Hello Vox! I've missed the neighborhood feel of Vox over on my WordPress blog, but keeping up with you all in my Google Reader is working quite well. In case you are interested, here's what I've been up to and what you're missing since I'm posting at bookishlyfabulous.wordpress.com now. If you missed my last post about moving over there, add me to your Google Reader (or whatever RSS reader you use) if you miss me. :)
I've started running, and I'm planning to run a 10K on Thanksgiving Day. I ran the Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure last Saturday in my grandmother's memory.
I've posted book reviews of:
Shanghai Girls by Lisa See
The Elegance of the Hedgehog by Muriel Barbery
The Memory of Running by Ron McLarty
Her Fearful Symmetry by Audrey Niffenegger
And I gushed about the movie Bright Star.
I haven't been posting here because it has gotten to be a real pain. Vox loads so slowly that I don't even want to attempt posting. Half the time I have to retype a post that got screwed up because I tried to add a picture, and typing in Word makes it look funky once I paste it.
I have not decided whether I'm definitely leaving Vox, but I plan to continue to read and comment on neighbors posts while I try out Wordpress. I will still read my neighborhood even if I decide to move my blog somewhere else. If you are interested in following my blog there, here is the address.
It was a tough decision to try another platform because I love the social aspect here on Vox, but I'm going to try something else and see how it goes.
What’s the best book you’ve read recently?
(Tell me you didn’t see this one coming?)
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This question was timely because I just finished reading The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo last weekend and enjoyed it immensely. I have grown a little weary of the thriller genre lately (especially the Americans) because they seem to all be so formulaic and unoriginal. Apparently, I just needed to look to Sweden. Steig Larsson crafted an engrossing tale that kept me up far too late on several nights. Part mystery, part business intrigue, and part family saga, this was one of the best books I've read this year.
I'd put a book cover in, but Vox wouldn't let me.
From the design to the features, what should the perfect kid-friendly laptop include? What would you leave out?
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I'd leave out the laptop and by them a book. Kids don't need their own laptops.
It has been a while since I posted about what I've been reading so here's a list.
Milan Kundera - The Unbearable Lightness of Being - This was a book club book picked by the same person who loved One Hundred Years of Solitude so I was wary, but I really enjoyed this novel. It takes place in Prague before and during the invasion of the USSR. It is a story of several interconnected people and their liaisons. Even though I enjoyed the book, I agree with everyone in my book club that the only likable character is the dog.
Charlaine Harris - Definitely Dead, All Together Dead, From Dead to Worse, Dead and Gone - There isn't much to say about these books. They continue the Sookie Stackhouse series. They have all started to blend together in my mind, but there are some new characters introduced that I really like reading about, and the shapeshifters and werewolves have a really good story arc.
Neil Gaiman - Neverwhere - I would describe Neverwhere as a dark Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. I love Gaiman's writing style. He can make you laugh about really dark situations. The character's Croup and Vandemar are perfectly written, and I found myself giggling through their scenes.
Suzanne Collins - The Hunger Games - This is one of many recent Young Adult post-apocalyptic novels. The interesting twist here is that there is a tyrannical Capitol that rules 12 districts. Each district must send two teenagers annually to fight in the Hunger Games, a televised game where the 28 teens fight to survive. Only one teen leaves the arena alive. It was riveting, and some of the best YA fiction I've read recently. I loved that it was also a social commentary on reality TV and celebrity. This will be a trilogy, with the second book, Catching Fire, coming out in September.
Suzanne Collins - Catching Fire - No spoilers here, I promise! I was lucky enough to land an Advance Reader's Copy of Catching Fire from a Collection Development Librarian who went to Book Expo America this year. I will just say that it is awesome, and I can't wait to read the final title in the trilogy.
David Wroblewski - The Story of Edgar Sawtelle - This is the book club book that we will be discussing on Saturday. I don't usually read Oprah's Book Club selections (except for the classics), and this title hasn't made me want to in the future. I do have to say that Wroblewski is an awesome writer. The prose is wonderfully crafted, but I found that I had to make reading assignments for myself to finish this book because I wasn't riveted. I did find myself really wanting a Sawtelle dog.
Jane Green - The Beach House - After making myself finish the thick tome for book club, I needed a nice light read to loll around on the beach with. The Beach House was perfect. It was predictable and formulaic, but just what I needed. I loved the Nantucket setting, especially since I read a good portion of it on the beach.
At some point, I hope to post regularly again, but I'll do one of these bullet point things for now.
- We are officially moved into the house. It's great! The best thing about it is the quiet. No more bass coming from our neighbors apartments. Our neighbors all look like they are probably on social security, and that is just fine with me.
- On the fourth night in the house, I walked into a cabinet door in my beautiful new kitchen and broke it. I was truly devastated, but the sellers were great in leaving us all paperwork so we found the model number and have ordered a replacement from Lowe's. The lady there was awesome. She actually remembered them ordering the cabinets. I think she's going to get them to give it to us free because it shouldn't have broken so easily.
- I have reduced my caffeine intake to one can of diet coke a day. Hopefully, this will help me sleep better.
- I lost 3 pounds the week of moving. That's awesome because I gained two while packing and shopping for the house.
- I finally finished The Story of Edgar Sawtelle, and is was meh. I feel that way about most Oprah books so I'm not surprised.
- I got stung by jellyfish twice on Sunday, and the stings don't bother me much, apparently. It stung for a few minutes and then went away.
- I had a library tour with 19 kids today, and it went well.
- I just saw a kid walk by on a leash. I really don't understand those, but maybe I'll get one for Dan to keep him in line.
According to last.fm, here are my top artists since I've been keeping track of what I listen to. It seems about right. I love all these singers/bands.
- We move into our house next Wednesday.
- I'm off today for working tomorrow, and I need to finish packing up the kitchen. I have instead been procrastinating by playing online and reading.
- I'm currently reading The Story of Edgar Sawtelle, which is so far boring me to tears. The writing is pretty good, and I like the main character, but it moves so slowly that I just can't enjoy it that much. This should be a good example of how much I don't want to pack the kitchen. It's not like I'm reading a book because I really love it. This one is for book club so I have to persevere even though I normally would have taken it back to the library by now (150 pages into a 560 page book).
- I did a craft program for summer reading this week. The kids made paper plate masks. They loved it, but one mother and her daughter came to my table and sat there working on their mask for an hour and a half. They stayed until we were cleaning up the room at the end of the program. The daughter was hogging all the supplies, and her mom didn't care. I had to reign her in, which is not my job, especially if the parent is sitting right there.
- I saw Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince last night, and I really enjoyed it. I thought it was really well done.
- I should be getting a promotion soon. Cross your fingers for me.
- I bought some mango tangerine sorbet from Trader Joe's, and it is awesome.
- OK, the kitchen really needs to be packed so I'll put a DVD on and get to it now.
If you had one day to spend $100,000 - and you had to spend it totally selfishly - what would you buy?
I would pay off my student loans and put the rest on our mortgage. I couldn't enjoy anything else knowing how much debt that amount of money could pay off.

