Gravatar Hooray! I'm so glad you're enjoying the book. Such an interesting idea, the chrono disorder. And such a lovely romance!

Do you always do library books? I should, I know. Instead I buy (often used, though) and resell (amazon).


Gravatar Thank you for this--your entry just took me back to the Edinburg Public Library in Edinburg, Texas, where I would check out detective stories and later, when I graduated from the children's and young adult section, spy novels. Reading your entry, I remembered just how it smelled, and just how yummy it was to read in the library on a rainy day.


Gravatar I've been menaing to read TTW for some time (my dissertation was on time travel films), but I rarely find time to read fiction on my own. I'll certainly check it out now that I've seen two recommendations from bloggers I trust.


Gravatar Thanks for the tip - I've just placed TTTW on hold at my local library!


Gravatar The public library of my youth closed at 6:00 p.m. on Fridays, which meant that it was a rare occasion when my parents got home from work in time to take me to the library at the very beginning of the weekend. If they didn't make it, we'd go Saturday morning, but it used to be anguish to me on a Friday night that I actually had a free evening with no homework that had to be done and yet I had no new library books to read. (Of course, if I'd had good time management skills--then or now!--I would have done my homework Friday night and thus been able to read on Sunday night. But that never, ever happened.)

I wish that I had the ability to read "fun" novels during the term, but I just don't have the discipline. So my night-time reading is usually non-fiction, often essays, something I can read for just a few minutes before going to sleep. Fun novels get read in one fell swoop on school breaks.

Enjoy your reading!


Name:

Email:

URL:

Comment:  ? 

 

Commenting by HaloScan