What I'm Reading This Week - August 22, 2010
Quote de jour
"The unread story is not a story; it is little black marks on wood pulp. The reader, reading it, makes it live: a live thing, as story."
Ursula K. Le Guin
This is a quickie under the radar entry with comments closed. Only one new book while I finish the batch from the past two weeks. All good, no stinkers in the bunch. I had fun making this magazine collage except for the crappy quality upload. Red, white,blue and yellow are the dominating colors. Tongue-in-cheek as per usual plus adding a gazillion bits of trivia to my over-saturated brain. It's my version of doing Suduko to keep my brain forever young, ha! Just think if I were fool enough to get on a game show...

Alexander McCall Smith is a phenomenally successful writer but until his latest, Corduroy Mansions haven't considered myself a fan. This one set in London with a quirky cast captured my fancy, and how can you resist a cute dog as a character? The author has a gorgeous new website, the kind aspiring writers can only dream of, sigh.
Alexander McCall Smith
"The unread story is not a story; it is little black marks on wood pulp. The reader, reading it, makes it live: a live thing, as story."
Ursula K. Le Guin
This is a quickie under the radar entry with comments closed. Only one new book while I finish the batch from the past two weeks. All good, no stinkers in the bunch. I had fun making this magazine collage except for the crappy quality upload. Red, white,blue and yellow are the dominating colors. Tongue-in-cheek as per usual plus adding a gazillion bits of trivia to my over-saturated brain. It's my version of doing Suduko to keep my brain forever young, ha! Just think if I were fool enough to get on a game show...
Alexander McCall Smith is a phenomenally successful writer but until his latest, Corduroy Mansions haven't considered myself a fan. This one set in London with a quirky cast captured my fancy, and how can you resist a cute dog as a character? The author has a gorgeous new website, the kind aspiring writers can only dream of, sigh.
Alexander McCall Smith




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