Top Ten Tuesday: What I Love Most

toptentuesday

About being a reader/blogger!! I picked five for blogger and five for reader. Go check out the other TTT posts.

Blogger:

1. Community – I love you. All of you. Making new friends and meeting people from all over the world has to be the number one reason to be a blogger. Am I right?

2. Reading Record – Before I blogged, I’d often forget how I felt about a book or certain quotes I wanted to remember. With a blog, I have a handy-dandy record of my reading experience for the past several years. I revisit old posts constantly.

3. Data Tracking – Sure, I could do this on a spreadsheet or Goodreads. And I do. But the reasons I started doing these things was to write wrap up posts on the blog. So thank you, blog, for giving me new reasons to geek out over spreadsheets and pie charts.

4. Learning new things (a.k.a. resume enhancement) – Okay, I know I’m not a professional, but blogging is a skill. I’ve learned so much. Whether about writing and grammar or writing code. Win-win.

5. Discovery – From podcasts to BookTube, I’ve made so many new internet and bookish discoveries that all started right here. And the books….MY GOD, the books. And music. And movies.

Reader:

1. 1,000 Lives – George R.R. Martin wrote, “A reader lives a thousand lives before he dies.” Best reason to be a reader, hands down.

2. Stretching the Imagination – I love building worlds and characters inside my head. Books allow me to do this and to go beyond the places my mind would go without someone else’s imagination and stories.

3. Community – Imagine that? Sneaking up on us again. But reading was what got me blogging in the first place. It’s what got me into my English classes and what motivated me to start my book club. Reading, while often solitary, has grown my social circle tenfold. A beautiful sort of irony.

4. Pretty Books – A totally shallow entry on the list. Sorry, I’m not sorry. Being surrounded by all the beautiful books on my many, many bookshelves makes me exorbitantly happy. I dream of having a dedicated home library in my next house.

5. Education – It sounds boring, I know. But I’ve learned so many things about the world and other cultures. I’ve done some amazing armchair traveling. Not to mention the growth in my vocabulary and nerdy grammatical anal retentiveness. Books allow you to go to school forever.

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Top Ten Tuesday: My Reading Wishlist

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This week’s TTT asks us, the readers, this question: what do you want to read about? What plots and characters and time periods and genres do you want to get lost in? Here are a few of my wishes:

1. More nostalgia fiction/nonfiction. What I mean is, more stuff set in or about the 1980s and 1990s. I cannot get enough.

2. More genre in literary fiction. Let’s have more well-written, thought provoking books starring vampires and werewolves. More outer space next to Alice Munro. And romance stories that defy my bitter heart much like Me Before You.

3. More Westerns. BECAUSE. Cowboys are sexy.

4. More accountants/lawyers/managers/office workers. I might be biased here.

5. More mixed media novels. Who doesn’t like pictures and other tidbits in their reading experience? We’ve been bringing books to cinema for so long. Time to bring a little cinema to the book.

6. Book soundtracks. That needs to be a thing that happens on the regular.

7. More diversity. Never a bad thing.

8. More time travel. Please, please, please.

9. More horror. Where did all the really great amazing horror go?

10. More Emma Thompson. I just want her to sit down one afternoon and write a book of her thoughts about all the things.

Top Ten Tuesday: Top Ten Sequels

One cozy, rainy Sunday afternoon when I lived in Vancouver I was working on my latest, slightly over ambitious craft project.  To pass the time while cutting out little stars on handmade birthday invitations (oh so many stars), I flipped on the TV.  And promptly began my happy dance.  You’ve Got Mail was on!  I settled in to watch, while my wonderful then-husband went out for the afternoon.  When he got back home hours later, I was still watching You’ve Got Mail.  So naturally, he asked, “how is this movie possibly still on?”  To which I had to shamefully (well, not really) admit that TBS was having one of its back to back movie repeats.  And that I was watching it…again.  Add that to the hundred times and counting I’d already seen it.  But that’s what you do when you just plain love a movie.  You love every quote, the whimsical music or the beautiful scenery; the main characters may even like the same books you like (got to love the Pride and Prejudice references in You’ve Got Mail).  So even though you’ve already memorized every precious part, you still want to watch it over and over again. 

Then one day you’re going along with your life and a trailer pops up on TV.  They’re making a sequel!  Huzzah!  Your excitement mounts (well, until you realize you have to wait another six months for it to be released).  In honour of that excitement, I’m dedicating this week’s Top Ten Tuesday to the Top Ten Sequels that most made me giddy in the weeks before their release.  Now, not all are necessarily the most Oscar worthy sequels ever made, but they will make you laugh.  And, of course, warm you up on a rainy, cozy Sunday.

1.      Father of the Bride & Father of the Bride Part II

Starring Steve Martin and the unbelievably lovable Diane Keaton, Father of the Bride and Father of the Bride II rank right up at the top of my family’s MUST WATCH REPEATEDLY list.  Based on the popular 1949 novel by Edward Streeter and the classic 1950s original film, FOTB gives us a glimpse into the serene life of George Banks (Martin); a life thrown into chaos when he reluctantly becomes the father of the bride in the wedding of his only daughter, Annie (Kimberly Williams).  Among the long list of things that endear these films to me is the unconditional love Banks exudes for his children – even when he’s busy losing his shit in the middle of crowded grocery store it’s wonderful to know it all comes from a place of fatherly concern.  And what great father doesn’t go a little nuts when the happiness of his kids is at stake?  As George’s wife Nina, Keaton gives another flawless performance, providing just the right calm to his crazy and giving both films an extra dose of heart, while wedding planner Franck Eggelhoffer (Martin Short) and his barely comprehensible foreign accent provide additional comic relief.  I could go on (obviously), but I think Roger Ebert reviewed it best when he said that FOTB is, simply “just everyday life, warmly observed.”  Well, it certainly warms my heart.

2.      Before Sunrise & Before Sunset

As one of the most graceful and subtle romantic films made in the 1990s, I never would have thought to dream that Before Sunrise would eventually inspire a sequel.  As a relatively unknown film, it just didn’t seem the sort.  But sometimes life sends you very pleasant surprises.  Nine years following its release, its starring actors, Ethan Hawke and Julie Deply, partnered with director Richard Linklater to continue their small labour of love.  After spending a single night together nine years earlier in Vienna, fated lovers Jesse (Hawke) and Celine (Deply) come together again, this time in the City of Lights (and this time in the daytime).  In keeping with the original film’s eloquent, dialogue-fueled storyline, we get a refreshingly realistic look of where nine years of adult living can take two people who can’t escape the memory of one another.  Blissfully unadulterated fans of the films, such as myself, will also be happy to know the trio has announced a third installment in the year to come.  So keep on the lookout for trailers people!

3.      Sex and the City & Sex and the City II

There is little need to describe the depth and perfection achieved by the first Sex and the City movie.  If you were elated during its production and waited with bated breath for its release, I find it unlikely you came away from theatres disappointed.  With complex performances by all my favourite SATC regulars, and a few fabulous new faces as well (that’s right, I’m talking about you, Jennifer Hudson), I literally wanted to eat this movie with a spoon and from the moment the credits rolled was ready for seconds.  And although the second course undeniably missed the mark, I still just can’t help myself.  I savour any time spent with Carrie, Miranda, Charlotte, and Samantha, and their gorgeous, over the top couture.  (For fans of the series’ fantastic fashion, tune in to ABC Family on Tuesday nights for Jane by Design, a new show that boasts a cameo by SATC’s famed Costumer Designer, Patricia Field).

4.      My Girl & My Girl 2

My Girl was released in 1991.  I was seven years old and it was, for me, the examination of life and death that I imagine Lean on Me was for my brothers in the 80s.  In small town Pennsylvania in 1972, Vada Margaret Sultenfuss, a quirky and uniquely mature little girl, lives with her distant, undertaker father (Dan Aykroyd).  As charming and funny as this movie is, My Girl radiates a depth that could have easily been minimized and turned to fluff by a sequel.  But the 1992 follow-up did not disappoint as our heroine (because truly that is what Vada is to me) journeys to California to explore the life of her radiant mother, who died shortly after childbirth.  As well as unveiling how magical her mother was and how much she meant in the peculiar lives she touched, Vada discovers the bittersweet disenchantment of growing up and going home.  And, of course, meets a boy.

5.      How to Train Your Dragon & How to Train Your Dragon II

How to Train Your Dragon is probably the most out of place selection on my list because, well, its sequel has actually yet to be released.  It earned its position as number five, however, as a result of my incredibly eager anticipation of its sequel, which I sadly have to wait until June 20, 2014 to see!  The only upside to this long delay is that Finn will finally be old enough to attend movies with Mom and Dad, so yay for that.  Based on a series of young adult novels by British author Cressida Cowell, HTTYD tells the story of Berk, a seaside Viking village plagued by ruthless dragons, and its smallest and most awkward occupant, Hiccup (Jay Baruschel), who somehow manages to befriend the cutest dragon ever put to paper, Toothless.  In my opinion it is the most adorable and accessible animated film for children, while still managing to appeal to the sarcastic sensibilities of us grown-ups (that’s right, I’m counting myself as a grown-up now).  Since HTTYD is designed to be a part of a trilogy, we can only hope Dreamworks doesn’t disappoint in round two!

6.      Bridget Jones’s Diary & Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason

Since this is technically a book based blog and I have been lucky enough to attend a fair few book club meetings with our lovely Atlanta Lady Litwits, I know for a fact that our audience is very familiar with the brilliant novel Bridget Jones’s Diary by author Helen Fielding.  In making the transition from page to screen, BJD was fortunate enough to have lost none of its original charm.  In fact, we simply gain the opportunity to put a hilarious visual to the often unrefined escapades of London girl Bridget Jones and her search for the perfect man, career, and, well, panties.  And although Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason didn’t have quite the perfection of the original, it did include a slap fight between Colin Firth and Hugh Grant, which, if you ask me, was worth the price of admission alone.  The extra silver lining: look out for Bridget Jones’s Baby, appearing in theatres in 2013!

7.      Sisterhood of the Travelling Pants & Sisterhood of the Travelling Pants 2

Another fitting edition to our little book blog, the Sisterhood of the Travelling Pants also began as a series of young adult novels.  The actresses chosen to bring to life the four effervescent young woman of SOTTP, could not have been better selected and will no doubt each earn a place of their own on the great list of Hollywood’s most promising up and comers (if Hollywood can get its act together).  America Ferrera, Alexis Bledel, Blake Lively, and Amber Tamblyn play friends from birth Carmen, Lena, Bridget, and Tibby, all very special and all very different.  For the first time in their lives, the foursome find themselves facing a summer apart.  But when they unearth a vintage pair of “magical” jeans that miraculously fit each and every one of them, from the beautifully curvaceous Carmen to the long and lean Bridget, they sudden have a gateway to keep them united across time and distance.

8.      Sleepless in Seattle & You’ve Got Mail

Okay, okay, okay.  You’ve Got Mail is not technically a sequel to the modern classic Sleepless in Seattle.  It does, however, follow a similar storyline (with a modern, updated twist), and was undeniably a carryover of director Nora Ephron’s ongoing professional love story with romantic leads Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan.  In Sleepless in Seattle, the charming, but oh so 90s, frumpy Annie (Ryan) finds herself falling for single father Sam (Hanks) when she hears him on a phone-in radio show talking about the loss of his wife.  Five years (and much technological advancement later), Hanks and Ryan find love again in You’ve Got Mail as chat room pen pals Kathleen and Joe, blissfully unaware of each other’s true identities as rivals in the business of selling books.  Now, you can go on ahead and blame my youthfulness, but I actually saw the “sequel” before the original and it has found a place of indelible permanence on my list of favourite movies of all time (as I’m sure you caught on in the intro to this article).  I love everything about this movie.  I love getting to watch New York City move through Summer and Fall into Winter and lush, green Spring.  I love the slightly kitschy musical medley that my high school drama troupe ended up featuring in one of our shows.  I love the butterfly in the subway on his way to Bloomingdales (to buy a hat, of course).  And I love the books, all the books!  Charming.  That’s the only way to describe it…so see it, if you haven’t, and be charmed.

9.      Princess Diaries & Princess Diaries II: Royal Engagement

The Princes Diaries II and its predecessor are the first of two deeply guilty pleasures claiming spots on my list.  As well as being fun and silly (classic Disney, perfect for being re-run on ABC Family), these films marked the entry of Anne Hathaway into film making, where the powers that be thankfully discovered how talented an actress she truly is.  Hathaway stars as the clumsy Mia Thermopolis, hapless enough without the newfound discovery that she is, in fact, secretly the princess of a small European country called Genovia and the only heir to the Genovian throne.  Adding substance to these sweet films is the always royal grace of Julie Andrews who plays Mia’s long-lost grandmother Queen Clarisse Renaldi.

10.   Cheaper by the Dozen & Cheaper by the Dozen 2

Guilty pleasure number two comes with a confession.  I actually do not love the original Cheaper by the Dozen.  But take the crazy family of fourteen, fronted by Bonnie Hunt and Steve Martin as Mom and Dad Baker, on the road and into the woods for lake house fun, and I’m back on board.  Sometimes I ask myself why I like it so much.  Usually, the answer is something in the neighborhood of “I don’t know but Eugene Levy sure is a funny jackass.”  Either way, CBTD makes a good, wholesome treat when you get nostalgic for summer vacations with the family. 

Brooke’s Note:  Thanks so much to Victoria for kidnapping this week’s Top Ten List and morphing it into a fun movies post – always fabulous to add a little variety (spice of life and all).  TTT is hosted by the lovely people at The Broke and the Bookish, so go check out their regularly scheduled postings!

Top Ten Tuesday: 10 Best Couples for the Unromantic Reader

Hosted by The Broke and the Bookish.

So this Tuesday bloggers are letting it all hang out and going freestyle, choosing whatever TTT theme tickles their fancy.  Love it.  I’ve decided to choose 10 power couples that I personally love.  This topic appeals to me because I’m not a fan of obvious romantic stories.  I don’t read books that cram a love story down your throat, no bodice-rippers in sight, and even most chick lit alludes me.  This is not to say I don’t enjoy a beautiful love story because I absolutely do – it’s just that I prefer my love story to be VERY subtle, a slow build, something that percolates right beneath the surface for a long time before bubbling over.  When I sat down to create this list, I had so much fun, but quickly realized I was not able to come up with a list of 10 bookish couples so I’ve chosen 5 couples from books and 5 from television shows.

Also, obviously my reading life is lacking in great love stories so please suggest some to me!!

Without further ado:

Brooke’s Top 5 Bookish Couples for the Unromantic Reader:

1.  Hermione Granger/Ron Weasley from Harry Potter – Jo Rowling has several couples I truly adore, but none more so than Hermione and Ron.  I’m a sucker for friends crippled by sexual tension and smart girls getting the guy of their dreams.  Honorable Mentions:  Snape/Lily, Remus/Tonks

2.  Emma and Knightley from Emma – Many readers don’t like Emma, but I adore her.  Far more importantly, Mr. Knightley is my favorite Austen hero (yes, even above Darcy).  Again, friends who become more – I have a type.

3.  Elizabeth and Darcy from Pride and Prejudice – I might like Knightley more, but the preference is negligible.  My second favorite story is enemies falling in love.

4.  Bathsheba Everdene and Gabriel Oak from Far From the Madding Crowd – The most honest depiction of a love story ever penned (that I’ve ever read, anyway – and also, my own humble opinion).  Bathsheba is a kick ass heroine and I just noticed that Katniss from The Hunger Games shares her last name – wonder if that was on purpose because it would make so much sense.

5.  Elphaba and Fiyero from Wicked – I relate to Elphaba is so many ways, so this choice is really about my love for her.  Of course, her getting all dirty with Fiyero in the forest was pretty satisfying as well.  Also, you gotta love when brunettes beat blondes.

Dishonorable Mentions:  Katniss/Peeta/Gale, Bella and Edward  (just to clarify, I hate these couples with a fiery passion)

Brooke’s Top 5 Television Couples for the Unromantic Reader:

1.  Mulder and Scully – My first ‘ship.  Yes, I read the fanfiction.  Yes, I wrote the fanfiction.  Yes, I find Gillian Anderson just as attractive as David Duchovny.  Don’t judge me – you know The X-Files (seasons 1-7 only) was awesome.

2.  Veronica and Logan from Veronica Mars – Even my husband rooted for them and he’s the opposite of romantic.  I still believe that Kristen Bell and Jason Dohring are together in real life.  I still feel you judging me.

3.  Luke and Lorelei – Gilmore Girls is the best scripted show of all time.  While Lorelei and Rory’s relationship rightfully took center stage, Luke and Lorelei quietly stole the show.

-Side Note:  As for Rory, I’m a Logan girl.  Do not argue with me on this fact because you will not win.  Logan trumps both Dean and Jess always and forever.

4.  Brian and Justin from Queer as Folk – I probably obsessed over Brian and Justin more than any couple on this list (with the possible exception of Hermione and Ron).  They also prompted me to enter the blogging world way back in 2003/2004 when Livejournal was all the rage.  I also wrote fanfiction.  You can still find it on the interwebs, but under a secret identity that shall remain nameless.

5.  Buffy and Angel – Love between a monster and the woman destined to slay him.  God Bless Joss Whedon for all he has done for television and my life.

Honorable Mentions:  Ross and Rachel, Monica and Chandler, Sam and Dean (bromance), Castle and Beckett, Chuck and Blair, Elena/Stefan/Damon, Chuck and Sarah (pre-wedding), Maria and  Michael, Joey and Pacey, Angela and Jordan, Jim and Pam,  Coach Taylor and Tami, Sydney and Vaughn, Doug and Carol, David and Donna, Zack and Kelly – I’m going to stop here before this list gets out of hand.

And just for some fun, my favorite Veronica Mars scene:

Top Ten Tuesday: Short Stories


Hosted by The Broke and the Bookish.

Today’s topic is Top Ten Books you’d recommend to someone who doesn’t like X (fill in the blank).  I’ve chosen my Top Ten Favorite Short Stories for those who think they hate short stories.  They are in no particular order and are linked to the actual story online so you can have fun reading!  Also, these stories are a great introduction to some amazing authors and are often much more accessible than longer novel length works.  Give them a try!

1. Young Goodman Brown by Nathaniel Hawthorne
2. A&P by John Updike
3. The Lottery by Shirley Jackson
4. The Monkey’s Paw by W.W. Jacobs
5. The Legend of Sleepy Hollow by Washington Irving
6. The Tell-Tale Heart by Edgar Allen Poe
7. The Story of an Hour by Kate Chopin
8. Hills Like White Elephants by Ernest Hemingway
9. A Rose for Emily by William Faulkner
10. A Good Man is Hard to Find by Flannery O’Connor

Top Ten Tuesday: 2011 Favs

 

Hosted by The Broke and the Bookish.

So, it’s time to wrap up 2011 and reflect back on which books meant the most to me this year.  Most of these novels were written before 2011, but they were new to me and timeless!

1.  The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern – A novel of place and beautifully written.

2.  The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton – I love Wharton so very much.

3.  All 7 Harry Potter books – I reread this year for first time and loved them even more than first reading!

4.  The Devil in the White City by Erik Larson – So perfect for history buffs and lovers of atmosphere.

5.  The Reader by Bernhard Schlink – Quite possibly my favorite of 2011.  What a powerful little story.

6.  Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf – This book shocked me.  I hated it the first time I read it so dreaded reading for book club, but the second time through was an amazing experience.

7.  The Beautiful and the Damned by F. Scott Fitzgerald – My book club hated it and I loved it.  Favorite Fitzgerald so far – the grey house still haunts me.

8.  The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie by Alan Bradley – Upon finishing the novel, I thought I had enjoyed the first Flavia story, but since then I haven’t been able to get her out of my mind!  Will catch up on series in 2012!

9.  Saturday by Ian McEwan – His ability to turn a phrase is phenomenal.  I would read his prose about ANYTHING.

10.  The Emperor’s Children by Claire Messud – Initially I hated this book, but upon rumination I realized I was deeply affected by it.  Some books sneak up on you like that!

Top Ten Tuesday: Dear Santa…

Hosted by The Broke and the Bookish.

What I’d love for dear old Santa to drop down my chimney this Sunday:

1.  Harry Potter Page to Screen by Bob McCabe – an obvious gift for the Potter lover and also the only book on this list I might actually end up getting from Santa Hubs.

2.  The original U.K. hardcover editions of all 7 HP books – For my permanent home library and because my paperback copies are nearing the end of their life.

3.  The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald – Read in high school but need to reread for upcoming movie release.  Also want in hardcover to add to the shelves.

4.  The Hobbit by Tolkien – Same as #3.  So many book-to-screen adaptations releasing this year!

5.  The entire Roald Dahl collection – Want to reread all his novels in the coming year.

6.  The Professor by Charlotte Bronte – The last Charlotte Bronte novel I haven’t read.  I love when I read all of one particular author’s novels.  Makes me feel well read.

7.  In the Garden of Beasts:  Love, Terror, and an American Family in Hitler’s Berlin by Erik Larson – I loved Larson’s Devil in the White City and can’t wait to read this!

8.  Bossypants by Tina Fey – Want this on audiobook!  Love Tina Fey so very much.

9.  Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy – Have never really read any Russian literature and need to remedy this immediately.  Always been far too intimidated.

10.  Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov – Want to know what all the fuss is about!

Top Ten Tuesday!

Hosted by The Broke and the Bookish.

This week’s topic is books we’d give as gifts.  Since I have nearly no one in my real life who appreciates a good book, I’m giving imaginary gifts to imaginary people.  Such is my life.

1.  To the hater of science fiction:  Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card – my first sci-fi love affair and a book I still love to reread.  Ender will make a believer out of you!

2.  To the Twilight hater:  The Harry Potter series by Jo Rowling – It’s always good to help solidify Twilight loathing by reading worthwhile books.

3.  To the non-fiction hater:  In Cold Blood by Truman Capote – This story will suck you in and consume you in a massive google search for even more information on these infamous murders.

4.  To the classics hater:  Emma by Jane Austen – Mr. Knightley is superior to Mr. Darcy in every way, plus you’ll have another reason to revisit Clueless and enjoy a young Paul Rudd.

5.  To the young adult hater:  Sloppy Firsts by Megan McCafferty – I don’t actually think these novels are young adult, but the first one reads as a young adult, but with a slightly smarter tone.  I think modern young adult fiction has reached this same standard.

6.  To the poetry hater:  Marge Piercy’s work – Piercy writes novels as well, but she’s the first poet that I’ve ever read like a novelist – from page one all the way through to the end in one sitting.

7.  To the Shakespeare hater:  Richard III – Or really any of the history plays, this particular one just happens to be my favorite.  The histories are filled with drama and humor but much more accessible to the common reader.  A great place to start!

8.  To the fiction hater:  The Secret History by Donna Tartt – For me, this book was superb and stands out as one of my favorite all-time reads.  For the first time, when I finished this story I immediately wanted to reread it.  Also, my sister liked this book even when she claimed to hate reading.

9 & 10. To the history hater:  Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe and The Reader by Bernhard Schlink – I know these novels are fiction, but often fictional historical accounts win readers because of the human connection  they bring to the story.  When we’re better engaged and feel intimately connected to the characters, we’re much more receptive to the lessons woven into the plot.  Both of these novels are exceptional in this respect.

Top Ten Tuesday: Childhood Favorites!

Hosted by The Broke and the Bookish.

As I was strolling down memory lane prepping for this post, I couldn’t help but grin from ear to ear looking at all the books I had cherished as a young reader.  I’ve been reading since I can remember, so choosing a mere ten was incredibly hard, but I tried to stick with books that really affected me as a reader – books that moved beyond enjoyable into the realm of inspiring, both as a reader and a writer.

1.  Hop on Pop by Dr. Seuss – This book taught me how to read.  My dad and I would sit together in my bed every night reading this together for at least a year.  One of the best memories I have with my father and the book that literally started it all.

2.  The Pokey Little Puppy by Janette Sebring Lowrey – What makes the pokey puppy stand out was the edition I owned.  Mine went far beyond the little golden book classic and into the land of puppetry!  The pokey puppy came alive with a finger puppet, and yet again, my dad was an awesome narrator!

3.  The Boxcar Children series by Gertrude Chandler Warner – These books were my first chapter books.  My mom was studying to become a teacher at the time and she loved letting me read several chapters a night to her.  Great memories of sitting on the couch in our breakfast room, just me and her.  The books I loved because the idea of children living on their own was so rebellious and fantastical!

4.  The American Girl series by Valerie Tripp – Loved them passionately.  My first heroines and I truly believe these stories acted as a precursor to my love of Austen.  I especially loved Molly and Samantha – plus, the pages were so silky and smooth.

5.  The Indian in the Cupboard by Lynne Reid Banks – Toys come to life and far better than the Toy Story movies.  I loved books with fantasy elements as they allowed my imagination to take off.  Probably read this book 10+ times.

6.  The BFG by Roald Dahl – Really, I loved any Dahl novel, but The BFG stands out as a favorite.  My fourth grade teacher read this novel aloud to the class which made the experience all the more magical.  I immediately purchased any and all Dahl books from the book fairs and the scholastic order forms!

7.  Sideways Stories From Wayside School by Louis Sachar – The first time I finished a book and immediately turned back to page one and started again.  My copy was so worn down and battered.  You never knew what was going to happen next at this crazy school and you honestly believed that the stories could change with every re-read.

8.  Just As Long As We’re Together  by Judy Blume – My favorite Judy Blume by far.  Got me through the beginnings of puberty far better than anything else in my life.  I felt so grown and adult as I turned the pages – kind of the pre-teen equivalent of dirty romance novels.  I even hid it from my mother because I thought it was so salacious.

9.  The Babysitter’s Club by Ann M. Martin – I read every single one of these including the horror and super specials.  Kristy was my favorite and I aspired to be just like her – I loved tomboy characters.  I remember reading them so quickly that I won my fourth grade Book-It competitions repeatedly and won an award at the end of that year for most books read in my grade.  I loved finding a new one at Wal-Mart.

10.  The Fear Street novels by R.L. Stine – These books took the place of The Babysitter’s Club once I thought I was too old for such childish things.  The horror aspect made me feel older and far more mature.

I feel sad for all the books I couldn’t list.  I’d like to say that Beverly Cleary was also a favorite and it was with great regret that a Ramona book didn’t make the list.  Maybe next time!  Also, had the Harry Potter books been published before I was  a teenager, they would have definitely been included.

Top Ten Tuesday!

Decided to join in the fun of Top Ten Tuesday hosted by The Broke and the Bookish.  Today’s topic is top 10 books on your TBR list for Winter!

1.  The Odds by Stewart O’Nan – Won ARC on Goodreads.  Excited to read!

2.  The Girl Who Played With Fire and The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest by Stieg Larsson – Two books technically, but want to finish this series so I can start another.

3.  The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern – Reading for January book club.  Magical Realism is always a bang-up good time!

4.  Motherless Brooklyn by Jonathan Lethem – Up next on my bookshelves.  Never read anything by Lethem, and I love discovering new authors to love.

5.  Wives and Daughters by Elizabeth Gaskell – A HUGE novel that has sat on my shelves for a couple of years now.  Always super intimidated by chunky classics, but ready to give it a go.

6.  The Vampire Diaries series by L.J. Smith – One of my favorite genres and the television show is superb.  Ready to compare show to novel!

7.  Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck – Time to remedy the fact that I have never read any Steinbeck.

8.  Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close by Jonathan Safran Foer – With the movie coming out, I obviously want to read the novel first.  Also, really love reading stories related to 9/11 – I have a bit of morbid curiosity about that day.

9.  The Art of Fielding by Chad Harbach – Has topped many best of 2011 lists and there’s a baseball theme, sounds perfect!

10.  Emma by Jane Austen – Will be my first re-read of 2012.  Austen is a fav and I try to re-read one of her novels every year.