Robin Song Reads
Robin Song Reads
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Some Rapid Fire Questions! With a very special guest :)
Huge thanks to Andy over @ReallyRandomReads for tagging me in this wonderful tag! It was a lot of fun for us to answer these questions, albeit not so rapidly. I hope y'all enjoy and that y'all have had a happy new year!
Also I completely forgot to say this in the video but if you watch this and would like to do this tag then I officially tag you!! I would love to hear your responses :)
Email: robinsongreads@gmail.com
Instagram: densoncamp
The questions in question:
1. E-Book or Physical Book?
2. Paperback or Hardback?
3. Online or In-Store Book Shopping?
4. Trilogies or Series?
5. Heroes or Villains?
6. A Book You Want Everyone to Read?
7. Recommend an Underrated Book?
8. The Last Book You Finished?
9. The Last Book You Bought?
10. Weirdest Thing You’ve Used as a Bookmark?
11. Used Books: Yes or No?
12. Top Three Favorite Genres?
13. Borrow or Buy?
14. Character or Plot?
15. Long or Short Books?
16. Long or Short Chapters?
17. Name the First Three Books You Think Of.
18. Books That Make You Laugh or Cry?
19. Our World or Fictional Worlds?
20. Audiobooks: Yes or No?
21. Do You Ever Judge a Book by Its Cover?
22. Book to Movie or Book to TV Adaptations?
23. A Movie or TV Adaptation You Preferred More Than the Boo
24. Series or Standalones?
#booktube #books #book
Переглядів: 251

Відео

My Favorite Book of All Time: Moby Dick!My Favorite Book of All Time: Moby Dick!
My Favorite Book of All Time: Moby Dick!
Переглядів 334Місяць тому
Welp I've done what I set out to do by creating this channel: yap excitedly at length about a book I love. And this just so happens to be the book I love the most: Moby freaking Dick. I really hope you enjoy this video, it was a blast to make, and in preparing for it I read a bunch of letters Herman Melville wrote to friends and publishers during its creation and I got a huge kick out of them. ...
The Very First Ever Bookhaul! Featuring Jane Austen, Mikhail Lermontov, Agatha Christie, and More...The Very First Ever Bookhaul! Featuring Jane Austen, Mikhail Lermontov, Agatha Christie, and More...
The Very First Ever Bookhaul! Featuring Jane Austen, Mikhail Lermontov, Agatha Christie, and More...
Переглядів 523Місяць тому
Hello again! I filmed this video right after my booktube newbie tab so I don't say this in the video but WOW! The response to my first video has been so overwhelmingly kind and supportive. I feel very welcomed by y'all and I'm really stoked for the times and chats we'll share ahead :) I went to Reed books in Birmingham, Alabama to get these books and it was simply delightful. A cozy home of dee...
It's The Booktube Newbie Tag!It's The Booktube Newbie Tag!
It's The Booktube Newbie Tag!
Переглядів 856Місяць тому
Hello everybody! After a year or two of watching booktube and positively loving this community I've decided to plunge in and start making videos myself - needless to say I am incredibly excited :) In the spirit of booktube tradition I'll be doing the classic, the reliable, the wonderful Booktube Newbie Tag to kick things off! I hope you enjoy. I would really like to thank a couple of wonderful ...

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @ReallyRandomReads
    @ReallyRandomReads 7 днів тому

    You did a great job with this! Glad I’m not alone in making the rapid fire less rapid, enjoyed this 👍

  • @Averagebookwormdad
    @Averagebookwormdad 11 днів тому

    Call me picky, but in the new or used books question I always think about the author. If they are dead and/or have problematic views, I buy the book used. But I read a lot indie authors recently, I always buy the their books new if I have the chance to. Currently my gem are fantasy books based on different mythologies, extra points if the author has the same heritage it is based on.

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads 11 днів тому

      That's a really fantastic point that I never even considered! Yeah supporting artists should really be on my mind more once I start venturing out into new releases or Indie books; I think about that with musicians but I should think about that with writers more. I guess I'm not so concerned about Tolstoy's financial well-being when I find a used copy of the Death of Ivan Ilyich, but that's a good thing to keep in mind overall :)

  • @karenpotter3015
    @karenpotter3015 12 днів тому

    So glad you are back! And with a guest 😊 If you are into characters and long books, try The Magic Mountain by Thomas Mann. Not short chapters, but great characters.

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads 11 днів тому

      That's a great recommendation!! It's top of my list for German classics and I'm thinking I'll read it in translation and then give it a go in the original. Thank you for your kind words :)

    • @karenpotter3015
      @karenpotter3015 11 днів тому

      Awesome if you can read it in German. Probably best to read in English first, but I am jealous! Forgot you have the German. Hope you will share your thoughts after reading. Don’t think you will be disappointed…Karen

  • @davidnovakreadspoetry
    @davidnovakreadspoetry 12 днів тому

    I’m going to check out _No Longer Human_ but not certain I’ll read it. Qiu Miaojin made reference to it and him - was a fan I guess - but her books were a little too harrowing for me.

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads 11 днів тому

      Yeah it sounds incredibly dark to me as well, but may be worth reading once in my life. There's some art out there that was worth experiencing once in my life, but which I have no plans of returning to.

  • @joshuacreboreads
    @joshuacreboreads 12 днів тому

    Well, what a wonderful video! And what a sweet couple you guys are!

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads 11 днів тому

      Thank you Joshua!! It was super fun to make and I definitely hope I can bring more guests onto the channel :)

  • @saintdonoghue
    @saintdonoghue 12 днів тому

    He's back! With a guest! And flashing lights!

    • @NoUseid-iz4fh
      @NoUseid-iz4fh 11 днів тому

      Hi Steve

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads 11 днів тому

      Soon it'll be strobe lights and disco balls, all notion of books left behind

  • @amy_harboredinpages
    @amy_harboredinpages 21 день тому

    Being read to is nice 😌. I'm trying to read one classic a year. This year I've chosen Gone With the Wind... and next will be Lonesome Dove... perhaps you've convinced me to add Moby Dick... 😉 perhaps. 🐳💙📖☺️📚💙🐳

  • @amy_harboredinpages
    @amy_harboredinpages 21 день тому

    Very nice haul of literature. 💙📚☺️📖💙

  • @amy_harboredinpages
    @amy_harboredinpages 21 день тому

    Welcome! 💙📖☺️📚💙

  • @InstruMentalCase
    @InstruMentalCase 23 дні тому

    If you like Heaney’s translation, you should check out the poetry of Stanley Kunitz: ua-cam.com/video/KGmzr1kGeoQ/v-deo.htmlsi=bTY7XLAafvWEAOcG

  • @barrysmith3408
    @barrysmith3408 25 днів тому

    Robin, Really enjoying your content. Hoping for more soon!

  • @EthanColour
    @EthanColour 28 днів тому

    I was really hoping that there would be a video about Moby Dick because, yes!!! The book is seriously so overwhelming and beautiful and so descriptive and moving. I haven't seen a person talk about Moby Dick with so much love for the book, and it feels so nice because I feel the same!! Moby Dick is a masterpiece, and it has to be more widespread and just commonly appreciated. Btw, the length of the book makes it so interesting! Like when I finished it, I found myself knowing a ton of things about whalers and stuff, and it felt so nice! The chapters of descriptions -- i love them. Not the plot, but YES, how Melville pays attention to every little thing; the colour white -- the best part of the book, really. Also, an interesting thing about the gory part of the whaling is how Melville comprehends it, because sometimes, as you've quoted, he talks about it being cruel and horrible, but at other times, god, the chapter where Ishmael is just looking at Queequeg butchering the body of the whale and thinking damn, he looks sexy, he looks nice! I don't know what more to say, just that I totally get you and your passion about Moby Dick. Wow. And btw, the thing I really paid attention to while reading, I dont know why, is like the length of sentences and the amount of semicolons???? So beautiful! Also, the fact of the book being Melville's love letter/message to Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Melville is really heartbroken because he can't express his love, so he just sends the nook to Hawthorne and says, 'I've written a wicked book." The quote may be inaccurate, but I do remember something about that!! Anyway, thank you so much! Your video was really heartwarming

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads 26 днів тому

      Ok well this comment is just about one of the greatest things I've ever read. I love your enthusiasm too!! As a fellow "Whiteness of the Whale" apologist all I can say is simply that we get to experience more joy and happiness than the digression haters hahahh - What a chapter! I also find that he's able to take these beautiful, shining nuggets (almost like Ambergris??? :0) out of his digressions: Take a chapter like "The Blanket" where he humorously tries to define what the Whale's skin is. It's a lot of whale knowledge stuff, but in that classic great Melville prose, and he ultimately ends the whole thing with this bit of genius: "It does seem to me, that herein we see the rare virtue of a strong individual vitality, and the rare virtue of thick walls, and the rare virtue of interior spaciousness. Oh, man! admire and model thyself after the whale! Do thou, too, remain warm among ice. Do thou, too, live in this world without being of it. Be cool at the equator; keep thy blood fluid at the Pole. Like the great dome of St. Peter’s, and like the great whale, retain, O man! in all seasons a temperature of thine own." I mean COME. ON. If I repeated those words like a mantra for a couple of days and meditated upon them I think I would become a more solid person, someone who feels more steady and confident in a way that's not standoffish or proud. All at the end of a chapter on whale skin. The digression chapters RULE! And, obviously, the plot and the action in the book is simply astonishing. A pure thrill all the way through those last three chapters, it's like you can the sea-salt wind racing through your hair, the white flukes of Moby-Dick rising in the distance. That's a great point about the Hawthorne connection, all that stuff really is crazy. In the Norton Critical edition I had in this video there are all these letters sent to critics, publishers, and friends; and then there's the letters to Hawthorne and they're all just about 4 to 5 times as long as any of the other letters. I heard a writer once say that he developed "something that very much resembles a schoolgirl crush" for Hawthorne; I don't think he was trying to be insulting at all and I think it's probably true. Man what a joy just to think about all these things, thank you again for your wonderful comment :D

  • @leilastackleather9927
    @leilastackleather9927 Місяць тому

    I’m currently reading the Norton Critical Edition of Moby Dick, and having a wonderful time. I’m finding the story demands to be read aloud, the language of Melville so beautiful. So far, really enjoyed chapters “The Sermon” and “A Bosom Friend.” Interesting that the chapters are short, like Bible chapters.

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads 28 днів тому

      That's such a cool point about it working really well being read aloud! I imagine Willem Dafoe's performance in "The Lighthouse" would be a stellar manifestation of how well some Moby Dick scenes would work when read dramatically hahahhh, particularly for some of Ahab's speeches - If you haven't seen that film this clip will show you what I mean: ua-cam.com/video/jfD5u9Ary6M/v-deo.html&ab_channel=Merty Those two chapters you mention are wonderful, I remember reading "The Sermon" on the lawn in college and wishing I had a Bible with me to read Jonah and the Whale. I also love the short chapters, it's somewhat like Anna Karenina in that respect; a chunker book that grants you lot of gratification along the way :)

    • @leilastackleather9927
      @leilastackleather9927 28 днів тому

      @@RobinSongReadsI watched “The Lighthouse” for the first time a few days ago and loved the scene you referenced. Perfection. If you ever include the Bible on a future reread of Moby Dick, I recommend the King James Version. I think it would make a great match to Melville’s lyrical language. Reading update: I loved, loved Chapter 15. Chowder. I had to reread it several times. “Oh, sweet friends! hearken to me.” I’m a few pages away from meeting Ahab for the first time. The suspense! I’m also halfway through my reread of Anna Karenina, and may be enjoying it more than War and Peace. Maybe. How much of Tolstoy’s work have you delved into, or of Russian literature in general?

  • @alynam82
    @alynam82 Місяць тому

    😂 you said "notes to read" right the first time. But that got me laughing, you thought you said rotes-to-need lol!

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      hahahh it seems my inner monologue was tripping over its words when my mouth was doing just fine. I guess these are the consequences of talking about something that makes you very excited!

  • @ghiblicat
    @ghiblicat Місяць тому

    ok you've convinced me it's on the tbr !

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      hahahhh heck yes, just goes to show that monologuing for 30 minutes will get you just about anything you want ;)

  • @karenpotter3015
    @karenpotter3015 Місяць тому

    Great video Robin! I definitely need a re-read. My last re-read was about 20 years ago while visiting Nantucket (off the coast of Massachusetts). I too love the book and your energy is so inspiring. Thank you!

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Wow that's incredible that you read it white actually on Nantucket! Especially considering its significance in the book. I've never been to that particular island, but I was on Martha's Vineyard for about 9 days around one and a half years ago, and I definitely subconciously drew from it in creating my mental landscape/soundscape/smellscape of the early chapters. I'm honored to hear that my energy is inspiring hahah, and thank you so much for watching!

  • @BookChatWithPat8668
    @BookChatWithPat8668 Місяць тому

    Such a joyful and thoughtful discussion! Your passion for Melville’s masterpiece is delightful to uphold! You are going to have such a wonderful time here.

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Thank you so much Pat! I definitely will, and I certainly am already. I was wondering if you have you ever taught this book, and if you have, what approach you took/would take if you were to teach it now. There's so many directions in which one could go, and I would love to hear your educator's perspective :)

    • @BookChatWithPat8668
      @BookChatWithPat8668 Місяць тому

      @@RobinSongReads So this is very strange. I left you a long, detailed response, and it has been deleted! I was trying to tell you about a course that is being offered this summer at the graduate school where I got my degree on Moby-Dick. I immediately thought of you, and I'd love to send you this course description. I'm not sure why comment would have been deleted. I also told you which works of Melville we did teach, although we did not teach M-D. It's difficult to incorporate super long novels in the curriculum in high school, though I certainly did teach a number of longish novels. M-D would be a rough one in high schools, although I do know people who did read it in their high school classes. We taught Billy Budd, Bartleby the Scrivener, and some of Melville's poetry. I was also trying to tell you about Nathaniel Philbrick. He wrote the intro to my edition of M-D. He also won the National Book Award for In the Heart of the Sea, the Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex. The ordeal of the Essex was Melville's inspiration for M-D. Philbrick has also written a great book, Why Read M-D? I think you'd love that, if you haven't read it already. Anyway, if this comment gets through, maybe we can figure out how I can get this course description on M-D to you.

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      ​@@BookChatWithPat8668 Oh no I'm so sorry your comment got deleted!! That is one of the worst feelings - but this comment you left in its place is very beautiful and made me smile. I get what you mean about it being difficult to incorporate long novels into a high school curriculum, and I think it's probably best that Moby-Dick is not often assigned in high school, lest younger readers get turned off to an author with so much depth and wonder, simply because they were assigned his longest, most bizarre work first. I read Bartleby, the Scrivener in both high school and college, and still think that's an amazing introduction to Melville. I'm very excited to take the dive into his poetry, thank you for putting that back on my radar! And that is a great suggestion to get more into Nathaniel Philbrick. I watched a talk that he gave on Moby-Dick and he read a passage from Why Read Moby-Dick? which I, naturally, loved. After my next re-read of M-D I'd like to read it as a kind of digestif. There's no come-down quite like finishing a great book, and that'll be something I can look forward to :)

  • @selwang
    @selwang Місяць тому

    I love your energy :)

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      hahahh thank you very much, you are very kind :)

  • @joshuacreboreads
    @joshuacreboreads Місяць тому

    Wow, awesome video! It brings a smile to my face. This is definitely one of those books that I need to take down from my shelf and finally read. I began to read it some years ago, but didn’t know what to make of its strange and unique narrative style, and so gave up a third of the way through. That isn’t a criticism of the book, however - more so just a fault on my part. I think, if I were to return to it (which I now want to do after watching this), I would appreciate it much more. Awesome to see another video by you!

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Thank you so much dude! I wouldn't call that a fault on your part at all hahahh - some things just take getting used to, and Melville's style can be, well... a lot. It makes me so happy to hear that you'd like to give it another go one day, and if you ever do return to it I would be super stoked to hear your thoughts!

    • @joshuacreboreads
      @joshuacreboreads Місяць тому

      I’ll definitely return to it. Hopefully sooner rather than later.

  • @Bander1302
    @Bander1302 Місяць тому

    Alright you handsome mofo how do you look like every fan art i have seen at the same time

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      hahahahhhh well this just absolutely made my day, you are too kind. i guess it's the constant grinning i'm doing because of my excited-nervousness that gives me the fanart aesthetic lmaooo

  • @karenpotter3015
    @karenpotter3015 Місяць тому

    Hi Robin You are a refreshing and interesting addition to BookTube. Welcome! Look forward to getting to know you better through your videos…

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Thank you so so much Karen, it's a pleasure to be here! I hope you're having a nice holiday season :)

  • @BooksThatTeachUs
    @BooksThatTeachUs Місяць тому

    Hi there, just came here to say hey as we both got a shout out from MJ! Hey from a fellow newbie!

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Hello there fellow newbie!! Maaann what a pleasure it is to be so warmly received into a community like this, MJ is so kind. I saw in your booktube newbie tag that you like historical fiction, that's definitely a big blind spot of mine in my reading and I hope to fix that one day! Hope you're having a nice holiday season :)

  • @OldManReads-c9r
    @OldManReads-c9r Місяць тому

    Welcome to Booktube, look forward to seeing your future videos.

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Thank you so much!! I'm excited to make said future videos :) I saw in your channel description that you enjoy Japanese literature - maybe I'll make a video on the Tale of Genji in the future

  • @BeyondBooks-wt5il
    @BeyondBooks-wt5il Місяць тому

    What an awesome haul! Thanks for sharing! I love your enthusiasm and wish you the very best with your channel!

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Thank you so so much! I just watched your video on Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening and it was so wonderful. That was the first poem I ever fell in love with, and is still one of my favorites to this day. The peace rock at the end was a delightful touch :)

  • @ghiblicat
    @ghiblicat Місяць тому

    did you get your degree in literature since you mentioned you took a russian lit class? also ur very articulate and ur twinkle lights are very charming haha

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Funny enough I got it in German Studies hahahh - hence the flag of Germany pinned to that jacket. I loved my major but looking back English/Literature would have been wonderful too. Thank you for your kind words and I'm glad you like the fairy lights, took me forever to string them up but it's SO worth it. Especially when all the lights are off, then it really does become an enchanted forest. I love your Lady of Shalott profile picture and the Ghibli username, my favorite film of all time just so happens to be Princess Mononoke!

    • @ghiblicat
      @ghiblicat Місяць тому

      @@RobinSongReads Ooo very cool! I have a lot of vines in my room too but no fairy lights so maybe that'll be my next addition. I really like Elaine (I have a tapestry of this painting too) and Arthuriana so she's my pfp a lot lol. Also Princess Mononoke is my favorite too :)

  • @book-ramble
    @book-ramble Місяць тому

    Came by way of M-J who gave you a shout-out. Hello from a fellow noob[ish] to book tube. Subbed for support. Good luck with your journey! Best, Mark.

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Thank you so much Mark! And many thanks for bringing that to my attention, I just went over to her channel and it truly warmed my heart. It seems like a good time to be new on booktube! Just subbed to your channel and about to watch your video on the Lord of the Rings, I've been doing loads of winter cleaning whilst listening to The Return of the King on audible, and I'm preparing for the emotional devastation that is sure to follow when I complete it. Hopefully I'll be ready, this being my second go around, but we'll just have to see :) Happy holidays!

    • @book-ramble
      @book-ramble Місяць тому

      @@RobinSongReads Happy Merry Season etc, and good luck with LOTR [I have just recorded an episode on Aragorn]. And MJ is a treasure.

  • @demen4ik
    @demen4ik Місяць тому

    wow there is something really calming in you speaking of books is amazing! feels so sincere!! you go!!!!! as a russian speaking person in whose dna lermontov is imprinted i am amazed with your opinion on it! one hundred percents support your channel!!!!!

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Спасибо и добро пожаловать! You are so so kind hahahh, i'm happy to hear that my somewhat excited energy in this video was calming for you :) And I am honored to have a russian speaking person watching my videos! I truly love Russian literature - Anna Karenina is probably my third favorite book of all time, and I plan on reading the Brothers Karamazov with my girlfriend soon. And it's amazing to hear that Lermontov is in your dna hahahh, that is very well expressed! Did you read him growing up/ in school? I only came around to him later in college. Anyways thank you so much again and have a wonderful holiday season :))

  • @Tolstoy111
    @Tolstoy111 Місяць тому

    Welcome to BookTube!

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Thank you so so much! It's an honor to have Tolstoy watching my videos ;))

  • @jscottphillips503
    @jscottphillips503 Місяць тому

    Watching your video is like looking in a mirror! Not that we look alike by any means, but because I'm literally looking in a mirror so I can read those book covers left-to-right! Welcome to BookTube!

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      I legitimately laughed out loud when I read this hahahahh, what an amazing response. I think I've figured out how to get around the mirror effect, and you'll be reading left to right again in no time ;)

  • @claratcr
    @claratcr Місяць тому

    I loved your energy! Wish you the best on this new journey, you're good at this! Have you ever read Wuthering Heights? It's going to be my next read and I'd love some feedback!

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Thank you so so much, you are so kind!! I have unfortunately not yet gotten to Wuthering Heights - the Victorian Period (and the Bronte Sisters) represent a large gap in my reading that I can't wait to get around to. I really hope you enjoy it, I've heard that it can be read almost as a sort of horror novel which makes it very enticing :)

  • @ReallyRandomReads
    @ReallyRandomReads Місяць тому

    Welcome Robin, I’m new too, love the enchanted forest!

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Thank you so much!! Welcome to you as well, this is quite a nice corner of youtube to find ourselves in :)) I'm glad you like the enchanted forest, it gets even more magical when I turn off the overheads and let the fairy lights work their magic

    • @ReallyRandomReads
      @ReallyRandomReads Місяць тому

      @@RobinSongReads I can believe! :)

  • @MaximusStetich
    @MaximusStetich Місяць тому

    It’s wonderful to have you here - and a Genji reading, Moby Dick loving musician no less!

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Hahahahh thank you so much!! I just watched your video on "Behave" by Robert Sapolsky and loved it, I hope you'll make more videos someday :)

    • @MaximusStetich
      @MaximusStetich Місяць тому

      @ Thank you, that means a lot frankly.

  • @AnEruditeAdventure
    @AnEruditeAdventure Місяць тому

    I bought Kidnapped several years ago now and still haven’t read it. There’s a fantastic movie adaptation of it that I’ve watched, but just don’t take the time to read the book. I’ll get to it soon. I also need to read Treasure Island. I’m well versed in the story, but I’ve only ever read abridged versions. I should do that one on audio in the next couple weeks. I’m due for another classic. -T

    • @AnEruditeAdventure
      @AnEruditeAdventure Місяць тому

      You’ve also completely sold me on A Hero of Our Time. I’ll be on the lookout for that one.

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      I think I may have read an abridged version for children when I was in elementary school, so I've also got the skeleton of the story in my head. I think those action-packed books like Kidnapped and Treasure Island are going to be a really nice contrast from the Tale of Genji, which is subtle, deliberate, and beautiful. After 1200 pages of subtle, deliberate, and beautiful, sometimes you just want some pirates.

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      @@AnEruditeAdventure Awesome man I think you'll love it. It's a quick read and really transports you into the Caucasus.

  • @davidnovakreadspoetry
    @davidnovakreadspoetry Місяць тому

    Lermontov - the old Penguin translation (which I read) was supposed to be bad (it may have been Steve Donoghue who said so), and I couldn’t stand the Nabokov translation (which some people love). But Penguin has a new translation which may be better, though I liked what I read.

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      I've not read the Nabokov translation but would love to give it a shot! The translator in this video's edition (and the one Penguin has had for years) is Paul Foote, which I think is the one we've both read. I really enjoyed it as well, but as a fan of this book I'll try to get my hands on the new translation at some point.

  • @NicholasOfAutrecourt
    @NicholasOfAutrecourt Місяць тому

    Hi there! I'm looking forward to hearing about all bookish things you want to share with us. From an oldie content creator to a newbie, welcome aboard. We're so glad to have you here!

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Thank you so much Nicholas!! I'm so stoked to be here, and I feel very welcomed thanks to kind words like yours :)

  • @joshuacreboreads
    @joshuacreboreads Місяць тому

    Ha! The Mr. Collins scene! I remember sitting in class at my highschool and grinning and laughing quietly while reading it. I’m sure I drew some stares, as everyone else was quiet at that time. I have never heard of Lermontov, but the way that you’ve described the book is fascinating. Now I’ll definitely have to keep an eye out for it. This video is wonderful. You have an incredibly enthusiastic presence on the screen. Thanks.

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Hahahahh then it must be a near-universal experience among its readers! Lermontov is incredible, and may well have been an author near the caliber of Tolstoy and Pushkin, but we'll never know. He was killed in a duel when he was 26 years old. Many great Russian authors never wrote anything near the quality of "A Hero of Our Time" when they were in their twenties, and here was this young poet greeting the world with a great novel and dying one year later. I've never read his poetry, which my Russian professor told me was astonishing in the original, but didn't work so well in translation, but maybe a great translator will come along one day and give it the glory it deserves. Thank you for your kind words, perhaps my enthusiasm is an outlet for my somewhat nervous excitement at doing these videos hahahh - we'll see if I settle down at all in the future :))

    • @joshuacreboreads
      @joshuacreboreads Місяць тому

      I can’t believe I had never heard of the author before! Thank you for the recommendation.

  • @LauraRodriguez-Peace
    @LauraRodriguez-Peace Місяць тому

    I’ll bet it was such a joy perusing the shelves and finding just the right gifts for yourself, (and friends and family.) Great choices! Book recs from Mark, are always a sure hit, he is so knowledgeable, as is our friend, Steve, of course. Loved hearing the sweet memory of your fave book, P & P. Hope your gift recipient enjoys it, as well! Thanks for sharing your cool book stash! ☮️🩵📚

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      It certainly was, I've not felt so excited at being in a shop like that for a while. And you're completely right about Mark and Steve! Both of them have also recommended the naval historian Samuel Eliot Morison so I'll be on the lookout for him as well. I'm glad you enjoyed the Pride and Prejudice story and thank you so much for your kinds words, I hope you have a wonderful holiday season :)

  • @saintdonoghue
    @saintdonoghue Місяць тому

    He's back, straight from the heart of King Thranduil's Woodland Realm! And you're taking book recommendations from that crusty old corsair, Mark Richardson!

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Just wait till you see me in my pine-cone decorated beanie. I'll be getting more elf-like in each successive video.

  • @BookChatWithPat8668
    @BookChatWithPat8668 Місяць тому

    You are so delightful! Thank you for mentioning me. I'm so glad to have found you! Welcome to the community and to "our corner." You are going to have so much fun here. Congratulations on your recent college graduation. I loved hearing about your experience of reading Moby Dick and your discovery of Seamus Heaney. I am really looking forward to seeing your future videos. Welcome!

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Thank you so much Pat! This is a very wholesome and beautiful corner indeed, and you're a very bright spot in it :) I'm glad you liked hearing about Moby Dick - one of the things I'm most excited to do on this channel is talk at length about books that I particularly love, and Moby Dick will certainly get more attention. I look forward to more videos of yours as well and thank you for stopping by!

  • @davidnovakreadspoetry
    @davidnovakreadspoetry Місяць тому

    Welcome aboard the BookTube train! 🚆

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Thank you so much, David! I'm really hoping this'll be more like a Love Train situation than a Murder on the Orient Exprest type deal.

  • @michaelk.vaughan8617
    @michaelk.vaughan8617 Місяць тому

    Moby Dick is fantastic. I’ve read it three times. That edition seems very durable!

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Goodness gracious, it's an honor to recieve words from Stately Vaughan Manor! I positively love your channel, and you've put authors like Dashiell Hammett and Robert E. Howard on my radar - Thank you for that, and I can't wait to get to them :) I completely agree with you about Moby Dick. I could exhaust most of the adjectives of the English language in attempts to characterize that book, but fantastic is a particularly apt one. And that edition certain is durable... perhaps a little too durable! It's heavy as hell hahahh

  • @AnEruditeAdventure
    @AnEruditeAdventure Місяць тому

    Welcome. I’m due for a reread of Moby Dick. Loved it when I read it, but that’s been several years now. Always great to have more musicians around. I’m by no means a professional, but I play the violin and sing. I’d like to do more with it some day. -T

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Thanks so much! Great to hear that all this Moby talk makes you want to give it a reread :D And violin, wow, that's crazy impressive. I don't play any fretless instruments, but I've fooled around on a Cello a couple of times and it felt like I was walking on ice in flat slippers. I think bowed instruments are much like human voices in their ability to steadily crescendo - a voice and a violin go really well together :)

    • @AnEruditeAdventure
      @AnEruditeAdventure Місяць тому

      absolutely. As long as you get past the squeaky stage. Although that can apply to both violin and voice. 😅

  • @JamesRuchala
    @JamesRuchala Місяць тому

    Welcome Robin.

  • @Kite562reviews
    @Kite562reviews Місяць тому

    Hey welcome to booktube! 😊

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Thank you so much! It's very nice to be here in this way :)

  • @joshuacreboreads
    @joshuacreboreads Місяць тому

    Welcome to Booktube! This video really brightened my day. You are incredibly kind to refer to me as a “poetry expert”, haha. For Seamus Heaney, I own an edition titled “Opened Ground,” which is a fairly meaty selection of his poems (about 400 pages worth). There are some newer selections, which may serve you just as well, but I haven’t been able to find a collected edition! As someone who does not have musical skill but loves to listen to it, I find it fascinating that you are a musician. But I’ll end this comment so that it doesn’t get too long - I look forward to your future videos!

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Maaannn that makes me so happy to hear it had a positive impact on your day :) You are certainly more of an expert than me, and I'll keep an eye out for "Opened Ground" - maybe I'll look up what selections are in there and read some of the poems within them on the Poetry Foundation website. I look forward to your future videos as well, and I especially love your poetry readings!

    • @joshuacreboreads
      @joshuacreboreads Місяць тому

      Maybe I’ll try to show the volume in my next poetry video, which will hopefully be soon. 🙂

  • @HannahsBooks
    @HannahsBooks Місяць тому

    Welcome! You are going to fit in well to this corner of booktube if you like Moby Dick and Genji. What a charming video! I’m looking forward to more videos from you. I hope you will show us a bit of your music sometime.

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Thank you so very much Hannah! I'm glad you think so hahahh, I certainly can't wait to talk about those books in depth with y'all. Perhaps sometime down the line I'll point y'all in the direction of my music, but for now I'm happy to keep this channel solely book focused (although we'll see how long that lasts, it seems I can't go very long without mentioning music in some way... :))

    • @HannahsBooks
      @HannahsBooks Місяць тому

      @ 🤓

  • @LauraRodriguez-Peace
    @LauraRodriguez-Peace Місяць тому

    Welcome! So glad you are here, and looking forward to enjoying more of your wonderful enthusiasm! Yay! ☮️🩵📚

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      You are so kind for saying that, I'm glad you enjoyed the video! I can't wait to make more

  • @GenreBooks23
    @GenreBooks23 Місяць тому

    Subbed. Dragging a book about whaling around Japan is very subtle trolling..

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Hahahahh, I am not at all brilliant enough to have mentioned that on purpose - you have a very keen eye :)

  • @saintdonoghue
    @saintdonoghue Місяць тому

    It's downright eerie how similar are hair style is. It's like looking into a mirror!

    • @RobinSongReads
      @RobinSongReads Місяць тому

      Just one of the many joys we share of being in our twenties! ;)

    • @saintdonoghue
      @saintdonoghue Місяць тому

      @@RobinSongReads but old fogies are always underestimating us! It's so frustrating!