This Week’s Counts
Total Chapters Read: 23
Bastard Count: 33
Dragons Count: 24, and then an explosion of Dragon mentions and I stopped counting.
Winter is Coming: 6
Chauvinism: 2
New Characters Introduced: 105
Catch up on last week’s impressions HERE
What is your Overall Evaluation of Game of Thrones This week?
__Excellent x Very Good x Good ___Fair ___Poor
Summary: This week Arya got a sword and she and Jon finished each other’s sentences. Dany had a much nicer wedding night than on TV. NotRobb took a ride with the King and got mad about Jaime sitting on the iron throne once when he was 17. Tyrion hung out on the wall and spit some straight truth Jon’s way. Catelyn traveled to King’s Landing with a guy who has a green beard, and saw her friend Creepyfinger. Sansa hung out with Joffrey who acted like a bunghole, and Arya ran away. NotRobb murdered Sansa’s dog, dropping him very low on my personal totem pole of characters I’m rooting for. But the C-Word is the reason Lady gets murdered so I hate her, too. Bran dreamed about crows, and then woke up (!!).
NotRobb found out that King Rob is massively in debt (is he representative of America because he’s fat and borrows money a lot?). NotRobb also feels terrible about Lady which GOOD he should. He saw Cat at Creepyfinger’s brothel and then Cat left King’s Landing. Arya Underfoot returns from her fleeing incident, and she had to throw rocks at Nymeria to save her life, but then she got a dancing partner and things are okay. Dany got pregnant so you know bad things are coming her way. Tyrion showed up and gave Robb plans for a saddle that will help Bran ride even though he’s crippled now. NotRobb began a quest to find more information on Jon Arryn’s death, and he found another Bastard in a steelwork house. Jon knows nothing but now he has a friend named Samwiseell and he weren’t droppin no eaves.
Cat accused Tyrion of tryna murder the Sweet Summer Child, and they began a journey “back to Winterfell” but they’re really going to the Vale. The Tournament began and ended without Paul Bettany so that’s a shame, and Loras Tyrell invented the Rose Parade. The Hound is nicer than his brother who killed his own horse, but both still scare Sansa a bit. Some idiots attacked Cat and Tyrion’s party, but the named characters won the fight (surprise.)
Why Do You Think You (Or We as a Class) Read Game of Thrones?
Everyone seems obsessed over this series because the story is so epic. There is a grand variety of characters to chose from. I dunno…it’s good, and it’s nice to know what’s getting all this hype. At the very least it’s a great exercise as a writer to know what I like and what I don’t like.
How Would You Rate Game of Thrones on the Following Qualities:
Action: Very Good
Interest: Good
Originality: Good/ Fair
Character Development: Excellent/Very Good
Tell More About One of Those Qualities Above. Why Do You Feel This Way?
I rated Character Development above the other categories because I feel that the characters are what make Game of Thrones stand out. Other elements of the book help it fit very well into the fantasy/high fantasy genre.
There are a TON of characters introduced at all times in this book, and each is unique and interesting so far. I like that there’s less chauvinism than I expected from the men in power, and that when it is expressed it’s done so to add to a character.
On a similar note, I like how strong the female characters are in their development. Sansa and Arya are totally different, but neither is villainized or made less than the other, which makes them very interesting and believable as siblings. Jon Snow is allowed to be a cranky 14 year old boy and he’s disappointed that life on the Wall isn’t what he expected. He takes Tyrion’s criticism and uses it to change his ways a little, but when challenged he still goes back to his older instincts. Dany’s determined not to let circumstances dictate her life, which is respectable and awesome. It’s OKAY that Sansa is a dreamer and Arya is a scoundrel. NotRobb loves them all (even Dany. He doesn’t know it but he has love in his heart for all the children in the KnownWorld. Or whatever ya’ll are calling it these days.)
Also Tyrion is small but powerful. The end.
Describe a Part of Game of Thrones you Identified with Or Tell How this Book Relates to Your Life.
Erm…
I’ve been to Medieval Times a bunch so I’ve seen jousting and tourney games before. I have siblings whom I love but they also sometimes annoy the bejesus out of me. One time my Dad got promoted at his job at Eddie Bauer so my family moved from one apartment to a different apartment. Just like the Starks.
What Are the Strengths of this Book?
- Lots of Character Development
- Expansive World Building
- Detailed Descriptions
- Animals
What Are the Weaknesses of Game of Thrones?
- Repetition of certain identifying details (Jon messing up Arya’s hair and them finishing each others sentences)
- Too long between exciting scenes sometimes (is this a necessary evil of the form?)
- Animals in danger
Final Conclusion: Loras on TV is FAR inferior to Loras in the book. Considering I imagined his whole outfit looking like a glammed out version of the cape that the Lion wears at the end of the Wizard of Oz.
Tune in next week to see how many more rude nicknames I can come up with for main characters in this ridiculous series, and feel free to catch up with my reading adventures on Twitter (@Jenisaur) and use the hashtags #JenSnow, #sweetsummerchild, or #GoTvirgin to join the conversation!
Oh and thanks to Free Graphic Organizers for my reading guides!
Halloween is fast approaching (says the writer who has yet to start making his 1930’s Flash Gordon hot-pants costume) and to celebrate I’ve found a wacky bunch of informative and even a little spooky and all-together amazing books to share with everyone from Applewood Books, who specialize in new reprints of classics from yesteryear. These books are historical, odd, and are still helpful and fun even today. Parents, do you want you and your kids to step away from the TV, tablets and laptops for a little while? Many of these books are chock full of fun and interesting activities and things to do this fall and onwards into the future that will help unplug and interact. Don’t have kids? These books are still great to have and are great references especially if you babysit. Or actually like to have fun. It’s always good to have a party trick. Which leads me to my first pick:
Madam Le Marchand’s Fortune Teller and Dreamer’s Dictionary.
In the spirit of Halloween there is first this fun “occult” gem and guide originally all the way back from 1863. This eerie guidebook to fortune telling provides an endless list of how to tell people’s, especially ladies, fortunes in various ways from rolling dice to tea leaves, palm reading, cards, counting people’s freckles or moles or egg whites, being able to calculate a person’s character and discovering truth from falsehoods. It also includes a nifty pre-Freud “Dreamer’s Dictionary” a glossary of dream symbols and their meanings to one’s future or current state , lists of fortunate and unfortunate days and even particular charms to enact. With this little tome kids at parties or get-togethers can recreate the fervid Victorian interest in the supernatural, read each others or adult’s fortunes and one can liven up any Halloween or Birthday (or even Christmas if you prefer the British tradition of horror and ghost stories) party with a real life Harry Potter Divination “lesson” or exhibition. It’s still fun stuff to do and weird people out. Speaking of finding things to do…there is then my second pick, which is actually two:
The Boys and Girls Own Books
Continuing the guidebooks filled with fun activities to do there are also two books hailing from 1829 and 1834 respectively that can fast become a great source of entertainment; The Boy’s Own Book by William Clarke, and The Girl’s Own Book by Mrs. Maria Child. Written long before the advent of electricity, radio, television, internet and videogames these books are stuffed to the brim with fun games and guides of activities kids can enjoy and play the same way they did two-hundred years ago. It’s not only fun to see what kids back then did, it’s just as much fun to revive them. Many of the games are still played today so many are still quite accessible.
The Boy’s Book is filled with rough and tumble gymnastic games and exercises and chemistry-based experiments and activities that would make most modern helicopter parents faint (yay mercury!), but there are also guides to other ball-based games and small “sports” games ranging from marbles to spinning tops. There are guides on swimming, learning sign language, archery, draughts and checkers, “ledgerdemain” or slight-of-hand and magic tricks, card-games and many other fun miscellaneous activities. One interesting one in particular is how to preserve rose-buds in early summer to bloom at Christmastime (this was before repeating roses were common and the planted varieties at the time only bloomed in late spring), arithmetic games and puzzles, riddles and guide to fishing, fencing and pigeon care. There is literally nothing left out in this little book and while a bunch of entries are purely comical or rather impossible to do now and serve more as a learning experience and a laugh, boys and girls both can still find fun and interesting things to do or learn how to do from this book. It’s super useful for those who watch kids, are a camp counselor or just want to be the “cool” cousin or sibling.
Likewise The Girl’s Own Book is chock full of games in which to play, and while somewhat dated in terms of the scope of what girls could do is still surprisingly engaging; girls didn’t just sit and play with their dolls in fact many of the games suggested in this book are still played today on playgrounds (if kids are even granted recess) by both sexes. The activities in this book are more group based; circle based both word and action games to do with friends most involving a little bit of roleplay. Some games like “Cries of Paris” involve a lot of roleplay, each child assigned to be a certain pedlar (cherries, umbrellas, water-bearer, flowergirl etc) which also involves the use of french phrases. Perhaps a helpful exercise and game for French teachers to try out. The Girl’s Own Book also features guides to archery, riddles and puzzles, tongue teasers and songs, active games like shuttlecock (similar to badminton), old out of fashion or rather forgotten games like the more or less exclusively female game la grace (small hoop throwing and catching back and forth on two rods) and even a guide to calisthenics. Additionally the Girl’s book is much more creative activity based, providing different things in which to actually “make” with one’s hands such as paper screens, many different types of baskets, paper cutting and folding, candle ornaments, engraving egg shells, butterfly and leaf impressions, and then domestic topics with guides to sewing and knitting and even encyclopedia-esque guides to bees and silkworms, on keeping animals and also gardening. While a bit less full to the brim with activities as The Boy’s Own Book it still is a extremely cool book full of activities to try instead of the usual offers. I’d gift both books together as a bundle for both girls and boys to get a complete scope of fun stuff to do or as a gift for teachers and babysitters.
Onwards to my third pick!
Goops and How to Be Them: A Manual of manners for Polite Infants by Gelett Burgess
This 1900 book is a guide on manners full of small little poems and poem-y stories to teach etiquette and proper outstanding morals in children. It’s notable for its very stylized and simple illustrations featuring the titular ” Goops”, children who are depicted as these bald round headed little caricatures with noodley almost octopus like arms and simple but very expressive faces including quite a bit of side-eye. Many of the little ditties featuring these Goops as they both behave and misbehave are actually still pretty applicable to kids today, but the real charm lies in the artwork, whose simplicity and quirkiness looks like something someone today would come up with, not 113 years ago. The poems and little stories are charming in their own way and while somewhat dated the book can still be enjoyed for the illustrations alone which are quite different from most children’s book art of the time which leads us to my final pick….
Freaks and Frolics of Little Girls and Boys by Josephine Pollard
If this book title doesn’t belong in an October review then someone help me. This lushly illustrated book of poems and little ditties about mischievous, overtly emotional or just naughty children in the era of being seen but overall not to be heard or fuss is different from the above book in that it is more conventional in it’s “playing it straight” Victorian earnestness…but…. there’s something amiss and extremely compelling amongst its gorgeous color prints. While a great deal of the entries are straightforward tales about little girls such as “Foolish Fanny”, and “Stupid Jane” (things that don’t age too well) and boys like “Teasing Tom” and “Inky Jake” all of whom express “too much” of a certain emotion, or are vain, or get ink everywhere, essentially examples of what not to be…there….seems also seems to be….oh….a poem-story about a kid catching on fire as a warning not to play with fire. Okay. Let’s see…oh god she’s getting attacked by winged pies….and oh god a boy makes himself into a kite….another boy getting attacked by poultry and other farm animals in his dream…..oh….oh my. He actually gets dipped into a vat of ink? Oh god. This is some weird stuff. Help. Help.
Amidst the earnestness and some rather dated and “cutesy” stories there are somewhat macabre or fanciful additions to teach those kids who are seen as less than good or well behaved a “lesson” that truly put the “freaks” in the book. These are further emphasized or rather contrasted by the very pretty, conventionally detailed and idealized artwork of the time which is a treat to look at especially for those interested in what I’ll assume is mostly middle and upper-class fashion and activities of the time for children. The array of socks, bows, stockings and shoes and jackets the little boys wear is just as interesting to look at as the girl’s smock dresses maybe even more so as the boys fashions are no longer really worn whilst variations of some of the girls’ dresses are still used and worn by little girls even today. Much of the behavior seen in the book would not be seen as freakish today either but more reflects what was seen as bothersome to Victorian sensibilities so it’s further a curious read to see how things have changed and realize how things have changed since then too. Yet another book that is great for checking out for the illustrations, fashion, and bizarre stories alone.
So if you can, take a look into the past this week and pick up one of these books or seek them out to have or give to others as they’d make a perfect gift for the right kid or person. You might learn something frighteningly good if you do!
See you next week!
Max Eber
Staff Writer/The Doctor
max@sub-cultured.com
Twitter: @maxlikescomics
Hello folks, I’m back! I have for this week a modest children’s book offering everyone should check out. The book, from one of our favorites Candlewick Press, is called Mitchell Goes Bowling by Hallie Durand and illustrated by Tony Fucile. This is a must read book if you have a young child and need a good book for nightly reading or it make a great gift, be it for a birthday or for milestones such as starting preschool (or first day of gasp, KINDERGARTEN). At least, I would have liked receiving a book like this at that age.
Mitchell’s plot is rather straightforward; Rowdy four year-old Mitchell and his dad have an afternoon together at the bowling alley for the first time and we follow their antics as Mitchell learns the ups and downs of the game. This is the second Mitchell book and collaboration between Duran and Fucile (the first being 2011’s Mitchell’s License now being re-released as Mitchell Goes Driving as part of what I will assume be an ongoing Mitchell Goes series); the book is fresh, charming with witty and very current humor sensibility and descriptions from Fucile as we follow the father-son duo as they play their game.
If Tony Fucile’s kinetic, and animated yet simple artwork looks familiar and brings to mind The Incredibles or other Disney and animated works you’re not far off; Fucile has worked more than twenty years in the animation field whether as a character designer, head of animation, supervising animator, visual development or character artist and animator (not all at the same time) for many films in the Disney/Pixar canon and other studios. A few of the works Fucile has contributed to include The Little Mermaid (1989), FernGully: The Last Rainforest (1992), Aladdin (1992) The Lion King (1994), The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996) The Iron Giant (1999), The Incredibles (2004), and Ratatouille (2007).
Fun, quick and endearing, visually comedic. this is a great book for all ages. However there is something that sets this book further apart. The one thing that really makes this book special is that the titular Mitchell comes from a bi-racial family; Mitchell shares his dad’s curls but none of his complexion or coloring, and that fact is presently plainly without fuss or being tied to the narrative stories in either book.
It are these quiet displays of representation that make all the difference. I know there are so many families that look exactly like Mitchell’s family and have for the longest time struggled with proper representation, seeing themselves in American entertainment media which overwhelmingly skews towards white families even in 2013. This now two book series is a classic-in-the-making series (and if there are continued adventures it could be a fun animated TV show or shorts) and while pretty casual and fresh it is completely worth the space on anyone’s shelf; hopefully there will be more and more adventures of Mitchell and his family to come soon. Overall (so help me I can’t resist), it’s a perfect strike! Check this out when it comes out this September.
Mitchell Goes Bowling
by Hallie Durand
illustrated by Tony Fucile
Candlewick Press | 9780763660499 | $15.99 | Available Sept 2013
Until next time!
Max Eber
Staff Writer/The Doctor
max@ihogeek.com
Twitter: @maxlikescomics
This week for kids and their parents alike I have three fantastic children’s books everyone should check out.
Whimsical, gorgeous and unique with compelling art these three books cover all age groups; you are guaranteed a satisfying read for bedtime or for summer reading. Happy Summer!
Journey
by Aaron Becker
Journey by Aaron Becker is an adventure through a lonely girl’s rampant imagination (or is it?) when her family pays her no attention and she finds escape in a magic crayon. Built from the same classic foundation of children’s storytelling as Where the Wild Things Are and most notably Harold & The Purple Crayon, Journey is perfect for all ages as there is no dialogue. Its story and its narrative is told simply through artist-author Aaron Becker’s beautiful full page watercolor and pen illustrations as you follow the little girl through fantastic lands and architecture as she manipulates her experience along the way with her crayon. Her adventures culminate in the little girl going up against a cruel Emperor and the rescue of a mysterious purple bird.
Timeless, the book is just as evocative as it’s literary ancestors of fifty years ago and can stand the test of time just as they have due to it’s simple yet universal plot. And yet it does make small commentary on modern family life, particularly the effect of electronics on people and familial interaction. Poignant and sweet Journey above all teaches kindness and the importance of imagination and finding others that think and feel the same way you do. Many kids will relate to the feeling our protagonist feels despite the complete lack of dialogue. Looking forward to seeing this book becoming a perennial favorite and a future children’s classic.
Maude: The Not-So-Noticeable Shrimpton
by Lauren Child, illustrated by Trisha Krauss
A book for kids about ages five to eight who enjoy Edward Gorey style fables Maude is a quirky story about the eccentric and attention-grabbing Shrimpton family and then their not-so attention grabbing middle daughter, Maude. Each family member has a special attention getting skill be it their beauty, dancing, singing, humor, their taste in hats or even their majestic mustache, that is except for Maude. She’s the odd-one in the family.
Maude’s skill is that instead of being attention getting or extroverted, she has the uncanny ability to disappear and hide. Maude’s unnoticeable nature is seen as a disappointment in the family, that is until her family buys her an animal for her birthday present; it’s something Maude did not ask for. A lesson in introversion being just as an acceptable thing to be if not better than being extroverted and attention getting all the time, Maude is a darkly humorous tale that shyer kids and adolescents, middle-childs, or ones with a quick wit and a nasty sense of humor could easily relate to and enjoy. Trisha Krauss’ stylized mod artwork further creates a funny off-kilter and artful feel; the Shrimpton’s are a very stylish family. Wickedly dark, easy to read with fun various fonts and formatting and interesting art make it morbidly enjoyable.
Bluffton: My Summers With Buster
by Matt Phelan
A graphic novel for ages ten to fifteen to ninety-two Bluffton is a warm and poignant look at the sleepy resort town of Muskegon, Michigan around the turn of the twentieth-century. Matt Phelan creates a gentle and cinematic-like story in soft watercolors following the fictional resident Henry Harrison as his life is turned upside down when a troupe of vaudeville performers comes to take a summer retreat by their lakeside community in 1908.
Young Henry in his new-found curiosity for the bizarre world of vaudeville (particularly a zebra) that has interrupted the sleepy daily flow soon thereafter meets a young stone-faced performer his own age named Buster. Yep, Buster Keaton of future slapstick silent film fame. Based loosely on true accounts of Buster Keaton’s real-life lake-side summers, Phelan’s heartfelt friendship between Buster and Henry and their subsequent summertime fun, disagreements and reconciliation over a period of three summers is a perfect coming-of-age story and teaches the importance of dreams, individualized personal aspirations and keeping inspirational influences in your lives. And of course appreciate summers to their fullest. Brimming with comedic moments, the graphic novel has threads of more serious issues too considering the life of a child in show-business urged on by family, but in all it is a book is full of genuine heart and feeling. Bluffton is a nostalgic look at slice-of-life Americana and a fine placid introduction to the graphic-novel medium for readers of a younger age. Highly recommended for reading over a period of nights if reading together or to another, or great for helping readers branch out into more independent and sophisticated reading. If your children dislike novels, try this instead. Adults are urged to take this lovely trip back in time too, I found it extremely enjoyable and may find itself considered a classic as well. Extremely special.
Let me know if you’ve read these books yourself or with your child in the comments! Let me know what you think!
Until next week!
Max Eber
Staff Writer/The Doctor
max@sub-cultured.com
Twitter: @maxlikescomics
Last week I talked about some cartoons that are breaking boundaries and providing kids with fun and yet progressive and intelligent cartoon series. I wanted to add one more to the list, and its a doozy; SheZow. The premise of the recently imported The Australian/Canadian cartoon on Hub about a boy that is granted the ability to turn into a superhero from his aunt’s magic ring, the twist is that his superhero form has the appearance of a girl. He can’t have the powers otherwise.
The show has already premiered in other countries and was just brought to the States June 3rd. The premise alone is daring and it’s already gathered criticism both constructive and damning from all sides. One Million Moms in particular condemns the cross-dressing for the sake of humor (no surprise). I think it’s too new to weigh in for sure but overall I feel this cartoon is another that is noteworthy since it treats the condition, that is powers comes from the female alter-ego so cavalierly. This kind of gender stuff hasn’t really been played with in Western cartoons much to my knowledge. So kudos SheZow.
Moving on, I wanted to shift some focus onto two things I think are worth your attention, this time in comics form:
EARTHWARD from Bryan Q. Miller and Marcio Takara is a graphic novel coming out for kids and teens that is set to launch sometime later this year.Starring a wonderfully diverse cast, the graphic novel series is meant to follow the “Mercury Six” as they solve a mystery concerning their missing parents.
From Bryan Q. Miller;
The MERCURY SIX, consisting of Eldest BEN and his hot-tempered sister, ALYSSA; SMACK, the hustler; CODY and TRIN, the learned, proper set of twins; and little DANIELLA, orphaned by a SPACE PIRATE assault, then taken in as one of Mercury’s own.are sent on a standard supply run, but return to find Mercury adrift, and their respective parents missing. The only clue as to what happened – a warning recorded by their trusty TEACHBOT:
“DON’T COME LOOKING FOR US.”
Wet your appetite? Sound sorta familiar? Well I ran an announcement for the then unfunded project back in January. I think this type of media is exactly what I personally am looking for and think we need more of for children, teens and adults alike. It is sophisticated and yet accessible. Bryan Q Miller get’s it;
Again from Bryan Q Miller:
The goal is to create a piece of Graphic fiction that can be enjoyed by both children AND adults, while pandering to neither – a line that is rarely ridden in the current climate.
That said, while trying to make this as all-ages as possible, there is still some danger and space violence (explosions, blasters, etc.) present that may be uncomfortable for a reader younger than age 7. “Earthward” definitely wanders into the “PG”-range of the media spectrum.
The secondary goal, of course, is to have this be the first in a yearly series of adventures for the Mercury Six.
This is EXACTLY the philosophy I am espousing. There is a place for gratuitous violence and adult, grown-up stories. But I feel there really is a need for this at the moment as well. Strong emphasis on family , adventure, and a generality that is neither dumb nor pandering. Everyone should look into this when I believe it becomes available sometime in September.A second comic I feel is amazing, and is pretty much the antithesis to all the complaints I have for the Disney Princess line. This so called antithesis? Princeless by Jeremy Whitley.
That’s Princess Adrienne. She’s, well, amazing:
A little blurb.
Princeless is the story of Princess Adrienne, one princess who’s tired of waiting to be rescued. Join Adrienne and her guardian dragon, Sparky, as they begin their own quest in an all-ages action adventure designed specifically for those who are tired of waiting to be rescued… and who are ready to save themselves.
Starring a heroine of color, for that fact alone Princelsss is enough in a world where characters of color in Medevial and Rennaisance-society styled fantasy genre are often given the cold shoulder by writers when that just shouldn’t be. Additionally the writing is top notch, extremely genre savy, critical and almost fourth wall breaking in its satire and criticisms. It’s also extremely conscious of race and representation
While the spunky and brash and self-saving Adrienne is the lead; she is also only one of many sisters who well, are also princesses. Each sister is different and will be featured. The different types of girls and their different interests and personalities are amazing. Because it shows the different types of girl you can be if you want or that it’s okay to. Notably whilst Adrienne is tomboyish her younger sister is your more traditional hyper-feminine Snow White style princess. The comic argues it can fine to be either if you choose. The variety of characters, the genre savvy nature and overall critical eye to comics, it’s own genre, sexism and race issues are all things going for it but above all; it’s also fun.
What about you readers? What do you think being published right now is a must read for those who want good comics that anyone can read? The only thing DC Comics is putting out right now worth buying is Li’l Gotham which is more or less spectacular if only going off of Dustin Nguyen’s wonderful watercolor artwork.
Any suggestions? Put them in the comments!
Max Eber
Staff Writer/The Doctor
max@ihogeek.com
Twitter: @maxlikescomics
Well, it’s January First again. I am here to help you ring in the new year on your favorite geeky blog!
But I have to be honest with you, I’ve spent most of the last week sleeping, playing with my Christmas loot, and thinking about Flash Gordon. So this week, I just want to talk to you all about books, and the stuff I want to read in 2013.
1. The Kingkiller Chronicles by Patrick Rothfuss I read the first book in this series and I’m about to dive into the second. I am not kidding when I say that Rothfuss’ writing is so good it will make you cry. Not the events of the book, mind you; the writing itself is SO GOOD you will WEEP. The series will be a trilogy when it’s complete. It follows the life story of Kvothe, a man who has become so legendary that it is nearly impossible to separate fact from fiction without talking directly to the man himself. His life story takes him three full days to tell to a man named Chronicler, who has arrived a Kvothe’s Tavern to transcribe Kvothe’s life story. Kvothe started his life as a gypsy child; his parents were lovely people, his mentor believed in him and magical skills came easy. But his luck doesn’t last long, and the real excitement lies within how the facts of Kvothe’s life have since become EPICALLY exaggerated–or perhaps discovering that they’re no exaggeration at all.
Additionally, Rothfuss’ blog and facebook page are, put simply, amazing.
2. The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit… again. I like rereading books before the movie comes out, and if all goes according to plan, by this time next year we’ll all be fawning over The Desolation of Smaug. Before that happens, however, I’m traveling back to Middle Earth.
3. Game of Thrones; which is the only exception to my “books before movies and/or television shows” rule. I finished watching season one of the HBO series by the same name as the first title in the Song of Ice and Fire series, and even though it’s not my FAVORITE thing in the universe… bitches won’t get off my back about reading the book *COUGHCOUGHleiaandkaitlynCOUGHCOUGH* so I’m going to give it a try.
4. Catching Fire and Mockingjay, again because the movies are coming out. I am not the biggest fan of The Hunger Games, either, but I feel somehow incomplete by not finishing the books.
5. Alton Brown’s Good Eats: The Early Years was one of the items in my Christmas haul. It is a cookbook that goes beyond just being a cookbook; it’s also a guide to Alton’s television show Good Eats, which looks at food from an academic standpoint. Another appropriate title for Alton’s show and books would be “The Geek’s Guide to Anything You’ve Ever Eaten”.
As I go on through the year, I’m sure I will add more books to the list, but this is the first few months worth. If you’re somewhat invested, you can follow my progress (and whether or not I make good on my …resolutions…) at goodreads.com.
What are you going to read this year?
Jen Schiller
Staff Writer
twitter.com/Jenisaur