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message 1: by Lori S. (new)

Lori S. (fuzzipueo) | 2809 comments First, I'd like to thank our wonderful Moderator flavor type person Lucas for setting up this area of the forum.

As a reader, I always wonder what other people are reading. I find myself staring at total strangers who are reading, though I'm not really staring at the people but rather at their books no matter what flavor of hard copy, paperback (aka mass market), hardbacks or trades. It's harder with electronic readers, of course, and it would be really rude to try and sneak peeks over people's shoulders to see what they're reading ... though, uhm, I do find I, er, sometimes try ...

I wonder if other people do this or am I just weird that way?

I also wonder how other people got started on reading books? Did you have a parent who read to you or a teacher who enlivened your interest? For me, it was the fourth grade, a cool teacher who instead of doing English lessons would read to us in class and, according to my mom, a certain amount of maturity, which led me to finally picking up and reading the entirety of the Trixie Beldon Mysteries series. (I was a horrible student and preferred the easy entertainment TV offered, though what I watched at the time has had an affect on what I tend to read still.) After that I couldn't stop reading. Science fiction and fantasy were my mainstays throughout the rest of my childhood and through to my adulthood and I still enjoy those genres. Any road, just curious!


message 2: by Tj (new)

Tj (bluesmokey) | 632 comments I really don't remember what really got me into reading. It may have been having a father that was a teacher. He had a Masters in education and Bachelor's in Mathematics, minored in English. My parents were big into education and the reading was part of it. I haave enjoyed reading my whole life. Obviously my parents did well with instilling a love of learning and reading in all us kids.

My daughter would tell you her father is responsible for her love of reading. He was huge on story time, even when the kids were older. I think it finally stopped when my oldest hit junior high and wasn't always home.


message 3: by Lori S. (last edited May 01, 2013 07:51AM) (new)

Lori S. (fuzzipueo) | 2809 comments Tj wrote: "I really don't remember what really got me into reading. It may have been having a father that was a teacher. He had a Masters in education and Bachelor's in Mathematics, minored in English. My ..."

I read to my niece until she just quit coming to me. She can read on her own now, but doesn't really have the patience for others to read to her (except in class). I think we both suffer from the same problem - it's one thing when you read for yourself but when others are reading, we both get distracted and bored and start looking for things to do while listening. I love audio books because I can do other things like house work or watering while listening. Otherwise I'd be trying to read while listening ... that doesn't work to well! =o)


message 4: by Lori S. (last edited May 01, 2013 08:06AM) (new)

Lori S. (fuzzipueo) | 2809 comments This morning there was a guy dressed in bright yellow Hawaiian shirt giving out advice to kids graduating from college. While most of his advice was pretty common sense stuff like 'get a job, any job,' 'move out' of your parents' house, etc. the one that got me going was when he started talking about reading.

His point, that most people quit reading once they get away from school reading lists, is valid, but his suggestion was to read as much nonfiction as possible (including papers, magazine articles, business journals, etc.) so one can keep up with what's going on in the real and business world. Good advice if that's your gig, I guess.

My thinking is is that most people, if they didn't have the reading bug from before school tried to ruin it (with their insistence on reading books that can be, in their own way, mind-numbingly boring and depressing) in the first place, aren't even going to pick up a fiction book much less a nonfiction book - especially business books, which strike me as being deadly dull and perfect cures for insomnia. One of my friends tried to get her son to read on his own the whole time he was little, but as soon as he was away from the school environment, reading was the last thing he wanted to do. It was too much like work and not a pleasure as it is for her. I wonder if that's why my niece won't read the library books she got a few weeks ago?

Just pondering.


message 5: by Hilary (new)

Hilary Evans (hilevans83) | 121 comments I'm rereading the great gatsby for the Navy wife book club I joined. I dislike it as much as I did when it was forced on me in high school.


message 6: by [deleted user] (new)

Hilary wrote: "I'm rereading the great gatsby for the Navy wife book club I joined. I dislike it as much as I did when it was forced on me in high school."

Hey I'm not not the most brilliant star in the sky but I know enought that when I put down my textbooks I was want to read for fun and escapism that why I like adventure-romances like Complaint Department member Roger Kean's novel A Life Apart set in the the British Mahdist wars of 1884 where I learn a little history of calvary and naval warfare and a lot about the loves of two soldiers.

No The Great Gatsby for me, I rather have Great fun! Now where did I put Zack's Hot For Boys: The Sexy Adventures Of Rogue Comic Book, er... I mean Graphic Novel. :-)


message 7: by Lori S. (new)

Lori S. (fuzzipueo) | 2809 comments While I love the look of the poster and the commercial previews, The Great Gatsby was one of those books I hated in high school too. The one that still sticks out in my memory is The Pearl by John Steinbeck. Depressing.

For fun I was reading stuff like Dune and discovering Anne McCaffrey and Katherine Kurtz, so, I agree with you Lucas, fun and pleasure reading first and above all!


message 8: by Hilary (new)

Hilary Evans (hilevans83) | 121 comments Oh the Pearl was such a buzzkill. And I'm only rereading because the book club is gonna read it, discuss, and then go see the movie which looks awesome...so I guess I'll muddle through it or at least find a detailed plot summary.


message 9: by Lori S. (last edited May 02, 2013 10:01PM) (new)

Lori S. (fuzzipueo) | 2809 comments Mundane bunch I take it? :o| Sorry you're suffering through that! And I highly recommend SparkNotes - not only detailed plot summaries but character lists. I've found it very helpful for listening to Jane Austin novels and when I listened to Brave New World earlier this year.


message 10: by [deleted user] (new)

Hilary wrote: "Oh the Pearl was such a buzzkill. And I'm only rereading because the book club is gonna read it, discuss, and then go see the movie which looks awesome...so I guess I'll muddle through it or at lea..."

Why do military wives read such boring books? Do they have to pretend it's educational or high brow or is it that they don't like to have fun? Do they think anything that's escapist is somehow morally wrong? What is wrong with mystery, romance, adventure, fantasy, scifi? Have they ever read a book written in the 21st century? What's wrong with sexy books?


message 11: by Hilary (new)

Hilary Evans (hilevans83) | 121 comments Actually the last couple books they read sounded very good and I was really excited. The first month I couldn't finish the book because the crazy pollen here have me a headache so bad I could read without crying. So this month, I read and loved the book, went to the mtg last night raring to go...and the two girls who had read the book didn't show up. The other five ladies just wanted to sit around and talk about hot actors...I don't think I'll last too long in this book club...lol


message 12: by Lori S. (new)

Lori S. (fuzzipueo) | 2809 comments Well, you know, no one likes to be caught with such low-brow entertainment ...


message 13: by Lori S. (new)

Lori S. (fuzzipueo) | 2809 comments Hilary wrote: "Actually the last couple books they read sounded very good and I was really excited. The first month I couldn't finish the book because the crazy pollen here have me a headache so bad I could read ..."

Allergies! Bleh! No fun. May I ask what the book is?


message 14: by Hilary (new)

Hilary Evans (hilevans83) | 121 comments Lol...actually the first two books were the Night Circus which was supposedly kinda romantic and mysterious and the second was Reconstructing Amelia, which dealt with teenage bullying, a teenage girl realizing she's a lesbian, and then she winds up dead supposedly by suicide. It was a mystery and a pretty good one. I really think the Gatsby thing is so they have an excuse to fawn over Leo the whole mtg. I have a feeling a lot of their books will be a little sexy. Our husbands are on submarines and not home a lot.


message 15: by Lori S. (new)

Lori S. (fuzzipueo) | 2809 comments (view spoiler)


message 16: by Hilary (new)

Hilary Evans (hilevans83) | 121 comments I just read the original post on this topic, and I always wonder what people are reading. If I meet new friends, I ask what kind of books they like right off the bat. I am that stranger on the bus, train, subway, whatever that will ask a strange what they're reading, what it's about if I haven't heard of it, and if its good...lol. I also ask for a few of their fave books, so I can gauge their level of "good".

I don't know how I started reading because I was too young. Neither of my parents read any where near as much as I do, but they did read more than the average person does today probably. They both wrote professionally before I was born and quit after, though dad has started again and published a couple books in the last few years. Even though they both worked full time and late hours, they read to me when they could. I guess I just always knew books were important. They say shortly after I turned 3, I walked up behind my dad who was reading the paper, and I started reading out loud to him only having trouble with a few off the big words.

As for what I like to read, it's a crazy random mix. In school besides required stuff, I liked thriller novels...Stephen King, Dean Koontz, Robin Cook, and my favorite was John Saul. I liked to keep it light because between work and school, I had very little free time. Now that I have all the time in the world, I mostly read non-fiction, though a couple months ago I got on a fiction kick (I read Twilight even though I swore to myself I never would and liked it so I've been giving some similar books a chance...lol). My non-fiction stuff is so varied, but the topics I have the most books in are religion, philosophy, psychology, politics, history, cleaning, organizing, home decorating, cooking, Naval history and traditions, books about how to be the kind of Navy spouse that doesn't embarrass their husband or get him in trouble, legal stifle, genealogy, personal finance, and some random self-help books. But basically any time I get curious about something, I order a book...so there's all sorts of random stuff in our house...lol.


message 17: by Lori S. (new)

Lori S. (fuzzipueo) | 2809 comments Just writing out a thread of story. Feel free to peek and comment. Playing with an idea, practicing, I guess.

(view spoiler)

Really rough.


message 18: by [deleted user] (new)

Lori wrote: "Just writing out a thread of story. Feel free to peek and comment. Playing with an idea, practicing, I guess.

Neal leaned against the railing of the second story walkway of Ortega Hall staring at ..."

I like the way you write. I don't know if I'd be interested in the character. I'm not much for guys who can't be open to everyone. I can't waste my time on guys like that. If this guy can't make up his mind what he is then I don't much care what he is. If the guy is gay but not out, good luck with that but I'm not interested in his inability to make a decision.

I have some women who are important to me but by no means would we have a ♥ BFF faghag ♡ relationship. So I would not be interested in a gay guy who hung out with the stereotypical gal pal.

So without knowing this stuff I have no idea if I like the story but I do enjoy your style and would like to read more.

(Gads! Your thermal description of NM made me sweaty and I think I'm getting a bit of a sunburn. This story is so realistic it needs air conditioning! )

Well written!


message 19: by Lori S. (last edited May 16, 2013 08:29PM) (new)

Lori S. (fuzzipueo) | 2809 comments I don't blame you, I have no interest in such people myself.

Keep in mind this is only part one. I haven't had much time this week to write much of anything thanks to a combination of being sick and busy at work, so I did not get a chance to finish the idea.

Neal is not gay, straight or bi. I'm working on a different sort of coming out story with an orientation that is only just beginning to gain recognition (an orientation I have discovered I share and, boy howdy, it explains a whole slew of things, including oddly reluctant characters) - it's not a case of not being able to make up his mind, it's a case of not being interested in the things that most people think of as being basic to human nature ... and some find incomprehensible as a result.

Sandra's genuinely interested in having a relationship with Neal, but she about to get a rude awakening. Believe me, and I mean no offense, but I wouldn't want a faghag relationship with my best friend either. I respect him and his cool partner too much - just wish they weren't in Austin ... Sigh. :o\

Thank you for your kind words on my writing. I have something up a Fiction Press, but no comments really.

Yeah, NM gets hot in the summer, and with all the concrete at UNM, it's amazingly bright with the sun out. The great thing is that we don't have a lot of humidity (8% is high), so it can be deceptively nice out at times. :o)


message 20: by Lori S. (new)

Lori S. (fuzzipueo) | 2809 comments Part two. Still rough, but hopefully clearer as to where I trying to get.

The spoiler is merely for length.
(view spoiler)


message 21: by Lori S. (new)

Lori S. (fuzzipueo) | 2809 comments Something I found from September last year before I began to realize just why what I wrote in the post bothered me:

"Is it possible to find a romance novel in which the guy is *not* "hawt", "gorgeous", "beautiful", "mouth watering", etc. and so forth? ..How about a guy who's a little on the pudgy side or is just an everyday fella who's just a nice guy? Or, cooler yet, how about more stories about women who *aren't* desperate to get married/laid and just want to live life as it comes? Or am I just delusional?"



message 22: by [deleted user] (new)

Lori wrote: "Something I found from September last year before I began to realize just why what I wrote in the post bothered me:

"Is it possible to find a romance novel in which the guy is *not* "hawt", "gorge..."


There are few books about men who are in their 50s and 60s and one book I saw even had a protagonist in a M/M Romance who was 71 and still getting it on with his partner.

I know some people will jump all over me for saying this but most men in their 60s are not considered "hawt" by most M/M Romance readers.


message 23: by Lori S. (last edited May 29, 2013 03:59PM) (new)

Lori S. (fuzzipueo) | 2809 comments Lucas wrote: "There are few books about men who are in their 50s and 60s and one book I saw even had a protagonist in a M/M Romance who was 71 and still getting it on with his partner.

I know some people will jump all over me for saying this but most men in their 60s are not considered "hawt" by most M/M Romance readers."


Very true - m/m is steered more toward the younger set, isn't it? So, is, if you'll forgive, most of gay culture in general, or at least what I've seen of it (mostly through books and TV).

My main complaint included m/f romance too (which I was reading at the time) and getting extremely frustrated because such people as described in those terms are rare in (my) real life [I've never met any of those people anyway - Navy Seals/Army Rangers, etc.] and I find the terminology extremely annoying.

Keep in mind too, that, at the time, I was still vising the Amazon Forums more regularly (and some of those people are not nice) and getting over loaded by the ridiculousness that romance novels tend to invoke without any real discussion of any substance.

As I told someone recently, if I were interested in that sort of thing, I'd be more attracted to the guy who's lifting a book, wearing reading glasses and is capable of having an intelligent conversation.


message 24: by [deleted user] (new)

Lori wrote: "Keep in mind too, that, at the time, I was still vising the Amazon Forums more regularly (and some of those people are not nice) and getting over loaded by the ridiculousness that romance novels tend to invoke without any real discussion of any substance."

Well Neal's story isn't ridiculous it's wondrous and intelligent and has plenty of substance to discuss. I truly hope you consider giving him his HAE with a collection of loving, loyal, empathetic and smart people who appreciate him for his words and deeds and are glad he is content and fulfilled with a life where he can pick and choose and is not forced to take everything on the menu. You could name it "A la Carte." <-grin->


message 25: by Ije the Devourer of Books (last edited Jun 01, 2013 01:00AM) (new)

Ije the Devourer of Books | 14527 comments Lori wrote: "Something I found from September last year before I began to realize just why what I wrote in the post bothered me:

"Is it possible to find a romance novel in which the guy is *not* "hawt", "gorge..."


I don't often read m/f romance because the women always seem to be just a little too fragile, or needy, or indecisive, or they are always swept off their feet by the alpha male. I know there are many romance stories where this isn't the case but instead I read urban fantasy which has elements of romance. For some reason in those kinds of books women seem to be more capable of dealing with life, perhaps because they are also vampire slaying, or dealing with the forces of darkness, or they might be shifters themselves e.g the Mercy Thompson series or Jane Yellowrock series. I think all of this is simply to do with the trends within genres and the perception of what sells. I think we need some new trendsetting authors.

It is a pity we don't have more m/m stories with characters in their forties and older. There are a few, but it always puzzles me why being forty is seen as being really old. Michael Thomas Ford writes gay fiction and his stories are sometimes romantic and he is excellent at writing about all kinds of characters, good looking, ordinary, old and young. DSP have also recently published an anthology which is focused on older men called Snow on the Roof. I haven't read it yet, but it does look good. Also The Apothecary's Garden has a man in his sixties falling in love with a young man in his twenties and it was an excellent story , really well written too. I like it when there are books within the romance genre that don't follow the usual trends.


message 26: by Lori S. (new)

Lori S. (fuzzipueo) | 2809 comments Ijeoma, I have enjoyed a number of UF books over the years. One of my favorite authors is Tanya Huff who wrote the Blood Books (aka Victoria Nelson series), as well as Smoke and Shadows, Smoke and Mirrors and Smoke and Ashes - featuring Tony Foster, who's working for a TV show that sounds suspiciously like an all male version of Huff's Blood series (and Forever Knight), trying to find the right guy [he's got a major crush on the show's lead actor], and discovering that he's a fledgling wizard into the bargain.

There are still a few m/f series I do read/reread: Suzanne Brockmann's Troubleshooter series, which features a number of strong, competent women and Jennifer Ashley's Shifters Unbound series and Nalini Singh's Psy-Shifter series, which also feature strong, competent women.

However, it's a bit of a struggle now to read these books because skipping all the intimate stuff really cuts out a lot of the book. Then, if the characters are less than impressive and you don't buy the relationship between them, say like Singh's Tangle of Need then that makes the problem worse. The book was a big disappointment after the excellent Kiss of Snow.

One of the reasons I like Josh Lanyon's stuff so much is that he does have older characters (in keeping with the author's own age). For instance, Kit Holmes is experiencing a bit of a mid-life crisis in Somebody Killed His Editor, for a number of reasons. Kit's lover has run off with another man, his books are being cut from his publisher's planned run, he's just turned 40 and he has to deal with the return of someone from his past, not to mention that he considers himself to be over the hill!

I have read and enjoyed a number of Ford's books (and even found and bought a Proof of What We Remember at the library bookstore once), though funnily, the first book I ever read of his was a Jane Austin vampire book. Because of him, I finally listened to audios of Emma and Sense and Sensibility and did for a time consider actually reading a Steinbeck book before sanity returned. LOL

You're right about the having more books featuring older folks in such settings. You'd think, with the older population, there would be more books geared toward that segment, but we're going against what the market wants to sell to and though I fall into the right age group (at least for now), I don't like what's on the market. Which is why I read a lot of science fiction & fantasy, urban fantasy, m/m and gay/lesbian literature.


message 27: by Lori S. (new)

Lori S. (fuzzipueo) | 2809 comments Lucas wrote: "Well Neal's story isn't ridiculous it's wondrous and intelligent and has plenty of substance to discuss. I truly hope you consider giving him his HAE with a collection of loving, loyal, empathetic and smart people who appreciate him for his words and deeds and are glad he is content and fulfilled with a life where he can pick and choose and is not forced to take everything on the menu. You could name it "A la Carte." <-grin->

Muchos gracias, Lucas. I am going to try giving him exactly that. Characters keep popping into my head and waving their hands at me, so though they're in proto-form, they do exist. Just how I'm going to write it, I don't know. :oD


message 28: by Lori S. (new)

Lori S. (fuzzipueo) | 2809 comments Huffington Post is running a series of articles on Asexuality. Though I'd post each of the links here, if anyone's interested in reading them. :o)

1. What is Asexuality

2. Asexual Disorder? The Search For Ace Identity Is Part Recognition, Part Redefinition

3. Asexual Relationships

4. 6/20/13


message 29: by Preston, Moderator (new)

Preston | 20148 comments Lori wrote: "Huffington Post is running a series of articles on Asexuality. Though I'd post each of the links here, if anyone's interested in reading them. :o)"

Tremendous! This should be posted in the main thread "Post Complaints Here" so that everybody sees it. It's about time people start thinking that sexual orientation isn't limited to LGBT but the all orientations including an asexual one.


message 30: by Lori S. (new)

Lori S. (fuzzipueo) | 2809 comments If you don't mind I will do so.


message 31: by Hilary (new)

Hilary Evans (hilevans83) | 121 comments Haha...I randomly noticed mentioning that I was rereading Gatsby and still hated it. Around chapter 4, I ended up getting into it ..:and I ended up loving it. Since a lot if it about trying to go back and re-live the dreams of your youth and living in the past, I guess I didn't get it as a sixteen year-old who didn't have regrets or a past at all behind me. Now two months away from 30 with past regrets and a few heartbreaks behind me, I related to it a lot more. And the movie was amazing.


message 32: by Lori S. (new)

Lori S. (fuzzipueo) | 2809 comments Yeah, I find that books I read years ago take on a different meaning as my experiences change and I get older. I wonder if some of the books they jammed down our throats in high school would make more sense these days, not that I'm interested in rereading them at this point.


message 33: by Lori S. (new)

Lori S. (fuzzipueo) | 2809 comments Never get addicted to online fiction. It's too frustrating if the story doesn't't get updated quickly (or real life gets in the way). :-\


message 34: by Averin (new)

Averin | 1962 comments Hey Lori, have you read this one: http://www.discordcomics.com/shades-c... ? The MC is asexual and while the writer keeps trying to pace the storyline with 50 Shades it's genuinely good story.


message 35: by Averin (new)

Averin | 1962 comments Lori wrote: "Never get addicted to online fiction. It's too frustrating if the story doesn't't get updated quickly (or real life gets in the way). :-\"

I adore Daron's Guitar Chronicles but when the author is sick or otherwise busy, I'm jonseing.


message 36: by Lori S. (new)

Lori S. (fuzzipueo) | 2809 comments Averin wrote: "Hey Lori, have you read this one: http://www.discordcomics.com/shades-c... ? The MC is asexual and while the writer keeps trying to pace the storyline with 50 Shades it's genuinely good story."

Thanks for the heads up Averin! I've not seen this comic before.


message 37: by Averin (new)

Averin | 1962 comments Lori wrote: "Averin wrote: "Hey Lori, have you read this one: http://www.discordcomics.com/shades-c... ? The MC is asexual and while the writer keeps trying to pace the storyline with 50 Shades it's genuinely..."

Cecilia Tan at http://daron.ceciliatan.com mentioned it. I got so hooked I read the whole thing. It looks like Shades of A is updated on Tuesdays like DGC.


message 38: by Lori S. (new)

Lori S. (fuzzipueo) | 2809 comments My dad sent me this link to Red Green's Christmas Turkey Bake. Cooking while driving has never been more, erm, interesting. LOL


message 39: by Roger (new)

Roger Kean | 17278 comments Ho! Ho! Ho!

definitely entertaining in style… :)

Happy New Year!


message 40: by Lori S. (new)

Lori S. (fuzzipueo) | 2809 comments Roger wrote: "Ho! Ho! Ho!

definitely entertaining in style… :)

Happy New Year!"


Happy New Year to you too Roger!


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