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  • Tag: reread2016

    • Classic & Re-Read: “Emma” by Jane Austen

      Posted at 4:30 am by Laura, on April 15, 2016

      Two birds with one stone in this post! Each challenge has slightly different questions, so this’ll make for an interesting review and discussion of Jane Austen’s Emma.

      2016classicschallenge1

      Stacey @ The Pretty Books is hosting the Classics Challenge in an effort to read more classic literature — and you can define “classic” however you wish! Sign up and start reading literature that’s standing the test of time. 

      Book #1 of 2016:
      Emma by Jane Austen (1815)

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      WHEN I Discovered This Classic

      The first time I read Austen must’ve been in middle school, around 12 years old. I bought two volumes that had her six novels, and I’m pretty sure I breezed through all of them. Only four stick out to me and I read often — Emma would not be one of them! It was firmly one of my least-favorite at the time, so I just stuck to the BBC adaptation and called it a day.

      WHY I Chose to Read It

      It’s been over 14 years, more or less, since I read it, and I love the BBC adaptation. So maybe my adolescent opinion isn’t worth listening to and I ought to re-read this classic again! (Plus, come on, Austen said she loved Emma-the-character. Gotta give her a chance!)

      WHAT Makes It A Classic

      Because it’s Austen. But I’m not sure what exactly made Austen a classic. Possibly because her stories are universal, satirical, well-written, interesting. Austen understood people.

      WHAT I Thought of This Classic

      I definitely have a higher opinion of Emma! Though it’s still not one of my favorite Austens, it was nice to be back in her style of writing. Mr Knightley is sassy and realistic, I do not like Frank Churchill (what an awful flirt), Mr Woodhouse is far more of a hypochondriac than I remembered or expected, and Emma, though difficult, was fun to watch. Check out my full thoughts in my re-read section!

      WILL It Stay A Classic

      Of course! It’s Austen, it’s a classic. It inspired one of the greatest 90s movie classics, too: Clueless. That match-making-gone-wrong story is a classic trope as well. Not sure if it started because of Austen, but it’s something that audiences gravitate to.

      WHO I’d Recommend It To

      Anyone who enjoyed the BBC adaptation, Clueless, or matchmaking stories. Emma is so much more than that, but it’s definitely the draw to the novel.

      ReRead2016Graphic

      Kelly @ Belle of the Literati is hosting a fun challenge for bloggers: The Re-Read Challenge! Not much of a “challenge,” per se, because why wouldn’t you want to re-read and re-experience some of your favorites? Sign up and start re-reading!

      Book #2 of 2016:
      Emma by Jane Austen

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      WHEN I First Read

      As stated before (the one overlap question, yay!), I was probably 12 when I first read Emma.

      WHAT I Remember

      Nothing particularly detailed in this book except that I found Emma to be snobbish when I first read it. I also remembered Mr Knightley scolding her a lot. (And yet, of course, the BBC adaptation became most of what I remembered. How do you know when a show/movie blurs the original work too much?)

      HOW I Felt After Re-Reading

      Relieved the BBC stayed true to the work, and pleasantly surprised. I took some notes while I was reading (because who doesn’t do that with a classic?), and here’s what stood out:

      HARRIET / MR MARTIN / MR ELTON — Emma’s snobbery clouds Harriet’s judgement of the sweet and perfect Mr Martin in chapter four. How incredibly fast! Harriet was such an impressionable character, but she came to her own by the end. I was also surprised with how large a role Mr Martin had in the books, too, as a tertiary character. His random appearances spark Harriet out of each of her “I love Mr ___” stupors.

      EMMA / MR ELTON / FRANK CHURCHILL — What Churchill did to Emma is exactly what Emma did to Mr Elton, in a way. Both characters unknowingly led another on; such flirts! Yet I have a hard time forgiving Churchill the way I could forgive Emma. Emma, at least, didn’t seem like she realized she was flirting with Mr Elton and leading him on. In adaptations it’s quite obvious Elton is infatuated with Emma, but in the book it wasn’t. Despite Churchill’s explanatory letter and apology (side note: I love that Austen has letters from men in her novels so they can explain themselves!), I have a hard time understanding how Jane Fairfax could still marry him after all those months.

      EMMA / MR KNIGHTLEY — The confessions to one another before the proposal are awesome. They’re not apologizing for their behavior, but they can explain their conduct and recognize or admit to their faults. It’s huge for Emma to do so. She’s always arguing with Knightley, but he tends to make a fair point. After all of that, she’s still the same kind of Emma — argumentative, observant, nosy — but with growth and wisdom. They don’t completely change at the turn of a page, like many characters in books do. They grew up.

      EMMA — You can’t really blame Emma for her pompous attitude and rudeness, though. She has the most hypochondriac of fathers, no travel experience, and the only challenging conversations she has are with Knightley, who, despite his scolding, treats her more like an equal than anything else.

      WOULD I Re-Read Again

      I’m not sure I would read this Austen again any time soon, but I would definitely reread it again in my lifetime!

      What books have you reread recently? What classic have you read recently?

      Posted in books, Classics Challenge, ReRead2016, Reviews 2016 | 8 Comments | Tagged books, classics challenge, genre: adult fiction, genre: classics, reread2016
    • #ReRead2016 Book 1: Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix

      Posted at 5:15 am by Laura, on January 21, 2016

      ReRead2016Graphic

      Kelly @ Belle of the Literati is hosting a fun challenge for bloggers: The Re-Read Challenge! Not much of a “challenge,” per se, because why wouldn’t you want to re-read and re-experience some of your favorites? Sign up and start re-reading!

      Book #1 of 2016:
      Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix

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      WHEN I First Read

      June 21, 2003, at approximately 12:15am. I read all day and into the night, finishing just before June 22 and in no state to be by myself at that late hour. Because Sirius.

      WHAT I Remember

      I remember a lot of CAPSLOCK!Harry, a lot of dreams, a lot of dark and scary things, feeling incredibly pissed with Umbridge (so much so I threw my book across the room and left a dent in my wall), and distraught over Sirius. Actually, “distraught” is an understatement. Let’s be honest.

      OotP was an emotional read. Both with all of Harry’s emotions and all of mine after waiting ages for this book.

      HOW I Felt After Re-Reading

      Even more pissed with Umbridge and a little less distraught over Sirius. Here’s why…

      UMBRIDGE — She loves scapegoats. She loves control and order, which is fine and dandy when you have a heart (like McGonagall and Hermione). But because she’s heartless and takes pleasure in others’ pain, she is worse than Voldemort. She also has issues with anyone who is not like her: pureblood, wealthy, pro-government, human. Any half creature (Hagrid, Firenze, Flitwick), any human with extra abilities (Trelawney’s Sight, Harry’s Patronus, Fred and George’s wit), anyone who questioned her judgement with logic or reasoning. She reminds me of closed-minded right-wing politicians, and we all know they make me rage.

      SIRIUS — As an adult rereading OotP for the first time (I reread the others multiple times, but never OotP till now), I can see Sirius’s flaws. I’m not as distraught over him, but he still makes for a great character study. He was a father and a friend for Harry. He was the adult male who was closest to his parents, and therefore a father figure. He was a friend to Harry, because Sirius was not quite up to the task of being a father. Besides, neither one of them knew how to have that father-son relationship, as neither character had a father or son to compare the experience to.

      Sirius is also a hypocrite, but not in a way that makes you hate him. He tells Harry to treat others with kindness, that you know everything about a man based on how he treats those below him. And yet Sirius was cruel to his house elf. I understand why, but it doesn’t quite excuse his behavior. He was also vicious with Snape — and again, I understand why — but Sirius never attempted to try to make peace with Snape as adults. He never tried to trust him like Dumbledore asked of the Order. The Weasleys could do it, Lupin and Tonks could do it. It’s called being civil. But Sirius never was.

      I think Sirius may be one of the most human of characters in the series. He is forever trapped in a time when his friends were young, he’s traumatized by the horrors of Azkaban, he has moments of wisdom and moments of weakness. It’s a tragic life, and I can forgive him for his hypocrisy.

      WOULD I Re-Read Again

      It was an emotional read this time around, too. It may be another 10+ years before I pick it up again, though the rest of the series will always be reread without question.

      What books have you re-read recently?

      Posted in books, Flights of Fantasy, ReRead2016, Reviews 2016 | 17 Comments | Tagged books, flights of fantasy, reread2016
    • 2016 Bookish Resolutions & Reading Challenges

      Posted at 3:10 am by Laura, on January 2, 2016

       

      2016bookishresolutions

      READ 50 BOOKS || Easy peasy. I’ve been doing this every year. It’s always a challenge to see if it’ll get done, what with agenting and all. 2016 will be especially difficult because there are a lot of travels planned (and, strangely enough, I don’t read much when I’m traveling).

      READ FEWER ARCs || ARCs are important. I’ll always love receiving them. But I think I hit my max in the number of ARCs to read and review in 2015, and I’d like to take a step back from that in 2016. My primary job is to find new manuscripts — to be the hipster in the publishing industry (cause that’s what agents are!). I’ll be more selective in the ARCs I accept for review, just like how I’m selective in the manuscripts I read.

      REREAD 5 FAVORITES || Last year I made a goal of rereading 10 favorite books, and only managed to complete 3 and nearly finish another. Five seems like a more achievable goal.

      READ 10 LIBRARY BOOKS || I’m debating between making this 10 library books and 15 library books — either way, read more books from the library! One does not need to buy all the new books when you could easily check them out from the library and decide if they’re worth keeping in your own personal library later on. I managed to read 7 books from the library in 2015, so I think 10-15 seems a good range.

      PURCHASE NO MORE THAN 5 NEW BOOKS || This will be the tough one. I could never quite follow the “for every 5 books read, 1 unread book can be purchased” resolution I’d make in previous years, because…well, are ARCs part of the list? Or was it 5 already published books? And because I was wishy washy with the definition, I wouldn’t keep track of the number of books I read and just bought stuff whenever I felt like it. Now I have something to keep track. Only 5 completely-new-to-me, never-been-read-in-any-format-ever-before books.

      Reading Challenges

      This year I’m participating in four reading challenges, all quite naturally. While I have a goal to read fewer ARCs, more library books, and tackling my TBR, these challenges can also keep me in line a bit with all of them.

      2016classicschallenge1

      I’ve told Stacey @ The Pretty Books that I would participate in her Classics Challenge ever since she started this, and two years have gone by and I haven’t kept my word. NOW I WILL! I plan to read at least five classics in 2016, four of the five on my TBR bookcase and one of them I’ve been eyeing for a couple years now. Might as well snag it from the library!

      flightsoffantasy-2016

      Alexa @ Alexa Loves Books is a massive fantasy fan, and we tend to share similar reading preferences. This year I decided I would join her Flights of Fantasy reading challenge. It’s quite simple: read fantasy books. Well, I have loads of those on my TBR bookcase, so I’m planning to read at least five fantasy books in 2016.

      ReRead2016Graphic

      I’m continuing in the Re-Read Challenge in 2016, now hosted solely by Kelly @ Belle of the Literati (because former co-host Hannah @ So Obsessed With will be busy with a little bundle of joy!), and like I said in my resolutions, I plan to re-read five books in 2016.

      rockmytbr

      And last but not least, there’s actually a challenge out there for reading books off your TBR shelves! Sarah @ The YA Book Traveler is hosting the Rock My TBR Challenge, and all you need to do is read at least one book a month off your shelves. I will certainly read more than one a month in 2016.

      As you can see, these challenges will easily overlap with one another. They’re not challenges so much as ways to make me accountable for what I’m resolving to do in 2016. We all need a little something to keep us in line, right?

      What are your bookish resolutions for 2016? Are you participating in any reading challenges (and if so, which ones)?

      Posted in books, Classics Challenge, Flights of Fantasy, ReRead2016, Rock My TBR, Update Post | 18 Comments | Tagged 50 book challenge, books, classics challenge, flights of fantasy, personal, reading, reread2016, resolutions, rock my TBR
    • Hello, I’m Laura!

      I'm a bookish bookworm and book hoarder. By day I'm a literary agent, and by night I'm forever rearranging my bookshelves. I could talk your ear off about Gothic literature, and in my past life people thought I'd become a professional musician. I have a fluffy black cat named Rossetti, I love to knit, tea is my drink of choice, British TV is the best, and I'm obsessed with popcorn. Welcome to Scribbles & Wanderlust! Grab your favorite hot beverage and let's chat books!
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