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Kylie's Literary Adventures in 2011


Kylie

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Dystopian Reading List

TBR Pile

 

Disclaimer: some books on this list might be more post-apocalyptic or utopian in nature. I don't care; it's my list.

 

TBR as at 1 January 2011: 61

TBR as at 3 July 2011: 65 (1 read, 5 acquired)

 

TBR Pile (read, currently reading):

 

*Margaret Atwood: The Year of the Flood

JG Ballard: Crash

John Brunner: The Jagged Orbit

John Brunner: The Sheep Look Up

John Brunner: The Shockwave Rider

Katharine Burdekin: Swastika Night

Anthony Burgess: 1985

Anthony Burgess: The Wanting Seed

Karel Capek: RUR

Karel Capek: War with the Newts

Eoin Colfer: The Supernaturalist

Justin Cronin: The Passage

Philip K Dick: Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?

Philip K Dick: The Man in the High Castle

Cory Doctorow: Little Brother

Jeanne DuPrau: The City of Ember

Ben Elton: Blind Faith

Philip Jose Farmer: Dayworld

Philip Jose Farmer: Dayworld Rebel

*Philip Jose Farmer: Dayworld Breakup

EM Forster: The Machine Stops

William Gibson: Neuromancer

William Gibson: Count Zero

William Gibson: Mona Lisa Overdrive

*Dmitry Glukhovsky: Metro 2033

Ursula Le Guin: The Left Hand of Darkness

Sarah Hall: Daughters of the North

Harry Harrison: Make Room! Make Room!

Robert Heinlein: The Moon is a Harsh Mistress

*Michel Houellebecq: The Possibility of an Island

Aldous Huxley: Brave New World Revisited

Aldous Huxley: Island

Shirley Jackson: The Lottery and Other Stories

PD James: The Children of Men

Andrew Keogh: twentytwelve

Stephen King: The Bachman Books

Stephen King: The Stand

Arthur Koestler: Darkness at Noon

Stanislaw Lem: Memoirs Found in a Bathtub

Doris Lessing: Memoirs of a Survivor

Jonathan Lethem: Gun, with Occasional Music

Ira Levin: This Perfect Day

Sinclair Lewis: It Can't Happen Here

Saci Lloyd: The Carbon Diaries 2015

Saci Lloyd: The Carbon Diaries 2017

Lois Lowry: Gathering Blue

Lois Lowry: Messenger

Walter M Miller Jr: A Canticle for Leibowitz

Thomas More: Utopia

Vladimir Nabokov: Bend Sinister

William F Nolan & George Clayton Johnson: Logan's Run

George Orwell: 1984 (re-read)

Chuck Palahniuk: Rant

Mordecai Roshwald: Level 7

Will Self: The Book of Dave

Charles Stross: The Halting State

Kousun Takami: Battle Royale

Kurt Vonnegut Jr: Breakfast of Champions

Kurt Vonnegut: Cat's Cradle

HG Wells: The First Men in the Moon

HG Wells: The Shape of Things to Come

*Bernard Wolfe: Limbo 90

Jack Womack: Going Going Gone

Jack Womack: Random Acts of Senseless Violence

Jack Womack: Heathern

Jack Womack: Ambient

Jack Womack: Terraplane

Jack Womack: Elvissey

Yevgeny Zamyatin: We

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Dystopian Reading List

Wish List

 

Disclaimer: some books on this list might be more post-apocalyptic or utopian in nature. I don't care; it's my list.

 

Wish List (acquired):

 

Margaret Atwood: The Year of the Flood

Paul Auster: In the Country of Last Things

JG Ballard: High Rise

Oliver Bolokitten: A Sojourn in the City of Amalgamation, in the Year of Our Lord, 19--

Karin Boye: Kallocain

William S Burroughs: Nova Express

Octavia Butler: Parable of the Sower

Pat Califia: Doc and Fluff

GK Chesterton: The Flying Inn

John Christopher: Cloud On Silver (US title: Sweeney's Island)

James De Mille: A Strange Manuscript Found in a Copper Cylinder

Philip K Dick: Time Out of Joint

Harlan Ellison: Repent, Harlequin! Said the Ticktockman

Philip Jose Farmer: Dayworld Breakup

William Gibson: Virtual Light

William Gibson: Idoru

William Gibson: All Tomorrow's Parties

Dmitry Glukhovsky: Metro 2033

Michel Houellebecq: The Possibility of an Island

Ernst Junger: The Glass Bees

Ursula Le Guin: The Lathe of Heaven

Jack London: The Iron Heel

Oisin McGann: Small-Minded Giants

Alan Moore: V for Vendetta

Larry Niven: A World Out of Time

Frederik Pohl: The Space Merchants

Robert Silverberg: The World Inside

Emile Souvestre: The World As It Shall Be

Shaun Tan: The Lost Thing

Jules Verne: Paris in the 20th Century

Kurt Vonnegut: Harrison Bergeron

David Foster Wallace: Infinite Jest

Bernard Wolfe: Limbo 90

Aleksandr Zinovyev: The Yawning Heights

Edited by Kylie
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Series Reading

 

I have a lot of series on my TBR pile that I either haven't started or that I'm partway through. I'd like to make some more progress on these this year. Below is the bulk of the series I have on my TBR pile.

 

I've marked books that have been read and books that I'm currently reading.

 

Series Reading: 63 series (235 books) (2 read)

 

Douglas Adam: Hitchhiker's / Dirk Gently (4 / 2)

Isaac Asimov: Foundation (3)

*Pat Barker: Regeneration (2)

Stephen Baxter: Manifold (3)

*Benjamin Black: Quirke (3)

Trudi Canavan: The Magician's Guild (3)

Isobelle Carmody: Obernewtyn Chronicles (4)

Raymond Chandler: Philip Marlowe (3)

*Cassandra Clare: Mortal Instruments (2)

Arthur C Clarke: Space (3)

Arthur C Clarke & Stephen Baxter: Time Odyssey (1)

Eoin Colfer: Artemis Fowl (3 --> 6)

William Corlett: The Magician's House (4)

Arthur Conan Doyle: Sherlock Holmes (6)

Janet Evanovich: Stephanie Plum (4)

John Fante: Bandini Quartet (4)

Philip Jose Farmer: Dayworld (2 --> 3)

Jasper Fforde: Nursery Crimes (1)

Helen Fielding: Bridget Jones (2)

Cornelia Funke: Inkheart (3)

William Gibson: Sprawl (3)

*Morris Gleitzman: Once/Then (2)

*Kerry Greenwood: Phryne Fisher (4)

Julia Gray: Guardian Cycle (5)

Ursula Le Guin: Earthsea Cycle (4)

Charlaine Harris: Sookie Stackhouse / Harper Connolly (3 / 2)

Harry Harrison: Stainless Steel Rat / Stars and Stripes (4 --> 5 / 3)

Raven Hart: Savannah Chronicles (3)

Kathryn Kenny: Trixie Belden (3)

Stieg Larsson: Millennium (2)

Madeleine L'Engle: Time Quartet (2 --> 3)

CS Lewis: Space (3)

Jeff Lindsay: Dexter (5)

Saci Lloyd: Carbon Diaries (2)

Lois Lowry: Giver / Anastasia (2 / 3 -- > 6)

*Cormac McCarthy: Border (2)

China Mieville: Bas-Lag (3)

LM Montgomery: Anne (4 --> 3)

Terry Pratchett: Discworld / Johnny Maxwell (26 --> 27 / 2)

Chris Priestley: Tales of Terror (2)

Philip Pullman: His Dark Materials (3)

Anne Rice: Vampire (2)

Kim Stanley Robinson: Mars (3)

Gillian Rubinstein: Space Demons (3)

Alexander McCall Smith: 44 Scotland St / No 1 Ladies / Sunday Philosophy (3 / 6 / 3)

*Lemony Snicket: A Series of Unfortunate Events (8)

Paul Stewart & Chris Riddell: Twig Saga (3)

Sue Townsend: Adrian Mole (4)

Nancy Turner: Sarah Prine (2)

SA Wakefield: Bottersnikes and Gumbles (2)

*Scott Westerfeld: Peeps (2)

*Elie Wiesel: Night (3 --> 2)

PG Wodehouse: Blandings / Jeeves (7 / 6)

Jack Womack: Dryco (6)

Jonathan Wylie: Island and Empires (3)

Edited by Kylie
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Multiple Authors

TBR Pile

 

I tend to buy everything an author has written without reading their books that I already own. I aim to reduce these numbers this year.

 

The list doesn't include any series, which are listed separately in the above post. I'm only listing authors for whom I own 3 or more books, and I'm not counting their series alongside their standalone books.

 

I've marked books that have been read and books that I'm currently reading.

 

TBR as at 1 January 2011: 154

TBR as at 2 May 2011: 228 (1 read, 4 acquired)

 

TBR Pile (read, currently reading):

 

Margaret Atwood: 5

JG Ballard: 6

John Banville: 9

*Jorge Luis Borges: 3

Ray Bradbury: 6

John Brunner: 8

Italo Calvino: 5

Truman Capote: 4

Angela Carter: 6

Arthur C Clarke: 9

Philip K Dick: 7

Charles Dickens: 4

Ben Elton: 5

Stephen Fry: 4

Neil Gaiman: 6

Graham Greene: 3

Susan Hill: 9

SE Hinton: 3

Aldous Huxley: 6

Kazuo Ishiguro: 4

Jack Kerouac: 6

Stephen King: 5

Stanislaw Lem: 4

David Malouf: 3

John Marsden: 4

Nancy Mitford: 3

Walter Moers: 3

Haruki Murakami: 7

Vladimir Nabokov: 6

Flann O'Brien: 3

Chuck Palahniuk: 4

Terry Pratchett: 4

John Steinbeck: 4

Hunter S Thompson: 4

Kurt Vonnegut: 5

Sarah Waters: 4

Evelyn Waugh: 4

HG Wells: 7

PG Wodehouse: 20

Tom Wolfe: 5 --> 4

John Wyndham: 5 --> 6

Richard Yates: 6

Edited by Kylie
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OMG!!! Obviously my first read of 2011 will have to be all your lists .. they're awesome :)

You've certainly set yourself a few targets. I bet you had a great time just sorting everything into categories etc.

Happy 2011 Kylie .. let the reading commence :readingtwo:

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You don't understand how much respect I have for your organizational skills, or how jealous I am of all the incredible books you have waiting for you. Well anyway now I've finished moaning I just want to wish you all the best with your 2011 reading; I hope you manage to find some crackers, and I look forward to reading your views on what you've read as the year progresses.

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OMG!!! Obviously my first read of 2011 will have to be all your lists .. they're awesome :)

You've certainly set yourself a few targets. I bet you had a great time just sorting everything into categories etc.

Happy 2011 Kylie .. let the reading commence :readingtwo:

 

 

Thanks Poppyshake. I think I went a little overboard but I wanted to have more thorough lists for my various challenges. My 2010 lists were hard to keep up to date because they were so patchy in details.

 

You don't understand how much respect I have for your organizational skills, or how jealous I am of all the incredible books you have waiting for you. Well anyway now I've finished moaning I just want to wish you all the best with your 2011 reading; I hope you manage to find some crackers, and I look forward to reading your views on what you've read as the year progresses.

 

Aw, thanks Ben! blush.gif I'm sure I have plenty of great reads ahead of me and I can't wait to get stuck into them!

 

I hope you have an awesome reading year too, and I hope you can find more time for reading as well. ;)

 

 

Kylie, I love how organised you are, happy reading :)

 

Thank you Weave! I'm so excited to see what 2011 will bring. I look forward to reading your reviews in 2011.

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Thank you Weave! I'm so excited to see what 2011 will bring. I look forward to reading your reviews in 2011.

 

You are very welcome Kylie and thanks :)

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Aw, thanks Ben! blush.gif I'm sure I have plenty of great reads ahead of me and I can't wait to get stuck into them!

 

I hope you have an awesome reading year too, and I hope you can find more time for reading as well. ;)

Thanks Kylie, I'm sure I will find some time, I think especially my new Amazon Kindle will help a lot with that. Don't worry, I won't forget my non-digital novels still sat upon my shelves; I still have a to-be-read pile which seems to just ever-increase rather than go down, that I should really get stuck into in 2011. Well, I guess we'll just have to see where our reading takes us in the new year; an exciting prospect for sure.

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I'm glad you won't be forgetting 'real' books Ben. We've gotta keep those bricks-and-mortar stores in business! wink.gif

 

I have started my first read of 2011: Watchmen by Alan Moore. I've finished chapter 1 of 12 and it's quite interesting. I'm reading this as an ebook on my 'puter (with the artwork of course) so unfortunately it won't count as one off my TBR pile. :(

 

I'll also be starting Alberto Manguel's The Library at Night. I've gotten into reading books about books recently, and this is a collection of essays about the history of libraries written by a guy who lives in France with a personal library of 16,000 books. I'm looking forward to getting some tips from him. giggle.gif

 

Frankie, I know you've added this to your wish list already, and I feel obliged to point out that Manguel has included a list of his favourite books at the end (more than 100), so your wish list may be expanding even further if/when you read it. wink.gif There is some overlap with other list books but there are quite a lot that I don't recognise.

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Yay, it's all set up now! I love going through your TBR piles because no matter how many times I look at it or how many times I looked at all your bookshelves, I'll always find something new that I didn't notice/remember you already had. It's like being a kid in a candy store! :smile2:

 

Henri Alain-Fournier: The Lost Estate (Le Grand Meaulnes)

 

What's this? I think I saw it either on the FTBC reading list or then Jason Steger mentioned it as one of his favorites or most life changing novels he's read in his interview on the FTBC website. I'm curious!

 

Martin Amis: The Rachel Papers

 

Another Amis. I hope it's a good one. I've seen the title somewhere, rather recently. Maybe on the FTBC list.

 

Murray Bail: Eucalyptus

 

I'm happy to announce that when I got back to Finland I found this for only 2e at a secondhand bookshop. It was thrilling because I'd seen your copy in your library and I know it's Australian. I hope we like it!

 

I also hope you enjoy the Banville's. Oooh and Flaubert's Parrot.

 

Aphra Behn: Oroonoko

 

Where did you find a copy of this and why did you buy it? I remember it being on the 1001 list. And it's hella old!

 

Poppy Z Brite: Exquisite Corpse

Poppy Z Brite: Lost Souls

 

giggle.gif Good look with these!

 

Augusten Burroughs: Magical Thinking

Augusten Burroughs: Running with Scissors

Augusten Burroughs: Sellevision

 

My, my, you have excellent taste!

 

 

Mark Z Danielewski: House of Leaves

 

Oh boy... I bet if you decide to read this one in 2011, it'll be one of your most challenging reads. Remember that I'd be happy to do a mini reading group on it :)

 

Oh by the way, I know remember the fish book that's on the 1001 list that I've been thinking about when we've tried to remember the fish book. The one that I was thinking is Trout Fishing in America by Richard Brautigan, only now that I checked my copy of 1001 it's NOT on the list. Where the hell did I get the name. It must be on some list or another.

 

Fannie Flagg: Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe

 

Remember to also watch the movie. Both are excellent!

 

Your list of Ursula Le Guins reminds me of one author I've been meaning to ask you about. Do you know Ursula Hegi? She's got a book on the Rory list, only can't remember the title now, and I was wondering if you've read it?

 

 

Lloyd Jones: Mister Pip

 

 

Oooh, this one's awesome, I really hope you enjoy it! :)

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Erik Larson: The Devil in the White City

 

I sooo want this book, it sounds so great. It's one of the Rory reads I'm looking forward to the most!

 

Ayn Rand: The Fountainhead

 

Have you noticed that the Rory Gilmore group on goodreads is going to read this in January?

 

Patrick Suskind: Perfume

Donna Tartt: The Secret History

Sue Townsend: The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole Aged 13 3/4

Sue Townsend: The Growing Pains of Adrian Mole

Sue Townsend: True Confessions of Adrian Mole

Sue Townsend: Adrian Mole: The Wilderness Years

Sue Townsend: Rebuilding Coventry

 

These are all excellent in their own ways, enjoy!

 

Hunter S Thompson: Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail '72

Hunter S Thompson: Hell's Angels

 

I want!

 

Tom Wolfe: The Bonfire of the Vanities

 

Everytime I go to this one particular charityshop, I see a copy of that lying around and I always pick it up but never end up buying it. The blurb sounds alright but it's a massive read and it's scary!

 

Tom Wolfe: The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test

Tom Wolfe: I Am Charlotte Simmons

Tom Wolfe: The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby

Tom Wolfe: The Pump House Gang

 

I hope these turn out to be amazing reads! :)

 

Wow, I almost broke out in sweat while going through your TBR :lol:

 

(Bloody hell, I had to put my reply in two separate posts, apparently I have too much stuff to say! :huh:

 

Edit:

 

OMG!!! Obviously my first read of 2011 will have to be all your lists .. they're awesome :)

You've certainly set yourself a few targets. I bet you had a great time just sorting everything into categories etc.

Happy 2011 Kylie .. let the reading commence :readingtwo:

 

:haha: That's a long first read of the year, are you sure you can get through it by the end of 2011? :giggle:

 

I'll also be starting Alberto Manguel's The Library at Night. I've gotten into reading books about books recently, and this is a collection of essays about the history of libraries written by a guy who lives in France with a personal library of 16,000 books. I'm looking forward to getting some tips from him.

 

Frankie, I know you've added this to your wish list already, and I feel obliged to point out that Manguel has included a list of his favourite books at the end (more than 100), so your wish list may be expanding even further if/when you read it. There is some overlap with other list books but there are quite a lot that I don't recognise.

 

Oh boy... :giggle2: I guess I shouldn't buy that book immediately. Maybe I should wait till I get my TBR under 300. Although, what's the point....

 

Kylie, I only went through your fiction TBR in my posts but I have to give it to you, you have some seriously interesting non-fiction books on your TBR as well. And thanks for posting the 1001 Children's Books list, it'll give me an idea of what kind of stuff they have on it.

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What's this? I think I saw it either on the FTBC reading list or then Jason Steger mentioned it as one of his favorites or most life changing novels he's read in his interview on the FTBC website. I'm curious!

 

Another Amis. I hope it's a good one. I've seen the title somewhere, rather recently. Maybe on the FTBC list.

 

Yes, Le Grand Meaulnes was reviewed on the First Tuesday Book Club ages ago. I remember it sounded intriguing.

 

Marieke has talked about Martin Amis a lot because she loves him, and The Rachel Papers was reviewed on the FTBC. :) I hope I enjoy Martin's works more than I enjoyed his son Kingsley's!

 

Where did you find a copy of this and why did you buy it? I remember it being on the 1001 list. And it's hella old!

I got Oroonoko at the Canberra book fair last year. It was first published in 1688, so yeah, it's kind of old! mocking.gif It's very short but I think it might be a slightly difficult read because of ye olde English style. Although having just flicked through it, it doesn't look too bad.

 

Oh by the way, I know remember the fish book that's on the 1001 list that I've been thinking about when we've tried to remember the fish book. The one that I was thinking is Trout Fishing in America by Richard Brautigan, only now that I checked my copy of 1001 it's NOT on the list. Where the hell did I get the name. It must be on some list or another.

 

Ooh, I remember Richard Brautigan's name coming up on the forum once. I think maybe by Freewheeling Andy, but I'm not sure. I remember that his books sounded really interesting but I couldn't find any in print or something. I'll have to add him to my wish list again, thanks!

 

Your list of Ursula Le Guins reminds me of one author I've been meaning to ask you about. Do you know Ursula Hegi? She's got a book on the Rory list, only can't remember the title now, and I was wondering if you've read it?

 

Despite all my work on setting up my new Rory list, I don't remember seeing this name, so no, I haven't read anything by her.

 

Have you noticed that the Rory Gilmore group on goodreads is going to read this in January?

 

Cool. I hope everyone doesn't hate Atlas Shrugged. I'll be quite upset if they do!

 

I definitely have to read Hell's Angels this year. I can't believe I haven't read it yet when I wanted it so badly (the same goes for Tom Wolfe's The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test). I saw a documentary on Hunter S Thompson recently which was pretty interesting.

 

The Bonfire of the Vanities is supposed to be excellent but I agree that the size is rather daunting. I think it was chosen as a reading circle book once.

 

Kylie, I only went through your fiction TBR in my posts but I have to give it to you, you have some seriously interesting non-fiction books on your TBR as well. And thanks for posting the 1001 Children's Books list, it'll give me an idea of what kind of stuff they have on it.

 

Thank you! Did you also notice that I posted some stuff from my 501 Must-Reads book? I found a good list here. The book is split into the categories shown in the blog. I have to rearrange my reading posts so move the 501 books to be under the 1001 children's.

 

Thanks for your comments! :)

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Listastic!

 

Haha. Thanks Raven!

 

I had a dream last night that I was walking around laden down with a huge pile of books that I had just bought. Then I realised that it was the first of January and that I had bought all these books before even reading a single book in the new year and I was so disappointed with myself for caving in and buying so many books so quickly.

 

So just to be on the safe side, I'm staying indoors today and I have no plans to go anywhere. But then again, I've just remembered online book shopping. Mwahaha!

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I think you should set yourself a rule that you will only buy one new book for every five or ten you read from your TBR list.

 

Whilst I admire your book buying prowess over the last year, what is the point in you haven't been reading them?

 

 

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I have successfully done a read 3, buy 1 challenge for short periods of time, but for now I'm going to go cold turkey for as long as I can and avoid all bookshops. The online Book Depository is another matter, but if I can stop checking out my wish list every day or two then I should be able to resist temptation there as well. It doesn't help that the Aussie dollar is doing so brilliantly at the moment.

 

I just really need to concentrate on all the books I've already got and remember how badly I want to read them all.

 

The thing is, all the books I buy are ones that I really, really want to read, but it's just a matter of when I'll get to them. With every, say, 100 books that I buy, I'm putting myself back another year from reading books I already have. <sigh>

 

I have very good intentions this year, I promise! :) I've already sworn off the first of the Canberra book fairs, which saves me at least 100 books right off.

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I have successfully done a read 3, buy 1 challenge for short periods of time, but for now I'm going to go cold turkey for as long as I can and avoid all bookshops. The online Book Depository is another matter, but if I can stop checking out my wish list every day or two then I should be able to resist temptation there as well. It doesn't help that the Aussie dollar is doing so brilliantly at the moment.

I'm going to try not to buy too many new books this year. My 'to read' pile isn't the epic proportions of yours, but I'd still like to reduce it if possible. It's hard though - I'm already ear-marking books I need purchase in order to try to complete my decades challenge! :lol:

 

Good luck with tackling the pile. :)

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It's hard though - I'm already ear-marking books I need purchase in order to try to complete my decades challenge! :lol:

 

 

Yes, taking part in challenges can make it quite difficult to stop buying books.

 

Aww, thanks Chesil and Charm. smile2.gif

 

You're using pages from first editions as patches, aren't you?

 

My response to this is equal parts icon_eek.gif and haha.gif.

 

It's blasphemy to suggest I would tear up books (and first editions at that!)

 

Without the aid of patches, I've lasted two and a half days without buying a book so far.

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All I can say Kylie is that it's a great comfort to read your lists, and know that there is at least one person who is more addicted to acquiring books that they desperately want to read, but never quite get around to reading, than me!!! The word awesome is way overused in this world, but I think it applies accurately here.

I notice your comments about enjoying books about books, and that you've got Susan Hill's Howards End is on the Landing on your priority list. Definitely want to recommend it, not least because I think you will relate very much to some of the things she says! It was my favourite non-fiction read last year.

 

One thing I'm definitely taking away from your blog - I'm going to start a list of books acquired, not just read. Hopefully, when it's sat there staring at me, it might help me rein in my wilder tendencies. But then again, maybe not!

 

Hope you have a great year's reading this year!

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