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Sep 13, 2010

a post-baby guide to reading.

so, i love to read. LOVE it.

apparently, there is a genetic component to this, so thanks to the Sommers side and the long line of just-for-fun readers. i can remember as a kid i would read after "lights out" by scooting to the end of my bed, getting just enough light from the hallway to barely see the printed words ("sneak reading"....call me a rebel). and after getting married and falling head over heels in love with Newport Beach Public Library, i would read each and every day over my lunch break and while my graduate student husband was doing homework. All this to say, it was a loss after having Sadie and realizing that any extra moment i had would be spent drooling into my pillow trying to catch up on sleep and NOT diving into a great book.


enter one of my favorite kitchen appliances:

Kitchen CD player/radio
 
not exactly earthshattering, i know, but thanks to a great selection of CD/audio books at the library, i'm officially back on the booklovers bandwagon.  i spend hours in our kitchen, and can finish GIANT biographies (my favorite) in no time at all.  love it.
 
currently, finishing up a biography on Franklin D. Roosevelt. if you think Obamadrama is a socialist, you should check out this dude. :)
 
any other dorks out there, willing to offer up a good book suggestion?? (Jenniken, i know you're reading this, and i expect a good one!)

7 comments:

Kelsey said...

that's not what your kitchen looked like when we left!!! excuse me, you owe us an update look of your house!!!

Maggie Sierdsma said...

have you read John Adam's biography? I listened to it on tape driving cross country in the summer of 2003 and it was very interesting.

Amanda Richey said...

I love books on cd! They are great motivation for getting things done you don't want to do -cleaning, exercising, etc!

hair treasures. said...

i don't know how high-tech this device is, but i love to listen to npr's "this american life" when i drive long distances. you can get the podcasts for free. they're not books, but they're hour-long themed vignettes. anecdotes, interviews, interesting stories. i love it!

Joy said...

I highly reccomend anything by David Foster Wallace, especially anything from his collection, "A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again." He is a spectacularly funny and sensitive writer and finds fascinating ideas about humanity in the most seemingly inane subjects (like getting sent by Harper's magazine on an all-expenses paid cruise, or going to the IL state fair). He is my favorite author in the whole life.

Joy said...

Good grief, you have a BLOG? We seriously need to catch up.

Jenni said...

It has been my largest goal since Kaylie was born to get these two on the same schedule so that I can READ again! I think that in 20 years that is the thing I will enjoy most about my new 'free' time :) Because of Kyle's recent ventures into China I've been reading a book by Peter Hessler. I'm reading his first book he wrote while in China teaching English lit at a college in a town where they hadnt had white people for at least 4 decades. Interesting. He is a great writer, fun to read and super informative. That is my latest :)