For this Tuesday’s Top Ten List, The Broke & The Bookish folks are asking us to be unproductive citizens by listing our “Spring Fever Book Lists” otherwise known as the “Top Ten Books I’d Play Hooky With.” Like Skyline Chili, I decided to go three different ways with this one! After all, why indulge in literary “what ifs” if you can’t glut yourself every portion of the fantasy!? So, without further ado, here are the books I’d be willing to pull a Ferris Bueller for in order to have more time to read.
Books Due Out This Spring
Insurgent by Veronica Roth—I hate to admit it, but I enjoyed Divergent, the first book in this series. It’s a lot like The Hunger Games, another dystopian teen novel, but for some reason, those always serve as nice time fillers for me. Easy reads that are purely escapist romps for me, I usually don’t turn one down—especially if it involves a trilogy and possible film deals.
Bitterblue by Kristen Cashore—Another teen book I’m embarrassed to say I’m looking forward to. The other two in this series, Graceling and Fire, were actually very well written. They were a little too mature for teen readers in my opinion, but good nonetheless. This one goes back to the original story in Graceling to complete the tale of the young princess Bitterblue and her gifted companions.
The Wind Through the Keyhole by Stephen King—If you want to know how excited I am about this book, I’d rate it somewhere between “I’m about to pee my pants” and “Shia LeBouf is tied up in the soundproof room. Here’s your crowbar.” Seriously, I’ve been longing for a new Dark Tower book for some time, but I never thought he’d actually go back and revisit the universe, much less go for material in Roland’s past like he did with my favorite book, Wizard and Glass. I can’t wait to spend a day reading this one cover to cover.
Popular Books I’ve Been Wanting to Read But Haven’t
A Discovery of Witches by Deborah Harkness—This is one of those books everyone talked about but I never went in on for some reason. I don’t have a good reason as to why. Scholarship, magic, intrigue, vampires, and all that—you think I would have been instantly sold. But no, I held back. I should make up for this egregious oversight before the second book comes out.
Fall of Giants by Ken Follett—I know it makes me a nerd sicko, but I love it when I see a book is so large it could double as a doorstop at Fort Knox. This book is one of those. Granted, most of Mr. Follett’s books are large enough to serve as blunt force weapons, but this one is extra beefy. Even in the paperback form, it’s cumbersome and contains a daunting grand total of five interconnected story lines. Books or boys–if it’s complicated, I’m in. 🙂 This one should make due for a long car ride or vacation book….if I ever get a vacation that is.
The Winter King by Bernard Cornwell—I need something to fill in the gap now that the long wait for new books by Patrick Rothfuss and George R.R. Martin has begun. This is the first of three beautiful, five-hundred-page novels I can use to scratch my itch for sword fights, epic drama, and world building. Plus, it’s about King Arthur. Bonus!
Classic Works I’ve Never Read
To Have and Have Not by Ernest Hemingway—I watched the Bogey and Bacall film version of this last week (and I’ve started to feel that I want to be Lauren Bacall when I grow up. So amazing…) I bought this book when I was at the Hemingway House in Key West a few years ago, put it on the shelf, and forgot all about it. I think a little “spring cleaning” is in order to get books like this one read.
The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins—I loved The Woman in White, and this one is another popular detective piece from an author who spins a good yarn. If you like murder mysteries centered on a a giant diamond and all other manner of cloak and dagger goodness, I’m thinking this one might fit the bill.
Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez—For some reason, I could never bring myself to read this. I know it’s a great book; I’ve heard it from more than one reader I trust. For some reason, however, I just don’t know if I can stand 200 pages of lovers separated by time and custom. I suppose I should just wait until we get a nice spring downpour, curl up with it and some Goobers, and just be done with it.
Completely Random Pick
Nerd Do Well: A Small Boy’s Journey to Becoming a Big Kid by Simon Pegg—Of all the genres I frequent, biographies and autobiographies are the least popular. When I do read them, I’m the “egghead” type and normally choose presidents, random moments in history, or other books that might help me win at a game of Trivial Pursuit. I rarely read them books about celebrities who are still alive…much less so if they were written by the celebrity him or herself. However, I really like Simon Pegg; I have since Shaun of the Dead. And I was thrilled to see him getting bigger and better parts in films like Star Trek and Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol. This is his “life story” as it were, focused mainly on how a “funny kid” used what he loved to become who he is today. I’m thinking this might be a fun pick in a category I don’t often visit.
I want to read Love in a Time of Cholera too! And still need to read Divergent.
Divergent is a fun read. Granted, it’s a little predictable in places, but the idea is interesting enough to look past it.
A med student wanting to read a book with Cholera in it!? No way! 🙂 I’ve read the first five or six chapters, but I just wasn’t in the mood to finish it then. Maybe I’ll take it on this year. Thanks for stopping by for a read and a comment!
Love love love the title of this blog. Haven’t read any of these books, but now I have some for my to-reads pile.
Your blog has a pretty awesome name, too! 🙂 It’s always nice to have book ideas to trade with other folks. Do you use Goodreads?
I have been reading the Steve Jobs bio but a book about King Arthur might be a great change of pace.
How is that bio? I was halfway interested in it but wasn’t fully in the corner until the paperback comes out. 🙂
It is interesting that is focuses almost totally on his work life. Even childhood stuff makes a reference back to how it shaped his ideas that would be used at Apple. Great read but not sure I would have wanted to know Steve.
The image rarely matches the man, I’m sad to say. Still, the man changed how we communicate for better or for worse.
Other than the Simon Pegg bio, I’ve not read a single one of these, Jamie! I need to add some fresh titles to my reading list, and these might fit the bill. (Oldie but goodie…I once faked sick from work so I could finish Robert McCammon’s “Swan Song.”)
Did you like the bio? I had heard mixed reviews about it.
The top three are all due out this month through May, so that gives you ample time to catch up on at least some of the other books in the series. I have no doubt you’ll whip through the YA Lit; it’s so fun it borders on being a guilty pleasure!
Nice! I’ve never actually faked sick for the purposes of reading. I once did to go to a baseball game though. 🙂 I have missed class to finish a book before though. Does that count?