• 1. Read all books on 888 challenge list
  • 2. Read War and Peace
  • 3. Read a biography of Richard III
  • 4. Read a history of the Wars of the Roses
  • 5. Read The Iliad
  • 6. Read the rest of the Outlander series
  • 7. Read the Bible - all of it
  • 8. Reach a total of 150 on the 1,001 Book You Must Read Before You Die list
  • 9. For three months, abandon any book that hasn’t grabbed me by page 75
  • 10. Increase by five the number of centuries from which I have read at least one work
  • 11. Read more than 250 pages a day for two weeks
  • 12. Cull my book collection
  • 13. Reorganise my bookshelves
    11-4-08
  • 14. Get a wooden bookcase
  • 15. Reduce my TBR pile to a single-figure number
  • 16. Break the habit of using junk as bookmarks
  • 17. Merge my various want-to-read lists into one
  • 18. Finish adding all my books to LibraryThing
  • 19. Get the hit counter on this blog to 50,000
  • 20. Run another reading challenge
  • 21. Start a meme
  • 22. Add at least one link to the Saturday Review of Books each week for three months
  • 23. Add 20 new blogs to my blogroll
  • 24. Get to 5,000 pages proofed at Project Gutenberg
  • 25. Volunteer at a Lifeline Bookfest
  • 26. Participate in NaNoWriMo
  • 27. Finish and edit the result
  • 28. Send it to a publisher
  • 29. Get paid for a short story
  • 30. Keep a journal
  • 31. Pay library fines
  • 32. Get a new laptop
  • 33. Acquire and deploy a NO JUNK MAIL sticker
  • 34. Start an investment portfolio
  • 35. Leave home
  • 36. Leave Queensland
  • 37. Adopt a cat
  • 38. Get new glasses with Transitions lenses
  • 39. Get a Proof of Age card
    28-3-08
  • 40. Find a pair of high heels that actually fit
  • 41. Double my cushion cover collection
  • 42. Buy a photo album and organise my collection of six-year-old photos
  • 43. Frame the painted scroll I inherited from my grandmother
  • 44. Find the Year 11 art class self-portrait that has apparently vanished into thin air
    18-3-08
  • 45. Find or make a jewellery container specifically designed to hold drop earrings
  • 46. Finish my butterfly earrings
  • 47. Make a new cover for my ottoman
  • 48. Make a new cover for the cushion on my cane chair
  • 49. Finish sewing my grey skirt
    10-4-08
    And I am never, ever, ever using fabric like that again!
  • 50. Sew my blue dress
  • 51. Design a pattern for a patterned dress
  • 52. Sew patterned dress
  • 53. Embroider a bookmark
    17-3-08
  • 54. Make an easy-to-change doona cover
  • 55. Knit a jumper
  • 56. Knit socks
  • 57. Crochet a shawl
  • 58. Design and make a small quilt
  • 59. Design and make a full-size quilt
  • 60. Decoupage something
  • 61. Design a tarot deck
  • 62. Do one sketch a week for 2 months
  • 63. Paint my toenails
  • 64. Take pottery classes
  • 65. Take bellydancing classes
  • 66. Take Latin dance classes
  • 67. Begin regular exercise
  • 68. Take up yoga
  • 69. Get to the point where I can stop wearing my retainers
  • 70. Grow my hair long again
  • 71. (Try to) learn a foreign language
  • 72. Study history
  • 73. Learn to make bread
  • 74. Learn to make scones
  • 75. Learn to type
  • 76. Learn to do more with Excel than just putting in data
  • 77. Clear junk off laptop hard drive
  • 78. Clear junk off desktop hard drive
  • 79. Clear my wardrobe of everything I no longer wear
  • 80. Spend one month clutter-free
  • 81. Learn to meditate
  • 82. Moisturise every day for a month
  • 83. Visit a local art gallery
  • 84. Go on a ghost tour
  • 85. Grow a bonsai plant from seed
  • 86. Grow a herb garden
  • 87. Grow vegetables from seed
  • 88. Keep a gerbera alive for three months
  • 89. Keep an orchid alive for three months
  • 90. Keep a cyclamen alive for three months
  • 91. Get a potted Wollemi pine
  • 92. Grow bulbs
  • 93. Decorate a hat . . .
  • 94. . . . and wear it to the races
  • 95. Get a digital camera . . .
  • 96. . . . and start doing Wordless Wednesdays
  • 97. Make a Regency dress . . .
  • 98. . . . and go to a Jane Austen ball
  • 99. Get up early and watch the sunrise
  • 100. Celebrate my accomplishments!
  • 101. Try to think of another 101 things . . .
  • End date:26-11-10

31 May 2008

Eponymous Challenge Reviews

**STICKY POST**

The Eponymous Challenge has begun! This post is where the participants can link up their reviews like this: Name (Title). If you don’t have a blog, you can just leave a comment; and if you haven’t signed up, you can still do so here.



Now reading: Don Quixote - Miguel de Cervantes (CC)
                                The Sunne in Splendour - Sharon Penman (CC)

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24 April 2008

Book Review: Antony and Cleopatra by William Shakespeare

Eponymous Challenge #2
Royalty Rules Challenge #3

The world as the Romans know it is divided between three men, but those three are about to be reduced to one. With Aemilius Lepidus out of the way, the fight is between Mark Antony and Octavius Caesar. Antony prefers to spend his time in luxury in Egypt with the still-beautiful Cleopatra, while Octavius concentrates on the running of the empire. They are united for a time by the threat posed by Pompey and by Antony’s marriage to Octavius’s sister. But the lure of Cleopatra is too strong, and the desertion of Octavia gives her brother the perfect excuse for war. Antony is confident of victory; but his pride goes before the fall not only of himself, but of Cleopatra.

It was hard not to read this and not compare it to what I know of Roman history. A reasonable amount of compression took place; Lepidus was dispensed with some years before the Battle of Actium. This realisation didn’t hamper my enjoyment of the play; after all, Shakespeare is hardly reliable history (Richard III, anyone?). Besides, the rearrangement of the empire took second place to the relationship between the two main characters. Antony was entranced by Cleopatra, happily ignoring official business where possible so that he might stay with her, while she was not content unless he was in Alexandria with her. For a famous monarch, Cleopatra had moments of surprising clinginess and emotional erraticness; for someone who controlled a kingdom, she didn’t always have much control over herself. Her powers of seduction being legendary, however, I didn’t stop to think overmuch about what he saw in her.

The structure of the play was impressive, but I couldn’t avoid the thought that it must be hard to stage. Several acts run to more than a dozen scenes, and some of those fill less than a page; just enough to establish the who, what, and where. (The mind boggles at the idea of the backstage chaos created by having groups of people entering and exiting in such quick succession.) The main characters leave plenty to think about, being so drawn as to allow for the reader’s own judgement. A hero, or a fool? A tragic queen, or an emotionally unstable manipulator hoist by her own petard? A political schemer, or a man genuinely concerned for the empire he’d inherited? The play doesn’t decide. Its downside is that, compared to other tragedies, it feels . . . well, rather un-tragic. It doens’t inspire the if-onlys as, say, Romeo and Juliet does; it prompts no listing of things which might have changed everything if they’d just turned out differently. Antony and Cleopatra carries a sense of leaden inevitability.

Rating: B

Now reading: The Three Musketeers - Alexandre Dumas (EC)
                                The Big Over-Easy - Jasper Fforde (888C)

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Book Review: Arabella by Georgette Heyer

Eponymous Challenge #1

Arabella Tallant is the eldest of four sisters in a family of eight children and modest means. As such she knows it is her duty to marry as well as she can, in order to assist her younger siblings. With her godmother’s offer of a Season in London and her family’s contrivances to get her finely arrayed on a budget her chances look good. Then her uncle’s carriage breaks down, obliging her and her chaperone to seek shelter at the home of the fabulously wealthy Mr. Beaumaris. There she overhears a comment revealing that he thinks her a gold-digger and her ‘carriage accident’ a mere ruse. Impulse gets the better of her and she pretends to be an heiress travelling to London in order to conceal her wealth and be courted for herself alone - before giving him a firm set-down. Not liking such treatment, Mr. Beaumaris decides to have word of the mythical Tallant fortune spread all over town, and to pay Arabella enough attention to make her the most popular girl of the Season.

Sure enough, Arabella is beset by suitors, and when she realises what Mr. Beaumaris’s gossipy friend Lord Fleetwood has done she’s in a quandary. She must marry; but how can she accept a proposal when to do so means revealing that she has no fortune - and the origin of the story that she does? She also finds it hard to keep up the pretence of being a fine lady; as a vicar’s well-brought-up daughter she can’t help rushing to the aid of creatures in need - even mongrel dogs and climbing boys. Mr. Beaumaris is disconcerted to discover that instead of being just a harmless bit of amusement, he actually likes her - and can’t say no when she needs a home for one of her rescued unfortunates. It takes the calamitous London career of Arabella’s incognito brother Bertram to sort things out - after making them vastly more complicated.

It’s about time I posted a review in my own challenge! (But, well, reading slump, blogging slump, whole-life slump . . . my mother is currently making better headway through my TBR box than I am.) This book I finished . . . er, a while ago, so it wasn’t part of the aforementioned slump - quite the opposite, in fact. While reading it I frequently had a broad smile on my face - especially if Ulysses was on the page. The little dog had a marked personality and simply adored his new owner, leaving many gentlemen comically confused as to whether having a dog following one everywhere was a new fashion they should all be adopting. (Except for Mr. Frederick Byng, who I’ve recently discovered was a real figure, and who took drives in the park with a perfectly coiffed and clipped poodle.) I liked Mr. Beaumaris’s willingness to poke fun at the slavish followers of fashion even though they were following him; but my favourite of the two was Arabella. She was kindhearted, able to hold her own in repartee with all the city people, and prone to getting into scrapes by not thinking about the likely outcome of her good intentions. Her agonising about how to extricate herself can’t have been much fun for her, but certainly is for the reader.

I just wish I could have seen the oh-so-fashionable Mr. Beaumaris happily pottering about the parsonage with all Arabella’s relatives; or her first meeting with his dragonish grandmother. (Somehow I think Arabella and the Dowager Duchess would have liked each other immensely.) And a glossary of Regency slang terms wouldn’t have gone amiss.

Rating: B+

Now reading: Antony and Cleopatra - William Shakespeare (RRC, EC)
                                The Three Musketeers - Alexandre Dumas (EC)

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29 February 2008

Roll Up, Roll Up for the Eponymous Reading Challenge!

** STICKY POST **

One of my favourite things about book blogging is the existence of reading challenges. I’ve considered several ideas for running my own, but have only recently hit on one that no-one else has thought of. So I am striking while the idea is still unclaimed and celebrating books that share names with their characters with

The Eponymous Challenge

Here’s how it works:

The challenge will run from 1 March to 31 May, 2008.

During that time your mission should you choose to accept it is to read 4 books whose titles are the name of one or more of the characters (e.g. Evelina, Oscar and Lucinda); or a description of one or more of the characters (e.g. The Merchant of Venice, Sylvia’s Lovers).

Non-fiction books and overlaps with other challenges are welcome, as are books named after four-legged characters.

Once you’ve chosen your books, choose a colour scheme . . .




(200 x 87)

. . . post your list, and add a link to it with Mr. Linky below. I can’t wait to see how this works out!

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04 February 2008

The Eponymous Reading Challenge

One advantage of devising your own reading challenge is you get to be the first one signed up! For my first (and hopefully not last) challenge my selections are:

The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas
Arabella by Georgette Heyer
Antony and Cleopatra by William Shakespeare (overlap with the Royalty Rules Challenge)
The Warden by Anthony Trollope


Now reading: The Quiet American - Graham Greene (888C)
                                The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes - Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

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