100.

Ever since I realized this was going to be my 100th post, I’ve had the hardest time composing an entry, since I don’t have a review yet because I’m still halfway through the book I’m reading (Noli Me Tangere by Jose Rizal).

Anyway, after a day or two of just staring at the computer screen, I realized I might as well plunge in and just write… so here goes:

Sumthinblue’s 100 random book quirks
(or, a peek inside the crazy mind of a biblioholic)

100. I learned to read at three years old.

99. I have no scars from childhood rough and tumble because I preferred reading to playing.

98. I used to think endpapers / flyleaves were blank so you could draw on them.

97. When I was about five, I got lost at SM North EDSA (then the biggest mall) because I wandered off inside a book store.

96. The first book I bought with my own money was Sweet Valley Kids #6, Lila’s Secret

95. I got my first pair of glasses in 2nd year high school, when I couldn’t read the subtitles off Il Postino, which we watched for Lit Class. I started out at +0.75/1.00 grade.

94. I am currently wearing +2.50 contacts.

93. I like books on trivia and useless information.

92. I am a big Harry Potter fan and I have a collection of international editions of the series, numbering nearly 80 books now.

91. My cousin and I once threw a birthday party in honor of Harry Potter.

90. I cannot read a book that has not yet been covered in plastic.

89. When I borrow books I usually return them already covered in plastic, except when I know the owner prefers books naked.

88. I abhor mass market paperbacks and I love hardbacks!

87. I visit the bargain bookstore at least twice a week.

86. I don’t buy books at full price if I can help it.

85. I have loyalty cards to National Book Store and Powerbooks. My next target is a Fully Booked loyalty/discount card but it’s so expensive (P15,000 purchase in 1 year, or P700 outright – I am thinking of the number of books I can buy with that money)!

84. Romance novels are my guilty pleasure.

83. I have only recently learned to read several books at the same time, I used to strictly stick to one book from start to finish before I pick up another one.

82. I currently have nearly 300 books in my to-be-read pile.

81. I prefer female authors to male authors, although I read a fair amount of both.

80. I am not a Twilight fan and no amount of persuasion can make me change my stand on the series.

79. My favorite series are Harry Potter, Cirque du Freak, The Bartimaeus Trilogy, and The Thursday Next series

78. I read all sorts of books, except self help/inspirational, drama, and political novels. I also don’t like cutesy talking animals, so I am very picky about books with animal characters. Give me a grisly murder anytime.

77. I remove price stickers using WD-40, but only for glossy finishes (otherwise the oil seeps through). Sometimes sticky-taping the price sticker works too.

76. I don’t dog-ear. If I don’t have a bookmark, I’ll use a receipt, a gum wrapper, tissue, or anything I can insert inside a book. Dog ears break the fibers of the paper and one day, the dog-ear will fall off.

75. I always lose bookmarks so I dare not buy any expensive ones. Once I leave a bookmark inside the book, I tend to forget about it until the next reading.

74. I like reading in cars and other modes of transportation, I’ve gotten so used to it that the movement doesn’t bother me.

73. I also like to read while eating – one hand for the food, one hand to hold the book up.

72. At any given time there are three to four books on my bed – under the pillow, tangled in the sheets, etc. I like my bedtime reading, especially in the dark with my Lumos book light.

71. There was one mystery series I liked more than Nancy Drew – The Three Investigators! I loved Jupe, Pete, and Bob’s team up, and the sleuthing gadgets they created.

70. Aside from my work as a PR writer, I moonlight as a newspaper contributor and a children’s book illustrator.

69. I get disturbed by deckle-edge books, although I don’t really have much choice if the book comes in rough cut. More edges for dust to sit on…

68. I frequent bookstores to find new titles to mooch. Even at Book Sale, when the book is over P100 and I don’t have to have the book, I end up adding it to my BookMooch wishlist.

68. My books usually have a bookplate sticker and my name handwritten on the flyleaf.

67. I have a fluffy pink duster on my bookshelf.

66. I have a separate bookshelf for to-be-read books, which overflows into several stacks on my workdesk, taking it over completely.

65. I “upgrade” mass market paperbacks into trade paperbacks, and trade paperbacks into hardcovers, and as you may know by now, my book club friends call it “doing a Blooey”

64. Vlad Tepes from the book The Historian scares the hell out of me.

63. Once, at Book Sale – Cash and Carry, one of the clerks came up to me and asked if I was the illustrator of Alamat ng Atis, causing me to blush beet red.

62. Once I forged all the signatures from the letters inside the Harry Potter books, and then invented a few more… (crazy!)

61. I get sad when I walk out of a book store without buying anything.

60. In our sixth grade production of Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, I starred as Snout the tinker, who presents the Wall in the play Pyramus and Thisbe.

59. I find Neil Gaiman to be an acquired taste, which I’m acquiring very slowly.

58. I was thoroughly depressed by Haruki Murakami’s Norwegian Wood.

57. I once snuck out a book from my grade school library- Nothing’s Fair in the Fifth Grade by Barthe De Clements.

56. I stopped reading picture books after the first grade because I thought they were babyish and I wanted to read “grown up” books. Now I’m making up for it, tee hee hee.

55. In high school I was addicted to movie tie-ins and read every single movie tie-in I could find in the library. Today, I steer clear of movie covers.

54. In college I took a production design class and I had to create a machette (a miniature stage) for Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice.

53. I snuck reading Harlequin romances in high school.

52. On the launch of Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince, I won a hardbound boxed set of Harry Potter books because I made a diorama of Harry battling the Hungarian Horntail in the first task.

51. I am trying to complete my Tintin comics. I think I’m about 2/3 there.

50. The person I’ve mooched the most books from is wired_lain, who supplies me with all the books I could possibly want (and more!) from Japan.

49. When on a trip, I usually take books I have trouble starting so that I’ll be forced to read them.

48. I rarely like movie adaptations of books.

47. I prefer to have read the book before seeing the movie.

46. I got over my chick lit phase because I kept getting disappointed by random chick lit titles. Today I stick to Sophie Kinsella, Emily Giffin and Meg Cabot.

45. I hate that there are so many skanky books for young girls.

44. I have loads of art how-to books but I’ve never had the time to practice them. Ditto computer/ graphic design books.

43. I want a cue cat scanner.

42. I am one book away from completing the 2nd Griffin and Sabine Trilogy: Alexandria remains elusive.

41. I have a signed copy of Jasper Fforde’s Something Rotten and Meg Cabot’s Queen of Babble in the Big City, and Lynne Reid Banks’ The Secret of the Indian.

40. I like wordless picture books!

39. I have the following boxed sets: The Next Set by Jasper Fforde; Harry Potter; Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell (separate books for Part I, II, and III); The Spiderwick Chronicles; and The Lord of the Rings (mass market paperback).

38. I have a hardbound, anniversary edition of The Little Prince (in clothbound slipcase) that I got for P140 at the Book Sale warehouse.

37. I have been inside the Book Sale warehouse.

36. I love it when P5, P10, P15 and P20 books at Book Sale turn out to be great reads.

35. My mom used to cover all my school books with fancy wrapping paper and plastic cover.

34. My favorite Book Sale branch is in Makati Cinema Square.

33. For the past four years, I have been to the Manila International Book Fair every day of its 5-day run.

32. The most I’ve spent for books all in one go is P4500 (nearly $100).

31. My favorite Harry Potter character is Severus Snape.

30. My cousin Dianne and I had “In Snape We Trust” shirts made before book 7 was out.

29. My favorite TV character as a kid was Kapitan Basa on Batibot.

28. I like copying down quotes from books I like.

27. Judy Blume got me through adolescence.

26. I get paranoid when I enter a book store and there are books in my bag, I’m always afraid that my books will set off the scanner alarms, although it has never stopped me from going
in.

25. The first classic I read was Heidi.

24. When I was in third grade, I joined an art workshop conducted by Jose Aruego and decided I wanted to “draw books.”

23. I like my white space, I get disturbed when books have narrow margins and tight leading.

22. The earliest memories I have of books is a ladybird book of She-ra (Was a big She-ra fan), a board book of The Wolf and Seven Kids, the type that uses puppet illustrations, and a ladybird book of Opposites

21. I feel bad if I spend more than P100 on a book from Book Sale
.

20. Thickness is not an issue for me, if it’s compelling enough, I can read it. But no matter how thin the book is, if it bores me, I’ll fall asleep while reading it.

19. I get freaked out by fantasy novels that have maps and unpronounceable names.

18. When I am book shopping or attending a book club event, I always bring a recyclable bag because I know I’ll get loaded down with books.

17. I like hunting down books for other people.

16. I get extreme satisfaction when I find a bargain copy or mooch a book that would have set me back for so much more money if I’d bought it full price.

15. My officemates often pore through my desk when I have books that come in the mail.

14. I have read until book 4 of the Charlie Bone series (and I have Books 5 and 6) but it’s so vague that until now I still don’t get the point of the series.

13. When covering my books, I like using plastic cover that’s at least gauge 3. I hate thin plastic cover.

12. I’m annoyed that there are no ready-made dust jackets and book repair supplies available in the Philippines.

11. When I was in kindergarten I played the role of Henny Penny in the school play. All I remember is running around, screaming “The sky is falling! The sky is falling!”

10. I collect Caldecott Medal and Caldecott Honor books.

9. I only loan books to people that I trust will return them in their original condition.

8. I get thirsty when I shop for books, I don’t know why.

7. I currently have 1113 books on my Shelfari shelf.

6. The books that have wrung buckets of tears out of me are: The Time Traveler’s Wife; Walk Two Moons, The Book Thief, Tiger Eyes, and Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.

5. When we were young, my cousin Dianne and I made our own books and branded them “Twinklelite.”

4. In high school, I was on TV to talk about my favorite book- Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban.

3. I discovered the book “Love You Forever” in an episode of Friends.

2. I like getting people to read the books I enjoyed so I can have someone to discuss them with.

1. I am averaging 18 books a month so far in my book challenge.

Splash! Awards

Because I’ve been given a Splash! award by Susan, I’d like to return the favor and give some Splash! awards to other book blogs I’ve been reading regularly.

The Rules:

1) Put the logo on your blog/post.
2) Nominate up to 9 blogs which allure, amuse, bewitch, impress or inspire you.
3) Be sure to link to your nominees within your post.
4) Let them know that they have been splashed by commenting on their blog.
5) Remember to link to the person from whom your received your Splash award.

(Squee. I just realized this is my first meme!)

Here are my splash awards
1) Back to Susan, whom I admire for turning book blogging into a social activity. You always have something new, interesting to read every time I check your blog, and it’s always from the heart too :)

2) Peter, because I was hooked from my first visit to your blog! I look forward to reading your entries, and I feel gratified that there are more book lovers in this country.

3) Honey, my Flipper friend! I love how eloquent you are in your reviews, and how you go out of your way to aggregate little bits of book info for us bibliovultures. And now you’ve started a crusade to unite all book bloggers and promote book blogging in the Philippines, a cause I fully support!
4) Jo, because I love how organized your reviews are. And I just discovered your archive (!), yay, lots more to read through!

5) Marie, another Flipper friend! I enjoy your company because we have very different literary taste, and I admire your take-no-prisoners attitude towards books :)

6) Patti, who is one of my inspirations for blogging. When I saw your WordPress blog last year, I knew I wanted a blog of my own!

7) IHop, another one of my inspirations. You have a blog for everything, and someday I’d like to do that too! And I love how I can imagine you as I read your posts, like we’re talking face to face :D

8) Keyla, whose blog I discovered today. I’ve been seeing you in Shelfari, and you’ve added me too, and your love for books is infectious :)

9) and one last — Color Online, because the advocacy is admirable, and the blog goes out of its way to reach out to readers and make empowerment fun! :)

(I wish I could add more!)

Lenten Special: Tuna Melt

I’ve been in the middle of a book for some days now (Pagan in Exile), and admittedly, I’ve been losing interest in it. So tonight I decided to “cleanse the palate” with a cookbook, my first cookbook review for the year :)
Book #44 for 2009: Grilled Cheese: 50 Recipes to Make you Melt by Marlena Spieler, from one of my favorite publishers, Chronicle Books. This book caught my eye at the National Bookstore Book-sak Presyo sale last December at Market! Market! because I looooove cheese. All sorts of cheese (no, processed cheese isn’t counted), and the stinkier, the better.
Because it’s Lent, I decided to try the recipe for spiced up tuna melt (Tuna Melt with Spanish Flavors), and it’s great because I had all the ingredients — tuna, Monterey Jack cheese, bell peppers (that I roasted in the oven toaster), paprika, half an onion, mayo, olive oil, and some salt and pepper to taste.

Aside from the long time it took me to peel the bell pepper (note: next time, canned pimientos!), it was pretty easy, just like making normal tuna spread except with more ingredients. I had fun using the mezzaluna knife (a la Nigella) that my mom bought at Crate and Barrel (comes with its own chopping board!) for the fine chopping.

And then I grilled the sandwich (brushed with olive oil on the surface) on a non-stick pan, using a clean saucer to weigh down the bread (my battery was conking out, so no photo of the saucer).

When the bread was nicely browned, I sliced it down the middle and yum — cheese came oozing out! :) It was yummy — the paprika and the bell peppers gave the tuna spread some zip, and some smokiness. The Monterey jack was nicely melted; I got cheesy strings stretching out as I bit into the sandwich. Sigh… it was perfect!

My yummy tuna melt!

My goal is to try out all the recipes in this book within my lifetime, and maybe invent some of my own. I need to collect more cheese “specimens” (not a wide variety available in this country, and expensive, too!) to experiment with the different combinations of grilled cheese sandwiches in the book… Meanwhile, just flipping through the pages makes my mouth water.

I think I’ll go make another tuna melt! :D

***

My copy: paperback, bought for P50

My rating: book 5/5 stars, tuna melt 5/5 stars

Lovin’ my Thumbthing!

I wandered into Powerbooks while waiting to be seated at Saisaki for lunch last Sunday and discovered a nifty new gadget that’ll help me reach my target of over 234 books this year: the Thumbthing.
As soon as I saw it on the counter, I just knew I had to have it — it’s perfect for people like me, who attempt to read at practically any given opportunity, regardless of logistics (hehehe, MRT, bathtub, the loo, in bed, jeep, trike, while cooking, while watching tv, while eating, etc…). My sister was like, what, P150, for that little thing?!? But I ignored her, because I considered it a good investment.

The dynamics are hard to explain, so I’m borrowing a diagram from the ThumbThing website to explain:

And here it is in action:


It’s been four days and I’m thoroughly enjoying this little thingamajig, which makes juggling a book so much easier for me, especially when I’m multi-tasking. The ergonomic design allows you to hold a book open with one hand, freeing your other hand to attend to other things. It doesn’t break the spine of the book (yay!), and it doesn’t obscure the text either, because the wings fit neatly in between the lines.

You can also use it as a bookmark, although strictly for leaving books on flat surfaces — it’ll probably get dislodged when you stow it inside a bag.

I’ve tried it on different books, and it works perfectly on everything from mass market paperbacks to standard hardcover novels. Doesn’t work on magazines and coffeetable books, but I think that’s asking for too much. Also doesn’t turn the pages for you, but then again, a page-turning device is also asking for too much.

It comes in a variety of sizes (mine’s a small and it fits perfectly) and colors (I wanted a pink or blue but they didn’t have it in my size so I had to get purple) too. My tiny complaint — I wish they had thought of adding a little hole to thread a handstrap or an id strap through for people like me who tend to lose (knock on wood) or misplace little things like this. Oh, and I haven’t tried it yet, but I’m foreseeing a juggling act reading in the dark with my Lumos booklight on.

Hmm, maybe I should stock up — I could try reading two books at a time, one in each hand!

(Clarification: not a sponsored post, despite my rave review :D)

Rating: 5/5 stars!

Meet David.

Book #8 for 2009 – Sock and Glove: Creating Charming Softy Friends from Cast-Off Socks and Gloves by Miyako Kanamori

I’m not much of a sewer (as in person who sews, not drainage), but the cuteness of this book got me hooked as soon as I spotted it up on a high shelf at Book Sale.

I looked it over and decided my powers could take on the amount of sewing the projects in the book required, and started hunting for cast off socks at home.

The book contains a short story showcasing different softie animals. Very minimalist, very Japanese. Then the back of the book contains some pretty straightforward instructions on how to create 13 softie toys, including dog, monkey, cat, rabbit, zebra, panda, mouse, fish, etc., and even how to make clothes for them.

I realize I don’t have to write on and on about the book because last night, I unearthed my sewing supplies and decided to try it out. Voila, meet David the dog! My stitches were a bit wonky because I was in a hurry to finish (took me about three hours all in all) to see what it would look like. But I’m sure I’ll get better with practice.

Can’t wait to make friends for David.

***
My copy: paperback, about P125 at Book Sale

My review: 5/5 stars