bibliogrrrl

Review: Coraline by Neil Gaiman

June 20, 2011

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Format: Paperback Published on: September 1st 2006 Published by: Harper Perennial Pages: 162 ISBN: 0061139378 Goodreads When Coraline moves into a new flat with her parents, she finds a locked door that leads to nowhere. That is, until she discovers that the door actually leads to a flat very much like her own in…

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Books Read in 2010

June 19, 2011

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Books Read in 2010

Here’s what I read in 2010. 1. A Great and Terrible Beauty by Libba Bray 2. I Was a Teenage Fairy by Francesca Lia Block 3. City of Bones by Cassandra Clare 4. Go Ask Alice by Anonymous 5. The Truth About Forever by Sarah Dessen 6. Rumble Fish by S.E. Hinton 7. Shelf…

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Books Read in 2009

June 18, 2011

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Books Read in 2009

Some backstory: I’ve started keeping a list of the books I read over the course of the year in 2009. Around the same time, I started writing down thoughts of some of the books I’ve read in a notebook. I thought I’d start off by posting most of these “reviews” here on bibliogrrrl. It…

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Review: Well Behaved Women Seldom Make History by Laurel Thatcher Ulrich

June 17, 2011

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Format: Paperback Published on: September 23rd 2008 Published by: Vintage Pages: 320 ISBN: 1400075270 Goodreads Like many people, I was familiar with the saying “well-behaved women seldom make history” but knew nothing about the author until I got to college. As part of a women’s history class, I read Laurel Thatcher Ulrich’s books A…

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Booking Through Thursday: Interactive?

June 16, 2011

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Booking Through Thursday is a weekly meme that asks a book related question. Participants post the answer on their blog and then comment on the entry. This week’s question: With the advent (and growing popularity) of eBooks, I’m seeing more and more articles about how much “better” they can be, because they have the…

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Actually, @wsj, #YAsaves

June 16, 2011

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Actually, @wsj, #YAsaves

The Wall Street Journal posted an article by Meghan Cox Gurdon attacking young adult literature caused a shit storm of a response over the interwebs. I feel like others have already addressed the problems with the article itself better and more eloquently than I could have, so I’m just going to suggest you read…

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bibliogrrrl – Part 17

Books Read in 2009

June 18, 2011

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Books Read in 2009

Some backstory: I’ve started keeping a list of the books I read over the course of the year in 2009. Around the same time, I started writing down thoughts of some of the books I’ve read in a notebook. I thought I’d start off by posting most of these “reviews” here on bibliogrrrl. It…

Read more »

Review: Well Behaved Women Seldom Make History by Laurel Thatcher Ulrich

June 17, 2011

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Format: Paperback Published on: September 23rd 2008 Published by: Vintage Pages: 320 ISBN: 1400075270 Goodreads Like many people, I was familiar with the saying “well-behaved women seldom make history” but knew nothing about the author until I got to college. As part of a women’s history class, I read Laurel Thatcher Ulrich’s books A…

Read more »

Booking Through Thursday: Interactive?

June 16, 2011

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Booking Through Thursday is a weekly meme that asks a book related question. Participants post the answer on their blog and then comment on the entry. This week’s question: With the advent (and growing popularity) of eBooks, I’m seeing more and more articles about how much “better” they can be, because they have the…

Read more »

Actually, @wsj, #YAsaves

June 16, 2011

By

Actually, @wsj, #YAsaves

The Wall Street Journal posted an article by Meghan Cox Gurdon attacking young adult literature caused a shit storm of a response over the interwebs. I feel like others have already addressed the problems with the article itself better and more eloquently than I could have, so I’m just going to suggest you read…

Read more »

Review: This Common Secret: My Journey as an Abortion Doctor by Susan Wicklund

June 15, 2011

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Format: Paperback Published on: December 29th 2008 Published by: PublicAffairs Pages: 288 ISBN: 1586486470 Goodreads I knew or rather heard stories of some of the realities abortion providers face: shootings, arson, attacks on clinics. Because the murder of Dr. George Tiller had not yet happened when I read Susan Wicklund’s memoir, This Common Secret:…

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Let’s try this again: An Introduction to Bibliogrrrl

June 14, 2011

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As I was messing around with bibliogrrrl, I pretty much broke the site and hat to start all over again. I guess I should know better than to try any fancy PHP stuff, or at least have everything backed up first. Hello again, I’m Joss. For full disclosure, Joss is a pseudonym; it’s the…

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bibliogrrrl

What is the Best Way to Decide What to Let Kids Read?

October 18, 2011

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Yes, I’ve been talking about posting my thoughts on this subject for some time. It’s something I’ve been thinking a lot about, but seem to have a hard time articulating my thoughts. When I sat down to write my post for the first time, what came out was a very long, very disorganized mess….

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Review: The Supergirls: Fashion, Feminism, Fantasy, and the History of Comic Book Heroines by Mike Madrid

October 17, 2011

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I’ve never been a comic book reader. There’s no single reason I can give for not getting into comics as a kid. Maybe it was something a benign as them simply never capturing my attention. Maybe I bought into the idea that the mainstream comics with the male superheroes weren’t meant to be read…

Read more »

Audio, Digital and Paper, Oh My!

October 11, 2011

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There’s this web series on YouTube called InterrobangYA, where book bloggers who blog about YA literature discuss various things relating to YA. I was really interested in Danielle’s recent video about formats..i.e. audiobooks vs. eBooks vs. paper books. I’d kind of been thinking about these issues and was going to post about it anyway,…

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Notes from the Bibliosphere: Where Bibliogrrrl Goes From Here

October 9, 2011

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Notes from the Bibliosphere is a semi regular feature I do here on Bibliogrrrl. It’s usually posted on Sunday and is where I reflect on book blogging and/or share things I’m interested in from the bibliosphere. When I started Bibliogrrrl in June, I had notebooks full of what I call book reviews: my thoughts…

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Review: A Swiftly Tilting Planet by Madeleine L’Engle

October 7, 2011

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Cover: A Swiftly Turning Planet

A Swiftly Turning Planet, the third book published in Madeleine L’Engle’s Time quintet (apparently, Many Waters takes place in time between A Wind in the Door and A Swiftly Turning Planet, but wasn’t published until later) occurs about nine years after A Wind in the Door. Meg is now married to Calvin and pregnant;…

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Review: A Wind in the Door by Madeleine L’Engle

October 5, 2011

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Cover: A Wind in the Door

Set about a year after A Wrinkle in Time, A Wind In the Door follows Meg Murry and Calvin O’Keefe on a quest to save Meg’s brother, Charles Wallace. Charles Wallace has a medical condition that the medical field hasn’t yet learned how to treat. In the second novel of Madeleine L’Engle’s Time quintet,…

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bibliogrrrl

Review: A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L’Engle

October 3, 2011

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Cover: A Wrinkle in Time

Meg Murry’s story begins one dark and stormy night with a knock at the door. Meg’s father has been gone for some time and nobody knows where he has gone. It’s up to Meg, her brother Charles Wallace and their friend Calvin O’Keefe to find Mr. Murry and bring him home. With a little…

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Notes from the Bibliosphere: Bias

October 2, 2011

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Notes from the Bibliosphere is a semi regular feature I do here on Bibliogrrrl. It’s usually posted on Sunday and is where I reflect on bookblogging and/or share things I’m interested in from the bibliosphere. I’ve had an interesting week on the blog front. It was my first Banned Books Week as a book…

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Introducing…the bibliogrrrl tumblr!

Review: Cinderella Ate My Daughter: Dispatches from the Frontlines of the New Girlie-Girl Culture by Peggy Orenstein

September 30, 2011

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I was looking forward to reading Peggy Orenstein’s Cinderella Ate My Daughter: Dispatches from the Frontlines of the New Girlie-Girl Culture, despite not having a daughter myself. While reading Orenstein’s book, I tried to remember what playing was like as a kid. The Disney Princess thing wasn’t big yet. In fact, my favorite Disney…

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Banned and Challenged Books, Twilight Edition

September 29, 2011

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Back when Bibliogrrrl was just this idea that I had, I kept coming back to banned books week. “Yeah,” I thought enthusiastically, “I’ll start a book blog, do something in honor of Banned Books Week, and it’ll be awesome!” Of course, we are now in the midst of Banned Books Week and that awesome…

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Review: The Filter Bubble: What the Internet is Hiding From You by Eli Pariser

September 28, 2011

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It goes without saying that the Internet plays a big part of many of our lives. Millions of us have Facebook profiles, search Google for information, etc. Part of the appeal of the Internet, at least in the early days, was that it was supposedly a place of anonymity where anyone could go for…

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bibliogrrrl

Top Ten Tuesday: Books I’d like to Reread

September 28, 2011

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Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by The Broke and The Bookish. This is a meme I’ve been meaning to join for a while now but just haven’t. Today I finally decided to jump in…very late in the day on Tuesday. This week, we’re talking about books we’d like to reread. As…

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Review: Stiff by Mary Roach

September 26, 2011

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What happens to our remains after we die? What kinds of tests are done on bodies donated to science? I decided I wanted to be an organ donor a number of years ago. After all, I won’t have any use for my organs when I’m dead, if someone else can benefit from them, why…

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Notes from the Bibliospehre: Making Time to Read

September 25, 2011

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Those who care to look through the archives have may notice that the first post here was in June of this year. When I started the blog, I had notebooks full of handwritten book reviews. I figured I’d start by typing them up and sharing them here. Many of these reviews have appeared here,…

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Banned Books Week starts today!

Review: Winter’s Bone by Daniel Woodrell

September 23, 2011

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I’ll be honest: I hadn’t heard of Daniel Woodrell’s novel, Winter’s Bone, until the movie came out and Jennifer Lawrence got an Oscar nomination. I’m not sure I would have picked up this book if the movie hadn’t gotten so much buzz. What can I say? The movie made me curious about the book….

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Amazon and the Future of Public Libraries

September 22, 2011

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The Wall Street Journal recently reported that Amazon is hoping to create a Netflix like service for eBooks. Members would pay a flat fee and could read “borrowed” eBooks on their Kindles. I was originally going to discuss this news in my post about book piracy, but I figured that post was long enough…

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bibliogrrrl

Review: Girls to the Front: The True Story of the Riot Grrrl Revolution by Sara Marcus

September 21, 2011

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I was six years old when Bikini Kill formed in 1990, so it’s pretty safe to say that I wasn’t particularly aware of the Riot Grrrl movement when it was actually happening. I’m not even sure how I first heard of Bikini Kill, but I do remember listening to them for the first time…

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Book Piracy or That Building Called a Library

September 20, 2011

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A few months ago, I subscribed to Jackson Pearce’s Youtube Channel. Pearce falls into the category of authors whose work I’ve never read but really want to. As I was going through some of her past videos, I came across this one about book piracy: And I found myself thinking about book piracy. There…

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Review: Living Dead Girl by Elizabeth Scott

September 19, 2011

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Cover: Living Dead Girl

Trigger warning: Living Dead Girl by Elizabeth Scott deals with rape and sexual abuse as does the content of the below post. When Alice was ten, Ray took her away. Alice is now fifteen and fears that Ray will kill her; he is growing tired of her, she’s too old. After five years of…

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Review: Fit to Be Tied: Sterilization and Reproductive Rights in America, 1950-1980 by Rebecca M. Kluchin

September 14, 2011

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While I was working on Rebecca M. Kluchin’s book, Fit To Be Tied: Sterilization and Reproductive Rights in America, 1950-1980, I received a letter from a penpal in which she described the United States as a “pro-choice country” and that she was glad to live in such a country. This made me stop and…

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Review: Story of a Girl by Sara Zarr

September 12, 2011

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Deanna’s first sexual encounter was her brother’s best friend, Tommy. When her father catches them in the act, Tommy is 17 and Deanna is 13. Sara Zarr’s debut novel, Story of a Girl, deals with what Deanna considers to be a big mistake. Tommy ultimately tells everyone at school that Deanna is “easy” and…

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By the time you read this, I’ll be on vacation. I had thought I’d have some posts scheduled, but I got busy and that didn’t work out. I’ll be back sometime after labor day.

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Challenge 2012: Monthly Themes

Challenge 2012: Monthly Themes

Here’s the thing: I’ve been watching a bunch of book related YouTube channels. It’s just another way for me to waste time on the Internet. One of my favorite channels is one called The Readables. One of the things I like most about Priscilla’s channel is that she came up with the idea of doing a monthly theme. Basically, she picks a different theme each month (like “dystopian” or “banned books”) and only reads and reviews books that fit that theme over the course of the month. I really like that idea and thought I’d try a modified version here in 2012. Depending on how it goes, I might continue doing it in future years. These are the rules I hope to live by:

  1. My goal is to read at least fifty books in 2012, or roughly four books a month.
  2. At the beginning of each month, I will create an introductory post of sorts. I’ll do my best to define the theme and why I chose it. I will also include a list of books I own that fit in the theme. The list should include at least four books, but ideally I’d like to have more like six to eight books available, just in case I find myself reading a book I can’t finish for whatever reason.
  3. At least forty of the fifty books I read in 2012 have to be books already in my collection. In other words, I’m allowed to purchase no more than ten books for this challenge.
  4.  Priority is on books I haven’t yet read. Rereads are OK, as long as I haven’t talked about or reviewed them on bibliogrrrl.
  5. I must read at least four books that fit each theme. If I get done with four books and there’s still time left in the month, I’m free to read any book I want, whether it fits the theme or not.

Since I want to spend 2012 focusing on books I already own, I’ve already picked out themes for each month of 2012 with my current collection in mind. So here’s a monthly breakdown of each theme:

  • January
    • Theme: fantasy/paranormal.
  • February
    • Theme: books by authors of African descent.
  • March
    • Theme: women’s history.
  • April
    • Theme: freak shows, sideshows and circuses.
  • May
    • Theme: mental illness (including, but not limited to, depression, suicide, eating disorders, addiction).
  • June
    • Theme: dystopias.
  • July
    • Theme: books set in France, by French authors, or about French history.
  • August
    • Theme: fairytales and fairytale retellings.
  • September
    • Theme: banned and challenged books.
  • October
    • Theme: LGBTQ
  • November
    • Theme: the next book in the series.
  • December
    • Theme: free

Joss

Blog Archives

When You Read a Book You Don’t Think You’d Like

November 2, 2011

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I have a confession to make: sometimes I read books I don’t think I’ll like. I’m sure that surprises some of you. After all, life is short and there are already so many books out there and so little time with which to read them. Why waste time on something I don’t think I’d…

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Adventures with Audiobooks: Unfamiliar Fishes by Sarah Vowell

November 1, 2011

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“Adventures with audiobooks” is a series in which I explore and experiment with audiobooks. What do I like or dislike about them? What kinds of narrators work for me? What kinds of books do I prefer on audio? I hope to answer these questions and more with this series. Since I really enjoyed listening…

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Adventures with Audiobooks: Bossypants by Tina Fey

October 26, 2011

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“Adventures with audiobooks” is a series in which I explore and experiment with audiobooks. What do I like or dislike about them? What kinds of narrators work for me? What kinds of books do I prefer on audio? I hope to answer these questions and more with this series. I have a confession to…

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Review: Speak by Laurie Halse Anderson

October 24, 2011

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Cover: Speak

Trigger warning: Speak deals with rape. It’s Melinda Sordino’s freshman year of high school and it gets off to a bad start. She called the police at an end of summer party. The cops break up the party and some people get busted. So when school starts, she’s an outcast. Her former friends hate…

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Why I Read YA

October 20, 2011

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Young adult literature seems to be in a funny place right now. Rather, how adults talk about YA seems to be in a funny place right now. On the one hand, we have people like Meghan Cox Gurdon who lament how horribly dark YA is and how we need to protect children from it….

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Review: Tender Morsels by Margo Lanagan

October 19, 2011

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Tender Morsels

Trigger Warning: Tender Morsels by Margo Lanagan contains instances rape and incest. Furthermore, I don’t think it’s possible to discuss the book without mentioning those plot elements as part of the review. Margo Lanagan’s Tender Morsels is a story of healing with fairy tale influences. Liga didn’t have a good childhood by any stretch…

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What is the Best Way to Decide What to Let Kids Read?

October 18, 2011

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Yes, I’ve been talking about posting my thoughts on this subject for some time. It’s something I’ve been thinking a lot about, but seem to have a hard time articulating my thoughts. When I sat down to write my post for the first time, what came out was a very long, very disorganized mess….

Read more »

Review: The Supergirls: Fashion, Feminism, Fantasy, and the History of Comic Book Heroines by Mike Madrid

October 17, 2011

By

I’ve never been a comic book reader. There’s no single reason I can give for not getting into comics as a kid. Maybe it was something a benign as them simply never capturing my attention. Maybe I bought into the idea that the mainstream comics with the male superheroes weren’t meant to be read…

Read more »

Audio, Digital and Paper, Oh My!

October 11, 2011

By

There’s this web series on YouTube called InterrobangYA, where book bloggers who blog about YA literature discuss various things relating to YA. I was really interested in Danielle’s recent video about formats..i.e. audiobooks vs. eBooks vs. paper books. I’d kind of been thinking about these issues and was going to post about it anyway,…

Read more »

Notes from the Bibliosphere: Where Bibliogrrrl Goes From Here

October 9, 2011

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Notes from the Bibliosphere is a semi regular feature I do here on Bibliogrrrl. It’s usually posted on Sunday and is where I reflect on book blogging and/or share things I’m interested in from the bibliosphere. When I started Bibliogrrrl in June, I had notebooks full of what I call book reviews: my thoughts…

Read more »