Pages

Showing posts with label Early Reviewers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Early Reviewers. Show all posts

Tuesday Thingers May 20


This week's Early Reviewer Tuesday Thingers discussion topic is: discussion groups -- how many do you belong to, how much do you participate....

Oh, this is so going to feel like a confessional. I was on LibraryThing (LT) for a couple of months before I ventured into any of the talk groups. I've been in some discussion groups on other websites, and inevitably there is some controversy or uproar or just plain obnoxious posters who tend to spoil things. So I was a little hesitant to get involved in any of the LT talk groups. But happily, my experience has been nothing but positive. I "belong to" about half a dozen talk groups on LT - some much busier than others and some I participate in more than others. I also monitor a few other groups and "star" posts that I particularly want to track.

I've had amazing experiences with a couple of LT private talk groups - levels of sharing and trust develop that are impossible to achieve within open groups. I spend an embarrassing amount of time in these groups.

I'm fascinated by the new communications existing in the world today -- that I can nurture genuine close friendships with people who live in a different state or on a different continent without ever meeting them face-to-face (though that happens too, at group meet-ups). I have pondered the consequences of such communication -- are we forgetting how to communicate face to face? or are we expanding our abilities to communicate? I think both things can be true - like anything else, I can get obsessive about online communicating to the exclusion of other kinds of connections. But I'm also aware of how much I'm writing and learning and being creative, which have been goals.

On LT, I mostly view the communications as very positive -- I've learned an incredible amount about literature and have been introduced to authors and books I may have never run across otherwise. And meeting interesting and wonderful people is a bonus I hadn't counted on. I just wanted to catalog my books! Read More!

Tuesday Thinger (on Wednesday)




A group of bloggers who are Early Reviewer members at LibraryThing are doing a weekly themed blog-o-rama, and I thought I'd jump in. This is Intro week, so I'll do my literary autobiography.

Though there was a lot of competition from television when I was a child, I did like to read and usually had a book going - Nancy Drew, Little Women or biographies like Helen Keller's or Anne Frank's diary. And I always loved my English classes and writing book reports.

College was delayed a bit for me - I did a couple of semesters just out of high school, but I was almost 40 when I started back to college. I just naturally drifted into English lit and writing classes. It opened up new worlds to me; up until then, I'd pretty much been reading best sellers. But Women's Studies, Black Studies and some other collaborative programs introduced me to literature I'd never known before, in addition to some of the classics (not as much as you'd expect though, for an English degree). I graduated in 1993 with a BA in English and a certificate in Women's Studies. I've been working in the health care area as a technical writer/web builder for the last ten years and will retire in 5 1/2 months.

Reading since college has been a mixed bag - lots of Isabel Allende, Louise Erdrich, David James Duncan, Barbara Kingsolver, Terry Tempest Williams, Alice Walker (all of whom I still read and adore) -- and probably 50-50 fiction and nonfiction.

And then (drumroll please): LibraryThing came into my life. At first I thought it was just a great place to catalog my books and peek into others' libraries. But then I discovered the Talk groups - here you find people with common interests who discuss books (and other things), recommend books, even trade books back and forth. In the last year, I've been encouraged and supported in my forays into Sense and Sensibility and War and Peace (can you believe an English major who'd never read any Jane Austen or Leo Tolstoy??) and Grapes of Wrath, not to mention all the authors and books I've been newly introduced to (Helene Hanff, Barbara Pym, Siri Hustvedt, Jhumpa Lahiri, Kazuo Ishiguro). The last six months I've been reading mostly fiction. I feel like I'm catching up with books I ought to have read years ago - and discovering new exciting authors too.

Not only that, but since I'm an Early Reviewer, publishers will sometimes send me free advanced readers books to review before they're published. Which can also be a mixed bag - some are stunning and some are - imo - not readable. But it's always nice to have someone value my opinion, for the cost of a book!

One thing's for sure: I'm reading a lot more than I ever have. And I'd be reading even more if I could stay off the computer! Read More!