I agree with you Maud. I always find it better reading if I am in a quiet place. Also I love it outside on the veranda when it is raining, with a nice cup of coffee. I love it when it is cold, and you know that where we live it very rarely gets cold.Maud Fitch wrote:My bookaholic quirks are a comfortable chair and a quiet room. This doesn't always happen but I get maximum enjoyment from a good book if it does. Also I never see reading as a lonely pursuit; does this count as a quirk?
Bookaholc's quirks
- Gannon
- Previous Member of the Month
- Posts: 14464
- Joined: 17 May 2009, 01:48
- Favorite Book: Pillars of the Earth
- Currently Reading: Heaven's Net is Wide.
- Bookshelf Size: 52
Re: Bookaholic's quirks
- Tralala
- Posts: 1059
- Joined: 28 Dec 2010, 13:13
- Favorite Book: Retro Hell
- Bookshelf Size: 0
Yeah, rub it in, Gannon. It's 9 degrees (F) in Wisconsin...you're welcome to visit any time.Gannon wrote: I love it when it is cold, and you know that where we live it very rarely gets cold.
I've started to collect "found" bookmarks...bookmarks that are left in the used books that I've bought. So far I've got a transpass from 1983 (in Jon Longhi's "Wake Up and Smell the Beer"), an 'out of order' slip (in Toni Morrison's "Beloved"), a cute guy cut from a Cosmo subscription card (in Bret Easton Ellis's "The Informers"), a library check-out card from 1992 (in Graham Greene's "Travels With My Aunt"), and an ad for art posters with a copy of Klimt's 'Tree of Life' (in Fannie Flagg's "Standing in the Rainbow"). The Klimt ad got me started, 'cause I've got that print hanging in my living room.
- Gannon
- Previous Member of the Month
- Posts: 14464
- Joined: 17 May 2009, 01:48
- Favorite Book: Pillars of the Earth
- Currently Reading: Heaven's Net is Wide.
- Bookshelf Size: 52
Oh man that would be so COOL (get it, cool). I know, I know, very lame.Tralala wrote:Yeah, rub it in, Gannon. It's 9 degrees (F) in Wisconsin...you're welcome to visit any time.Gannon wrote: I love it when it is cold, and you know that where we live it very rarely gets cold.
I've started to collect "found" bookmarks...bookmarks that are left in the used books that I've bought. So far I've got a transpass from 1983 (in Jon Longhi's "Wake Up and Smell the Beer"), an 'out of order' slip (in Toni Morrison's "Beloved"), a cute guy cut from a Cosmo subscription card (in Bret Easton Ellis's "The Informers"), a library check-out card from 1992 (in Graham Greene's "Travels With My Aunt"), and an ad for art posters with a copy of Klimt's 'Tree of Life' (in Fannie Flagg's "Standing in the Rainbow"). The Klimt ad got me started, 'cause I've got that print hanging in my living room.
- Bighuey
- Previous Member of the Month
- Posts: 22451
- Joined: 02 Apr 2011, 21:24
- Currently Reading: Return to the Dirt
- Bookshelf Size: 2
- esawyer
- Posts: 65
- Joined: 26 Jan 2013, 15:31
- Favorite Book: Daytripper by Fabio Moon and Gabriel Ba
- Currently Reading: Usagi Yojimbo by Stan Sakai
- Bookshelf Size: 0
Maybe you're the one who has my favorite book mark that's gone missing! I used it primarily for graphic novels. My girlfriend made it for me... so the losing of it has left me quite flustered. I'm almost at the point where I'm going to go through all of my books to find it!
- read4fun
- Posts: 7
- Joined: 20 Feb 2013, 00:54
- Bookshelf Size: 0
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- Posts: 251
- Joined: 18 Feb 2013, 17:29
- Favorite Book: Narnia and Redwall
- Currently Reading: Aesop
- Bookshelf Size: 0
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- Posts: 19
- Joined: 09 Jan 2013, 12:45
- Bookshelf Size: 0
I don't like to see any writing by anyone else in any book or it distracts me.
If I like certain lines I will rewrite them with the page # into notebooks or type them up.
I don't often use a bookmark; I used to remember the page. Now if I don't use one I try to find what looks familiar and then reread a little to get back into it.
I have sometimes been so excited to read something that I've left the library with nothing because I was overwhelmed with the selection.
Other times I'm so excited to read I'll take out 4 books and can barely finish one
I love to reread good books; I can't believe how many details I forget, and also life changes so much that things strike me differently every time I read them.
I don't like when they modernize or change the covers of books I've loved.
There are certain books I refused to see the movie for, like The Fountainhead with Gary Cooper, and Simon Birch which I think was loosely based on A Prayer for Owen Meaney. I am tempted to see The Fountainhead now though, since it's been 20 years since I read the book and I like old movies. Although of course I reread it 2 or 3 times but it's been a while......
- Brittneyapalooza
- Posts: 3
- Joined: 01 Mar 2013, 21:08
- Bookshelf Size: 0
I make my own book marks when I lose them.
I never fold pages. Ever.
It's easier for me to focus on reading if I have music playing.
- Jessie83
- Posts: 8
- Joined: 30 Oct 2012, 22:19
- Bookshelf Size: 0
I normally only read one book at a time.
I always finish a book.
I ABSOLUTELY NEVER EVER turn down the page of a book, I have been known to almost tear someone's eyes out for doing this in front of me.
I own lots of books, most of which I haven't read yet.
I own an e-reader but still read both on that or in paper.
I read while the tv is on, it doesn't bother me. Allows me to enjoy hubby's company while he watches tv and I read, peace reigns in the house.
I love the new and old book smell and yes I smell books.
The Library and bookshops both secondhand and new are my favourite places in the world, and I can spend hours in there and not notice how much time has passed.
I don't lend my books although I will recommend them.
I use any piece of paper I can find as a bookmark or I remember where I'm up to as I finish at the end of the chapter.
I read in the bath, one of my favourite things to do.
I like pristine pages in a new book, and get upset if I mark the page.
I have thought of bequeathing my books to someone when I pass.
I enjoy audiobooks while travelling to work
I love cold and wet days as it is perfect time to curl up with my book, not that you need a perfect time
I have often thought about getting a quote that I read tattooed.
- Bighuey
- Previous Member of the Month
- Posts: 22451
- Joined: 02 Apr 2011, 21:24
- Currently Reading: Return to the Dirt
- Bookshelf Size: 2
Dabshelim, King of India, had so numerous a library, that a hundred brachmans were scarcely sufficient to keep it in order,and it required a thousand dromedaries to transport it from one place to another. As he was not able to read all of these books, he proposed to the brachmans to make extracts from them of the best and most useful of their contents.These learned personages went so heartily to work, that in less than twenty years they had compiled of all these extracts a little encyclopedia of twelve thousand volumes, which thirty camels could carry with ease. They presented them to the king, but what was their amazement to hear him say that it was impossible for him to read thirty camel-loads of books. They therefore reduced their extracts to fifteen, afterwards to ten, then to four, then to two dromedaries, and at last there only remained enough to load a mule of ordanary size.
Unfortunately, Dabshelim, during this process of melting down his library, grew old, and saw no probability of living long enough exhaust its quintessence to the last volume. "Illustrious Sultan," said his vizier, "Though I have but a very imperfect knowledge of your royal library,yet I will undertake to deliver you a very brief and satisfactory abstract of it. You shal read it through in one minute, and yet you will find matter in it to reflect upon throughout the rest of your life." Having said this, Pilpay took a palm leaf, and wrote upon it these words: The greater part of the sciences comprise but one single word - perhaps_, and the whole history of mankind contains no more than three and they are, born, suffer, die.
That pretty much sums it up. Who needs more?
- Fran
- Posts: 28072
- Joined: 10 Aug 2009, 12:46
- Favorite Book: Anna Karenina
- Currently Reading: Hide and Seek
- Bookshelf Size: 1208
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-fran.html
- Reading Device: B00I15SB16
You forgot to add .... and that's when the ass fell out of the camel market
A world is born again that never dies.
- My Home by Clive James
- Bighuey
- Previous Member of the Month
- Posts: 22451
- Joined: 02 Apr 2011, 21:24
- Currently Reading: Return to the Dirt
- Bookshelf Size: 2
Fran wrote:@Bighuey
You forgot to add .... and that's when the ass fell out of the camel market
- primrose777
- Posts: 2012
- Joined: 25 Sep 2011, 05:11
- Favorite Book: The Chosen
- Currently Reading: The Light Between Oceans
- Bookshelf Size: 0
Just loved that story BH.Bighuey wrote:Fran wrote:@Bighuey
You forgot to add .... and that's when the ass fell out of the camel market
- Bighuey
- Previous Member of the Month
- Posts: 22451
- Joined: 02 Apr 2011, 21:24
- Currently Reading: Return to the Dirt
- Bookshelf Size: 2