Archive for the 'eBooks' Category

The Terror and the Tortoiseshell #bookreview

The Terror and The Tortoiseshell As far as reading goes, I’ve been having a hard time with books that aren’t complete shit this year, the worst of it is, because of my RULES on having to finish books that I start I’m way behind on my minimum quota, I’m not going to even come close, unless I cheat and read a bunch of super short books. If they are good I guess it doesn’t really matter. Other than The Joy of Living – Unlocking the Secret of Happiness by, Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche, which I read so my psychiatrist and I could have a sort of book club therapy session on it and it turned out to be fantastic I highly recommend it. But it wasn’t a fun, easy, fancy free read. In most places it was pretty slow and took longer to read than I’d have liked. Learning to meditate and trying to meditate may cause actual meditation slowing down the reading process considerably. This meant I had to read things back over constantly.

I put out a call on Twitter, to the effect of “someone please send me something that doesn’t suck to read, this is getting ridiculous”. Ian from @atomicfez who I have met only once but made an impression and we chat on the Twitter, sent me an eBook copy of a book he’d published called The Terror and the Tortoiseshell, A Benji Spriteman Mystery by John Travis. He basically told me it was something about cats, Ian knows I like cats, an extra piece of thoughtfulness there I thought. I finished the piece of trash I was currently crawling through and with some skepticism set out to read the new book; I’m extremely picky with what I will read when it comes to fiction Mystery novels.

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Benji the cat asleep on his owners legs awakens to screams, which turn out to be animals murdering humans, The Terror has started. He suddenly finds himself to be of human size and able to stand on and walk with his back paws. This has happened to the rest of the animals as well, lions, tigers, bears, dogs, with no explanation for what caused The Terror. There is also no explanation for the odd cat or dog found still living as if it were the good old days, unable to talk and just a pet. The animals fill the zoo with the last of the humans found on the streets, most finding themselves cast out of their previous homes. They are now called Humes or Sappies, barely seen for fear of being viciously slain. Even new organizations like The Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Humans [SPCH] can’t stop the madness or heinous murders. Benji Spriteman takes on the roll of his old owner Jimmy, this has become commonplace for a lot of animals, if they don’t take over their jobs they still take on many defining characteristics. Benji, now a detective, sets out to solve the hume murders.

When you first start to read The Terror and the Tortoiseshell, the talking animals and their take over will cause anyone who has also read Animal Farm to try and draw comparisons. It doesn’t take long to realize you are reading a better story and one with very few similarities. I found the ninety-five page Animal Farm tedious, it felt like it took me as long to read as the just over three hundred page Travis novel did. It may be hard to imagine that a book with the word terror in the title could be funny, but you’d be wrong, from Rats taking over the newspaper and publishing it with no sentence structure, grammar or spell checking, to a restaurant that serves nothing but human dishes, there are surprises around every corner and just when you think there is nowhere for the story to go other than to be solved but you still have one hundred pages to go, Benji and his buddies will cough up even more hair balls to chase after.

Animals behaving like animals but on two paws instead of four towering over humans, feeding on humans because The Terror has happened, turned out to be just as dark as it was fun and hilarious. The writing is witty and intelligent, I was able to lose myself into the absurdity of it all while not feeling like the message of the book was being pushed in my face. I would definitely recommend it and thank my buddy Ian for giving me the eBook copy, about time I read a good book this year.

The Year in Books

Totally didn’t even make my minimum reading quota for this year.  I blame this on having one and a half break downs. The half one, I guess I’ll call it a mini break; I’m still having, YAY for break downs!

I’m only going to finish twenty-one books this year I’m supposed to read at least twenty-four.

self portrait #reading

Yesterday I had an epiphany thinking of sneaky ways I could pull off three more books in under two days, I’ve never really been able to decide when people ask me what super power I want because they all sound pretty cool and all but call me crazy I have decided I want to be able to speed read. How is this even a super power? Easy, I could also work undercover for anyone who needed it reading documents and intelligence super fast helping catch serial killers and environmental terrorists and those other freaky terrorists. I’d even get to be on Heroes Season Five.  Not to mention I could read 100′s of books a year. I am so sinfully jealous of fast readers.

There is one exception to what will be the final count. Adam agrees with me that technically I should get one extra credit for The Turn of the Screw, Henry James.  I did not finish this book but I attempted to read it twice, I read the first sixty-three pages two times. That would put me at twenty-two.

These are the books I did read.

1. Animal Farm, George Orwell
2. The Time Traveler’s Wife, Audrey Niffenegger
3. Dry, Augusten Burroughs
4. The Last Days of Socrates, Plato
5. The Undomestic Goddess, Sophie Kinsella
6. Tori Amos Piece by Piece, Tori Amos and Anne Powers
7. Me Talk Pretty One Day, David Sedaris
8. Fugitive Pieces, Anne Michaels
9. The Catcher in the Rye, J.D. Salinger
10. Under the Skin, Michel Faber
11. Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim, David Sedaris
12. sTORI telling, Tori Spelling w/Hilary Liftin
13. On Chesil Beach, Ian McEwan
14. A Wolf at the Table, Augusten Burroughs
15. Snuff, Chuck Palahniuk
16. The Lost Art of Keeping Secrets, Eva Rice
17. The Definitive Edition, The Diary of a Young Girl, Anne Frank
18. Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, Lewis Carroll
19. Stiff, The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers, Mary Roach
20. The Almost Moon, Alice Sebold
21. The Condition, Jennifer Haigh

reading right now

In July I did a mass review that covered a random selection of books on the above list, my review of The Time Traveler’s Wife, Audrey Niffenegger appeared in the zine Estella’s Revenge and I did a full on review of my Sony eBook as well as the book Stiff, Mary Roach because it was probably the number one book of the year. Because of that book I just recently discovered having watched it twice over this horrid holiday season that the scene in Love Actually where Liam Neeson HAS to play, at his late wife’s funeral,  the montage of photos set to the Bay City Rollers version of Bye Bye Baby (Baby Goodbye) now bugs me A LOT.  Both times I yelled at the TV.  I still seriously love that movie; that particular book just happened to change my life.

I am really looking forward to what books 2009 brings, I’m back in a book club which I love, I’ve missed two meetings but I’ve still read two of the three books read by the group since joining and have the book for the next meeting in my reading pile.

Just a couple of books that I already have in my possession that I hope to read next year are;

Disgrace, J.M. Coetzee
Middlesex, Jeffrey Eugenides
The Corrections, Jonathan Franzen
The Gum Thief, Douglas Coupland
Attachment, John Bowlby
The Hour I First Believed, Wally Lamb
Rant, Chuck Palahniuk

I am particularly eager to start The Hour I First Believed I read that it apparently references his other two books, She’s Come Undone and I Know This Much is True; I can’t wait to see how those characters play into the eight hundred page book that is ninety six pages shorter than his last book.

saturday morning.

I did not like Fugitive Pieces, Anne Michaels, seriously stick to poetry please. Under the Skin, Michel Faber was horrid, I read it because I found it on the 1001 books to read before you die list and I already owned it and I can not for the life of me figure out WHY it is on that list, maybe to free up bed space in hospitals? I also despised YES DESPISED The Time Traveler’s Wife. But I’ve bashed it enough this year.  The rest I would highly recommend. Other than Stiff if I had to pick a favourite this year it would have to be Tori Amos Piece by Piece, Tori Amos and Anne Powers and Snuff, Chuck Palahniuk which equals three favourites because I can’t pick one of anything except one Adam Bradley Carlson.

Please feel free to leave your favourite reads of 2008 in the comments because I am always looking for great new reads.

The Sony eBook [My official review]

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland Back in September I mentioned that I had been given a Sony eBook, a digital book reader, I briefly mentioned how awesome it was.  I have now not only used it and read some books on it but I have also traveled with it.

I started to read The Turn of the Screw Henry James, because as mentioned previously it came with one hundred classic novels to choose from.  As soon as I started reading, I noticed an increase in my reading speed. I read sixty or so pages and couldn’t decide if I was going too fast or if I didn’t like the book.  I gave the book the benefit of the doubt and started it over. It was not the reader it was the book it was not my thing and I stopped reading it again around sixty pages in.  I put the reader down after this and didn’t touch it again until shortly before my most recent trip.

The reader has two off options, I had left it in sleep mode which is an automatic mode used by simply flipping the on/off switch so when I turned it on to load it up for travel I found it dead.  It takes all of a half hour to fully charge it. Had I known after finding Mr. James a bore that I wasn’t going to use it for a while I would have powered it down completely which is very easily possible from the settings/advanced settings menu.

Once it was charged I added Madame Bovary Gustave Flaubert and Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland Lewis Carroll to the four classics I’d already loaded onto it as soon as I hooked up the software.

When I went to pack to leave it was pretty awesome only needing to grab the paper book I was reading and one other I had started and actually still haven’t finished but that is neither here nor there. The reader is light enough that you can comfortably hold it while reading and your wrist doesn’t get sore, if you are a pussy I can’t help you it shouldn’t hurt it is that light. If you are anything like me you need at least four plus books a trip just think of the space and weight that you save right there.  I have a book bag that goes inside of bags and I placed the reader into it as if it were a cherished first printing first edition hard cover, the USB port and the headphones port and some other tiny little hook-up area are open, I would prefer if they were covered but I guess this is a gadget that if you own you are already going to treat like a baby.  Or I do, I find myself sometimes kissing its smooth brown magnetic cover.

When it comes to gadgets and gizmos I could use a lesson or six million, I can hardly use my cell phone, I have had it almost two years and just learned how to get the photos off of it. The eBook is so easy to use I’ve been able to figure everything out without issue from downloading the free books from the Sony site to transferring them onto the reader.  There are no unnecessary buttons and I forgot to mention it also has a removable memory slot, which is filled with a fake card and therefore it was part of it that I had no idea how to use, but the very small manual explained it and I now know it is just to hold more than the 160 books it already holds with it’s internal memory.

I finally settled on Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland as the next book I would try to start and finish.  Again, I found myself reading a lot faster than I normally do, I didn’t read it in one sitting as I’m sure many people do but I noticed a few things that made the book more enjoyable to read; because you can’t, you are not constantly checking how far into the book you are every time you pause to pick your nose or scratch your ass.  Once you have decided on your hold position you’re pretty much set because, and this is my favourite thing, you can turn the page with either hand with just the light tap of a finger.  The screen is not back lit like a computer screen making it almost exactly like paper to read off of. Reflections are no more or less annoying than shadows or weak light on a paper book.  You can bookmark as many pages as you like, it tracks them for you, and it turns on to the page you turned it off at.

I can’t imagine traveling anywhere without it already and not only does it give me an excuse to read 100 classic novels, it means that I can buy more of my favourite books in first printing first editions and save silly books like the new one by Dennis Leary that I seriously want to read for the eBook that and the book Madonna’s brother wrote, totally don’t want to own them on paper. You do have to buy books for the reader but they are considerably cheaper and it supports PDF documents so you can also get books free from the library for it, I just have this odd thing about having to in some way shape or form own all of my books.

My Sony eBook Reader

Seeing as there is a 50/50 chance right now depending on a couple things and people that I might be in Bali for Christmas I didn’t think I was getting a Christmas present from my parents this year.  We were all out getting Adam luggage for his Christmas gift which he got already because Christmas gifts in my family are given sometime between August and December every year since I left home and my mom mentioned that I did get a present and I hadn’t even thought about it so I said I wanted a tripod but I got a Sony eBook Reader.

They actually bought three, my showing it to my mother off a friend’s photo stream turned out to be great for them because they can’t easily get books in Bali and can now hold up to 160 books each on their own readers.  We also have a family book club we are going to keep going over webcam so it all just fell into place.  I know that they are considered expensive but when you think about how many books it holds, the fact you can still get free books from the library for it and that it comes with 100 free classic novels (if you buy it before September 20) for an avid reader it is dirt cheap.

OH YAY!

I have my third fifty dollar Chapters gift card coming in the mail this year which I will be spending on paper books.  I think it will be a long long long long time before any electronic reader could or will take over paper books but for anyone who reads as much as I do and more I highly recommend it.

No more packing four to eight books every time I hop a plane.  No more trying to decide what I am going to feel like reading before I leave.  I have only added four books to the eBook so far, Anna Karenina Leo Tolstoy, Pride and Prejudice Jane Austen, Wuthering Heights Emily Bronte and The Turn of the Screw Henry James.  With the 100 free classics I can’t see buying any books for it for a while; I have a feeling I’m going to be on a classics kick for some time.  My only complaint, even though I completely understand why is that the free classics list does not contain any book that has been banned for even one minute, yet you can get the book of Mormon which I just don’t consider a classic in ANY sense of a the word.  No Orwell no Salinger, etc. and etc.  I also wish the USB port had a cover but it doesn’t.  I generally have my current book in a bag within my bag which will hopefully protect it from getting a dirty port.  It comes with a really cool magnetic brown cover.

my brand new Sony eBook.

I have kissed my eBook and petted it like a pet and hugged it because I love it. A lot.  The reader is not only pretty much the raddest thing I own now but it opens up the door for me to continue collecting my favourite novels in first printing first edition hard covers!! I’ve mentioned before I spent over a hundred dollars on my covered in plastic copy of The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay Michael Chabon and I bought the cheapest one I could find and hoped it would show up in the condition promised and thankfully it did.