Jassi75

will run into the spring soon



I'm doing 40 things
 

Jassi75's Life List

  1. 1. lose 10 kg
    99 people
  2. 2. declutter 15 minutes a day
    1 cheer
    71 people
  3. 3. give a compliment to my boyfriend daily
    1 person
  4. 4. give up sugar for a week
    1 entry
    5 people
  5. 5. do some sports while watching tv
    1 person
  6. 6. go to the gym twice a week
    1 cheer
    44 people
  7. 7. Swish and Swipe the Bathroom
    3 people
  8. 8. Do the Flylady daily missions
    4 cheers
    52 people
  9. 9. each evening, make a plan for the next day
    7 people
  10. 10. create a basic weekly plan
    1 person
  11. 11. complete the "Gateway to 8k"-plan
    3 entries . 1 cheer
    2 people
  12. 12. Floss Every Day
    3 cheers
    1,230 people
  13. 13. practice reiki for myself once a week
    1 person
  14. 14. complete my coaching education with 45 min of self-study each work-day
    1 entry . 2 cheers
    1 person
  15. 15. keep in better touch with friends & family
    1 cheer
    270 people
  16. 16. Read 50 books in 2009
    24 entries . 9 cheers
    247 people
  17. 17. Do the A-Z author challenge
    9 entries . 2 cheers
    146 people
  18. 18. watch 50 movies in 2009
    32 entries . 1 cheer
    12 people
  19. 19. Try 14 New Restaurants by the End of 2009
    8 entries . 2 cheers
    2 people
  20. 20. follow the Tom Ang photo course
    1 person
  21. 21. become a better photographer
    1 entry . 1 cheer
    1,971 people
  22. 22. Take 43 pictures of feet/shoes
    14 entries . 7 cheers
    7 people
  23. 23. take an alphabet of photos
    6 entries . 2 cheers
    167 people
  24. 24. get married
    1 cheer
    18,540 people
  25. 25. go to a cultural event each month
    15 entries . 9 cheers
    1 person
  26. 26. Make my own bread
    3 entries . 3 cheers
    55 people
  27. 27. travel more
    4 entries . 2 cheers
    2,906 people
  28. 28. run a 5K in under 30 minutes
    1 entry . 6 cheers
    41 people
  29. 29. run a half marathon
    5 cheers
    1,913 people
  30. 30. Get organized
    15 entries . 6 cheers
    6,058 people
  31. 31. write a book
    6 cheers
    25,999 people
  32. 32. Have a baby
    5 cheers
    5,705 people
  33. 33. learn about buddhism
    2 cheers
    395 people
  34. 34. scan all my old photographs
    1 cheer
    258 people
  35. 35. join utopia.de and live after their rules
    1 person
  36. 36. Build an Emergency Fund
    2 cheers
    21 people
  37. 37. fill my i-pod with music that represents me and what I love
    2 cheers
    4 people
  38. 38. explore the city i live in
    1 entry . 4 cheers
    277 people
  39. 39. live frugally, but richly and deliciously.
    2 cheers
    12 people
  40. 40. give up chocolate
    81 people

How I did it
How to quit drinking for one month
It took me
1 month
It made me
proud and clean


How to kick the economic crisis in the canoogies by doing at least one NEW AND FULFILLING (and quite possibly thrifty and frugal) thing in April, May, and June!
It took me
6 weeks
It made me
I don't know yet


How to start 2009 with a BANG! by doing at least one new and fulfilling thing in January, February, and March!
It took me
14 days
It made me
overwhelmed


See all "How I Did It" stories...

Recent entries
Read 50 books in 2009. (read all 24 entries…)
24 - Vergebung (The girl who kicked the hornet's nest) by Stieg Larsson 2 weeks ago

In the third volume in the explosive trilogy that has sold more than 20 million copies worldwide, Lisbeth Salander confronts political corruption from her hospital bed while a killer lurks next door

My opinion:
I’m so sad, that it’s over. I’m so sad that this great author can’t publish another book. Read this trilogy! It’s simply great stuff!



Read 50 books in 2009. (read all 24 entries…)
23 - Verdammnis (The girl who played with fire) by Stieg Larsson 2 weeks ago

Amazon.com Review
Amazon Best of the Month, July 2009: The girl with the dragon tattoo is back. Stieg Larsson’s seething heroine, Lisbeth Salander, once again finds herself paired with journalist Mikael Blomkvist on the trail of a sinister criminal enterprise. Only this time, Lisbeth must return to the darkness of her own past (more specifically, an event coldly known as “All the Evil”) if she is to stay one step ahead—and alive. The Girl Who Played with Fire is a break-out-in-a-cold-sweat thriller that crackles with stunning twists and dismisses any talk of a sophomore slump. Fans of Larsson’s prior work will find even more to love here, and readers who do not find their hearts racing within the first five pages may want to confirm they still have a pulse. Expect healthy doses of murder, betrayal, and deceit, as well as enough espresso drinks to fuel downtown Seattle for months. —Dave Callanan

From Publishers Weekly
Fans of intelligent page-turners will be more than satisfied by Larsson’s second thriller, even though it falls short of the high standard set by its predecessor, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, which introduced crusading journalist Mikael Blomkvist and punk hacker savant Lisbeth Salander. A few weeks before Dag Svensson, a freelance journalist, plans to publish a story that exposes important people involved in Sweden’s sex trafficking business based on research conducted by his girlfriend, Mia Johansson, a criminologist and gender studies scholar, the couple are shot to death in their Stockholm apartment. Salander, who has a history of violent tendencies, becomes the prime suspect after the police find her fingerprints on the murder weapon. While Blomkvist strives to clear Salander of the crime, some far-fetched twists help ensure her survival. Powerful prose and intriguing lead characters will carry most readers along. (Aug.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

My opinion:
After finishing part 1 I had to buy the sequel at once. It’s not as good as the first book, but if you fell in love with Lisbeth Salander, you have to go til the bitter end with her. Great characters, great studies about the way our economies work – or even fail!



Read 50 books in 2009. (read all 24 entries…)
22 - Verblendung (The girl with the dragon tattoo) by Stieg Larsson 1 month ago

Wikipedia:
“Män som hatar kvinnor” (Swedish for “Men who hate women,” renamed in the English translation as The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo) is an award-winning novel by the late Swedish author and journalist Stieg Larsson, the first in his “Millennium Trilogy”.

At his death in November 2004 he left three unpublished novels that made up the trilogy. It became a posthumous best-seller in Europe.

A middle-aged journalist, Mikael Blomkvist, publishes the magazine Millennium in Stockholm. He is hired one day by Henrik Vanger, the aged former CEO of a group of companies owned by a wealthy dynasty, in order to chronicle the family history. His real mission, however, is to solve a cold case – the disappearance, some forty years previously, of Vanger’s great-niece when she was sixteen. Blomkvist encounters “the old Miss Marple closed-room scenario” with all the wealthy suspects marooned on the family estate on an island; a village we grow familiar with, full of hostile locals peering out from behind their curtains”. The real main character of the story is Lisbeth Salander, an asocial punk who has been victimized by authorities throughout her whole life. By accident she meets Blomkvist and the unlikely couple become another classic detective pair where the hunters become the hunted.

The opening courtroom drama where Blomkvist as publisher loses a libel case brought by corrupt Swedish industrialist Hans-Erik Wennerström, has serious repercussions for his Millennium magazine’s future.

Blomkvist reads crime novelists Sue Grafton, Val McDermid and Elizabeth George and enjoys amateur sleuthing and investigative journalism. Later, he is asked to investigate a family mystery by Henrik Vanger, the elderly scion of a wealthy but dysfunctional family. Henrik has questions about the disappearance of his 16-year-old great-niece Harriet 40 years before. Harriet had given Henrik a present of pressed flowers since she was eight years old. On Henrik’s birthday the year after Harriet’s death, he received a present of pressed flowers, and he continued to receive such flowers, which he believes to be sent by the killer, every birthday thereafter from various parts of the world. Blomkvist is certain that he can discover nothing new, but delving into family secrets produces shocking results. When he teams up with Salander they shed disturbing light on the four-decade-long puzzle.

The historic scenario of a locked-room mystery applies since the island on that fateful day was cut-off due to a road-tanker crash on the only bridge that connects the inhabitants to the mainland. Henrik Vanger believes that Harriet (his brother’s granddaughter) was murdered by one of his family members, as the island was sealed from the mainland when she vanished. In disgrace due to losing his libel defense, Blomkvist takes on the Vanger case when the old man offers him not only to help his financially strapped magazine, but also promises to give him information to prove Wennerström is corrupt. His cover is spending a year writing the Vanger family history.

My opinion:
GO! Get that book! READ IT!
It’s a real page-turner and I was addicted to the story the whole weekend. The first thing I will do tomorrow is buying the second part of Larssons Millenium-Trilogy!



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