That sucks. But hey, at least it's not an ear infection. I had those all the time as a kid, and I suppose it's not a coincidence that I have tinnitus now. (That, and my mother's own tinnitus caused by Meniere's.)Also, I think I got another sinus infection. *sighs*
Let us see! I love book hauls.Found the book section and made a haul!!! I also instinctively organized all the books.
I've not read a book since I got tinnitus as I find it really hard to concentrate. Surprised I can type even semi-coherently nowadays to be honest.I miss book shopping! Online isn't cutting it. I was buying mask making supplies at my local Dollar Tree. Found the book section and made a haul!!! I also instinctively organized all the books.
I don't know how loud your tinnitus is, but it took me a few months to read again after my tinnitus worsened. Experiment with different kinds of sound enrichment and keep working at it. Maybe start with Graphic Novels/comics, and work your way back to prose. I found the illustrations made it easier to focus.That said, my tinnitus was milder back then, so not sure I could do that now.
I always find it hard to define my tinnitus in relation to that of others, but on my scale of mild, moderate, severe, and catastrophic I would consider it severe, but when I get a cold or other illness or my kids scream it hits catastrophic.I don't know how loud your tinnitus is, but it took me a few months to read again after my tinnitus worsened. Experiment with different kinds of sound enrichment and keep working at it. Maybe start with Graphic Novels/comics, and work your way back to prose. I found the illustrations made it easier to focus.
He probably wishes he was talented in general.Bob Dylan commented years back, "I wish I was that talented."
How many books per year were you reading before? Have you ever tried to write a book yourself?@all to gain I. Feel. You. When I first got T it was super mild, and after three months almost totally faded. I continued to read like nothing had happened. Then the new hell T hit along with insomnia which gave me what I fondly termed as brain psycho-babble. Totally messed with the way I thought, and more importantly read. I ended up dropping my book blog, turning down advance reader copies, and so on. I still forced myself to read. But I went down to like 20 books a year if I'm lucky. Forcing myself to read. So bad. I think for a while I kept reading the same pages over and over. Thank god for comics and manga. I've finally started to actually enjoy reading again.
It's not quite like it used to be, yet. But closer. Though a lot of other members on TT talk about how they couldn't read and enjoy a book for anywhere from 5 to 10 years. After their T became severe.
So while I couldn't read I bought a lot of book . . . because buying books is like reading. Right?
Like aot said. Try a bit of masking. It's weird I use to be able to read in quite or super noisy environments and still be able to be transported to the magical world of Bookland. So I thought when my T got severe I'd still be able to do that. So yeah. Just keep trying to read and find masking that helps you.
Today I actually read in the silence and yesterday during a hot bubble bath.
How many books per year were you reading before? Have you ever tried to write a book yourself?
My daughter reads manga it seems 24/7. I don't see the appeal myself, but maybe it's because I am old. I love watching cartoons and animated films with my younger ones though.
I will try some background sounds and see how I fare. Got to pick a book to read first though.
Only one of my cats likes to go outside. He's not allowed because we have opossums and raccoons at night. Plus he likes to climb up trees. The other two cats are lazy babies who sleep all day.Poor baby!!! It's so cruel for the doggies who need their walks. Especially has the weather changes to lovely spring.
My cats are going stir crazy. My Mulan has been meowing out the door and mugging me every time I go near it. Even though we go on walkies every day! She's actually walking now that the ground is bare and not so wet.
Oh, I never ever let my outside cats stay out over night. My old outside cats Yuki and Mr. Peaches were trained to be at the door by 4 pm. If not I hunted them down! They stayed in the garage and I let them out when I woke up.Only one of my cats likes to go outside. He's not allowed because we have opossums and raccoons at night. Plus he likes to climb up trees. The other two cats are lazy babies who sleep all day.
Right! haha...because buying books is like reading. Right?
Anyways, we are still good in this corner of the world. Stay healthy and safe, my friends.
He-he, my fellow bookworm.Right! haha...
I love to read, although right now all the reading I'm doing is all the books my 13 year old daughter wants to read! (I read them before she does...shocking... just shocking what's out there aimed at a 13yo!
Anyways, we are still good in this corner of the world. Stay healthy and safe, my friends.
Have you read the John Wayne Cleaver series? They're YA, but they're about a teenage sociopath (as in he's clinically diagnosed) who fights demons. It's graphically violent, and can be found only a few feet from typical highschool drama stuff, it's wild.He-he, my fellow bookworm.
Ah! Has your daughter read anything by Tamora Pierce? *cough* start with Alanna: The First Adventure (Song of the Lioness, #1) *cough* Oh, I'm curious what the shocking bits are? I will admit the YA books have gotten more graphic, but also so tropey that I just want to shake people. The insta-love is killing me.
I'm in a super religious area and the adult books are policed to nothing at the library! But they suddenly got a decent YA section the past few years. Everyone of them I read had pretty graphic sex scenes. It was hilarious!!!! I asked if they were getting a certain adult title in and they were like "we hear this one is to graphic." Knowing look of judgment. Because I had to ask what kind of graphic. So I bought the book and loved it. Not one sex scene. Some hints, mostly gore like a murder mystery or horror. Then every YA book I got from the library after that
Every time I returned a book and they asked me how I liked it I wanted to shout "the sex scene(s) was fire!!!!"
I have noticed in the thrift stores around here that I have to flip through the books. Not just to check for missing pages, but the books tend to be blacked out with permanent markers. I've never encountered it in adult books, but I bought some YA ones and I was so upset! Not to mention that I got curious what parts were being censored. I mean. Who censors Charlotte's Web?
So between 100-500. Are your books for 3-year olds? That's prolific reading...Slow reading year 100 to 200. Good reading year up to 500. Yeah, I have. I've got a few rough, and I mean rough , outlines. Some short stories. Nothing that will see the light of day.
That's good for her! She should check out some of the American graphic novels. I'm picky about my manga. Some favorites are Beserk (which your daughter probably isn't old enough for) and Red River! OH, yeah I'm an anime and cartoon junky too!! Oooo, I just found an anime that I can't believe I wasn't aware of. Ascendance of a Bookworm! What are some of you top anime and cartoons?
Good luck! Let me know if you need a recommend for some independent readers/picture type books.
Have you read the John Wayne Cleaver series? They're YA, but they're about a teenage sociopath (as in he's clinically diagnosed) who fights demons. It's graphically violent, and can be found only a few feet from typical highschool drama stuff, it's wild.
That being said, I fell out of YA when they all started being about teenage girls overthrowing dystopias. They call just kinda started to blur together.
I read the first three books, and they're pretty good. But I found myself both in awe at how much the author was getting away with, and feeling that he was holding back. Like he wanted to go all the way with it, but he couldn't because it was YA. (And I can confirm that things don't improve for the mom, though John comes to love her. As much as he could love anyone, I guess.)I read I Am Not a Serial Killer when it came out and always meant to check out the other ones. I remember feeling so bad for the mom. I have some of the author's sci/fi, AKA Dystopian works, as well but haven't gotten to them. He-he, that is super funny.
Ah, no I get you. YA is a market in which the traditional publishing houses are strongest in "this formula works and this is the current genre. Let's beat this with a stick until people can't stand it" So called reading trends. It's only a "trend" because that's all the publishers want to pump out there. Then they move on. Epic/High Fantasy and Sci/Fi are on trend right now. Also, certain contemporary themes, but it's not my genre and they're pandering so hard I could vomit.
The publishing houses don't realize that tropes should not control the story, the author should be able to create an amazing concept around the trope or not have it in there at all.
I tried a few of the new Epic Fantasy YAs and the Sci/Fi. WTF!!!!!!!! The lack of world building!!!!! This genre is all about world building! Not only that but I'm left wondering what characters look like and . . . my own mind supplies all the fine details. And it ticks me off that amazing Epic Fantasy writers like Cinda Williams Chima aren't being recognized because people are reading these mindless fodder reads. They're telling not showing with their writing and I hate it. So much.
Stopping self now. Before I book rant you guys to death.
So between 100-500. Are your books for 3-year olds? That's prolific reading...
Ooooooo! There's a fascinating interview with the author I read on a blog, can't find it I think the blog is gone. Where he talks about how he wanted this to be an adult series. BUT his agent said that the market was saturated and that because so many adult were reading YA he should tackle the YA market. So he pushed the boundaries hard. That's good to hear the first three are good. I think the final one came out in 2017? I think. (Ah, poor mom. That's expected though.)I read the first three books, and they're pretty good. But I found myself both in awe at how much the author was getting away with, and feeling that he was holding back. Like he wanted to go all the way with it, but he couldn't because it was YA. (And I can confirm that things don't improve for the mom, though John comes to love her. As much as he could love anyone, I guess.)
I did read the Rot & Ruin series though, and I loved it. It's the only YA dystopia that really hooked me. The fact that it had zombies probably helped.
That being said, I'm admittedly inexperinced with Sci-Fi and Fantasy, at least in the literary sense. I read Narnia and Philip K Dick like everyone else, but my interest in them didn't really kick off until my ex started to talk and gush about her love of them. Now 40% of my reading list is fantasy and/or Sci-Fi . (Would probably be halfway down by now if not for tinnitus.) Up until that point I was almost strictly into crime fiction.
Rot & Ruin is a gem! There's a webtoon adaptation which I hear is a good, but I hate the art.Ooooo! I like the Rot and Ruin series!! I need a reread so bad. There's some hidden gems, but you got to dig for them.
Not gonna lie, I've found myself doing the same for female authors, so don't feel bad. I came across Cinder in fifth grade I think, and I thought it was too girly so I didn't bother. But in hindsight, Sci-Fi dystopia + Fairy Tales is right up my alley, so I missed out! I plan to give that series a try at some point.I still find myself skipping over a book because it's written by a dude. So sexist I know.
I was reading lots of Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler, who both unfortunately had lots of sexisim and all around ickyness. There was a point where I tried to consume everything Lawrence Block ever wrote. I loved his Matthew Scudder books to death. It helps that he had some sympathetic (even if a bit sterotypical) lgbt characters.I use to read a ton of crime fiction. But I became very bored with it and rarely read it anymore. I like a mix of it with some of the other genres if I do read it.
Wait. How old are you?
Most books are published by men, right? Or at least published under masculine pen names. Those books get better marketing at least.You would think that's how it goes for each sex. It's odd that women still tend to read more books by men unless it's the romance genre. And the female dominated genre Urban Fantasy.
Her husband was doing some stuff that wasn't really "Chit Chat And All That" appropriate. She knew, but didn't do anything to stop it. Her children made similar allegations against Bradly herself.What parts were the ?
I'll do that. Our libraries open up again on April 30th.The Lunar Chronicles is one I suggest you borrow first. Especially until you get to book 2. I don't know you're tastes so I can't 100% guarantee them.