30 Day Book Meme - Day 10
Sep. 7th, 2010 08:31 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Day 01 – Best book you read last year - I went back through the "book report" tag on this one, and am going to have to go with a fairly recent read, Mission of Honor by David Weber. After 5 years of keeping us waiting for a mainline Honor Harrington book, he gave us one that rocked. It wasn't 800 pages in hardcover, the technical stuff didn't go to insane extremes, he killed off major characters, and he made me cry a little. The review is here, but it has SPOILERS SPOILERS SPOILERS! I picked it as the best book because it brought me roaring back into a series that I started considering dead (especially since it was almost 5 years since the last book).
Day 02 – A book that you’ve read more than 3 times - So this question makes me wonder what kind of audience this thing is geared for, because there are LOTS of books I've read more than 3 times.
I'm going to go with a Christie triple feature: Murder on the Orient Express (Murder in the Calais Coach), Cards on the Table, and After the Funeral (Funerals are Fatal). These three probably rank as my favorite mysteries featuring Poirot.
Orient Express/Calais Coach (I have copies under both titles) is just fun to watch. I like the whole stuck-on-a-train aspect, and it's probably one of the few books where you actually root for the murderer(s). It also has an excellent AND faithful movie adaptation, which makes it a little more accessible. It makes an excellent book for when I don't want stress, I just want to enjoy the ride.
Cards on the Table features a race of sleuths vs. criminals. It's fun to read, especially how the different detectives deal with the different criminals. I don't play bridge, so that part of the book gets boring, but the rest is pretty good. There is a Suchet adaptation, but it changes things slightly (for one, in the TV adaptation, it doesn't come down to last criminal alive, so helps the tension some) and I think it preserves the spirit of the book.
After the Funeral captures my imagination, although I'm not sure exactly why. I think it has to do with the dysfunctional family angle, because I really enjoy those in my fiction. It also has a Suchet adaptation that changes some aspects, but preserves the story's spirit. It makes another good mental vacation.
Day 03 – Your favorite series - There are so many answers for this one, because I read quite a few series.
There's the Vorkosigan Saga by Lois McMaster Bujold, the Honor Harrington series by David Weber, the Nantucket series by SM Stirling, Star Wars (pre-switch to Del Rey), the various incarnations of Star Trek, LMB's Chalion series, the Discworld books, and Elizabeth Moon's Serrano series and Vatta's War series ...and that's just on the sci-fi/fantasy shelf.
Mysteries tend to run to series as well: the Gaslight Mysteries by Victoria Thompson, the Amelia Peabody series, Peter Wimsey, early Robert Tanenbaum Karp and Ciampi, Anne Perry's Thomas Pitt series, and The Cat Who... books.
Let's not even open the YA box.
For favorite series, however, I'm going to go with JD Robb (Nora Roberts) and the "In Death" series. Yes, it's like popcorn or candy for your brain. I enjoy the range, and I love her characterizations because she does NOT overdo the characters with too many walkons, or give us the LKH treatment of page-long descriptions. Some of them are better than others in quality and plot, and despite the series having a sort of futuristic facade (set in 2060s, with stuff like hovercars), the one that was actual sci-fi is probably my least favorite of the group. They're an instant buy-in-hardcover, because she's never let me down yet. I love Eve, even though in real life I'm probably more like Peabody. :) Yes, Roarke is pure wish fulfillment, but if you're going to dream, might as well go for the really satisfying ones.
Day 04 – Favorite book of your favorite series - So, having admitted how much I love the "In Death" series (so maybe I'm not a serious-all-the-time reader, your point?), let me share my favorite book with you. There's several good contenders, but I'd have to go with Visions in Death, which is near the midpoint of the series currently. It's the one where the psychic uses her connection with a serial killer to try covering up her own murder of a rival (in her eyes at least)... and for those of us enjoying the series continuity, it's the one where Ian McNabb finally finds out that Delia Peabody (girlfriend and about-to-be cohabitation partner) never did sleep with Charles Monroe, the sexy licensed companion (sex work is legal and regulated in Eve Dallas's world). Overall, it has one of the better plots, and some of the better dialogue. Runners up would include Witness in Death, where the killer commits the murder during a production of Witness for the Prosecution with Eve in the audience, and the short story "Haunted in Death", where Eve wraps up an eighty-five year old murder and a much newer one, with a few brushes with the spirit world.
Day 05 – A book that makes you happy - This one is actually pretty easy. I love to pick up and reread Barbara Metzger's Saved by Scandal. It's a Regency, and was my introduction to Metzger's writing, which is IMO some of the funniest in the Regency genre. It's a book to pick up when you need to read about someone being in a way worse situation than you. Plus, smart wealthy handsome heir to a dukedom with artistic talents - sign me up! It never fails to make me laugh and feel better.
Day 06 – A book that makes you sad - I thought about this one on the way home, and the problem is that lots of books have PARTS that make me sad. I also actively avoid books that are going to make me sad, because there's enough real bad stuff in the world without adding the fictional.
I ended up picking The First Four Years, the last of the original Little House set. It just depresses me. I know the story was based on Laura's reality, but I just hate to think that all the good in These Happy Golden Years is followed by all the financial problems, health problems, inability to have more than one living child... It just makes me sad. So for me, they stop at These Happy Golden Years.
Day 07 – Most underrated book - I don't really pay attention to how people "rate" books, so this question was kind of hard. I read a lot of "genre" stuff (romance, mystery, sf/f) and it's hard not to notice the hate a lot of people have for genre stuff. Just because something isn't critically acclaimed doesn't mean it isn't worth reading. What's important is that you enjoy reading it.
Day 08 – Most overrated book - I'm going to go with the Twilight saga. I read the first one while I was in Iraq, just to see what all the buzz was about. It wasn't the best book I'd ever read, but I didn't feel outraged that trees died to produce it. I got fifty or so pages into the second one and stopped, because I did feel outraged that trees died to produce it. Also, having seen the movie, I do NOT understand why we're supposed to think that Edward is sexy. The guy who plays Jacob is, but I feel mildly pervy thinking about it. Basically, I felt like I didn't care if the whole town of Falls fell into a gaping chasm (lava optional). However, to those that enjoyed it, see Day 7.
Day 09 – A book you thought you wouldn’t like but ended up loving - I don't usually pick up books I don't think I'll enjoy, unless they're for a class. I'd have to go with Dickens here and A Tale of Two Cities. I didn't have high hopes for TOTC after being forced to read Great Expectations and Oliver Twist, but I loved it. It has adventure, romance, tragedy, action, and Mme Defarge. It also has an awesome movie adaptation. Ronald Colman plays Sydyney Carton in one of his best roles, Basil Rathbone is evil and class-conscious, and Mme Defarge is awesome. Not to mention the fight between her and Miss Pross. Maybe Dickens got paid by the word, but surely everyone who has written a paper can sympathize with the need to make word count.
Day 10 – Favorite classic book - For Christmas 1990, after my grandmother's death at Thanksgiving, I recieved a set of 8 books that would really open some doors for me in the world of reading. She had picked out our Christmas gifts, possibly because she knew she would not be in the world on Christmas morning. Then, of course, it was too raw for me to even take the books out of the cardboard box they were displayed in, so they went in my room. I think it was about four months later when I finally felt able to try the books. I picked up the first one, and stayed awake all night to read it (hiding out in my closet so my parents wouldn't see the light), with the other seven following in very short order.
That is how I was introduced to Anne Shirley, a character I had an almost instant connection with. A character who had a temper, who forgot to do stuff because she got too busy daydreaming, a character who wasn't too afraid of seeming silly or daydreamy. My favorite isn't actually Anne of Green Gables, but a toss between Anne of the Island and Anne of Windy Poplars, which I usually just read back to back anyway, because I love them.
Day 11 – A book you hated
Day 12 – A book you used to love but don’t anymore
Day 13 – Your favorite writer
Day 14 – Favorite book of your favorite writer
Day 15 – Favorite male character
Day 16 – Favorite female character
Day 17 – Favorite quote from your favorite book
Day 18 – A book that disappointed you
Day 19 – Favorite book turned into a movie
Day 20 – Favorite romance book
Day 21 – Favorite book from your childhood
Day 22 – Favorite book you own
Day 23 – A book you wanted to read for a long time but still haven’t
Day 24 – A book that you wish more people would’ve read
Day 25 – A character who you can relate to the most
Day 26 – A book that changed your opinion about something
Day 27 – The most surprising plot twist or ending
Day 28 – Favorite title
Day 29 – A book everyone hated but you liked
Day 30 – Your favorite book of all time
no subject
Date: 2010-09-08 03:51 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-09-09 01:00 pm (UTC)The first is good, although I often skip re-reading it and just watch the miniseries.
no subject
Date: 2010-09-08 05:01 pm (UTC)I loved Anne of Green Gables but only read the first one. I saw the television/movie version of the first and a sequel, but still enjoy the fiesty young Anne. (Anne with an 'e').
no subject
Date: 2010-09-09 01:02 pm (UTC)She's the one who taught me to read, so it's a pretty fitting remembrance. The ones she actually gave me live in my cedar chest now, and I have reading copies on the shelf (although I need to replace my Anne of Green Gables because I lent it to someone who had never heard of Anne Shirley.
The first miniseries is awesome. It's right up there with the A&E 1996 Pride and Prejudice on how to adapt a book well.
Lesson 1: Use the proper time format (ie, miniseries vs movie).
no subject
Date: 2010-09-08 11:37 pm (UTC)I love the first of the Kevin Sullivan/Megan Follows miniseries, and the second one is okay (mostly because I adore Wendy Hiller), but after that they went straight downhill.
no subject
Date: 2010-09-09 01:10 pm (UTC)Gilbert Blythe was an early imaginary boyfriend of mine (especially after seeing the miniseries). I always enjoy watching that slate go crack over his head. :)
I like Anne of the Island and Anne of Windy Poplars partly because they take her out of her comfort element a little. And I LOVE the end of Anne of the Island because of how the end is so perfectly touchingly romantic and true to the couple.
The first miniseries is wonderful, a good lesson in adapting a book, and the casting is So Very Good, across the board. So many of the characters are exactly what I pictured in my head.
The second one I was kind of not-so-impressed with, but it's a massive pet peeve of mine when they play Frankenstein with different books in a series (take character from book 2 and put in situation from book 3, etc...) so that was pretty much not going to make me happy. The ending is good, though.
The third one (Anne in WWI) just had me making the sad and surprised face at the TV when I saw the preview. WWI isn't Anne and Gilbert's story, it belongs to their children. I would love to see a good movie version of Rilla of Ingleside.
One that I do like is the 1940 Anne of Windy Poplars starring the actress Anne Shirely. It's a black and white, with some continuity issues, but rather entertaining.
no subject
Date: 2010-09-09 05:16 pm (UTC)And, yes, I agree with you about the third miniseries, wholeheartedly. AAMOF, I didn't even watch most of it because what little I saw made me cringe.
no subject
Date: 2010-09-10 08:37 am (UTC)It doesn't seem to be available on DVD - I saw it probably 15+ years ago on AMC, had it taped from the TV but now the tape is MIA (well, and my VCR is dead). A turn on Amazon looking for it was pretty unsuccessful.
I haven't seen anything of the third miniseries other than the preview. I'll stick with the first 2.
no subject
Date: 2010-09-10 11:14 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-09-11 12:23 pm (UTC)It's been MIA for at least 2 years, much to my sorrow. My dad and his tape labeling skills are not always the best.
no subject
Date: 2010-09-11 07:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-09-13 01:12 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-09-13 02:02 am (UTC)