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“Let us read, and let us dance;
these two amusements will never do any harm to the world.”

Monday, 7 January 2013

Enid Blyton Challenge!

I made this: Unknown at 8:45 pm 4 comments
One of our Superstar Guest Stars has agreed to a new challenge based on our chats relating to #LBCPuffins.

Helen was intrigued about our constant references to the various series created by Enid Blyton and decided to set herself the task of reading one a month to see what all the fuss is about!

Can't wait to read each review as they come!

Thanks Helen!


Helen's Enid Blyton Challenge



About the Author

Enid Blyton is one of the most-loved authors in children's publishing. With over 700 titles published, Enid Blyton's stories remain timeless classics, adored throughout the world. As a young woman Enid was faced with many choices: her father had planned a career in music for her, while she felt drawn to writing. In the end, she became a teacher. In 1922, a collection of poems by Enid was published, it was her first step towards her dream of becoming an author. Aged 27, Enid married Hugh Pollock and moved to London. 

Enid had two children with Hugh, and soon after wrote her first novel, The Adventures of the Wishing-Chair. Enid divorced Hugh after almost 20 years of marriage, and married Kenneth Waters in 1943. Throughout the 40s and 50s, Enid wrote books at a colossal pace: adventure stories, mysteries, magical stories, farming stories, stories for younger children, best-selling series like The Famous Five and Noddy. Enid fell ill with Alzheimer's disease and she died in 1963. 


Her spirit lives on in her books and she is remembered as one of the most-loved and celebrated children's authors.



For 2013 and leading from Book recommendation discussion for LBCPuffins I have set myself a challenge to read some Enid Blyton books. I think as a child I only read one and it’s one that my
Grandma gave me and has always stuck with me and it’s first on the list is - The Book of Brownies!


So here is the list. It’s 12 so I can read one a month and hopefully, borrow or find them in charity
shops.




The Book List

Dec - The Twins at St Clare's
Nov - The Mystery of the Pantomime Cat
Oct - The Naughtiest School Girl
Sep - Mr Galliano’s Circus
Aug - The Boy Next Door
Jul - Adventures of the wishing Chair
Jun - The Magic Faraway Tree
May - The Enchanted Wood
Apr - The Adventures of Scamp
Mar - Secret Seven
Feb - Five on a treasure Island
Jan - The Book of Brownies




Helen tweets from @isfromupnorth and has her own blog Hello from me to you.


The Hobbit (book) review


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Saturday, 5 January 2013

The Lainibop Challenge - Book 21 - Catching Fire - Suzanne Collins

I made this: Unknown at 8:02 pm 0 comments

READ!TO GO!
21109

The LainiBop Challenge

CATCHING FIRE
SUZANNE COLLINS

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* * * * * SPOILERS * * * * *
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The second book in The Hunger Games trilogy, was not quite as gripping as the first in my opinion. When we left Katniss Everdeen, she had just become the joint victor in the 74th Hunger Games, along with fellow District 12 inhabitant Peeta. Now, after returning home, she and her family have been moved to the prestigious winner's quarter where they will live a fairly opulent lifestyle until Katniss' death.

Her previous victory however is far from complete, as President Snow visits her with a warning about her effect on the rest of Panem's population. It seems Katniss has stirred up a bit of a storm with her actions during the games. Between her “relationship” with Peeta, her heartwarming care of Rue's body, and her willingness to sacrifice herself at the end of the games to ensure Peeta's survival, she has won many followers and the people of the districts are beginning to question the government and their way of life.



All this just in time for the Quarter Quell. The Quarter Quell is a very special Hunger Games, which is “celebrated” every 25 years. Though the annual Hunger Games are a demonstration of the Capitol's control over the districts and a reminder not to rebel, the Quarter Quell is generally a more brutal and vicious attempt at this. Every one has been different, much the games themselves, but the one similarity is that they have a twist which pushes the tributes to new extremes.

In honour of the 75th year, it is announced that 24 previous winners will compete. As the only winners in District 12 are Hamish, Peeta and Katniss, the list is quite short and it is a certainty that Katniss will be returning to the arena. As Peeta joins her to protect her, can she win a second year, and is there any chance that President Snow will allow 2 winners again?

As I said, this wasn't quite the unputdownable read as the first one...which I read in the space of about 4 hours. It was enjoyable, but perhaps the pace could have been a little faster. Maybe it was the fact that by the time I reached the second book, the world was more familiar to me, which took away from the horrific impact that parts of the first had on me. Still definitely worth a read though, if only to get to the third one.


SCORE       7/10



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Say Hello to @Lainibop

Her To Be Read Challenge - The Countdown Begins!





Book 30 - ?
Book 29 - ?
Book 28 - Sexing the Cherries by Jeanette Winterson
Book 27 - Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
Book 26 - Breaking Dawn by Stephanie Meyer
Book 25 - Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell
Book 24 - From the Earth to the Moon by Jules Verne
Book 23 - Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins
Book 22 - Not a Penny More, Not a Penny Less by Jeffery Archer


Find more reviews HERE

If we've used any videos, you'll find them on the LeedsBookClub YouTube Channel - 

Visit LainiBop's playlist HERE 
Visit Fizzy Elephants HERE
The 10 Things I Hate About You playlist is HERE!
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Table of Contents - Guest Stars

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Table of Contents - Laini's Book Shelf

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Wednesday, 2 January 2013

LBC Puffins - The power is YOURS!

I made this: Unknown at 10:04 pm 0 comments
So we have to pick a book for our newest venture - 
LBC Puffins 
(thanks again @LuraTea for the awesome name)

We've had TONS of fabulous suggestions for our first book and I couldn't possible choose myself so I'm leaving it up to you. 

In no particular order, the books suggested are as follows:

Matilda - Roald Dahl
BFG - Roald Dahl
Just William - Richard Crompton
The Borrowers - Mary Norton
George's Marvellous Medicine - Roald Dahl
Tom's Midnight Garden - Philippa Pearce
The Railway Children - Edith Nesbit
Five Children and It - Edith Nesbit
Nicobobbinus - Terry Jones
The Wolves of Willoughby Chase - Joan Aiken
Boneland - Alan Garner
The Phantom Tollbooth - Norton Juster
Skulduggery Pleasant - Derek Landy
The Book of Three - Lloyd Alexander
Marianne Dreams - Catherine Storr
Charlotte Sometimes - Penelope Farmer
The Weirdstone of Brisingamen - Alan Garner
Mrs Frisby and the rats of NIMH - Robert O'Brien
Children of the New Forest - Captain Marryat
A Little Princess - Frances Hodgson Burnett
The Little Prince - Antoine de Saint-Exupery
Moomins. Any of them - Tove Jansson
Ouick lets get out of here - Michael Rosen
Black Beauty - Anna Sewell
The Secret Garden - Frances Hodgson Burnett
Treasure Island - Robert Louis Stevenson





To find other members of the club, search on twitter for#LBCPuffins

And don't hesitate to contact Outlaws on @OutlawYachtClub

Let me know your thoughts by either tweeting me @LeedsBookClub, commenting below or emailing me at leedsbookclub@gmail.com

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Book Club - Table of Contents

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LBC Puffins - What? Another book club?

I made this: Unknown at 9:08 pm 0 comments
Ladies and Gentlepeeps, LeedsBookClub is somewhat bewildered to be finding itself announcing the launch of a new Book Club*. 


LBC Puffins

The second of our themed clubs, this is a book club strictly for the young at heart - no true grown ups will be allowed anywhere near us. 

We shall be meeting every two months (oh who am I kidding, we invariably end up meeting more frequently than that!) in a fabulous local art-cafe.bar.hangout - Outlaws - to discuss children's books.


Because why should children get all the fun! 


Venue: Outlaws Yacht Club
Date:  Wednesday, 20th of February 2013
Time:  6pm
Address: 38 New York Street, LS2 YDY

We haven't chosen a book yet - options will go up in a post or two, with you lot the deciding votes!

What's more, I have it on good authority that the write up's will be rotated between group members and will contain music, cartoons, emoticons and more colours than you ever thought possible. 




*This time, it really isn't my fault. 
My arm is still twisted halfway around my body. There was begging, pleading, tears...it was a kindness to say yes. Seriously.  
I'm just so easily led you know. 

To find other members of the club, search on twitter for #LBCPuffins

And don't hesitate to contact Outlaws on @OutlawYachtClub

Let me know your thoughts by either tweeting me @LeedsBookClub, commenting below or emailing me at leedsbookclub@gmail.com

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LBC Puffins

NOV - Wee Free Men - Terry Prachett - GUEST
OCT - Black Beauty - Anna Sewell GUEST
SEP - The Secret Garden - Frances Hodgson-Burnett GUEST
AUG - Coraline - Neil Gaiman GUEST
JUL - Mrs Frisby and the Rats of Nimh - Robert C O'Brien GUEST
JUN - The Sheep Pig - Dick King-Smith GUEST
FEB - Matilda - Roald Dahl GUEST

Book Club - Table of Contents

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Monday, 31 December 2012

BookElf Reads 2012

I made this: BookElf at 4:26 pm 0 comments
In the tradition of the last few years...
Not PUBLISHED this year, READ this year, savvy?

Oh God this list has caused me some heartache! What a cracking year for reading this has been for me! I know that the LeedsBookClub itself has had some wonderful discoveries over the past twelve months, but these are what I personally have awarded, I did it in 2009, 2010 and 2011 and I'm doing it all again today, M'Ok?

Discovery of the Year
The Garden of Evening Mists
Tan Twan Eng-The Garden of Evening Mists, The Gift of Rain
See, this is why I don't get those there book bloggers doing their 'lists of the year' at the beginning of December-you never know what's going to happen in the last month of the year and this is a case in point. I got The Garden of Evening Mists in the post (thank you, more please) at the beginning of December and spent a long week seeped in its beauty. His second novel, set in Malaya from the Second World War onwards this is just such a beautifully written book, its just such a shame it wasn't written twelve years ago or so when everything was set in Asia as it would have been a massive best seller. The story of a Chinese woman living in Penang, captured by the Japanese and held in a concentration camp throughout the war at terrible cost to herself and her family, who decades later returns to the mountain province and the garden Yugiri, where she stayed for years during the Malayan Emergency of the 1950s, in her  South African friend's tea plantation, this book is big, complicated and multi cultural. You think you in a multi cultural society, you ain't got jack on 1940s Malaya, the setting also of his first book, The Gift of Rain, which I am currently ploughing through. The writing is exquisite and the plots fascinating. The amount of detail poured into the books shows just how clever and committed a writer Tan Twan Eng is and with his first longlisted and his second short listed for the Booker, I have massive hopes for his third novel. Fans of metaphor ridden prose and history should wake up and get into these books. Its a teeny tiny publisher as well, which is always nice.

Series of the Year
The Eye in the Door
The Regeneration Trilogy by Pat Barker
I had to review Pat Barker's latest novel Toby's Room this summer, so thought it might actually be a good idea to read one of the five of her novels cluttering my shelves first and boy am I glad I did. This kick-started a good three month period where I apparently read nothing but books set in the First World War, always a treat, and I was so happy with the massively positive response I got off people who loved these books as much as I do. The second one, The Eye In The Door, is just spectacular and was robbed of glory by the weaker third book The Ghost Road which somehow managed to claim all the prises. With the anniversary of the beginning of the war in a couple of years, you need to get into Pat Barker, her detailed descriptions and psychological analysis of the soldiers who fought and the people back home are extraordinary.

Up All Night Award
The Song of Achilles
The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller
Oh this book, this beautiful beautiful book. My favourite by far of the Orange Prize (or whatever its called now) winners, this re-telling of the Iliad is sexy and sublime, you need to speed read it because you literally will not be able to put it down. Myself and a whole load of other people cannot wait for her next one. Also, do a big of background reading on Madeline Miller herself, as she is pretty damn ace.

Best Debut
Rules of Civility
Rules of Civility by Amor Towles
I've read this book twice this year, recommended it to pretty much every reader I know, gone on and on and on about it on the Twitters and Facebook and pretty much every other place I can, wept over it, sighed over it and lamented frequently that Katey Kontent isn't real, and I can't actually get twatted on gin with her. This is literally the saddest of thoughts as I have never loved a fictional character as much as I love Katey Kontent and that includes the otherwise LOML Ralph Leary from Ralph's Party.
Set in 1938 New York, if you have any sense whatsoever you will buy yourself two copies of this book because the first will be saturated with tears. If you are twenty seven, you owe it to your future self to read this book NOW. If you are younger than twenty seven, buy it and put it in storage, if you are older, buy it, read it and feel whimsical. I will blattos be re-reading in the new year, if it wasn't completely socially unacceptable I'd blow off my party and re-read this book tonight. This book is my new Persuasion and you KNOWS I don't say things like that lightly.

The I-Know-I-Know-Its-Brilliant-But Award
Anna Karenina
Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy.
I know, I'm a failure as a human being and an utter utter thickie. I couldn't get past about 300 pages. I was bored, and I'm sorry. I will try again next year.

Best Recommended Read
Frenchman's CreekMoon Tiger (Penguin Modern Classics)
SHARED between Frenchman's Creek by Daphne Du Maurier and Moon Tiger by Penelope Lively
Both of these books are @sianushka's fault, and it would be impossible and wrong of me to pick from between the two. Again, this goes to show how December reading can make or break your year. From the moment I read Frenchman's Creek back in the spring I had this on the list, but Moon Tiger, which I read in four hours on the 20 December figuring if the Apocalypse was to come the next day at least I'd spend my last night doing something magical as opposed to Management Theory Homework, was such an experience I needed it on the list.
Frenchman's Creek has already had my splurge treatment, but I haven't been able to do the same with Moon Tiger so I'm going to do so now, and apologies for the twenty or so people on Twitter who were following by reading of the book and are subsequently buying it already.
Read it. Read it now.
Winner of the 1987 Booker again this book would have completely passed me by had it nt been for a recommendation. I was reading The Hand That First Held Mine by Maggie O'Farrell (and how the hell it took me so long to get round to that I'll never know) and @sianushka suggested that I follow it with Moon Tiger as a lovely companion read. What an understatement. I'm not going to say exactly what reading this book reminded me of but let's say I started the evening with questioning worrying doubt, then experienced true love and complete euphoria, followed seamlessly by an hour of relaxing into acceptance of a life well lived. Bloody hell this is a well written book. The structure of it, it's tighter than Donna Tartt's A Secret History. The main character is a posher cleverer version of me, which always helps in relating to a history, and the way it portrays a life as lived by a particular kind of person at a particular time is spot on. I've read a lot of books set during various wars and this one gets the grief part right. I was weeping so much by the end of this book and it was by far my favourite pre-Apocalypse evening I've ever spent. If you are a speed reader, you need to experience this in a night, it is worth it, but take tea breaks because it does get a bit heavy at times.

Worst Book of the Year
Nine Uses for an Ex-Boyfriend
Nine Uses For An Ex-Boyfriend by Sarra Manning
This pissed me off because I really like Sarra Manning's writing, she used to write for J17 and now writes YA chick-lit, some of which is really really good. I've read other stuff she's done for ForBooksSake and the Graun and she's a witty funny clever woman. This book however is a exercise in patience as the most neurotic and boring narrator navigates her way through what is obviously a horrible long term relationship and evil friendship with an annoying bint. Surprise surprise bint and boyf end up shagging, but instead of having some sort of St Paul revaluation and dumping his ass Hope tries to patch things up for another 300 pages. The actual hero is crap, her parents are Comedy Sidekicks from Hell and the whole thing is just a big mess. You wouldn't get pissed with Hope in real life and it therefore fails in the fundamental law of chick lit-you have to like your protagonist, not just want to shake her. Shame as the cover is beautiful.

 

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