Wednesday, October 14, 2009

review: bonk by mary roach

there's nothing like curling up with a blanket, a cup of tea and your cuddly pet rabbit and reading about penis transplants and prescription vibrators.

bonk: the curious coupling of science and sex is the latest offering from science writer mary roach, who previously tackled the interactions between science and death and science and the afterlife. i'll read pretty much anything she writes, because she's extremely funny and shares my morbid fascinations and patterns of obsession, and her books are highly entertaining without sacrificing interesting, factual information.

that said... ok, bonk is not my favorite of her three pop science books. (that honor goes to stiff. it is a fantastic, gross, thoughtful, awesome book.) bonk is interesting, and at times i actually laughed out loud while reading, but it sometimes drags. i think there were three chapters devoted to erectile dysfunction, and there were a number of sexual topics i would have liked to see covered in more depth that weren't covered in much detail. and i pretty much enjoyed the earlier chapters, which discussed the scientists of the past and the sometimes ridiculous, sometimes daring, sometimes totally innovative ways they were forced to go about studying human sexual habits. i also thought it was pretty awesome that roach did not just write about these experiments- on a few occasions, she actually participated (and enlisted her husband, as well).

i'd recommend bonk to those who have enjoyed roach's previous works, but i would not recommend it as an introduction. if you're the type of person who would enjoy reading about all of the things that could potentially happen to your body after you die, in great and graphic detail (i am! wait, that might not be something to be proud of) then i would recommend starting with stiff. (if that sounds awful but you want to read about weird genital surgery, go ahead and pick up bonk. you definitely won't go wrong.)

conclusion: bonk had moments of brilliance but honestly i kind of thought the footnotes were the best part.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

teaser tuesdays

Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by MizB of Should Be Reading. Anyone can play along! Just do the following:
 
  • Grab your current read
  • Open to a random page
  • Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page

BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)

Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the book to their TBR Lists if they like your teasers!

My teaser:

Drastic measures were taken. The princess had her clitoris moved.

-p. 73, Bonk: The Curious Coupling of Science and Sex by Mary Roach

halloween

i can't believe it's almost halloween. i haven't done any seasonally appropriate reading this october! (well, actually, i read ray bradbury's the halloween tree but i kind of hated it.) as soon as i finish bonk: the curious coupling of science and sex by mary roach, i plan to get to work reading some properly spooky stories and novels.

i don't actually have much in the way of horror novels. i like zombies (well, i don't know if "like" is exactly the right word) so i've read a lot of those- world war z, the living dead, the walking dead, etc. i think this year i'll try reading something different. maybe some more poe and lovecraft, and maybe i will finally get around to reading through house of leaves.

what are your favorite books for autumn or halloween?

half price loot

i love half price books SO MUCH.

i went there today and found a ton of things i wanted. i could easily have spent $100... but i've already spent more than enough money on books this month and so i limited myself to the following:

cold comfort farm by stella gibbons
-someone recommended this to me a long time ago. it was $5, so i thought i might as well pick it up.
thank you, jeeves by p. g. wodehouse
right ho, jeeves by p. g. wodehouse
-the jeeves & wooster books have been recommended to me alll over the place, and i believe i am doing a challenge at goodreads.com for which these books can count.
nights at the circus by angela carter
-i read the bloody chamber (angela carter's collection of folk/fairy tale-inspired short stories) a while back and i loved it so much. it was exquisite. nights at the circus looks really good but i especially could not pass up this copy- it's a vintage-look new edition; i'm not normally in the business of judging books by their covers and all that but there is just something really pleasing about it.
the tale of murasaki by liza dalby
-this has been on my amazon wishlist forever. it is a fictional account of life of the author of the tale of genji, which i also want to read.
the space between us by thrity umrigar
-another wishlist purchase. i've also been really interested in reading about india lately.
love walked in by maria de los santos
-this looks super chick litty but something about it appealed to me.
fight club by chuck palahniuk
-i have sort of a problem with chuck palahniuk. every annoying hipster-type girl i've ever met has been obsessed with his books, for one. and then i tried to read haunted once and it was terrible. so, i am very biased against him at the moment. but my boyfriend thinks i would like the movie fight club, and if i'm going to watch that, i might as well read the book.

Monday, October 12, 2009

hi

1. i am not really a dinosaur.
2. i do like to read a lot.
3. i am not sure what the first two facts have to do with one another, but they are things that i thought you should know.