Wednesday, December 15, 2021

30-Day Book Challenge from 2017 That I Never Finished (Part 2)

ICYMI, you can read Part 1 here. Unlike in Part 1, all challenge answers here are 2021 only.


Day 17: Favorite quote from your favorite book

“It does not do to dwell on dreams and forget to live.” — Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone

This line really struck me as a young kid and it still does as an adult who never truly grew out of being a spacey dreamer.

Day 18: A book that disappointed you

I'm sure there have been many over the years but I can't remember them and I don't want to waste effort remembering. Brain space is such precious commodity. Why waste it on disappointments?

Day 19: Favorite book turned into a movie

Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone. Pitch perfect adaptation, good casting, excellent set and music.

Honorable Mentions: Crazy Rich Asians, The Godfather Part II, The Devil Wears Prada (Meryl Streep, Anne Hathaway, Emily Blunt 'nuff said), To All The Boys I Loved Before.

I love the music of The Godfather, the Love Theme especially (a remixed version is my ring tone).

Day 20: Favorite romance book

I can't. I can't pick just one! Off the top of my head though, these are the books I LOVED and have held up with subsequent rereads: Pride and Prejudice, My Imaginary Ex, Ascending Do Not Disturb, Rebirth of the Malicious Empress (don't let the title scare you away - this one's excellent), Speed Dating, Remember When.

Day 21: The first novel you remember reading

One of the Nancy Drew mysteries in 3rd grade. I forgot which one it was - I read so many in my youth - but it was a gateway drug. I've been a voracious reader ever since.

Day 22: A book that makes you cry

Death of certain characters always makes me sad. Dobby, Sirius, and Fred in Harry Potter. Rue in The Hunger Games. Those were the ones that had me sobbing, and I still get sad when I reread them.

And this one's cheating a bit as I haven't read the book in full except for certain chapters and scenes translated by kind volunteers, but Bu Bu Jing Xin by Tong Hua made me cry big, fat, juicy tears. It is a time slip melodrama set in the Qing Dynasty. The Chinese TV adaptation is also a favorite to this day.

Day 23: A book you wanted to read for a long time but still haven't

Anna Karenina. It's been on my list forever but I keep putting off reading it.

Day 24: A book that you wish more people would've read

Eating Fire and Drinking Water by Arlene J. Chai. I had read dark books before this, books with violence and gore, but this felt different. Maybe because for once the violence, albeit fictional, occurs to people who look like me. And the bad things that happen in the book still happen in real life and just as easily could happen to me. I was also quite young when I read this: young and impressionable and prone to bad dreams. What a trip.

Day 25: A character who you can relate to the most

In recent memory, it's probably Frank Li in Frankly in Love. On paper we don't have a lot in common. He's a full-blooded ethnically Han Korean born and raised in America. I'm a biracial Filipino born and raised in the Philippines. Frank's struggles with his Korean heritage and feeling American but not quite, resonated with my struggles growing up Filipino but expected to also conform with Chinese cultural norms - a culture that I am only ever exposed to in small doses when relatives come to visit a few times a year or in small, superficial ways such as celebrating Chinese New Year or Moon Cake Festival with food and hongbao. I say superficial because there are deeper cultural nuances to these celebrations that my Chinese relatives never bothered to explain to me, and that I never bothered to learn until my adulthood. And then there are the microaggressions from both sides, conflicting cultural attitudes, or worse, when both sides agree on what I feel are antiquated/misogynistic/xenophobic views. 


Day 26: A book that changed your opinion about something

The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown. 

I was raised Catholic. I went to Catholic school nearly my entire educational career. In fact, prior to reading DVC, I was quite the devout little Christian girl. I read the bible, could lead prayer novenas, knew every line the priest would say at regular mass. I was young and I accepted what was taught as is and never thought to question it. DVC opened my eyes to the fallibility of the human Church, I began looking into the many atrocities it committed throughout history, and I started to question my Faith, to look at it critically and have my own moral judgment about the various teachings.

I believe that religion is a very personal thing and every religious person comes to a point where they start to question their Faith or what they've been taught about it. That's not necessarily a bad thing. Some people emerge with stronger conviction in their Faith, others completely break away, and still some end up in a comfortable middle ground (like me!) who remain in the Faith but still have questions that may never get answered. And I'm okay with that.

Day 27: The most surprising plot twist or ending

The Girl With A Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larsson. The reveal about who the villain was and how it related to the overarching mystery and the mystery that started the whole thing. I did not see it coming. Masterful work.

Day 28: Favorite title of a book

Hannibal Rising - Thomas Harris.


Day 29: A book everyone hated but you

I have no answer for this one. I don't think I've encountered a book that most people hated and only I loved. I'm usually one of the haters. Hehe.

Day 30: Your favorite book of all time

This one hurts. It changes over time but if I had to choose just one? In 2021 my answer is World of Cultivation by Fang Xiang. At different points in the past, some of my answers would have been Harry Potter 4, Count of Monte Cristo, Dracula, and Millennium Trilogy (Yes, all three. I CANNOT choose just one).


Friday, December 10, 2021

30-Day Book Challenge from 2017 That I Never Finished (Part 1)

I occasionally have commitment issues and this was one of them. Looking at old tweets, I see I managed up to Day 16 and then must've forgot about it. Or got lazy. Or both.

In the spirit of semi-productive procrastination, I thought it would be fun to answer this again in 2021 and see if any of my answers changed.

This is the Challenge I got off Twitter. I unfortunately couldn't find who originally created it, so I can't credit them.


Day 01: Best book you read last year

2017: Best overall: Pelican Brief - John Grisham. Best emotional grip: Me Before You - Jojo Moyes.

2021: Look, I have pandemic brain and cannot remember past the last few months and you ask for last year's best book when I was at the height of anxiety?? 2021 is ending so I'll just think of this question as "the past year."

Best over all: And Then There Were None - Agatha Christie. Riveting from start to finish and excellently narrated by Dan Stevens in the audiobook I listened to.

I had a paperback copy of this in my possession years ago but lost it when I moved. This cover what finally pushed me to give it a try. I was in a noir/murder mystery mood and this fit the bill precisely.

Honorable mention: The first three books in the Anne of Green Gables series. It's a heartwarming story of chosen family. I finally see what the fuss is about. It is also excellently narrated by Karen Savage for LibriVox audiobooks. It's available free on YouTube!

Day 02: A book that you've read more than 3 times

2017: Harry Potter 1-7 (annual tradition), Stoker's Dracula, Hunger Games 1, My Imaginary Ex, Charlie All Night, Remember When

2021: That Harry Potter annual tradition has long been broken and replaced with Millennium trilogy by Stieg Larsson. Adding to this list: Ascending, Do Not Disturb - Yue Xia Die Ying, World of Cultivation - Fang Xiang, A Slight Smile Is Devastating - Gu Man. I'm sure there's more but those are the ones that easily come to mind.

ADND is a fluffy, feel good read about chosen family and a slow burn friends to lovers romance.

Day 03: Your favorite series

2017: Nancy Drew series, Harry Potter Series, Millennium Trilogy

2021: My answer hasn't really changed much except HP has since been tainted by the author's TERF-y ways coming to the fore. It will always be a favorite. It's too closely tied with my childhood not to be, but it's now viewed through a... I don't know how to verbalize my complex feelings about it.

Anyway, I digress. I will just add World of Cultivation by Fang Xiang to this list because it is several books long and held up well with each reread, ie it still makes me cackle.

Day 04: Favorite book of your favorite series

2017: Nancy Drew#32 - The Scarlet Slipper Mystery, HP#4 - Goblet of Fire, Millennium#2 - The Girl Who Played With Fire.

2021: Same as above. For World of Cultivation, I forgot which book it is, but it's the one with the Sword Conference. It is HILARIOUS.

It starts slow but once it gets going, the dry comedy is note perfect. The lead is a stubborn, money-grubbing, zombie-faced amnesiac who turns out to be kind of a genius at formations. Plenty of hijinks ensue.

Day 05: A book that makes you happy

2017: A Slight Smile Is Devastating by Gu Man, World Of Cultivation by Fang Xiang, Harry Potter 3 and 4

2021: Ascending, Do Not Disturb - Yue Xia Die Ying, World Of Cultivation by Fang Xiang

Day 06: A book that makes you sad

2017: People I like die, I cry buckets. Harry Potter 6 and 7, Hunger Games 1, Me Before You

2021: Probably the same? It's been a while since I cried reading a book. Thanks to my goldfish memory, I don't recall if I cried while reading a book since 2017. Oh! Maybe when Matthew died in Anne of Green Gables. That was sad. 

Day 07: A book that makes you laugh

2017: Still makes me laugh on subsequent rereads: World of Cultivation - Fang Xiang, A Slight Smile is Devastating - Gu Man.

2021: Ascending, Do Not Disturb - Yue Xia Die Ying, World Of Cultivation by Fang Xiang, Mo Dao Zu Shi - Mo Xiang Tong Xiu. The Gu Man novel too but its place in my heart has been supplanted by ADND. You must've noticed by now how certain titles are mentioned frequently. These books are near and dear to my heart and have made the pandemic just a tiny bit more bearable.

Day 08: Most overrated book

2017: The Fault in Our Stars - John Green Most overrated book I read in recent memory. "Most overhyped" work too.

2021: I can't think of any right now, so I guess my answer remains the same.

Day 09: A book you thought you wouldn't like but ended up loving

2017: I can't recall any. My dislikes tend to stick.

2021: Anne of Green Gables - L.M. Montgomery. I ended up binging the audiobooks. That's how much I liked it.

Honorable Mention: Mo Dao Zu Shi - Mo Xiang Tong Xiu. It's not that I thought I would dislike it, I just did not expect how much I would enjoy it. It's danmei (BL), which I had not read a lot of so that may have factored into my expectations going in. MDZS is excellently written and paced, the characters are memorable, the romance believable, the sex - well, the sex is soooo spicy I blushed. Erotica writers take note!

The translations are very well done too. Kudos to Exiled Rebels Scanlantions. Read the novel summary and chapter transations here.

Day 10: A book that reminds you of home

2017: None? Probably because books take me out of my home and brings me to other places. I've yet to experience the opposite.

2021: Same sentiment.

Day 11: A book you hated

2017: Mortal Instruments book 2. It was SO frustratingly BAD. And Clary was infuriatingly stupid, impulsive, and stubborn.

2021: That and I should really add Something Borrowed. It was also adapted into a film, which I couldn't finish no matter how much I liked the actresses. It's a story about terrible people making terrible decisions. I hated every character in this book except the one character, who I later found out will go on to marry one of the terrible characters in the novel sequel. Ugh.

Day 12: A book you love but hate at the same time

2017: HP6. Harry was an insufferable angsty teen for a considerable chunk of the book but I still love the book overall.

2021: Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine. IYKYK.

Day 13: Your favorite writer

2017: Anne Rice and J.K. Rowling. Honorable mentions: Stoker, Dumas, Gu Man.

2021: Stieg Larsson, Gu Man, Anne Rice. For reasons already mentioned previously, Miss Rowling is no longer a favorite.

Day 14: Book turned into a movie and completely desecrated

2017: One Day (2011) - I enjoyed the book, didn't like the film. Anne Hathaway's fake British accent was distracting.

2021: I don't know. It's been a while since I watched a movie that completely botched the source material.

Day 15: Favorite male character

2017: Edmond Dantes, John Ambrose, McLaren, Cinna, Van Helsing, Snape, Dumbledore, Hannibal.

2021: Zuo Mo aka Zombie Face in World of Cultivation, Edmond Dantes, Cinna, Van Helsing, Dumbledore.

Day 16: Favorite female character

2017: Lisbeth Salander, Daenerys Targaryen, Mina Parker, Lizzie Bennet, Jane Eyre, Hermione Granger.

2021: Kong Hou in ADND, Lisbeth Salander, Daenerys Targaryen, Arya Stark, Mina Parker.


This post is getting wayyyyy too long. Better to end it here on the last question that had 2017 answers. Stay tuned for Part 2! xo