Liquor = Literature

I’m one of those people that when they go out to a bar, or go to a beer store, or go to a 7-11, never know what to get. I hog up a bar stool for way too long, or pace up and down the aisles 6 times too many or stand there with the fridge door open as I scan all my choices.
I just never know what I’m in the mood for. Do I want liquor or beer? If liquor, brown or clear? What about beer? Light, dark, wheaty? I never know. But, I can assure you, after I suck one of those babies down; it’s usually the right decision.
So how do I decide? And how does my liquor thought process play into anything worth blogging about? Usually, I’ll do one of the “I’ll have what’s he/she’s having” or ask my friends what to do. So there ya go, there’s the blog post. Only, I’m not asking what I should drink tonight, or ever, but rather, what should be next on my reading list.
There are a bunch of web 2.0 book recommendation sites such as What Should I Read Next?, Whichbook. There are also along book-loving social networks like Shelfari, and Books Connect and other sites to help buy cheap books for trial and error reads like eBay’s Half.com and BookMooch.
But even after all this help, I find my network and personalized user generated content/recommendations just seems to serve me right and puts me in a small book group of sorts. So, readers (of both my blog and books), what do you suggest I should conquer next?
Recent History:
World According to Garp by John Irving. A fictional novel that tugged at the heart strings with gritty details combined with dark-hearted humor. (Loved it.)
IV and Sex, Drugs and Cocoa Puffs by Chuck Klosterman. Books combining two of my loves, pop culture and music in a narrative nonfiction genre. Loved S, D &C, not so much IV.
Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll. It was nice to read the original version and to escape away from the Disney creation, but not nearly or as crazy as I thought it would be based on other reviews I’ve heard and read.
Watchmen by Alan Moore. Fantastic graphic novel! It combined politics and action into a film noir format. I might have to re-read it after the terrible movie adaptation I waited out to see at midnight opening night
.
A Series of Unfortunate Events by Lemony Snicket. A captivating, but sadly short children’s book that made me laugh and just flat out wonder.
About A Boy by Nick Hornby. A British comedy that tugged at the heart strings. It was definitely a coming of age tale.
So there ya go, readers. If I find something on my own, I’ll definitely share.
(Image Sources: Ginnerobot’s Flickr, Waxidiotical



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