All Consuming


Items Hippopottoman consumed in…

April, 2008



  1. Thursday 10
    0345460014

    Finished consuming…
    The Scar — 32 people

    Worth consuming! Tagged: fiction library 24 2008


  2. Sunday 13

    Finished consuming…
    In Defense of Food — 48 people

    Worth consuming! Tagged: nonfiction library 25 2008


  3. Tuesday 15
    0785118764

    Finished consuming…
    Runaways, Vol. 1 — 37 people

    Worth consuming! Tagged: fiction library illustrated 26 2008


  4. Saturday 19
    0752877127

    Finished consuming…
    A Good Hanging — 4 people

    Worth consuming! Tagged: fiction short stories borrowed marryat 27 2008


  5. Saturday 26

    Finished consuming…
    The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao — 55 people

    Not worth consuming Tagged: fiction library 28 2008 noquotes


  6. Sunday 27

    Finished consuming…
    Naoki Urasawa's Monster, Vol. 13 — 3 people

    Worth consuming! Tagged: fiction library illustrated 29 2008

    Finished consuming…
    Naoki Urasawa's Monster, Vol. 14 — 3 people

    Worth consuming! Tagged: fiction library illustrated 30 2008


Entries about these items

    at least it was brief — 31 weeks ago

    NOT WORTH CONSUMING

    With all the jumping around and various historical footnotes, I’d say this barely qualifies as a novel. (I know, I like the footnotes when Terry Pratchett does them – these weren’t fun.)
    Of the various family members whose arcs we traced, I found only two of them to be the least bit interesting – Oscar and Abelard. The women did nothing for me, although La Inca seemed very nice.
    Being a one time humongous geek myself (and I flatter myself that I’m now only a large geek), I noticed that Díaz really had the voice down – Oscar sounded exactly like he should, and when the narrator got into it, he was credible as well. This was perhaps the best thing about the book.
    Otherwise, I did not like the narrator’s voice. In particular, I felt uncomfortable being called negro all the time (I’m sure this is a perfectly acceptable Dominican practise, but I still didn’t like it). My enjoyment was lessened by the fact that I don’t have anything approaching a working knowledge of Spanish, so I couldn’t tell what I was being told parts of the time.
    All of this combined so that I was barely enjoying the book, zipping through the Abelard and Oscar parts, and dragging myself to read the others, so the book probably would’ve rated a low “worth consuming”, but the lack of quotation  marks pushed it over the edge.

    0752877127

    A review of "A Good Hanging" — 31 weeks ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    A decent story collection about our favourite Edinburgher. Nothing particularly earth-shattering in here, and some of the stories were a little shallow, but I did enjoy seeing our old friend Brian Holmes once again. Probably my favourite parts of the book were those where we were briefly inside Rebus’s colleagues’ heads – seeing Brians motivations and fears and Lauderdale’s attitude towards Rebus. A nice, light, fun read.

    0785118764

    Nearly ranaway with my heart — 32 weeks ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    I really enjoyed reading this book – I liked many of the characters, the story was pretty good, and the art was very nice. I’m taken with the cover-drawer’s work.
    I’d’ve thrown this book up to 5 stars, but there were a few things that niggled at me, mostly the predictability. I felt like a few of the minor plot points (and one major one) were set up to surprise me, but nearly nothing did – maybe I just got lucky, or maybe it’s because the book was intended for a younger audience. Still, I enjoyed watching the non-surprising events play out and intend to consume the rest of the series.
    I’m particularly looking forward to seeing Whedon’s and Moore’s work when they take over (okay, Whedon’s done, but I’m writing this from the virtual past).

    In Defense of In Defense of Food — 33 weeks ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    Okay. I’m torn. I started off reading the book and nodding and enjoying myself. Pollan’s easy conversational style appeals to me – I like reading what he writes, and probably would almost no matter what he was writing.
    And the tagline – Eat Food. Not too much. Mostly plants. – it’s maybe not Save the cheerleader. Save the world., but it’s pretty darn good. It makes sense.
    Complaints: while being down on nutritionism, Pollan uses its methods to support his position. He even points this out (kinda late, as I was already annoyed by it) and notes that even though the tools are flawed, they’re the best we have. That may be, but it still rankles.
    Also, the book is short. And repetitive – not a great combination, but better than long and repetitive.
    So, it’s no The Omnivore’s Dilemma, but still entertaining and more than a little thought-provoking – I found myself counting the number of ingredients in my breakfast cereal this morning (more than 5, but I knew what they all were).

    0345460014

    Why it's taking me forever to finish consuming "The Scar" — 34 weeks ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    I’m going to Japan and planning takes a lot of time. I’m excited, but it’s also killing me, ‘cos I’m enjoying the book and would really like to finish it.

    0345460014

    A review of "The Scar" — 33 weeks ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    Better than Perdido Street Station. I’ve read comments that the characters are less sympathetic, but I didn’t find that to be so. Well, some of them, but they more than make up for it by being mysterious. Even though there’s more profanity than I tend to enjoy, China Miéville’s writing is definitely high quality and well worth it.
    As in Perdido, a very ambitious plot, but the setting is far and away more interesting.


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