are blue, I've given you the clues. A great writer lets their work be a bit of a puzzle. A great reader finds enjoyment in being challenged.

As Thomas C. Foster writes in How to Read Literature Like a Professor (2014)
"We tend to give writers all the credit, but reading is also an event of the imagination; our creativity, our inventiveness, encounters those of the writer, and in that meeting we puzzle out what she means, what we understand her to mean, what uses we can put her writing to."

There are perils in this mutual work. A writer may distrust their reader and try to get ahead of any interpretations by making their themes plain or including no symbolism at all. A fear of the reader making a bad faith claim. As Foster continues,
"Imagination isn't fantasy. That is to say, we can't simply invent meaning without the writer, or if we can, we ought not to hold her to it."

Yes, there is risk of misinterpretation, but why should we preemptively leave our windows plain or bare in fear that bad actors will rip our curtains down and throw them in the trash. They will do that whether the curtains are blue or pure white, and they will break our windows too.

A responsible reader responds to what actually appears in the text. This is why any good analysis of a story is asked to prove itself with examples and direct quotes. Evidence of your interpretation through the context of the story. So that it can then be agreed with or refuted by others who have also read the text.

Read More )

alaterdate: skull with a scroll (Scroll Skull)

There's a reading meme going around on youtube and I wanted to fill it out so I did.

Source: get to know my taste tag (original)— mynameismarines

The Questions
  1. How do you rate books? Give a quick rundown of how you do your star ratings (or if you don’t use star ratings, how you evaluate books).
  2. How do you approach reviewing books? What’s your review style? Are you analytical, emotional, casual, or structured?
  3. What’s the book that made you a reader? Whether it was your first favorite or the one that got you hooked, what book started it all?
  4. Do you have a genre niche? Are there certain genres you gravitate toward? Or do you read widely across genres?
  5. Do you generally prefer character-driven or plot-driven stories?
  6. What’s a book you love so much that you don’t care if others don’t like it? What’s that one book you love enough for everyone?
  7. What’s a book you love so much that if someone doesn’t like it, you know your reading tastes don’t align? The book or books where a difference of opinion is a strong indicator of different reading preferences.
  8. What’s in your “trash pocket”? What books, tropes, or themes that you know are bad but you love them anyway?
  9. Do you have any dealbreakers in books? Something that, if present, immediately turns you off from a book.
  10. What’s a strong opinion you have about a book released within the last year? Whether it’s overrated, underrated, or just a take you need to share.
  11. What do you look for in writing? What makes a book stand out to you? Is it prose style, themes, voice, structure, or something else?
  12. How do you decide what to read next? Do you plan ahead, mood read, or follow external factors (hype, recommendations, ARCs)?
I took out the Booktube specific questions.

This is long. I did all the questions at once. )
alaterdate: head with an interrobang (Surprised)

If you hover your mouse over the star ratings on Goodreads and Audible the 3-star option is "I liked it" and "Pretty good" respectively. But to me 3-stars means "It was okay." It's not a book I would particularly recommend, but also not one I'd dissuade people from reading.
Herein lies the problem. If the websites are marking 3-stars as "good" instead of "okay" then in actuality shouldn't all my 3-star ratings be rated as 2-stars instead? "It was okay" (Goodreads) & "It's okay" (Audible).
Then all my 2-stars would drop to 1-star! But 2-stars is just an abysmal rating. A 2-star book is one that I would mention how I found it lacking if someone brought it up. And I save the 1-star rating for things I actually didn't like and would want to dissuade someone from reading. I don't really use star ratings in the contents of my own reviews/logs or on my website. I have a loose tag here I've been considering removing in favor of just tagging them with genres, but I do mark them on the website. So should I follow their metrics when rating books on their site?? It seems much harsher than my actual opinion.

alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

My copy of Dracula Daily arrived today, hooray!

The cover of Dracula Daily

It's like reading an annotated book and I find that so fun. I was participating on Tumblr when this was happening so I've seen quite a few of these, but I'm excited to look through this.

alaterdate: Fenris (Fenris)

every time these YA books have a bisexual female main character their ex is a woman and their love interest is a man *yawn* 🥱

It's Alive!

Feb. 3rd, 2023 10:59 pm
alaterdate: Senjougahara (Senjougahara)

I don't usually make posts while I'm reading a book, but I got Sally Thorne's Angelika Frankenstein Makes Her Match from the library today like I hoped to and was able to read a couple chapters on my lunch and just LMAO. LMAO. Oh, I can't take it seriously at all as a "Frankenstein retelling" it's making me lose my mind with how just WRONG it is. Victor's characterization, the plot? It's not a retelling why did they say it was lmaooo. "Inspired" fine, but lol. She should have just made a new character instead of being like "this is Victor Frankenstein from the book Frankenstein." No it's not 🤣

But I do love the balls of giving Victor a sister in the vein of old school Naruto's long lost sister fic y'know? But then Elizabeth in this is just some random girl he met or smth?? Lol. I am having a good time and am appalled simultaneously. This might be the last straw with Thorne tho I am serious.

alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

The books currently on my nightstand.

Currently Reading )
alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

Another Goodreads challenge down. This was my third year using the site to track books I read.

My goal for 2020 was 40 books. And my total came up to... 62 books!
That's 3 less than last year, haha xD I did have a nagging feeling that I wasn't reading as much as I did the previous year, but that pushed me to pick up some things I had been putting off for a while. Seeing the number come up to about the same feels good! Three years ago reading 52 books a year seemed like a daunting challenge that I might not accomplish and now I've done so three years in a row. It's a good feeling.
I'll be setting my goal as 52 again this year like I did that first year. This year my friend is joining me in the challenge and we're even buddy reading a few books, I'm looking forward to it.

Most importantly I found some new authors and works I really enjoyed! Last year I fell in love with Conn Iggulden's historical fiction books about Rome and Sparta, really got into V.E. Schwab, and dug some Michael Crichton books. This year, this year I found Tamsyn Muir. And when I say I love her work that's an understatement. Her writing just hits on everything I love and Gideon the Ninth was my favorite book of the year hands down. While the last book of her Locked Tomb trilogy doesn't release until 2022 I am excited at the prospect of finding even more authors to love.

And also perhaps I will take more of a whack at my books I own and need to read, reading backlog. Cheers!

alaterdate: skull with a rose (Rose Skull)

I have finally caught up* with Aya Kanno's manga series Requiem of the Rose King (薔薇王の葬列). As volume 14 has not yet been released in English (and I also lack the Japanese version, though I supremely doubt my current ability to read this manga series in Japanese after the first volume (which I did read years ago)) nor any future volumes if 14 is not the final installment. Therefore, this is not a full review of the series and I might make another post in the future. It was intended to be a partial review, but turns out I have a lot of feelings so this is something else. What, I’m not sure. Spoilers for sure though.

CW: intersexphobia, transphobia, rape mention, body dysphoria

Loooong_post )

Playlists

Aug. 19th, 2020 07:49 am
alaterdate: Belial with a shiny red apple (Belial Apple)

I know people have playlists for writing, but does anyone else have playlists for reading?

I can hardly do anything single-mindedly so I like to have music or a video playing in the background when I'm doing something that doesn't take too much mental effort (or else I will definitely get distracted. Sometimes videos are distracting if it's something new and not like a let's play of a game I've already beaten, but I digress...).
So I usually play music (with words) while I'm reading and my mind will zone it out kind of selectively. Like I could go five or so songs without even realizing I didn't hear a word of them while I was reading. But every once in a while I'll tune back in and sometimes it creates this experience.

For instance Comfort of Strangers by Bastille was playing while I was finishing up Harris' Pompeii and it fit so well for me that I was just agape with emotion for the book I probably wouldn't have had that degree of if the song wasn't playing as I read. I honestly still think about it whenever I hear that song now. It was just so good. (However, now my feelings are skewed on that book and while I would never recommend someone read it, I love it.)

Right now I'm reading Muir's Gideon the Ninth and the songs I had playing fit so well tonally that I was completely ABSORBED as it enhanced the tension immediately. While I do like the writing I feel like I would have read less pages today if I weren't also listening to the fitting music.

I think it's such a nice experience I love when it happens. I wish it would happen more. It would be kind of difficult to tailor a playlist to a book you haven't read yet, but I'm sure people out there make playlists for books. Though that could be distracting if the songs are new. I just have this massive playlist I always put on and the songs can just so happen to click like that sometimes. Happy accidents.

alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

Officially calling my Goodreads 2019 reading challenge at 65 books!
15 books less than last year (80). It's daunting when I hang around reading circles in which people are reading 100+ books a year and I think I should be reading that much too, but I have other hobbies I like to pursue and spend a lot of time on *cough* videogames *cough* So, 65 is an excellent number!

Read more... )

So, I'm setting my goal for 2020 at 40 books. I think that's perfectly achievable for me at a normal pace. If I hit it mid-year then I will up it to 52 and that's the highest I'll put it (again) 😤 Maybe I'll read 52, 65, 80, 100! It doesn't matter if I go over, but I think it's good to have an achievable and comfortable goal instead of one that makes me feel like I'll stress myself out. 40 books is still a lot of books.

alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

On black friday and cyber monday I bought several books (even though I hadn't finished reading a book since November 4 lol). I got these )

I started reading the Louis L'Amour short story collection and the introduction was like "He did not care about writing a good story and pumped out the same situations over and over again, with so many errors" with NO turn-around. It just ended after vaguely shit-talking him and I was so baffled 😂

alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

I've read three books since the beginning of August, but they ranged from underwhelming to absolutely terrible so I don't feel like doing write ups for them.

I'm only 9 books away from completing the 52 book challenge now. \O/
I have a few books on my shelf I need to read, but I can never bring myself to read books on my shelf like I can books from the library lol.

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