5 posts tagged “reading”
One of the cooler things I've seen in recent years is the old media companies using modern, digital technologies to make their archives accessible to everyone.
A while back I installed a Firefox extension called "Read It Later". The idea behind the extension is a quick trigger bookmark applet, putting longer articles and pages into a folder titled, appropriately enough "Read It Later."
The trouble is, I never got around to reading those articles. Until now, anyway. So, first and foremost from the list is this article from The Guardian called "The World's 50 Most Powerful Blogs."
It's an interesting list; a lot of the standard power players are represented, but what was interesting for me was how many I had not heard of. Lest that sound too self-important, I should say that I read a lot. I gather most of my news about the world from the web and keep about 80 to 90 assorted blogs, zines, comics, and what have you in my feed reader.
There are an equal number of sites listed of which I had heard but do not, for various reasons, read. The list seems, at first glance, to be almost equal numbers of celebrity related gossip blogs, political reporting outside traditional media, and the etc. column.
There are only two listed in the piece that I want to start reading on a trial basis, and, admittedly, I'm interested in both as a way to practice my foreign language skills: Microsiervos and Gigazine.
Still, the piece is worth looking over - you might find something new to read.
eMusic works on a subscription basis. I pay a monthly fee of around $20 USD and am able to download 90 tracks per month. The tracks can be from any album, from any genre, from any artist I choose, provided they have licensed their music to eMusic.
And now, for an addtional $10 USD per month, subscribers can choose an audiobook to download as well.
The selection is modest at the moment, although several well-known and popular authors are represented, as well as a good selection of the classics, and eMusic promises to add more authors and books on a regular basis.
I decided to try out my membership with William Gibson's Spook Country and Jonathan Lethem's You Don't Love Me Yet. The downloads were quick and easy, and, unlike, Audible, eMusic breaks each book into hundreds of tracks to make listening workable on any device. The files are good quality mp3s, just like the music, and will play on any music player.
$10 may seem like a lot for a single audiobook, but, considering that the same books often run $50 or $60 on CD, the price suddenly seems much more reasonable.
For someone like me - I have an hour long commute to work - this is a welcome addition to a service I already loved and I am looking forward to being able to get many, many books this way.
A few weeks ago, I was wasting time on Lists of Bests and came across a list for Dr. Peter Boxall's 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die. That particular list is, of course, enormous but I had fun listing off the books I had read. I decided, arbitrarily, to try to read the entire list. However, I would only check off books that I could remember something about. In other words, the fact that I read Treasure Island twenty years ago is not enough. I have to know something about the book and be able to at least remember the main plot points.
And, after a week or two, I decided that that list was just too big. While surfing around, I noticed that there were several smaller book lists with a lot of overlap and I thought that starting with one of those lists might make things a bit easier. So I found this list: Random House Modern Library's 100 Best Books of the Twentieth Century: Fiction. I added the list to my queue and went straight over to Amazon to order the first two unread books on the list: Ulysses and Gatsby.
Once the books arrived they sat on my shelf for a month or two while I read books that were of little consequence but a great deal more fun than Ulysses. I read a lot of my usual science fiction and fantasy popcorn books, quite a few magazines, a book of essays about Firefly (the T.V. show) and a couple of books of trivia. All the while I kept looking at Ulysses and finding another way of avoiding it. Finally, I decided to just skip it for a while.
All of which brings me back to Gatsby.
There are times I would like to go back and smack my twenty-one year old self around a bit and this is one of them. Gatsby is a fantastic book; I would have loved it had I bothered to read it back when, and I loved it last week, reading it straight through in a couple of hours, then reading it again. It is called a masterpiece and rightly so, for reasons far better explained by many others over the years.
However, for myself, the biggest benefit of reading Gatsby was remembering that something need not be new to be new to me and worthwhile. So, I am feeling quite ready to tackle the next, or, rather, first, volume on the list, the dreaded Ulysses, and to finish something I should have done years ago - reading the classics.
Links: Amazon Affiliate Links for Ulysses