And yet, knowing this, I have this disliking of online petitions. "Dislike of" is probably too strong a word, maybe even the wrong one too… but when you sign something by liked and shared it just circulate inside the bubble of a social media. Noone can feel the real engagement and liability people wish to express and be heard on.
Back in the days, you knocked on a door and carried a truckload of boxes
into an office; boxes full of papers with signatures on the dotted line underneath. We
physically vouched for what we believed in, and whoever received it could see
there was a strong opposition, and they felt the unpleasantness of the
opposition’s resistance. We made things visual and physically real.
But there are groups and applications on Facebook I enjoy a LOT! And which I am more than happy to both like and share: Goodreads and Bookcrossing.
Goodreads keeps me updated on great books. I have to admit there are
books I would not have read if they had not been recommended by ordinary
readers… like myself(?). Now that I think about it; I have no idea who writes the reviews, but the reviews are well written and gives a good insight in what you might expect from reading this book. There is no fancy lingo, with multisyllable words I have not even heard of before...
Often, when I read about literature, there is someone zealous who explain everything by using what to me come across as (psychedelic?) linguistic gambol. But you don't find that on Goodreads. Goodreads tells you if a book is good or not, it recomends to you good books you should read... preferably for your own likeing.
Often, when I read about literature, there is someone zealous who explain everything by using what to me come across as (psychedelic?) linguistic gambol. But you don't find that on Goodreads. Goodreads tells you if a book is good or not, it recomends to you good books you should read... preferably for your own likeing.
When I read a really good book... I just can't find it in me to part
with it... ha ha ha... it took me 25 years to learn to get rid of ANY book.
I wrote about it before on my blog, but I give you the summing up here: I handed approximately 2500 Harlequin books over to the Salvation Army. Suddenly my office looked more empty, the Salvation Army told me they sold out within a week.... and these books, (which I read when I need to escape from thinking) were MINE and not something my family should bother with: I never missed them a second after I removed them from my house.
I wrote about it before on my blog, but I give you the summing up here: I handed approximately 2500 Harlequin books over to the Salvation Army. Suddenly my office looked more empty, the Salvation Army told me they sold out within a week.... and these books, (which I read when I need to escape from thinking) were MINE and not something my family should bother with: I never missed them a second after I removed them from my house.
There is a scary attraction to what allows me to empty my head from
pondering. I know, before I even buy the book, how it will end, and yet I still
buy and read it. Some of them are ridiculously bad written… that adds another
dimension to them as well… a bonus if you will: How NOT to write.
Anyway, when I read a really good book I sometimes buy the paperback and
release it. I always carry a couple of Bookcrossing labels with me and release
the books I have finished reading. Then I register the books online. It is
great fun to see how my books travel, or just disappear and then show up again
long time after the release. I think those who pick the books up also read
them, and enjoy doing so.
Sometimes, far from always, I release books in my own town, but I always release the books
I read when I travel.
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