77

Of Reading

Posted November 9th, 2006 in Reflections by M

An informal poll I have just conducted has left me unsure of whether to laugh or to cry. I mean, when you ask a grown man with close to 30 years of belly development the last book he read, and that gentleman informs you the last book he read was The Winner and Other stories, it is cause for concern.

For the uninitiated, The Winner and Other Stories was a collection of short stories that tortured us unfortunates who went through the 8-4-4 syllabus while it still had stuff in it.

Doing some quick arithmetic, this chap last read a book 8 years ago.

And he was not done. Mistaking the stunned look on my face for admiration, he went on to enthusiastically share with me that he did not read newspapers either, aside from the daily cartoons and a monthly illustrated pullout called SuperStrikas. And, of course, the Pulse.

Now, you might tell me different strokes for different folks. Reading is not for some people.  If you think along these lines I suggest you raise your right hand and smack your head and hard as you can. My friend reading is not optional. Even if its to know how much milk to put into your cornflakes! You must read something, at the very least read my lips:

READ!

Strategy

My friend, let’s call her Redemptor, can reliably be heard bemoaning the lack of men in Nairobi. I have told he repeatedly that is a statistical impossibility, and I have many a time used simple techniques like asking her to

  1. Open her eyes
  2. Look around

Needless to say, she has been unconvinced.

Just this evening I ran into Redemptor, grimly ploughing through the pages of a booklet. At the sound of my noisy approach her look of concentration disappeared and she gave me her usual smile.

“What you got there?” I asked nonchalantly.

“Nothing, nothing!” The booklet at this point dropped to the floor and she scrabbled to pick it up. It had landed on its face so I naturally read the back.

The booklet was very ambitious indeed. It promised to:

  • Unleash the secrets of men
  • Give women insights into said men
  • Unleash the secrets to allow women to capture and;
  • Keep the said men interested;
  • Get them to say “Of course you don’t look fat?” “Will you marry me?”

But much of the wind was knocked out the declaration’s sails by one or two issues

  • One of the author’s names was Carla or Carol or something of the sort
  • It was preceded by a Ms.
  • Booklet could not be more than 50 pages

But fear not gentlemen. I’ve never said this before but for the last two decades I have been working on a book “Woman: A Detailed Insight”. It will undoubtedly be quite the feather in my cap. I have worked very hard on it and am making excellent progress. For those twenty years I’ve tackled and completed the title and the forward.

Looking good.

Some time back my jamaa Archer asked what I read. Mzee, this is for you.

Books & Bookmen

One of my quirks is that I read several books at the same time. I highly recommend this. Among its many benefits is

  • Of all the books you are reading you can always continue the one most in your current mood (assuming you want to maintain it)
  • Of all the books you are reading you can always continue the one least like your current mood (assuming you want to change it)
  • Forces you to compartmentalize your mind so as to keep everything in its own little enclave

Of course the main drawback, especially while staring out is you will bewilder yourself when after 40 days and 40 nights the Red October will surface and Jack Ryan will emerge from its depths and Noah will attempt to get his precious from him.

Anyway, I digress Right now I am reading the following:

Scarecrow : Matthew Reilly

If you want to know what fast paced is, read this book. By page 3 people are already targeted for death. After that its all downhill. Across several continents mortuaries are kept busy attending to the corpses the good and bad guys kill with gay reckless abandon.

In terms of techniques Mr Reilly does not discriminate. Those who are not shot or stabbed are beheaded, thrown off buildings, thrown off cliffs, strangled, burned alive, guillotined.

The only books where more people die are those that talk about the Hiroshima bomb.

Mr Reilly also has a fine disregard for the laws of physics, chiefly gravity, aerodynamics and magnetism, which allows him a lot of room for his characters to maneuver. Rather than spoil the goodness of this action, let me just say there is a scene where a a car at full speed rolls onto the roof of another and then hits the ground on the other side, still at full speed.

If you can suspend reality (and credulity)  for a few hours you will enjoy this.

Le Morte d’Arthur : Thomas Mallory

If Matthew Reilly had scant disregard for human life, Thomas Mallory is the grim reaper himself. While Reilly’s characters generally killed one at a time, King Arthur’s knights slay thousands at a go.

… However he was met by Sir Launcelot and Sir Bors, and before long five thousand Saracens lay dead or dying …

Mallory is also fiendishly creative

… With his first stroke sir Launcelot split open the knight’s head, down to his throat …

Yikes.

You cannot say you have lived life until you have read and grasped this lounge twister

… And so after midnyght, ayenst day, the Bysshop that was hermyte, as he laye in the bedde aslepe, he fyl upon a grete laughter…

Loving it, loving it.

The Teeth Of The Tiger : Tom Clancy

While the other books I’m reading go to great detail to outline the action, Tom Clancy goes out of his way to outline inaction. He describes things that have nothing to do with the story in embarrassing detail.

Take for instance a meeting between a Marine, fresh from slaughtering Afghans, meeting with an impressed senior officer who wants to set up a crack unit to fight terrorists.

It is only a gifted few, such as Mr Clancy that can capitalize on this opportunity and have scintillating conversation like this

“You can try the bagels, but they aren’t that good, sir”, Caruso warned as he got two English muffins and real butter. He was clearly too young to worry about cholesterol …

Hardesty got himself a box of Cheerios, because he had gotten that old, rather to his annoyance, along with low fat milk and non sugar sweeteners.

The coffee mugs were large …

Yep. 625 pages, most if it waffle. It is getting harder and harder to read.

On Writing  :  Stephen King

Even if you don’t want to write, read this anyway. It will explain to you why there are some writers you just cannot stand but can’t explain why. It is also Stephen King’s autobiography of sorts

I also have an off and on relationship with my William Shakespeare Omnibus that has crammed all his works in a tiny font into a couple of thousand pages. Bill is VERY HARD to read in his original form but boy is that chap deep!

QUOTE OF THE DAY

While in Egypt, take any 3 men at random

  • One will be called Mohammed
  • One will be called Ali
  • The third will be called Mohammed Ali
2Pac – Hit ‘Em Up!
  • http://kadhat.blogspot.com egm

    Hear hear on reading! I came to the realization that I was stagnating where books were concerned a few weeks ago and decided to do something about it. Reading, just like physical exercise, is a vital part of life!

    Nice post! If everyone did that i dare say we’d have a much more able country!
  • http://www.randomgirlnextdoor.blogspot.com Girl Next Door

    Reading is essential to life. Certain phases of my life are more memorable because of the books I read at the time. Books open up the world, and help you experience multiple realities. My siblings and I have bonded over books for years and I’m eternally grateful to my parents for passing that on to us. I’ve connected with friends over various works that we’ve loved (or loathed). And I’m also one of those people who reads multiple books at the same time. It just makes so much sense! I don’t understand how somebody can boast about not even reading a newspaper. That is a tragedy! My heart always beats a little faster when I enter a library, and I enjoy scrutinizing what others are reading. My dream house has a library like the one in “Beauty and the Beast.” Oh my, can’t believe I’ve bought into a fairy tale animation. Wait a minute….there’s a knock on my door. I can’t believe it! Looks like Prince Charming just rode over on his white steed with a glass slipper for me. Amazing things happen when you read!

    =)) Glass slippers? With those feet? =))
  • http://www.vituvingisana.blogspot.com VituVingiSana

    Reading is so much fun… there is little time pressure unlike watching TV.

    I don’t like a TV in the bedroom but, oh, a book… so inviting to read under those covers.

    And especially on the white throne :D

    I have many favourites but I got into Patrick Robinson’s fictional thrillers about submarine warfare.

    Many years ago, I joined The British Council Library and really enjoyed their collection of “Horsey” detective books by Dick Francis.

    Mr Francis is an aquired taste. I tried 3 of his books and they left me cold …

    Non-fiction can be just as fun & eye-openers. I will refer to Freakonomics…

    Of course, there is Chinua Achebe…. With the recent political upheavals in Kenya, I re-read his books & sadly realised the Nigerian problems of the 70s & 80s plagued Kenyans in the 90s & new millenium.

    My political & economic thinking was certainly influenced by Milton Friedman, Ayn Rand & recently John Stossel’s views. Interesting stuff from Jared Diamond as well… The Cato Institute also publishes books worth reading. Not always easy reading but certainly thought provoking.

    Of the “newer” writers, I tried a couple of Jhumpa Lahiri’s books but it was not an easy read.

    I’ll make it a point to try them out!
  • http://www.vituvingisana.blogspot.com VituVingiSana

    M… m not linked?

    http://www.vituvingisana.blogspot.com

    Cheers!

    Done!
  • http://udi-m.blogspot.com Udi

    Don’t hate on the dude of the winner and other stories. Me I read CD liners to update me on the latest producers and artists

    At least you read something!
  • http://gathunuku.com Gathunuku

    Have to say you scored a first there, calling William Shakespeare Bill? Almost as bad as calling Nelson Mandela by his first name; just doesn’t happen.

    he he! Me and Bill are tight like that!

    Unfortunately, folks would rather be keroro-ing at Jeans (does that still happen?) for 12+ hrs than pick up better habits like books and fitness. How is it that 50 is considered old age??

    Alas! We’d rather read “4.5% alcoholic content” than “Chapter One”
  • http://gishungwa.blogspot.com Gish

    May i testify? Reading is life. Discovered some place that sells second hand books for as little at Kshs.20 to tops 300, while there i discovered russia and its writters. Oh and also those books that require a magnifying glass to read.

    WHERE IS THIS?!!!!

    @Gathunuku
    Yes they still keroro at Zinos, Jean, Sabina Joy and all those places that you think are forgotten.
    Am all for reading…

  • http://bangaiza.kylix.co.ke maitha

    echo your sentiments about On Writing – its a a gem in its own right

    That’s one of the books marked for re-re-re-reading
  • Kenyanchick

    Gish!! Ati books for 20 – 300 each? WHERE IS THIS BOOKSHOP??

    I’m also dying to know! My ususal place is generally 100 bob

    People who don’t read? I don’t understand it.

  • Kenyanchick

    How can I get a flag next to my name? (Stomps feet, jumps up and down in childish – though highly literate – tantrum) I want a flag!!

    Nione kando. For a fee these things can be arranged … :D
  • Ms K

    Atiriri, I notice a certain… um…. predilection for books gory and violent. Hmm….

    =)) My dear, no conclusions should be drawn on the basis of the books I’m reading right now! What would you say for instance if I told you the last lot I read included JK Rowling, Jane Austen, Richmal Crompton and P.G. Wodehouse?

    About pople who don’t read… No comment. Even a comic angalau!

  • http://prousette.blogspot.com prousette

    I fear for the day I will be in a situation where there is nothing to read… like being shipwrecked on an island etc.

    Or in Parliament ….

    Now that chap with “30 years of belly development” LOL does he not read billboards and grafitti as well?
    Or that does not count?

    =)) Somehow I doubt it …
  • http://prousette.blogspot.com prousette

    where is my flag??

    Now, if people can’t take care of their flags what can I do? :(
  • http://www.sylkwan.blogspot.com Shiroh

    Hey!

    Ati your spam catcher is Ruthless?!

    Your friend lastly read Winner and the other stories? And Udi lastly read CD liners

    Where is the world coming to?

    I am reading the Harry Porters now. Because i watched the movies before..ooh what an excuse?

    I can’t stand though so much fiction!! Like your books above…aiih me am real like that

    So where are those good men? If they are not dead

    Wako, wako. Just ask around and sleep with one eye open
  • http://www.sylkwan.blogspot.com Shiroh

    Reading is to the Mind, what Exercise is to the body

  • eclipse

    Well..song for the day..2pac – hit em up??? thats for all the non readers out there…

    I might deny i said this later on but am an AVID Clancy fan..his way of building a story to the climax is orgasmic…i mean when all event now come together..its….

    He takes TOO BLOODY LONG to get to the point. Compare with a guy like Thomas Harris or Ken Follet. Or my absolute favourite Alistair MacLean

    Mindless violence, killing and action..thats what am talking about gotta get me that scarecrow book

    That books is dangerously close to laughable!

    Shakespeare et al..never been a fan but thats not to say they write garbage…

    if u don’t read SHAME on you..hey even a newspaper will suffice..learn a new word or two weekly at the very least…

    winner and others stories..M ur taking me way way back…now i want to go carni new jack swing…!

  • http://www.kenyanmusings.com KM

    yipee!! Nice post.

    LOOL, M, don’t do that. Don’t knock the winner and other stories. I struggled through it in school, what can I say? bollocks!!

    I enjoyed it myself btw. Esp the Barbara Kimenye stories of mamas being eaten by ants sehemu zile nyeti

    LOL, I remember having this conversation with you, where you mentioned Bill and Hamlet in the same breath and I was like, who the hell is Bill, then eti you go “william shakepseare”. *smh*, Dude, don’t push it!!!

    Uh, you know, penguin classics have good (read modern day english) versions of, ummm, Bill, William to rest of us thank you. I usually read those first then take on the original versions. I find it pampers my ego better.

    Trust me my dear, once you read the origi you will know what “lost in translation” means. Really. The guy has a way of writing where a sentence can mean anything

    LOL, the other day, someone gave me a copy of “How to make your man never leave you”. Ahem…me I dunno if it was a pirated copy lakini, yeah, no comment. And yes, I read it, pass me the knife, I will stick it in my own back thanks, only I dunno if it left me wiser or mixed up.

    Uh, me I’m reading now,

    -The greatest crimes ever recorded. Its a huge copy of short true stories. My god! Its brilliant! you have to read it. Its effin cool!!! Mwehehhhe, Muaaaaahahahahahha.Yeah, I’m reading about Jack the Ripper, Bonnie and Clyde under the covers (blech! they were not all that. Clyde even had syphillis!!! Eeek! Or was that Prince Albert who was suspected to be Jack the Ripper? Even him he had syphillis or did Clyde cut off his toe so he can get out of jail? Haiyaaaaaaa, tebu I’ll go refer one more time!) Anywhoo, syphillis? It was a scourge back in the day…like syphillis was Ipod or Iriver or sum…

    Wee! Wacha kuongea mbaya about iPod!!!

    - And I just got a new one As I Lay Dying- William Faulkner, Yes, from the streets for 200 shillings bob… That should be a cool read.

    - halafu, let me ask, me, I am still reading for the gazillionth time “Fairy tales”, Hans Andersen. What can I say, the child refuses to be stiffled.

    No shame my dear, no shame. I’m even looking for the Brothers Grimm omnibus!

    I hope you is keeping well.

    I good, I good. Keki will see the light of day very very very soon :)
  • http://www.randomgirlnextdoor.blogspot.com Girl Next Door

    My glass slippers aren’t made-in-China; they’re made in the US of A where everything’s bigger and ‘better.’

    I just bought a couple of books this afternoon for a dollar each : The Confessions of Nat Turner and The Mayor of Casterbridge. I love bargains:)

    Mayor of Casterbridge? :D That’s next on the list. As well as Canterbury Tales
  • http://www.jadekitten.blogspot.com/ Jadekitten

    That poll; you really should be crying. The state of Kenyans and reading is, at best, deplorable.

    A workmate (someone I had previously held in high regard) once saw me with a 500′ish page book, and commented that he thought people prefer to watch movies these days. I, of course, was quite incensed. Do you now wonder why you have the concentration span of a mosquito?

    :D in fact Hollywood is not doing the reading culture any favours. Anyone who has read for example The Lord Of The Rings and watched the movie will know what huge differences there are

    The last Clancy I tried, ‘The Bear and the Dragon’. Aiiii. I thought it was just me.

    Gish, the 20-300 bob place. Tell, tell. :-)

  • http://bankelele.blogspot.com bankelele

    We must commend people for still reading, even if it’s not books – and I must says the ordinary Kenyan reads more than the ordinary South African or American (even if its’ only newspapers for politics, entertainment, sports, or better opportunities)

    That’s true. But there are still people who don;t read anything at all. Insane!!

    As Gish pointed out books are available for young Kenyan who wish to read.

    About your list; Tom Clancy books are rather dry – long & technical, not enough boom boom – like taking a panadol without water.

    Reading is fallopian!

  • http://kadhat.blogspot.com egm

    You hit on a very valid point responding to JK, M. I purposely read Lord of the Rings before watching the movie since I wanted to experience it through my own imagination and not through Peter Jackson’s. When the gazillionth remake of Count of Monte Cristo came out, I decided to do the same thing. Only this time I refused to watch the movie. My reason? 15 plus hours of LOTR could not even begin to capture some of the things in the book, yet for a similar length book in Monte Cristo, the movie was just 2 hours long. Hapana! Once while browsing for books about a week ago there was a table with books made into movies and a banner above it declaring that the book is always better than the movie. How true!

    So true. The Shire I built in my head, and the Hobbits and Saruman and Gandalf that exist in my head — Peter Jackson’s effort, good as it is, could not hold a candle to the tapestries I built in my head

    As for Tom Clancy, I have to say he does take forever to get to his point. But I sitll love how he does it, how seemingly obscure events all come to a fore in the end. When it comes to adventure/intenational intrigue, however, I have to say Clive Cussler is my guy. He is quite the show-off, but he does weave a good action packed tale.

    The master of weaving strands together into a fascinating end in my opinion is one Alistair MacLean. That man was very gifted!

    I have tried Monsignor Bill in the original. I had this ambitious goal to go through his entire works. Made the mistake of trying to tackle the tragedies then the histories (getting the hard stuff out of the way early) and didn’t get far. I should pick it up again soon.

    The thick book is still on my reading table as it has been for over a year. He’s difficult to read but boy — the punch he packs!

    Brothers Grimm, hiyo nilipata as b/day gift two years ago. Good stuff! At this rate I might just have to post on reading so I don’t take over your casa, cause there’s plenty to write on this topic!

    Carry on mzee! Hapa ni kwako pia!
  • kipepeo

    I so don’t understand how people don’t read! I’ve got a few friends who don’t and i just don’t get it. I can’t say I follow a certain author or type of writing…whatever, as long as it interests me…but Paulo Coehlo!!!!! Great man!!! And yes gish, please share???

    Hear hear on following a particular author or type of writing. That’s the next problem after not reading at all. We must investigate Gish’s sources. 30 bob? Yaani for 50 bob you can get a book and drink a soda?
  • eclipse

    People stop hatin on Clancy..the guy is educative at the very least..after reading his book you actually feel like a rocket scientist coz uve learnt so much!

    Well … when it comes to research and detail the man gets full marks and then some. But of late I think his books get more and more bogged in the mundane. You can’t compare his later works to stuff like Clear And Present Danger or Red Storm Rising

    M cant wait for your book….yeah those funny books that women read :-)

    PS: am not starting gender wars 3 here just that laughable that women should write about men hahahah!

    Esp. a single woman writing about keeping men! Does not compute!
  • http://kadhat.blogspot.com egm

    Have to agree with eclipse. Reading Clancy is like reading into the workings of the US military. You learn much about it. And since he gets to consult with actual military officers, it is the real deal.

    I have heard if you want to learn about whaling, Moby Dick by Herman Melville is the book to read. It is currently on my to-read list. A precursor to the likes of Clancy, I suppose.

    After you’re done with Captain Ahab you can move on to one Hornblower … adventure at sea
  • http://mywordsonly.blogspot.com acolyte

    M you are not alone in that sad observation. In Kenya I was told that I used to read too much and should become a professor so I can share all that knowledge.

    I came to resent that as well. In fact even now whenever i’m told that i generally ask “What do you mean read too much?”

    What is sad is the way people revel in their ignorance and the fact that they don’t read. I remember having a discussion with Kenyan Pundit the other day on the virtues of starting a free neighbourhood paper or the such for certain areas because Kenyans are hungry for something to read. I told her in no certain terms that her hypothesis only applies in the case of politics. Most people will read a paper that has anything about politics in it but move onto any other things and readership begins to dwindle. The best selling copies of Kenyan dailies are those covering things to do with politics ie Elections, Parliament reshuffles, deaths etc.

    Its not so much the politics per se but the intrigues around it. The money, power, sex, scandals, shuffling, strategizing that people are after

    As for that tripe like 100 ways to get and keep a man, most of those authors are usually single. Makes me wonder if they use their own medicine at all. But that is a secret when selling that crap always put numbers on it, the higher the number of rules, factors or tips. The higher your sales turn out it seems.

    As for your books, Matthew Reilly writes a great airport book. The kind you read when waiting for your plane/train/bus. I haven’t read Mallory. But when it comes to Clancy, that dude makes my day. I loved the Jack Ryan series but as you have said he goes too much into detail. He can take a whole page describing the kind of sniper pistol one of his antagonists is going to use to assasinate the Russian president so as to cause World War III. He will describe its’ weight, caliber, kind of bullets it uses, how strong the recoil is, what it is made of, where it was made, if it is sold on the open or black market and how long the antagonist has been using it. That’s Tom for you!

    Stephen King on writing is a jewel! I got my copy after refusing to return it when one book shop/ library in parklands deemed that my deposit had now been deemed non refundable. Banyani punks! I’m sorry but it still galls me!

    Mr King is now the top of my list. Versatile does not begin to describe him! A mind that can come up with Pet Sematary, Christine and then Shawshank Redemption and Green Mile? Genius

    I think it is about time when they have those reading tents at Railways or wherever else they have them to have one for adults too! People need to read more than the politics/sports parts of the papers, spice/seen magazine and the A4 papers. National Campaign anyone?

    Great post!

  • Mitzy

    M, you have an eck-a-lec-tic reading list just like Bushie! http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2006/08/30/video-bush-explains-his-_n_28367.html

    Reading makes me feel alive! @ EGM on Clancy, I agree on the military theme. I love Ken Follet, finished Jackdaws a few months ago. Currently re-reading Michener’s Hawaii. With everything going online (newspapers, magazines, e-books), the reading culture is slowly getting eroded, and that is sad. It’s a shame most people don’t read for pleasure, but just to pass exams. Watching a movie based on a book doesn’t count, so much from print gets lost!

    He he! But you cannot take a blog into the small room can you?:D

    And what is this I’ve been reading, that Stephen King is now venturing into romance novels???

    Eh?! :-?
  • http://www.ciikuandhermess.blogspot.com Ciiku

    UDI…. LOL… U know u make my day, right??? :-)

    Anyway, I cant stand when someone says proudly, that they don’t read, like they should be given a medal or something. Def a peeve for me.

    That being said, I’m with EGM on reading the book before seeing the movie…… and also, your taste in books is quite……… uumm…. interesting.

    :D Thank ye, thank ye!
  • http://www.vituvingisana.blogspot.com VituVingiSana

    Mitzy:

    Jackdaws u say? That was GREAT… I wasn’t too sure about it but once I got into it… it was suspense all the way… well, the love angle was predictable but the espionage… Yes, Cherie, eet vas vunderful…

    M:
    Aren’t most authors acquired tastes? I would say give Dick Francis another shot BUT start with his earlier books.

    Well … i’m one to keep an open mind. I’ll give it a shot when i get through my current stack

    If you like Tom Clancy, you might enjoy Patrick Robinson but don’t expect to become a submariner!

    Who remember Biggles as in Bigglesworth of the RAF? I really enjoyed his books as I soared through the skies in my trusty Camel waiting to shoot down a Hun… My favourite character was The Professor…

    =)) Dude, who can forget akina Ginger and the rest? Good times, good times!

    As a kid I was lucky to “inherit” lots of books from a friend of the family. Secret Seven, then graduated to Famous Five, the “Adventure” series… Enid Blyton was a prolific writer.

    And of course Hardy Boys!

    I did enjoy Mailu during early puberty but I think it was for the salacious descriptions! I used to earmark the relevant sections!

  • http://kadhat.blogspot.com egm

    Enid was indeed prolific. Over 600 books. I was reading an article about her that says in her prime she could write 10000 words a day. That’s some heavy writing. Her books were great too. The only time I hated reading them, however, was anytime I was hungry. That woman could do to cupcakes, ecclairs, ginger beer and fruit pies what Clancy does to sniper pistols, nuclear powered submarines and tomahawks: Describe the food so well mpaka I could taste it in my mouth.

    Duude! I was thinking about that too this morning. I still remember akina Brer Rabbit and Brer Fox. Man, I wish I could get all them books in a huge collection

    Another writer I loved back in the day was Willard Price and his Adventure series of books featuring Hal and Roger Hunt. This was the Hardy Boys of travel adventure! I read an excerpt of a comment he made about why he wrote these books:

    “My aim in writing the Adventure series for young people was to lead them to read by making reading exciting and full of adventure. At the same time I want to inspire an interest in wild animals and their behavior. Judging from the letters I have received from boys and girls around the world, I believe I have helped open to them the worlds of books and natural history” (quote found here).

    And don’t forget Gerald Durrell and James Herriot!

    Eh, books! They bring up such passions that I still can’t understand those who don’t read them!

  • Mitzy

    @ VituV, yeap the Jackdaw team rocked, it was a bit predictable, but Follet incorporated that love angle into the WWII story well and used a strong female as the main character.

    As for the kiddie books, I was an Agatha Christie junkie, I still have them stored in Nai, together with Nancy Drews, Hardy Boys, Pacesetters (African series of books that was such an addiction). As for Mailu, yeah his books were too “hot” :D Meja Mwangi was also worth it.

    I still remember Mwangi’s Carcase For Hounds. Good stuff!
  • Jogoo wa Shamba

    I dare to say that my thirst for reading is insatiable.I read almost everything I can put my hands on.i was brought up in an army base and my interest in military stuff/intelligence begun at quite an early age.a Tom Clancy,Colin Forbes,Fredrick Forsyth… works for me any day.but my all time favorite -”Hello Children” I have my reasons…

    =)) Mr Kamau and his bus, which got a puncture …

    @Gish – Sh.20 to 300? can we form a merger :-)

  • http://www.porojo.com kimx

    Looks like we want to play the politics of ’60s and ’70s all over again.

    “Soma, soma , soma we! Masomo ya kitabu, soma we.”

    Well then, by the time I was done with form two (Grade 10?) I had read 78 James H. Chaseses. Were they that many? (My friends claimed to have read a 100+). Well, after all that, the only “Chase” I remember reading was titled “The Things Men Do.” Oh!, I don’t remember if I was a man then, (whatever that means). So what happened do those James Hardley Books? Why were they so the “in-thing” then, but not now?

    Yes, we will read. But for what sake? DON’T read newspapers, read novels. Which novels? That fiction from America is fake (maybe that’s why it is fiction).

    :D Fake fiction? Wouldn’t you say real fiction is an oxymoron?

    When you are young, you are impressionable! Like you have no mind of your own. True, your mind is just forming.

    Won’t realize
    When they call a big spoon
    A spade.

    Reading for readings’ sake? Get outta here! Because it doesn’t add up.

    Read if it will, yes
    Add sufurias of ugali,
    On your table.

    Reading is boring.
    Only that I gotta an exam on Monday.

    I’ll pass. You are assured.

    I Read philosophy. Because you need to tell facts from opinion.

    It doesn’t matter how many books you read:

    As long as books are :

    Bibles to you.

    The beauty is in asking the author: Whatdaya mean?

    And do ya believe I belief in that?

  • http://www.bantuts.blogspot.com bantutu

    Am currently tryin that multiple reading thing::Ethoipian Power struggle>>The Red Terror and my Third Francis of Asisi biography, somtimes I find my self putting Megistu Haile Mariam in the 12th century….am gettin’ the hang of it though…..
    I hear you on the reading…….we’re are a nation of voluntary Knowledge starvation…

    Some body told me that when the city council guys start their reign of terror on the hawkers in town,the ppl who sell reading material don bother “Funganyaain their virago”….

    That I can believe! =))

    PEOPLE READ SWAHILI!!!

  • http://kadhat.blogspot.com egm

    @Kimx that is why it is necessary to have a variety of books to read, not just one type. Like you, I like the books that make you think. There are times when I want to read just to escape, and in those times I’ll pick up a Clive Cussler, Robert Ludlum or the likes. My preferred reading material is non-fiction. For fiction, I prefer the classics which definitely force you to think (ala Dostoevsky (eg the chapter The Grand Inquisitor in Karamazov Brothers that forces you to go, “What the heck did I just read?”), Dumas, Bill (M, ’06) and others like them).

    Cannot have put it better. Reading only one type of book is only marginally better than not reading at all. Pigeonholing yourself is pigeonholing your reading. Books from every possible genre have something to offer

    True, reading for readings sake doesn’t mean much. But reading to converse with the author of the book, challenging some of what he/she writes, learning from other facets, etc is what makes reading great.

  • http://potashke.blogspot.com POTASH

    The last two months have seen me read and or hang out with so many amazing Kenyan writers: Billy Kahora, Mukoma wa Ngugi, Binyavanga Wainaina, Muthoni Garland, Dipesh Pabari, Parselelo Kantai and some ugandans like Doreen Baingana and Beverly Nambozo.. well.. well.. and a one on one with Soyinka!

    Maybe because of that I haven’t been writing much and because of that my new publicist gave me a copy of Stephen King ‘on writing’ last week. I took offence, really I did, but then again I have so much to say about Stephen King. I admit I haven’t gone far with it because there was Ngugi’s- weep not child and Anderson’s ‘histories of the hanged’ to get through.

    It is indeed true that all Kenyans read is newspapers- when they talk about Raila and Kibaki- and beer labels. I always thought it had something to do with 8-4-4 and its ability to turn literature merely into a paper you have to sit and that coupled with having to read hard books taught by ignorant teachers.

    I find it strange that inspite of having read Romeo and Juliet and passed their KCSE, all the people who I ask what: “Romeo, wherefore art thou Romeo” means they think it means where are you? A little dictionary use and a bit of finding meaning in context would resolve this. but who cares, it is all about cramming and then burning your books. Yes, reading was turned into a traumatic experince for most Kenyans; it is no wonder they cannot touch a book after school.

    As Archer had asked what I read, well, that I grew up on Shakespeare and the bible will always suffice.

    On affordable books, I am told that Kwani trust intends to publish a series of books next year called Kwanini’s that will retail for about 200/- and make kenyan writing easily accessible to the general public. I think it a brilliant idea, hopefully, I can work a publishing arrangement with them… lol.

    Oh, and for exciting stuff on writing and the rejuvination of the Industry, the Kwani Litfest:
    http://kwanilitfest.blogspot.com
    this december will certainly rock and open spaces. The module on web publishing and blogs will be of particular interest to lots of us. Do check it out.

    Will certainly do!
  • donworry

    Great topic M. Reading is definitely food for the mind. I think one is defined by what one reads. The biggest selling newspaper in the UK by the way is the Sun.

    @vituVingi you are right there! Chinua Achebe is the man. Anthills of the savannah was completely un-putdownable for me

    =)) I especially remember this part … “There is nothing in the pipeline”
  • http://www.vituvingisana.blogspot.com VituVingiSana

    Wow… Reading the posts takes me back to the halcyon days of holidays…

    Willard Price & his Adventure Series was EXCITING… I used to visit a bookshop in Westlands for the “used” copy of the latest… The lucky Hunts used to go everywhere… Of course, they were kind of outdated but oh, so fun. PLUS one actually learnt something from these books…

    Pacesetters – LOL… They were introduced in my school in Std 7 & we went gaga… They were actually good books…

    Achebe – His books would have been banned if not for being super-famous.

    Sherlock Holmes – Oh, I loved the stories. I had my hands on an Omnibus at one time. I can’t find it but I shall dig deep. The stories, plots, characters… the best!

    I have the complete illustrated collection, facsimiled from the Strand magazine. Priceless!

    Enid Blyton – Too many books. I used to have a favorite tree that I used to perch myself in over a lazy afternoon!

    Biggles – This was just a trip for me. The adventures… I (blush here) wanted to join the air force coz of Biggles!

    He he! Didn’t we all?
  • Ni2

    Someone mentioned books at Kshs 20. Could they please elaborate further!

    We wacha zako! Everyone knows you only read illustrated books!
  • Trojan

    hey,someone forgot to mention the “Moses” series by Barbara Kimenye!

    Good times, good times!!!
  • I

    I personally enjoy reading about two things that have absolutely nothing to do with each other..
    usually allows my mind to go wild…
    for example.. .. i am reading the Da Vinci Code and Tin Tin.. yes!! i said Tin tin.. managed to find some copies online.. but the diff in stories is just from out of this world…

    Sweetheart sugar — ebu hook a brother up with some URLs?! I SHAMELESSLY read Tintin and am not afraid to be seen carrying one in public!

    i have already likened tin tin to one of that Da Vinci code characters…

    In fact on that note I have a very dodgy Tintin In Thailand that CANNOT have been written by Herge. Scandalous!!
  • http://www.vituvingisana.blogspot.com VituVingiSana

    I – Don’t forget Asterix!

    Mzee, several cold ones on me the next time you come down. Asterix Rocks. There was a camp called Chewingum. :) :D =))
  • http://www.vituvingisana.blogspot.com VituVingiSana

    It’s amazing how they played on the words esp considering the original was in French…

    The names, puns and the cleverness of it all…

    Asterix – our star
    Obelix – easily my favourite!
    Vitalstatistix – The chunky chief
    Getafix – The druid
    Cacofonix – The oh, so bad, bard

    Among a myriad other names! Of course, there were the allies & enemies…

    OK… I will hold you to a few bottles of the waters of Ruaraka (wacha that Keroche), next time I am around!!!

    Here is a freebie for you… Same author had a series called Iznogoud… for this lil’ tidbit (if unknown to you) you owe me big time!

  • njege

    totally wild! this is like meeting a complete stranger then discovering you have hundreds of people you both know well – biggles! famous five! asterix! willard price! hardy boys! holmes!

    tom clancy: perfect for when you have a 15hour train ride through multiple countries
    matthew riley: needs many many characters coz he needs many many people to kill. so fast you need to wear a helmet and protective clothing to read.
    bill: first time i saw a play and actually understood what was going on, i realised why people still read his stuff 100s of years later..deep understanding of human nature that never changes.

    for those who have a wierd taste (like me)
    douglas adams: this dude is as strange and far out as it is possible to get while still remaining a carbon-based life form. his less known detective series are unique.
    terry pratchett: douglas adams crossed with jrr tolkien

    my fellow kenyans have always impressed me with their general knowlege. unfortunately we seem to be moving more toward mtv, but this blog and comments prove that readers are still out there!

  • http://theoracleatnairobi.blogspot.com .-fooFighter

    On the asterix tip…anyone remember his aide de camp….GLUTEUS MAXIMUS!?!

  • I

    Here’s the Tin tin website… http://www.tintin.com/

    http://tintin.francetv.fr/uk/

    http://gb.asterix.com/

    there you go M….

  • http://kadhat.blogspot.com egm

    @njege, I have only done Hitchhiker’s Guide which I found quite hilarious! I’ll admit, however, that by the end of the series you could tell DA was getting tired of it. I haven’t read Terry Pratchett yet, but having heard goog things about him, I’ll try some of his books. My ultimate Sci-Fi writer is James P. Hogan. The man has some hardcore science where he breaks down Clancy style stuff to do with bio, phyc or chem on top of telling a very rivetting story. Check out his Giants series.

    With all this talk of Bill, I think I’ll go home tonight and pick up the omnibus and jaribu one of his plays.

  • http://www.vituvingisana.blogspot.com VituVingiSana

    Sci-Fi….

    Isaac Asimoc esp I, Robot series… Good ol’ R. Daneel…
    Read his Azaael stories… just great!

    Arthur C Clarke – Visionary… He conceptualised the satellite!

    Frank Herbert – Dune series… MARVELOUS… AMAZING… OUTSTANDING…

    Kenyan writers suck in this instance i.e. Sci-fi and “fantasy”…

    Go to go… got some reading to do!

  • http://guessaurus.com Guess

    I laugh at you talking about Tom Clancy – come over and borrow Nelson De Mille ‘Up Country’ – which is a thoroughly good book about Vietnam – and wow, the dude they are looking for isnt even hinted at being found before page 1000 – top that.
    As for Scarecrow – or Matthew Reilly – he doesnt take prisoners (literally and ..er.. literally) but he is cool. Try Ice Station – it will slide you down to antartica faster than you can say ‘Bill’ LOL

    Dude stop kidnapping my books :(

  • http://madcouch.blogspot.com/ modoathii

    i remember book thicker than a double tot scared me shitless. but not anymore. now did gish tell us where we can organise for books for a pao?

  • http://www.sylkwan.blogspot.com Shiroh

    @Modoathii, i hear it is called Soko ndogo somewhere near house of leather. Ati books scared you; now how Couch?