Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Highlights from this Year's Reading List.

A few of this year's best reads:
For the Collage I used images of my personal copies (with the exception of Lord Peter Whimsy).
  • Frankenstein by Mary Shelley: my annual reading of my favorite book.
  • Persuasion by Jane Austen: my favorite work by Jane Austen.
  • Under the Greenwood Tree by Thomas Hardy: Just a sweet story.
  • Lord Peter Whimsy by Dorothy L. Sayers: Mystery!
  • The Awakening by Kate Chopin: an old favorite that shows me different themes and conflicts every time it's read.
  • Death Comes to Pemberly by P.D.James: The only continuation of Jane Austen's writings worth reading.
  • Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte: I read this whenever there is a lull in my reading list.
  • Irish Autumn by Margaret Evans Porter: an easy read with a cute love story.
  • A Room With  a View by  E.M.Forester: Classic story of love and questions.
  • Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte: My favorite Bronte work.
  • Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen: the worlds favorite love story.
  • Harry Potter by J.K.Rowling: life, lessons, and friendship. 
  • The Turn of the Screw by Henry James: as close as I will ever get to horror fiction.
  • Mary Barton by Elizabeth Gaskell: I love North and South and wanted to read more of her works.
  • Mrs.Dalloway by Virginia Woolf: days of a bored housewife.


Sunday, June 2, 2013

What I'm Reading Right Now

My "Just Graduated" Reading List

I'm currently reading through the Lord Peter Wimsey Mystery Series by Dorothy L. Sayers. This has been more of an adventurous read, as I had never read mystery novels. I've stuck within the classic genre. But this has opened up a whole new world of options for me. I love Lord Peter Wimsey: a more stylish sleuth than the much loved Sherlock Holmes. Lord Peter is a fellow of wealth, who never leaves without his monocle and a wonderful outfit. He solves murders in style!


Elizabeth Gaskell, author of North and South, writes a story of Mary Barton. The story is set in the English city of Manchester between 1839 and 1842, and deals with the difficulties faced by the Victorian lower class

Sunday, May 26, 2013

What is Inside of a Book?

A book is a constantly aging enclosure of a story. The pages of a book will wither with time, yellow with age, and tear through use: but with every opening the story is reborn. This wonderful contradiction has guided me through my education and provided my life with fulfillment and passion.


Sunday, April 28, 2013

No Longer Lacking


I posted this article on a different blog a few months ago- A conglomerate blog entitled "The Writers March." To my great pleasure It was well received, but some wonderful feedback and self-reflection has inspired to make some edits. Writing is always a work in progress.


Part of humanity is comparing ourselves to the others around us. It keeps us uncomfortably self-aware. We look at a reflection of ourselves and say one of three things, 1) I’m happy where I am 2) I can live with this & 3) Who have I become?!?

There has always been one aspect of my life where I would respond with the latter. I have always felt a little absent in one aspect of life- passion. Passion for one thing that drives me or inspires.

I never felt a consuming love of any one thing- I have no hobby that consumes my energy, thoughts, and time. I look around at friends, family, and historical figures and see people that are filled with both a healthy and unhealthy fascination for one thing. Maybe I am romanticizing this almost obsessive behavior- but it seems incredibly fulfilling.

My brother has spent his life eating, breathing, and sleeping baseball- now he’s a college ball player. I was always so jealous of his commitment to baseball. I was going to t-ball games and now I’m at college games surrounded with boys just like him that worked hard to maintain their grades and bodies in order to fulfill their desires to simply play baseball. These events are absolutely thrilling, but not because I love them, but because they, the players, do. I enjoy baseball, but I'd prefer to read a book. It is the energy which thrills me and not necessarily the activity itself.

In addition to my brother, one of my dearest friends is an artist: she paints, sketches, spins pottery, and is a photographer. She is now graduated with a degree in Art and is a professional photographer. She fulfilled her dream and literally creates art every day.

My choice historical figure who embodies passion and commitment is 1st Lady, Dolly Madison. Mrs. Madison ran back into an enflamed White House in front of quivering soldiers to save treasured paintings, risking her body to conserve pieces of American history.

But back to my own perceived lack of such feelings. I always felt that I would find my passion- so I explored different hobbies. I am not an artistic woman- I can’t sew, knit, crochet, or create anything really. As much as I want to be a writer, I lack the creative imagination (at least for now). I am far from athletic; I can barely walk in a straight line for any length of time.

I was discussing this with a friend and she laughed at me, responding, “You have a hobby! It is just less expressive than others- you read.” She’s right, but I struggled for some time with this realization. I wanted a “better” passion, something that could make itself known to everyone around me, something animated and obvious.


If we truly “can’t choose who we love” I think it’s safe to assert that you can’t choose what you love. At last, I feel like I am no longer missing out on a pivotal aspect of life. I have what I love, and it is one thing, reading. 

Upon further reflection, I see where this dilemma has shown itself before. I return to my struggle with my Major in college- English Literature. Now I have a response to the question, "How did you choose your major?" and I respond with a little laugh, saying, “I didn’t choose my Major, it chose me.” 

Monday, November 26, 2012

Poets & Their Poetry

These are a few of the poets that I especially enjoy! The poems I listed are my particular favorites. 

Emily Dickenson- 'I lost a world the other day.'
T.S.Eliot- The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock
Thomas Hardy- I Said to Love
William Blake- Songs of Innocence and Experience
Sir John Suckling- 'Oh for Some Honest Lover's Ghost'
John Keats- Ode to Melancholy
Cecil Day Lewis- The Album
Samuel Taylor Coleridge- Rime of the Ancient Mariner
William Wordsworth- London, 1802




Saturday, November 17, 2012

My Favorite Short Stories

As a Lit student, I have read a countless amount of short stories. I absolutely love short stories, they contain all of the excitement and feeling of a novel but they are easier to make time for! So, for all of you busy readers out there (that want to actually finish a story occasionally) I want to share my favorite short stories with you.

  1. The Yellow Wallpaper- Charlotte Perkins Gillman- A wonderfully disturbing short-story about the roles and treatment of women around the turn of the century. The ending is spine-chilling. 
  2. Cathedral- Raymond Carver- A simple and inarticulate narrator experiences an epiphany through a relationship with a blind man.
  3. Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?- Joyce Carol Oats- a young girl yearns for adulthood but her innocence is snatched away in a traumatizing way. 
  4. Dubliners- James Joyce- Dubliners is a collection of 15 superb short stories. My favorite is Araby, a young boy goes to the fair.
  5. A Mark On the Wall- Virginia Woolf- I love all forms of writing but "stream of consciousness" is one of my favorites. Virginia Woolf is one of the few writers who perfectly put this human condition on paper.
  6. A Haunted House- Virginia Woolf- don't let the title scare you, it is not your typical haunted house. 
  7. Krik? Krak!- Edwidge Danticant- a collection of 9 short stories based on the brutal and hard lives of Haitians. I had to do this reading for a class and I absolutely suffered through this, the topic is horrifying and put into simple terms, sad. I admit I will only read it once, however, this author has a gift for story-telling. 
  8. Videotape- Don Delillo- A man is mesmerized and appalled by a scene of tragedy caught on tape. 


Share yours!

Monday, October 29, 2012

English Verse


Purchased a new book and now I'm enjoying it! It's a cold morning in Florida- I've got a hot tea and my reading glasses are out!

Sunday, October 28, 2012

My Reading List!

Margaret Drabble
Eats, Shoots, and Ladders
The Crucible
A Dash of Style- Noah Lukeman
Dorothy Sayer
Charlotte Perkins Gilman- Yellow Wallpaper
George Elliot-Mary Evans
Thomas Hardy
How To Marry an English Lord 
Carol McD. Wallace
Julian fellows
Park Lane -Frances Osborne
Booth Tarkington