Sunday, July 1, 2007

Summer reading

It’s been a little while since I wrote the last time. It is like this when it’s summer and there is much to do during a short period. Summers in Sweden are not very long and the days of really nice weather are easy to count and there is so much you want to cram into those days. Visits to the beach, picnics, running and most of all read. Reading in the summer for me consists of two occasions, the beach during the day and the garden in the evening. What and where do you read in the summer?

For the book industry, summer is the time when paperbacks are sold the most. In almost every bookstore in Sweden, there is an offer to buy four paperbacks and pay for three. There are definitely advantages to paperbacks, they weigh less than their hardcover sisters and they cost less, much less. Nowadays most books come out in a paperback version as well, sometimes even at the same time as the hard cover editions. Paperbacks are great for those lazy days on the beach when you grab a book just before you head out the door with your bath towel and flip-flops. Some of my favourite beach reads are Sophie Kinsella, Marian Keyes and Philippa Gregory. They are funny, easy read books that don’t require you to think too much. Another thing I like about them is that you can put them down between swims in the ocean and chats with your friends without getting lost.

During the long light evenings of Sweden I like to sit outside, when the weather allows it, and read in the evening. This is when I take out the more “heavy” books. The ones that are too mind wrecking to read in the heat and sun on the beach. Right now I am reading Winston Churchill’s history of England, which is quiet interesting. There are four volumes and I am only at the first, The Birth of Britain. It is certainly not objective, but it is an interesting read from one man’s perspective of the building of the great British Empire.
Josefine

My recommendations: For the beach: Sushi for beginners by Marian Keyes, for the evening: Eine frau in Berlin (A woman in Berlin) by Anonymous.

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