Books Read in March + April:
*discontinued House of Leaves, will pick it up soon! Thoughts on these books later on :)
- Ender’s Game - Orson Scott Card
- The Lover’s Dictionary - David Levithan
- Paper Towns - John Green (currently reading!)
Ah, I am disappointed in myself. Only 12 books read so far :(
scott pilgrim returning in full color with remastered art at a new larger trim size in beautiful hardcover editions!
colors by Nathan Fairbairn.
WUT. must… resist urge to splurge another $70
Source: radiomaru
I’m so tired. Sleep’s been stalking me for too long to remember. Inevitable I suppose. Sadly though, I’m not looking forward to the prospect. I say “sadly” because there was a time when I actually enjoyed sleeping. In fact I slept all the time.
Books read in February:
1. The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
2. Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins
I didn’t want to make a blog post about rereading The Hunger Games and Catching Fire for February so here goes a photo of me holding one of the notes I use to scribble down thoughts of every book I’ve read so far.
I promised myself I’ll finish 52 books this year and I plan on making that happen!
LOL @ my enthusiasm.
The Name of the Star
Maureen Johnson
A Jack the Ripper story set in modern London, how could you not be intrigued? I wish I didn’t read this in the middle of the night where every single sound was amplified and my scared self didn’t have to freak out so much. Maureen Johnson wrote a hauntingly beautiful story about a transfer student from Louisiana, Rory Deveaux, and her start at a boarding school in London.
I was so so thrilled at the end of the book, because I knew it was going to be a part of a series. I wanted to know what happened next, because there will be a cliffhanger at the end, there, I said it! You will want to read the next book, even if its ten times creepier than the first one.
And I also loved that Doctor Who reference. Like, really. This book! Amazing.
The only thing that I probably didn’t like as much was the whole Rory-Jerome thing. I felt like that there wasn’t enough to go with it. I can picture Rory with Stephen, but not with Jerome.
This was the quote that I really, really liked:
“Fear can’t hurt you. When it washes over you, give it no power. It’s a snake with no venom.”
Source: sospelldennisse
Dash & Lily’s Book of Dares
Rachel Cohn & David Levithan
These are two great authors who wrote one of my favorite books (possibly of all time, although can’t tell for sure; but it’s up there) which also got turned into a movie which I also loved, Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist. I have yet to finish Naomi & Ely’s No Kiss List, so maybe that’ll be next on my book pile. But for now I want to talk about this book. THIS BOOK. So many feelings.
Like Let It Snow, Dash & Lily’s Book of Dares was also set around the holidays.
Here’s the thing I’ve noticed about myself during the holidays when everyone’s getting kissed under the mistletoe and I’m in a corner stuffing my face with leftover Halloween candy: I always imagine the characters in the book I’m reading to be actual living people.
I can imagine Lily, this optimistic, Christmas-loving, lebkuchen cookie-baking girl actually scribbling on a red notebook. Or she could be at the Strand, talking to her cousin, asking him to do this one tiny favor. Then threatens him if he refuses. I can see this actually happening.
I can picture Dash hunched over, talking to his dad, annoyed and just a tad snarly. I can see him getting hugs from Boomer, and he actually likes it. Or him going to the supermarket because he ran out of yogurt. I can see someone just like Dash actually doing all of this.
Cohn & Levithan create these characters that I instantly connect with and fall for. After reading the book I secretly wished to meet someone like Lily, who’ll bake me cookies or take me with her to walk dogs when I’m feeling down; or maybe someone as articulate as Dash, who, even if he’s only just met me, would make sure I got some safe and not leave me all alone in a party just because some guy couldn’t get in my pants. If anything, I wish I was there to witness the story unfold between them.
The book was amazing, I wanted more! I wanted to know what happened next. I wanted to know what didn’t. I wanted to keep reading and falling in love with them. But the book had to end somewhere or else it’ll end up as massive as the unabridged OED. (Book inside joke, sorry?)
I will say this though: Cohn and Levithan can do no wrong in my book.
And now I am so very tempted to go to Barnes & Noble, leave a red notebook with very specific instructions, and wait.
Because sometimes the waiting is the best part.
Some lines that I adored:
It’s moments like this, when you need someone the most, that your world seems smallest.
I want to believe that, despite all the evidence to the contrary, there is reason to hope.
Now could someone please tell me how much it is to make my own Muppet? Maybe I should ask Boomer.
Let It Snow
Maureen Johnson, John Green and Lauren Myracle
I am a big fan of John Green ever since I read Looking for Alaska. I watch his videos on YouTube religiously (or, if I fail to, watch them all in one go) with his brother Hank whom I also adore. I am a proud Nerdfighter. I support their cause of decreasing world suck. John Green and his family (especially Henry! Oh, what a cutie pie) are awesome. I wouldn’t expect anything less.
Through John Green I found out about Maureen Johnson. At the time I had just gotten my Kindle and was looking for a quick summer-type read, when John retweeted one of Maureen’s tweets, and after a quick search in Amazon, downloaded 13 Little Blue Envelopes and The Last Little Blue Envelope. I’m actually halfway through finishing The Name of the Star. Needless to say, I loved them.
I have not heard of Lauren Myracle at the time when I bought this book but I was insanely jealous of her last name. (Hehe)
To anyone who wants to read Let It Snow, I suggest you read it prior to Christmas, or at exactly Christmas. It is a nice book to cozy up to, with a fuzzy blanket and a cup of hot chocolate. Sounds cliche, I know, but that’s how this book feels to me: fuzzy, warm, comforting.
I don’t really want to go into details with this one, for fear that I might spoil it, but I truly loved it. I am a big fan of stories that are somehow interconnected with all the different characters from different stories without it seeming too forced. A perfect example of this would also be one of my favorite movies to watch during the holidays, which is Love Actually.


I liked, how, even if three stories were written by three different authors, they were all able to mesh well together to create one beautiful novel. It’s a YA book, a genre that I just can’t quit, so my sentimental self can’t help but think back on all of my past Christmases, the good and the bad. I wondered to myself if I had a memorable Christmas that was so good I can write a whole book around it. I don’t think I have one yet, so we’ll see where that goes.
Here are some passages/quotes from each of the stories that I really liked. There might be a mild spoiler in one of them, but I’m sure you’ll need to read all three stories beforehand. :)
God… I’d been bored for a year. I hadn’t talked about myself in ages. Stuart was talking about me. He was paying attention. It felt foreign, a little embarrassingly intimate, but kind of great. My eyes filled up.
—The Jubilee Express
I always had this idea that you should never give up on a happy middle in hopes of a happy ending, because there is no such thing as a happy ending. Do you know what I mean? There is so much to lose.
—A Cheertastic Christmas Miracle
Silly girl, it’s not what the universe gives us that matters. It’s what we give the universe.
—The Patron Saint of Pigs
Let It Snow is a wonderful book. I wish there was a part two lurking around in Johnson, Green, and Myracle’s heads.
I haven’t seen a lot of The Office (I’ve seen a couple of episodes, tops) but if this book is any indication of how great Mindy Kaling is then I would totally put The Office on my Instant Queue.
The introduction is funny in a way that it doesn’t try to be. Mindy (is it okay if I called her by her first name? Yes? Okay then) answered some questions readers potentially might want to ask her in the near future.
One question that she answered really agreed with me, so I’m going to go ahead and quote it.
I don’t think it should be socially acceptable for people to say they are “bad with names.” No one is bad with names. That is not a real thing. Not knowing people’s names isn’t a neurological condition; it’s a choice. You choose not to make learning people’s names a priority. It’s like saying, “Hey, a disclaimer about me: I’m rude.” For heaven’s sake, if you don’t know someone’s name, just pretend you do. Do that thing that everyone else does, where you vaguely say, “Nice to see you!” and make weak eye contact.
I didn’t know who Mindy Kaling was until I saw her in No Strings Attached and thought she looked familiar, which led to a Google Search, which led me to this book.
The book was entertaining and I often reached for my pen to put quotation marks on the book. I liked that we shared some things in common too—like her weight and body image and how bullies are total assholes (my words, not hers) I liked that she only learned how to ride a bike when she was twelve and how she despises it. I am a twenty year old fully functioning person who still hasn’t learned how to ride a bike. Her love for New York and my fascination for it.
I started this book with no initial expectations of, “This better be good,” or “Let’s see what all the hype is about.” I closed the book with a big smile on my face and three pages worth of quotes from the book.
It’s safe to say that I completely adore Mindy Kaling now. And that I followed her on Twitter, which is a big deal, because you know how some celebrities only tweet to promote their shows/videos/endorsements? Well, she isn’t like that.
BRB, watching Season One of The Office.
(Yes, I am fully aware that I am very far behind on this show. Forgive me. I will make up for it.)
**
Book #1 down. 51 (or more, heh, we’ll see) to go!
To Read More Books, and to Keep Track of It
I made exactly 12 kind-of resolutions for this year. I say kind-of because I kind of see them as little challenges. One of these is to read more books.
When I went to California for a much-needed vacation away from all the drama I surrounded my life with (not even going to sugar-coat it, I really did attract a lot of drama, heh) I brought my Kindle with me and read the first few chapters in J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Fellowship of the Ring, then Chelsea Handler’s My Horizontal Life: A Collection of One-Night Stands to cheer me up when I didn’t get to talk to someone on the phone that day (again with the drama) and when my flight from SFO to ORD was delayed for six hours or so (please note that I had been in the aiport all day, just waiting) I finished Worlds 1-3 in Super Mario, five recipes in Cooking Mama, got a high score at Temple Run, and Lemony Snicket’s A Reptile Room.
Well that was a long sentence.
Anyways, what I’m trying to point out is that for all of 2011, I did read a lot but I never kept track of it, and I always (always) got a tiny bit jealous of people who, at the end of every year, posts a year end list of all the books they’ve read. I made a promise to myself to start doing what I’ve wanted to do which is to keep track of the books I’ve read.
So here it is. Challenge #1. I started reading Mindy Kaling’s Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me? and I just finished last night. So there.
Here goes.






