Bookie
Brunch is a weekly meet-up, held every Sunday, where book bloggers can
have a cup of tea and chat about a particular bookie question of
interest. The discussion is open from Sunday through Wednesday, and
you’re welcome to drop by any time to add your opinion or read what
other people have to say. This discussion is open as well to general
readers or bloggers in a different field, authors,
publishers and
publicists.
Courtesy
guidelines: Thank you for coming! All thoughtful comments will be
considered and probably get a response from fellow bloggers. In fact,
you’re encouraged to talk about it and share viewpoints or include links
to relevant materials. We’d like everyone to have a nice time.
Differing viewpoints are just fine, even if strongly expressed, but
inflammatory or off-topic comments will be removed.
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This Brunch, my guests are: Amanda-Lee, who blogs at StoryWings, Jenny at Let Them Read Books, Tiffany from About to Read, and Brenda from Reading Fairy Tales.
Our
discussion question is: How do you discover new books? Do you look for
recommendations on book blogs, ask your friends, go to the library?
All of the above? None of the above? Have you ever received a book
recommendation from a completely unexpected source?
First up is Tiffany, who said:
I discover new books from other bloggers, publisher catalogs,
and Goodreads. Bloggers typically get me really excited for a
title--especially if a lot of people are raving about it. I also
get recommendations from friends, and will read a book they suggest if
they loved it themselves or think it is something I would enjoy.
I have a few close friends who love to
read, and whenever we find a book that is to-die-for, we share it with
each other. While we were in college, it was a bit like an informal book
club (miss those days!).
Jenny added her thoughts:
Hey ya'll! Thanks for having me today! This morning I'm sipping on my hazelnut coffee with Almond Joy creamer . . . mmmm!
I discover new books just about every day! I find most of them on
blogs and on Goodreads, but I also find them at the library and *gasp!*
at the bookstore! I follow many bloggers who have the same tastes in
reading as myself. Last week I added my 1000th book on Goodreads and
I've created a series of shelves to help me keep track of how I find
books to read. So far, "Saw it on a blog" has the most books with 96. I
know book bloggers work hard and I believe they are instrumental in
helping books find an audience, and I wanted to prove it by keeping
track of the books I add to my reading list because of a blog. Goodreads
comes in a close second. I love the daily emails that tell me what my
friends are reading and I end up adding many books to my list and also
striking up great book conversations. My Goodreads friends recommend
books to me all the time, and I have three fantastic reading gal pals in
real life who also share their favorite books with me.
I find new books from other online sources, too, like NetGalley,
Shelf Awareness, Amazon Vine, and publisher newsletters. My library
sends out an email every week with all of the new titles they've
acquired, and mostly I find books I already wanted to read and add them
to my check-out list, but occasionally I find a new one to add to the
list. And lastly, I don't visit physical bookstores very often, but when
I do I usually walk out with twice as many books as I'd intended to buy
going in. I'm usually shopping the sale tables, and though I'm looking
for books from my wishlist, I usually pick out one book that's new to
me. I don't know that I've gotten a recommendation from an unexpected
source, but I have been amazed at how wonderful Twitter is for readers,
writers, and publishers. I put off signing up for ages, and in the four
months I've been tweeting I continue to marvel at what a fantastic
networking tool it is. And yes, I do have a "Saw it on Twitter" shelf!
Thirteen books and counting . . .
Amanda Lee, sipping on a skim mint hot chocolate, had this to say:
Most of my new books come from other bloggers. Whether I just happen to
be checking out what they're doing and see a cover I like or if it's a
reviewer I regularly read giving a rave review on a certain book. It all
depends if I like the cover though, I never read a book that I don't
like the cover of.
That's why I like going into book stores, because if any covers jump
out at me, I will pick the book up to see if it interests me. I haven't
actually discovered many "new to me" books recently, I am currently
trying to catch up on all of my series books and working through my
Shelfari wish list. I also regularly check my favourite author websites -
particularly those that write stand alone novels such as Jennifer
Echols - to see what they are currently doing.
I don't have any friends who read, so I don't get any new books from
that kind of source. Probably the most surprising book rec I got was
from a publisher I am on good terms with, they sent me their current
release (Embrace by Jessica Shirvington) for review. I had never heard
of it but I thought the cover was nice. When I picked it up...I couldn't
put it down, it's become one of my top series.
And me? Well, I get almost all of my books from the library, with a smaller number of them coming from publishers or authors who ask for a review. Since I'm a librarian, I'm always ordering new books for the collection, and I'm always reading reviews (professional journals, newspapers, online sources, book blogs) ---- and it's easy for me to place holds on things that are coming in to the library. I'm also surrounded by reading material, both old and new, so I never run out of books to take home with me. There's no way I could buy all the books I read, or have room in my house for them -- and I probably wouldn't want to buy everything I read, anyway. Getting books from the library lets me try before I buy. And if my library doesn't have something? No problem --- I look for it through interlibrary loan.
The blogging community has been both a wonderful thing and a bad thing, as far as alerting me to new books. It's wonderful, because I learn about books from other bloggers, read reviews, and see beautiful cover art. The bad thing is .... my tbr list is
out of control.
Seriously -- it's like that demon plant, Audrey, from Little Shop of Horrors. However, is that such a bad thing?
A HUGE thank you to all of my guests!!! And, I'm looking forward to seeing everyone's comments, as well!!
__________________________________________________________________
And now, we have the details on the
giveaway, courtesy of Sasha Soren!
Now you won't have to wonder if the movie is as good as the book or not - win this classic novel and matching movie version. This set features a paperback edition of
The Age of Innocence with a new, beautifully designed cover and a
DVD of the feature film, nestled together in a sturdy case. This could be a nice treat to keep for a rainy weekend.
About the book: Edith Wharton's novel is a masterful portrait of desire and betrayal set during the sumptuous Gilded Age of Old New York, a time when society dreaded scandal more than death. This is Newland Archer's milieu as he prepares to marry conventional socialite May Welland. But when the mysterious Countess Ellen Olenska returns to New York, Archer falls deeply in love with her. Torn between duty and passion, Archer struggles to make a decision that will either courageously define his life - or mercilessly destroy it. (Publisher desc.)
I have been having issues with Blogger and embedding videos --- so to see something quite cool, please click
HERE.
note: Music track is
Un dÃa llegará (
Amazon MP3)
About the DVD: Daniel Day-Lewis and Michelle Pfeiffer star in this luminous adaptation of Edith Wharton's novel about heartache and hypocrisy among the high society of Old New York's Gilded Age. Day-Lewis plays Newland Archer, the upstanding attorney who is engaged to lovely but ordinary socialite May Welland, but who secretly longs for the more passionate life represented by Countess Ellen Olenska. The psychologically astute and powerfully romantic film was nominated for five Academy Awards. (Publisher desc.)
Details: To win this charming book-and-DVD set, please leave email info and thoughtful or interesting comment below. A winner will be picked at random. If host and guests agree that a specific visitor comment is substantial, outstanding, or in some other way has particular merit, they can override
random.org pick at their discretion.
Please note - open internationally, but DVD manufactured for Region 1 only. Check your
region .
Through December 31, 2011, 12 midnight EDT.
Brought by: Sasha Soren (
Random Magic).More about
Random Magic can be found below - feel free to browse: Find Random Magic:
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