The Book Vipers discussion
2016 Challenges
>
Dusty Shelf Challenge
message 51:
by
Gisela
(new)
Jan 23, 2015 04:58AM

reply
|
flag

This is my fourth book currently on the go, which is too many. I really must finish one.

Cathy wrote: "It's sad I know, but I've just discovered how to get ebooks from the library via Overdrive and I am beyond excited. Have downloaded and started Howard's End. Promising so far, though she hasn't sta..."
I haven't ventured down the ebook route with Dorset Libraries yet. I am 8 over my limit as it is!
I haven't ventured down the ebook route with Dorset Libraries yet. I am 8 over my limit as it is!
Sha'ron wrote: "I have only finished two books so far on my bookshelf but I am comfortable with my pace after reading Howard's Landing. I am just enjoying picking up books I have always intended to read."
That was the intention Sha'ron. Any good ones yet?
That was the intention Sha'ron. Any good ones yet?

Sha'ron wrote: "I am reading the magicians land and I am glad I bought it. I am at the beginning still but I am really enjoying it so far"
I have wondered about Lev Grossman. Is his work any good?
I have wondered about Lev Grossman. Is his work any good?

The only problem is that, rather than making me want to read the dusty books already on my shelf, I've added even more books to my reading list - authors and books I've always meant to read. Oh dear!

I must start a Dusty Shelf book! Doing well with Full Deck, and one or two do overlap so I just need to get on with it....


I like the concept of this book more than the actual writing. The first chapter introducing the idea of only reading from your own bookshelf for a year made me think long and hard about what books were gathering dust on my own bookshelves, and what is it that makes me choose my next books to read. However, I felt that the book then deviated off for the next 60 pages before returning to what the book was supposed to be about. We delved into her relationship with literature going back to her childhood and university days, and as many have said before me, just too much name-dropping. When she discusses authors and books I have experienced it makes light reading but there are many authors/books discussed that I haven't a clue about so I found myself skimming through those pages. I would have preferred to join her through her year of reading these books, hearing her thoughts of these forty books she proposed reading. Instead I was allowed to sit in on her deliberations of what books to pick intermingled with countless short anecdotes regarding her love of literature, which to me is not as interesting as what I thought the book would be like.
Charlotte wrote: "thought i would share my thoughts on the susan hill book..."
Very well written Charlotte
Very well written Charlotte



Read this one a few years ago and really enjoyed it. Would love to do the same journey as it seems a good way of seeing the real USA, but will probably have to wait till retirement.



The Power of Habit: Why We Do What We Do and How to Change was one of my dusty shelf books. Next will be A House In Corfu or Margrave Of The Marshes

The Da Vinci Code
The Loveless Marriage
Love in the Dark
The Bedside Companion to Sherlock Holmes

At the beginning of this year I owned 153 unread books and my plan for 2015 was to reduce the tbr to 100, so with a bit of math and rounding up, 80 sounded like a good goal for mid-2016.
I haven't read Susan Hill's book yet, but it has been on my wishlist for a while. I've been hoping for a translation (I'm German), but hey.
Finally I have an "official" tracker so I can see if my aim is still achievable. That helps a lot.
Happy reading to you!


Gisela wrote: "I've done all my 8 and whilst this was a low target, the books were very dusty indeed. Of those 5, four I should have read years ago they would have enriched my reading earlier, 3 however, I reall..."
Congrats, Gisela! Whatever suits you, reading should be fun, right?
I've just read "The Woman in White" from my dusty shelf. Brilliant novel which I really enjoyed.
I think I'm just about on track with this challenge and a couple ahead in the other. I'm almost exclusively reading dusty shelf books at the moment though.
I think I'm just about on track with this challenge and a couple ahead in the other. I'm almost exclusively reading dusty shelf books at the moment though.

Interesting. My daughter has been trying to get me to read this one for ages. Guess I better give it a go.

I'm currently 5 behind on this one, but 5 ahead on the full desk, so I'm calling it even at the moment. Hoping for some time to catch up soon. I've got a few big train journeys ahead of me.

...And, yes, 80 books was maybe a bit too ambitious :)

However my reading binge was kicked off by the great inspirational The Year of Reading Dangerously: How Fifty Great Books (and Two Not-So-Great Ones) Saved My Life - so I'll start by cheating, and substituting that for the (less wonderful sounding) book by Hill.
The "reading classics"-binge also ticked off Crime and Punishment so fell like I'm on a roll and will give Cervantes a go too...
I have got The Year of Reading Dangerously: How Fifty Great Books Saved My Life from the library to read soon.

Do it! It's awesome! I entirely blame it for getting into reading again!

I just read this. He has an interesting view on some of the books he read. Plus he read some I have never heard of which I might have to check out. I have to agree with his assessment of The Da Vinci Code.
Books mentioned in this topic
Howards End (other topics)The Year of Reading Dangerously: How Fifty Great Books Saved My Life (other topics)
The Year of Reading Dangerously: How Fifty Great Books Saved My Life (other topics)
The Year of Reading Dangerously: How Fifty Great Books Saved My Life (other topics)
Crime and Punishment (other topics)
More...