Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Different Kinds of Reading

Today marks the start of my second month here at the University of Wyoming, and so far so good. As I mentioned two months ago when I last posted something, I'm working as a program advisor for student government. The position is new, and still a little undefined. I've been told to enjoy the summer and laid-back pace because come September, it's a whole different story. So far, I've been doing a lot of planning, and a lot of reading up on what the heck a Student Affairs professional should be doing. Here's a sampling of my current "professional development" reading list:

- Helping College Students
- Elements of Mentoring
- Advice for Advisors
- The Tipping Point
- Multicultural Competence for Student Affairs Professionals


Basically, I've gotten to know a whole new section of my library. At this point, I've been better about picking them out than actually reading them, but I have time to reform. I like to think that all this research is the information scientist in me (it's semi-official, I got an alumni license plate holder in the mail last week!!).

When not reading about how best to advise and appear competent, I've been reading my new favorite author, Laura Willig. The Seduction of the Crimson Rose and The Temptation of the Night Jasmine are books four and five, respectively, of the Pink Carnation series. Even though I haven't read the early books, I wasn't confused about what was happening. From writing this post, I see that there are eight books so far, and I can tell that I'm in trouble. I was a total waste of space once I started reading these. They're the kind of books where I promised myself I'd go to bed after I finished the chapter, and then it was suddenly 1:00 a.m. on a Wednesday and I had to get up in five hours but couldn't sleep because I was still thinking about the story. You know, one of those kinds of books.

The series has parallel stories in the present day and 19th-century England. The present day part is about a woman doing dissertation research on 19th-century English spies. The 19th-century part is about the English spies. Tidy, right? The major pros of the novels, in my humble opinion, are as follows:

1. Romance without hot-and-heavy romance (wink, wink)
2. Great dialog
3. Smart heroines
4. Fast-paced action/intrigue


I realize I'm not the best reviewer, especially since I failed to include any kind of plot summary, but do yourself a favor and check out these books.

1 comment:

  1. I'm reading a book by Jeffrey Steingarten- one of the Iron Chef judges that is surprisingly nonfiction and funny at the same time. Definitely different for me!

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