Sunday, 28 September 2014

The To Be Read Tag

Another Swap-Bot challenge :D

How do you keep track of your TBR pile?
Good Reads is fantastic, whenever I get new books (Yule or birthday usually) I scan them into my To Read list and then I can shelve them without worrying about forgetting them, or piling them by the bed and forgetting them. I also tend to scan books I want to borrow from the library in future.

Is your TBR mostly print or ebook?Mostly print or not-yet-obtained. I have a few on my amazon wish list but I tend not to use my kindle app much.


How do you determine which book from your TBR to read next?I like taking part opinion "pick my next read" swaps as I struggle to choose otherwise, I tend to end up reading things I've already read before. I fear new reads, I don't want to like any characters only to have them die on me :p


A book that's been in your TBR the longest.Here are the ten books that have been in my goodreads queue the longest. It's a weird mix of Classics and silliness.





A book you recently added to your TBR.
The Halloween Tree by Ray Bradbury, and a whole lot of Loki.


A book in your TBR strictly because of its beautiful cover.

Eragon, I wouldn't exactly say it's a beautiful cover, but it IS an interesting cover. However after trying to watch the movie, I don't imagine I'll ever actually read it. I was tempted to say "Bound Lilies" by Nico Murray, but that's a bit cheeky since I designed the cover :D

A book in your TBR that you never plan on reading.
To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee, or Catcher in the Rye by JD Salinger, or Lord of the Flies by William Golding. They're on the list because I know I should read them, should probably have read them in school, but I really really can't be bothered. There are neither spaceships nor dragons, and I don't have time for books that lack should basic elements.

An unpublished book in your TBR that you're excited for.
I adore Terry Pratchett's books and always get the Discworld ones as soon as they come out. The next one that's due is a Tiffany Aching YA book, which I don't currently read (though I will get them for my toddler once he's old enough) so I'm not that excited about it, but there'll hopefully be another Discworld one soon.

A book in your TBR that everyone recommends to you.
Probably The Pillars of The Earth by Ken Follett, it's only on my list cos it was given to me.

Number of books in your TBR.
96


Thursday, 31 July 2014

Recipes To Blog About

This is part of a challenge from swap-bot to cook a recipe recommended by another swapper and then blog about it.

Carbonara

Lima recommended this carbonara recipe. Carbonara is something that always sounds nice but Italian restaurants in England tend to include mushrooms so I never order it.

Ingredients:
• Four egg yolks + 1 egg
• 100 g/a half cup of grated Pecorino Romano cheese
• 150g/5.5 oz of diced guanciale or a good quality smoky bacon
• 320g/12 oz of spaghetti
• Two tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil
Freshly ground black pepper

First cook your pasta as per the instructions. Keep the salt low because both the meat and the cheese are already quite salty. In a separate pan sauté the bacon in a thin layer of olive oil. Once the bacon is golden and crispy, take it off of the heat and leave it to cool for a few minutes.

In a bowl, whisk together the four egg yolks plus the whole egg until completely mixed. Add the grated cheese, mix it in well, and after add the black pepper. If the sauce seems to be too thick, you can thin it by adding the pasta water a little at a time. Here Now add the bacon which has, by this time, cooled a little. Mix everything together, and with that, the sauce is ready.

When you drain, leave the pasta a little moist -- don't get rid of all of the water. This will help to thin out the sauce so it coats all the pasta. Now, mix it together, and once the pasta's coated, serve it right away.




Thoughts
I can't watch YouTube videos so I made this entirely from the instructions and I got really worried when they didn't mention actually cooking the egg. As a child of the 80s I have a deeply ingrained fear of raw egg. I also couldn't get Pecorino Romano cheese so I ended up using mozzarella as that's what we had. I was actually quite relieved when the cheese bunched up and the egg ran out when I spooned the pasta out of the pan. I wouldn't make this again, as I try to make food that's suitable for our whole family and this really isn't suitable for a one year old.


Mint and Basil Zucchini (Courgette) Salad

Over the last few years we've started growing our own fruit and vegetables. So far the most successful vegetable has been our courgette (or zucchini) plants, we can usually get 5 strong plants in containers to produce more courgettes than we can find a way to eat. One of the recipes suggested by my swap partner Lima was Mint and Basil Zucchini Salad, I'd never thought to try them with mint before!

Ingredients:
Courgette 800 g
1 tablespoon coarse salt
Extra virgin olive oil to taste
Salt & Pepper to taste
4 basil leaves
4 mint leaves
1 clove of garlic

Wash the courgette under running water. Pat dry with a cloth and the cut off the two ends. Divide the courgette in half.

Cut it in half again in the direction of the length and then made wide slices of about 1.5 cm. Now take a large pot, fill it with water and bring to a boil. Pour the sliced ​courgette in boiling water.

Add a teaspoon of salt and simmer for 10 minutes. After ten minutes, drain the courgette with a colander and let them cool. Then transfer them to a baking dish and drizzle with a little extra virgin olive oil.

Add salt and pepper to taste and add a diced clove of garlic.

Then add the chopped mint and basil leaves. Mix everything together with a fork or a spoon and your courgette salad with mint and basil is ready to be served and eaten either warm or cold. If not serving immediately, keep it in the fridge until ready to eat it!


Thoughts
I really didn't expect the combination of basil and mint to work but it really did! I would definitely make this again but I'd probably blend everything but the courgette to get a more even coverage. Will definitely make this again.

Thursday, 24 July 2014

Ten Top Tens!

These prompts came from the Carpe Librum 1 Year & 100 Members Celebration

10 of My Favourite Authors

  • Terry Pratchett
  • Neil Gaiman
  • Anne McCaffrey
  • Mark Hodder
  • Agatha Christie
  • Philip Reeve
  • John Le Carre
  • Philip Reeve
  • Alan Moore
  • HP Lovecraft


10 of My Favourite Books

  • Jane Eyre - Charlotte Bronte
  • The Fifth Elephant - Terry Pratchett
  • American Gods - Neil Gaiman
  • Years of Rice and Salt - Kim Stanley Robinson
  • Small Gods - Terry Pratchett
  • Rebecca - Daphne Du Maurier
  • Phantom - Susan Kay
  • The White Dragon - Anne McCaffrey
  • Otherland - Tad Williams
  • Evil Under The Sun - Agatha Christie


10 First Line(s) From 10 Different Books

  • "It was a dark, blustery afternoon in spring, and the city of London was chasing a small mining town across the dried-out bed of the old North Sea." - Mortal Engines by Philip Reeve
  • "The Wind Howled. The storm crackled on the mountains. Lightening prodded the crags like an old man trying to get an elusive blackberry pip out of his teeth." - Maskerade by Terry Pratchett
  • "Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again." - Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier
  • "Mr Sherlock Holmes, who was usually very late in the mornings, save upon those not infrequent occasions when he stayed up all night, was seated at the breakfast table." - The Hound of the Baskervilles by Arthur Conan Doyle
  • "The sun rose slowly, as if it wasn't sure it was worth the effort." - The Light Fantastic by Terry Pratchett
  • "Dirk Moeller didn't know if he could fart his way into a major diplomatic incident. But he was ready to find out." - The Android's Dream by John Scalzi
  • "It was a nice day. All the days had been nice. There had been rather more than seven of them so far, and rain hadn't been invented yet. But clouds massing east of Eden suggested that the first thunderstorm was on its way, and it was going to be a big one." - Good Omens by Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett
  • "As Gregor Samsa awoke from a night of uneasy dreaming, he found himself transformed in his bed into a gigantic insect." - The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka
  • "The sky above the port was the color of television, tuned to a dead channel" - Neuromancer by William Gibson
  • "The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents." - The Call of Cthulhu by H. P. Lovecraft

10 Mini Reviews of 10 Different Books


  • Yellow Blue Tibia - Adam Roberts. A masterly cold war romance that will leave you as certain of the nature of reality as Philip K Dick's Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep.
  • Small Gods - Terry Pratchett. A clever, cynical and poignant look at why gods stop doing miracles once they have an established priesthood. As relevant today as the day it was written.
  • Color Out of Space - HP Lovecraft. Lovecraft's stories often lose their power when he describes the monster in detail or goes for the "it was too terrible to describe" line. But with Color Out of Space Lovecraft finally mastered the balancing act that is a truly scary tale.
  • Dune - Frank Herbert. One of the best ever examples of universe building and hugely influential on so much modern sci-fi. A must read for any thinking person, absolutely NOT a book that you can understand from a mere film (sorry David Lynch!).
  • Red Shirts - John Scalzi. Have you ever watched a sci-fi and wondered why no one seems to notice that it's always the same character who gets into trouble or that things always go south in the first 7 minutes of a diplomatic mission? Turns out some of them HAVE noticed, and they're pissed. Hilariously geeky look at inter-universal influences.
  • The Penultimate Truth - Philip K Dick. The first time I've ever wanted to travel back in time to punch an author. An excellent book, but not for people who like completion!
  • The War of The Flowers - Tad Williams. A modern take on the changeling concept and the true nature of Faerie. Really clever, compelling characters, great world building.
  • Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy - John Le Carre. George Smiley is no James Bond. He's the exact opposite of James Bond in fact and by the end of this spy thriller you'll love him for it!
  • Anno Dracula - Kim Newman. Infinitely more interesting than the original by Bram Stoker, this is the tall of what would have happened if Van Helsing had been less efficient. Nice gentle introduction to the world of alternate histories.
  • Stardust - Neil Gaiman, a return to the good old days when fairy tales were full of sex, violence, horror and magic. Don't accidentally read the adult version to your kids though, it isn't the movie. If you can find the original Charles Voss illustrated edition you'll cherish it forever.


10 Quotes About Reading


  • "A good book shop is just a genteel black hole that knows how to read"- Terry Pratchett
  • "There is no such thing as a moral or an immoral book. Books are well written, or badly written. That is all." - Oscar Wilde
  • "For some of us, books are as important as almost anything else on earth. What a miracle it is that out of these small, flat, rigid squares of paper unfolds world after world after world, worlds that sing to you, comfort and quiet or excite you." - Anne Lamott
  • “The more that you read, the more things you will know. The more that you learn, the more places you'll go.” - Dr Suess
  • "I was born with a reading list I'll never finish." - Maud Casey
  • "Eating and reading are two pleasures that combine admirably." - C.S. Lewis
  • “In a good bookroom you feel in some mysterious way that you are absorbing the wisdom contained in all the books through your skin, without even opening them.” - Mark Twain
  • “A good library will never be too neat, or too dusty, because somebody will always be in it, taking books off the shelves and staying up late reading them.” - Lemony Snicket
  • “Books are a uniquely portable magic.” - Stephen King
  • “If one cannot enjoy reading a book over and over again, there is no use in reading it at all.” -Oscar Wilde


10 Book Worlds You'd Want To Live In


  • The Net literary virtual reality from Tad William's Otherland Quadrilogy
  • Terry Pratchett's Discworld Universe
  • London Below from Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere
  • The Victorian Steampunk world in Philip Reeve's Larklight Trilogy
  • Frank Herbert's Dune Universe
  • Anne McCaffrey's dragon filled planet of Pern
  • I'd have loved to go to Hogwarts, but sometime in the ten years of peace BEFORE Harry got there!
  • Faerie in Tad Williams' War of the Flowers
  • The Europeless alternate history of The Years of Rice and Salt
  • Ann Rices's vampire rich New Orleans


10 Favourite Characters From 10 Different Books


  • Wednesday from American Gods
  • Lord Vetinari from The Discworld Series
  • Severus Snape from Harry Potter
  • Erik aka The Phantom Of The Opera
  • Claudia from Interview With the Vampire
  • Edward Fairfax Rochester, Jane Eyre's love interest
  • The unnamed narrator of Daphne Du Maurier's Rebecca
  • Hester Shaw the prickly heroine of Mortal Engines
  • !Xabbu one of the heroes of Otherland
  • Cadfael from Ellis Peter's medieval mysteries


10 Books I Want to Read, But Haven't Yet


  • Beowulf
  • Odd and the Frost Giants - Neil Gaiman
  • A Red Sun Also Rises - Mark Hodder
  • Happy Hour in Hell - Tad Williams
  • Swiftly -Adam Roberts
  • The Night Circus - Erin Morgenstern
  • The Curious Incident of The Dog in The Night-Time - Mark Haddon
  • The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland In a Ship of Her Own Making - Catherynne M Valente
  • Pride And Prejudice and Zombies - Seth Grahame-Smith
  • The Court of The Air - Stephen Hunt


10 Books I Read Most Recently


  • Frankenstein - Mary Shelley
  • Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell - Suzanna Clarke
  • The Gospel of Loki - Joanne A Harris
  • Red Shirts - John Scalzi
  • Where's My Shoggoth - Ian Thomas
  • The Long Earth - Terry Pratchett & Stephen Baxter
  • Fringe: The Zodiac Paradox - Christa Faust
  • The Ocean at The End of The Lane - Neil Gaiman
  • Professor Moriarty: the Hound of the D'Urbervilles - Kim Newman
  • Expedition to The Mountains of The Moon - Mark Hodder


10 Favourite Dewey Codes


  • 847
  • 730
  • 401
  • 753
  • 646
  • 521
  • 774
  • 344
  • 564
  • 935

Sunday, 29 June 2014

55 Book Related Questions

1 Favourite childhood book?
Anne McCaffrey's The White Dragon. I loved Ruth and always wanted a time travelling dragon!

2 What are you reading right now?
The Gospel of Loki by Joanne M Harris

3 Do you go to a library? If so, what do you currently have checked out there? If not, is there a reason?
Yes our local library is excellent (especially since my friend works there so the science-fi/fantasy section is always well stocked!) I currently have three books checked out- The Rise of The Nerds by Cory Doctorow, Twenty Trillion Leagues Under The Sea by Adam Roberts and Happy Hour In Hell by Tad Williams.

4 Do you collect any authors/series or certain types of books?
I have pretty much every book by Mark Hodder, Neil Gaiman (including graphic novels and German translations) and Terry Pratchett. I'm currently working on replacing my Anne McCaffrey collection with early editions, I love the art work.

5 Do you have a yearly goal on amount of books you want to finish?
No, I have too much going on in my life to be able to predict how much reading time I can get in.

6 Do you have an e-reader?
No, but I have an e-reader app on my phone. I rarely use it though.

7 Do you prefer to read one book at a time, or several at once?
I usually have at least one non-fiction, one new fiction and one re-reading fiction on the go at once.

8 Do you have a blog where you post about books? Do you follow any blogs about reading/books? Which ones?
My book and personal musings blog is here- http://phantoms-siren.blogspot.co.uk . I follow bookandbiscuit.com and I've just started reading Perpetual Pageturner too.

9 Least favourite book you read this year (so far in 2014)?
Overcoming Depression by Paul Gilbert, I'm reading it for a study and it's really hard going and upsetting.

10 Favourite book you’ve read this year (2014)?
Raising Steam by Terry Pratchett. I'm liking the progress that Ankh Morpork is making, the Patrician is my favourite character, I really want to see his plans succeed!

11 How often do you read out of your comfort zone?
At least once a year I try to read something different.

12 What is your reading comfort zone?
Quality sci-fi and fantasy, academic books and bizarre humour. I really can't be bothered with fiction writers who don't think outside boring reality.

13 Do you read for enjoyment or to gain knowledge?
Both. I love to discover new things.

14 Favourite place to read?
The bath lol!

15 What are your thoughts on book lending?
I love to borrow books from series that I'm not sure about buying, or I borrow books I won't re-read from libraries that pay royalties to the author.

16 What are your thoughts on pirated books?
Authors earn so little money from sales, it's not fair to steal from them.

17 What are your thoughts on "Banned" books?
Banning book seems to mostly be about pretending kids don't know words/concepts that repressed adults find uncomfortable. It just makes the books more famous and tempting (in some cases undeservedly).

18 What are barriers you have to reading more? (work, family, ect)
I have an 11month old baby and I work from home so there's very little space for leisure time.

19 How many books have you read in the last six months?
Five, I joined Carpe Librum in the hope of motivating myself to read more

20 What makes you love a book?
Characters I can really care about and anything that inspires me to do further research (for example all the classic rock 'n' roll references in Terry Pratchett's Soul Music)

21 What will inspire you to recommend a book?
Either it has to be amazing on a universal level or it should appeal to the specific tastes of the person I'm recommending too. In terms of universally amazing I mean something like American Gods or Years of Rice and Salt that touches on history, science, fantasy, spirituality, personal relationships and global issues.

22 5 of your top read genres
Sci-fi
Alternate history
Science-fantasy
Comedy-fantasy
Historical mystery

23 5 authors you read a lot
Neil Gaiman
Terry Pratchett
Mark Hodder
Alan Moore
Tad Williams

24 Do you read non-fiction? Biographies?
Yes, non-fiction tends to be either historical, art focused or scientific. Biography has to be someone I'm really interested in and I'm usually disappointed.

25 How many times do you read a week?
I try for at least 10 minutes every day

26 Do you feel you read better with or without noise?
Better with something I know well like familiar music or classic TV. Quiet=suspicious

27 What influences your book choices?
I have to admit to being initially attracted to a good cover design but it needs a good blurb to seal the deal. Personal recommendations from people with good taste help too.

28 Favourite reading snack?
Nutella on toast but it can get a bit messy so not with library books!

29 Do you literally judge a book by its cover, title, or author?
I will judge something that looks poorly designed or excessively like a "Mills and Boon" romance novel. I do give some authors more benefit of the doubt that others, some books I've regretted reading the most were by my favourite writers.

30 What is the longest book you have ever read? The shortest?
Les Miserables is probably the longest non-compilation book I've read, though I did read the entirety of Lord of the Rings (including appendices) in a single monstrous volume.

31 How do you feel about giving bad/negative reviews?
I feel hesitant about giving some authors negative reviews, especially if it's a first attempt or self published. I once received a free copy of a book in order to review it for a magazine and it really wasn't worth the paper it was printed on, but I chickened out of saying so in the review. Unfortunately our local library bought the whole series on the back of my lukewarm review and I felt so guilty I stopped doing magazine reviews.

32 Do you make up stories, or ever think about an alternate ending for a book because you want to?
Yes, I adore fanfiction but lack the writing skills to commit my daydreams to paper. But Severus Snape is alive and well in my head and that's good enough for me :)

33 Most intimidating book you’ve ever read?
Hunchback of Notre Dame by Victor Hugo, the prose is so dense and he goes off on so many tangents, it was very hard to keep up with what was going on!

34 Most intimidating book you’re too nervous to begin?
2001: A Space Odyssey by Arthur C Clarke, I know I should read it but I fear it'll be as long and dull as the movie.

35 What book do you try to steer people away from?
The Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro. I have a serious irrational hatred of that book!

36 What book do you recommend most to others?
Depending on how serious the person is I recommend either Good Omens by Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett or Years of Rice and Salt by Kim Stanley Robinson

37 Do you ever re-read books?
Yes, I re-read Dune by Frank Herbert every year, Lord of the Rings, Jane Eyre and Good Omens every two. I've read all of Pratchett books multiple times too, I have Fifth Elephant in English and German.

38 Favourite fictional character?
Lord Vetinari from Discworld universe. He's phenomenally intelligent, devious, sarcastic and has hidden depths of assassin skills. Stephen Briggs, who voices the audiobooks, has absolutely perfected the portrayal of the character- you can hear the eyebrow raising!

39 Favourite fictional villain?
I mostly like anti-heroes but for villains I'd have to pick Hannibal Lecter, he's so smooth and creepy. I adore his mind palace and his one liners.

40 Books I’m most likely to bring on vacation?
I used to either pack light and run out of things to read or pack too many books and get nothing done. I try to budget for new books when I plan a holiday now, that way I get to visit fun new book stores. It drives my husband mad!

41 The longest I’ve gone without reading.
The last 18 months have been really hard for me and I haven't really done much reading in the last 10 months or so. I've missed it but my brain hasn't felt like concentrating.

42 Name a book that you could/would not finish.
Blameless by Gail Carriger. I had a lot of trouble with the first two books in this series, the concept of a crime fighting steampunk lady really appealed but it quickly turned to the kind of chick lit tropes I really can't stand.

43 What distracts you easily when you’re reading?
Only my son waking up from a nap and declaring reading time to be over.

44 Favourite film adaptation of a novel?
Francis Ford Coppola's Dracula, best portrayal of Dracula until Richard Roxburgh.

45 Most disappointing film adaptation?
The Gerard Butler version of the The Phantom of the Opera. I've seen every movie adaptation of that book from the classic silent movie, through the 1970s rock opera and the Robert Englund gore fest and I can't find good points about all of them. But a Phantom who ISN'T disfigured and CAN'T sing?!? Ridiculous.

46 The most money I’ve ever spent in the bookstore at one time?
£150 ($250, €190) on text books for university (plus a copy of Nick Cave's When The Ass Saw The Angel, cos all work and no play gets you better than a 2:1)

47 How often do you skim a book before reading it?
Rarely, I accidentally spoilered myself skimming through a mystery but didn't realise until I'd read half the book.

48 What would cause you to stop reading a book half-way through?
Sexual assault, anything more than briefly pregnancy related, cats dying will make me bin a book, whilst some violence/supernatural stuff can make me put a book in fridge for a day or two.

49 Do you like to keep your books organised?
I tend to organise by size so I can get the maximum number of books on the shelves, but where possible I buy all the same issue of series so all the books are the same size and have matching covers. My signed first editions and graphic novels are kept separate.

50 Do you prefer to keep books or give them away once you’ve read them?
Depends on whether I expect to re-read or refer to the boom later. I keep about 80% of the books I buy! I'm locking down carbon and insulating the house honest.

51 Are there any books you’ve been avoiding?
The Hunger Games trilogy. I know I'll have to read it eventually but I don't particularly want to.

52 Name a book that made you angry.
The Penultimate Truth by Philip K Dick. I threw it across the room when I read the ending, but you'll have to read it yourself (or read my other blog post on the subject).

53 A book you didn’t expect to like but did?
I actively avoided the Harry Potter books for five years until I found out that Alan Rickman (owner if the sexiest voice known to human ears) would be in the movies and realised I'd have to read the books after all. I borrowed Philosophers Stone from a friend, read it in one sitting, then immediately went out and bought Chamber of Secrets. Now it's one of my favourite series and one of the few occasions that I've gone to a store at midnight to buy a new release.

54 A book that you expected to like but didn’t?
The Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman, I feel terrible for saying this but it wasn't a real book, it was a short story that got out of hand and really should have been left to grow up into a proper book before it was published. Or it should have had the violence toned down and been released as a kids book.

55 Favourite guilt-free, pleasure reading?
I love classic crime/mystery series like Mrs Bradley, Poirot or Cadfael that I can dip into when the mood takes me. I usually remember who did it but I still enjoy the process.

Monday, 23 June 2014

Last ~ Current ~ Next

Last Read
The Dirty Streets of Heaven (Bobby Dollar #1) by Tad Williams. I'm a big fan of Tad Williams' modern fantasies, so I was excited to see that he'd written a classic gumshoe detective story with the twist of added angels. Reminiscent of his War of the Flowers, which I also found to be very good.

Current Read
I'm currently reading a few different books-
Overcoming Depression by Paul Gilbert. I'm reading this for a study into the benefits of self help books, some of seems sensible and some seems like hokum!
Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell by Suzanna Clarke. I'm about 20% of the way through this, so far I'm  enjoying it, it's nice to reminisce about my university city.
The Gospel of Loki by Joanne M Harris. I've been dipping in and out of this one since February, the trickster really drags you along for the ride but I've not been in the mood for mischief recently.

Next Read
I can't decide between-
20 Trillion Leagues Under the Sea by Adam Roberts. I've enjoyed some of his other writing, particularly Yellow Blue Tibia, but others like New Model Army and By Light Alone have had disappointing conclusions.
BooksRapture of the Nerds by Cory Doctorow and Charles Stross. This feels like the sort of book I "should" have read by now, like William Gibson's Neuromancer or Difference Engine, but I fear it'll be beyond my frail mind and disappoint me.

Friday, 13 June 2014

A to Z Book Survey

For Swap-bot, based on the survey on Perpetual Pageturner.

Author you’ve read the most books from: 

Terry Pratchett! I've read all the books in the Discworld series, including the Young Adult ones, and most of the stand alone books, though I'm still waiting for book 2 of The Long Earth series to arrive in our library.

Best Sequel Ever: 

Hannibal. I'll not spoil it for you but it has the outcome for Dr Lecter that I always wanted.

Currently Reading:

The Gospel of Loki by Joanne M Harris

Drink of Choice While Reading: 

Hot chocolate with cinnamon!

E-reader or Physical Book? 

Physical book. I'm the place good books go to die, I've destroyed two copies of American Gods over the last few years via spills, tears, broken spines etc. An E-reader would be a very expensive paperweight after 5 minutes in my hands!

Fictional Character You Probably Would Have Actually Dated In High School: 

Newton Pulcifer from Good Omens, I always got the losers!

Glad You Gave This Book A Chance: 

The Years of Rice and Salt by Kim Stanley Robinson, it changed my philosophy on death

Hidden Gem Book:

Burton and Swinburne in the Strange Affair of Spring Heeled Jack by Mark Hodder. I highly recommend this to any fans of sci-fi, alternate history, historical adventure or just bat-poop crazy writing.

Important Moment in your Reading Life: 

Reading Jane Eyre in high school and realising that classics weren't all dull gossiping women

Just Finished: 

Red Shirts by John Scalzi

Kinds of Books You Won’t Read: 

Anything that's sold in the “Chick-Lit” section, I have enough trouble with real life!

Longest Book You’ve Read: 

Les Miserables by Victor Hugo

Major book hangover because of: 

The Phantom of the Opera by Gaston Leroux, it's lasted 19 years so far!

Number of Bookcases You Own: 

Eight floor-to-ceiling and two waist height.

One Book You Have Read Multiple Times: 

I read Dune by Frank Herbert once a year or so

Preferred Place To Read: 

The bath! LOL

Quote that you like, from a book you’ve read:

 “Sometimes you wake up. Sometimes the fall kills you. And sometimes, when you fall, you fly.” - Sandman: Fables and Reflections by Neil Gaiman

Reading Regret: 

The Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro. We were forced to read it for A-Level English Lit and frankly it was the worst book I've ever read.

Series You Started And Need To Finish(all books are out in series): 

The Sookie Stackhouse novels, I kinda lost track around book 10.

Three of your All-Time Favourite Books: 

Rebecca by Daphne Du Maurier
Lord John and the Private Matter by Diana Gabaldon
Necronomicon (the collected works of HP Lovecraft)

Unapologetic Fangirl For: 

Mortal Engines by Philip Reeve. Cities roaming the nuclear wastes of Europe, brilliant

Very Excited For This Release More Than All The Others: 

The novelisation of The Dark Crystal surprisingly. The written version of the Labyrinth was excellent and perfect bedtime reading for the baby.

Worst Bookish Habit: 

Folding pages to mark my place, my favourites scenes/quotes and then not knowing which is which and having to start over.

X Marks The Spot: Start at the top left of your shelf and pick the 27th book: 

Ubik by Philip K Dick

Your latest book purchase:

George RR Martin's Dance with Dragons part 1 & 2 for my husband. I won't read them.

ZZZ-snatcher book (last book that kept you up WAY late): 

Terry Pratchett's Raising Steam. I read it in one sitting.

Monday, 5 November 2012

The Lyrics of Abney Park



For more then twenty years “Captain” Robert of Abney Park has been creating a world. Each song he’s written is like a tiny window revealing a new detail or character in this lush UNIVERSE. This book is a collection of all the lyrics to all the songs that shape the World of Abney Park. It also contains hundreds of full color illustrations by -

Artists: Juan Pablo Valdecantos Anfuso
Rachel Esmeralda Schwarting
MANDEM
Delucienne Maekerr
Desiree Kern
Miles Graves
Alex Thomas
Myke Amend
Bethalynn Bajema
Phantoms Siren
Model Maker: Matthew Slater
Photographer: Jonathan Happs


Copies are available for purchase in the Abney Park Marketplace.