Random Reading Challenge

RandomReading

Ugghhhh….  I caved.

I have been looking at this challenge and thinking I don’t need another challenge but it looks like such a fun challenge and how hard would it be to complete over the next year I mean after all it is only 12 random books and they are probably books I would be getting to anyway so is it isn’t really all that difficult, right?  Right?

Right.

So here is how this plays out:


August 1, 2009 – July 31, 2010


Are you stuck in a rut? Do you always find yourself reading from set lists or feeling committed to reading one book while another book screams at you from your TBR mountain? Has your reading become completely scheduled? If so, the Random Reading Challenge may be just the thing to put the spontaneity back into your reading.

For this challenge, readers will be choosing books randomly from their TBR stacks. You may select one of three levels of participation:

Level I

You are just a tad compulsive about your reading – you love your lists and schedules. Being spontaneous is not something that comes naturally to you. To complete the challenge, force yourself out of your rut and read just six books

Level II:

You really want to break away from all those lists, but you do still have a responsibility to your reading groups, other challenges and all those review books. Six books is too little, but twelve is too much. Stretch a little and read nine books for the challenge.

Level III:

Throw away the lists, don’t look at your schedule, bring on the joy that comes with the freedom to chose books randomly. Read twelve books for the challenge.

Rules (come on, you didn’t think I would be THAT random did you?!?!?):NO lists allowed.
Books for the challenge are chosen one at a time when the mood strikes.

  • Sign up at any time during the challenge period using Mr. Linky below. Please give me a direct link to your blog post about the challenge. If you do not have a blog, no worries. Simply enter your name and leave the URL box on Mr. Linky blank.
  • Book reviews are not required, but if you want to write a review I will be providing a review Mr. Linky after August 1st.
  • Books are selected one at a time using the following procedure:
    • Randomly select any number of books from either your physical OR your virtual TBR pile (I don’t care how you do this, but it must be random…no “cherry picking” allowed)
    • Assign a number to each book based on how many books you selected (ie: if you selected 14 books, assign each book a number from 1 through 14; if you selected 28 books, assign each book a number from 1 through 28…you get the idea)
    • Go to http://www.random.org and use the TRUE RANDOM NUMBER GENERATOR located in the upper right hand corner of the page to randomly select the book you will read. NO CHEATING – whatever the random number generator generates is the book you must read!
    • Each time you select a book for the challenge, you will use this procedure. You many select different books each time, choose a different amount of books each time, etc…have fun, mix it up, keep it random.

    I am going in to this at the Level III Challenge.  While reviewing the books is not mandatory in this challenge, I choose to do so and will use the Random Reading Challenge Meme to mark them and number them.

    9.
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    Guest Blogger/Author Interview with Rachel Stolzman (+ Signed giveaway copies!)

    In recent weeks I have had the pleasure of chatting back and forth with author Rachel Stolzman.  Rachel is the author of the book, The Sign for Drowning.


    Rachel Stolzman

    When Anna is eight years old she witnesses the tragic drowning of her younger sister at the beach.  While her parents frantically search the waves for their child, Anna watches alone from the shore.  Desperate for hope, Anna begins silently communicating with her sister, begging her to resurface.

    Anna’s  family emotionally breaks down in the years following the drowning.  In her grief and loneliness, Anna develops the belief she can communicate to her dead sister through sign language.

    As an adult, Anna makes her living working with hearing impaired children, and she develops a close bond with a deaf foster child she works with, Adrea.  As Anna makes the momentous decision to adopt Adrea, she is driven to face her conflicted desire to hear her daughter speak and she is forced to delve into the connections between Adrea and her own, lost sister.

    BIO:

    rachel-thumbI was born in New York and at the age of seven moved to Los Angeles with my family.  My sister and I told everyone we were moving to a swimming pool.  I began writing poetry in my journal when I was about ten years-old.  My first poems were about children, a phony fortune teller, the question of an afterlife, and an anti-war poem called Warheads.  I attended the University of California in Santa Cruz.  It was during my college years that I began working in the HIV/AIDS field, work which I continue to do to this day.  At UCSC, I took numerous poetry workshops, participated in readings, and I had my first poems published.  Looking back, these poems were about solitude, escapism, and drunken love.  A year after college, living in San Francisco I decided to apply for MFA programs in creative writing.  I was surprised to see that the applications required you to choose between poetry and fiction, and I marked ‘poetry’ on each.  But while completing my applications, I thought- I don’t know how to write fiction, if I’m going to go back to school it might as well be to learn something I don’t know.  I sent for new applications and applied to three programs in New York.  I went to Sarah Lawrence College, and received my MFA in creative writing- Fiction.  An early draft of The Sign for Drowning was my thesis.  In 2008 my first novel, The Sign for Drowning was published by Trumpeter.  I am still writing about children, impermanence, loss and the workings of the heart.  I currently live in Brooklyn and am working on my second novel.


    I want to thank Rachel for taking time to join us here at One Persons Journey Through a World of Books I have really enjoyed talking with you these past couple of weeks and I am excited to hear more about you and your books.

    S:  As I read your biography on line about how you were really writing from about the age of ten, it reminded me of the books of short stories and poetry that I had written at about that age.  Did you feel at such a young age that writing would be a part of your future?

    Rachel: As a kid I had a closet in my bedroom with sliding doors.  One side held clothes, and the other held a bookcase with all my books.  I was infinitely more interested in the book side of my closet.  I read my favorite books over and over.  I do remember thinking that these writers were leaving something in the world that would be here forever, long after the writer was gone.  It only now occurs to me that I was thinking about immortality.  Luckily, I didn’t know then about going out of print!

    S:  Your book, The Sign For Drowning sounds wonderfully deep and dramatic.  I just read the synopsis again and I am so excited to actually get a chance to read and review this book.  How did the idea for this book begin to develop?

    Rachel:  I had written a short story based on an actual event that happened to my family.  When my older sister was two she was washed out of a small boat in the waves, while playing with my father.  She was only underwater for a minute, but they couldn’t see her and it was very scary.  My mother was filming them playing as well.  A friend in the water felt my sister, Dana, brush against her leg and she pulled Dana out.  In the story I wrote, there is an older sister watching and narrating the story, and the child is not recovered, but drowns.  As an MFA student I returned to this story and became curious again about the family, especially, Anna, the sister who tells the story.  I wondered what happened to them afterwards, and if and how this loss would affect Anna as an adult. rachel reading

    S:  This book centers around sign language.  Is this something you knew about before you wrote the book or something you learned to write the book?

    Rachel:  While I was writing the book, I was taking American Sign Language classes for the fun of it.  I had always been interested in sign language and I stuck with it until I was pretty fluent.  I really enjoyed learning from my deaf teachers, not just the language but about deaf culture and history.  I decided to make Anna, in her grief and loneliness, develop a fantasy that she could communicate to her lost sister through sign language.  This childhood fantasy grew into an alternative family and home for her and a career working with deaf children.  And it would ultimately lead Anna to her adopted deaf daughter, Adrea.

    S:  What sort of background prep work did you find yourself doing to write this book?

    Rachel:  I read a lot of books about Deaf culture, and about the history of ASL and deaf education.  After becoming proficient in ASL, I got a job in New York City working with deaf people at Fountain House.  I was around interpreters everyday, a co-worker who was the child of two deaf parents, a deaf co-worker and many deaf members.  I was told amazing stories about being deaf in hearing families and vice-versa, living in deaf boarding schools, surviving during World War II- deaf and alone, and the many ways people learn to communicate and cope.  Those stories helped shape the lives of my characters.

    S:  I just love that you are blogging your journey from your first book signing to the arrival of the paperback version.  How did you decide to do a blog?

    Rachel:  I think I started blogging very hesitantly.  My agent and publisher had recommended I launch an author website, but I had declined to do so just feeling it wasn’t necessary.  Then I took a course on book promotion and it was heavily encouraged there too, especially blogging.  And the final push came when I did an author interview on the radio with Reading with Robin and she actually reprimanded me on the air for not having a website for my readers to go to!

    S:  You are currently working on your second book.  Would you share a little hint about what that is going to be about and when we may expect to see it in print?

    Rachel:  My current book is about a pair of twins born in NYC in the early 70’s.  One twin, David, is born a reincarnated enlightened Buddhist.  The Dalai Lama is a character in the novel, and he becomes David’s teacher.  Jamila, the twin sister, struggles to find her soul, her purpose and her own journey as a bodhisattva’s twin sister.

    I will definitely let you know when you can find it in stores, and thank you so much for having me as a guest at One Person’s Journey Through a World of Books!

    Peace, Rachel

    Rachel’s Official Website

    Rachel’s Blog

    ♥Rachel has generously offered two signed copies of her book, The Sign For Drowning to the readers here at One Persons Journey Through a World of Books.

    To enter your name to win:

    1.  Leave a comment here about Rachel’s interview

    2.  Receive 2 extra chances to win if you blog/twitter about this giveaway

    3.  Earn a BONUS chance by commenting on any other of my posts

    US only and no PO box numbers.  Please be sure to leave me an email so I am able to contact you if you win.

    The Giveaway will end August 16.  Have fun and good luck!






    Friendship Award

    Lets be friends awardReagan at Miss Remmer’s Review gave me the Lets Be friends award tonight!  How sweet is that?  This award if for bloggers who has really extended a hand of friendship by befriending others bloggers, being helpful, and a commenter.

    I shall display it proudly!  Thank you Reagan, if you have not been over to see Miss Remmer’s Review (and even if you have) go back again and again.  her reviews are full of great information and I love that she is striving to find book reviews for Young Adults to encourage reading.  If you have reviewed a great YA book, be sure to connect with her for her Guest Reviews.

    I am pretty tired tonight, but in the next few days I will pass this award on to a few of the bloggers that come to mind that have really been friendly and helpful to me along this crazy journey through books and blogging.  🙂

    Morning Meandering Confession

    a big improvement

    Ok…. does this happen to anyone else?

    I like to get up early  in the morning and have my coffee while I visit some of my favorite book blogs.  Oh, you know who you are….I am on your door step with coffee cup in hand and hair still wild as actually attempting to fix it prior to two cups of coffee is not a good idea…

    So I go to a book blog and I am reading about some delightful book review or book related happening when my eye wanders over to their side bar.  Whats this?  Another book blog?  So after I pay my comment respects to said blog owner, I click on the sidebar blog and find a whole new blog filled with book related things that make my typing fingers tingle with excitement to post a comment on what I have found.  AND THEN, I see something on their sidebar…  that’s right – another book blog that sounds interesting….  and I click on that…. (are you seeing the pattern?)

    By the time I come out of the blogesphere (although there are times I wonder if I ever fully come out of it….) many things have happened:

    1.  I have no doubt added a book to my “TBR” list

    2.  I have no doubt found my way into a blog I have not read before and liked it

    3.  I have no doubt become lost, and by the time I snap out of it (usually because duty calls and I must go to work!) I can not rememberbe the book how I got to where I wound up.

    Lately I have found that in work conversations I think in book titles or book quotes.  Yesterday afternoon I handled a particularity difficult phone conversation well and hung up and and said “Crisis Management” (then wrote it down because I liked the “title”)  Later I cleaned up around the coffee room where it can quickly become a disaster zone and satisfied with my  job well done said, “Mischief Managed.”

    Ok… enough morning rambling…. and I have to go to work.  🙂  Anyone else out there care to share?

    Pope Joan by Donna Woolfolk Cross

    Every once in a while, we as readers are lucky enough to find that hidden treasure – the book we cantBest read 2009 wait to read in its entirety… yet we are saddened when it is done, as though we just said good-bye to a good friend. I have just experienced such a read. ~Sheila


    p joanFor a thousand years men have denied her existence — Pope Joan, the woman who disguised herself as a man and rose to rule Christianity for two years. Now this compelling novel animates the legend with a portrait of an unforgettable woman who struggles against restrictions her soul cannot accept.

    When her older brother dies in a Viking attack, the brilliant young Joan assumes his identity and enters a Benedictine monastery where, as Brother John Anglicus, she distinguishes herself as a scholar and healer. Eventually drawn to Rome, she soon becomes enmeshed in a dangerous mix of powerful passion and explosive politics that threatens her life even as it elevates her to the highest throne in the Western world.

    My thoughts:  Endings are inevitable.  In life…as they are in books.  With each page of a great read you are excited to move on to the longed for conclusion…. yet at the end, you may sit there as I am now, almost feeling a loss.  This book was such a find for me and I absolutely loved the historical value in this read.  Joan was strong and determined from the moment she was born – until the moment she died.  I found myself trying to find moments in my day when I could pick up this book and read even if it was only for a minute or two.  Donna Woolfolk Cross writes with a brilliant stroke where at times I even laughed out loud at the witness of her words.  donna2006

    Donna Woolfolk Cross graduated cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa, from the University of Pennsylvania in 1969 with a B.A. in English.  She moved to London, England, after graduation, and worked as an editorial assistant for a small publishing house on Fleet Street, W.H. Allen and Company.  Upon her return to the United States, Cross worked at Young and Rubicam, a Madison Avenue advertising firm, before going on to graduate school at UCLA where she earned a master’s degree in Literature and Writing in 1972.

    She is the coauthor of Speaking of Words and Daddy’s Little Girl.  The product of seven years of research and writing, Pope Joan is her first novel.  She is now at work on a new novel set in 17th century France.

    More on Donna Woolfolk Cross here in my author interview

    Was there a Pope Joan?

    I for one hope that Joan really did live on this earth.  A woman ahead of her time – I applaud her strength and conviction.  Joan, fictitious or not, lived a life that few could live up to even today.

    Thank you Donna for a read that I can honestly chalk up there with one of the best books I have read this year.  I will treasure this book and our conversations, forever.


    “Partout ou vous voyez une legende, vous pouvez etre sur, en allant au fond des choses, que vous trouverez une histoire.”

    “Whenever you see a legend, you can be sure, if you go to the very bottom of things, that you will find history.”

    ~Vallet de Viriville

    Go here to my earlier post where you have a chance to win a sign and inscribed copy of Pope Joan from Donna Woolfolk Cross.

    Information to the movie Pope Joan due out this Fall of 2009!

    More about the novel

    Enchanted by Josephine’s post and author interview for Pope Joan

    redcarpetMy Amazon Review

    *This book was purchased locally at our very own BookWorld in Brainerd Minnesota

    I rate Pope Joan PG13 for some mild nudity and violence


    Morning Meanderings

    a big improvementAnother cloudy morning in central Minnesota and I am a bit bummed as I was hoping to go biking a bit after work this afternoon… well, I can always read.

    monique

    Yesterday, Coffee Cup and  I found a book on Julie’s Jewels, My Favorite Things that I keep thinking about and have already added it to my wish list tab.  Monique and the Mango Rains by Kris Holloway not only has a title that rolls musically off the tongue, but the book sounds like a wonderful read set in West Africa as Kris Holloway (the author) is part of the Peace Corp.  This is her story and I dont want to say too much here because I really would like you to link on over to Julie’s Jewels and read this review for yourself.

    A Will To Love by Kim Smith – Book Tour

    Is it possible in such a short amount of time… say the time it takes to read a book, that you can fall in love with the scenery… the musical flow of the words?    Yes.  It is possible.  ~ Sheila

    My first ever Book Tour!!!

    School_bus_2
    Blog Tour

    awilltoloveA Will To Love is the story of Benton Jessup, a widower who is still mourning the loss of his wife Carla, to cancer the previous year.  Together Carla and Benton had ran a Bed and Breakfast, and now Benton is left only with his memories and the work of trying to make the Bed and Breakfast a success.

    When Kitty Beebe comes to stay, with plans to write a book based around the beautiful area around the Bed and Breakfast, Benton thinks this may be just the ticket to draw people to the Inn.   A  fast friendship develops between Benton and Kitty and causes Benton to rethink who he is.

    This book is a quick read that tugs at your heart.  It is about hope and dreams, past hauntings, and new beginnings. I enjoyed the characters and the great setting of this book. kim-smith

    Author Kim Smith a lifelong Memphian who has been married for nearly 16 years and have two wonderful adult children.  You can visit Kim’s website at:  http://www.mkimsmith.com/


    Red Rose Publishing offers a Southern Drink after a Southern Book:


    Aunt Tillie’s Sweet Tea

    ice tea


    Ingredients

    3 Family size tea bags

    2 Cups of cold water

    1 Cup of sugar

    Directions

    We in the south make the best iced tea you’ll find.

    Maybe it’s how it’s done, or maybe it is the water

    in the south, or maybe it’s just that

    a southern belle has put a lot of TLC

    into making the tea. Who knows!

    We recommend Luzianne Tea Bags if available.

    Place the two cups water in a pot and add the tea bags.

    Bring to a boil, do not continue boiling.

    Remove from heat and let steep.

    Pour warm tea into empty pitcher.

    Add the sugar and stir until the sugar is dissolved.

    Fill remaining pitcher with cold water.

    Optional – some women say they use less water and add ice to the tea.

    *This book came to me as a E book to me from Dorothy Thompson of Pump up Your Book Promotion

    I rate this book PG13 for some mild nudity

    Monday Mind Game: What do you look for in a book blog?

    Question_HowMost of us have a few favorite blog stops we like to keyboard our way over to frequently to see whats new.    Today’s question is… what do you look for in a good blog, one that you go back to again and again to see what they are reading, what they recommend, etc…

    For me… I look for a blog that:

    • Is active.  Frequent posts and activity on the blog.
    • The posts are mostly book related.  I am a book blogger, I am interested in book related blogs.
    • The book genre is something I like reading about.  These blogs write about books that I either have read or would like to read

    How about you?

    Morning Meanderings

    Coming off a great weekend and new memories with my friends.  I did some blog hopping last night as a big improvementa little catch up session from my time away.  While doing this I stopped over at Between The Bookendz and found a review on The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie.

    Its interesting that this book, with a  rather plain cover and a description that may or may not have caused me to read, captured my attention because of the review.  The way Eve at Between the Bookendz describes the book by first saying that the character Flavia De Luce is “one of the the best character names she has ever run across” and then going on to saying she adored the book…. that is what peaked my interest.

    As book reviewers I thing we get a feel for what we like in a book, what makes us want to turn the pages.  When we read I review, at least for me, how the reviewer expresses their thoughts on the book can speak to me.  Eve’s delight in this book made me take a second look at it and now I think it would be a fun mystery – which, as Coffee Cup and I look out my window at a drizzly cloudy Minnesota morning, makes me think this is a book that would be a perfect read for today.

    Stop by Between the Bookendz and say hi to Eve.  She has many more great reviews and as I explored her site I found other books that i felt I would enjoy as well.