Wednesday, July 29, 2020

Let's write a book!

There is one thing there cannot be too many of in this world, and that is books. If you get lucky, you can sell your book, if you get really lucky, your book becomes a best seller. It really doesn't matter if your book is good, so - get over that. We aren't writing a GOOD book, or a PUBLISHABLE book, we are writing A book.

Get it?

Good.

Now, the point with this "exercise" is to get you over what ever it is that stops you from writing a book. Because you obviously want to write a book, if you are reading this.

So, let's start.

There is no reason why it should take you more than a week to write your book.
Google "write 10.000 words a day", and read a couple of articles.
Some points are
- set a certain time and sit down and just write. You can use a timer and write 15 minutes intervals, then take a short break and then come back and write another 15 minutes. It would be best if you can create the most creative environment, pick the time you are at your most creative and productive, but what you must do is to see there are no interruptions. Turn off the phone, lock the doors, put on earphones and nice, quiet music in your ears, something that doesn't disturb you, give yourself a cup of coffee (or what ever) and write.
- just write. It doesn't need to make any sense. If you don't have anything to write, think about some issue you have VERY STRONG opinions and write down your opinion. Think about that time when someone said or did something and what you wish you had done. Write it down. Write fan fiction. Try to write something you have read. Retell a fairytale. Anything, just as long as you write.
- you should have a story you WANT to tell, for any reason. Either because it means something to you, or because you think it's an interesting story worth telling.
- plan your writing beforehand. It doesn't matter if you have just thought about it, or if you have a plan on paper, just know your story.


Think about it a little.
What do you want to read?
If you have read a book you loved, try to rewrite it. Just tell it your way. You know, like Arthur's saga - has been told thousand ways the last century, and most of them are good. Or... any high fantasy is Lord of the Rings retold :-D So - change what you didn't like, add what you missed, and remember to change all the names, you know like how Cassandra Clare changed Ginny and Draco to Clary and Jace, or how E.L.James changed Edward and Bella into Christopher and Ana.

Which is your favorite genre? Which genre do you most like to read?
That is the genre you will be writing in.
Think about the books in this genre you have read. What is your favorite trope? Which trope do you dislike most? Use both in your book. The favorite as it is, the hated one changed to better please you.

1) Choose three (or more) of your favorite books or books you liked, books you think are good books.
Now, describe their plot, with your own words.
( Google "How to write a short plot summary")

That is the plot of your book. Just mix them all together the best you can.

2) Pick a dozen characters you love. These people can be from a book, a movie, tv series, anywhere. It can even be a real person.
Now, gender swap them. Race swap them.

Now, write a character sheet for each of them. (Use the character sheets for novel writing, not RPG)
Important things to think about:
Who is the person that intrigues you? What was their childhood like? What did they dream of? What was their greatest desire? What obstacles did they face? What was their greatest triumph?

BTW, to get their picture, pick an actor to play this character. Focus more on the CHARACTER of your characters, than looks. Or pick actors by THEIR looks (that is, an actor you are attracted to), not how you imagine the characters in the books, or who played them in the series/movie. (After all, they are gender swapped and race swapped, so they can't play the same character.)
This is the "description" of your character. No purple eyes and red hair, unless the actor you chose has purple eyes and red hair. :-D Let's keep the Marysueness down a bit.

Do NOT describe the character as "looking like soandso" or "if this book was a movie, this character would be played by soandso", but "he was tall and slender, with narrow shoulders and slightly wide hips. His eyebrows were slightly angled, which gave his face a somewhat worried look. He had a small mouth with a shy, boyish smile, and a gap between his front teeth. All that was overpowered by the straight, unafraid look of his slightly narrow, deep dark brown eyes. When he wasn't smiling, he looked serious and focused, like a man who genuinely cared about what you were saying." Or, don't do it like that, because it could be done much better, but you get the idea.

3) Pick a world you love. Be it Middle Earth or East London. That will be the world of your novel.
Come on, this is a quickie, to get you started. We'll "steal" everything here.
Just change everything. Give things a new name, put mountains where there were plains, lakes in deserts, plant forests in farm areas and swamp the forests.
Take some interesting, fascinating places from our world and insert them here and there on your map.
Why not mix many worlds from books you like?
Develop your own legends and histories about why those places are where they are.
Inhabit them with life forms adjusted to the environment, place people there and give them a culture "stolen" from a people living in the same kind of area in our world.
Change the colors, make the sand green and plants red.
Unless you write about East London. That already exists.That you shouldn't change. Much. Use Google Earth to "walk" the area, and invent street names and addresses.

Steal the best descriptions of worlds from books. But do it with style, meaning, you take the passage but change it, to describe something different. You know, Andy Warhol got famous by coloring photos. Basically :-D


 A reef of clouds and lightning raced across the skies from the sea. . . . My hands were shaking, and my mind wasn’t far behind. I looked up and saw the storm spilling like rivers of blackened blood from the clouds, blotting out the moon and covering the roofs of the city in darkness. I tried to speed up, but I was consumed with fear and walked with leaden feet, chased by the rain. I took refuge under the canopy of a newspaper kiosk, trying to collect my thoughts and decide what to do next. A clap of thunder roared close by, and I felt the ground shake under my feet. . . . On the flooding pavements the streetlamps blinked, then went out like candles snuffed by the wind. There wasn’t a soul to be seen in the streets, and the darkness of the blackout spread with a fetid smell that rose from the sewers.  The night became opaque, impenetrable, as the rain folded the city in its shroud.
- Carlos Ruiz Zafón; Shadow of the Wind
 That passage echoes the main characters emotions with the weather, and binds it into a dance, each encouraging the other, and you can do the same. Just don't do exactly the same, because that's really stealing, plagiarism, and it's not OK. Don't do that.
Write down all the books you were inspired by, and where you stole from, and mention it in the end of your book. Credit people you stole from. That's just good manners.

4) Your book's name will be an idiom you like. Or a line from a poem or a song you like.

5) You know those books on step 1 whose plots you described, concise the plots into one sentence. Use that sentence as your snowflake.

Now you should have a first draft :-D


If you get stuck on any step, you can look at this Master Outline or this Pulp Fiction Master Plot
Also, How to Write a Novel in Only 10 Days
"A great place to start is with your own life:
What strange experiences have you had?
What are you afraid of?
Who is your best friend and how did you meet?
What is your strongest or most impactful memory?
What do you want to achieve in life?
What would you consider a great adventure?" 

- The Ten Day Outline by Lewis Jorstad

Now find The Story Grid by Shawn Coyne and do the first edit of your draft.


Sunday, July 19, 2020

50 things to do alone...

I came to this blog after several months' absense, and saw that there were a lot of comments! YAY! Someone actually reads this blog! I have an audience! Wow!

It was all SPAM.

Great.

*sigh*

Well... maybe someone sees something here anyway.

So, today I tumbled over "50 Ways to Spend Time Alone" on Pinterest


And the reactions were... hmm...
"need more like these to survive quarantine"
"
Right I'm Sooper bored!!!!"

How? Why? There isn't enough time for me to do all I want to do and I'm practically bedridden!

Ok... here's some other things you can do:

1) play "floor is lava"

2) give yourself a manicure or pedicure - or both


3) try different facial masks


4) try different reading challenges. I recommend "around the world in books" - find out information about the country and culture the book is from, cook something from that culture etc.
There is also a reading challenge where one is supposed to do an activity connected to the book, for example read a book about a bus ride and then take a bus ride. Read and Go

Create your own reading challenge
 

5) learn a language

6) start an art journal


7) make a junk journal of all the junk mail that comes this week 


8) Learn a new skill
- for example, choose one from https://diy.org

9) Go to bucketlist.org and pick one 


10) Find an interesting tv series in foreign language (foreign to you - I mean, English is my second language, and thus could be counted as "foreign", but most tv series I follow are in English, so it's not foreign to me :-D)

11) Find a new YouTube channel

12) Learn to read tarot cards or another divination method (No, it's not Satanic or supernatural or paranormal or anything like that. It's a pile of pictures based on common Western symbolism, and is all about your subconscious and free association.)

13) Learn to give massage

14) Take a 30 day challenge

15) Take the 100 species challenge (Make a list of 100 plant species found within walking distance from your home)
Bonus points if you learn the usage of these plants; if they are edible, and how they are eaten; if they can be used to dye fibers, or other crafts, are they medicinal etc.

16) Learn to draw

17) Learn about the history, culture and attractions in your home area.

18) Write fan fiction

19) Find a new band
Or listen through the whole production of a famous band you aren't that familiar with.

20) Make home cosmetics. Bath bombs are easy and fun.

21) Learn to make 10 drinks

22) Learn to make barista art

23) Learn card tricks and coin tricks

24) Learn origami
Learn to fold a crane by heart and fold 1000 cranes


25) Learn a skill that looks good on your resumé - that makes you more employable

26) Think about what advice you would give to your younger self. Think how it would have changed your life. What would you have done differently? Would it have changed something better in your life now? Can you change it now?

27) Leave 10 positive, encouraging, nice comments on different blogs or vlogs

28) Learn to bake bagels

29) Choose something on Pinterest and do it; a recipe, a craft tutorial, a pattern

30) Learn to sew, knit, crochet, or some other such thing

31) Learn carpentry

32) Learn to sing your favorite song

33) Make a meal from scratch

34) Learn to make hot sauce

35) Learn to make chili

36) Play a board game - with yourself
Develop a board game
 
37) Learn to find 10 constellations on the night sky and go find them

38) Write the best, most amazing letter you can imagine - to yourself

39) Read a newspaper. An actual paper newspaper. Cut out the most interesting articles. 
Use the rest of the newspaper to make some craft, like basket or papermache

40) plant the seeds from the fruits you eat

41) Come up with a project you’d like to pursue

42) Learn tai chi

43) Play a game you loved as a child.
If you don't remember or didn't play any games, look at old children's games and play some of them.
I remember playing wall ball for hours... all by myself. I was a very lonely kid, being the youngest in my family, living on the countryside. The closest neighbor was several miles away.

44) Lay puzzle

45) Make a zoo of paper (how to make simple paper animals)
You can, of course, learn to whittle and make wooden animals, or make animals of clay (for example salt dough, though that isn't very good for that purpose)

46) Make a collage

47) Find a swing and swing

48) Learn to play the guitar

49) Learn to dance


50) Sing karaoke

Some more good ideas:
50 things to do when you unplug
 

Tuesday, April 21, 2020

I had an idea...

I have been thinking about filming a YouTube video. I am not that original and imaginative and all that, or photogenic or funny or anything special, so I really don't think it will get many views. If any. But I would like to have done that. And maybe someone sees it and finds it entertaining or something.

So, I was thinking about what to film. My idea was to try to cook something someone else cooked.
So, I went to YouTube to see most popular cooking videos... and... uh. A lot of kids. A lot of "cooking" - not food.
Uh. :-(
Not so good an idea, then.

But... moving on.

The 10 most popular cooking channels are

Tasty(18M), and their most popular video is 30-pound burger. No.
8 Desserts in 1 sheet tray. Ok

Gordon Ramsay (14.5M) and slow-roasted pork belly

Rosanna Pansino (12M), and her most popular video is "how to make a Disney princess sisters cake". No.
"My little pony cupcakes". No
"Pizza challenge"? No. I hate wasting food.
Come on, isn't this kind of against the spirit of the challenge?
Yes, it is. Cooking what ever is most popular. But on the other hand, this is just a way to find something to do.
"How to make a rainbow cake"
Ok, that I can live with.

The problem with her channel is that it's very specific. It's basically fandom cooking, and I don't do that. I might try something in my fandoms, but my fandoms aren't... that popular. :-D I could make Star Trek food :-D

LiZiqi (10M) and Peanut and melon seeds, dried meat, dried fruit, snowflake cake - snacks for Spring Festival

办公室小野官方频道 Ms Yeah Official Channel (8.5M) - cooking crayfish with popcorn popper? No
Watermelon feast. Ok...

Epic Meal Time (7M) and Fast Food Lasagna

Binging with Babish (6.5M) and Ratatouille from Ratatouille. Great!

Bon Appétit (5.5M) and "Every Way to Cook an Egg (59 Methods)"
I'm actually more interested in "Every Way to Cook a Tomato"

Jamie Oliver (5M) and Spaghetti Carbonara

Maangchi (4.5M) and Kimchi :-D
I love Maangchi :-)

Jun's Kitchen (4.5M) and how to train your cats... er... or, perhaps the Sukiyaki with homemade tofu.

(Frankly, I hate it that Gordon Ramsay and Jamie Oliver are in there... isn't it enough they are in the television? Why do they have to take viewers from YouTube amateurs? Well... yeah... Tasty and Bon Appetit aren't that either.)

But... right now this feels like a really bad idea.

Maybe do the exact opposite and try to do what the least popular videos made?
It's basically impossible to find those videos. :-(

Something inspiring I found while researching.

5 minutes crafts cooking hacks. Oh no.
I mean... they steal to begin with and recycle everything. :-(
But - "peel ginger with a spoon" - can one make ginger bug with the peeled skin? It should be possible. Just like you make apple cider vinegar with all the apple cores and peels and such.

I liked the "using baking hacks to bake" series... I might do something like that.

Dragon's birthday party

Fireball - I would make baked alaska with chili ice cream set on fire
liquid lava - layered smoothie with some chili, ginger and cinnamon (red hots?)
burned trees - meringue
fireflies - chocolate dipped in gold
fireants - freeze-dried strawberries dipped in hot sauce

Eating Your Feed sounds like an amazing idea. My feed is... a little special :-D

Also, about the grapefruit pith steak and watermelon ham - I'd like to try to make vegan alternatives of food and let people taste test them. Blindly, of course.

I like Binging with Babish's versions, I like Sauce Stache, he tries different versions of things, too, I like Racch, I like the "4 levels of...", I like Tasty's "vs" series...







Wednesday, April 15, 2020

Ordinary American food I have never eaten

fettuccine Alfredo

peanut cups - now, this at least is easy - just to go and buy some. At least I hope one can get those in our store. Otherwise I have to make them...

biscuits and gravy - here's another recipe using ground pork. We don't get that sausage meat. And, of course make sausage patties, fried eggs, and Southern fried apples... and remember to break the biscuits in pieces and put the gravy over them, use the biscuits like potatoes or so, don't break the biscuit open and use it as a scone. It's only idiots or evil people who do that :-D

green bean casserole - now... I'm having second guesses here... it's green beans stewed in cream of mushroom soup and topped with french fried onions... and that doesn't sound good to me at all, not even edible.

I have eaten VERY LITTLE Mexican food - or "Mexican", I don't know how authentic any of this is
tamales
burritos
chimichangas
enchiladas
empanadas
fajitas
churros
tres leches cake

cornbread - Uh, I don't like corn.
polenta or grits - Uh, I don't like corn :-D

girl scout cookies

root beer float - I thought this is what we call ice cream soda, but that is apparently something different... you put in a tall glass some syrup, for example chocolate syrup, a ball of ice cream, some soda water, mix to smooth liquid, fill up with more soda water, put on a ball of vanilla ice cream and serve. Float is putting in a couple of balls of ice cream and filling it up with soda, pop, root beer, "carbonated beverage" of your choice :-D

banana pudding
banana cream pie
coconut cream pie
grasshopper pie
key lime pie - the problem is getting key limes... :-( Apparently one can replace key limes with regular limes and some lemon.

caramel corn

cheese fondue

baklava

eggs Benedict

fried green tomatoes - these have to wait to late summer when there is green tomatoes

plantain - I think Mangú works well for this. I want to try that one.

huevos rancheros or shakshuka

Sandwiches:
Rubens - corned beef, sauerkraut and Russian dressing on rye - I need to make Jewish deli style rye bread and corned beef.
pastrami on rye - rye, mustard, pastrami - so... I suppose I need to make pastrami as well... Hmm... Also, mustard. The USonian mustard seems very thin compared to ours.
Philly cheese steak - chopped steak (ribeye or entrecote in Swedish...) served with American cheese on french roll.
French dip - French roll dipped in beef drippings... so, it must be beef, slow cooked. I suppose my brisket works fine for this :-D

pineapple and cottage cheese
ambrosia

baked brie

chicken pot pie
chicken and waffles
chicken tikka masala
chicken cacciatore
chicken divan
chicken kiev
chicken a la King
chicken tettrazzini
cobb salad
General Tso's
King Pao's chicken

divinity

flatbread pizza

jello salad

Pasta primavera

peanut butter and jelly sandwich

poptarts

rice krispie treats

celery and peanut butter

fig newtons

samosas

poke

poutine - and for this I need to make cheese curds!



Now, it's mostly because I'm not American, but also because I have an aversion to onion, garlic, mushrooms, beans, fish, corn, etc. etc.

Top 100 Food Items
Top 100 Most Comforting Comfort Food According to Ranker.com
Comfort Foods Everyone Loves


Wednesday, January 1, 2020

Mission Statement

We are the bucket list generation. We want to LIVE, not just exist until we die, we want to EXPERIENCE, we want to HAVE BEEN THERE, DONE THAT.


I assume we all have those moments of envy, longing, satisfaction, seeing or reading about someone doing something, when our whole being says "Yes! I want to do that!"
The first step for any dream to come true is to acknowledge you have that dream.

There's several sites and projects online to help people to make their dreams come true.
 A lot of that is about people reading others' lists and going "that sounds interesting, I want to do that, too!"

But that's just the first step. That doesn't take you much further from just wishing, wanting and dreaming. I have taken that step hundreds of times. My "to do" -list, "bucket list", "101 things in 1001 days" -list, "50 things before 50" -list; my List, is mile long. I need help to get from dreaming to doing.

I am not alone. Most people have these lists, and some of us actually manage to tick off things from our lists, but those are a minority.  Well... most of us manage to tick off a couple of things from the list, but as the lists are much longer than a couple of things, it doesn't make much difference. So, how did we manage to do those few things? What makes the people who actually can tick off things from their lists different from the rest of us? How can I become one of them?

This blog was created to record my journey from a dreamer to a doer, and I hope it will help others to realize their dreams as well, and becoming from a LIST generation to a LIVE generation.

Having a list of things is not going to do much. It just sits there, giving the impression of that I'm doing something to make my dreams come true, but that's not the case, is it? You aren't really DOING anything by writing bucket lists. Sure, it's the first step, and a necessary step (at least for most of us. :-D There are those who get an idea and start doing it right away.)

Not all dreams are equal. Not all dreams are true. Not all dreams are yours. You will find out what do you REALLY want with time. To begin with, write down everything you might want to try or do, without thinking about priorities, but as you work with your goals, the priorities will appear. You see, if it's important, you will find a way. You will make the time. You will do it. If not, you will find excuses. You will "forget". You will rather do other things.

So how ever much you "want" something, if you haven't find time to take ANY further steps to reach your goal within a year, scrap that "dream". It's not yours. It's not important to you.
I read somewhere... there was a writer or a musician, who was told once again, "I wish I could do what you do!", to which he/she responded: "No, you don't. If you did, you'd do." 
Maybe it's just the lifestyle you dream of. The power. The ability to change people's lives. I don't know. Find out what it is, and reach for THAT goal.


Some dreams are not realistically possible. At least not right now. Don't let that stop you from dreaming. Find out what would make the dream more realistic.

For example, the likelihood of me ever becoming a mother is very small.
I would have better changes if I was lighter and had more money.
I can lose weight and I can get money. If I REALLY want to become a mother, I'll lose the weight and get the money, and I'll get myself pregnant.
Apparently, as I am still overweight and penniless, I don't REALLY want to become a mother.
After all, I could start having one night stands, just to get pregnant, like millions of other women do, without needing to lose weight and get money. But I don't even do that.

Another dream I have is to visit space.
It's the same thing there. If I was 15, I could get myself in the army, learn to fly, become a pilot and seek for the space program of my country.
I'm not. So my only way of visiting space is either building a space rocket, or paying for the trip.
In both cases, it would be better if I was fit.
I'm not doing anything to become fit and rich enough to pay for the trip. Nor am I studying space engineering, or physics or rocket science, to be able to build a space rocket.

Some people dream about riding a flying unicorn...
Well... There are no flying unicorns. At least, if by that you mean an actual, living, breathing creature, very much like a horse with wings and a horn on the forehead.
It is possible to give a regular, ordinary horse a fake horn and wings, and it's possible to rent a helicopter, strap the horse under it, and then ride a "flying unicorn". It's just not advisable :-D
Or you could become an actor in a fantasy movie and appear to fly a unicorn.
So - what would be almost as good? Perhaps it would do to ride a real horse, with no horns or wings? Ride an ostrich (to have the feeling of a living, winged being under you and carrying you forth through the air... because even if the ostrich cannot fly, it can run pretty fast, and it might be the closest thing anyone of us ever gets to flying on the back of an animal.) Or get a motorcycle and name it "Flying Unicorn"... >:->

Some dreams need to be adjusted a little.

A lot of us don't really believe we are worthy our dreams. I know I don't. I am afraid of failure, I'm afraid of success and the consequences of that. I'm afraid of not being able to keep my promises to myself. I'm afraid of how my life will change. I'm afraid of a lot of things, and choose the instant gratification, comfort and "safety" in stead of taking the risk... even when the gain would be everything I've ever dreamed of, and the loss would be nothing... In most cases the worst thing that can happen is "no" - that is, nothing changes. I'd still be able to sit on my couch and write blog entries :-D Nevertheless, I don't dare to risk nothing to gain everything. (Not really "nothing" - it's a question of risking the comfort and instant gratification. And it would be absolutely horrible, not being able to sit and do "nothing much".... :-D)

Added 19/3-15: The Ultimate Bucket List Resource Guide

Friday, October 25, 2019

25th - And it's Friday again!

Greasy Food Day

Chucky The Notorious Killer Doll Day

Sourest Day

Punk for a day Day

International Artists Day

Watch Make Mine Music

100 pushups

13 - 13 - 17 - 17 - 16 - 16 - 14 - 14 - 50+
45 seconds seconds between each set

"Well? Did you make it through Week 6? If you did; congratulations - you should be very proud of your achievements and ready for one final test.

If you struggled with Week 6 (many people do), no problem, just repeat the appropriate week and try again. Maybe an extra couple of days rest will benefit you?"

20 pullups

13 - 11 - 9 - 7 - max
120 seconds between each set

"After week 6 you’re ready for the final test. Take two days off. Eat well and remember to drink water. Now you should be able to do 20 pull-ups. If you couldn’t, don’t give up. Start again from week 5 with your new test result."

The Photography challenge/lesson today is:
Shallow DoF
Steam, Smoke, or Fog
Cityscapes
How to Install Photoshop Actions – featuring Jodi from MCP Actions
Naked night photography

The Inktober prompt is TASTY

Thursday, October 24, 2019

to read, to watch

So... I am going to leave Pinterest. As much as I have promoted it. They are selling it off bit by bit and it's no longer the site I loved. So I am moving things out from there.

Well... I suppose Blogger won't live forever either. But - Uh. Things happen. Nothing lives forever.

This is Heiroglyph, a Fox series that didn't happen.


Watch

Pufnstuf zaps the world
Murdoch Musteries
The Country Diary of an Edwardian Lady
Carnivae
The Onedin Line
Rosemary & Thyme
Game of Thrones
Castle
Buddenbrooks
Lillie
Cadfael
The Borgias
DaVinci's Demons
Warehouse 13
Perception
Whitechapel
The Librarian
Special Unit 2
Night Stalker
Passions
Alphan
The Others
Todd and the book of pure evi
house of anubis
beautiful creatures
the escape artist
joan of arcadia
the equalizer
the secret circle
Buffy the vampire slayer
Extant
Transcendence
The Bletchley Circle
The Grand
Ripper Street
Father Brown
Miss Fisher's murder mysteries
MacGyver original
Young Indiana Jones
Haven
The Gates
Tru Calling
Dark Skies
Miracles
Eleventh Hour
Misfits
The Nine Lives of Chloe King
Friday the 13th - the series
Watch:
Making History
The Dresden Files
The Cape
EPIC
Hemlock Grove
The following
The Paradise
The Making of a Lady
The Sceret of Kells
FreakyLinks
Awake
Transylvania
Tigre og tatoveringer

I want to see Xena again, the whole series. I'd like to own it.
I need to see Nikita. all three. Movie, copy, series



HUGE list of shows like Downton Abbey
(It's so huge it ends up being a list of historical shows and movies of which some are a bit like DA :-D)

Against the Wind
An Ideal Husband
Belle
Berkeley Square
Birdsong
Bleak House
Bomb Girls
Bramwell
Call the Midwife
Cranford
Daniel Deronda
Death Comes to Pemberley
Doc Martin
The Duchess of Duke Street
Emma
Father Brown
Flambards
Foyle’s War
Gosford Park
Great Expectations
He Knew He Was Right
Her Majesty, Mrs Brown
Jane Eyre
Land Girls
Lark Rise to Candleford
Little Dorrit
London Hospital
Lorna Doone
Lost in Austen
Mansfield Park
Merlin
Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries
Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day
Monarch of the Glen
Mr. Selfridge
Nicholas Nickleby
North & South
Northanger Abbey
Our Mutual Friend
Persuasion
Poldark
Pride & Prejudice
Robin Hood
Sense And Sensibility
Sherlock
Tess of the D’urbervilles
Aristocrats
The Bletchley Circle
The Buccaneers
The Buddenbrooks
The Forsyte Saga
The Grand
The House of Eliott
Murdoch Mysteries
The Mystery of Edwin Drood
The Onedin Line
The Paradise
The Scarlet Pimpernel
The Secret Life of Mrs. Beeton
The Strauss Family
The Way We Live Now
Under the Greenwood Tree
Upstairs Downstairs
When Calls the Heart
Wives and Daughters
Wuthering Heights

7 Movies You've Never Seen To Make Your Night In That Much Better

The Science of Sleep
Red Riding Hood
Phoebe in Wonderland
Brick
Atlantis - The Lost Empire
Sleeping Beauty
Paprika

To Watch

Uncovered
Sherlock Holmes (RDJ movies)
Whip It
Dean Spanley
Red Riding Hood
Resident Evil series
It's Complicated
Oz the Great and Powerful
Hope Springs
No Country For Old Men
Oblivion
Memento
Captain Phillips
Tin Man
Ringer
Finder
the 10th kingdom
being human
eastwick series
the fades
haven
lost girl
seventh son
Emerald City
Dominion
Time After Time
The Wakewood
Shame
Rigor Mortis
Miss Robin Crusoe
Elementary
Metal Hurlant Chronicles
Atlantic (BBC America)



Read

Shanaya Tales' reading goals for 2017

Read 35 Books
Finish the Bingo for 2016
Complete 3 book series start to finish
Read My Own Damn Books (books I own but haven't read)
Participate in the community through Readathons and Buddy Reads
 - like Dewey’s 24 hours , AuthorAThon, BorrowAThon, Diversathon & OwnVoices October Readathon.


Your Picks: Top 100 Science-Fiction, Fantasy Books

1
The Lord Of The Rings
by J.R.R. Tolkien

2
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
by Douglas Adams

3
Ender's Game
by Orson Scott Card

4
The Dune Chronicles
by Frank Herbert

5
A Song Of Ice And Fire Series
by George R.R. Martin

6
1984
by George Orwell

7
Fahrenheit 451
by Ray Bradbury

8
The Foundation Trilogy
by Isaac Asimov

9
Brave New World
by Aldous Huxley

10
American Gods
by Neil Gaiman

11
The Princess Bride
by William Goldman

12
The Wheel Of Time Series
by Robert Jordan

13
Animal Farm
by George Orwell

14
Neuromancer
by William Gibson

15
Watchmen
by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons

16
I, Robot
by Isaac Asimov

17
Stranger in a Strange Land
by Robert A. Heinlein

18
The Kingkiller Chronicles
by Patrick Rothfuss

19
Slaughterhouse-five
by Kurt Vonnegut

20
Frankenstein
by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley

21
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?
by Philip K. Dick

22
The Handmaid's Tale
by Margaret Atwood

23
The Dark Tower Series
by Stephen King

24
2001: A Space Odyssey
by Arthur C. Clarke

25
The Stand
by Stephen King

26
Snow Crash
by Neal Stephenson

27
The Martian Chronicles
by Ray Bradbury

28
Cat's Cradle
by Kurt Vonnegut

29
The Sandman Series
by Neil Gaiman

30
A Clockwork Orange
by Anthony Burgess

31
Starship Troopers
by Robert A. Heinlein

32
Watership Down
by Richard Adams

33
Dragonflight
by Anne McCaffrey

34
The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress
by Robert A. Heinlein

35
A Canticle for Leibowitz
by Walter M. Miller Jr.

36
The Time Machine
by H.G. Wells

37
20,000 Leagues Under the Sea
by Jules Verne

38
Flowers For Algernon
by Daniel Keyes

39
The War of the Worlds
by H.G. Wells

40
The Amber Chronicles
by Roger Zelazny

41
The Belgariad
by David Eddings

42
The Mists of Avalon
by Marion Zimmer Bradley

43
Mistborn Trilogy
by Brandon Sanderson

44
Ringworld
by Larry Niven

45
The Left Hand of Darkness
by Ursula K. Le Guin

46
The Silmarillion
by J.R.R. Tolkien

47
The Once and Future King
by T.H. White

48
Neverwhere
by Neil Gaiman

49
Childhood's End
by Arthur C. Clarke

50
Contact
by Carl Sagan

51
The Hyperion Cantos
by Dan Simmons

52
Stardust
by Neil Gaiman

53
Cryptonomicon
by Neal Stephenson

54
World War Z
by Max Brooks

55
The Last Unicorn
by Peter S. Beagle

56
The Forever War
by Joe Haldeman

57
Small Gods
by Terry Pratchett

58
The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant the Unbeliever
by Stephen R. Donaldson

59
The Vorkosigan Saga
by Lois McMaster Bujold

60
Going Postal
by Terry Pratchett

61
The Mote in God's Eye
by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle

62
The Sword Of Truth Series
by Terry Goodkind

63
The Road
by Cormac McCarthy

64
Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell
by Susanna Clarke

65
I Am Legend
by Richard Matheson

66
The Riftwar Saga
by Raymond E. Feist

67
The Sword of Shannara Trilogy
by Terry Brooks

68
The Conan The Barbarian Series
by Robert E. Howard and Mark Schultz

69
The Farseer Trilogy
by Robin Hobb

70
The Time Traveler's Wife
by Audrey Niffenegger

71
The Way of Kings
by Brandon Sanderson

72
Journey to the Center of the Earth
by Jules Verne

73
The Legend Of Drizzt Series
by R. A. Salvatore

74
Old Man's War
by John Scalzi

75
The Diamond Age
by Neal Stephenson

76
Rendezvous With Rama
by Arthur C. Clarke

77
The Kushiel's Legacy Series
by Jacqueline Carey

78
The Dispossessed
An Ambiguous Utopia
by Ursula K. Le Guin

79
Something Wicked This Way Comes
by Ray Bradbury

80
Wicked
The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West
by Gregory Maguire

81
The Malazan Book Of The Fallen series
by Steven Erikson

82
The Eyre Affair
by Jasper Fforde

83
The Culture Series
by Iain Banks

84
The Crystal Cave
by Mary Stewart

85
Anathem
by Neal Stephenson

86
The Codex Alera Series
by Jim Butcher

87
The Book Of The New Sun
by Gene Wolfe

88
The Thrawn Trilogy
by Timothy Zahn

89
The Outlander Series
by Diana Gabaldon

90
The Elric Saga
by Michael Moorcock

91
The Illustrated Man
by Ray Bradbury

92
Sunshine
by Robin McKinley

93
A Fire upon the Deep
by Vernor Vinge

94
The Caves of Steel
by Isaac Asimov

95
The Mars Trilogy
by Kim Stanley Robinson

96
Lucifer's Hammer
by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle

97
Doomsday Book
by Connie Willis

98
Perdido Street Station
by China Miéville

99
The Xanth Series
by Piers Anthony

100
Space Trilogy
by C.S. Lewis

10 Books You Pretend to Have Read (And Why You Should Really Read Them)

1) Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson
2) Dune by Frank Herbert
3) Gravity’s Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon
4) Foundation by Isaac Asimov
5) Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell by Susanna Clarke
6) 1984 by George Orwell
7) Last and First Men and Star Maker by Olaf Stapledon
8) The Long Tomorrow by Leigh Brackett
9) Dhalgren by Samuel Delany
10) Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace


The 30 Best Fantasy Book Series of All Time

The Black Company by Glen Cook
The Broken Empire Trilogy by Mark Lawrence
The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis
The Chronicles of Prydain by Lloyd Alexander
The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant by Stephen R. Donaldson
The Dark Elf Trilogy by R.A. Salvatore
The Dark Tower by Stephen King
Discworld by Terry Pratchett
Dragonriders of Pern by Anne McCaffrey
The Dresden Files by Jim Butcher
The Earthsea Cycle by Ursula K. Le Guin
The First Law Trilogy by Joe Abercrombie
The Gentleman Bastard Sequence by Scott Lynch
Harry Potter by J.K. Rowling
His Dark Materials by Philip Pullman
The Kingkiller Chronicle by Patrick Rothfuss
The Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien
The Magicians Trilogy by Lev Grossman
Malazan Book of the Fallen by Steven Erikson
Mistborn by Brandon Sanderson
The Night Angel Trilogy by Brent Weeks
The Pendragon Cycle by Stephen R. Lawhead
The Realm of the Elderlings by Robin Hobb
Redwall by Brian Jacques
Shannara by Terry Brooks
A Song of Ice and Fire by George R.R. Martin
The Stormlight Archive by Brandon Sanderson
The Sword of Truth by Terry Goodkind
Temeraire by Naomi Novik
The Wheel of Time by Robert Jordan




72 Books for Halloween – The Ultimate Guide to Halloween Thrills

Sherrilyn Kenyon Acheron
Gena Showalter Darkest Night
Beautiful Creatures
Karen Marie Moning Darkfever
Christine Feehan Dark Prince
Lauren Kate Fallen
J.R.Ward Lover Awakened
Glass Houses
To The Grave by Frost
Switched Amanda Hoeking
Tempest Julie
Twilight Stephenie Meyer

A Discovery of Witches
Clean by Alex Hughes
Evernight by Claudia Gray
Fated by Benedict Jacka
Libriomancer by Jim C. Hines
Rivers of London
Poison Study b Maria V. Snyder
Rae of Hope by W.J.May
Shadow Falls The Beginning
Jim Butcher Storm Front
A Modern Witch by Debora Geary
Sea Priestess  by Fortune?

Interview with the Vampire by Anne Rice
Dark Lover by J.R.Ward
Fracula by Bram Stoker
The Wolf's Hour by Robert R. McCammon
Pride Mates by Jennifer Ashley
The Wolfman by Nicholas Pekearo
Salem's Lot by Stephen King
I Am Legend by Richard Matheson
Shiver by Maggie Stiefvater
The Werewolf of Paris by Guy Endore
Twilight
Ancient Sorceries and Other Weird Stories by Algernon Blackwood

Phantom Nights - John Farris
Dark Matter b Michelle Paver
Heart shaped box by Joe Hill
Help for the Haunted by John Searles
Ghost Writer
The Little Stranger by Sarah Waters
The Winter Ghosts by Kate Mosse
The Turn of the Screw by Henry James
The Woman in Black by Susan Hill
Carnacki the Ghost Finder by William Hope Hodgson
Casting the Runes and Other Ghost Stories by M.R.James
The House of Lost Souls  by F. G. Cottam

the shining by stephen king
the picture of dorian gray
the phantom of the opera
the legend of sleepy hollow by washington irving
The Haunting of Hill House
Complete Stories and Poems by Edgar Allan Poe
Frankenstein
Rosemary's Baby by Ira Levin
Dr. Jekyll and Mr Hyde by Stevenson
H.P.Lovecraft at the mountains of madness

Stephen King It
Clive Barker books of Blood
Laird Barron the Imago Sequence
House of Leaves by
Caitlin R. Kiernan the Red Tree
Ghost Story by Peter Straub
the Exorcist by William Peter Blatty
Haunted by Chuck Palahnick
Thomas Harris the Silence of the Lambs
psycho by Robert Bloch
Poppy Z. Brite Lost Souls
Ray Bradbury From The Dust Returned

11 Of The Best Fantasy Series You've Probably Never Heard Of

The Farseer Trilogy by Robin Hobb
The Graceling Realm series by Kristin Cashore
The Patternist or Seed to Harvest series by Octavia E. Butler
The Kingkiller Chronicle by Patrick Rothfuss
The Grisha Trilogy by Leigh Bardugo
The Kushiel's Legacy series by Jacqueline Carey
The Fairyland series by Catherynne M. Valente
The Earthsea Cycle by Ursula K. LeGuin
The Queen of the Tearling trilogy by Erika Johansen
The Chrestomanci series by Diana Wynne Jones

N.K. Jemisin's Inheritance Trilogy
David Anthony Durham Acacia Trilogy

The 51 Best Fantasy Series Ever Written

1. The Kingkiller Chronicles by Patrick Rothfuss
2. The Stormlight Archive by Brandon Sanderson
3. A Song of Ice and Fire by George R.R. Martin
4. The Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien
5. The Lightbringer series by Brent Weeks
6. His Dark Materials by Philip Pullman
7. Discworld by Terry Pratchett
8. The First Law by Joe Abercrombie
9. The Sword of Shannara Trilogy by Terry Brooks
10. Demon Cycle by Peter V. Brett
11. The Riddle-Master Trilogy by Patricia A. McKillip
12. Mistborn by Brandon Sanderson
13. Gentlemen Bastard Sequence by Scott Lynch
14. The Inheritance Trilogy by N.K. Jemisin
15. Liveship Traders Trilogy by Robin Hobb
16. The Harry Potter books by J.K. Rowling
17. The Sword of Truth by Terry Goodkind
18. The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis
19. The Earthsea Cycle by Ursula K. LeGuin
20. The Fionavar Tapestry by Guy Gavriel Kay
21. Raven’s Shadow by Anthony Ryan
22. The Broken Empire series by Mark Lawrence
23. A Land Fit For Heroes by Richard K. Morgan
24. Outlander series by Diana Gabaldon
25. The Wheel Of Time by Robert Jordan
26. Malazan Book Of The Fallen by Steven Erikson
27. The Black Company by Glen Cook
28. Elemental Logic by Laurie J. Marks
29. The Chronicles Of Amber by Roger Zelazny
30. The Avalon Series by Marion Zimmer Bradley
31. The Merlin Quintet by Mary Stewart
32. The Dark Elf Trilogy by R.A. Salvatore
33. The Elric Saga by Michael Moorcock
34. Redwall by Brian Jacques
35. Temeraire by Naomi Novik
36. Inheritance Cycle by Christopher Paolini
37. The Riyria Revelations by Michael J. Sullivan
38. Prince Of Nothing by R. Scott Bakker
39. Dragonlance by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman
40. The Chronicles Of Thomas Covenant by Stephen R. Donaldson
41. The Powder Mage Trilogy by Brian McClellan
42. The Once And Future King by T.H. White
43. The Bartimaeus Sequence by Jonathan Stroud
44. The Gormenghast Series by Mervyn Peake
45. The Abhorsen Trilogy by Garth Nix
46. The Dark Is Rising Sequence by Susan Cooper
47. The Farseer Trilogy by Robin Hobb
48. The Traitor Son Cycle by Miles Cameron
49. Dreamblood by N.K. Jemisin
50. The Riftwar Cycle by Raymond E. Feist
51. The Magicians Trilogy by Lev Grossman


Tales from the Flat Earth by Tanith Lee
The Last of the Renshai by Mickey Zucker Reichert
The book of the New Sun by Gene Wolfe
Tamora Pierce The Song of Lioness Quartet
Anne McCaffrey Dragonriders of Pern
Eddings the Belgariad and Mallorean series
Lloyd Alexander's Chronicles of Prydain series

365 days of ya


39 Classic Books Every Modern Gentleman Should Read

'Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance' by Robert M. Pirsig
'The Prince' by Niccolo Machiavelli
'To Kill a Mocking Bird' by Harper Lee
'For Whom the Bell Tolls' by Ernest Hemingway
'One Hundred Years of Solitude' by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
'The Age of Innocence' by Edith Wharton
'Palace Walk' by Naguib Mafouz
'Crime and Punishment' by Fyodor Dostoevsky
'Things Fall Apart' by Chinua Achebe
'Fathers and Sons' by Ivan Turgenev
'Animal Farm' by George Orwell
'All Quiet on the Western Front' by Erich Maria Remarque
'War and Peace' by Leo Tolstoy
'Reminiscences of a Stock Operator' by Edwin Lefèvre
'The Autobiography of Malcolm X' as told to Alex Hayley
'The Iliad' and 'The Odyssey' by Homer
'Beowulf'
'Siddhartha' by Hermann Hesse
'Why I Write' by George Orwell
'The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass' by Frederick Douglass
'King Lear' by William Shakespeare
'Don Quixote' by Miguel de Cervantes
'This Side of Paradise' by F. Scott Fitzgerald
'As I Lay Dying' by William Faulkner
'Night' by Elie Wiesel
'The Master and the Margarita' by Mikhail Bulgakov
'The Brothers Karamazov' by Fyodor Dostoyevsky
'Sir Gawain and the Green Knight'
'Julius Caesar' by William Shakespeare
'On the Origin of Species' by Charles Darwin
'The Art of War' by Sun Tzu
'The Epic of Gilgamesh'
'On the Road' by Jack Kerouac
'The Oedipus Trilogy' by Sophocles
'Fahrenheit 451' by Ray Bradbury
The complete works of Chekhov
'I, Robot' by Isaac Asimov
'Great Expectations' by Charles Dickens

Tony Abbot: The Forbidden Stone