thedarlingone: Kanga and Roo captioned "u will roo the day u messed with me" (roo the day)
2020-07-12 02:55 am
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What I've been doing lately is mostly reading through Star Wars Legends in publication order. I've gotten to 1998, and I only have a couple more trilogies to go before the Yuuzhan Vong War / New Jedi Order (which is a spectacular 19 books long), so here are some quick notes of what I think so far.

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thedarlingone: Kanga and Roo captioned "u will roo the day u messed with me" (roo the day)
2020-05-22 07:10 pm
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HEY THERE Y’ALL. So I go through phases where I read nothing but Tumblr and then phases where I devour new books like a ravening wolf. I’m getting to a point where I want to Read Things, but of course the library is not open (and my local library is shite anyway, that’s a separate rant). So I’m basically stuck with Project Gutenberg, and I don’t know where the fuck to start. I don’t even know what genre I want to try.

So! Does anybody have any recommendations? What are your favorite out-of-copyright books? Are there Great Classics that are surprisingly readable? Assume I haven’t read much that’s aimed at adults, but I’m game to try anything. I’m generally fonder of adventure than of romance, but the thing about books old enough to be on Project Gutenberg is that they really don’t fall into the same categories as the mid-century kidlit I grew up reading.
thedarlingone: Jimmy Stewart in Philadelphia Story, captioned "this is the voice of doom calling" (voice of doom)
2020-05-11 03:08 am
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So most of my reading list right now is people talking about books they have read recently, which is all well and good. But it happens that I have finally read Ursula Vernon's horror novel, "The Twisted Ones", and I have run into the problem that prevents me from doing bookblogging, which is that I don't know what I think of it. And then I read "The White People", the 1904 horror story it's inspired by, and I went "Huh. ... I don't get it." And then I read "The Twisted Ones" again just in case, and I still was not scared by it, even though a great many people on Twitter apparently found it extremely scary and were saying one should not read it alone or after dark, which is why it took me so long.

So now I'm sort of having mild angst about whether I am just not horrorable due to the autism or something. I mean, I remember "The Pit and the Pendulum" spooking me pretty well, but I was like fifteen and very sensitive. (Jesus, that's more than half my life ago.)

I mean, I don't know why this is bugging me. It's not like I *want* to be scared out of my skin. I usually avoid horror-genre stuff for that reason. I used to have terrible crippling nightmares where I couldn't get out of bed afterward till someone else turned the light on for me, and there is no one to turn the lights on now. But I feel like I'm not getting what I'm supposed to be getting out of it, like doing an assigned reading in English class where you just don't have the key to understand what's going on.