Tagged: books

Discussion: Re-Reading Childhood Favourites

In the past few weeks I’ve re-read both Angeline and A Girl Named Disaster, both of which I read when I was quite young and absolutely loved.  Of course books that you liked as a child aren’t usually as good as you remember them, but I was surprised that Angeline was still pretty darn good.  A Girl Named Disaster was sort of a disappointment in that I have no idea how I finished it when I was eleven or twelve because it bored me to tears this time around.

So re-reading childhood favourites can be disappointing, but it can also be a great experience as you rediscover some of that childhood magic.  What I want to know is this: Do you re-read some of your favourite books from when you were a kid?  If so, how did you like them this time around?  Or do you try to avoid re-reading childhood favourites because you have the feeling they’re not as good as they were the first time around?

My Favourite Book Beginnings

Ours is a culture that can’t seem to focus much anymore.  Therefore, writers have to get the attention of readers right away or risk losing them immediately.  Some writers have horrible openings to their novels and others, like the ones listed here are just the sort that grab your attention right away.  Not necessarily in the very first line, but usually in the first few.  Here are a few of my personal favourites:

“Ravens!  Always the ravens.  They settled on the gables of the church even before the injured became the dead.  Even before Rike had finished taking fingers from hands, and rings from fingers.”  –Prince of Thorns, Mark Lawrence

This is certainly an opener that makes you think.  Why are there dead people around a church?  Why is the narrator watching this mysterious Rike plundering the bodies?  Is the narrator one of the people who killed the church-goers or is he an innocent bystander?  This is the perfect example of shocking the reader into continuing on with the story.  How do I know?  Because it worked on me, a generally cynical reader.

“If I close my eyes, and breathe to the rolling rhythm of the sea, I can still remember that long ago day.  Harsh, cold, and lifeless it was, as empty of promise as my lungs were empty of air.” The Lost Years of Merlin, T. A. Baron

This is sort of a more gradual opening than Prince of Thorns but it really does pull you in.  You can tell the narrator is reflecting on a time where he nearly drowned and he goes on to write of his old life with such sorrow and longing that you can’t help but keep reading.  The reflection only goes on for two paragraphs before we get to the present, but the opening packs a punch.

“Far out in the uncharted backwaters of the unfashionable end of the Western Spiral Arm of the Galaxy lies a small unregarded yellow sun.”  The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, Douglas Adams

This one is a classic.  Why is our little corner of the universe so unfashionable?  It’s obvious that there are other lifeforms out there who consider our solar system a backwater, so what are they going to do about it?  Will we find out more about these advanced beings?  Does the action take place on Earth or elsewhere?  This opening packs a punch in that it raises more questions than it answers, drawing the reader in and making them read on to find the answer.

“Our story opens where countless stories have ended in the last twenty-six years: with an idiot—in this case, my brother Shaun—deciding it would be a good idea to go out and poke a zombie with a stick to see what happens.”  Feed, Mira Grant

This is one of the very few opening lines that made me laugh.  So of course I read on!  And the thing is, I laughed but at the same time there was a hint of danger.  The zombie outbreak was twenty-six years ago?  What shape is humanity in at this point?  Will Shaun survive poking a zombie with a stick?  Who is our wonderfully snarky narrator?

“I did two things on my seventy-fifth birthday.  I visited my wife’s grave.  Then I joined the army.”  –Old Man’s War, John Scalzi

The first two sentences of Old Man’s War seem pretty normal.  Then you read the third sentence and get thrown for a loop.  That’s the kind of beginning I’m rather fond of because I like to speculate what the rest of the story will be like based on that opening.  It creates a bit of suspense and a lot of curiosity so that’s why this opening is one of my favourites, right up there with Feed.

These are just some of my favourite book beginnings that I can think of right at this moment, but there are so many more I could do several articles.  What I want to know is: What do you think of these particular beginnings?  Do you have a favourite opening line/beginning paragraph of a novel?  Why is it your favourite?  Do you fall for certain types of hooks more than others?

Look What Just Arrived! (#13)

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAYes, it’s that time again: book buying time.  I’m not even going to try to justify my addiction at this point.  Basically I have lots of reading to get done over the holidays and I can’t wait!

Here are my new books:

  • The Stone of Light: Nefer the Silent by Christian Jacq
  • The Stone of Light: The Wise Woman by Christian Jacq
  • The Stone of Light: The Place of Truth by Christian Jacq
  • Accursed Women by Luciana Cavallaro
  • A Dance with Dragons by George R. R. Martin
  • The Sorcerer: The Fort at River’s Bend by Jack Whyte
  • Marie Antoinette: The Journey by Antonia Fraser

The reason why I have so many books this time around is that the owners of the local bookstore I frequent sometimes set books aside for me.  When I saw they had set aside 3/5 books of The Stone of Light series (gently used) I couldn’t help but buy them.  They look like excellent novels and I’ve actually heard of Christian Jacq before, so for $4 each I figured why not give them a try?

Accursed Women is a collection of 5 short stories by Luciana Cavallaro.  She sent it to me partly so I could review her latest short story about Medusa, but also as a way of saying thank you for your reviews.  (After all, I did review 4 ebook copies of her first four short stories.)  I really appreciate when authors do that so I was quite happy to receive this book in the mail.

As you guys know I’m a fan of Game of Thrones, both the books and the television show.  Yet I was too cheap to buy A Dance with Dragons when it was still in hardcover, so on the day the paperback edition was released I bought myself one.  Yes, I know I’m a horrible cheapskate.  The same goes for when I was browsing the used section of the bookstore and saw one of the books in Jack Whyte’s amazing A Dream of Eagles series.  Who could resist?

Marie Antoinette: The Journey was meant as a gift for someone until I realized that it was nonfiction.  From the blurb it had sounded like fiction, but that just goes to show that one should always read carefully when they’re unsure of a book’s genre.  So I decided to read the book myself and so far, so good.  Antonia Fraser has a decent writing style for a nonfiction writer.

These are what I’m reading/will be reading soon.  What are you reading now?  See anything you like here?

Giveaway: Catnip by Valerie Tate

Today I’m lucky enough to be hosting a giveaway for Catnip by Valerie Tate, a mystery set in Canada involving cats, heiresses and seemingly crazy old ladies.  This is my first Rafflecopter giveaway, so please bear with me here.  There might be some bugs to work out.  However, I’ll do my best to get everything done on time and announce the winners on Monday, August 26 (3 weeks from today).

Just click the link below to get started on entering the giveaway, which includes prizes of 2 internationally shipped paperback books and 10 ebook copies of Catnip!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Look What Just Arrived! (#11)

Carrie Pictures 2013 008No, I did not just go on yet another book buying spree.  In fact, exactly half of these books were given to me by either publishers or authors.

  • The Color of Rain by Cori McCarthy
  • The Transhumanist Wager by Zoltan Istvan
  • Red Dragon White Dragon by Gary Dolman
  • The Devil Incarnate by Jill Braden
  • The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini
  • The Grass Crown by Colleen McCullough

The Color of Rain is an unusual book that I found through Grace’s blog, Books Without Any Pictures.  Her description of it intrigued me so much that I went ahead and ordered it from my bookstore, read it in a day and will be writing my review for it shortly.  For those of you that are curious, it’s the book that spurned me to write my ‘The Beauty of Fiction‘ article.

The Transhumanist Wager is something that I’m both excited for and reluctant about because while it’s something I might normally pick up on my own, I know it will be a controversial book to read and review here on my blog.  Red Dragon White Dragon was sent to me by Gary Dolman’s publisher ages ago (2-3 months!) and only got here a few days ago.  Hooray for Canada Post.

The Devil Incarnate was sent to me by Jill Braden’s publisher because they saw how much I loved The Devil’s Concubine (the first book) after I reviewed it through NetGalley.  This second book is not necessarily better than the first, but it is different and I love the cover art even more.

The Kite Runner was a book recommended to me by a fellow book lover in real life and when I saw it at the library’s “fill a bag of books for $1” I knew I had to get it.  It may be a while before I actually get around to reading it, but I’m definitely anxious to see what all of the hype is about.  And of course the last book I bought for myself was The Grass Crown, the second book in Colleen McCullough’s Masters of Rome series.  It’ll take me a while to read, being over a thousand pages, but it will be great in that since I’m so far ahead in my book challenge I’m going to skew my results by only counting books with larger page counts.  That, and Colleen McCullough is a great author.

So what are you guys reading lately?  See anything you like here?