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I had a victory against clutter this week. There's been a big pile of boxes in the middle of one room of the house since I moved in, waiting to be sorted out Some Day, and I finally decided that I'd had enough and Some Day had arrived. Some of the boxes got unpacked and some had more appropriate places found for them, and now I can walk straight across the room without circling around a big pile of boxes, which still feels a bit weird.


I read the last of my stack of library books, Stan Grant's Talking to My Country, and the Rivers of London box set I got for Christmas, and a few shorter things, finishing up the year by finally getting around to reading Algernon Blackwood's "The Willows". I hadn't been sure it would live up to its reputation, but it is atmospheric and effectively creepy, and I appreciated the final sentence, which caps it off effectively without trying to carry the whole weight of the story, the way some stories in this subgenre do.

Part of the reason I've been reading so many short things in the past few weeks is that I'd set myself a reading goal for 2024 with a moving target that went up every time I bought a new book, to encourage me to read more of the books I already own, and after keeping ahead of it most of the year I'd sent the target skyrocketing by succumbing to the lure of a Humble Bundle of 30 Ursula K. Le Guin books. At a certain point, I recognised that I wasn't going to catch up to the target without spending the last day of the year grimly slogging through books, and let it go. So I finished the year a few books behind the target, but I still read a respectable number of books for the year and, more importantly, I achieved the real goal of reducing my to-read pile by a significant amount.

The first book of the new year is Here Lies Arthur, an Arthurian legend retelling by Philip Reeve. I'm giving the monthly Buzzwords reading challenge another shot, so this is my book for the January challenge, "'Truth' and 'Lies'". I'm also doing the Random TBR challenge again; the prompt for January is to filter the TBR to fast-paced books under 300 pages long and then pick one of those at random; I ended up on Inside Job by Connie Willis.


On New Year's Day I spent a chunk of the day playing boardgames with my brother and some people we know from the boardgame club. We played Hey, That's My Fish!, Mysterium, Thornwatch, and Ingenious. I didn't win any of the competitive games (Mysterium and Thornwatch are both collaborative, and we collectively won those), but I had a good time. One of the guys offered to buy us all lunch, and got it from Macca's because that was one of the few places that was open; it's the first time in literally years that I've eaten anything from Macca's, and I haven't been missing anything.


Casting has been set for the Rep Club's next big production. Rehearsals haven't started yet, because some people are still away on holiday, but I've collected my copy of the script and vocal score. I should probably be spending more time practicing the songs than I have been.
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Fiction books
Ben Aaronovitch, Andrew Cartmel, Lee Sullivan. Black Mould
Ben Aaronovitch, Andrew Cartmel, Lee Sullivan. Body Work (re-read)
Ben Aaronovitch, Andrew Cartmel, Lee Sullivan. Night Witch (re-read)
Arthur Conan Doyle. The Valley of Fear (e) (re-read)
Charlotte Perkins Gilman. Herland
Ursula K Le Guin. Catwings (e)
Ursula K Le Guin. Catwings Return (e)
Ursula K Le Guin. Jane On Her Own (e)
Ursula K Le Guin. Wonderful Alexander and the Catwings (e)
Jack Masterton. The Same Damn Thing
E Nesbit. The Railway Children
Jeff Smith. Bone: The Complete Cartoon Epic in One Volume (re-read)

Abandoned
Hanan al-Shayk. Women of Sand and Myrrh

Picture books
Diane Elson. Olivia the Ostrich Has a Special Day (re-read)
Adam Goodes, Ellie Laing, David Hardy. Back On Country
Adam Goodes, Ellie Laing, David Hardy. Somebody's Land
Barbara Lloyd, Michael Williams. Pirate Edna of Old Tallangatta (re-read)

Non-fiction books
Stan Grant. Talking to My Country
Rosaleen Love. Reefscape
Thomas Mayo. Always Was, Always Will Be

short, screen, and stage )
books bought and borrowed )

Top of the to-read pile
Connie Willis. Inside Job (e)
pedanther: (Default)
I've been keeping up the exercise.

I have not, unfortunately, been keeping up the sensible eating. There have been a lot of days lately when I've gone into town to do shopping or something on my lunch break, and bought something for lunch instead of waiting and eating the food I had at home. Often I don't even enjoy the lunch I buy all that much, either because I went in hoping to see something I liked and ended up just buying something that was there so I wouldn't leave empty handed, or because I saw several things I liked and bought all of them and regretted it later. Or because it's getting into summer weather and heavy lunches just aren't that good. I'm working on keeping a stock of sandwich fixings at home so there's always an alternative available.

A worrying development is that a few times I've caught myself going to town just to buy lunch, or for some other reason that's really just an excuse to go and buy lunch. I'm not sure whether that's because I'm bored with the food I have at home, or if the food itself is just an excuse and really I'm just bored of being at home all day. I'd feel more confident about the second possibility if it didn't sometimes happen on days when I'd already been out in the morning for a walk or a bike ride. Maybe the problem is that my diet needs to adjust to the amount of exercise I'm doing and I'm not finding the right adjustments yet.

After finishing two books with page counts over 1000 last week, the next few things I read were much shorter: a couple of picture books that had been sitting in my TBR for a very long time, and then Ursula K. Le Guin's Catwings books. (In other news, I completely blew my annual quota on new books this week by succumbing to Humble Bundle's offer of 30 Ursula K. Le Guin ebooks for a reasonable collective price.) I also read a couple of the Welcome to Our Country picture books, which I came across at the library a while back and made a note of for when I felt like I was in the mood to read them.
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Fiction books
Tatsuya Endo, tr. Casey Loe. Spy x Family, volume 1
Tatsuya Endo, tr. Casey Loe. Spy x Family, volume 2
Arthur Upfield. The Mystery of Swordfish Reef

In progress
Aeschylus, tr. Robert Fagles. The Oresteia
Jane Austen. Pride and Prejudice (e) (re-read)
L Frank Baum. The Marvelous Land of Oz (e) (re-read)
Neil Gaiman, et al. The Absolute Sandman: Volume One (re-read)
CS Lewis. The Screwtape Letters (e) (re-read)

Abandoned
Tatsuya Endo, tr. Casey Loe. Spy x Family, volume 3 (october point)

Non-fiction books
Hallie Rubenhold. The Five: The Untold Lives of the Women Killed by Jack the Ripper (e)

Non-fiction books in progress
AC Grayling. The Good Book

short, screen, and stage )
books bought and borrowed )

Top of the to-read pile
Richard Flanagan. Gould's Book of Fish
pedanther: (Default)
Fiction books
Agatha Christie. Parker Pyne Investigates
Rosemary Kirstein. The Outskirter's Secret
Rosemary Kirstein. The Steerswoman
Aaron Williams. Nodwick: Haulin' Assets
Aaron Williams. PS 238: When Worlds Go Splat!

In progress
Leo Tolstoy. War and Peace

Non-fiction books
(none)

short, screen, and stage )
books bought and borrowed )

Top of the to-read pile
James D Macdonald. The Apocalypse Door

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