April 28th

Day 119
14.247 read, -1.137
A Game of Thrones 43-124

So, I started Game of Thrones yesterday but that was mostly catch-up, because originally, last year, I'd already read a "preview" of it from B&N (back when I had a nook, my first e-reader; I now have a Sony) that lasted through the first few chapters.

It'd been long enough that I thought I better start from scratch, especially since I hadn't read that much to begin with.  So today I finally passed the point I had already read to.

I'm not usually a fantasy person, but what originally interested me in it (and I only ever first heard of it early last year) was the idea that seasons only change once every several years.  That's a fantastic idea.  Could you imagine living in a world where it's summer for years or winter for years?  It's so cool to try and imagine, and imagine how life would be different in those circumstances.  And then, I knew the book also had great reviews and (at the time) was just being made into a new tv show for the premium channel HBO which is often known for quality series.

But last year I read less the entire year than I've already read in four months this year and I was always trying to catch up with the book club selections, so I never got to Game of Thrones.  And it was ONE VOTE away from winning the fantasy vote last year, but I'm glad it didn't.  Because the Name of the Wind beat it, and I ended up loving that one; it was really a fantastic book.

So here we are then, I'm finally to it, finally caught up past where I got to.  And it still took me a little while to get into it.  As always, I read slow at first, really wrapping my mind around the world and situations.  And spending a lot of time referencing the map.  It's at the beginning of the book, but because of damn e-readers limitations and the same limitations I suppose on my Sony reader library software on my computer, the maps show up too fuzzy to read.  It's happened on almost all pdfs.  It's a pain in the ass and I can't wait until I finally get around to getting a new e-reader.  The Sony 950 is really a top of the line e-reader but a nook tablet or Kindle Fire would hopefully read pdfs better and less fuzzy (and they'll be faster which is another pet peeve I have about the 950).  Oh, and before you wonder, yes of course I tried zooming; it zooms bigger and then you just see the same fuzzy unreadable words, only bigger.  And it's happened on many books with maps, not just this one (for instance, also the Lattimore Iliad which had maps of Ancient Greek cities and that was a real pita also)

Anyway...so I had to use my smartphone and find the same maps online and then I bookmarked it and kept referring back to it, and did that a lot since wow this Martin guy is nothing if not expansive.  I don't think he can go a page without managing to somehow mention a brand new place or person in passing.  I suppose it's not necessary to find all the place names on the map, but I like to.

What's funny is, you're reading, sort of waiting for the real story to begin, as you start to realise that this is all just the set-up happening now at Winterfell, that the real story begins once they get back to King's Landing, and then bam, the real story was already happening.  *spoiler*  I can't believe Bran got pushed off the ledge and is possibly dying now!  Unexpected.

So that bodes well for the book.  I like books that can surprise in a well-written way.  His writing isn't perfect, but his world-building so far is pretty superb.  And I get why they call Jon Snow "bastard" all the time (different world where it's more accepted) but still, come on, I think Martin overdoes it.  I was just picturing some comedy skit, such as on Saturday Night Live, making fun of Game of Thrones, where everyone calls Jon Snow bastard too much and at the wrong times.  Because in the book it does verge on excessive.

If I were to guess about the tv show, I'd say the first or second episode ends with Bran being pushed out the window, as that's the most surprising thing so far.

April 27th

Day 118
14.165 read, -1.219
Sylvie and Bruno Complete 385-412, 209-215
A Game of Thrones 9-42

Finished Sylvie and Bruno and at the end, it turns out that *spoiler* the doctor doesn't die.

Then I had to decide on something else to read.  It was a pity that the mobileread vote still wouldn't end for a day (tomorrow night) and I wasn't absolutely positive what would win, so I had to pick something else.  Also, the Odyssey read is starting very soon and I would start on that, but the Companion I ordered isn't here yet.

So I went back to my challenge list.  I'm now starting to make good work of it, with A Room with a View, Sylvie and Bruno and Sylvie and Bruno Concluded finished.  Only ten left.  I had thought of going with a half-read one since very soon I'll have a lot on my plate to read (mobileread selection tomorrow, the Odyssey in a few days, and the lit club selection soon after).  But both are long (Middlemarch and Anna Karenina), so even just reading half would take awhile.

And then, I didn't want to read another Carroll just after reading two (and I'm still waiting the Annotated Hunting of the Snark to arrive via snail mail as my next Carroll).  And I'm planning on waiting to read Ulysses once I've read the Odyssey and possibly as part of a group read later this year.

Well, that only left three possibilites...and all fantasy!  Which I wasn't particularly excited about reading just before a book club fantasy selection.  I decided against the second Name of the Wind as being too long for just right now and that I might really want to go ahead and read the third right after, and there's too much coming up soon to read.  So that left the second Hunger Games or the first Game of Thrones.

I should've gone with the second Hunger Games.  It is shorter and a quick read.  But I also thought after reading it, I might want to go ahead and read the third right away.  And I've been meaning to read Game of Thrones *forever* and I still have a friend who's now watching the next season on tv and still waiting for me to read it and finally start watching the show with them.

So I chose Game of Thrones and downloaded it.  And then started it and happened to notice the total pages.  Over 800!  Holy crap!  *head smack*  So my whole selection process today centred around trying to choose one that's somewhat shorter since it's a busy reading period coming up.  And then I go and unwittingly choose what's probably the longest book on my challenge list! (not counting Anna Karenina, which I've already read half of, so GoT is longer than half of Anna Karenina too)

I considered switching my selection, but I already had it downloaded and ready to go, and I really do want to finally read it, and once I decide on something, I usually like to follow through if possible.

So there we have it.  Game of Thrones, then Neverwhere (which did end up winning the vote) and the Odyssey too!  Game of Thrones and Neverwhere and Odyssey, oh my!  Lots of fantasy and long books on the horizon.  Even so, I am still excited for it all.

14 down, 36 to go!


April 26th

Day 117
14.096 read, -1.246
Sylvie and Bruno Complete 229-384

Wow, some great things happening today!  First, I read 156 pages, a record for this year!  This may end up being the day with the most pages read for the entire year, since once I catch up to my goal I think I'll slow down a bit.  It was an easy read though; Sylvie and Bruno is pretty quick and easy.

Second, I'm now at 14 books read!  Woohoo.

Third, I'm now less than two books behind my goal!  Right now I'm 1 book and 246 pages behind the goal.  And that puts me squarely back in the range of how far behind I was at times before the "long break" I took last month.

So I got a three-fer today! :D  Now looking forward to getting less than 1 book behind my goal, and then looking forward to finally catching up with it!

The book is going well, and actually, I think Sylvie and Bruno Concluded is a better book than Sylvie and Bruno, though it is very similar.  It's actually much more adult and serious than the first one, so it that way is even odder than the first one.  And he really outdoes himself with subject matter, ranging from political philosphy (he's against Socialism) to the possible boredom and depression of eternal life (he thinks we can't ponder eternal life because it's like a baby pondering adult matters) to charity (he's against just giving your extra money and feeling good about it) to the true nature of sin (he thinks a murderer may be less guilty than one who can't resist a tiny and easily resistable temptation) to eugenics (and, oddly, discussed by a German or anyway an alien man with a German title, and Carroll doesn't really make his opinion on the matter fully clear) and on and on.  But while the good doctor still lectures sometimes like in the first book, Carroll's better in this book about dividing the way the subjects are discussed and presenting them less lecture-like, and I think the subjects he chooses are interesting to consider.

And then there's the death again.  Wow, he really pulls no punches.  *spoiler alert* If you think what I've described of a "children's" book sounds odd, so far, wait until you hear what's next.  So, the doctor never left for India like he was planning in the first book and the lady broke off her engagement to the cousin because her cousin wasn't "Christian" enough.  So then the doctor (the "hero" of the story) and the lady become engaged.  Then, in the fisherman's section of the village, a terrible illness breaks out similar to the Black Plague.  They manage to confine it to that one area though.

The night of the engagement party for the doctor and the lady, officials come to tell the doctor that the doctor in the fisherman's village has also died from the plague and that they need a doctor to come.  He knows it means almost certain death if he goes but he does decide to go, saying it's his duty.  He and the lady marry the next morning in a quickie ceremony just before he leaves for the quarantined fisherman's village.

He does die in the village, and in what I think was a nicely contrasted scene, when the narrator meets the lady in the cemetery months later in her mourning clothes, she falls down on the ground and says the exact same words that Sylvie said when she flung herself on the ground beside the dead hare.  Something about "Oh, you're life should've been so beautiful" or some such.

So, a very strange turn of events for a children's book.  I really thought it'd end with the doctor and lady married and happy at the end.  As Carroll wrote in an Alice book, "Curiouser and curiouser".  But, in thinking it over, it does make sense from a religious duty viewpoint.  It's obvious he wanted to infuse his religious thoughts in these two books, and so if you look at if from a religious morals viewpoint, it makes more sense.  He wanted to present a scene that showed how moral and how far the doctor was willing to go to help others, which would go hand in hand with the charity discussion they had earlier in the book.  And while secular books would obviously usually shy away from death discussions in children's books, when you add the religious element, people are much more likely to discuss death with children then, thinking they need to learn how to approach the thought of it and to illustrate religious principles and sacrifice, which is exactly the reason it happens here.

Anyway, I'm near the end now, and the narrator is finally back in Outland and we're finally dealing with the Sub-Warden and his wife again (who are now Emperor and Empress).  I was wondering if they were going to come back or if that section had been completely forgotten.

In fact, it's all given a very nice sandwiched effect that I'm only now seeing at the end and I like it.  Meaning, first it starts with the narrator in Outland, almost invisible to everyone, and the Outland drama.  Then Sylvie and Bruno recognise the narrator and get him to go with them outside and eventually he watches them become fairies.

Then it changes to where he meets them as fairies and they treat him as a visitor/guest (not invisible) and play with him.  Then, they show up in the real world, being able to go there and become bigger and visible to other humans.

Then it all reverses quickly.  They're in the real world, then they disappear.  Then after the doctor dies, he takes a walk with the lady where they both finally reveal that they both believe in fairies and then here comes Sylvie and Bruno for both of them to see, singing.  And this time the humans are invisible to the fairies and after Sylvie and Bruno walk out of sight, the lady remarks that they're gone from that world for good.

And then, finally, they're back in Outland, and, as at the beginning of the first book, the narrator is as if invisible there, or rather ignored, and Sylvie and Bruno have come back for a banquet the Emperor and Empress are having.

And that's where I'm at.  Full circle if you will.  I suppose the end will deal with the Emperor and Empress tricking Sylvie and Bruno's father out of being the ruler of Outland (though he's now the king of Fairyland and hasn't been seen for much of the book).

I plan to finish this tomorrow (only about 30 pages left) and not sure what I'll start on next.  If I were sure which book would win the mobileread vote I'd start on it, but I'm not.  It's fantasy month and there's a three way run-off between Neverwhere, Kraken and The King of Elfland's Daughter.  I am rooting for the King of Elfland but it's a very close vote and at the moment Neverwhere is in the lead by one vote.  I suspected before the run-off vote went up and I still suspect that Neverwhere will win, unfortunately.  But I can't be sure, so tomorrow after Sylvie and Bruno I'll be starting *something* else, I'm just not sure what.

April 25th

Day 116
13.200 read, -2.100
Sylvie and Bruno Complete 225-228

Rare recent slow day, only 4 pages read, and oddly even numbers (both ending in double zeros!)

April 24th

Day 115
13.196 read, -2.062
Sylvie and Bruno Complete 121-208, 9-17, 216-224

Today I have reached the halfway mark in catching up!  The farthest behind I became this year so far was -4.171 or 4 books and 171 pages behind on April 3rd.  So half of that is 2 books and 85.5 pages and now I'm below that at -2.062 or 2 books and 62 pages.  It's a good feeling to know I'm working on catching up and have gotten farther than halfway from my most behind moment now.  It's just a matter of time until I'm completely caught up!

I finished Sylvie and Bruno today, which ends somewhat abruptly and strangely.  Then I went back and read Carroll's own preface to it.  Then I started on Sylvie and Bruno Concluded, the sequel that in the same volume (starts page 216).

I have to say, Sylvie and Bruno is quite an odd mixture.  It's got the nonsense and whimsy of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland but he also approaches it from a perspective of "esoteric Buddhism" and he includes some sombre and serious passages on death, philosophy and proper Christianity.  What I mean by "esoteric Buddhism" (that's in his own words in a preface) is that he uses that principle in the structure of the book. in transference of physical form, as to how humans and fairies can interact.  Specifically, in this book he uses first person for an old man and this old man keeps randomly crossing over from the real world to the fairy world and sometimes he's a part of the scene and sometimes it's as if he's invisible.  Sometimes someone else will be in the middle of a sentence and then suddenly he'll find that he's in the other world and a character from the other world is finishing the sentence.

In that way though it's quite Carrollian really, employing a similar fantastic quality that the Alice books have.  Later in the book he gives hints that perhaps the fairy world is only when he "falls asleep" and even says the transference is best when it's very hot and you're somewhat sleepy.  But he doesn't bother following any rules he's made up really, as at one point he ends up with a time travel watch in the real world which he uses.

The sombre aspects though are what really differentiate it from the Alice books.  The tone will change suddenly too.  One chapter he's flitting about with Sylvie and Bruno in the fairyland, hearing silly songs just like Alice might have, then the next chapter he's sitting in the real world with his adult friends, having a very serious conversation on the proper way to behave on the Christian sabbath that sounds a bit like a lecture.

Then there's the death stuff.  At one point little fairy Bruno whimsically uses a dead mouse (ew!) to measure distances as if he uses it all the time, and reclines on it when he's resting.  Later on, the old narrator and Sylvie come across a dead hare that she cries over and that was apparently "scared to death" while hunters chased it, and he makes his anti-hunting views known.  And the narrator is old and also ponders his own death at points too.

Then there's the strange story (for a children's book) in the "real world", which is that the narrator has a bad heart and is coming to see his young friend, a doctor, at a seaside village for rest and relaxation.  There is a wonderful young woman who lives in the village, a lady, that the doctor is in love with and sees often.  Though he sees her often in visits that include the narrator and the lady's father, he hasn't told her that he loves her yet and is waiting for some reason.  Later in the story, a handsome young gentleman turns up that at first worries the doctor but turns out to be the lady's cousin, so he worries no more.  But then, later it is revealed by the father that the lady and the cousin are basically a couple and that they're about to be engaged.  So, in a fit of despair, the doctor decides to take a position in India.  And this is how the book ends.  The last chapter is even titled something like "Look Eastward" as the doctor and the old narrator have one final meeting before the doctor's departure discussing his plans in India.

Strange, no?  I'm assuming these things will be corrected in the sequel, but when he published this book, no one knew there would be a sequel, so this was the end as far as many were concerned.  And I know in past time periods that cousins marrying was more socially acceptable, but it still confused me. Because first when he finds out that they're cousins, he's worried no more, as if it's obvious that cousins won't marry (as we would think today).  Yet later on that logic is out the window and they are engaged and no one minds.  Huh?  So is it acceptable then or not?

And the doctor character is quite a prig.  He's the "hero" perhaps you'd say of the "real world" story, and at every visit with the lady, her father and the narrator (which is generally what's happening in most "real world" scenes), he's often going off on tangents to "teach" them things, with the lady listening in enjoyment and wonder like an eager pupil.  This is where we get most of the serious scenes on Christianity in particular (there's not that many really, but they do stand out in a book like this).

All in all an oddity.  I suppose the sequel will be more of the same but with a better conclusion.  This book isn't terrible though, if I've given you that impression.  It's odd and actually pretty interesting in its oddity, and a pretty quick read as well.  And I like Carroll's ingenuity, that he's willing to play with perceived notions of genre.  Not that he makes a splendid success of it here, but nonetheless it's interesting.

April 23rd

Day 114
13.090 read, -2.126
Sylvie and Bruno Complete 50-120

13 down, 37 to go!


13 books on day 113!

April 22nd

Day 113
13.019 read, -2.155
A Room with a View Annotated Excerpts 9-28
Sylvie and Bruno Complete 21-49

April 21st

Day 112, 103 pages
12.230 read, -2.162
A Room with a View 175-182
The Princess Bride 30th Anniversary 2-24, 224-279
A View without a Room 1-2
A Room with a View Annotated Excerpts 1-8
Sylvie and Bruno Complete 2, 7-8, 18-20

Just trying a slight change to the way I list things above.  Possibly adding back in total pages per day (103 today) though I'm not sure if it's necessary.  Also switching places so that the total read and +/- are the second line followed by the books and page numbers I read today rather than the other way around.  I may keep it this way or switch back. Fascinating stuff, I'm sure!

Today way a busy reading day. I finished A Room with a View, lovely book, though I was surprised it ended up being half in England.  When you start reading it seems as if it'll be all in Italy.  I fished out the not-so-good essay that Forster did in the 1950's, an "update" to the story entitled "A View without a Room" that tells us what happened from book's end to the time of his essay.  It was very short, 2 pages, and actually somewhat dim and depressing, not giving a terrible outcome, but not a very bright one either.  Then I actually bought a cheap different version of the book because mine wasn't annotated.  So in this other version, I just read the introduction and the annotations which is why I added "Excerpts" to the book's title to differentiate it.  I need to keep the books separate for page number counting's sake.

Then, I also bought a different version of The Princess Bride so that I could read the "sequel" chapters Buttercup's Baby.  It's not really a sequel but rather a long teaser to a sequel that never came (yet, anyway).  It also came with two introductions (one for the 25th anniversary and one for the 30th anniversary) written by the author himself that in a way were part of the story as well (or rather, part of the "sequel" story), as they added to the mythos as if he were still in the fiction of the book.

Finally, I decided of my "to do" books that it was time for some Carroll.  I have quite a few on my list and the next in line was "The Hunting of the Snark" but I wanted to order the annotated edition and I had to order it paperback and chose a slow delivery (no reason to pay extra for faster delivery when I can just read something else until it arrives).  So it's now on its way.  But as for now, I still wanted to start on Carroll so I decided on Sylvie and Bruno which I found in the mobileread library for free.  I considered buying an annotated version but decided against it.  First, I wouldn't know the quality of the annotations until bought and second, this isn't a major work and I don't have to read annotations for *everything*, so I decided against annotations.

Also, the mobileread version is wonderfully formatted and chances are, an annotated ebook version would probably actually be formatted worse.  And, the mobileread version comes with both Sylvie and Bruno and its sequel Sylvie and Bruno Concluded all in one.

April 18th

Day 109
A Room with a View 46-88
12.041 read, -3.007

I read the minimum yesterday and then worked on updating this blog, but even so, another day to celebrate as I'm now at 12 books read!  And oh so close to being under 3 books behind.

Welcome to spring! Some changes - new counting method

Even before my "break" recently, I'd been wanting to change my counting method a bit but was trying to wait until I'd gotten caught up.  Heh, now I'm further behind than ever but that's OK because I still have the fighting spirit to go after it.

Anyway, over my break I decided to go ahead and change the counting method now.  Basically, I wanted a day off a week.  I mean, I could've taken one off anyway, but then I'd be behind that many pages the next day, or else I'd have needed to get that far ahead before.  I just want it easier and more straightforward what I need to read each day so that one day a week I can have off if I want it.

Recalculating, now I need 42 pages per day instead of 37, and this also allows me one day a week off, which I've tentatively scheduled for Saturdays, but really can be whenever I want.  However, for calculating purposes on here, it will be 42 pages a day Su-Fr and then 0 pages as a goal for Saturdays, so if I do read any on a Saturday, every page is extra.

I also may try to simplify the way I post.  I've decided shorter posts if I can help it, including with the reviews.  At least until I'm well caught up.  I'll still try to put in the meat of my thoughts though.  With all this we'll see as it goes along, but you may notice changes in the way my daily totals look so be on the lookout!

And....I'm back!

Time to get back down to business!

I did get sidetracked in March.  I left off the blog for a bit.  After, I started back counting on a sheet of paper, but haven't gotten to the major task of finally updating the blog again til now.  Bad me!  Once I'm caught up, I hope that's a lesson not to let my blog updating go again through the year, because the more it gets backed up, the more there is to do.

I'll leave this post on its current day (April 18th), but I haven't updated until now the blog since March 11th.  I will start the daily updates from then that I've recorded on paper, but I want them all to match up to their real date so in the index they'll still be in their correct month, so I'll be manually changing their "posting" dates to match their actual dates, which means even though I'm doing March 12th-now after this post, they will show up before the post!

I would elaborate more, but I have a lot to do!  There will be one more post after this explaining a change....

April 17th

Day 108
The Eternal Husband and Other Stories 239-263, 17-21
A Room with a View 4-45
11.258 read, -3.008

And finally I'm now caught up.  I just did March 11th through April 17th all in one day!

What a day to catch up on too.  First it just happens to be day 108 which, anyone here a fan of Lost? ;)

Then, I've finished up all the stories and the introduction to The Eternal Husband and Other Stories.  Of course, since it's Dostoevsky it was all pretty drab and dismal, but so insightful and with much more unexpected humour than I was expecting.  Still, the stories really revolve around many strange, poor, sad/reclusive/misguided people.  I can't continue with Dostoevsky now but I really look forward to one day reading The Brothers Karamazov (I've already read Crime and Punishment).  And reading some of his lesser stories which I for the most part all liked, and seeing his entire fiction output isn't so oppressively huge, I wouldn't mind at some point banging out all of his works (the intro that spoke about other works whetted my appetite).  But not now.

So, finally, finally, FINALLY I was left in the position to now choose my own book to read (not a book club selection!) Well, also aside from the epics reads too.  And in fact, I might've chosen the Odyssey to start on but for two reasons.  One is I wasn't sure of the start date for our group read of it and two is that this time, I want to read the companion along *with* the book, not after, and I had to order the companion paperback on Amazon and its on its way and may be a few days, may be a few weeks who knows.  So in all events, I decided against the Odyssey right away and *finally* went to my list of pre-determined challenge reads for this year.

Remember those?  I listed them at the beginning of the year, and they're in my list post on mobileread.  My goal was to read all the book club reads, which I'm doing smashingly on, to read a certain amount of "whim" books, of which I've read a few (the epics and companions to them and such are considered "whims" since they fit in no other category for my challenge) but last and certainly not least, I picked 13 various titles that I wanted to have read by the end of the year and so far....I've read none of them!

LOL.  And a fourth of the year is already done. So I was very happy to be able to look at the list today and pick one off it to read.  I ended up going with A Room with a View.  A few reasons - Reading the Pevear translation of Dostoevsky reminded me of first picking out Pevear for Master and Margarita which was our very first pick for the inauguration of the Lit club.  And, Room with a View was the very first pick during my time with the general book club.  It was February of 2011 when I started, the category was Romance and I actually voted for Room and it won!  With ten choices every month, it's rare the one you actually vote for wins, so that was a great start.  Then I didn't finish reading it. Ha.  But I was determined to eventually get back to it, and it went on my challenge list as one of my halfway-read books that I wanted to finish this year.  So from Pevear translation to Forster, it's a bit nostalgic for my entrance into the clubs only last year!

Also, there's someone who's been harping on me to see the film ever since I mentioned a few months ago that I'm going to watch the film once I read the book.  So, I want to finish this book so I can watch the film and quiet them! :D

Also, it's rather short, so I thought it would be good for my first choice from the list, especially with a new club pick coming soon and Odyssey starting soon. Of course, next day (the 18th) I found our group Odyssey read won't start til May which is great, and at my pace of reading recently any length book I'd probably finish relatively soon, so all in all I don't think it matters so much whether I had picked a long or short one to read now.

But I'm happy with my choice and am enjoying it immensely.  This really is one of my favourite types of literature - a gentle English classic drama.  And it really has some great wit and barbs in it too.  Oh yes, and I love travel too, so I'm thinking by finish it may rank up there with my all-tme favourites.  But of course, perhaps not as well, I'm only at the beginning now so I don't know.

Funny though, I had thought I'd read about half of it, but opened it back up to find out I was only about 20 pages in, lol.  So seeing that, I just thought it'd be silly not to start from the beginning again fresh, so I did.

Well, here I am, I've been resolving to write shorter posts and here's a gigantic one!  I may as well call it a PM, right? ;)

April 16th

Day 107
The Eternal Husband and Other Stories 47-66, 183-238
11.186 read, -3.038

April 15th

Day 106
The Eternal Husband and Other Stories 26-46
11.110 read, -3.072

Heh, if I'd been keeping track of the total read on the 15th, I would've made myself read just one more page!  Then, I would've been at 11.111 for the day!  Oh well, I have one more chance, at 22.222.  After that there will be no more chances though, since the decimals start over after 260, so there can't be a 33.333 or 44.444.

April 14th

Day 105
The Eternal Husband and Other Stories 166-182, 2-3, 7-16, 22-25
11.089 read, -3.051

See note from yesterday on why I skipped around so much today.

11 down, 39 to go!

April 13th

Day 104
A Companion to the Iliad 282-287
The Eternal Husband and Other Stories 67-165
11.056 read, -3.084

Two more reasons to celebrate today!

If the other day was for all intents and purposes the finishing of the main Iliad book, today is the 100% completion of the whole Iliad subject!  Woohoo!

And second, I'm now at 11 books read!  Movin' on up!

Of course, started a new book and of course, it's another book club pick, ha.  This time it's Eternal Husband.  I wanted the Pevear/Volokhonsky translation so I had to shell out a little money even though other versions are free, and their version comes with other stories too (since Eternal Husband is more a novella of around 125 or so pages).

You will see strange skips for Eternal Husband.  It is because  I started with the main story which is in the middle of the book (today), then days after this I read a bit of the intro, then I skipped to reading the other stories before and after Eternal Husband to complete the book, then I finished the intro (I ended up putting the intro off until the end because it was discussed the plots of all the stories).

I only needed to read Eternal Husband for the book club, but since I already had the others and they were all so short (the other four stories are about the same length together as Eternal Husband is alone) so I just said - why not?

April 11th

Day 102
The Iliad 3
A Companion to the Iliad 88-191
10.120 read, -3.196

Great day, over 100 pages read!

Ten down, 40 to go!



Ten done on the 10th!

April 10th

Day 101
A Companion to the Iliad 41-87
10.015 read, -3.259

If you noticed reading the last line, I've reached two big milestones today!

First, I'm at ten books read, a fifth of the challenge done!  Woohoo!

Second, even if it's just by one page, I've manage to get below 4 books behind and now am only 3 books and 259 pages behind.  Like the turtle, slow and steady wins the race!  (I prefer a sea turtle though) ;)

April 9th

Day 100
The Iliad 48-76
A Companion to the Iliad 3-40
9.228 read, -4.004

What a better way to celebrate 100 days in the challenge than, for all intents and purposes, to FINALLY finish the Iliad, which I started back at the beginning of January!  Yay! :D

I do still have one more page I will read in two days that I forgot about, and also I'm still reading the companion, but the actual book is done!  Woohoo.

April 7th

Day 98
The Princess Bride 175-198
The Lady, or the Tiger? 9-16
The Discourager of Hesitancy 1-5
A Companion to the Iliad vii-viii
The Iliad 6-26
9.140 read, -4.008

Quite a day full of different titles!

First, I finished Princess Bride.  Fun read!  Need to get a version with the "Buttercup's Baby" "sequel" chapter to finish it up completely.

Next, read the short story The Lady, or the Tiger? by Frank R. Stockton that Princess Bride references near the end, since it piqued my interest and was so short.  The page issues are because the project gutenberg version I downloaded had EIGHT pages of random preface on where it came from digitally.

The I read the "sequel" to it, The Discourager of Hesitancy, also by Frank R. Stockton, also a very short story. (a bit harder to find online, but I found it)

Then, I *finally* turned back to the Iliad.  I started with the Companion I hadn't gotten to yet, with the intro, then remembered that I still hadn't read the introduction to the actual Iliad, so I went back and started that instead.   For reference, the Iliad is the Lattimore translation, new edition, and the Companion is by Malcolm M. Willcock and is based on the translation by Lattimore.

April 4th

Day 95
Turn, Magic Wheel 160-215
The Princess Bride 2-42
8.208 read, -4.116

And here begins my glorious resurrection!  Slow, glorious resurrection. :D

I finally finished Turn, Magic Wheel.  Let me tell you, for me, that magic wheel just turned and turned too. When did I start it?  Heh.  But today I turned it one last time and onto the next.

Which, of course, is another book club selection!  The Princess Bride.  Not my first choice, but one of the five up for the vote this month out of ten that I would've preferred, so I'm happy enough.  I've already seen the film.  Many books-to-films that I've already seen the film of this year!

April 3rd

Day 94
8.111 read, -4.171

And...took a day off after starting back, lol.  But, this was my last day through now (April 18th, when I'm updating all these) of this, and -4.171, or being behind 4 books and 171 pages, is the farthest behind I've gotten, and I've made some up since.  Hopefully it will be the farthest behind I get all year!

April 2nd

Day 93
Turn, Magic Wheel 158-159
8.111 read, -4.129

Well, I finally started back today.  Heh, two pages, but hey, it's a start!