
Okay, now it’s official: sometimes I’m just a stupid Dutch cow. *
(Cows are cute though! ;)
I thought that the Friday Book Blogger Hop only happened on… Fridays. I even laughed at Novroz for doing it on the wrong day! Silly me ;) Jennifer’s Book Blogger Hop at Crazy for Books is a party that goes on for the whole weekend.
This week I was triggered by Lori enquiring:
Do you listen to music when you read? If so, what are your favorite reading tunes?
My answer to this question is that it really depends on the book I’m reading, the music I’m listening to, loudness & language. If I’m reading a book in English the lyrics of a dito song can be distracting if it is being played too loud. On the other hand I love to create a cosy atmosphere with some candles and soft classical music, or melancholic Turkish songs by Sezen Aksu. So there’s no definite yes or no to this question!
Without a doubt books and music can become an integrated experience. Right after I had finished my studies in Museology I lay in bed for three whole days and read. Noooo, I wasn’t ill! Just tired and very happy with my time off. Mr Gnoe (who was still only Gnoe’s BF at the time ;) had recently bought a cd by Dogbowl & Kramer, called A Hot Day in Waco. He played it all the time, while I was immersed in J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings Trilogy… It is more than 10 years ago but whenever I hear a song from that album, Frodo, Gollum & Gandalf appear before my mind’s eye and I’m back in Middle-Earth!

Mr Gnoe’s taste in music has evolved and Kramer can only very rarely be heard at our place these days. But today I’ll share When te Sun Goes Down with you (4:19 mins)!
I would like to add that this was the first and only time I have read books in the Fantasy genre. I loved wandering about in that magic world, but once was quite enough. And up until today I have refused to watch the movie adaptation: I do not want a director to replace my personal images of The Lord of the Rings. I really don’t care what people think of that — I already admitted that I’m sometimes plain stupid ;)
* Mr Gnoe is Not Amused that I’m calling myself a cow in this post. Don’t you love that? :))
Other bookish things
I’m currently reading The Accidental by Ali Smith. Haven’t gotten really far yet so I can’t tell you anything about it. I finished Sarah Waters’ Affinity the previous weekend when I was staying with family in the Hautes Fagnes (Belgium). It was a fun read and I hope to share my thoughts with you in a few days.
In between my previous Sunday Salon and Waters I also read Shusaku Endo’s Silence for the Japanese Book Group and The Sea, The Sea by Iris Murdoch for my personal 2008-2010 challenge and this year’s What’s in a name challenge, category ‘body of water’. Aw, lots of reviews to write up!
The Pillow Book

Reading along with the ‘Pillow Book Friday‘ on In Spring It Is The Dawn
Arrived at entry: 111/180
Entries read since last time: 26
Edition: 1986 Dutch translation of Ivan Morris’ Penguin edition: Het hoofdkussenboek van Sei Shōnagon (transl. from English by Paul Heijman)
Last month I went out to dinner with two of my friends and they were really strict with me, telling me to quit (!) reading The Pillow Book. Why? Because I hardly took up a book at all and reading the plotless musings of Sei Shōnagon had become a huge chore. Honest, it was a BIG relief to hear them say that! So I stopped, but never got round to pulling the cover off my blog page. Today I wanted to do so, but not without telling you about it! Maybe I shouldn’t have… While checking the page number where I had ended my Pillow Book project, I noticed I have only about 75 entries more entries to go — less than a hundred pages! What to do???
Other Japan-related nonfiction I’m reading is a book by Hans van der Lugt, a Dutch reporter having stayed on the Japanese islands for over 10 years: Geketende democratie, Japan achter de schermen. It hasn’t been published in English but if I’d have a go at translating the title it would be something like: Democracy in Chains; Behind the Scenes in Japan. The author’s revealing accounts are quite interesting, but the book doesn’t really call out to me to come read. And that is what I need these days! I guess I could ‘do’ a chapter every once in a while — maybe after I have finished reading The Pillow Book? ;)
The Sunday Salon is a virtual gathering of booklovers on the web, where they blog about bookish things of the past week, visit each others weblogs, oh — and read ;)












14 reacties
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zondag 8 augustus 2010 bij 17:03
leeswammes
You’re not doing all that bad with reading at the moment! I took you for a slower reader than you are.
About the Pillow Book: well, if it’s no fun, why continue? On the other hand… (ok, that’s no help). Just STOP. :-)
zondag 8 augustus 2010 bij 18:07
gnoegnoe
I’m glad I’m not as slow as you thought! LOL :)
You know how it is sometimes with books… they’re interesting but to say that you’re much enjoying it :\ Oh, and I’m a bit compulsive too, of course ;)
zondag 8 augustus 2010 bij 17:39
Novroz
Your experience with dogbawl and kramer is just like mean with Hyde’s album called faith. I write exactly the same like yours ;) everytime I listen to it I remember DaVinci Code.
zondag 8 augustus 2010 bij 18:09
gnoegnoe
Hadn’t hopped over to your blog yet — wanted to get my own post up first! Good thing I did, otherwise I would have felt like a copy cat! :-o Hehehe. Going to read about your experiences with the Da Vinci Code and Hyde (which I believe I’ve not heard of before) NOW.
zondag 8 augustus 2010 bij 17:54
debnance at readerbuzz
I love the silence when I read. Beautiful silence.
I found your blog via the Hop. I’m a new follower. I’d love for you to stop by my blog and become a follower.
http://www.readerbuzz.blogspot.com
zondag 8 augustus 2010 bij 18:03
gnoegnoe
LOL you must be kidding me, debnance! I’ve been following you for ages via twitter & my rss-feeder! :) Didn’t you know? :-o
zondag 8 augustus 2010 bij 21:06
mywordlyobsessions
Hi there gnoegnoe! Just found you on the blog hop. You are so right about the melancholic song of Sezen Aksu. I can’t listen to her. I cry! So I stick with Japanese instead.
I really happy to have found your blog (and you’re a wordpresser too, double yay!) Consider yourself followed and added to my blogroll :)
Happy blogging!
maandag 9 augustus 2010 bij 09:32
gnoegnoe
Hi fellow wordpresser! *waves* :)) Thanks for hopping by. Any Japanese music you can recommend?
zondag 8 augustus 2010 bij 21:56
Lisa Almeda Sumner
What an interesting blog you have–I’m so glad I found you on the blog hop. I look forward to reading more. About the Pillow Book–I think it is a book to read in short excerpts (the way it is written)–to pick up and then put down again. I like to use examples from the Pillow Book as writing exercises…
maandag 9 augustus 2010 bij 09:34
gnoegnoe
Hi Lisa, I think you’re right about reading The Pillow Book in short sessions. But then I seem to loose track..? Forget about the book?
You’ve got me really curious about the writing sessions! What would an exercise look like for example? Something like “Write a list of Things that are boring”, like Sei Shonagon did?
maandag 9 augustus 2010 bij 12:12
meadowmist
Love your cow!!
maandag 9 augustus 2010 bij 14:54
Kelsey
Thanks for stopping by my blog! Totally love the cow!!!
donderdag 19 augustus 2010 bij 17:20
Carin B.
I LOVE that cow photo. I am a huge fan of cows…especially Holsteins. They are so pretty! They are such cute animals!
vrijdag 20 augustus 2010 bij 15:37
gnoegnoe
Hi meadowmist, Kelsey & Carin! Thanks for stopping by :)) I love cows too, they’re such kind animals! We see them a lot over here, being mainly cattle & farmland.