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"Junk Drawer" > February 2023 Reading Plan

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message 1: by Lynn, New School Classics (new)

Lynn (lynnsreads) | 5106 comments Mod
What are you planning to read this month? Are you following whim or challenge plans? Are you following monthly read schedules like February Black History Month?


message 2: by Greg (last edited 28. Februar 2023, 17:43 Uhr) (new)

Greg | 940 comments My plans for February:

finish from last month:
Breakfast at Tiffany's and Three Stories (Truman Capote) ★★★★★ (4.5)

very likely:
1. The Conference of the Birds (Attar of Nishapur)
✔ 2. Love in the Big City (Sang Young Park) ★★★★ (4.0)
✔ 3. The 39 Steps (John Buchan) ★★★ (3.5)
✔ 4. Nubia: The Awakening (Omar Epps) ★★★ (3.0)

probably:
1. Praise of Folly (Erasmus)
✔ 2. The Silence of the Girls (Pat Barker) ★★★★★ (4.5)
✔ 3. What Moves the Dead (T. Kingfisher) ★★★★ (3.5)

possibly:
1. The Last House on Needless Street (Catriona Ward)
✔ 2. Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont (Elizabeth Taylor) ★★★★★ (5.0)
✔ 3. Sea of Tranquility (Emily St. John Mandel) ★★★★ (4.0)

unplanned:
✔ 1. C.P. Cavafy: The Poems of the Canon (Constantinos P. Cavafy) ★★★★ (4.0)
✔ 2. The Fall of the House of Usher and Other Stories (Edgar Allan Poe) ★★★★ (4.0)


message 3: by Squire (new)

Squire (srboone) | 281 comments I'll have a 9-book start on my reading goal, so I'll dive into Infinite Jest. That'll probably take me into March.

At least that's the plan....


message 5: by Lynn, New School Classics (last edited 25. Februar 2023, 18:09 Uhr) (new)

Lynn (lynnsreads) | 5106 comments Mod
I have more that I would like to read than I know I can LOL. My only real plan is to try to finish ✔ A Journal of the Plague Year By Daniel Defoe Annotated Novel

The Apparition by Guy de Maupassant

Also perhaps:
Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont by Elizabeth Taylor
The 39 Steps by John Buchan
The Ladies' Paradise by Émile Zola


message 7: by Teri-K (last edited 06. Februar 2023, 13:56 Uhr) (new)

Teri-K | 994 comments I'm still reading Middlemarch – taking my time and enjoying the second book more than the first, just ready to start Book 3.

Other new-to-me reads are:
Dissolution by Sansom, historical mystery that's really good so far
The Hobbit and Philosophy: For When You've Lost Your Dwarves, Your Wizard, and Your Way
The Hollow audiobook by Christie, narrated by my favorite - Hugh Fraser

Rereads include:
North and South by Gaskell, just because I love this book so much
The Five Orange Pips and Other Cases a Sherlock Holmes short story collection
King Lear
Una arruga en el tiempo, A Wrinkle in Time by L'Engle for working on my Spanish

Rereading for various groups:
Airs Above the Ground by Mary Stewart, it's been ages since I read this
The 39 Steps
Venetia, a Georgette Heyer I haven't read in a long time

I always do some spur of the moment reading, and I don't ordinarily plan out my reading this much, but there were several read-alongs I wanted to take part in this month.


message 8: by Darren (new)

Darren (dazburns) | 2138 comments ok so my February "Core 8":
Julie, Or The New Heloise Rousseau, Jean-Jacques 1760 (to finish)
Canterbury Tales, The Chaucer, Geoffrey 1400 (to finish)
Conference of the Birds, The Attar of Nishapur 1177 (buddy read)
Man Without Qualities, The Musil, Robert 1930 (middle third)
Adventures of Augie March, The Bellow, Saul 1953 (first half)
How The Steel Was Tempered Ostrovsky, Nikolai 1932
Binodini (aka "Choker Bali"; aka "Grain of Sand, A") Tagore, Rabindranath 1903
From The Earth To The Moon Verne, Jules 1865


message 10: by Janice (last edited 26. Februar 2023, 05:09 Uhr) (new)

Janice | 303 comments Books and Audiobooks from January:

The Long Winter by Laura Ingalls Wilder

Open House by Elizabeth Berg

The Little House in the Fairy Wood by Ethel Cook Eliot DONE
These are my choices for the Bookwanderers Readathon.

The Diary of a Nobody by George and Weedon Grossmith for Kindred Spirits Club by Kate Howe on YouTube and also my January challenge for A Little Tree Hollow. DONE

To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf for the Everyone Has Read This But Me The Catch-Up Classics

February's books:
Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen for The Literary Society (we are reading it for January and February).

Middlemarch(parts 7 & 8) by George Eliot for the Everyone Has Read This But Me The Catch Up Read-a-Long. DONE

The Pursuit of Love by Nancy Mitford for the Kindred Spirits Club on Kate Howe's YouTube channel.

Murder on the Orient Express by Agatha Christie for the Everyone Has Read This But Me The Catch Up

American Dirt by Jeanine Cummins for my local library book club. DONE

The Diamond Eye by Kate Quinn for Historical Fashionistas

The Women of Brewster Place by Gloria Naylor for Women's Classic Literature Enthusiasts

Again more books than I can read/listen to in a month but they say, "Variety is the spice of life! "


message 11: by Janice (new)

Janice | 303 comments Lynn wrote: "I have more that I would like to read than I know I can LOL. My only real plan is to try to finish A Journal of the Plague Year By Daniel Defoe Annotated Novel by [author:Daniel Def..."

I have that problem, too, when planning my monthly reads! :)


message 12: by Janice (new)

Janice | 303 comments Teri-K wrote: "I'm still reading Middlemarch – taking my time and enjoying the second book more than the first, just ready to start Book 3.

Other new-to-me reads are:
Dissolution by..."


I am reading Middlemarch as well. :)


message 13: by Squire (new)

Squire (srboone) | 281 comments Now that I've got a solid start on my challenge, I'm going to dive into Infinite Jest-- which will be my reading plan for Feb and probably most of Mar, lol


message 14: by Teri-K (new)

Teri-K | 994 comments Janice wrote: "Teri-K wrote: "I'm still reading Middlemarch – taking my time and enjoying the second book more than the first, just ready to start Book 3.

Other new-to-me reads are:
[book:Dissolut..."


You're way ahead of me! But I'm enjoying taking my time with it. How would you rate it so far?


message 18: by JP (last edited 27. Februar 2023, 23:14 Uhr) (new)

JP Anderson | 173 comments I hope to finish 9-11 classics this month:

✔️1. Wodehouse: Summer Lightning (1929)
✔️2. Austen: Sense and Sensibility (1811)
✔️3. Pratchett: Equal Rites (1987)
✔️4. Dante: Vita Nuova (1292)
✔️5. *Dostoevsky: The Meek One (1876)
replace with Beerbohm: "The Mote in the Middle Distance," from A Christmas Garland (1912)
✔️6. Tyson: Vincent Van Gogh (Grt Achievr) (1996)
✔️7. Lovecraft: The Color Out of Space (1927)

...and at least a couple of the group reads
✔️8. Erasmus: The Praise of Folly (1511)
✔️9. Buchan: The 39 Steps (1915)
✔️10. Calvino: If on a Winter's Night a Traveler (1979)
11. Taylor: Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont (1971)

The first 7 all fit into either BINGO or various challenge plans for me. I can use the Erasmus instead of The Prince for my millennium challenge. And, of course, any of the last four will contribute to the group reads challenge.

Updates:
* I had planned to use this Dostoevsky short story to satisfy a few challenges, but since his The Dream of a Ridiculous Man is a group read in March, I'm going to read that story next month instead of this one.

While waiting for my next audiobook to be available at the library, I listened to ✔️Oscar Wilde's The Happy Prince and Other Tales (1888) and ✔️Hemingway's Three Stories and Ten Poems (1923) on Librivox.

Again, between audiobooks on reserve, I listened to ✔️Jerome's Three Men in a Boat (1889) on Librivox.


message 19: by Julie (last edited 28. Februar 2023, 21:02 Uhr) (new)

Julie | 604 comments Currently reading:
Tales of the South Pacific (pulitzer challenge)
The Way We Live Now
Kampen om Tågeøen

To read
As Fast As Her: Dream Big, Break Barriers, Achieve Success (audio)
Enkernes land
Early Autumn: A Story of a Lady (pulitzer challenge)
White Egrets (nobel laureate challenge)
Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont (group read)
The Forever Man
Poetry collection by Sully Prudhomme (nobel laureate challenge)
The Song of Achilles (audio, old&new)
The Kalevala (serial reader) - started
Så mange liv
This Book Betrays My Brother (audio)
Netspinderen
Short story collection by various authors - started
The Anthropocene Reviewed (audio)
The 39 Steps
Fødselsdagsmordet
Gøgeungen
Speaker for the Dead - started


message 20: by Leona (new)

Leona (mnleona) | 42 comments I plan to read My Cousin Rachel by Daphne du Maurier


RJ - Slayer of Trolls (hawk5391yahoocom) | 943 comments RJs FEBRUARY 2023 READS
I started working for a small but growing company in the financial services industry in mid-November and the hectic pace, along with my daughter's college basketball season starting around the same time, really curtailed my daily reading. However my work is cutting back on overtime, and basketball season is winding down, so hopefully things will soon return to normal or thereabouts.

Will Finish in February (or die trying)
Roadside Picnic by Arkady Strugatsky and Boris Strugatsky
Breakfast at Tiffany's and Three Stories by Truman Capote
Intensity by Dean Koontz
Veronika Decides to Die by Paulo Coelho
The Quiet American by Graham Greene

Will Read but Will Not Finish in February
The Last Good Kiss by James Crumley
The Cartel by Don Winslow
The Road to Amber by Roger Zelazny
The Time Ships by Stephen Baxter
If on a Winter's Night a Traveler by Italo Calvino
On the Eve by Ivan Turgenev
Battle Cry of Freedom by James M. McPherson
The Damnation Game by Clive Barker
The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume One, 1929-1964 edited by Robert Silverberg
The Collected Tales and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe by Edgar Allan Poe


message 22: by Wobbley (new)

Wobbley | 2473 comments Well, this is probably too ambitious for one month, but this is what I'd ideally like to read:

I just joined this group about a week ago, so first I'd like to
Catch up on last month's reads:
The Haunted Hotel: A Mystery of Modern Venice
Twelve Angry Men
The Cider House Rules

Make Progress in my Challenges:
Candide
I, Robot
The Machine Stops
The Tale of Peter Rabbit (I can't believe I've never read a Beatrix Potter!)


Luffy Sempai (luffy79) | 738 comments I am reading a nonfiction e-book called We Don't Know Ourselves: A Personal History of Modern Ireland. I have also been reading The Age of Reason Begins. This has been put on hold to concentrate on the former book.

I love to read non English (native) books in French. I therefore will touch on If on a Winter's Night a Traveler. But having just read the first sentences of Chapter I and II, I think I might not be a fan of the author's style.


message 25: by Richard (new)

Richard Craven | 94 comments I finished re-reading Nostromo. It's very difficult to follow but well-worth persevering with, in which connection I thoroughly recommend the televised serial, which is available on YouTube in three parts of roughly 100 minutes each.

I am presently about a third of the way through Madame Bovary de Gustave Flaubert, which I am reading in the original French, despite which I am finding it much easier to follow than Conrad's novel.


message 26: by Janice (new)

Janice | 303 comments Teri-K wrote: "Janice wrote: "Teri-K wrote: "I'm still reading Middlemarch – taking my time and enjoying the second book more than the first, just ready to start Book 3.

Other new-to-me reads are: ..."


I love it as much as I did the first time I read it. :)


message 27: by Janice (new)

Janice | 303 comments Leona wrote: "I plan to read My Cousin Rachel by Daphne du Maurier"

I recently found this book at a wonderful Little Free Library in my town and hope to read it soon. :)


message 28: by Linda R, (new)

Linda R, | 54 comments I am reading Kim by Rudyard Kipling. it is on my list of Nobel Prize Winners and G2 of Bingo, classic action or adventure. it also continues my study of India from the lifetime reading plan. also I just wanted to read Kipling.


message 29: by Bob, Short Story Classics (last edited 24. Februar 2023, 23:02 Uhr) (new)

Bob | 4586 comments Mod
I am doing this in reverse. I didn’t pre-plan my February reading it just happened. All books were on my years challenge reading plan, except one for my wife’s book club. I just pick the next one out of this year's pile. I have had a great February. All were finished in February others started and finished.

Moon Shot: The Inside Story of America's Race to the Moon
The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo. wife's book club read, the things I read for love,
The Ox-Bow Incident
The Forgotten Door
So Big
No Highway
The Haunted Hotel: A Mystery of Modern Venicel
King Solomon's Mines
The Yearling


message 30: by Teri-K (new)

Teri-K | 994 comments Linda R, wrote: "I am reading Kim by Rudyard Kipling. it is on my list of Nobel Prize Winners and G2 of Bingo, classic action or adventure. it also continues my study of India from the lifetime reading plan. also I..."

I read Kim about ten years ago. It's definitely on my reread list. I found it fascinating, and especially liked the references to The Great Game. I had to do some digging on that subject - it was fascinating. I'm kind of surprised there aren't more books set during that time. How is it going for you?


message 31: by Lynn, New School Classics (new)

Lynn (lynnsreads) | 5106 comments Mod
Bob wrote: "I am doing this in reverse. I didn’t pre-plan my February reading it just happened. All books were on my years challenge reading plan, except one for my wife’s book club. I just pick the next one o..."

Your February has been prolific. That's quite a list of books.


message 32: by Richard (new)

Richard Craven | 94 comments Lynn wrote: "What are you planning to read this month? Are you following whim or challenge plans? Are you following monthly read schedules like February Black History Month?"

I'm only reading novels by white men until the publishing industry gets over its animus against us, and the culture in general stops attacking whiteness. At the moment, I am two thirds of the way through Madame Bovary de Gustave Flaubert, which I am reading in the original French. Next on my list is either Riders in the Chariot or The Princess Casamassima. A novel. In Three volumes. Vol. II. I am also awaiting delivery of L'Éducation sentimentale


message 33: by Sara, Old School Classics (new)

Sara (phantomswife) | 9320 comments Mod
I have been reading almost at random and enjoying doing that. I loved making the plans, but I am trying not to be married to them this year.


message 34: by Richard (new)

Richard Craven | 94 comments Yesterday I bought Colonialism: A Moral Reckoning. This scholarly work by Nigel Biggar, Oxford's Regius Professor of Moral and Pastoral Theology was subjected to an attempted cancellation by junior staff at his original publisher Bloomsbury Publishing. However, thankfully William Collins have shown the moral gumption to stand up to the woke fascist children, and I very much look forward to reading Professor Biggar's work.


message 35: by Lynn, New School Classics (last edited 28. Februar 2023, 12:03 Uhr) (new)

Lynn (lynnsreads) | 5106 comments Mod
I read three of the texts that I listed above, which I quite a lot for me!! I usually go far afield, LOL. Honestly, I have turned off the politics and talk shows of today. Books are my escape. Last year I focused on 19th Century Works, because my read books were overly 20th Century. This year I noticed I had not read many British authors, so that is my current focus.

This month I read:

Short stories
The Apparition by Guy de Maupassant(1883) 2/1/2023 3*
"The Answer" by H. Beam Piper (1959) 2/2/2023 4*
The 39 Steps by John Buchan (1915) 2/19/2023 4*
A Saucer of Loneliness by Theodore Sturgeon (1953) 2/20/2023 5*
"Who Can Replace a Man?" by Brian Aldiss (1958) reread 4*
"He" by H. P. Lovecraft (1926) 2/21/2023 4*
"They" by Rudyard Kipling (1904) 2/25/2023 4*

Books
A Journal of the Plague Year by Daniel Defoe (1722) 2/12/2023 5*

Practical Magic by Alice Hoffman(1995) 2/23/2023 5*


Children's book
Finding Lincoln by Ann Malaspina (2009) 2/4/2023 4*

I try to complete the group read challenge each year and the short story challenge. This year I expanded the group read challenge a bit. I will try to read 12 texts from 2023 and also 12 texts from previous years that I missed along the way. So I have 7 short stories, 1 current group read, 1 past group read, and then Practical Magic which works for Bingo and other challenges.


message 36: by Teri-K (new)

Teri-K | 994 comments I finished all the books I'd planned this month except Middlemarch and The Hobbit and Philosophy: For When You've Lost Your Dwarves, Your Wizard, and Your Way, which aren't quite done.

I also read A Month in the Country by Carr– which was excellent! I'm kind of surprised this group hasn't read that one yet; at least I don't think it has.

Continuing my Christie reading I added Hallowe'en Party and Murder is Easy. Other mysteries were Crooked Adam, No Wind of Blame, and two Murder She Wrote pbs I wanted to get off my shelves.

Amusing reads were Brighton Road and The Importance of Being Earnest by Wilde, which never fails to make me laugh and really brightened up a dreary February day.


message 37: by Sara, Old School Classics (new)

Sara (phantomswife) | 9320 comments Mod
Hope you are enjoying Middlemarch. Not a quick read, but a worthy one. I agree about A Month in the Country...it is a lovely read! And, The Importance of Being Earnest always makes me laugh as well, so glad it brightened up your winter. Great progress!


message 38: by Greg (last edited 28. Februar 2023, 18:06 Uhr) (new)

Greg | 940 comments Thanks to some very long plane rides for work travel, I read quite a lot this month. On the 36 hours of plane travel (including layovers), I read 5 of the 10 of the month's books!

Overall this month, I read 8 planned books and 2 unplanned books. I skipped 2 of the books I'd planned (1 probably, 1 possibly). And there's 1 book I started that will carry over into next month.

My favorite two books this month were Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont and Breakfast at Tiffany's and Three Stories.

Lynn, like you I have eliminated the pointless political squabbling of political news and talk from my diet over the past five or so years, and I feel like my entire physical, spiritual, and psychological health has drastically improved. I feel that it was like one of those notorious murder cases where someone slowly poisons their spouse with low dose poisons so it isn't detectable, except that I had been poisoning myself. I've replaced that time with reading and other more fruitful activities. A newspaper once a week is plenty to stay informed of what I need to do my civic duty - I don't require more.

finish from last month:
Breakfast at Tiffany's and Three Stories (Truman Capote) ★★★★★ (4.5)

very likely:
(started, will continue) 1. The Conference of the Birds (Attar of Nishapur)
✔ 2. Love in the Big City (Sang Young Park) ★★★★ (4.0)
✔ 3. The 39 Steps (John Buchan) ★★★ (3.5)
✔ 4. Nubia: The Awakening (Omar Epps) ★★★ (3.0)

probably:
(skipped) 1. Praise of Folly (Erasmus)
✔ 2. The Silence of the Girls (Pat Barker) ★★★★★ (4.5)
✔ 3. What Moves the Dead (T. Kingfisher) ★★★★ (3.5)

possibly:
(skipped) 1. The Last House on Needless Street (Catriona Ward)
✔ 2. Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont (Elizabeth Taylor) ★★★★★ (5.0)
✔ 3. Sea of Tranquility (Emily St. John Mandel) ★★★★ (4.0)

unplanned:
✔ 1. C.P. Cavafy: The Poems of the Canon (Constantinos P. Cavafy) ★★★★ (4.0)
✔ 2. The Fall of the House of Usher and Other Stories (Edgar Allan Poe) ★★★★ (4.0)


message 39: by Carolien (last edited 28. Februar 2023, 20:19 Uhr) (new)

Carolien (carolien_s) | 894 comments Teri-K wrote: ".I also read A Month in the Country by Carr– which was excellent! I'm kind of surprised this group hasn't read that one yet; at least I don't think it has.."

I've seen so many positive comments about this one and it's quite thin. I own it and must get to it!


message 40: by Carolien (new)

Carolien (carolien_s) | 894 comments Greg wrote: "✔ 1. C.P. Cavafy: The Poems of the Canon (Constantinos P. Cavafy) ★★★★ (4.0)."

I read What's Left of the Night last year and I have wanted to read some of Cavafy's poetry since. Glad to see you liked it, I have to try and find it.


message 41: by Greg (new)

Greg | 940 comments Carolien wrote: "I read What's Left of the Night last year and I have wanted to read some of Cavafy's poetry since. Glad to see you liked it, I have to try and find it"

Cavafy's poetry has a lot more variety than I had known. I'd read some of the more abstract historical ones that are typically anthologized before, but I didn't know that he also wrote more immediate, lyrical poetry as well. I quite liked the book as a whole.


message 42: by Darren (new)

Darren (dazburns) | 2138 comments well happy to have finished all 8 of my February "Core 8":
Julie, Or The New Heloise Rousseau, Jean-Jacques 1760 (to finish) - 4 Stars
Canterbury Tales, The Chaucer, Geoffrey 1400 (to finish) - 4
Conference of the Birds, The Attar of Nishapur 1177 (buddy read) - 3.5
Man Without Qualities, The Musil, Robert 1930 (middle third) - DNF
Adventures of Augie March, The Bellow, Saul 1953 (first half) - enjoying so far...
How The Steel Was Tempered Ostrovsky, Nikolai 1932 - 3.5
Binodini (aka "Choker Bali"; aka "Grain of Sand, A") Tagore, Rabindranath 1903 - 3.5
From The Earth To The Moon Verne, Jules 1865 - 2.5


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