X-Kai- Vol. 1 by Asami Tohjoh

I do confess that the only reason I read this was because it was an ‘X’ title that I needed for the A-Z Challenge. It was also my first manga, AND since it was originally in Japanese, I also counted it for the Japanese Literature Challenge. Reading a manga is interesting because you read the book from back to front and right to left. It wasn’t really that difficult to do, and I enjoyed reading this book just for the experience.

This book features Kaito, a skilled assassin who trained at a very young age.  His day job is at a flower shop, and a mysterious woman comes there to give him his assignments.  He then uses lilies as a guise to kill his victims.  Kaito does have a heart, though, and even takes in a homeless boy.  He also cares for his brother who is in a coma.

There are three mini-stories in this book, and some of the drawings are fairly graphic in nature so I would recommend this for adults only.  Kaito is drawn in such a way that at first I didn’t know if he was male or female.  However, he uses that as a disguise sometimes to lure his victims.

I would read the second volume, if only to fill the need for another ‘X’ title.  Mangas are a new and very different genre for me.  If you like manga and know of a series I might like, please let me know.

2006 for the English translation, 200 pp.
Rating: 3.5/5

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Filed under "t" authors, "x" titles, 150-299, 2000's, 3.5 stars, japanese, review

Ban the Scrapers!

That almost sounds like I’m cussing, doesn’t it?  Anyway, I hadn’t heard of the term ‘scraping’ before, but it refers to websites that steal your content and publish it as their own.  It seems that it’s happening more and more frequently to me, and I discovered this wordpress plug-in that will ban certain ip addresses from your blog.  I’m starting to use it, and I thought some other wordpress users might want to know about it.  You can find more info here:

http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/wp-ban/

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Subscribe by email now working

I didn’t know it, but my ‘subscribe by email’ form wasn’t working.  It’s fixed now, so if you’d like to get all my updates in a single daily email, just click on the button at right or on the icon in my header.

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It’s Tuesday, where are you?



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Mailbox Monday 11.10.08

Many thanks to Hachette Book Group and Dewey!

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Lost in Translation Challenge


This is a great challenge that I’ll definitely be participating in.  I love reading world literature, and it’s been my goal for the last two years to also read more in translation.  In 2007, I read 14 titles with 10 different languages represented, and so far in 2008, I’ve read 19 books with 9 different languages in translation.

The goal of Frances’s challenge is to read six works in translation.  I’ll plan on having at least 6 different languages respresented as well.  This will be a good one!

  1. The Housekeeper and the Professor by Yoko Ogawa (Japanese)
  2. Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair by Pablo Neruda (Spanish)
  3. Thousand Cranes by Kawabata (Japanese #2)
  4. X-Kai- Vol. 2 by Asami Tohjoh (Japanese #3)
  5. Fear and Trembling by Amelie Nothomb (French)
  6. Kitchen by Banana Yoshimoto (Japanese #4)
  7. The Reader by Bernard Schlink (German)
  8. So Long a Letter by Mariama Ba (French #2)
  9. Solaris  by Stanislaw Lem (Polish)
  10. A Tale of Two Gardens by Octavio Paz (Spanish #2)
  11. The Devil and Miss Prym by Paulo Coelho (Portuguese)
  12. Zlateh the Goat and Other Stories  by Isaac Bashevis Singer (Yiddish)
  13. The House of Paper by Carlos Maria Dominguez (Spanish #3)
  14. Ravel by Jean Echenoz (French #3)

Some titles I’m thinking about:

  • The Good Women of China by Xinran (Chinese)
  • Kafka on the Shore by Murakami (Japanese)
  • The Devil and Miss Prym by Coelho (Portuguese)
  • Ficciones by Borges (Spanish)
  • The Girl Who Played with Fire by Larsson (Swedish)
  • The Summer Book by Jansson (Swedish)
  • To Siberia by Petterson (Norwegian)
  • Measuring the World (German)
  • Effi Briest by Fontane (German)
  • Night Train to Lisbon (German)
  • ? by Zweig (German)
  • Inkspell (German)
  • Inkdeath (German)
  • The Piano Teacher (German)
  • The Neverending Story (German)

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World literature in ’08 so far (TSS)

Have you been reading any world literature lately?  Do you enjoy books in a particular world location?

I do enjoy reading from authors outside the U.S., and I’ve been happy with my results for 2008 so far.  I’ve really enjoyed being a part of both Canadian Challenges.  I’ve read three each by L.M. Montgomery and Atwood with hopes to read more of both authors next year.

What’s also amazing was that I read two books (in translation, of course) originally in Icelandic and none (so far) in Spanish.  I never would have predicted that!  Here is the breakdown by original language:

  • Japanese (5)
  • French (4)
  • Hungarian (3)
  • Icelandic (2)
  • German (1)
  • Chinese (1)
  • Italian (1)
  • Norwegian (1)
  • Swedish (1)

The list below is by author nationality.  If a book is set in a different country, it is noted.  Also, some of the authors have moved from their original country, and if known, that is also indicated.  I should have a few more titles to add to this list by the end of the year.  (I’m behind on my reviews, but eventually they’ll get there.)

Australia

Canada

China

  • Sky Burial by Xinran (set in Tibet; author now lives in Great Britain)

Czech Republic

  • The Castle by Franz Kafka (originally in German)

France

  • Snow by Maxence Fermine (set in Japan)

Great Britain

Hungary

Iceland

India

Iran

  • Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi (now lives in France)
  • Persepolis II by Marjane Satrapi (now lives in France)

Ireland

Italy

  • Silk by Alessandro Baricco (set in Japan)

Japan

  • Strangers by Taichi Yamada
  • After Dark by Haruki Murakami
  • Silence by Shusaku Endo
  • X-Kai by Asami Tohjoh
  • Vampire Hunter D by Hideyuki Kikuchi

Nigeria

Norway

  • Out Stealing Horses by Per Petterson

Russia

  • Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov (later lived in U.S.; set in U.S.; originally in English)

South Africa

Sudan

Sweden

U.S. authors with books in foreign settings

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Notable Books Challenge Complete!

notables.jpg
**Button compliments of TypoGenerator

Hosted by Wendy and lasted all of 2008.

For this challenge I committed to 6 books, hoped to read 8, and ended up with 9!  My favorites by far were The Invention of Hugo Cabret, Unaccustomed Earth, and Out Stealing Horses.  My least favorites were Breath and On Chesil Beach.

The books I read in order of enjoyment:

  1. The Invention of Hugo Cabret stars4h.gif by Brian Selznick
  2. Unaccustomed Earth stars4h.gif by Jhumpa Lahiri
  3. Out Stealing Horses stars4h.gif by Per Petterson
  4. After Dark stars3h.gif by Murakami (I’m thinking of changing this to a ’4′)
  5. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows stars3h.gif by J.K. Rowling (Too many deaths)
  6. The Cloud of Unknowing stars3h.gif by Thomas H. Cook
  7. The Gathering stars4.gif by Anne Enright (Even though this is rated higher, it was mostly because of the writing. It’s not really a book I ‘enjoyed’)
  8. On Chesil Beach stars3.gif by Ian McEwan (I’m thinking of lowering this rating)
  9. Breath stars2.gif by Tim Winton (I actually liked the first 3/4 of this)

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Weekly Geeks #23: Challenges

Dewey’s Weekly Geeks #23 was to re-do a previous week. I chose to organize and update my challenge list. I’m not going to complete some challenges that I joined, but that’s okay. It’s been a great reading year so far, and challenges and fellow book bloggers really help on the journey.

These are listed in reverse order of completion and/or challenge end date, so completed challenges are at the bottom of the list.  Further updates can be found at this link.

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Decades Challenge Complete!

08decades.JPGI read a lot more consecutive decades in 2007, but I still had fun reading my choices and enjoyed the challenge.  I just decided to list all the books that fit a particular decade.

My favorites were probably the oldest book, Dracula and the first three books of the Anne of Green Gables series. Maus I and II were my favorites of the newer titles.

Want to join Decades 2009?  Just head on over to the Decades blog to sign up.

What I read:

1890’s

1900’s

1910’s

1920’s

  • The Castle by Franz Kafka

1930’s

1940’s

1950’s

1960’s

1970’s

1980’s

1990’s

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