bibliollama: (Book Love)
The Book Blogger Hop was originally created by Jennifer from Crazy-For-Books in March 2010 and ended on December 31, 2012. With Jennifer's permission, Ramblings of a Coffee Addicted Writer relaunched the meme on February 15, 2013. Check out the hop here!

Each week the hop will start on a Friday and end on Thursday. There will be a weekly prompt featuring a book related question. The hop's purpose is to give bloggers a chance to follow other blogs, learn about new books, befriend other bloggers, and receive new followers to your own blog.

The Question of the week is: July is the month for reading by the pool or on the beach. What's your favorite summer beach book, and why is it suitable for a sunny day?

I'm not a seasonal reader, to be honest, and don't think of books in terms of being a beach read or anything similar. So my pick of a book for reading at the beach would be basically whatever I was currently reading when I head for the beach - it could be a chick lit, it could be a horror, a sci-fi, or a European History textbook. I've been known to take my study materials and notebook and sit and read in the park, just as much as I have any other fiction book.

What makes it suitable for a sunny day is that it's a book I'm reading in the sun. *g*

And heading for the beach with a book is something I'm hoping will happen much more with the amount of time I'm spending down in the South West. I'm not quite back to the beach I grew up reading on, but I'm not far away at all which is so awesome
bibliollama: (Default)
I've missed a couple of weeks' worth of Book Blogger Hop prompts, so let's play catch up!

May is Mental Health Awareness Month. Are there any books with themes or characters dealing with issues related to mental health that you have found to be enlightening or comforting It might be a bit of a cliche answer, but I've found Matt Haig's books to be both comforting and helpful, especially some of his mental health non-fiction. I read The Comfort Book and Notes on a Nervous Planet when I was really struggling with anxiety and agoraphobia, to the point where I couldn't leave the house. There was just something so calming, so comforting and so relaxing about them that genuinely helped soothe my brain.

I recently read The Midnight Library - a book I'd been wanting to read for AGES but had been putting off because I got nervous I wouldn't like it (I hadn't been thrilled by one of Haig's other fiction books I read). It was, however, utterly fantastic and I gave it 5 stars. The descriptions of Nora's depression resonated so strongly with me.

Do you consider yourself a book collector or a book hoarder? Oh, definitely a collector. The collection looks a little hoard-like at the moment; there's piles of books everywhere because I'm sorting them, cataloguing, reshelving and figuring out a) how many more bookshelves I need and b) where they're going to go.

Summer often means more time for reading. Do you have a list of books you're eager to start reading during June's warm days? Do you have a summer reading goal? I'm not really a seasonal reader, but I did post my current summer TBR earlier this week.
I don't think I have any specific summer reading goals, other than continuing to read most days and try to focus a little on some of my reading challenges that aren't very far along.

Will society suffer in the future as a result of the younger generations' lack of reading? OK so I don't have any first hand knowledge of this, but based on what I've seen/heard, I'm going with yes. I also don't think it's the actual issue at hand, but rather a symptom of something much larger - although I can't pin down what that actually is. Like, it would be super easy to blame social media for 'rotting kids brains' and 'causing short attention spans' but then you only have to look at the size of the bookish community on social media which is filled with readers of all ages - including, yes, the younger generations. I'm sure I've even seen stats that things like TikTok are inspiring teens/new adults to start reading and reading is trending upwards again

There's a whole other rant about the way social media works and preys on people and oh I wish how it worked like it did 5, 10, years ago when it just showed me the people I'm following in chronological order - my social media experience is very carefully curated, I met pretty much my whole friends group through social media and lets not forget I met my fiancee on AO3 and Tumblr. But, as I said, that's a whole other thing... it is connected tangentially in that it's a symptom of the same larger issue that's affecting society.

I don't know if 'suffer' is necessarily what's going to happen with society. Society is currently undergoing such a huge change through all levels and because we're right in the middle of it, we can't see the end of it and it's scary and it's easy to blame 'the younger generations'. I'm a Millennial - we're still getting blamed for everything after all!

I don't know that I've actually answered the question - the answer is both yes and no and it's complicated - but this is the post that it inspired!

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Cassie

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