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Reading Week #83

12.18.2015 by Nicola //

xmas-soots

Happy one-week-til-Christmas day!

It’s difficult not to check out early for the holidays right now while the weather is decent, the nights are long, and I’m ready to celebrate my wedding anniversary this weekend and veg out til 2016. I hope it’s a good time for you too.

On with the links!

 

–– ON ROBOTNIC.CO ––

Vlogmas is still in full swing (I’m in half-swing) – here’s a recap of this week’s.
Day 11 – Friday Reads
Day 14 – Bookshelf Tour
Day 15 – End of Year Goals
Day 16 – On My Shelf Tag

ICYMI, the latest Bookish Blether is our Christmas Gift Guide.

 

 

–– ARTS & CULTURE ––

A sweet, seasonal story from Harper Lee: My Christmas in New York.

Rebecca Solnit followed up on her last LitHub essay about women and reading with a response to its response: Men Explain Lolita To Me.

Financial Times’ interview with Elena Ferrante contains so much real talk.

I prefer for end-of-year lists to be saved for the final week of the year (what if you read the best book of your life on 27 December?!) but here are a few I’ve earmarked for the holidays:

Longform’s Best of 2015 can always be trusted.
Longreads Best of 2015: Essays & Criticism is bound to have some good stuff too.
Poll: The Best Video Essays of 2015 from Fandor (it includes Tony Zhou’s Art of the Gag so it must be legit.
While we’re at it, LitHub’s 25 Best Books of the Year, According to Booksellers is probably the best books of the year list I’ve come across so far.

 

 

–– DIGITAL / LIFE ––

Get rich or die vlogging: The sad economics of internet fame gives us a view on the “middle class” of online content creators. It’s striking to hear how some people rely on regular jobs but have become too visible to keep one, how some feel they’re in too deep to back out now, and the kind of economic entitlement that often comes along with having a big audience.

On the Longform podcast, Adrien Chen discusses his investigations of Russian trolls and one of the online voices behind the Westboro Baptist Church.

And just for fun, here’s a 6 second video in which Ron sneezes and scares deer.
 

 

–– ON PAPER ––

This week I read Charles Dickens’ classic A Christmas Carol for the very first time. Despite knowing every plot movement it was a delightful read. Between his descriptions of Scrooge and Dr Seuss’ descriptions of The Grinch I’m considering a dissertation on sick villain owns in literature.

Now I’m returning to a few books I left unfinished last month, including the enlightening and surprising Notes from No Man’s Land by Eula Biss, and Bill Bryson descending into dotage in The Road to Little Dribbling.

What’s on your nightstand?
 

 

–– &c. ––

These photos of China’s largest ghost town are absolutely engrossing.

More on why 2015 was the year of the newsletter. Lena Dunham said it so it must be true.

 
 

––

Read anything good this week? Hit reply or tweet me about it, won’t you?

Next Friday is Christmas day so I’ll be taking the week off from newsletter writing. Wishing you all Happy Holidays and I’ll see you in 2016!

Nicola x
 

Categories // Reading Week Tags // a christmas carol, bill bryson, eula biss, link list, reading week

Reading Week #77 – Autumnal af

11.06.2015 by Nicola //

autumny

I’m in New Jersey and it’s the platonic ideal of Autumn. Except that it isn’t cold. It’s around 20°C, everything’s burnished yellow and orange, the light slants across campus around 3pm, the leaves fall like gentle rain when the wind catches them and crunch with every step. If Autumn were actually like this where I live I might not rag on people who harp about it quite so much.

For fear of becoming one of those people, I’m going to stop describing it now and offer you some reading material for your weekend. (Or if you want more Autumn you can add me on Instagram @robotnic / Snapchat @robotnicola.)

 

–– ON ROBOTNIC.CO ––

Not much to see here. But in last week’s Bookish Blether we discussed Prize List Pressure – how we cope with the pressure to read literary award nominees and winners, along with some literary prizes we trust and follow.

 

 

–– ARTS & CULTURE ––

Melville House’s reading list for Rory Gilmore for these past few year is excellent, if a little too on the nose. Sure she’d keep up with popular literary fiction, but she’d be into some real obscure shit too. I did love the line about Ben Lerner though.

A quick Guardian interview and a longer Rolling Stone Feature with Nick Hornby on the occasion of the film Brooklyn's release. It’s a gorgeous film, and I love his philosophy of adapting books to screenplays. I’ll watch any film he adapts now. He definitely found his calling.

Chris Kraus’ I Love Dick is belatedly out in the UK. Emily Gould wrote about why you should read it. I might read it too.

This Story Makes Me Like David Sedaris More, Actually. Well, duh.

 

 

–– THE FUTURE ––

Twitter changed its favourite/star to a like/heart this week and people lost their shit. Gawker comes to the rescue with a way to change the heart to the emoji of your choice. Y’welcome.

A recent episode of Reply All, Blind Spot, gave me the heebie jeebies. [AUDIO, 36 mins]

I also enjoyed this special mash-up episode of Criminallusionist. [AUDIO, 23 mins]

Dialing Down: some interesting thoughts on digital / information overwhelm from CGP Grey.

 

 

–– ON PAPER ––

flight

This week I’ve been traveling and mostly reading The Road to Little Dribbling by Bill Bryson. It’s pretty great – though he’s definitely turned up the crankiness factor, which I fear ages him rather more than necessary. I also read most of Bridget Jones’ Diary on the plane, for some reason or other.

After landing I bought The Unspeakable by Meghan Daum. As is the fate of many an essay collection, it’s been languishing on my Kindle for the longest time, but now that I’ve bought it I’m racing through. I admire her forthrightness in discussing topics that usually elicit shame over identification.

What’s on your nightstand?
 

 

–– &c. ––

From Eva Wiseman: Quick question: how much do you earn? Ask your colleagues, won’t you?

Over on NY Mag, someone asked the resident agony aunt, “Am I Too Smart for My Own Good?” and got something like a Dear Sugar response that I think we can all benefit from hearing. TL;DR you are not a unique snowflake; you are not better than anyone else; show up.

 

––

Read anything good this week? Hit reply or tweet me about it, won’t you?

Til next week, pals.

 

Categories // Reading Week Tags // bill bryson, link list, meghan daum, reading week

Reading Week #58

06.12.2015 by Nicola //

9pm-sun

It’s here! The 9pm sunshine is here! I’ve been taking advantage.

I had an amazing weekend in Sheffield last week, and definitely recommend you keep an eye out for my highlight of the festival, a documentary called My Beautiful Broken Brain.

This week I’ve been gearing up for Small is Beautiful, which I’ve been working on all year. After it finishes next Thursday evening, we’re off to California next Friday morning. Busy, busy.

What’s new with you? Here, have some links.

 

–– ON ROBOTNIC.CO ––

New podcast klaxon! Bookish Blether Episode 11 – Summer Reads is all about our tips for holiday reading, along with lots of recommendations.

On my business blog, a call to arms: How to Sell in the Off-Season.

 
 

–– ARTS & CULTURE ––

The wonderful Oliver Sacks on Mishearings.

I really enjoyed the latest Literary Disco podcast, in which they discussed Leslie Jamison’s The Empathy Exams.

The hipster is dead, and you might not like who comes next. This is… I can’t. I don’t know. The worst? The most true?

I read half of this weeks ago, and (ironically?) finally got around to finishing it: Blank Space by Lauren Quinn.

 
 

–– DIGITAL ––

My working week has been characterised, as it tends to be, by intense periods of concentration contrasted against mid-afternoons of being driven to distraction. So I loved this: The Rabbit-Hole Rabbit-Hole from Kathryn Schulz.

The latest show in the Gimlet family launched recently, and it’s called Mystery Show. I’m loving it so far. Here’s a recent gem: Case #3 Belt Buckle.

Digital publishers are having a collective orgasm over Clickhole. Here’s the latest in that series from Slate.

 
 

–– ON PAPER ––

This week I finally delved into a book I’ve been meaning to read for years: A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson.

I’ve also been very gradually working my way through The Folded Clock by Heidi Julavits. I think I like it.

What are you reading this weekend?
 
 

–– &c. ––

An elegy for the sleeper train – a lovely wee essay from Ian Jack in the Guardian.

A very good, very short blog from Nev Pierce: Failure By Degrees.

You know I love Sadie Stein, and this made me reminisce about buying gag cards for friends in high school. My masterpiece was a New Baby card for a friend’s 18th birthday, addressed to his parents with an apology for the delayed correspondence. But anyway, Remembering Irony’s Awkward In-Between Stage.

 

Read anything good this week? Hit reply or tweet me with a link.

​Have a lovely weekend, friends!

 

Categories // Reading Week Tags // bill bryson, heidi julavits, link list, reading week

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