Showing posts with label summer reading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label summer reading. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 5, 2007

Summer Reading

I just got back from a weekend at the cottage in Harbert, Michigan-- lake and lake house country! I love it there. My great grandparents built the lake house in a heavily wooded area a half-mile from the beach back in 1929, right before the stock market crashed. My great grandfather died shortly thereafter and my grandmother worked her butt off to hold on to a house and apartment building in Chicago and the cottage in Harbert, while also caring for her bedridden mother. Quite a feat. Thankfully, she had some help from my grandfather, a painter from Sweden. They eventually married, of course, and my mom spent every summer hanging out in Michigan. We didn't spend the entire summer there, when I was growing up, because my uncle and mom split the time between them but we spent a week in June, the week of 4th of July and the three weeks before school started there.

You 'd think we'd be boat people, but we aren't. Boats always required too much maintenance and money. I was a teacher's kid. My parents were frugal. So, we were beach people-- and I still am. Nothing beats hanging out at the beach. Beach people float on air mattresses, anchor a diving raft just past the sand bar, play frisbee, walk down to the dunes and climb them, build sand castles, collect seashells, get very tan and read, read, read.

Hanging out at the cottage this weekend got me started on my summer reading list. It's that time of the year, no? Summer Reading lists are busting out all over:) Macy actually posted on summer reading before she left for London. Check that out along with the following--

  1. Fave authors tell us what books they have in their beach bags at USA Today.
  2. The NY times claims, "Summer reading has more to do with charmed lives, blue skies and location, location, location."
  3. NPR's summer reading list
  4. A great summer reading list from a A Gaggle of Book Reviews
  5. Greenopia's favorite "green" reads
  6. Rebecca Blood's round up of summer reading lists
Okay, so all of those are lists of books. Even better, check out Patricia Woodside's blog, Hot Fun in the Summertime, over at Romancing the blog. She discusses what makes a good summer read-- beach/water/seaside setting, fast pace, light, fun, frothy but filling plots. I wholeheartedly agree although, I confess, I read Brothers Karamazov, Beloved, The Sound and the Fury, Gone With the Wind and The Poisonwood Bible at the cottage, in summer, sometimes on the beach. Not exactly light. I guess I like an eclectic mix.

I started my summer reading list this weekend with Lost and Found by Jacqueline Sheehan. I inhaled it. If you love dogs, read it! Other books on my summer reading list include--

Life's a Beach by Claire Cook
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows by JK Rowling
The Time Traveler's Wife by Audrey Niffenegger
Julia's Chocolates by Cathy Lamb
Possession by A.S. Byatt
Broken for You by Stephanie Kallos
Evening by Susan Minot
A Knight in Shining Armor by Jude Devereaux
Sea Swept, Rising Tides, Inner Harbor and Chesapeake Blue by Nora Roberts
Bewitching by Jill Barnett
The Accidental Witch Trilogy by Annette Blair
Lean Mean Thirteen by Janet Evanovich
Not Quite a Lady by Loretta Chase
The Department of Lost and Found by Allison Winn Scott
Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life by Barbara Kingsolver
The Wild Trees: A Story of Passion & Daring by Richard Preston

That looks pretty good for starters. A couple are rereads. A lot are fun and light. A couple are research for the two novels I'm working on. A couple are supposed to be brilliant. A couple are non fiction. One has beach in the title. It's a good mix. And I'm sure it will change a bit as the summer progresses. In the mean time, what's on your reading list and why? AND what do you think makes a good beach or summer read? I love recs and suggestions (hint, hint.)

Cheers and happy reading,
Alyson

Sunday, May 27, 2007

A Summer Reading Sunday Six

School is out for summer – at least here in Florida.

Summer reading lists are posted. I’m lucky. Both of my step-kids like to read. Mikaela more than Jake (the younger), but both enjoy a good book.

My “now a 6th grader” has to read 3 books this summer and write a 3 to 5 paragraph summary (synopsis) of each. One must be from a “classics” list. He chose 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea – one of my personal favorites, but a difficult book, nonetheless. He also had to pick one book from a list of pre-approved authors. He chose Lemony Snicket. The last book was completely his choice. He says he’s going to read the second Artemis Fowl book. Good choices. By the end of the summer, he’s counted that he’ll have read more than 1000 pages. (Can anyone say future accountant? He’s a numbers sort of kid.)

My “now a sophomore” (yikes) has to read 2 books. Her high school has changed how they approach summer reading. No classics in the summer. The classics will all be taught during the school year. The purpose of this year’s summer reading is to excite kids to read. Therefore, all students and teachers at her school in grades 10-12 will be reading The Hot Zone. This is one of my all-time favorite books. I’m so excited they chose it. She has already read one of Richard Preston’s other books – The Demon in the Freezer – as her non-fiction choice for English as a freshman. She loved it, so I have hope that she’ll like this one, too. The other required book is Ender’s Game. This has been a book required of sophomores at her school for awhile now. I’m not sure she’ll like it as well. It’s science fiction and she doesn’t have a science fiction mind. She’s more of a “relationship” book reader. However, I have every reason to believe that Ender’s Game will one day be considered a classic. It’s that good.

It is strongly recommended that the high school students choose one other book from the following list to read over the summer. I perused the list this morning and found a delightful selection of books – something for everyone from non-fiction to fiction to spiritual to fantasy to mystery. Some of my favorites are on there – Libba Bray, C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien, and Orson Scott Card.

Of course, there were no romances on the list. I won’t go there.

However, I decided to make my Sunday Six this Sunday a list of 6 books that I think they left off. These books should have been on the list, as well, making the list 256+ great reads instead of 250+.

Oh, yeah, here's the list and a link: Teenreads.com

#1 – I’m glad the school where my kids go selected a Richard Preston book. Neither the Hot Zone nor The Demon in the Freezer made the Teenreads.com list. They should have. He has a new book out called The Wild Trees. It’s at the top of my summer reading list. I love his books. Back to the Hot Zone. Here’s a bit about it from http://www.richardpreston.net/books/hz.html .


The Ebola virus kills nine out of ten of its victims so quickly and gruesomely that even biohazard experts are terrified. It is airborne, it is extremely contagious, and in the winter of 1989, it seemed about to burn through the suburbs of Washington D.C.
At Fort Detrick's USAMRIID, an Army research facility outside the nation's capital, a SWAT team of soldiers and scientists wearing biohazard space suits was organized to stop the outbreak of the exotic "hot" virus. The grim operation went on in secret for eighteen days, under unprecedented, dangerous conditions.
The Hot Zone tells this dramatic story in depth, giving a hair-raising account of the appearance of rare and lethal viruses and their outbreaks in the human race.

#2 – I think Watership Down by Richard Adams should have made the list. I remember being mesmerized by the book. This sums up nicely what the books is all about:

Watership Down is not a sweet fable about bunnies; it's a gritty, often frightening tale, in which characters die or become injured and these facts of life are not disguised. Hunt quoted an interview with Adams, in which Adams said of his writing style, "I derived early the idea that one must at all costs tell the truth to children, not so much about mere physical pain and fear, but about the really unanswerable things—what [writer] Thomas Hardy called 'the essential grimness of the human situation." Paradoxically, Adams chose a tale about rabbits to do just that.

#3 – Let’s also add Elizabeth Gilbert’s soul-touching memoir to the list. Eat, Pray, Love may be a novel that only adult women can really “get”, but I don’t think so. I think it has something in it that can speak to everyone.

#4 – Last summer, the book on the top of my summer reading list was Elizabeth Kostova’s The Historian. I loved the book because I truly felt transported to another time and place. Salon.com sums up the book better than I could. It is about “a band of intrepid historians hunt for the real-life Dracula -- and visit plenty of far-flung European locales -- in this hypnotic multigenerational mystery.”
Here’s a bit more:

Elizabeth Kostova's "The Historian" is a hypnotic yarn, saturated in authentic history and eerie intrigue. Kostova has a genius for evoking places without making you wade through paragraphs of description. The "fluttering hush" of the Carpathian forests, the chaotic streets of Istanbul, a cryptic ritual dance in a Bulgarian village unchanged in hundreds of years -- all impress themselves on the reader almost as vividly as actual memories. "The Historian" also imparts a sense of how real historians work (sifting through archives of ancient ledgers to find that crucial and revealing letter, etc.) and of a sizable chunk of Central Europe's ravaged past as a borderland between Christendom and the encroaching Ottoman Empire.

#5 – Um, how did Gone with the Wind not make the list?

#5 ½ -- Can we all question how none of J.K. Rowling’s books made the teenreads list? Perhaps one just assumes that they will be read. This must be the list for what to read when you’ve exhausted J.K.’s list.

#6 – Finally, I’m surprised Go Ask Alice didn’t make the list. Yes, the book is controversial, but this anonymously written book is a powerful testament to the dangers of drugs and addiction.

Check out Teenreads.com. It’s a great list for teens and adults alike.

Of course, my summer reading list contains a lot of romance, too. I’ve got some Alyssa Day, Cherry Adair, and Susan Elizabeth Phillips waiting to be read.

Happy summer reading.
Macy