Jan. 11th, 2005
(no subject)
Jan. 11th, 2005 11:19 pmReading-
1. Stanley Park by Timothy Taylor- I read this when I was in Mongolia, but I had to read it again because it's so Vancouver centric. I enjoyed it a lot more the second time. It's a fun novel with a lot of layers. If you're interested in the restaurant trade and Vancouver, give this a go.
2. "A home at the end of the world" by Michael Cunningham- I savoured this one. It was great, full of dense, thick prose. I loved the story. I think it worked as a movie and as a film. Michael Cunningham creates great characters and can write believable female characters.
3. "The Joy of Writing" a literary memoir by Pierre Berton- Whipped through this today. There were a lot of great anecdotes about his writing and how he writes, funny stories about Can lit mavens and the way people react to books and writers, and lots of tips. I loved it, actually.
I've also been reading "Marketing for Dummies" because I'm trying to learn more about marketing. I have to read it in bits because I find it rather dry. I recently read "Guerilla Marketing for Writers", which I found much more useful and practical. If you have any other recommendations for marketing books that will not put me to sleep, please pass them my way.
1. Stanley Park by Timothy Taylor- I read this when I was in Mongolia, but I had to read it again because it's so Vancouver centric. I enjoyed it a lot more the second time. It's a fun novel with a lot of layers. If you're interested in the restaurant trade and Vancouver, give this a go.
2. "A home at the end of the world" by Michael Cunningham- I savoured this one. It was great, full of dense, thick prose. I loved the story. I think it worked as a movie and as a film. Michael Cunningham creates great characters and can write believable female characters.
3. "The Joy of Writing" a literary memoir by Pierre Berton- Whipped through this today. There were a lot of great anecdotes about his writing and how he writes, funny stories about Can lit mavens and the way people react to books and writers, and lots of tips. I loved it, actually.
I've also been reading "Marketing for Dummies" because I'm trying to learn more about marketing. I have to read it in bits because I find it rather dry. I recently read "Guerilla Marketing for Writers", which I found much more useful and practical. If you have any other recommendations for marketing books that will not put me to sleep, please pass them my way.