Tag: blogger’s bookshelf

  • Bookshelf Tour

    bookshelf tour header
    So I thought I’d share something I’ve been wanting to post about for a while now and give you guys a little bookshelf tour. Not all of these books have been read, nor are these every single book I own (I have some stashed upstairs/residing in my sister’s room) and the collection is ever growing (God Bless cheap charity shop finds!)
    bookshelf 3
    Jean Ure collection/Karen McCormic books/New Moon & Eclipse, S’Meyer/Lola Rose, Jacqueline Wilson/Twilight: Director’s Notebook/Stormbreaker & Point Blanc, Anthony Horowitz/Marked, PC & Kristin Cast/The Accidental Billionaire (aka The Social Network), Ben Mezrich/Virals, Kathy Reichs
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    A Place Of Secrets, Rachel Hore/Perfect Match, Jane Moore/Awaken, Katie Kacvinsky/The Little Flower, /Wicked, Gregory McGuire/Labryinth, Kate Mosse/Firebird, Susan Gates/Angels & Demons, Dan Brown
    bookshelf 5
    McFLY: Our Story/Will Grayson/Will Grayson, John Green & David Levithan/Dash & Lily’s Book of Dares, Rachel Cohn & David Levithan/Paper Towns, John Green/War Of The Worlds, HG Wells
    bookshelf 1
    The Fault In Our Stars, John Green (signed!)/North Child, Edith Pattou/Looking For Alaska, John Green/Icefire, Chris d’Lacey/Catcher In The Rye, J.D. Salinger/An Offer You Can’t Refuse, Jill Mansell/I Heart New York, Lindsay Kelk/Nocturnes: Five Stories of Music and Nightfall, Kazuo Ishiguro/Anasi Boys, Neil Gaiman/One Day, David Nichols/Never Let Me Go, Kazuo Ishiguro/The Magical Worlds of Harry Potter, /The Merlin Conspiracy, Dianna Wynn Jones/Coram Boy, Jamil Gavin/The Help, Kathryn Stockett/Glamour, Louise Bagshawe/Remember Me?, Sophia Kinsella/Sabriel, Garth Nix/The Casual Vacancy, JK Rowling/The Rosie Project, Graeme Simsion
    bookshelf 2
    An Abundance of Katherines, John Green/Old School, Tobias Wolff/Mother Tongue, Bill Bryson/Warm Bodies, Issac Marion/Struck By Lightning, Chris Colfer/Elegance, Kathleen Tessaro/Perks of Being a Wallflower, Stephen Chboksy/The Forest of Hands and Teeth, ??/The Gospel Of Judas, Simon Hawer/The Jane Austen Book Club, Karen Joy Fowler/The Secret Lives Of Dresses, Erin McKean/The Prophecy of the Gems, Flavia Bujorbookshelf 6 
    Divergent & Insurgent, Veronica Roth/The Hunger Games: Tribute Guide/The Hunger Games & Catching Fire (MockingJay with le Sis), Suzanne Collins/The Maze Runner & The Scorch Trials, James Dashner/The Declaration & The Resistance, Gemma Malley/Delirium & Pandemonium, Lauren Oliver/The Looking Glass Wars, Seeing Redd & Arch Enemy, Frank Beddor/The Hunger Games Movie Companion
    bookshelf 7 Empire Magazine’s Harry Potter collectors edition/Harry Potter: Books 1-5 UK children’s edition, 6/7 UK adult editions
    From the top photo, down, I first have fiction from my teen years, then the books are blocked in colours (black, green, red blue etc). I then have a shelf for dystopian-uptopia/continuing series (but mostly dystopian/utopia) and then the beloved and rather battered copies of my Harry Potter books. 
    The idea for colour co-ordinating my shelves came from booktuber The Readables, who’s bookshelves are much more impressive than mine, as well as the many other bookshelf tours I’ve been chain-watching on YouTube. 
    Hope you enjoyed that :) don’t forget to check out what I’m reading on GoodReads and keep up with anything I (or any of our lovely team) are reviewing at Blogger’s Bookshelf
    Keep on wishing…
    R.xoxo
  • February | In books

    Feb in books

    The Bell Jar | Sylvia Plath
    One ticked off my Blogger’s Bookshelf challenge! The Bell Jar was my first step into the world of Plath and I was certainly impressed. Much easier to read than ‘Catcher…’ and definitely much more captivating, the story follows Esther Greenwood in 1950’s America as she slowly descends into depression and emotional breakdown. Plath is a poet and it definitely shows in her writing (The Bell Jar is her only novel), that being said it’s not flower-y and it’s never forced. It’s helps to know that the book itself is semi-autobiographical and that Plath is painting a realistic of mental health. She makes Esther feel human not this other-worldly character which was refreshing to read compared to my usual moany-female-YA-protagonists. Her situation towards the end of the book improves, but the ending is definitely bittersweet and is a great reflection on the true nature of mental illness and life in general. Recommended read!
    Pandemonium | Lauren Oliver
    The sequel to Delirium, it took me a while to actually get on to read this and I have to admit the first few pages was mostly spent trying to remember what actually happened and who the characters are (I clearly read too much Dystopian lol). I have full review on Blogger’s Bookshelf here, but I did enjoy it a lot more than Delirium. I was great, fast-paced and the cliffhanger? Oh lordy. Very excited to get Requiem very soon!

    The Named | Marianne Curley
    This was a random one I picked up in the Kindle store. It wasn’t a bad read and I’m starting to think I should be wary of reviewing YA novels as technically the target audience is much younger than myself. The story follows that of Ethan, who is a Guardian of Time, and his brand new apprentice Isabelle. Ethan is a part of the Guard that protects the world from the Order of Chaos, who like to mess up points in time to cause widespread…well chaos. Isabelle is brand new to the guard and Ethan has to train her up for her first mission in two weeks, which won’t be easy. Not to mention the fact that the two have known each other since childhood when Isabelle harboured a crush for Ethan since then. Despite the obvious YA tone, world they live in is rich and detailed with much more that I expect will be revealed in good time. I’m just left wishing I could hear more about it rather than their, rather obvious, romantic dilemma but all in good time I suppose.

    Struck By Lightning | Chris Colfer
    I’ve been dying to read this one for a while. I’m a huge Chris Colfer fan and so insanely impressed by all of his achievements (from Glee to writing and starring in the SBL movie to writing other books etc etc all before the age of 23). Again this is another one for the Blogger’s Bookshelf review pile so go check it out once it’s up on Monday! My overall feelings on the book were good. You see Chris’ natural sarcastic humour through the writing, but as a stand-alone novel without the film to back it up? It won’t shake the literary world. This however has got me more motivated to read The Land of Stories – Colfer’s first full children’s book – and to gear up to see the movie (once it actually freaking comes out in the UK ¬_¬)

    Smart Mouth Waitress | Dayla Moon
    I didn’t realise this book was part of a series until I put it in to GoodReads. This was a cheap-y Kindle buy, but I gotta say I really liked it. It turns out this series (‘Life In Saltwater City’) is actually a series of stand-alone books. This particular book (which is the second in the set) is all about a seventeen year old girl called Peridot (or Perry) stumbling through her romantic life, whilst balancing a job as a waitress, her famous musician mother, bipolar dad and typical teenage brother, in Vancouver. The relationships in this one are great, they feel believable, even though some of the situations Perry gets into may not be, and there’s plenty of character development for the majority of people in the book. It’s a quick chic-lit read, the writing is humorous and there are dozens of extremely recent pop culture references in there. If I’m honest it was nice to take a break from the crazy genre that is Dystopia/Utopia to read about a girl with pretty normal, albeit rather amusing problems.  

    Check out what I’m reading on GoodReads and don’t forget to read up on all of the Blogger’s Bookshelf reviews here!

    Keep on wishing…
    R.xoxo
  • This Week…

    Insta Feb #2
    – Day #119 – My new toy :) – Crazy awesome sunset the other evening – Day #120 – Started and finished Pandemonium this week – Day #121 – Soap & Glory Hand Food = Heaven for my hands – Day #122 – Day #123 – Saturday lunch time latte – Rainy rain is rainy – Final year options chosen and submitted Eek! – 
    Happy Chinese New Year everyone! It’s been an exhausting one this week. Busy, busy, busy, but I guess this always does make time fly! Most days I’ve been happy enough to get home and curl up with a book or my laptop and pour over the fashion week coverage before hitting the hay. 
    But as ever, I’ve had to hitch up and get organised a little bit. My Uni options for my final year (when I start back in October) came through and I’ve hit the big submit button. It’s weird to think I’ll have to be heading back, it feels so far away at the moment but I’m kinda excited to make a start on my modules and dissertation topic – does that make me a bit odd? Who knows?
    In the blogsphere tonight is the most ridiculously scheduled awards night of the year with The Grammy Awards to be held in L.A. and the BAFTAs in London. I honestly think they do this just to make red carpet bloggers like myself a little crazy whilst it’s happening. Though with all the goodness that has been New York Fashion Week so far, I’m itching to see whether any of these celebs have managed to nab any Fall 2013 already. So keep an eye out for my reports – they’ll most likely be slightly reduced highlights due to the sheer volume of the potential guests to both events this year!
    In book bloggy news, Kindle arrived! And I hate to admit it but I kinda love my new commute companion – even though I kinda ended up buying two news books at Waterstones last Saturday…Oops. What can I say I love a BOGOF deal?! 
    Also my collab blog Blogger’s Bookshelf has a GoodReads group page! Join! Keep up with reviews! Discuss all things book! Also if you’re not on GoodReads anyway, go join. I seriously can’t imagine a time without it anymore, brilliant site for bookworms like me ;)

    Soundtrack: Now by Paramore

    Keep on wishing…
    R.xoxo