Dewey's 24 Hour Read-a-Thon discussion
Personal Readathon Logs
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Susan Used to Live on Reader Lane
Some readathons I too read more, others socialize more too. Changes all the time, doesn't it. Have a good new day.

Yes, it does — keeps it fresh! See you in October!

How would you assess your reading overall? I’m happy. I completed five short-ish books and started two more for a total of 750 pages read.
Completed:
A Grown-Up Guide to Dinosaurs,..."
Great job, Susan! See you in October!

How would you assess your reading overall? I’m happy. I completed five short-ish books and started two more for a total of 750 pages read.
Completed:
A Grown-Up Guide..."
Thanks, Elyse — see you next time!


Thanks! The Bingo can be a lot of fun, Ann, and is definitely worth a try some time. Usually, I just get one or two rows ;). This time one of my favorite Readathon reads (Guardians of the Louvre) was inspired by the Bingo square to read outside your comfort zone. So I thought of Manga ;) and found this beautiful ebook at the library. Hope you had a good Readathon even with other commitments!
Hi Susan. I suspect you are out about in the Dewey's neighborhood, greeting various neighbors. . . . Looking forward to your developing plans :)

Hi, Cynda! I’m pretty late getting organized, but am just about ready to go. Wanted to thank you for the tip about the graphic El Cid — very interesting story and history. I had no idea! Trust you have some good choices for this time!

**Book Choice Ideas**
Business as Usual, Jane Oliver & Ann Stafford (novel)
Ghostland: In Search of a Haunted Country, Edward Parnell (literary travel)
Igifu, Scholastique Mukasonga (short stories)
A Mercy, Toni Morrison (novel, Super Rooster)
The Nose and Other Stories, Nikolai Gogol (short stories, some horror)
Pittsburgh, Frank Santoro (graphic novel)
Radio Silence, Alice Oseman (YA, library)
The Red Fox, Anthony Hyde (thriller)
The Secrets of Wishtide, Kate Saunders (mystery)
Stone-Garland: Six Poets from the Greek Lyric Tradition (poetry)
Tell Them of Battles, Kings and Elephants, Mathias Enard (novel)
Vita Nova, Louise Gluck (poetry)
Audiobook possibilities:
Carmilla, Sheridan LeFanu (horror) (2 hrs, 17 mins)
A Mind of Her Own, Paula McLain (biography) (1 hr, 15 mins)
News of the World, Paulette Jilles (novel), (6 hrs, 17 mins)
The Real Sherlock, Lucinda Hawksley (biography) (2 hrs, 5 mins)
Snack Ideas:
—digestive biscuits
—pumpkin ice cream
—dried mango
—decaf chai tea
—lemon seltzer
Meal Ideas:
Breakfast
— Pumpkin donuts
—Coffee
Mid-morning
—Banana and yogurt
Lunch
—Turkey sándwich on rye
—Red lentil soup
—Baby carrots
Dinner
—Renata’s frozen stew and rice or leftovers
—Salad

Happy readathon reading!
Susan, I just read the nose with a classics group. So much discussion. The story leaves so much open for discussion. Hope you enjoy it and the other stories in the collection :)


I'm so jealous. I meant to order a Super Rooster shirt, but never did.

Good luck and happy readathoning!

Susan, I’m reading the super Rooster judgments, but haven’t done anything else. That was quite a twist with the judgment on Friday —lots of comments on the judge’s “a pox on both your books” verdict. I love the design of that T-shirt — how perfect for the Readathon! Happy Readathon!

Hi, Cynda, I’m really looking forward to the Gogol stories. Glad you recommend The Nose! Happy Readathon!

Pumpkin chocolate chip cookies!! Those sound delicious! Nice to have a treat to look forward to post-RAT. Happy Readathon!

Good luck and happy readathoning!"
Thanks, Susy! Happy Readathon!

Hi, Kate, it is pumpkin pie ice cream from Halo, and it must be a seasonal thing because I’ve never seen it before. For some reason, I’m really into pumpkin flavors this fall. Happy Readathon!

Opening Survey —
1) What fine part of the world are you reading from today?
Maryland on the East Coast, USA
2) Which book in your stack are you most looking forward to?
Maybe Vita Nova by Louise Gluck. I haven’t read any poetry for awhile.
3) Which snack are you most looking forward to? I would say pumpkin ice cream, but I ate it last night while I was watching the Great British Baking Show ;) so I’ll say digestive biscuits.
4) Tell us a little something about yourself! I’m retired, love reading, and just got a Halloween costume for my reading buddy, a pooch named Jaxie. This year she’s going to be a bumble bee ;)
5) If you participated in the last read-a-thon, what’s one thing you’ll do different today? If this is your first read-a-thon, what are you most looking forward to? I’d like to do more sprints. They really helped me focus my reading last time.
Happy Readathon!

1. What are you reading right now?
The Red Fox by Anthony Hyde, an excellent, twisty spy thriller
2. How many books have you read so far?
1/2 of The Red Fox, two chapters of Dr Thorne by Anthony Trollope and 15 minutes audio of Master and Commander by Patrick O’Brian
3. What book are you most looking forward to for the second half of the Read-a-thon?
Lots of good ones on the stack. Maybe The Nose and Other Stories by Nikolai Gogol
4. Have you had many interruptions? How did you deal with those?
No more than usual. I did take a longer-than-planned nap, but now I can stay up longer ;)
5. What surprises you most about the Read-a-thon, so far?
How much I’m enjoying The Red Fox — I usually jump around more between books
Have you read Anthony Trollope before Susan? How do you fi d his writing? I am thinking I might want to read two or three of his novels because he--I think--was archenemy writer of Dickens.

Right. More like competitors for readers and allocades. There is an enjoyable scene in the movie The Man Who Invented Christmas.

I’ve got to watch that movie again! Will remember to look for Trollope


Same . I think Baskin Robbins sells pumpkin ice cream during the fall.

Is that a fact ? I wouldn't think anybody like Charles Dickens would have an archenemy .

ETA: I wasn't able to do the final hour. Oh well - I'm old and need the snoozing :)

How would you assess your reading overall?
I was very happy with each of the books I read even though I read fewer pages than usual. I spent most of yesterday on a spy thriller, The Red Fox, but fit in a couple Gogol stories last night and a book of poetry and part of a graphic memoir this morning.
Did you have a stategy, and if so, did you stick to it? No, I didn’t have a strategy, just a pile of books I wanted to read and some snacks ;). I did want to do a couple reading sprints and did. I decided not to worry about Bingo but in the end completed a 1-row BINGO.
What was your favorite snack? Pumpkin donuts (breakfast) and mini-KitKat bars.
Wanna volunteer for our next event? Stay tuned for the recap post!
Maybe, I’ll have to see what April brings ;) Thanks so much to the organizers and volunteers who made this a another fun event!!!

Read a book with a supernatural element — The Nose and Other Stories
Read a book with a person on the cover — The Nose and Other Stories
Read non-fiction — Pittsburgh, Frank Santoro
Read one hour during the night and day — done
A book set in fall or winter — The Red Fox
Read two different formats — ebook, ppb, hdbk and some audio
X Read 200+ pages — done
X Read a book new to your TBR in the last year — The Red Fox, Pittsburgh, The Nose and Other Stories
X Start and finish a book — Vita Nova, Louise Gluck
X Read a book published in the last 13 years — Pittsburgh
X Exercise for 30 minutes — a long morning walk with the pooch
Read a graphic novel, manga, comic or play — Pittsburgh
A book where the total page count as 1 or 3 — Vita Nova, 51 pages
Post on any Dewey’s social media — done
Read with something comforting (blanket, hot drink, pet) — done
X’s are for the BINGO row I completed

I only finished one book, but I enjoyed everything I read and will be finishing up The Red Fox and maybe Pittsburgh on this rainy Sunday.
Dr Thorne, Anthony Trollope, novel, 27 pages, (online, Serial Reader)
The Red Fox, Anthony Hyde, suspense, 303 pages (ebook)
The Nose and Other Stories, Nikolai Gogol, short stories, 50 pages (ppb)
Master and Commander, Patrick O’Brian, novel, 24 minutes = 12 pages (audiobook)
Vita Nova, Louise Gluck, poetry, 51 pages (hdbk)—FINISHED
Pittsburgh, Frank Santoro, graphic novel, 71 pages (hdbk)
READ 514 pages total

ETA: I wasn't able to do the final hour. Oh w..."
It sounds like you had a good Readathon anyhow, Ann! And you stayed up late reading too ;)

I did! Looks like you did, too! Hope to see you in April!

I needed some snoozing too. I stopped about Hour 20. We already read lots anyway.
Hope to see you in April!
Hope to see you in April!

I only finished one book, but I enjoyed everything I read and will be finishing up The Red Fox and maybe Pittsburgh on this rainy Sunday.
Dr Thorne, Anthony Trollope, novel, 27 page..."
Great job, Susan! I have never heard of any of the books you read. lol! And have only heard of Gogol, none of the other authors, but have not read him.

Dr Thorne, Anthony Trollope — The only son of a proud, poor English squire, Frank Gresham is supposed to marry money, but he loves Mary Thorne, the niece of a poor, local doctor. But Mary has a secret. One of the Barsetshire novels. 800 pages long so I read a little bit every day using the Serial Reader app.
The Red Fox, Anthony Hyde — A gripping spy story which takes its hero all over the world on a quest to help his old flame find her missing father. Excellent.
The Nose and Other Stories, Nikolai Gogol — I bought this collection for the Readathon partly because it contains some spooky stories. The title story is more absurd with many notes of humor — what does it all mean. I dunno, but I enjoyed reading it.
Master and Commander, Patrick O’Brian — In the first of this long series set in the Napoleonic wars, Jack Aubrey gets his first command in the British Navy and becomes friends with Stephen Maturin, physician, naturalist, revolutionary, and spy. I’m revisiting the series through the wonderful audio versions by Patrick Tull.
Vita Nova is a book of poetry by the recent winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature, Louise Gluck. A brilliant but complicated book about the painful end of a marriage.
Pittsburgh, Frank Santoro — A graphic memoir about the artist’s parents’ courtship, marriage, and divorce set in the city he grew up in. Apparently he also has a graphic novel about Pompeii that I want to check out.
A fun Readathon! Hope to see you all in April


Here’s how I’m doing:
Roll — 1 “Read 50 pages and jump ahead”. Read 50+ pages in Trial Run by Dick Francis.
Jumping ahead — “Read your favorite genre”. I’ve got a lot of favorites, but let’s say it’s mysteries. So I finished Trial Run ;)
Roll — 4. “Read 100 pages and jump ahead”. Read 100 pages from Sprig Muslin by Georgette Heyer.
Jumping ahead — “Read a graphic novel” — I’m on it!
A month later — Read Taking Turns: Stories from HIV/AIDS Care Unit 371 by MK Czerwiez, a powerful account from another terrible pandemic.
Roll — 5. Read for 2 hours. Read 2 hrs in You Don’t Own Me by Mary Higgins Clark and Alafair Burke
Roll — 4. Oh No! Go Back! Read for 2 hours. (Not exactly a hardship ;). Read for two hours in 10 Lb Penalty by Dick Francis and Another One Goes Tonight by Peter Lovesey.
Roll — 5. Book Title Begins with D. Coming up: The Death of a Joyce Scholar by Bartholomew Gill.

Book stack so far —
The Man in the Brown Suit, Agatha Christie (mystery)
The Scapegoat, Daphne Du Maurier (suspense)
Black Wings Has My Ángel, Elliott Chaze (mystery/noir)
Washington Black, Esi Edugyan (novel)
The Posthumous Memoirs of Bras Cubas, Machado de Assis (novel)
Tell Them of Battles, Kings and Elephants, Mathias Enard (novel)
Tartuffe, Moliere (play)
New and Collected Poems, Wistawa Szymborska (poetry)
Girl, Rebecca Goss (poetry)
The Sandman, Neil Gaiman (graphic novel)
Suppose a Sentence, Brian Dillon (essays)
Snacks —
Lemon seltzer
Decaf chai tea
Hummus with carrots, cucumber, and baby tomatoes
Lemon biscotti
Books mentioned in this topic
Have Space Suit—Will Travel (other topics)Where They Last Saw Her (other topics)
The God of the Woods (other topics)
The Night Country (other topics)
The Night Country (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (other topics)Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (other topics)
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (other topics)
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (other topics)
How would you assess your reading overall? I’m happy. I completed five short-ish books and started two more for a total of 750 pages read.
Completed:
A Grown-Up Guide to Dinosaurs, Ben Garrod, (non-fiction, audiobook)—84 pages
Guardians of the Louvre, Jiro Taniguchi (manga)—137 pages
The Greatcoat, Helen Dunmore (suspense)—196 pages
1919, Eve Ewing (poetry) —73 pages
Sofia Petrovna, Lydia Chukovskaya (fiction)—120 pages
Started:
Glass Town, Isabel Greenberg (graphic) — 110 pages
All Systems Red, Martha Wells (science fiction) — 30 pages
Did you have a stategy, and if so, did you stick to it? This time I strategized reading choices for the BINGO board and got my first (and probably last) BINGO blackout. Also, I planned to limit social media and check-ins to every four hours, which helped me stay focused. And, I planned for several 1 hour reading sprints and ended up doing three — very energizing!
What was your favorite snack? Cantaloupe
Wanna volunteer for our next event? Stay tuned for the recap post!
I will keep an eye out!
It was great fun reading with you all. BTW, I’m sorry I missed the bookshelf scavenger hunt challenge on Twitter last night— so clever, and it looked like a lot of fun.