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

Monday, June 16, 2014

Summer Reading Challenge

Well my summer has started! Actually, last Friday was my first full day of summer vacation. I didn't write a post then because, well to be honest I was doing my favorite thing...Reading! When I finished my book Saturday evening and posted it to Facebook a friend commented asking me to provide a little information about the book in order to decide if it was worth scribbling in on her "To Read..." list. I guess she didn't know that I review all of the books I read. So, keep watching and you will find out about all of the great books I will be reading this summer.

Reading Bingo Challenge 2014
from Random House


Reading Bingo Challenge: YA Edition 2014
from Random House


One of the cool things I discovered this weekend while reading online ~ it is still reading, no matter what the material may be: Facebook, BuzzFeed, etc. ~ is a Reading Bingo Challenge from Random House. Evidently they have had one last year and I didn't know about it. I have printed off the "Original Reading Bingo" AND the "Reading Bingo Card: YA Edition" (Yes, I read YA ~ You got a problem with that?!? I didn't think so!!). I'm not going to say I will be able to complete both this summer since there are a total of 48 slots and to be fair I would have to enter one book per box. I don't want to cheat and enter a title in multiple boxes! Not to mention the fact this is the 2014 (or 2013 if you choose) challenge and not just for the summer. I guess I could go back and record the books I have already read this year into the boxes in which they would fit, but again I believe that would be cheating. I will play by the rules. Now, you don't HAVE to get a Blackout, but if I'm going to play, I'm going to WIN! So, if you are in for a fun challenge, let's see how many squares we can complete by the end of the summer. Who's in?

Reading Bingo Challenge 2013
from Random House

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Summer Reading Challenge 2013

It seems our "assignment this summer, if we choose to accept it" is to read 500 pages of our choosing. Okay, this challenge does not bother me in the least, because I am well on my way of completing this challenge only DAYS into the summer. My disappointment comes in the fact that I am not really challenged by this at all. I know I could set my own parameters for the 500 pages, but now I am free to read whatever I want! Yes, having the choice to choose whatever I want to read this summer is fantastic, don't get me wrong. However when I have been "forced" to step out of my comfort zone of genres (children's, mystery, thrillers, historical, and science fiction) then I discover so many more authors and titles in which to fall in love. ~ Remember, you can NEVER have too many books! ~ I am a living example of the saying, "I was born with a reading list I will never finish." The summer reading challenges have given me permission to delve into areas I have really never discovered. This year, I will simply have to do it myself, or will I? At this point I can't decide. I have gathered a number of pre-pub e-books I need to review (and will post here for all to see), all of which I have selected. I'm fairly certain there are some books that are not typically on the Texas Library Lady's reading list, so I guess I will live up to previous challenges, but 500 pages - PIECE OF CAKE!!

Happy Reading ~ and let the challenge begin!

Thursday, June 28, 2012

9/10 complete

Early this morning I finished reading the 9th book in my summer reading challenge, one book in the adult controversial category. Did I choose Shades of Grey by E.L. James? No. I actually chose a book that was controversial when it was published in 1899, The Awakening by Kate Chopin. I chose this book because I was intrigued by the type of writing that would be considered controversial at the end of the 19th Century.
The Awakening
by Kate Chopin
Last weekend my family attended a wonderful local production of the musical Ragtime, based on E.L. Doctrow's novel, published in 1975. I have not yet read the book, but it is on my book bucket list. My husband and I had seen the show before and truly loved the historical references and the manner in which the characters' lives cross paths. While reading The Awakening, I was reminded of the character, Mother, in Ragtime. The book opens with Edna Pontellier and her family as they vacation at the Grand Isle Resort  near the Gulf of Mexico. While  enjoying the area, Edna is befriended by the Robert, the resort's manager. There interactions and conversations lead Robert to feelings he should not have for a married woman. Upon realizing these feelings can never lead to anything good, Robert quickly leaves for Mexico. Once Robert leaves, Edna decides she no longer wants to follow in the normal society manner, but choose to lead her life in a manner that makes her happy and enjoy her life. Mother's metamorphosis in the musical, although not as dramatic as in The Awakening, can be compared to Edna's claim of independence and personal happiness when she refuses to stay at home to receive her callers and then moves out of her family home to live alone.


I wonder how Edna would feel in today's world? It seems the morals of today have become lax and extra-marital affairs are more common than not. Divorce and separations occur on a daily basis and more and more couples are living together before, and sometimes instead of choosing marriage. I don't approve of these loose morals for myself, but why should I tell someone how they can obtain and maintain their happiness. Would I make the same choices Edna made? I can't really answer that question. I am happily married, I know that, but I also know I have a great deal more opportunities afforded to me than Edna ever would have had in her lifetime.


As a woman in the year 2012, I have a very difficult time putting myself in Edna's place. I, like so many other women, take for granted my independence, my ability to make my own choice, go where I want to go and do what I want to do. Connecting Edna to Mother, I can see how their lives were really not their own, but revolved around their husband and children.  As a wife and mother I believe my family is very important, but I also know that in order to have a happy family I have to be happy as well. I don't feel my family is neglected in any way because I choose to work outside the home, go to a movie with my girl friends, or even blog after reading a great book. In the 21st Century, we may not be a traditional family in the sense of these characters from long ago, but I believe we are happier because we can develop our own personalities and actually be more well rounded as individuals who make up a family.

My final thoughts are of gratitude for living in a time when I have the ability to make personal choices and not be condemned by society for being myself.