I don't know why I didn't think to do this before. All things considered I should have thought of this within moments of creating the Books Read list years ago.
Since 1999 I've been keeping a list of every single book I read, using Excel to track title, author, pages, fiction or non, date finished, etc. I've even kept track of most of the short stories I've read, whether published in books or magazines. (Note: I've actually been keeping track since before 1999, but it wasn't in Excel format, instead it was on calendars, spare notebook, scraps of paper shoved in folders, etc.).
Then the other day, as I headed home from the library with a stack of books I know I won't finish by the time they're due, I realize that I'm going to need to write down the titles I don't read so I can check them out again at a later date. It wouldn't be the first time I had wanted to ask the librarian if there was anyway she could pull up a list of books I've checked out so I could see which ones I hadn't read.
I have no belief that they actually keep such a list (and if you've ever watched the 1995 movie "Seven" with Morgan Freeman and Brad Pitt, Freeman's character says that by secret order of the government that libraries keep such a list, which now they probably really do because of 9/11), but I thought it would be helpful if I could access this "non-existent" list.
It then occurred to me to stop being an idiot, and just keep the list myself as a tab in my current Excel sheet. When I got home, I popped open the file, added the tab, and input the names of the books I just lugged in.
So, should the NSA, FBI, or CIA ever need a list of the books I own, they can gather that info from LibraryThing.com (http://www.librarything.com/Michael_P), or else if they want a list of books I've checked out from the local library, they can just seize my computer and read my Excel file.
Until Next Time...
Spyingly Yours,
Michael
Avid reader, writer, food-lover, and historian of rock-and-roll (1960 - present), fantastic fiction, and just about any topic in the past.
Monday, July 22, 2013
Tracking Library Books
Labels:
books read list,
Brad Pitt,
CIA,
Excel,
FBI,
LibraryThing,
Morgan Freeman,
NSA,
Se7en
Sunday, July 21, 2013
Libyrinth review
Here is the most recent review I posted on all the usual places: LibraryThing, Amazon, Good Reads, etc. etc.:
This was a fun YA read that even adults can love -- in fact, adults may like it
more, especially book lovers. North populates the story with quotes from various
Earth books and half the fun is figuring out the quote or reference from the
current story line.
It comes off over simplistic at times, but that's my opinion as an adult reader and may not be the opinion of younger readers.
The story has two heroines who after the initial plot gets rolling are separated and must each cope with their particular situation while still accomplishing the overall goal of saving the Libyrinth from conquest by its enemies.
On a whole, this is a very strong female driven plot which does not compromise and doesn't cater to emotional appeal to keep the reader interested in their fate.
If you liked the Hunger Games or other books of futuristic dystopias, I'd definitely recommend this book.
Until Next Time....
Shelvingly Yours,
Michael

It comes off over simplistic at times, but that's my opinion as an adult reader and may not be the opinion of younger readers.
The story has two heroines who after the initial plot gets rolling are separated and must each cope with their particular situation while still accomplishing the overall goal of saving the Libyrinth from conquest by its enemies.
On a whole, this is a very strong female driven plot which does not compromise and doesn't cater to emotional appeal to keep the reader interested in their fate.
If you liked the Hunger Games or other books of futuristic dystopias, I'd definitely recommend this book.
Until Next Time....
Shelvingly Yours,
Michael
Sunday, June 9, 2013
Sharing a beer with Stephen King
I hadn't intended to write another post about King, but I'm a fan of the Hard Case Crime series of books, and King's latest novel is another in that series (his first: "The Colorado Kid" was loosely, very loosely, used as the basis for the Siffy television series "Haven".)
So today I went to my favorite local bookstore, Rose's Bookhouse, and bought "Joyland" in trade paperback edition, brought it home, set it on the table, and promptly spilled beer all over it.
I think Steve-O would be proud.
Until Next Time..
Soakedly Yours,
Michael

I think Steve-O would be proud.
Until Next Time..
Soakedly Yours,
Michael
Labels:
Hard Case Crime,
Joyland,
Rose's Bookhouse,
Stephen King
Sunday, May 19, 2013
Kingly Fans: Are you a fan or a Fan?
I guess
you could call me a Stephen King fan, but I think of myself as more of an
Unconscious Fan, which basically means, I had read a lot of King before I
realized exactly how much of him I had read. He and I have a great
relationship, one I’ve read he’s perfectly fine with: He writes books, I read
them, and recommend the ones I like to my friends. To paraphrase something
Tabitha King once reportedly said: "You pay your money, you get a story, and
that’s all you get of him, his family gets the rest." I have no problem with
that.
Only I discovered I must be a bigger fan than I realized. Nothing reminds me of that more than when I have a casual conversation with another fan. Usually I’ve read more than that person, don’t mispronounce his first name with the “F” sound, and don’t believe the urban legend about him witnessing another little boy get hit by a train while playing on train tracks (my grandmother says the exact same thing happened with my father when he was a boy – I suspect it’s a generation thing mothers used to tell their children to keep them from paying around railroad tracks.).
So as I started thinking back as to how many of his works I’ve read, and how much I’ve read about Stephen King, I thought the least I could do was make a list of all his works I’ve managed to complete over the years.
And without further redundancy, here’s that list:
Carrie (1974)
'Salem's Lot (1975)
The Shining (1977)
Rage (1977)
Night Shift (1978)
The Stand (1978)
The Long Walk (1979)
The Dead Zone (1979)
Firestarter (1980)
Danse Macabre (1981)
Cujo (1981)
The Dark Tower: The Gunslinger (1982)
Creepshow (1982)
Different Seasons (1982)
Christine (1983)
Pet Sematary (1983)
Cycle of the Werewolf (1983))
The Talisman (1984)
Thinner (1984)
Skeleton Crew (1985)
It (1986)
The Dark Tower II: The Drawing of the Three (1987)
Misery (1987)
The Tommyknockers (1987)
The Dark Half (1989)
Four Past Midnight (1990)
The Dark Tower III: The Waste Lands (1991)
Needful Things (1991)
Dolores Claiborne (1992)
Nightmares & Dreamscapes (1993)
On Writing (2000)
From a Buick 8 (2002)
The Colorado Kid (2005)
Cell (2006)
Blockade Billy (2010)
Full Dark, No Stars (2010)
Like any bibliophile, I own way more books than I can possibly read. Here are the King books I own but haven’t read yet
The Stand: The Complete & Uncut Edition (1990)
Gerald's Game (1992)
Insomnia (1994)
Desperation (1996)
The Regulators (1996)
Dreamcatcher (2001)
Lisey's Story (2006)
Duma Key (2008)
Overall, there’s a lot of his work that isn’t on that list, and I know people who have read every single scrap that man has written. But I know people who’ve only read a quarter of that list, don’t know some of the others even exist, yet proclaim themselves pretty knowledgeable about King.
The lesson:
Real Stephen King fans are as loyal, knowledgable, and sometimes as fanatical as Star Trek and Star Wars fans, and unless you know those really obscure facts that 99.99% of the general population doesn't know, then you should consider yourself only a moderate fan. In the meantime, read and enjoy, but know there's always someone, somewhere out there who truly is a bigger fan than you.
Until Next Time...
Kingly Yours,
Michael
Only I discovered I must be a bigger fan than I realized. Nothing reminds me of that more than when I have a casual conversation with another fan. Usually I’ve read more than that person, don’t mispronounce his first name with the “F” sound, and don’t believe the urban legend about him witnessing another little boy get hit by a train while playing on train tracks (my grandmother says the exact same thing happened with my father when he was a boy – I suspect it’s a generation thing mothers used to tell their children to keep them from paying around railroad tracks.).
So as I started thinking back as to how many of his works I’ve read, and how much I’ve read about Stephen King, I thought the least I could do was make a list of all his works I’ve managed to complete over the years.
And without further redundancy, here’s that list:
Carrie (1974)
'Salem's Lot (1975)
The Shining (1977)
Rage (1977)
Night Shift (1978)
The Stand (1978)
The Long Walk (1979)
The Dead Zone (1979)
Firestarter (1980)
Danse Macabre (1981)
Cujo (1981)
The Dark Tower: The Gunslinger (1982)
Creepshow (1982)
Different Seasons (1982)
Christine (1983)
Pet Sematary (1983)
Cycle of the Werewolf (1983))
The Talisman (1984)
Thinner (1984)
Skeleton Crew (1985)
It (1986)
The Dark Tower II: The Drawing of the Three (1987)
Misery (1987)
The Tommyknockers (1987)
The Dark Half (1989)
Four Past Midnight (1990)
The Dark Tower III: The Waste Lands (1991)
Needful Things (1991)
Dolores Claiborne (1992)
Nightmares & Dreamscapes (1993)
On Writing (2000)
From a Buick 8 (2002)
The Colorado Kid (2005)
Cell (2006)
Blockade Billy (2010)
Full Dark, No Stars (2010)
Like any bibliophile, I own way more books than I can possibly read. Here are the King books I own but haven’t read yet
The Stand: The Complete & Uncut Edition (1990)
Gerald's Game (1992)
Insomnia (1994)
Desperation (1996)
The Regulators (1996)
Dreamcatcher (2001)
Lisey's Story (2006)
Duma Key (2008)
Overall, there’s a lot of his work that isn’t on that list, and I know people who have read every single scrap that man has written. But I know people who’ve only read a quarter of that list, don’t know some of the others even exist, yet proclaim themselves pretty knowledgeable about King.
The lesson:
Real Stephen King fans are as loyal, knowledgable, and sometimes as fanatical as Star Trek and Star Wars fans, and unless you know those really obscure facts that 99.99% of the general population doesn't know, then you should consider yourself only a moderate fan. In the meantime, read and enjoy, but know there's always someone, somewhere out there who truly is a bigger fan than you.
Until Next Time...
Kingly Yours,
Michael
Friday, April 12, 2013
The Dud Avocado review
Here's a copy of a review of "The Dud Avocado" by Elaine Dundy I've posted on Amazon, Good Reads, and LibraryThing:
This novel is very much a product of its time and comes from
the same literary vein as Truman Capote's "Breakfast at Tiffany's".
Our main character - the flighty Sally Jay Gorce - hops from one scene to the
other with random reckless abandon in the streets and clubs of 1950s Paris. At
this point in the novel, there is no real plot, and only a few minor points are
necessary for the overall storyline. The first half of the novel makes it
difficult to maintain interest in a character, who, even though she is only 19
years old or so, seems to have no plan other than prattle on inconsequential
issues. The rest of the characters in the book are practically flat and
interchangeable, and I didn't care about a single one of them. Dundy presents a
fairly accurate view of what a naïve American girl in 1950's France, but I
disagree with the reviewers who found it funny -- but then again, maybe in 1950
this WAS funny.
I gave it two out of five stars.
Until Next Time,
Dudingly Yours,
Michael

It's not until the second half of the novel when SJ and
three friends leave Paris and travel south where they encounter a film crew
looking for extras that this novel actually develops a plot enough to keep the
story moving forward.
I picked this up because it is a New York Review of Books
edition and was recommended by NPR. So while I
may not have completely enjoyed this novel, it is a good example of its
time and of some of the modern literature that was being read at that time.
Until Next Time,
Dudingly Yours,
Michael
Wednesday, April 3, 2013
Suicidal Authors
The other day during a discussion of The Rape of Nanking, we spent some time discussing the author Iris Chang, her fight with depression, paranoia, and eventual suicide at a very young age. Coincidentally enough, I've been working my way through the complete works of Anne Sexton, and the combination of these two things got me to thinking about other authors who have killed themselves. I then decided to attempt to recall strictly from memory, modern-ish authors who have committed suicide. I came up with these four immediately:
So if there are any you think I should aware of, but don't, let me know.
Until Next Time,
Alively Yours,
Michael

- Iris Chang (1968 - 2004)
- Ernest Hemingway (1899 - 1961)
- Sylvia Plath (1932 - 1963)
- Anne Sexton (1928 - 1974)
- Robert Howard (1906 - 1936)
So if there are any you think I should aware of, but don't, let me know.
Until Next Time,
Alively Yours,
Michael
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
RIP James Herbert

Until Next Time...
Creepy-ly Yours,
Michael
Labels:
British author,
James Herbert,
The Fog,
The Rats,
The Tomb
Tuesday, February 19, 2013
Happy Birthday, Amy Tan
Amy Tan was born February 19, 1952. She rocketed to fame when her first novel "The Joy Luck Club" hit the bestseller lists and was made into a 1993 movie of the same name. And unlike many debut novelists, actually wrote the screenplay as well.
I can remember when I was in college and the movie came out. Nearly every Asian girl I knew was going to the theater with their Asian mother to watch it. For them, like the themes of the novel, it was very much about mothers and daughters connecting. The book and the movie opened dialogues, and in some casese, helped resolved issues that had become walls between generations.
Since then, Tan has written several other bestselling novels, including "The Kitchen God's Wife", "The Hundred Secret Senses", "The Bonesetter's Daughter", and "Saving Fish from Drowning". She also wrote a collection of non-fiction essays entitled "The Opposite of Fate: A Book of Musings".
In addition to these, Tan has written two children's books I one day intend to look up and check out, "The Moon Lady" (1992) and "Sagwa, the Chinese Siamese Cat" (1994).
Until Next Time,
Luckily Yours,
Michael

Since then, Tan has written several other bestselling novels, including "The Kitchen God's Wife", "The Hundred Secret Senses", "The Bonesetter's Daughter", and "Saving Fish from Drowning". She also wrote a collection of non-fiction essays entitled "The Opposite of Fate: A Book of Musings".
In addition to these, Tan has written two children's books I one day intend to look up and check out, "The Moon Lady" (1992) and "Sagwa, the Chinese Siamese Cat" (1994).
Until Next Time,
Luckily Yours,
Michael
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
Judging A Book By Its Lover
I love reading books about books, books about reading, and anything book that falls in between. If you love to read, if you hoard books, or spends hours in the library only to carry out your loans with a equipment dolly, then this is the latest literary criticism book for you.
At Subterranean Books this past Saturday, I stumbled upon "Judging a Book By Its Lover: A Field Guide to the Hearts and Minds of Readers Everywhere" by Lauren Leto.
Since picking it up, I've barely been able to put it down. If it wasn't for things like family obligations, work, school, etc., I would have finished this that very afternoon in the local restaurant I hid in.
Leto is a well read reader who is impressive with her witty stories about life, reading, and growing up as a bookcat (not a bookworm as she argues). Oh course she could be faking it, as she provides clear steps about how to fake reading some of those books people claim to have read.
Her take on J.D. Salinger readers and fans is quite funny. Book club rules presented a'la Fight Club format is cute. There are sections on being a Harry Potter fan as a adult, how to write like any writer, bookstore pick-up lines, all delivered with such a deft skill, "page-turner" is really the only adequate description.
If anyone read "Texts From Last Night: All the Texts No One Remembers Sending" then you may already be familiar with her smart humor.
"Judging A Book By Its Lover" is one of those rare books that I not only recommend, but one of those few I may actually buy extra copies to give out to friends.
Until Next Time....
Readingly Yours,
Michael
At Subterranean Books this past Saturday, I stumbled upon "Judging a Book By Its Lover: A Field Guide to the Hearts and Minds of Readers Everywhere" by Lauren Leto.
Since picking it up, I've barely been able to put it down. If it wasn't for things like family obligations, work, school, etc., I would have finished this that very afternoon in the local restaurant I hid in.
Leto is a well read reader who is impressive with her witty stories about life, reading, and growing up as a bookcat (not a bookworm as she argues). Oh course she could be faking it, as she provides clear steps about how to fake reading some of those books people claim to have read.
Her take on J.D. Salinger readers and fans is quite funny. Book club rules presented a'la Fight Club format is cute. There are sections on being a Harry Potter fan as a adult, how to write like any writer, bookstore pick-up lines, all delivered with such a deft skill, "page-turner" is really the only adequate description.
If anyone read "Texts From Last Night: All the Texts No One Remembers Sending" then you may already be familiar with her smart humor.
"Judging A Book By Its Lover" is one of those rare books that I not only recommend, but one of those few I may actually buy extra copies to give out to friends.
Until Next Time....
Readingly Yours,
Michael
Labels:
book about books,
Lauren Leto,
literary criticism,
non-fiction
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
Losing a Poetry Outlet
In case you hadn't heard by now - Sagebook Frenchtown is closing its doors Sept. 15, 2012.
The owner and her staff were kind enough to host poetry readings once a month, and it's too bad we poets are losing another outlet. But business is business, and bookstores come and go.
She's having a big blowout sale on her remaining inventory, so now may be your last chance to grab up some book deals.
Until next time,
Michael
The owner and her staff were kind enough to host poetry readings once a month, and it's too bad we poets are losing another outlet. But business is business, and bookstores come and go.
She's having a big blowout sale on her remaining inventory, so now may be your last chance to grab up some book deals.
Until next time,
Michael
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