My resolution for the year 2012 is to read at least one book per week. I know it sounds pretty boring, but it's actually a lot more challenging if you look at the big picture. I work two jobs. Between these two, I probably work at least 60 hours a week. I am also on a tennis league and do other various things throughout the week to occupy my time. So say that a book reads at the pace of a page every two minutes (obviously some are harder reads). That would mean that a book that is 300 pages (about average for my bookshelf) would take about 600 minutes to read, or ten hours. Now, with working 60 hours a week, it can be pretty tricky to make yourself have 10 hours of reading time. With that being said, I am currently a week and a half behind on my timeline, but I am reading three books at the same time. Let me tell you a little about the books of the year so far.
The first book that I read is The Jester by James Patterson. In this book, a lowly man sets of for the Crusades in order to have a better life for his family. While fighting, he realizes that he will never be able to achieve what he set out to, and so he returns back to his village. When he arrives at his village, he finds his motel burned to the ground, wife missing, and son murdered. He then sets out for vengeance for his son and to find his wife. On his journey, he falls into a boar's trap. A Lady from another town rescues him and nurses him back to health as he tells her about his quest. Once he is healed, she leads him to meet the jester of that town. The jester tells him that they are going to turn him into a jester in order for him to get into the walls of another town. The ploy works. However, he finds out that who he thought was responsible is, in fact, not. He goes back to his own village to seek refuge. The Lady from the other town goes to meet him there because she needs to know if he is okay. While she is there, the village is attacked and they find out who really was responsible. The entire village then groups together to march on all of the villages until they can locate everyone responsible. Before they know it, every surrounding village is ready to march on the main towns of the land. Now, I know this book doesn't sound all the interesting from how I've described it, and it starts off really, really slow (I started it last year some time), but once I got about a quarter of the way through, I couldn't put this book down. All in all, it's about a little peasant that goes against all odds to defeat all the people that once stood in his way and said that he couldn't do it. He also gets a pretty hefty reward at the end. I happen to really enjoy James Patterson books because he's always throwing in twists and keeps a reader on their toes.
The second book that I've read this year is also by James Patterson; Private. This book is about a private investigation firm in California for the upper echelon of the famous. Within the book, there are about three subplots that keep you wanting to read to find out more about a specific plot. I found myself wanting more of the first one that they introduced, probably because it fit more into my demographic. In one subplot, the firms owners best friends wife ends up murdered and they need to track down the killer. In the another, there is a serial murderer killing high school aged girls by luring them with a phantom cell phone number. In the third, the reputation of the NFL is at risk of being tainted because of betting. How all three of these tie in to one another is that the mafia is somehow connected. While it wasn't the fastest paced J. Patterson book I've ever read, I am excited to read the next book in the Private series to see how certain relationships have grown and where they are now (I've heard Europe is the new setting).
The third book that I read is Dawn by Elie Wiesel. This is actually the second book in a trilogy. The first of which was Night and I read that near the end of last year. Night was about Mr. Wiesel's experience throughout the Holocaust and what he had to go through as he ended up at Auschwitz. In Dawn, he wrote more of a fictional story. However, the main character was to portray him and the experiences that the boy had to go through were to represent the struggles that Mr. Wiesel went though in the years immediately following the war. Dawn was a little bit harder to read than Night, but Night was one of those books that I literally couldn't put down until it was done.
The fourth book of the year is Day by Elie Wiesel. It is the third book in the trilogy previously mentioned. In it, Mr. Wiesel accounts the true life story of his hospitalization following a car accident. While in the hospital, he is faced with fighting for his life, his love, and reality. At the start of the book, he is having a hard time wanting to go on. By the end of the book, he has a new found appreciation for most everything in his life. All three books were very informative and, while not necessarily enjoyable due to content, were interesting to work through.
The fifth, sixth, and seventh week books are currently all sitting on my coffee table. The easiest read of them all so far has been The Slow Moon by Elizabeth Cox. The one I started first is The Invisible Wall by Harry Bernstein and the one I've found myself most frequently picking up is A Terrible Slendor by Marshall Jon Fisher. The first book is very Jodi Picoult-ish. It flows very well and I could probably finish it within one sitting. The last two books are both World War I era books. The Invisible Wall is about a Jewish family that lives in England; the invisible wall being right down the middle of the street. The other side of the street is Catholics. Neither side is to go on the other side. I'm only about a quarter of the way through, but I suspect it is about how the children of the families decide to go against the wall and decide to forget that they are divided. The book I keep picking up is also a wartime book, although it focuses mainly on another topic: tennis. It's about the 1935 Davis Cup tie between Donald Budge of the United States and Gottfried Cramm of Germany. Most of you probably find this boring, but I am salivating just thinking about it. Remember, I said in a previous blog that I am addicted to tennis.
So now that you know what I've been reading, you can do a little math to realize that I need to finish all three of these books by next Saturday to remain on track. I know it's going to be a pretty challenging task but I am looking forward to it. Beside, you can learn a lot from just picking up a book and reading it. Do any of you people have suggestions of books I should read? I have a fairly full shelf, although small compared to a library. Just give me some ideas of your favorites and I will definitely look into them. So now I bid you adieu because you know my New Years resolution that came within the wink of an eye.