Koji Yamauchi
I HAVE SOMETHING VERY IMPORTANT TO SAY ABOUT READING
Which is why I'm yelling 😆 But seriously, this is very important:
#1 Reading should be enjoyable.
#2 The original intent of fiction books was entertainment.
#3 You don't have to finish a book if it isn't enjoyable.
I have a degree in English. I used to be an English teacher. And I still firmly stand by all of the above. Yes, in school you have to read what you're assigned, but guess what?
Outside of school you can read what you want. No one can tell you what to read. No one can force you to finish something you're not enjoying.
I am a member of a Facebook group about fiction reading. Actually, I'm in two. One is specifically for romance novels, and it's a blast. The other one I feel is a little bit snobby. They read "literature." The other day, someone posted about a book and asked, "This book is depressing me so much. Does anything hopeful happen? I don't know if I can finish it unless there's some light ahead."
Last I checked, there were 64 comments. Some simply answered her question. "No, it's dark and sad." Everyone else lectured her on how it was "so accurate to the time period, what do you expect?" and "not every book is light and happy you know" "the best books challenge us to think."
Oh boy. You better believe I chimed in. I said, "Just know that if this book is too much for you emotionally, there is nothing wrong with ditching it and reading something lighter."
I could not believe people were acting all high and mighty to this woman like it was SO SHALLOW of her not wanting to be depressed while reading FOR FUN. In the year 2021. After a year of a pandemic, murder hornets, and rioting, she didn't want to read a depressing book? YA THINK?????
So, here I am, a certified English teacher giving everyone permission to not finish books. For whatever reason. It's depressing. It's boring. It's scary. Whatever. If anyone makes you feel bad for it, screw them. They have a giant stick up their pretentious ass.
Now excuse me while I go read this romance novel with a sexy man in a cowboy hat on the cover
(Seriously, that's what I'm reading right now.)
things that exist but you can’t see:
people thinking about you and smiling
flowers growing in your heart
the moon’s affection for you
how much you’ve healed already
a lovely future written in the stars
helenschofield70
Thereza Dillwyn Llewelyn (1834 – 1926), Welsh astronomer and pioneer in scientific photography who collaborated in the production of some of the earliest photographs of the moon in the mid-1850s
Ben Bova published Jupiter in 2000. The storyline involves huge aliens swimming in its depths, that he termed leviathans, with a follow-up book titled Leviathans of Jupiter. If you'd like to read what a scifi master thinks of our solar system, try his Grand Tour series.
It wrinkles my brain that Jupiter’s moon Europa has oceans that are sixty miles deep, while Earth’s oceans only reach seven miles deep at most. I’m willing to bet good money that there’s life in Europa’s oceans. Like five bucks. You hear me, NASA? I bet you five bucks that there’s life on Europa… Now that there’s money and reputation on the line, I bet they send a mission there real quick.
Hand massages from baby trash pandas are the BEST
(via)
Lots of good choices here!
Happy New Year everyone!
Bunnies at Meigetsu-in (明月院), Kamakura. The temple is associated with the moon (meigetsu means full or bright moon) and hence with rabbits (according to East Asian folklore, a rabbit lives on the moon).