Entry tags:
- ancient history,
- art deco,
- augustus,
- books,
- bristol,
- classical literature,
- dad,
- diana wynne jones,
- doctor who,
- electoral reform,
- eloise,
- family,
- fantasy,
- french,
- greek mythology,
- h2g2,
- horror,
- horror films,
- italy,
- kehs,
- memes,
- mum,
- oxford,
- personal history,
- photo posts,
- politics,
- rodolfo lanciani,
- roma,
- roman history,
- sci-fi,
- suetonius,
- tacitus,
- terry pratchett,
- vampires
June #bookaday meme
At the end of May, my friend
rosamicula posted this image on Facebook for a book meme designed to be played out during the 30 days of June:

Although I could see from the image that it had originally been designed as viral advertising for a publisher, and a poke around on Twitter revealed that it was four years old, the prompts instantly sparked lots of thoughts and ideas, so I decided to go for it. With a bit of careful forward planning, I managed to keep it going faithfully on both Twitter and Facebook every day throughout the month, despite the fact that I spent about a third of it away from home (on holiday in Scotland, visiting my family or in Swansea doing external examining), and I felt that it captured quite a faithful cross-section of my academic and personal selves. A little belatedly, and before the posts entirely disappear down the drain of social media, I'm now transposing the results here, so that a few different people can see them and I stand some chance of finding them again in future.
( Lots of books under this cut )
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)

Although I could see from the image that it had originally been designed as viral advertising for a publisher, and a poke around on Twitter revealed that it was four years old, the prompts instantly sparked lots of thoughts and ideas, so I decided to go for it. With a bit of careful forward planning, I managed to keep it going faithfully on both Twitter and Facebook every day throughout the month, despite the fact that I spent about a third of it away from home (on holiday in Scotland, visiting my family or in Swansea doing external examining), and I felt that it captured quite a faithful cross-section of my academic and personal selves. A little belatedly, and before the posts entirely disappear down the drain of social media, I'm now transposing the results here, so that a few different people can see them and I stand some chance of finding them again in future.
( Lots of books under this cut )