Skip to main content

Books I Haven't Read, But Display On My Shelves

I need to work on my TBR Challenge, as I've read 3/12 for the year, but they were kind of the easy ones, and I'll fall behind if I'm not careful. Also, that's the best challenge ever, because I have an embarrassing number of books that I own and have not read.

Just off the top of my head, here're some books I'd like to actually read this year that I've had on my shelves for a while (or, y'know, just bought):

Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil
Portrait of a Lady
Wigs on the Green
Opera and Its Symbols
A History of the Wife
Rats, Lice and History
Mayflower
The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo
Founding Brothers

 
There's some other stuff, like my grandmother's copy of The Golden Bough, which I'm mainly into because it was hers and reminds me she was both smart and awesome (I can tell myself this, as she's the only grandparent I never met and thus I can make up things). But I'd definitely like to make a dent in the number of unread books I have. Stupid library, licentious den of temptation. It keeps drawing me in with its shiny free books that aren't like the humdrum ones I see every day at home. Sure, my books are faithful and probably full of good things and haven't been pored over by tens of others, but the ones at the library are exotic and interesting.

I didn't go into that paragraph intending to compare the library to a whorehouse, but that seems to be what happened.

It's just a gamble asking people to list things, but does anyone have any books they've had laying around for years? Glaring balefully at you each time you pass them on the shelf? Yeah, everyone does. You might've just suppressed your knowledge of them, though. Started using 'em for coasters or something. Well, that's ok. You need something to set your drink on while marathoning The Office yet again (although that might just be me who still does that).

Comments

  1. I have a book that was assigned for a Latin class five years ago that I didn't read for class, but the discussion sounded good so I held on to it. Aaaand still haven't read it.

    ReplyDelete
  2. You can do it, dude. Someday.

    We need to get pie.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Eco's The Name of the Rose--I have a used copy I bought during college because I had heard that he was famous. Still haven't opened it.

    You're the only person I've ever seen calling the library a "licentious den of temptation," but you're completely right.

    ReplyDelete
  4. @Mike You know, I saw that book on a top 10 list of books people say they've read but haven't. A friend at work got all the way through it. I think he sort of liked it. I know more people who've made it through Foucault's Pendulum (I, of course, am not one of them).

    I'm totally right. I could also call it a siren's rock, its book ever tempting me away from home and hearth and into their blissful abode in the watery deep. YEAH.

    ...'cept if books get in water they get all messed up.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Harry Potter 2013 Readalong Signup Post of Amazingness and Jollity

Okay, people. Here it is. Where you sign up to read the entire Harry Potter series (or to reminisce fondly), starting January 2013, assuming we all survive the Mayan apocalypse. I don't think I'm even going to get to Tina and Bette's reunion on The L Word until after Christmas, so here's hopin'. You guys know how this works. Sign up if you want to. If you're new to the blog, know that we are mostly not going to take this seriously. And when we do take it seriously, it's going to be all Monty Python quotes when we disagree on something like the other person's opinion on Draco Malfoy. So be prepared for your parents being likened to hamsters. If you want to write lengthy, heartfelt essays, that is SWELL. But this is maybe not the readalong for you. It's gonna be more posts with this sort of thing: We're starting Sorceror's/Philosopher's Stone January 4th. Posts will be on Fridays. The first post will be some sort of hilar

Minithon: The Mini Readathon, January 11th, 2020

The minithon is upon us once more! Minithons are for the lazy. Minithons are for the uncommitted. Minithons are for us. The minithon lasts 6 hours (10 AM to 4 PM CST), therefore making it a mini readathon, as opposed to the lovely Dewey's 24 Hour Readathon and 24in48, both of which you should participate in, but both of which are a longer commitment than this, the Busy Watching Netflix person's readathon. By 'read for six hours' what's really meant in the minithon is "read a little bit and eat a lot of snacks and post pictures of your books and your snacks, but mostly your snacks." We like to keep it a mini theme here, which mainly means justifying your books and your snacks to fit that theme. Does your book have children in it? Mini people! Does it have a dog! Mini wolf! Does it have pencils? Mini versions of graphite mines! or however you get graphite, I don't really know. I just picture toiling miners. The point is, justify it or don't

How to Build a Girl Introductory Post, which is full of wonderful things you probably want to read

Acclaimed (in England mostly) lady Caitlin Moran has a novel coming out. A NOVEL. Where before she has primarily stuck to essays. Curious as we obviously were about this, I and a group of bloggers are having a READALONG of said novel, probably rife with spoilers (maybe they don't really matter for this book, though, so you should totally still read my posts). This is all hosted/cared for/lovingly nursed to health by Emily at As the Crowe Flies (and Reads) because she has a lovely fancy job at an actual bookshop ( Odyssey Books , where you can in fact pre-order this book and then feel delightful about yourself for helping an independent store). Emily and I have negotiated the wonders of Sri Lankan cuisine and wandered the Javits Center together. Would that I could drink with her more often than I have. I feel like we could get to this point, Emily INTRODUCTION-wise (I might've tipped back a little something this evening, thus the constant asides), I am Alice. I enjoy