
Everyone listens to audiobooks these days. In fact, it’s hard to find a time when we’re not plugged into something. A few years ago a blogger wrote about listening to audiobooks with her boyfriend. That’s rather sweet, but it’s even nicer to read books aloud with your boyfriend.
It used to be a cheap evening in for us, and now it still is: plus, now we have t to stay home. You don’t have to devote a lot of time to the project. Reading a chapter or two every day is a pleasure. Any genre you like, though we tend to stick to short books. I recommend Kurt Vonnegut.
And here are three NEW ONLINE LITERARY PROJECTS
100 Days of Decameron
http://www.iowacityofliterature.org/decameron/
She writes,
As the Great Plague, known as Black Death, was devastating Europe in the middle of the 14th century, Giovanni Boccaccio was writing a book of unparalleled wit and imagination to help rally the sagging spirit of humanity. Written between 1348 and 1352, The Decameron takes place in a Tuscan villa where seven young women, Pampinea, Filomena, Neifile, Fiammetta, Elissa, Lauretta, and Emilia, and three young men, Filostrato, Dioneo, and Panfilo, are self-quarantined while the plague is ravaging Florence. Being young and of active disposition, they stave off boredom by establishing a routine – every day they take walks, sing and tell stories.
Then there’s The Decameron Project.
According to the Tor website: “Over on Patreon, award-winning author (and Tor.com contributor) Jo Walton, poet and author Maya Chhabra, and librarian, singer, and SF/F fan Lauren Schiller recently launched the Decameron Project, which aims to provide readers with a new donation-supported short story or novel excerpt every day as long as the world is under threat by the coronavirus.”
Let me know about other “lockdown” projects!.
Just got back to your blog today, 4/2, and saw that once again, I predicted the future on 3/12 (see my comment): https://thornfieldhall.blog/2020/03/11/no-dystopian-novels-reading-during-a-pandemic/
honestly, sometimes its hard to be me! I have been banned from work, so did a ton of laundry and sorting and folding yesterday. I am not amused. Have been thinking of recovering the curtsy as a form of distant social greeting/acknowledgment. It would be more distant than the elbow bump and more readily adjusted to observations of social standing, antipathy, indifference etc. (Jane Austen!) take care and keep reading!
You WERE the first to mention the Decameron. I thought of you immediately when I saw that article. And I love your idea of the curtsy. I myself am considering the peace sign!