My visit, at four nights in total, felt far too short. Also, it was apparently carnival time in the region. If I had know before hand, I would have definitely bought a fancy dress costume with me. Dressing up and drinking? Count me in!
But, enough of that. Lets talk about books!
My total number of books bought and received on this visit was... well, it was certainly more than I could fit in my ryanair restricted hand luggage! Especially considering I made the mistake of bringing four of my currently reading books with me*.
I managed to bring back seven books, which will be the ones I talk about. The ten or eleven I left behind will have to be the talk of another time.
Having recently lived the surprisingly exciting and empowering experience of reading Pride and Prejudice in Swedish, I bought the German translation, Stolz und Vorurteil. My German is nowhere near as good as my Swedish, but I know the story so well that it's like having a pop-up dictionary in my head. I've decided to make it a tandem read with another friend, and so we'll aim to read two chapters per week. However, she's already on chapter five, so I'll have to catch up with her first.
Next is Frostfeuer (Frost Fire**) by Kai Meyer. This book has been sitting on my 'to read' list for a while now, and as my friend had a copy, she lent it to me. I... am in all honestly, no longer sure what this book is about, which is a little embarrassing, if I'm honest. But, the blurb mentions a magic duel and a snow queen, and the writing generally makes me happy. Also, the cover has a lot of blue on it, which is nice. I probably shouldn't start reading this anytime soon, but that's never stopped me before. After all, I've only got 28 other books to work my way through!
Next on my shelves are the first, third and fourth books from the Pucki series by Magda Trott. These were purchased at the book fair for two euros each. They are in great condition, although they are obviously well aged. They remind me of my childhood favourites: the Little Women series and the What Katy Dids. The series is quite long running, and there were three other books at the market, but I wasn't much interesting in Pucki the happy bride, or Pucki the housewife or even Pucki and her three young boys - although I'm thinking I may regret my decision if that last is anything like Jo's Boys. I intend to make my way through these at some point, but they're quite old so I'm a bit wary of the difficulty.
The sixth and seventh books are also book market purchases. The sixth is a gorgeously bound book of poems. I'll be honest: I bought this books based on the cover, the fact that it is printed in that wonderful old German typeface and the fact that it contains a poem called 'Fieberträume' which, if I'm not mistaken, translates to 'Fever dreams'. For the interested, it is called Dreizenlinden by F. W. Weber. The title seems to mean 'Thirteen Lindens', and I would chance a guess and say that the poems are at least loosely religious. From my flick through, it doesn't seem to be completely opaque, which is always a plus. It was also only four euros. How could I pass it by?
The seventh and final book for this post is Die schönsten Märchen aus aller Welt, a collection of folk tales from all over the world. The majority of the tales are unlabled, and so can be assumed to be European. However, there are also tales from the Americas (one apiece), quite a few from Asia, and some from Africa. There is also one Inuit tale. I'll make my way through this fairly slowly, as I am to be taking part in a challenge to read one short story or tale per week, and I am woefully behind as I decided neither the stories from Sommarboken or The Cyberiad count. This'll do me until I buy Låt den gamla drömmarna dö by John Ajvide Lindqvist.
This has been a rather long post, but before I sign off I'd like to share the fact that while in Germany, I started knitting a sock, which I finished yesterday (Thursday) morning. Go me!
I've never knitted a sock before, or anything in the round, so I'm pretty proud of myself. This was definitely a learning process. Of course, it's only one sock. As soon as my fingers have recovered enough from five days of almost straight knitting on teeny tiny needles, I'll start the second one :D
Happy blogging, all
Little Newman
*For the interested, those four books are: Bone Jack by Sarah Crowe, The Cyberiad by Stanislaw Lem, Die unendliche Geschichte by Michael Ende and Tintenherz by Cornelia Funke. Bone Jack is the only one I see myself finishing this month, contrary to previous expectation, which also included The Cyberiad in that projection.
**The return of the extremely liberal translations... consider yourself warned!
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