Sunday Salon: Reading, Read, To Read #51


Happy Sunday! Happy almost Christmas! Chances are you're busy, busy, busy. But are you busy making plans for next year's reading?! I definitely am busy planning what I want to read in January. (I'm a little eager to get started, I admit!) I keep reminding myself (it's not working, by the way) that I still have two weeks of December to go. I need to be planning what to read this month.

I have begun reflecting on this year's blogging. I was noticing that while the number of posts here at Becky's Book Reviews has gone down, the number of posts at Operation Actually Read Bible and Young Readers has gone up. One reason why that number may have gone down is that I've been posting about reading challenges at a different blog. (I've decided not to do that anymore, the last thing I need is a fourth blog to keep up with!) I've also done fewer memes this year. Though I'm still LOVING Library Loot!!!

I am also considering making a few changes to how I do "reviews." I'm debating (again) about whether I should try to give ratings to books. (And if so, should I do it with numbers out of five or ten or a hundred, or a letter grade.) What do you think?

I might also make a few changes to how I approach "reviews." I've been using the whatever-is-easiest-for-me-at-the-moment method. (Sometimes my reviews are very short--in retrospect a little too short; and sometimes my reviews are very long. And I'd be the first to admit that some are "better" than others. There are definitely weaknesses in my "whatever-is-easiest" approach. Sometimes there are reasons--stress, not having enough time, or too much time having gone by since I read the book, etc.) It's just hard balancing between two extremes. The potentially-generic summary/teaser where you're trying to get people interested in reading the book. And the analytical detail-driven (sometimes spoilerish) approach where you examine the book closely listing all its strengths and weaknesses. The second approach may be more useful after you've read the book. It can invite more "real" discussion. And it might be more valuable over time. But I don't think everyone needs to use this approach. I don't think there is one right way to blog.

In a perfect world, I would always have the right words to convey why a story worked for me. I would find a way to express what I loved most, appreciated most about a book. Or not. Perhaps, I should remember what my literature professor used to call the "so what?" approach to writing.

Quick question, how do YOU feel about quotes? Do you value quotes in a book review? Do you like getting a glimpse of the author's writing style? Does it ever help you make up your mind about a book? Whether you'd like to read it? I share quotes a bit unevenly--aside from the first sentences/first paragraphs. Sometimes I mark passages but never end up sharing them. Sometimes they're just too spoilerish. And other times I just have too many to share and can't decide which ones are 'best'. Sometimes I read a book without marking anything--for better or worse. (Sometimes a writing style just doesn't stand out as all that special.) If I knew one way or another how you felt about seeing quotes in my reviews, it would help me.

What I've Reviewed:

 The Weed That Strings The Hangman's Bag. (Flavia de Luce #2). Alan Bradley. 2010. Random House. 364 pages.
Pride and Prescience: Or A Truth Universally Acknowledged. A Mr. and Mrs. Darcy Mystery. 2004. Tor. 288 pages.
North by Northanger: Or, The Shades of Pemberley. A Mr. & Mrs. Darcy Mystery. Carrie Bebris. 2006. Tor. 320 pages.
The Boy From Ilysies. Pearl North. 2010. Tom Doherty Associates. 320 pages.  
Jane. April Lindner. 2010. Little Brown. 373 pages.
All The Things I Love About You. LeUyen Pham. 2010. November 2010. HarperCollins. 40 pages.
To Whom the Angel Spoke: A Story of the Christmas. Terry Kay. 2009. Peachtree. 32 pages.
The Gingerbread Pirates. Kristin Kladstrup. Illustrated by Matt Tavares. 2009. Candlewick. 32 pages.
Sweet Moon Baby: An Adoption Tale. Karen Henry Clark. Illustrated by Patrice Barton. 2010. November 2010. Random House. 32 pages.
Brand New Readers: Winter Fun! Various. 2010. Candlewick Press. 80 pages.
Miracle of Christmas: God With Us. John MacArthur. 1993. Zondervan. 144 pages

Coming Soon:


The Lost Memoirs of Jane Austen by Syrie James. 2007. HarperCollins. 352 pages.


Your Baby Is Speaking To You: A Visual Guide to the Amazing Behaviors of Your Newborn and Growing Baby. Dr. Kevin Nugent. Photographs by Abelardo Morell. 2011. January 2011. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. 106 pages.


© Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews


Twitter Delicious Facebook Digg Favorites More