Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Monday, February 13, 2023

Planet Word, Washington D.C.

A new museum in Washington, D.C., is Planet Word, a place dedicated to words, mostly English words (though plenty of other words from other languages sneak in, kinda like English). We visited on a recent Saturday.

Sign around the corner from the entrance

The museum bills itself as an "immersive language experience." It certainly has lots of interactive exhibits, even outside with Speaking Willow, an aluminum sculpture with little bell-shaped speakers that activate when a visitor comes within camera range. Each of the 364 speakers broadcasts a different language.  

Speaking Willow

Another outdoor sculpture is a person made out of letters. 

Many alphabets, one human

Inside, the experience starts on the third floor with a twenty-foot tall wall of words. Through an ingenious use of lights and narrative, visitors experience the various roots of the English language and have a chance to interact. The narrator asks questions and small microphones let visitors respond when the color wheel shows up on the wall.

Wall of words

Onomatopoetic words and the color wheel

A poorly-lit selfie

A better selfie

The next room has The Spoken World, with various screens representing the languages in the countries on the globe in front of it. As the speaker describes the quirks of their language (because every language has quirks), occasional images show up on the globe.

German information from native Nina

Wolof information from native Mariame

The main exhibit on the second floor is the Library, with many interactive signs, a lot of books to read, and a secret room. The ceiling is mirrored to make it look twice as big!

The library dark and quiet

A saying on the wall

That book case is sticking out!

The Word Worlds room has electronic paint brushes that paint with words like hibernal, tempestuous, crepuscular, and other creative adjectives. "Painting" the walls with the brushes will change the images to match the terms, creating a winter scene or a storm or whatever. My kids had a lot of fun changing the images, especially with the surreal paint that changed airplanes into dragons and houses into castles.

An ever changing landscape

Joking Around is a humor gallery that has a "guess the phrase" game along with joke challenge tables where two visitors face off in trying to make each other laugh.

Fruit punch

Horsing around

In the dog house

Two on one does not seem fair

A nearby room features karaoke and explains how lyricists come up with great songs.

No video, sorry!

The first floor has the obligatory gift shop and an exhibit on how advertisers use language to catch people's attention. Visitors can even make their own ads!

Using real ads

My son "Visitor" made this ad

In the Words Matter room, visitors can see various words that people find special for various reasons. Visitors are invited to add words on other walls.

Love those foreign words!

The building originally was the Franklin School, one of the early public schools built in the District of Columbia. It opened its doors in 1869. An exhibit shows the layout back then, along with pictures of the students.

Once an education building, always an education building!

The building also has a small free library out front.

Take a book, leave a book!

The other bit of trivia about the building is how the first wireless telephone call was made from the top floor, in 1880! Alexander Graham Bell was the inventor of the photophone before he invented the telephone. So the phone used light to send the message.

Historic plaque

Tuesday, January 1, 2019

2018 Book Review and 2019 Plans

As is my habit, I pick out some books each year to read so I can keep whittling down my shelf of shame. It's fun to have a challenge and I try not to pick too many books or else I can't do any spontaneous reading. Here's the list of my planned books from last year, with some bolded notes for unfinished books:

Fiction
  • The Christus Experiment by Rod Bennett--a time travel novel where the travelers plan to visit and possibly kidnap Jesus Christ! Reviewed here.
  • The Bradbury Chronicles edited by William F. Nolan and Martin H. Greenberg--an anthology of stories written by sci fi and fantasy writers inspired by and in honor of Ray Bradbury. Reviewed here.
  • After the King edited by Martin H. Greenberg--an anthology of stories written by sci fi and fantasy writers inspired by and in honor of J. R. R. Tolkien. Reviewed here.
  • Kristin Lavransdatter by Sigrid Undset--I found this classic at the church rummage sale for a dollar. I've been meaning to read it for a while, and at 1100+ pages I will be reading it for a while.  I only started this book in December, so no review but it will go on the new list!
Science
  • Seven Ideas that Shook the Universe by Nathan Spielberg and Bryon D. Anderson--this has been sitting on the shelf for a while. Reviewed here.
  • Christianity and Extraterrestrials? by Marie I. George--another long resident of the bookshelf that bridges nicely into the next category. Reviewed here.
Faith
  • Spiritual Excellence: How to Make Progress in Prayer and Love by Alban Goodier, S.J.--it's got to be helpful, right? Reviewed here
  • Essays of a Catholic by Hilaire Belloc--Belloc was back in the day with Chesterton, so this should be really good. Reviewed here.
  • A History of the Church in 100 Objects by Mike Aquilina and Grace Aquilina--highly recommended by Happy Catholic.  Reviewed here.
  • Crossing the Goal: A Saint Goes Marching On by Danny Amramowicz--football and faith? Reviewed here.
  • Saint Joseph: Shadow of the Father by Andrew Doze--my patron saint, so this is obvious. Reviewed here.
  • The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra by Msgr. Francis J. Weber--Reviewed here and tied to the next book...
  • Saint Junipero Serra's Camino by Stephen J. Binz--also recommended by Happy Catholic! Reviewed here.
Board Games
  • Dice Games Properly Explained by Reiner Knizia--Knizia has a doctorate in mathematics and has published over thirty board games. Reviewed here.
  • GameTek by Geoff Englestein--From the Dice Tower podcast, a bunch of essays on gaming with a scientific bent. Reviewed here.
 Other Stuff
  • Your Child's Writing Life: How to Inspire Confidence, Creativity, and Skill at Every Age by Pam Allyn--my kids are getting interested in writing, so this should be good. Reviewed here.
  • The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind by William Kamkwamba and Bryan Mealer. Reviewed here.
  • News from Tartary by Peter Fleming--brother of Ian Fleming (creator of James Bond) who had a life just like his brother's superspy hero. Whoops, didn't get to this one. Maybe in a future year.
  • Cabinet of Curiosities: My Notebooks, Collections, and Other Obsessions by Guillermo del Toro and Marc Scott Zicree--a lot of the chapters are based on movies, so I will probably read a chapter and watch a movie. Reviewed here.
  • Seven Pillars of Wisdom by T. E. Lawrence--might as well get credit for it! Reviewed here.
Only two misses isn't too bad, especially considering a bunch of other books I read this year.

I also read graphic novels and manga (basically, graphic novels from Japan). Here's last year's graphic novel challenge list:
  1. Fairy Tail Volume 17--reviewed here.
  2. Superman: Brainiac--reviewed here.
  3. Run for It--reviewed here
  4. Fairy Tail Volume 18--reviewed here.
  5. Asterix and the Golden Sickle--reviewed here.
  6. The Walking Dead Vol. 28--reviewed here.
  7. Asterix at the Olympic Games--reviewed here.
  8. Fairy Tail Volume 19--reviewed here
  9. Black Panther Prelude--reviewed here.
  10. Hellboy: Into the Silent Sea--reviewed here.
  11. Runaways Volume 2--reviewed here.
  12. Fairy Tail Volume 20--reviewed here.
  13. Castle in the Stars--reviewed here.
  14. Black Panther: The Complete Collection Vol. 1--reviewed here.
  15. Hellboy and the B.P.R.D. 1954--reviewed here.
  16. Captain America: Winter Soldier--reviewed here.
  17. Asterix and the Chieftain's Shield--reviewed here.
  18. The Infinity Gauntlet--reviewed here.
  19. She-Hulk Volume 1--reviewed here.
  20. Attack on Titan Volume 1--reviewed here.
  21. The Walking Dead Volume 29--reviewed here
  22. Wires and Nerve Volume 2--reviewed here.
  23. Black Hammer Volume 1--reviewed here.
  24. Full Metal Alchemist Volume 1--reviewed here.
  25. Batman: His Greatest Adventures--reviewed here.
  26. Rise of the Black Flame--reviewed here.
  27. Fullmetal Alchemist Volume 2--reviewed here.
  28. Monet: Itinerant of Light--reviewed here
  29. Hellboy in Hell Volume 1--reviewed here.
  30. Asterix the Gaul--reviewed here
  31. Dept. H Volume 1--reviewed here
  32. Hellboy in Hell Volume 2--reviewed here.
  33. Doctor Radar--reviewed here.
  34. Trinity--reviewed here.
  35. Ant-Man: Astonishing Origins--reviewed here.
  36. Fullmetal Alchemist Volume 3--reviewed here.
  37. Hellboy Omnibus Volume 1--reviewed here.
  38. The Comic Book Story of Baseball--reviewed here.
  39. Spill Zone Volume 2-reviewed here.
  40. Fullmetal Alchemist Volume 4--reviewed here.
  41. Asterix and Obelix's Birthday--reviewed here.
  42. Ant-Man/Giant Mant Growing Pains--reviewed here.
  43. DC Comics Bombshells Volume 1--reviewed here.
  44. Delilah Dirk and the Pillars of Hercules--reviewed here.
  45. Fullmetal Alchemist Volume 5--reviewed here.
  46. Hellboy and the B.P.R.D. 1955--reviewed here.
  47. The Mighty Captain Marvel Volume 3--reviewed here.
  48. Delilah Dirk and the Turkish Lieutenant--reviewed here.
  49. Castle in the Stars Book Two--reviewed here
  50. Wolverine--reviewed here.
  51. Fullmetal Alchemist Volume 6--reviewed here.
  52. Delilah Dirk and the King's Shilling--reviewed here.
  53. Amulet Book Eight--reviewed here.
  54. Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales: Lafayette!--reviewed here.
  55. My Hero Academia Volume 1--review here.
  56. The Walking Dead Volume 30--review here.
  57. Fullmetal Alchemist Volume 7--reviewed here.
  58. Asterix and the Secret Weapon--reviewed here.
  59. Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales: Raid of No Return--reviewed here.

Here's next year's plans:

Fiction
  • Kristin Lavransdatter by Sigrid Undset--Something to finish up from last year.
  • The Fall of Gondolin by J. R. R. Tolkien--Another "edited together by his son" work, it should be interesting.
  • The History of Rasselas Prince of Abyssinia by Samuel Johnson--Sitting on the shelf of shame for too long.
  • The Adventures of Robin Hood by Roger Lancelyn Green--This is a leftover from our time in England.
  • English Fairy Tales and Legends by Rosalind Kerven--More leftovers that should be fun.

History
  • The Medieval Myths by Norma Lorre Goodrich--One of the included myths is Beowulf, which I am interested in revisiting.
  • Visiting the Past by Gillian Hovell--A book for amateur archeologists!
  • The Anglo-Saxon World by Kevin Crossley-Holland--Yes, yet more leftovers from England.
  • Ellington at the White House 1969 by Edward Allan Faine--Jazz and politics, should they mix? In 1969 the occupant of the White House was...Richard Nixon! Nixon and Ellington sound like a weird combination. 

Theology
  • Showings by Julian of Norwich--After reading Medieval Women Mystics, I added this to my wish list and got a copy!
  • Humility Rules by J. Augustine Wetta--Bragging about humility has got to be interesting, right?
  • Means to Message by Stanley Jaki--Scientist, priest, and theologian Jaki wrote a bunch of essays on truth.
  • St. Thomas Aquinas by Ralph McInerny--Most famous for the Father Dowling Mysteries, McInerny was an astute medieval philosopher, so this is more theology than biography, I suspect.
  • The Right to be Wrong by Kevin Hasson--Another paradoxical title!
  • Psychology and Religion by Carl Jung--Maybe not theology, but I didn't want to leave Jung hanging all by himself.

Fun Stuff
  • The Geek Dad Book for Aspiring Mad Scientists by Ken Denmead
  • The Bluffer's Guide to Beer by Jonathan Goodall

I am planning on the graphic novels challenge again. Attack on Titan is much better as a TV show than a manga, so I switched to My Hero Academia and Fullmetal Alchemist, both of which are extremely popular (and thus readily available from the local library!). I'll probably re-read some Hellboy in anticipation of the movie.

Tuesday, November 22, 2016

Crazy (and Not So Crazy) Quotes

Here's a bunch of quotes that have been waiting to be published. I thought I would get a bunch more but I'm never near the computer when I read a book and find a quote I like.

From "Walk Around Historic Harrogate" by Malcolm Neesam: "Just round the corner from Harrogate theatre, the unusually named BEULAH STREET (once a hotbed of rampant Methodism)..." Neesam also quotes Charles Dickens who visited Harrogate in 1858 and described it as "The queerest place, with the strangest people, leading the oddest lives..."

From the health and hygiene section of The Time Traveller's Guide to Medieval England by Ian Mortimer: "So, as long as you can get enough to eat, and can avoid all the various lethal infections, the dangers of childbirth, lead poisoning and the extreme violence, you should live a long time. All you have to worry about are the doctors." [p. 209]

From Adler's Philosophical Dictionary by Mortimer Adler: "We cannot understand what it means to say that man is a rational animal without, at the same time, recognizing that a rational animal is a freak of nature. The nature of a rational animal is a mixture of incompatible elements." [p. 74]

From the Tippecanoe Battlefield Museum: "The greatest tragedies in history occur not when right confronts wrong but when two rights confront each other." Henry Kissinger

From Medieval Women Mystics, quoting Julian of Norwich: "I am not good because of this vision, but only if I love God more because of it. And to the extent that you love God more than I do, you are that much better than I am. I am not saying this to those who are wise, for they know it well enough. But I am saying it to you who are simple, to give you peace and comfort, for we are in fact all one in love. And truly it was not shown to me that God loves me more than the least soul that is in a state of grace. I am sure that there are many who never had any revelations or visions outside the ordinary teaching of Holy Church and yet who love God more than I do. [p. 132]

Thursday, April 14, 2016

New Toddler Skills

Our toddler is expanding his skill set at an alarmingly rapid pace! Three new levels have been acquired in a short month's time.

The toddler section of the library has a room with a bunch of fun toys. My son took the blocks and started to stack them!

Can he add the sixth block?

Making the ultimate tower of mega-power

A different stack collapses

Being cute

Previously, he only knocked down block towers. We are excited to see him building his own towers.

Also at the library, he enjoys the simple pleasure of sitting and reading a book.

A book he can identify with

All done!

He doesn't limit his reading to the library.

At home, at the table

He's an expert at turning pages and holding the book right-side-up. He even babbles along as he flips pages, with occasional real words coming out of his mouth.

The most infamous skill he has acquired is best shown in a video...



At least he hasn't figured out how to walk through, though that is surely to come shortly!

Saturday, January 2, 2016

Book Plans 2016 and Review of 2015

Since previous years' book challenges have provided me with lots of motivation to make progress in the ever-growing stack of unread books, I'm making plans for the new year. Here's the list of what I'd like to get read in 2016, divided semi-thematically. Some books could easily slip into other categories.

Women's studies
  • The Concept of Woman: The Aristotelian Revolution 750 B.C. - A.D. 1250 by Sister Prudence Allen
  • The Flight from Woman by Karl Stern
  • The Wisdom of Hildegard of Bingen compiled by Fiona Bowie
  • Medieval Women Mystics edited by Elizabeth Ruth Obbard
  • Heloise and Abelard by Etienne Gilson
  • Galileo's Daughter by Dava Sobel
English-themed non-fiction
  • English Catholic Heroines edited by Joanna Bogle
  • Newton and the Counterfeiters by Thomas Levenson
  • History of the Kings of Britain by Geoffrey of Monmouth 
  • Richard III by David Baldwin
  • Thomas More: A Portrait of Courage by Gerard B. Wegmer
  • The Time Traveller's Guide to Medieval England by Ian Mortimer

Philosophy/theology
  • Art and Beauty in the Middle Ages by Umberto Eco
  • The Art of Praying by Romano Guardini
  • The Journey of the Mind to God by Bonaventure
  • A Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge by George Berkeley
  • A Letter Concerning Toleration by John Locke
  • On the Advantage and Disadvantage of History for Life by Friedrich Nietzsche
Fiction
  • Two from Michael O'Brien's end time series--I didn't get to these last year, so I will try again.
  • Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter M. Miller, Jr.--Why haven't I read this classic yet?
  • The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrun by J. R. R. Tolkien--I've always been interested in the Ring Cycle so I hope this fills in some holes.
  • The Woodcutter by Kate Danley--a birthday present!
  • Chasing the Phoenix by Michael Swanwick--a Christmas present!
I'm signing up for the 2016 Graphic Novels and Manga Challenge for another 52 reviews. I'll probably start the Fables series or Morning Glories.

http://graphicnovelschallenge.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/2016-9th-annual-graphic-novelmanga.html

 Here's the results from last year:

Books of fiction:
  • Two from Michael O'Brien's end time series--I'm not sure which ones but I will list them.--Epic fail here, maybe in 2016.
  • Anansi Boys by Neil Gaiman. Reviewed here! Lots of fun.
  • Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson. Reviewed here! Lots of pretension.
  • In this House of Brede by Rumer Godden (which I started in 2014 over Christmas, so this will be the first to finish I'm sure--there's a discussion on A Good Story is Hard to Find podcast). Reviewed here! A great work, probably top ten or top twenty books of all time.
  • Everything That Rises Must Converge by Flannery O'Connor (which will be discussed by A Good Story is Hard to Find in early January). Reviewed here! Can't go wrong with Flannery O'Connor!
  • The Mistborn Trilogy by Brandon Sanderson. The trilogy is well-crafted and quite enjoyable.
    • Mistborn. Reviewed here!
    • Well of Ascension. Reviewed here!
    • Hero of Ages. Reviewed here!
  • City Beyond Time by John C. Wright--a Christmas present! Reviewed here!
  • Hell House by Richard Matheson--a birthday present! Reviewed here!

Books on theology/religion:

Books on philosophy and science:
  • The Meaning of Relativity by Albert Einstein--I'm dreading this a bit because it'll be tough and it may wind up a "read and donate" book.--I started this once and got bogged down in unfamiliar scientific terminology. I may try this again in a few years when I've forgotten how difficult it was.
  • Unpopular Essays by Bertrand Russell--also close to the "read and donate" pile. Reviewed here! And donated to a book drop in Indiana.
  • If Aristotle's Kid Had an Ipod by Connor Gallagher--intriguing idea for sure. Reviewed here! Well worth the read.
  • Two books by Mortimer Adler--Like O'Brien above, I've had these books for a while and been meaning to get them. Not sure which ones I will choose, probably the shortest ones!
    • Aristotle for Everybody. Reviewed here. An excellent book!
    • Adler's Philosophical Dictionary. Reviewed here. Ditto!
  • Two books by Josef Pieper--ditto above. 
    • Divine Madness. Reviewed here.
    • Only the Lover Sings. Reviewed here.
Book on writing:
Professional Blogging for Dummies--Leftover from last year, I keep meaning to up my game in blogging. Maybe without all the European wandering I can get caught up!--Still not caught up and getting dangerously close to being outdated. I should skim it this year but no guarantees.

So I didn't get to Michael O'Brien, Einstein, and the professional blogging book. Not bad for an ambitious list.

My other reading challenge was the Eighth Annual Graphic Novels and Manga Challenge 2015. I finished the Silver Age challenge, which is 52 books in a year, with room to spare. Here's my list:

  1. Wolverine: Old Man Logan--reviewed here.
  2. Saga Volume 2--reviewed here.
  3. Saga Volume 3--reviewed here.
  4. Avatar: The Last Airbender: The Promise - Part One--reviewed here.
  5. Avatar: The Last Airbender: The Promise - Part Two--reviewed here.
  6. Avatar: The Last Airbender: The Promise - Part Three--reviewed here
  7. Serenity Volume 4: Leaves on the Wind--reviewed here
  8. The Last Airbender Prequel: Zuko's Story--reviewed here.
  9. Messiah: Origin--reviewed here
  10. Cartoon Guide to Economics: Vol. 1--reviewed here
  11. The Book of Genesis Illustrated--reviewed here.
  12. Anne Frank--reviewed here
  13. Megillat Esther--reviewed here
  14. Avatar: The Last Airbender: The Search - Part One--reviewed here.
  15. Avatar: The Last Airbender: The Search - Part Two--reviewed here.  
  16. Avatar: The Last Airbender: The Search - Part Three--reviewed here
  17. Dr. Horrible and Other Horrible Stories--reviewed here
  18. Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales: One Dead Spy--reviewed here
  19. Avatar: The Last Airbender: The Rift - Part One--reviewed here.
  20. Free Comic Book Day issues--reviewed here!
  21. Avatar: The Last Airbender: The Rift - Part Two--reviewed here.
  22. Avatar: The Last Airbender: The Rift - Part Three--reviewed here.
  23. The Walking Dead TP 22--reviewed here.
  24. Green Lantern New 52 Volume 4--reviewed here.
  25. Itty Bitty Hellboy--reviewed here.
  26. Saga Volume 4--reviewed here.
  27. Usagi Yojimbo: Yokai--reviewed here.
  28. Hellboy and the B.P.R.D. 1952--reviewed here.
  29. Contract with God Trilogy--reviewed here.
  30. Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales: Donner Dinner Party--reviewed here.
  31. Baltimore: Passing Stranger and Other Stories--reviewed here.
  32. Avengers: Rage of Ultron--reviewed here.
  33. The Walking Dead TP 23--reviewed here.
  34. The Best of The Spirit--reviewed here.
  35. Twilight Zone: Deaths-Head Revisited--reviewed here.
  36. Justice League: Trinity War--reviewed here
  37. Fray--reviewed here.
  38. Batman '66 Vol. 1--reviewed here.
  39. Pride of Baghdad--reviewed here.
  40. Animal Crackers--reviewed here
  41. The Black Island--reviewed here.
  42. Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales: Big Bad Ironclad!--reviewed here.
  43. The Sword Vol. 1--reviewed here.
  44. The Sword Vol. 2--reviewed here.
  45. The Sword Vol. 3--reviewed here.
  46. The Sword Vol. 4--reviewed here.
  47. Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales: Treaties, Trenches, Mud, and Blood--reviewed here.
  48. Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales: The Underground Abductor--reviewed here.
  49. Batman: The Long Halloween--reviewed here.
  50. Avatar: Smoke and Shadow Part One--reviewed here.
  51. The Walking Dead TP 24--reviewed here.
  52. Secret Coders Vol. 1--reviewed here.
  53. Batman: Hush--reviewed here.
  54. Frankenstein Underground--reviewed here.
  55. The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl--reviewed here.

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Random Bits from the Summer

Here's a bunch of photos from the summer that didn't make their own blog.

The summer had plenty of outdoor and indoor activities that the children enjoyed.

Back yard swinging combined with a kiddie pool

Making a train track with an elevated line

Eating his first muffin!

Block house happiness

Ready to knock down the block house

Swag from the library's summer reading program

Our Minnesota trip included some fun photo opportunities.

Baby's first glass bottle

My wife and I spent the night in St. Paul before my flight to Gen Con. We went for a walk and dinner and saw some fun buildings along the way.

Cool houses in St. Paul

Apartments and businesses

A church that wasn't open

Moscow on the Hill is a Russian restaurant and vodka bar where we didn't go to dinner. They have a cool book exchange box just outside.

Book deposit

In Indianapolis, I finished reading Unpopular Essays. I decided I didn't want to keep it. Happily, my hotel's parking lot had a perfect disposal solution:

Easy to follow instructions

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Seven Continents Book Challenge

Julie at Happy Catholic is how I read about this internet meme that I am actually interested in (especially with the British spellings)!


1. What is your favourite book set in Europe? Who is your favourite European author?
The Brothers Karamazov 
J.R.R. Tolkien

2. What is your favourite book set in North America? Who is your favourite North American author?
Fahrenheit 451

Ray Bradbury

3. What is your favourite book set in South America? Who is your favourite South American author?
Starship Troopers starts in Brazil, right?
I really liked the Pablo Naruda character in the Italian film Il Postino He was a real author. He was a communist, which I have no sympathy for, but that doesn't make him a bad poet. His poetry is in a foreign language, so I probably won't ever read anything by him. So this answer probably doesn't count, but I can't think of any other authors from South America.

4. What is your favourite book set in Asia? Who is your favourite Asian author?
Set All Afire by Louis de Wohl is set in Asia mostly.

No authors that I know of.

5. What is your favourite book set in Australasia? Who is your favourite antipodean author?
Graeme Simsion's The Rosie Project starts there, doesn't it? He's also a New Zealander, so he does double duty! 

6. Have you ever read, or do you know of, any books written by authors in Antarctica/ the Arctic?
Who Goes There? by John Campbell is an awesome story set in the Arctic and was the basis for the two movie versions of The Thing, both of which are excellent films.
Brother Guy Consolmagno lived in the Antartica for a while and I've read a book by him that partially covers his time there, though I don't think he wrote it while he was there.

7. Who are your favourite African authors and books set in Africa?
King Solomon's Mines by H. Rider Haggard
St. Augustine was born in Africa, right?

This challenge makes me realize that I don't really pay attention to who wrote a book unless it is an outstanding book. Even then, I only try to remember the author's name, I don't read up on the person's history. Except for writing this post!

Thursday, January 1, 2015

2015 Personal Reading Challenge (and 2014 Review)

Moving back to America over the summer, we were reunited with the books that were in storage for three years. Twelve boxes' worth of books. We thought about whether we were ever going to re-read (or in some cases read for the first time) the massive collection that had waited for us. A lot of books were academic books. My wife has a computer science degree, I have one in philosophy. Hers are from ten years ago so they are a bit dated. Mine are a lot of esoteric topics that would have been useful if I had stayed in academia but are shelf fillers otherwise. So we decided to sort through and make three groups: (1) ones we want to keep, (2) ones we want to get rid of, and (3) ones we want to read (or re-read) to see if we want to keep them. The "read and keep or donate" shelf looks like this:

"Read before donating" shelf

Oh, and this shelf...

More books on the chopping block

And this shelf...

We ran out of book ends!

If I had a full time job reading books I might possibly read them all in one year, but at my current rate, that's clearly impossible. Here's my ambitions for this year:

Books of fiction:

Books on theology/religion:

Books on philosophy and science:
  • The Meaning of Relativity by Albert Einstein--I'm dreading this a bit because it'll be tough and it may wind up a "read and donate" book.
  • Unpopular Essays by Bertrand Russell--also close to the "read and donate" piile.
  • If Aristotle's Kid Had an Ipod by Connor Gallagher--intriguing idea for sure.
  • Two books by Mortimer Adler--Like O'Brien above, I've had these books for a while and been meaning to get them. Not sure which ones I will choose, probably the shortest ones!
  • Two books by Josef Pieper--ditto above.

Books on writing:
Professional Blogging for Dummies--Leftover from last year, I keep meaning to up my game in blogging. Maybe without all the European wandering I can get caught up!

So, there's no zombie books on my horizon but I'm sure that will change.

My other reading challenge is the Eighth Annual Graphic Novels and Manga Challenge 2015. I'm signing up the for the Silver Age challenge, which is 52 books in a year. Last year a read 42, so I think I can make it. I already have some planned (continuing Saga, re-reading Y: The Last Man, trying out Avatar: The Last Airbender graphic novels).

Here's what I planned and accomplished in 2014 (I did read more books than listed below). I'm glad that the blogging book is the only leftover!

Zombie Lit
English Lit
Christian Lit
Writing Lit (or is that redundant?)
Graphic Novels
  1. Hellboy in Hell #5, Dark Horse Presents #31 (in which Hellboy gets married!), Hellboy Christmas Special--reviewed here
  2. The Stuff of Legend Omnibus One--reviewed here!
  3. Time Travellers Hidden Rome--reviewed here!
  4. Hellboy: The Midnight Circus--reviewed here!
  5. Julius Caesar: The Life of a Roman General--reviewed here!
  6. B.P.R.D. 1948--reviewed here!
  7. Fanboys vs. Zombies Vol. 1--reviewed here!
  8. Fanboys vs. Zombies Vol. 2--reviewed here!
  9. The Stuff of Legend Omnibus Two--reviewed here!
  10. Dark Horse Presents #32 (Hellboy unweds), Twilight Zone #1 and #2--reviewed here!
  11. The Book of Revelation--reviewed here!
  12. Bone Vol. 1--reviewed here!
  13. Bone: Rose--reviewed here!
  14. Ray Bradbury Chronicles Vol. 2--reviewed here!
  15. Asterix and the Normans--reviewed here!
  16. Serenity Vol. 1--reviewed here
  17. Asterix and the Great Crossing--reviewed here
  18. B.P.R.D. Vampires--reviewed here
  19. Asterix and the Soothsayer--reviewed here
  20. Witchfinder Vol. 2--reviewed here
  21. Locke & Key Vol. 5--reviewed here
  22. The Walking Dead Vol. 19--reviewed here
  23. Locke & Key Vol. 6--reviewed here
  24. The Walking Dead Vol. 20--reviewed here
  25. Asterix and the Big Fight--reviewed here
  26. The Walking Dead Vol. 21--reviewed here
  27. Bone Vol. 2--reviewed here
  28. Bone Vol. 3--reviewed here
  29. Marvel Zombies vs. Army of Darkness--reviewed here!
  30. Bone Tall Tales--reviewed here
  31. Twilight Zone The Monsters Are Due on Mulberry Street--reviewed here
  32. Bone Vol. 4--reviewed here
  33. Bone Vol. 5--reviewed here!
  34. Zombillenium 1--reviewed here
  35. Bone Vol. 6--reviewed here!
  36. Bone Vol. 7--reviewed here!
  37. Zombillenium 2--reviewed here!
  38. Bone Vol. 8--reviewed here!
  39. Bone Vol. 9--reviewed here
  40. Bone Handbook--reviewed here
  41. X-Men: Days of Future Past--reviewed here
  42. Saga Vol. 1--reviewed here!