Tuesday 23 July 2013

In the beginning...

I suppose the fact that I am writing an entirely book-central blog is a fairly good indication that reading is a fairly important part of my life, but I hadn’t realised quite how monumental it has been until I started thinking about where it all began.

As a good blog often follows a rough chronological order, I thought I would start at the beginning and give you a bit of background as to where my love of reading originated and how it has shaped my life since then.

I can’t recall a time before I was able to read; the way I remember it, I learned to read at the same rate that I learned to speak. One of my earliest memories is reading out pizza toppings to my dad from the menu board at our local takeaway, and my mother tells me that as a toddler I used to collect a pile of books every day to read with her as soon as my baby brother fell asleep.

Growing up, my love of books only grew with me. These are a couple of my absolute favourite children’s authors – writers of books that I read over and over as a kid, and would read again at twenty years old. If you are a child, have a child, or like me, just enjoy reading children’s books occasionally, these are my top recommendations!

Enid Blyton


As a little girl, Enid Blyton was very easily my favourite author – I read every book of hers that I could get my hands on, and I don’t think I ever found one that I didn’t like. First published in the 1920s, a lot of her characters, language and plots are naturally quite old-fashioned, but I never found that to be a problem, maybe because I am quite old-fashioned myself!
 
My top 3:

1. The Faraway Tree Collection – The story of Jo, Bessie and Fanny, three siblings who move to the country and discover a magical tree called the Faraway Tree, which grows a different fruit on every level, is home to all manner of quirky creatures, and has a faraway land at the top, which changes every once in a while. This is one of the most amazing children’s series I have ever read. Packed with unique characters, beautiful settings, hilarious situations, suspense, magic and the most creative stories imaginable, every single chapter is an adventure all on its own.

 

The Faraway Tree Collection

 

The Children of Cherry Tree Farm


2. The Children of Cherry Tree Farm – This is a great favourite of mine about two brothers and two sisters who are sent from the city to live with their aunt and uncle on Cherry Tree Farm, where they meet Tammylan, the wild man, who teaches them all about animals and nature. I read this book and its sequel, The Children of Willow Farm, many, many times during my childhood, each time choosing my favourite character based on which one was closest to my age at the time!


 

3. The Wishing Chair Collection – One of the reasons I loved this series so much was because I almost believed it could actually happen! The books follow the adventures of Molly and Peter, a brother and sister who come across what they think is just an ordinary antique chair. It isn’t. It can fly, and it gets them into a lot of interesting situations!

 

 

 

The Wishing Chair Collection



Roald Dahl


If I remember correctly, it was my excellent Year One teacher who got me hooked on Roald Dahl when she read George’s Marvellous Medicine and various bits of Revolting Rhymes to my class. Roald Dahl’s writing is brilliant, dotted with puns and rhymes that make his books hilarious.

My top 3:

1. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory – If you have only encountered this story in movie form, I would highly recommend that you give the book a go! It is filled with far more details than either film adaptation, there is more depth to the characters, there are full pages of rhyming narrative songs sung by Oompa Loompas and you’ll get to enjoy the distinctively excellent artwork of Quentin Blake. What’s not to love?
 
 
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory

Matilda

2. Matilda – This is a book that every child who likes books (or has ever been called a nerd) needs to read! Matilda is the perfect heroine – smart, brave, and really good at pulling off awesome pranks.
 
 
 
 
3. The Vicar of Nibbleswicke – This is really not a children’s book (seriously, don’t read it to your children!) but I had to put it on the list, as it’s one of the funniest books I’ve ever read, and people often haven’t heard of it. This is the story of a young vicar who moves to a town called Nibbleswicke, and due to his nervousness at presenting sermons in a new town, develops a rare form of dyslexia which causes him to say the most important word of every sentence backwards. Oh my goodness. So funny.
 
 
 
The Vicar of Nibbleswicke


So there you have it! The beginning of my lifelong love of books! In the time that has passed since my childhood, I have worked for two different book chains, for a total of almost 3 years working in bookshops, and I am just now starting to study towards a library qualification, with the aim of becoming a library technician. It’s exciting to think that something that began as a hobby could someday build my career.

Let me know what you think of my suggested children's reading, and feel free to leave some of your favourites in the comments!

Friday 19 July 2013

100 books to get started

Hello there! You can probably tell where this is going just from reading my blog’s title, but I would feel terribly rude if I didn’t introduce myself, so here goes - my name is Clare and as you may have guessed, I read books.

If you spend as much time here on the Internet as I do (which, let's face it, you probably don’t), you may have seen the BBC Book List Challenge circulating around Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr and various other Social Media hubs. If not, it is essentially a list of one hundred famous, popular, classic or otherwise special books, compiled by the BBC and appearing on a website called Goodreads. You can find the original list here in its natural habitat. The BBC has estimated that the average person will have read just six of these one hundred books.
 
Being an avid reader and determined to prove myself ‘above average’, I thought this would be a great way to start off my book blog – it should give you an idea of the kind of books I like to read1, and we can compare scores. I’ve made a link to a downloadable version of the list as a Microsoft Word file, so you’ll be able to save a copy, or even print one out and tick the books off with a pen! How quaint! Click here to download a copy.

Needless to say, the books that I have crossed off are the ones that I have read. Let’s get cracking!

 
 1. Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone
By J.K. Rowling
 51. His Dark Materials            
By Philip Pullman
 2. The Da Vinci Code               
By Dan Brown
 52. Winnie the Pooh
By A.A. Milne
 3. To Kill a Mockingbird          
By Harper Lee
 53. Anne of Green Gables   
By L.M. Montgomery
 4. The Little Prince   
By Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
 54. Anna Karenina   
By Leo Tolstoy
 5. Animal Farm          
By George Orwell
 55. Persuasion          
By Jane Austen
 6. The Lord of the Rings        
By J.R.R. Tolkien
 56. A Prayer for Owen Meany            
By John Irving
 7. The Alchemist      
By Paulo Coelho
 57. Vanity Fair           
By William Makepeace Thackeray
 8. 1984          
By George Orwell
 58. The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time         
By Mark Haddon
 9. Pride and Prejudice           
By Jane Austen
 59. The Complete Works
By William Shakespeare
 10. The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
By Douglas Adams
 60. A Clockwork Orange        
By Anthony Burgess
 11. Wuthering Heights           
By Emily Brontë
 61. Tess of the d’Urbervilles
By Thomas Hardy
 12. The Hobbit          
By J.R.R Tolkien
 62. Les Miserablés   
By Victor Hugo
 13. The Count of Monte Cristo           
By Alexandre Dumas
 63. Corelli’s Mandolin            
By Louis de Bernières
 14. Catch-22               
By Joseph Heller
 64. Oliver Twist         
By Charles Dickens
 15. The Catcher in the Rye   
By J.D. Salinger
 65. A Fine Balance   
By Rohinton Mistry
 16. The Secret Garden
By Frances Hodgson Burnett
 66. The Bell Jar
By Sylvia Plath
 17. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
By Roald Dahl
 67. David Copperfield            
By Charles Dickens
 18. Rebecca
By Daphne du Maurier
 68. War and Peace  
By Leo Tolstoy
 19. Life of Pi
By Yann Martel
 69. The Remains of the Day 
By Kazuo Ishiguro
 20. Lord of the Flies
By William Golding
 70. Madame Bovary
By Gustave Flaubert
 21. A Tale of Two Cities         
By Charles Dickens
 71. Lolita      
By Vladimir Nabokov
 22. Memoirs of a Geisha       
By Arthur Golden
 72. The Wind in the Willows
By Kenneth Grahame
 23. Gone With the Wind       
By Margaret Mitchell
 73. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
By Arthur Conan Doyle
 24. Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland
& Through the Looking-Glass     
By Lewis Carroll
 74. On the Road       
By Jack Kerouac
 25. A Christmas Carol             
By Charles Dickens
 75. Moby Dick
By Herman Melville
 26. Charlotte’s Web
By E.B. White
 76. Emma    
By Jane Austen
 27. Little Women
By Louisa May Alcott
 77. The Secret History            
By Donna Tartt
 28. Bridget Jones’s Diary       
By Helen Fielding
 78. Far from the Madding Crowd
By Thomas Hardy
 29. The Time Traveler’s Wife              
By Audrey Niffenegger
 79. The Handmaid’s Tale       
By Margaret Atwood
 30. Jane Eyre             
By Charlotte Brontë
 80. A Town Like Alice              
By Neville Shute
 31. The Bible
By Anonymous
 81. Cloud Atlas          
By David Mitchell
 32. The Grapes of Wrath      
By John Steinbeck
 82. The Faraway Tree Collection        
By Enid Blyton
 33. Atonement         
By Ian McEwan
 83. Birdsong               
By Sebastian Faulks
 34. The Great Gatsby
By F. Scott Fitzgerald
 84. Middlemarch
By George Eliot
 35. Brave New World             
By Aldous Huxley
 85. Bleak House        
By Charles Dickens
 36. The Kite Runner
By Khaled Hosseini
 86. Brideshead Revisited      
By Evelyn Waugh
 37. Dracula  
By Bram Stoker
 87. Possession          
By A.S. Byatt
 38. The Five People You Meet in Heaven
By Mitch Albom
 88. The Woman in White      
By Wilkie Collins
 39. Love in the Time of Cholera         
By Gabriel García Márquez
 89. Dune      
By Frank Herbert
 40. The Shadow of the Wind               
By Carlos Ruiz Zafón
 90. Cold Comfort Farm          
By Stella Gibbons
 41. Of Mice and Men             
By John Steinbeck
 91. Watership Down               
By Richard Adams
 42. Heart of Darkness            
By Joseph Conrad
 92. A Suitable Boy    
By Vikram Seth
 43. One Hundred Years of Solitude
By Gabriel García Márquez
 93. Jude the Obscure             
By Thomas Hardy
 44. Midnight’s Children         
By Salman Rushdie
 94. Notes from a Small Island             
By Bill Bryson
 45. The Chronicles of Narnia
By C.S. Lewis
 95. Ulysses 
By James Joyce
 46. Sense and Sensibility      
By Jane Austen
 96. Swallows and Amazons  
By Arthur Ransome
 47. The Lovely Bones
By Alice Sebold
 97. Germinal              
By Èmile Zola
 48. The Three Musketeers  
By Alexandre Dumas
 98. The Color Purple
By Alice Walker
 49. Crime and Punishment  
By Fyodor Dostoyevsky
 99. The Wasp Factory             
By Iain Banks
 50. Great Expectations          
By Charles Dickens
 100. A Confederacy of Dunces           
By John Kennedy Toole


Well that was fun! Altogether, I have read twenty-five of the books on the list, which is a quarter, so definitely better than six. I would have thought I had read more, but the biggest surprise was finding a couple that I’d never even heard of! I guess I have some catching up to do!

Clare Has Opinions!

Top 5 books2 I’ve read from the list:

Any big reader knows how impossible choosing a favourite book is, and even choosing from a list this small is way too hard! I think these are the five that I most enjoyed reading, but I reserve the right to change my mind. A lot.
1.       The Harry Potter series
2.       Wuthering Heights
3.       Pride and Prejudice
4.       The Da Vinci Code
5.       The Time Traveler’s Wife

Top 5 books I want to read from the list:
 
1.       Catch-22
2.       Dune
3.       One Hundred Years of Solitude
4.       Atonement
5.       Life of Pi

Well, I hope you’ve enjoyed this beginning to my blogload of ramblings. Share your score in the comments below and hopefully we can all celebrate being above average together!




1. Although, it is worth noting that I was forced to read some of these books for English in high school and therefore may not have enjoyed them. Heart of Darkness, I am looking at you!
2. This was originally a list of my top 3 books on the list, but then my head nearly exploded, so I had to make it bigger. The list, that is, not my head.