The Big Game’s On…and I’m off

This weekend, as I mentioned earlier in the week, both my wife and I have the weekend off together and we have TV and movie plans. What I didn’t mention was my reading plans, so now I’ll mention them, which all will be done under the umbrella of…

Yes, the Super Bowl is Sunday as is the readathon, but as per usual, I won’t be playing strictly by the rules. I plan on pregaming with some reading Saturday as well. The focus will be on two books:

  • The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman
  • Atlas of the Heart: Mapping Meaningful Connection and the Language of the Heart by Brene Brown.

I started The Thursday Murder Club earlier this month, but I just haven’t gotten back to reading it. And I thought Atlas of the Heart fit well with the theme of Valentine’s Day, which is Monday.

Do you have any reading plans for this weekend? If so, what are you reading? If not, what else do you have planned? Please share in the comments.

Update #1, 11 am: I didn’t read as much as I wanted to read yesterday as I traveled to New York State. We’re in northcentral Pennsylvania about 40 miles from the New York border, and sometimes I just like to get out of Pennsylvania. Yesterday was such a day. So, today I’m starting with The Thursday Murder Club and then might dip into Atlas of the Heart later.

Update #2, 7:30 pm: I did finish The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman. I started Atlas of the Heart, but I decided it was too much to dig into for today. And then Kim and I watched a few YouTube compilations of the best of Super Bowl commercials from the last five years. Now we are watching the Super Bowl anyway as we decided to watch more commercials and the halftime show.

The Big Game’s On Read-a-thon For Me

Pregame

Tomorrow, I’ll be participating in The Big Game’s On Read-a-thon, sponsored by Jenn from Jenn’s Bookshelves. The “rules,” such as they are, are simple:

  • No rules, no guidelines, just read
  • No start/end times, just read at your leisure.

Jenn also has mini-challenges, but they aren’t mandatory. If interested in participating, visit Jenn’s blog (link above).

My plan is to start at 11:30 a.m. when the pregame coverage (officially) starts on TV and to read as much as I can right through the Big Game. What will I be reading? I think I’ll start where I left off for My January 24in48 Readathon: All Things Bright and Beautiful by James Herriot. Others that I might read include Inspired: Slaying Giants, Walking on Water, and Loving the Bible Again by Rachel Held Evans; Convictions: How I Learned What Matters Most by Marcus J. Borg; Spiritual Direction: Wisdom for the Long Walk of Faith by Henri J.M. Nouwen with Michael J. Christensen and Rebecca Laird; and Calypso by David Sedaris. Borgen and Nouwen both were theologians. Convictions was written in 2014 before Borg died in 2015; Spiritual Direction, compiled from lectures and other writings from Nouwen by Christensen and Laird, who were students of Nouwen.

As for food, my wife is making grilled cheese and tomato soup for dinner. Throughout the day, I’ll probably have “nibblies” in keeping with the theme of The Big Game. No wine, but I’ll be fine. I do have something for a nightcap later.

I’ll be updating here and on Instagram with the read-a-thon hashtag: #biggamereadathon.

The Game

It is now 4 p.m. as I write this first update. I started my readathon at noon, a little behind my own schedule, but I’ve been having fun and already have dipped into three books. I finished one, All Things Bright and Beautiful, which I already was three-quarters of the way through. I then started another, the Spiritual Direction book by Henri J.M. Nouwen, and after about getting halfway through, I switched it up for some Sedaris, which I am enjoying immensely.

When I put a link to this post in The Sunday Salon Facebook group, another blogger commented about how she prefers blogs to other forms of social media because of the conversation. Interestingly, since then, I have more comments on Instagram about the books I’m reading and more discussion there than I do here (so far). I found that true with last week’s readathon too, with people commenting and discussing with me books more there than here.

Here are some photos so far, a gallery to which I will add throughout the day:

The Finish

So for this year, all the books I have finished have been five stars in my estimation:

  1. The Library Book by Susan Orlean
  2. The 7 1/2 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle by Susan Orlean
  3. Shale Play: Poems and Photographs from the Fracking Fields by Julia Kasdorf and Steven Rubin
  4. Born A Crime: Stories from a South African Childhood by Trevor Noah
  5. All Things Bright and Beautiful by James Herriot
  6. Calypso by David Sedaris

How are you spending this Super Bowl Sunday? Big party with neighbors or just family at home, watching the game? Or going out to a movie? Or reading like me?