Books I read in September 2011

I’m not doing a very good job at posting regularly on this blog, am I ? Ah well. At least I did a lot of fun, light reading this month!

book by Diane JohnsonBooks I read (and finished reading) in September:

Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire by J. K. Rowling. Classic. Love love love.

Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix by J. K. Rowling. Please see above.

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince by J. K. Rowling. Please see above again 😉 I adore J. K. Rowling. She has a fantastic writing style, she is very engaging and she tells a great story!

Nutrition Now by Judith E. Brown. As I mentioned last month, this was required reading for my second nutrition course – which I successfully completed and took the exam for last week! I received 92% on my exam, hurray! And partially that’s because Brown’s book was so interesting. I really liked it and it was a great learning aid.

Le Divorce by Diane Johnson. I picked this up at a secondhand bookstore because the title was familiar and it sounded like a chick flick I would like… I was about a third of the way through it before I suddenly realized that I already knew the story. I’d seen the film years ago when it first came out and then had forgotten all about it! So that was funny. It was a decent book, although the characters were a little wishy washy.

French Women Don’t Get Fat by Mireille Guiliano. I must be on a French kick or something. Anyway, this book has been a bestseller and people rave about it but for some reason I never got around to reading it. I’m so glad I finally picked it up! It’s an excellent read – not only does it have very good advice (and tasty-looking recipes!), but Guiliano is also funny and sweet.

Books I read part of in September but haven’t finished yet:

Breaking Free From Emotional Eating by Geneen Roth. I read this book just a few months ago but felt the need to pick it up again. I’m reading it slowly to savour it. Roth is wonderful.

Sex, Art, and American Culture by Camille Paglia. I read some of Paglia in one of my rhetoric classes and was immediately intrigued, so I was excited to read more of her (rather than just the couple of essays I’d read in class). She is incredibly well-read and has interesting perspectives. I don’t always agree 100% with everything she says, but I find there’s a lot of value in reading her work. I’m a big fan.

What books did you read in September?

2 Comments

  1. Well done on the exam! That is terrific! It must have been just about the highest score :))

    I read French Women Don’t Get Fat when it first came out, and loved it too. One recipe from it which I cook all the time is the lemon tagliatelle. It is absolutely perfect on a summer’s evening with a green salad and a class of cold White wine. It’s my most used standby when friends come round on a weekday evening when I want to cook something quick. And I love all the little stories she weaves in, and ESPECIALLY I love e illustrations! Shallowness, they name is Liz!

    I might dig out Le Divorce, it rings a faint bell, sounds like a good book for my kindle for reading on the underground when I work in our Chelsea office.

    I have read practically nothing this month, apart from Home Farmer magazine which I love because it gives me lots of ideas for what I’m going to do on that great and mythical day when we move far enough away from London to buy a house with a bit of a garden… It’s fantasy land basically of a very gentle kind, and probably serves a similar purpose to Harry Potter 🙂

    The nutrition book sounds good too -I’m going to google it.

    Hope you are reading some good things is month!

    Liz

    1. Ooh I haven’t tried lemon tagliatelle before! That sounds tasty.

      Magazines are awesome. So much fun to look at house/garden-type magazines especially. Hmmm maybe I should start including magazines on this list… didn’t think of that!

Comments are closed.