Satunnainen kirjavalikoima kirjastosta, jonka omistaa Eurydice
How to Cook Everything: Simple Recipes for Great Food - tekijä: Mark Bittman
The mammoth book of great detective stories - tekijä: Herbert Maurice Van Thal
Confessions of an English Opium Eater - tekijä: T. De Quincey
Mrs. McGinty's dead : a Hercule Poirot novel - tekijä: Agatha Christie
James Beard's menus for entertaining - tekijä: James Beard
Double indemnity - tekijä: James M. Cain
Nostromo (Konemann Classics) - tekijä: Joseph Conrad
Nämä jäsenet omistavat samoja kirjoja kuin Eurydice
Yhteydet jäseniin
ystävät: Allama, aluvalibri, EstherD, Hera, MaggieO, Nobodaddy, oakesspalding
kiinnostavia kirjastoja: almigwin, aluvalibri, avaland, BelleStewartGardner, CharlesLamb, christiguc, criels, Dannelke, desideo, Eumenides, Hera, krishh, Marensr, Nobodaddy, oakesspalding, ostrom, pamelad, SamuelJohnsonLibrary, Sarahsponda, vpfluke, WilliamCongreve
LibraryThing-kirjailijat: Lisa Carey (axel)
RSS-syötteet
Arvostelut, jotka on tehnyt Eurydice
Arvosteluja kirjoista, jotka omistaa Eurydice, lukuunottamatta hänen omia arvostelujaan
Jäsen: Eurydice
Kirjasto1,432 kirjaa — katso kirjasto
Arvostelut45 arvostelua — katso arvostelut
Pilvetavainsanapilvi, tekijäpilvi
Avainsanatmystery (315), non-fiction (214), literature and fiction (207), 20th century (204), novels (191), golden age (130), british (117), 19th century (113), british literature (97), humor (95) — kaikki avainsanat
Ryhmät18th Century British Literature, Adventure Classics, Amazon's Kindle, Anglophiles, Annus mirabilis, Art History, Baker Street and Beyond, BBC Radio 3 Listeners, BBC Radio 4 Listeners, Best of British — näytä kaikki ryhmät
LempikirjailijatJoseph Addison, Alfred Bester, Mark Bittman, Elizabeth Bowen, Willa Cather, Raymond Chandler, G. K. Chesterton, Edmund Crispin, Robertson Davies, M. F. K. Fisher, Graham Greene, Bohumil Hrabal, Michael Innes, Samuel Johnson, Katherine Mansfield, W. Somerset Maugham, Barbara Pym, Muriel Spark, Laurence Sterne, Rex Stout, Josephine tey, William Makepeace Thackeray (Yhteiset suosikit)
SuosikkikirjakaupatHalf Price Books - Westheimer, Murder By The Book, Museum Shop of the Art Institute of Chicago, Myopic Books, Selected Works Used Books and Sheet Music, Seminary Co-op Bookstore
Tietoja minusta I've just made a VERY sketchy start on adding 'favorite' authors. It's too much fun to pass up, and too much to do all at once!
Tietoja kirjastostani It's fragmentary, embarrassingly full of mysteries, and very much a work-in-progress. One of these years, I'll fix the tagging inconsistencies. :) My reviews are almost totally random, and also need augmentation.
Mukana myösAIM, BookMooch, NaNo, Yahoo Messenger
Oikea nimiJulie
SijaintiSugar Land, TX
Sähköpostiosoitej_vollgraff
yahoo.com
Käyttäjätilin tyyppijulkinen, elinaikainen
YhteysuutisetYhteysuutiset
URL:t
http://www.librarything.com/profile/Eurydice (profiili)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/Eurydice (kirjasto)
RekisteröitymispäiväSep 19, 2005

Kommentteja muilta librarythingaajilta
(Jätä kommentti.)
Lähettänyt: nickhoonaloon 5:01 am (EST) Jul 17, 2008
Lähettänyt: RidgewayGirl 4:53 pm (EST) Jul 16, 2008
I'm very glad you've accepted my invitation, it's always nice to have some friends on the internet, especially here on Librarything!
Kind regards, Esther.
Lähettänyt: EstherD 11:41 am (EST) Jul 16, 2008
Lähettänyt: nautilus_library 4:04 pm (EST) Jul 14, 2008
Interwar period. I suppose I define it broadly to encompass works that are experiences of the two wars as well. Poets Sigfried Sasson and Wilfred Owen, Patrick Leigh Fermor walking across Europe before WWII breaks out in [A Time of Gifts], [A Month in the Country], [The Slaves of Solitude] and [In the Heat of the Day] both focus on the lives of women on the homefront during WWII. I am sure I will think of others but those are the most recent ones I've read.
Maren
Lähettänyt: Marensr 11:30 am (EST) Jun 29, 2008
Lähettänyt: avaland 8:21 pm (EST) Jun 28, 2008
Lähettänyt: avaland 8:03 pm (EST) Jun 21, 2008
Lähettänyt: avaland 5:31 pm (EST) Jun 21, 2008
Lähettänyt: bencritchley 8:48 pm (EST) Jun 20, 2008
A couple of books you might like -
Julian Symons - Bloody Murder (Mortal Consequences in the US) - an idiosyncratic trundle through the annals of crime fiction. One of those books that`s good because of it`s defects, not despite them.
Olney - The Authentic World of Sherlock Holmes (Victorian London)
There was another, but my memory`s not what it was. Adam-related sleep deprivation, no doubt !
Best,
Nick
Lähettänyt: nickhoonaloon 11:30 am (EST) Jun 15, 2008
Lähettänyt: Marensr 11:40 am (EST) Jun 6, 2008
Thank you for your information
Well i really don´t understand how i can share my books with you if you are so far away (by mail or maybe you mean e_books or only i share my experiences with the books?????
Yes i am still loose (sorry my English is not quite good enough to understand all the things in a web page), if you can please explain me more i will be very grateful
Sandra
Lähettänyt: DANNIELTANNA 3:49 pm (EST) May 26, 2008
Since we last encountered each other I`ve become a dad for the first time (a son, Adam, currently just over six months old). As you can imagine, we`ve been very busy and many things (including LT) have had to take a back seat.
I`m planning to keep up the LT interest, but confine it to just one or two groups that I contribute to regularly, rather than `spreading myself too thinly`.
How`s the writing going along ?
Nick
Lähettänyt: nickhoonaloon 4:39 am (EST) May 14, 2008
-Brian
Lähettänyt: bhouser 10:41 pm (EST) Apr 15, 2008
--Still Kind of a Newbie
Lähettänyt: oakesspalding 7:47 pm (EST) Apr 6, 2008
Lähettänyt: criels 5:42 pm (EST) Apr 1, 2008
Lähettänyt: oakesspalding 2:28 am (EST) Mar 21, 2008
Lähettänyt: christiguc 3:55 pm (EST) Mar 16, 2008
Lähettänyt: Sarahsponda 11:16 am (EST) Feb 24, 2008
That's a Hillman Books PB edition of the 1936 novel THE RUBBER BAND which I bet you have heard of. Hillman was a kind of sleazy PB house that had the habit of re-titling things (often without asking the author) so as to fool people into re-purchasing things they already had. It's not even a Christie American/British title thing. Just random stuff to make you crazy. Stout is one of those authors where I collect variant editions and you have certainly spotted one. Hope all is well with you.
- Barney
ps. - the new photo is from a Burns night where I performed the Address to a Haggis.
p.p.s. - check out my Sherlock Holmes tag.
Lähettänyt: Dannelke 4:39 pm (EST) Feb 23, 2008
I know your inquiry re: Charles & Mary Lamb is over a year old. But I thought I'd mention that www.daedalusbooks.com has The Devil Kissed Her for $3.98...which is a really great price (assuming, of course, you buy multiple books to offset the shipping costs).
Anyway, thought I'd throw that out there. Take care and be well!
Lori
Lähettänyt: extrajoker 3:38 pm (EST) Feb 6, 2008
Lähettänyt: Oklahoma 9:02 pm (EST) Jan 26, 2008
Tricia
Lähettänyt: hailelib 9:01 pm (EST) Jan 24, 2008
Also I noticed you own The Western Canon. Since the book came out in 1994, I have tried to read many of the books listed by Bloom in the appendix and have stockpiled many more for the future. How has the book influenced your reading or purchases if at all? Just curious. Last year I started trying to find some of the lesser known titles that I have overlooked for several years. On alibris.com I purchased a translation of Natural History by the Catalonian author, Joan Perucho. It is a slim historical vampire novel somewhat reminiscent of Italo Calvino's novels and very excellent overall. I'm hoping you have a review of Chatterton. I just picked it up used a few weeks ago and it looks promising. Check out my collection of Viking Portable Readers. I have nearly every one that was ever printed in the mass market size with the wraparound color photo covers- the design used in the eighties. Happy reading and happier collecting, Floyd de Burbank
Lähettänyt: floyd_dangle 11:24 pm (EST) Jan 16, 2008
Thank you for pointing me toward the vegetarian group. I think I looked once for a group such as this that first day when I found the Kindle group, but must not have looked in the full group listing. I'm happy to know there is one. The topics look interesting. Thanks again.
Lähettänyt: bereader 9:22 pm (EST) Dec 28, 2007
Quick question ... when you have a chance to read your new book, The Way of Tea by Rand Castile (as mentioned in the Tea! forum), can you kindly drop me a quick line to let me know what you think? I've never heard of this text before (it seems to date from 1971 or 1972). As a collector of books about tea ceremony in general, I'm intensely curious about it!
I didn't score any tea-related items from Santa, but no matter... a friend who just returned from a trip to Japan brought back some thick-tea matcha for me. So that's just about as good :-)
Lähettänyt: chamekke 9:08 pm (EST) Dec 26, 2007
Lähettänyt: Storeetllr 1:02 am (EST) Dec 26, 2007
Thank you for the nice welcome message on my profile page. Maybe this is a friendly place after all.
Bonnie
Lähettänyt: bereader 12:57 am (EST) Dec 24, 2007
Lähettänyt: williamc 5:37 pm (EST) Dec 6, 2007
Thanks,
TwaCorbies
Lähettänyt: twacorbies 8:23 pm (EST) Nov 13, 2007
Not rude at all.
Lately I have seen Fellini's I Vitelloni, autobiographical, about the lives of Fellini and his friends in an Italian seaside town after WWII. Very good.
The Cabinet of Doctor Caligari, a German silent. Conrad Veidt is the somnambulist. It's worth seeing just for the sets.
Pam
Lähettänyt: pamelad 5:41 am (EST) Oct 28, 2007
Spirit of the Beehive was excellent.The main character was played by Ana Torrent, about 6 years old at the time, a tiny, serious child with enormous dark eyes. Most of the story is viewed from Ana's perspective. Ana's sister, not much older, was also very good in her part and a little sinister. The film looked beautiful, the isolated villa in the plain, the gentle autumn colours, the little girls trotting off to the stone schoolhouse in the middle of nowhere, clutching their school cases, walking across the empty windswept plain. Very little dialogue, msot of it whispered. Definitely worth seeking out - it's a film that stays with you.
Also saw North West Frontier - Kenneth More and Lauren Bacall careering across northern India to save an Indian princeling. Cliched characters, but brilliant scenery, millions of extras and lots of excitement.
Have you watched von Stroheim in Children of the Paradise yet? Very interested to hear what it's like. Hope your sister and the baby are going well. How did the tests come out?
Pam
Lähettänyt: pamelad 5:23 am (EST) Oct 9, 2007
Lähettänyt: krishh 10:54 am (EST) Oct 7, 2007
Lähettänyt: oakesspalding 2:18 am (EST) Oct 2, 2007
- Barney
Lähettänyt: Dannelke 8:33 am (EST) Sep 27, 2007
I have seen The Wedding March, I think, but not Foolish Wives. Long running, cynical and perverse sounds like von Stroheim. Will look out for it - there is a video shop close by that has an enormous range, including Queen Kelly.
A fascinating man. As you say, as a director he did not know when to stop. I saw him in La Grande Illusion, an excellent film. Just looked him up on IMDB and found that he acted in quite a few films - had not realised that he had such an extensive acting career. Will keep an eye out for those too. Have you seen him in any other films?
Tonight I am seeing The Spirit of the Beehive, a Spanish classic of the seventies.
How did you get on with Buster Keaton?
So good to talk to a fellow fan of classic films, Julie.
Pam
Lähettänyt: pamelad 11:29 pm (EST) Sep 26, 2007
I'm glad you enjoyed that Ellison and that it's held up so well over the years. I was with him and his wife this weekend in Cleveland and he would have loved your remarks - even though I think that story is safely over the posterity transom.
Since you have a separate 19th century tag you REALLY need to get some Twain in you. I think you will really enjoy ROUGHING IT and THE INNOCENTS ABROAD. Also LETTERS FROM THE EARTH. Twain is just short of God-like. Only Swift and Voltaire are in the same league - and Twain wrote more, about more topics.
- Barney
ps. - Wait'll you see my Arthur Conan Doyle & Holmes tags. A project for next month. - b
Lähettänyt: Dannelke 8:11 pm (EST) Sep 26, 2007
Lähettänyt: oakesspalding 12:49 am (EST) Sep 20, 2007
Lähettänyt: laurenisrad 9:24 pm (EST) Sep 19, 2007
No problems on any fronts whatsoever. Thanks for the comment on the library. 4,000 down, 15,000 to go. Tonight I'll knock off some of the pre-Raphaelite art books and some architecture as I move through part of the living room.
As for the Ellison tag being so insanely huge, I have one of the three or four largest collections in the country. I've known him since 1978 and have been working on a biography of him for years. So that tag has come to represent more than books. It also includes magazine articles and the kind of ephemera that only someone hip-deep could possibly care about. Madness. ;-)
His strongest collections are STRANGE WINE, SHATTERDAY and ANGRY CANDY and SLIPPAGE. There is a new TPB edition of SHATTERDAY out this month with a great Arthur Suydham cover. Like Bradbury, his major strength is as a short story writer. His most famous stories are probably "Jeffty Is Five" and "'Repent, Harlequin!' Said the Ticktockman" which is one of the most reprinted stories and anthologized stories of the 20th century.
The Mark Twain tag is also huge but everyone should have a long ton of Twain - in my book. ;-)
- Barney Dannelke
Lähettänyt: Dannelke 12:56 am (EST) Sep 19, 2007
Lähettänyt: desideo 5:15 pm (EST) Sep 18, 2007
Since I have discovered BetterWorld.com, I have gone on a bookbuying binge (literally). I keep discovering authors and books I simply MUST have....oh dear my poor wallet!!
Your library has always fascinated me, by the way. So, we are even!
:-))
Lähettänyt: aluvalibri 12:19 pm (EST) Sep 13, 2007
Keaton popped up in Sunset Boulevard too. I saw SB and part of Queen Kelly at the Cinemateque. Queen Kelly is the film that Norma Desmond was watching in SB. It's silent, made in 1927, directed by Erich von Stroheim and never finished. Gloria Swanson, a well-travelled thirty, is playing the 18 year-old Patricia Kelly, a convent-raised orphan. Kelly is abducted by Prince Wolfram, who is engaged to the mad queen. He seduces Kelly in the queen's palace.
The mad queen makes her first appearance naked, drunkenly wandering the palace wearing only a stragetically placed white cat. It was late, and I had to go to work the next day, so I stayed just long enough to see the mad queen grab a whip from Wolfram's bedroom wall, and, foaming at the mouth, whip Kelly out of the palace. Apparently Swanson pulled the plug because she thought it would never pass the censors. I've located the DVD, so am planning to watch the rest of it. Insanely extravagent sets and costumes - a lot to look at. I recommend it as an eccentric piece of film history.
Lähettänyt: pamelad 3:12 am (EST) Sep 8, 2007
History is a vast early warning system. -Norman Cousins (1915-1990)
The universe is like a safe to which there is a combination. But the combination is locked up in the safe.
-Peter De Vries, novelist (1910-1993)
The crucial disadvantage of aggression, competitiveness, and skepticism as national characteristics is that these qualities cannot be turned off at five o'clock. -Margaret Halsey (1910-1997)
The great thing about getting older is that you don't lose all the other ages you've been. -Madeleine L'Engle (1918- )
For in reason, all government without the consent of the governed is the very definition of slavery. -Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)
Whenever people say 'We mustn't be sentimental,' you can take it they are about to do something cruel. And if they add 'We must be realistic,' they mean they are going to make money out of it. - Brigid Brophy (1929-1995)
"Call on God, but row AWAY from the rocks." - Hunter S. Thompson
Lähettänyt: Dannelke 12:19 pm (EST) Sep 7, 2007
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6OWjZd3Dy...
as an enjoyable clip?
All the best
Kris
Lähettänyt: krishh 9:22 am (EST) Aug 9, 2007
Going to see Buster Keaton next week - Sherlock Jr.
Happy film watching.
Pam
Lähettänyt: pamelad 3:05 am (EST) Jul 12, 2007
How are you going with the Powell and Pressburger? I think my favourites would be I know where I'm Going (have you seen it yet?) and The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp.
Saw Sabotage many years ago, and would like to see it again. Just saw Easy Living and The Big Broadcast of 1937 - not great, but worth the effort to see Jean Arthur, George Burns and Gracie Allen. It's a random selection - depends on what revivals the local cinemas are showing. Hope you get to see the Powell and Pressburgers on the big screen - they deserve it.
Pam
Lähettänyt: pamelad 6:07 am (EST) Jul 1, 2007
Lähettänyt: wormread 1:17 pm (EST) May 25, 2007
Lähettänyt: wormread 12:04 pm (EST) May 21, 2007
Love those old British films with everyone behaving very, very well. Have you watched any of the early Hitchcocks? The original 39 Steps, The Man Who Knew too Much and The Secret Agent. The last two with Peter Lorre as the villain (completely over the top in The Secret Agent). And of course Rebecca and The Lady Vanishes.
Happy film watching.
Pam
Lähettänyt: pamelad 4:27 pm (EST) May 18, 2007
I'm glad you're enjoying Books Compared. I started it on a whim, and it has been far more successful than I expected. There seems to be a magic in considering books in comparison that brings out richer insights than just contemplating one book at a time.
Lähettänyt: margad 8:26 pm (EST) Apr 14, 2007
Lähettänyt: the_terrible_trivium 2:36 am (EST) Apr 12, 2007
Lähettänyt: margad 4:06 pm (EST) Apr 2, 2007
Lähettänyt: oakesspalding 12:47 am (EST) Apr 2, 2007
Lähettänyt: margad 3:47 pm (EST) Mar 31, 2007
Lähettänyt: ggchickapee 3:53 pm (EST) Mar 23, 2007
Lähettänyt: oakesspalding 1:00 am (EST) Mar 1, 2007
Lähettänyt: Doulton 3:47 pm (EST) Feb 27, 2007
Lähettänyt: colllapse 5:48 am (EST) Feb 25, 2007
When I first started cataloguing my collection, I thought about using LT library to keep track of library books I've read, but I just couldn't figure out a consistent way to segregate them from the ones I own. I read so many library books, too, that unless I have a different place to put them, I might get them mixed up with the others.
Lähettänyt: Storeetllr 10:48 pm (EST) Feb 16, 2007
Thanks for the update, and I'm glad you're enjoying your time with Number Ten Ox - let me know what you think when you're finished!
Things are going well for me - all the contracts for 'The Spiraling Worm' have been signed and we're hoping to see the book in stores in just a few short months; it'll be exciting to see my name on the spine of a real, honest-to-God book! Champagne time...
I'm also neck-deep in various other writing projects - I've finished several of the stories I was contracted for, and am working on three novellas for various anthologies, in a variety of interesting themes; still no luck finding an agent for the first novel, but one of these folks is bound to bite eventually.
Hoping things have settled down a bit since the holidays, I remain
Yours,
John
Lähettänyt: john_sunseri 10:50 pm (EST) Feb 2, 2007
Lähettänyt: Storeetllr 10:41 pm (EST) Feb 1, 2007
Lähettänyt: Storeetllr 10:40 pm (EST) Feb 1, 2007
Hope all is well with you.
Mary
Lähettänyt: Storeetllr 12:54 am (EST) Jan 23, 2007
Lähettänyt: MrsLee 4:27 am (EST) Jan 19, 2007
Lähettänyt: literary.elitist 9:01 am (EST) Jan 17, 2007
Lähettänyt: literary.elitist 11:39 am (EST) Jan 16, 2007
Lähettänyt: Seajack 9:17 pm (EST) Jan 6, 2007
Lähettänyt: localpeanut 8:24 pm (EST) Jan 5, 2007
Lähettänyt: uffishread 11:08 am (EST) Jan 5, 2007
Lähettänyt: parelle 2:58 pm (EST) Dec 20, 2006
And just let me know on the novel - I enjoy reading stuff by people I know (even if I only know them online).
Best of the season to you and yours, as well.
Lähettänyt: john_sunseri 8:02 pm (EST) Dec 14, 2006
Let me know if you ever want a reader for it.
Be well.
Lähettänyt: john_sunseri 7:22 pm (EST) Dec 14, 2006
I added a couple of Crispins to my library tonight. Just thought you might like to know. Also a Nero Wolfe, some Christies, a lot of Ngaio Marsh (sorry about that), and a few really really good Swedish mysteries set in Stockholm (one is titled, "The Abominable Man"). I was inspired to add the books after reading the posts in the British crime group, which I've joined but have yet to post to.
Lähettänyt: Storeetllr 11:53 pm (EST) Dec 13, 2006
Lähettänyt: Storeetllr 11:54 pm (EST) Dec 11, 2006
I think every writer should have it on their shelf and that it should be de rigeur for beginning writers; even for established writers, it's a good reference book when rewriting and you can't decide whether something works.
It's clear and concise and contains lots of examples covering all the important things such as dialogue mechanisms, pov, interior monologue, "show and tell," characterization and exposition, etc. that often get ignored by beginners and even, sometimes, by pros. It has exercises at the end of each chapter ~ a few pages of prose that can be edited according to the lesson in the chapter. I find it very helpful and sometimes just read a chapter for "fun."
Lähettänyt: Storeetllr 11:53 pm (EST) Dec 11, 2006
Please feel free to join us in the conversations, because regardless of whether you're in a book club or not, it's great to share thoughts with others who love books - and it's a great way to meet new friends.
If you're ever interested in cross-posting any Houston book club readings, let me know - we have 500 people in Houston on our MyPeopleConnection.com mailing list for that area - but as yet have had only one event a while ago.
Cheers,
Jen
Lähettänyt: mypcjen 4:12 am (EST) Dec 8, 2006
Lähettänyt: Storeetllr 11:59 pm (EST) Dec 6, 2006
Lähettänyt: Storeetllr 11:00 pm (EST) Dec 6, 2006
Lähettänyt: Storeetllr 12:58 am (EST) Dec 5, 2006
Lähettänyt: MrsLee 1:07 am (EST) Dec 4, 2006
I sent for a CueCat but it arrived in November, and we all know what I was doing in November. heh heh Anyway, I started using it today on a few of my trillions (OK, thousands) of books. I'm so impressed by it! Makes cataloguing so much easier than doing it manually. Unfortunately, about 90% of my library consists of either really old books or books without a barcode that can be read, so I'll be manually inputting those. I just wanted to get a few of my books in my library right away.
BTW, I hadn't checked my profile for months so had no idea I had so many messages! Not as many as you have, of course, but more than I expected! I'm so excited! :)
Cheers!
Lähettänyt: Storeetllr 8:25 pm (EST) Dec 2, 2006
Lähettänyt: Opinicus 10:39 am (EST) Nov 30, 2006
Lähettänyt: MrsLee 3:27 pm (EST) Nov 24, 2006
Lähettänyt: Telute 4:34 pm (EST) Nov 22, 2006
Lähettänyt: MrsLee 6:58 am (EST) Nov 18, 2006
Congratulations on your first 40K - the thing's starting to look like a book, isn't it?
Advice noted as to the Lethem, and I'll hunt it down the next time I'm at the bookstore. If it's better than MOTHERLESS BROOKLYN, I'm in for a treat.
Keep plugging away on the novel, and keep updating me; I'm thrilled for you.
John
Lähettänyt: john_sunseri 7:24 pm (EST) Nov 16, 2006
Trust the writing is up to speed, sounds like a great challenge. And, the month is only half over!
Yes, my father's family is Welsh. My full name, however, is Bronwen Fitzugh. The "fitzhugh" is English so there is always a pleasant sense of conflict. It is interesting to follow the path of surnames as they came to this country. I enjoy looking up the various names in my family and watching how they landed and spread over the continent. Fitzhugh is one of the earliest of American surnames, and in fact, my aunts were members of the DAR!
Lähettänyt: haylan 11:48 am (EST) Nov 15, 2006
Lähettänyt: haylan 12:55 pm (EST) Nov 13, 2006
Lähettänyt: haylan 12:48 pm (EST) Nov 13, 2006
Re : The Individual and Society
Unbelieveable- we`re now up to message twentysomething and still we`re not back to the matter in hand ! It`s a good job I`ve got a sense of humour.
Thanks for your support and hope the writing is going well.
Best,
Nick
Lähettänyt: nickhoonaloon 8:51 am (EST) Nov 12, 2006
Lähettänyt: john_sunseri 9:46 pm (EST) Nov 5, 2006
Received my new Anderson novel, and am looking forward to reading it, but I've got the new Stephen King to finish, in addition to Lehane's 'Mystic River' (which I stupidly started knowing I was going to have a King to read before I could finish - but DAMN that Lehane guy can write!).
Keep in touch.
John Sunseri
Lähettänyt: john_sunseri 9:44 pm (EST) Nov 5, 2006
Thanks for the kind thought. We are doing OK - we`re far from rich, but we are happy.
One of the best things is actually the people you come across.
One customer was the daughter in law of a Sexton Blake writer, the late Wilfred McNeilly, who was murdered when her husband was quite young. She was secretly puuting together a collection of her late father-in-law`s books as a surprise gift for her husband. The grandchildren of another Blake writer Rex Hardinge - who was a real-life spy in WW2 - bought some of his titles after their own copies became damaged - they also supplied copy photos and correspondence to the Blakiana site, including some from his wartime activities. We`ve also sold books by historian David Hay-Fleming and theologian C F Garbett to family members.
Anyway, I`ll leave you in peace now, as you have some writing to get on with I notice.
Good luck !
Nick (& Ann-Marie)
Hoonaloon Books and Bits
Lähettänyt: nickhoonaloon 4:11 pm (EST) Nov 5, 2006
I haven`t remotely done Priestley justice here but hopefully that should give you a feel for it.
As regards `Shadows`, do you like Guy Boothby ? One story of his is in that anthology, very good it is too. When I was younger, I collected a series called the Ward Lock Sevenpenny Novels - circa World war One, pocket-sized hardback reprints of popular books of the day - you could pick them up cheaply (still can), they`re very enjoyable. Anyway, my point was, I developed a taste for Boothby through them, particularly the Doctor Nikola stories. you might like them.
Anyway, got to go,
Best,
Nick
Lähettänyt: nickhoonaloon 6:22 am (EST) Nov 4, 2006
As regards English Humour, that`s a funny one. I loved it, as you can probably tell, but it does touch on some quite obscure areas. I would guess that most English readers would find it hard to relate to, so not sure how it would work for you.
Still, you seem to have a better grounding in Eng Lit than most English people, so it might appeal.
I hope you enjoy Shadows after all this. I`ve been trying to remember who the anonymous author of the Sexton Blake story was - I used to know. I was going to look on the Blakiana web site, but it`s temporarily `missing` as Mark Haddon who runs it is low on funds and spare time - I know just how he feels ! I think he may be Mark Haddon the novelist as he referred to himself as a freelance writer in a recent e-mail.
Anyway, I`m rambling on a bit, so I`ll shut up now.
Nick
Lähettänyt: nickhoonaloon 4:03 pm (EST) Oct 31, 2006
I`ve read many collections of old detective stories, I don`t know if you have ? I have one book with the selections made by Dorothy L Sayers and I was surprised she`d picked one or two quite poor stories - it`s all subjective though.
As regards Priestley/English Humour, I think it is quite hard to find even in the UK, but my own copy (Longmans, 1930)wasn`t particularly expensive, so you might find an affordable second hand copy, you never know.
Lähettänyt: nickhoonaloon 12:49 pm (EST) Oct 29, 2006
I always thought Gervase Fen was a rather dim translation of Gideon Fell, but some of the books were great. 'The Moving Toyshop' is deservedly a classic, and 'Love Lies Bleeding' was very good, and Crispin's sense of humor is wonderful, so they're good reads and re-reads - but nowhere near as amusing as Fell or Sir Henry.
Now, if you're interested in DIFFERENT kinds of mysteries, you ought to give Asimov's R. Daneel Olivaw novels a try. 'The Caves of Steel', 'The Naked Sun', 'The Robots of Dawn' are all classic mysteries in a futuristic setting, and with a robot/human detective team.
The 'Dream Park' novels by Niven and Barnes are also mysteries, these ones a little more realistic, and they're incredible sf reads as well.
Sorry - I'm rambling. Just finished a story, and I'm winding down while my wife and I wait for pizza to show up so we can watch zombie movies...
But I've got nothing against Fen.
Lähettänyt: john_sunseri 11:11 pm (EST) Oct 28, 2006
But since you seem to be a fan of cosies, I think I'd recommend that you read Anderson's wonderful pastiches of the genre next - 'The Affair of the Blood Stained Tea Cosy' and 'The Affair of the Mutiliated Mink Coat' are superb, hilarious treatments of the Christie-style mystery, composed with love and skill and laughter. He's got a third one out that I'm ordering from Amazon next week (I just discovered it! It's been out there for MONTHS and I didn't know about it!).
Also, Leo Bruce's 'Case For Three Detectives' is a fun romp through Mayhem Parva.
And I haven't checked your library yet, but if you haven't read EC Bentley's 'Trent's Last Case' or Berkeley's 'The Poisoned Chocolates Case', you're missing some of the amazing cornerstones of the genre that tweak its conventions with amazing skill.
Lathen's not my favorite, by the way, but I'm a completist - once I read one, I tend to read them all.
And you're right about the yellow badge requirements, but I think I'm gonna have to wait until the book is published before I apply for the honor; my short stories weren't qualification enough.
Take care, and enjoy that balmy Texas fall - our autumn's just starting its frigid blast, and it's nice and warm in here on the computer...
Lähettänyt: john_sunseri 10:40 pm (EST) Oct 28, 2006
If you're interested in a contemporary take on your namesake, give 'The Ground Beneath Her Feet' by Salman Rushdie a try. Fascinating treatment of the Orpheus/Eurydice myth, and possibly his most accessible novel.
Lähettänyt: john_sunseri 10:28 pm (EST) Oct 28, 2006
Thank you for your kind wishes - and I think that yellow badge is going to happen sooner rather than later (a collection of stories by me and a fellow named David Conyers just got picked up by a publisher and will appear next July, so my plans for world domination are coming along nicely...)
The 'Gentle Age' of detective fiction? That's a wonderful title for it. I love the classics (and I'm making another trip to the book depository next week to collect another twelve liquor cases full of my books, so you'll see more Erle Stanley Gardner and Margery Allingham and Josephine Tey and Emma Lathen and...well, you get the idea) on my library pretty soon.
Thanks for being my first comment!
John Sunseri
Lähettänyt: john_sunseri 10:14 pm (EST) Oct 28, 2006
Just seen your reply re: Shadows of Sherlock.
If I notice any cheap copies on the market in UK or US, I`ll drop you a note with the sellers details - am in book trade so may have more chance of coming accross one than you.
Glad someone else likes Futrelle, Hornung etc. As you say, some people don`t like the old stuff - my best friend never reads anything but modern novels, usually by trendy Londoners. I always feel there are all these books from different times and places to choose from, and I like to select a variety.
Best,
Nick
Lähettänyt: nickhoonaloon 5:08 am (EST) Oct 28, 2006
Lähettänyt: ellen.w 9:39 am (EST) Oct 3, 2006
Best wishes
John
Lähettänyt: john257hopper 7:46 am (EST) Oct 2, 2006
thank you for joining Virago Modern Classics group!
Paola :-))
Lähettänyt: aluvalibri 8:07 am (EST) Sep 20, 2006
Lähettänyt: Sarahsponda 4:51 pm (EST) Sep 18, 2006
Lähettänyt: Sarahsponda 10:29 pm (EST) Sep 17, 2006
Lähettänyt: afinpassing 7:55 pm (EST) Sep 15, 2006
I really appreciate the hint.
Lähettänyt: HippieLunatic 8:50 pm (EST) Sep 12, 2006
Thanks for the searching tips! :)
Bill
Lähettänyt: williamc 1:36 pm (EST) Sep 12, 2006
Lähettänyt: oakesspalding 5:38 pm (EST) Sep 10, 2006
Thanks for the invite to the Houston group. Will take you up on it.
Lähettänyt: vikk 6:59 pm (EST) Sep 7, 2006
Lähettänyt: margad 3:00 am (EST) Sep 2, 2006
Thanks for the invitation to join your Nero Wolfe group. I have thoroughly enjoyed Stout's work, though it's been some years since I read any. In fact, I put together a complete paperback run of Stout, in anticipation of reading through the entire canon, but haven't got to it yet (but my daughter and son-in-law read through the whole lot a few years ago). Soon, maybe, if other projects and reading don't intervene.
By the way, I once met Rex Stout (at an MWA awards banquet)...interesting experience!
Best wishes,
Al Hubin
Lähettänyt: AllenJHubin 6:21 pm (EST) Aug 31, 2006
--thank you very much for the very nice comment on my birthday bookpile photo! :-)
Lähettänyt: Rachael 1:09 am (EST) Aug 30, 2006
Lähettänyt: bookstothesky 12:55 am (EST) Aug 12, 2006
I read a post from you asking about [[Philip Kerr]]'s [Berlin Noir] trilogy. I can't really recommend it highly enough to any lover of noir detective fiction. The fact that it's set in Germany pre- and post-WWII is the icing on the cake, especially the third novel when Berlin's split into 4 parts, each controlled by a different allied power. There are some pretty interesting descriptions of 1945 Berlin, as well as life therein.
Also check out UK author John Lawton for some more great period mysteries. He writes police procedurals involving a Scotland Yard (SGT./Inspector/maybe Chief Inspector, depending on the period) named Frederick Troy; not noir, but a good series anyway. The first book is [Black Out].
Later,
bookstothesky, but most people call me... bookstothesky.;) [with apologies to Mel Brooks].
Lähettänyt: bookstothesky 12:49 am (EST) Aug 12, 2006
Lähettänyt: teeps29 1:54 am (EST) Aug 9, 2006
Oops, I forgot! Thanks for the kind words regarding my profile.
Lähettänyt: bookstothesky 1:06 am (EST) Aug 9, 2006
Thank you for the invitation to join the Libertarian Science Fiction group; it looks to be thought-provoking, so I think I will accept.
Lähettänyt: bookstothesky 12:04 am (EST) Aug 9, 2006
Lähettänyt: jeremey 11:49 am (EST) Aug 8, 2006
nancy
Lähettänyt: bcquinnsmom 6:55 am (EST) Aug 8, 2006
Lähettänyt: jeremey 3:03 pm (EST) Aug 7, 2006
Lähettänyt: shamela 12:00 am (EST) Aug 7, 2006
Lähettänyt: Sodapop 8:34 am (EST) Aug 6, 2006
Thanks for the invite to the Tea! group - I was lucky enough to attend a tea cupping hosted by Mr. Pratt at my favorite local teahouse, Tea Rex, a few months back. He is quite a delightful man!
Lähettänyt: Cinnamon-Girl 12:15 am (EST) Aug 3, 2006
Lähettänyt: xtofersdad 1:55 pm (EST) Aug 2, 2006
There's an old joke among friends, or is it a joke among old friends? about what the Javacrucians say in the morning after stumbling blearily to the kitchen, making that pot o' coffee and taking their first sip: "Gods, I needed that!"
To which the Teasophists in our circle reponded, that their most common first words uttered after that first, civilized sip: "O, how nice."
Nice to be here.
Lähettänyt: RuTemple 1:42 am (EST) Jul 31, 2006
Lähettänyt: margad 9:39 pm (EST) Jul 26, 2006
Lähettänyt: jenniferb 9:23 pm (EST) Jul 26, 2006
Unless it involves pirates. I'm all about the pirate movies! Arg, matey!
Lähettänyt: Eumenides 8:11 pm (EST) Jul 26, 2006
Lähettänyt: Eumenides 4:51 pm (EST) Jul 26, 2006
-Wylie
Lähettänyt: WylieMaercklein 4:43 pm (EST) Jul 26, 2006
Mike H.
Lähettänyt: mhatchett 1:23 pm (EST) Jul 26, 2006
I don't wear the hats. I finally had to give in and accept that hats don't suit me. Fortunately the suits do. Best place to find them? one word - Ebay.
Lähettänyt: quartzite 12:14 pm (EST) Jul 26, 2006
Lähettänyt: archangelsbooks 8:04 am (EST) Jul 26, 2006
Lähettänyt: Eumenides 4:33 am (EST) Jul 26, 2006
Lähettänyt: Eumenides 4:28 am (EST) Jul 26, 2006
Lähettänyt: lilithcat 10:55 pm (EST) Jul 25, 2006
I'm not incredibly knowledgeable about tea... I just enjoy it, especially the afternoon ritual of it.
Lähettänyt: MindfulOne 7:47 pm (EST) Jul 25, 2006
Lähettänyt: WilliamDorr 2:14 pm (EST) Jul 25, 2006
Lähettänyt: coffeezombie 2:27 pm (EST) Jul 22, 2006
As lovely as your comments!
Ok--the kid just called me creepy.
We're up late, taking off for the Florida Keys tomorrow. I'm getting a bit punchy. But it IS a lovely picture.
14yo-Eww Mom!
Too funny.
Thanks Again
Kelly (opinicus)
Lähettänyt: Opinicus 1:45 am (EST) Jul 7, 2006
Thanks though for caring to comment. I do appreciate it! The 14yo is an actress, she was only outraged long enough for dramatic value, and experiance, than changed her personality again! :-)
Kelly
Lähettänyt: Opinicus 1:40 am (EST) Jul 7, 2006
BTW, I was many years ago a big Nero Wolfe fan. Have read nearly all of them. My favorite by far was "Too Many Cooks."
Lähettänyt: pechmerle 4:07 am (EST) Jun 28, 2006
Like the character in Kafka's Hunger Artist, I list gluttony last because I really haven't found any food to gorge yself on -- if there was a good Indian restaurant in the city I'd need to re-arrange my Deadly Sins...I need to update with an opposing column of Cardinal Virtues: Prudence, Fortitude, Charity, Justice, Temperance, Hope, Faith in descending order...
666 is happenstance, soon to be changed as I log in some more...
Yours
Paul
Lähettänyt: burgess 7:05 am (EST) Mar 7, 2006
Lähettänyt: oakesspalding 12:59 am (EST) Mar 7, 2006
I see we do share a number of tastes: Austen, women's novels, Johnson, DuMaurier, _Little Women_, Burney, 18th century and novels too. I like Graham Greene :)
Chava (Ellen)
Lähettänyt: ellenandjim 2:58 pm (EST) Feb 12, 2006
Lähettänyt: shirasade 3:01 am (EST) Jan 27, 2006
The particular book edition in my catalog, with the cover photo of Gene Tierney, is one I happened to find in a secondhand shop, so naturally I grabbed it. I particularly enjoy vintage mysteries. I noticed, while browsing your catalog, that you do, too.
Lähettänyt: carminowe 9:02 pm (EST) Jan 5, 2006
Mrs. Siegel
Lähettänyt: MrsSiegel 9:23 am (EST) Nov 1, 2005
I'm particularly fond of the "annotated" edition I have, which includes all sorts of nifty notes, images, etc. fleshing out the historical context of the book.
Lähettänyt: kukkurovaca 1:22 am (EST) Oct 22, 2005
I'm glad you liked The Three Coffins!
Oakes
Lähettänyt: oakesspalding 3:15 am (EST) Oct 6, 2005
You're right about Fritz's library. That would be great, too.
-- Keith
Lähettänyt: Wombat 9:58 pm (EST) Oct 4, 2005
Wolfe's Reading List.
Lähettänyt: Linkmeister 1:34 am (EST) Oct 3, 2005
It's great to meet another Nero Wolfe fan. It's funny---the people I meet in the real world have seldom read Rex Stout. Here on LibraryThing, lots of people have.
I hope you enjoy The Red Box. I haven't read it in years, but I remember it being a fun one. My parents have (had?) an ancient beat-up paperback copy that always felt like it was disintegrating as you read it. Just talking about it makes me want to go back and reread it!
It would be great to see Wolfe's library here on LibraryThing!
-- Keith
Lähettänyt: Wombat 9:56 am (EST) Oct 1, 2005
Oakes
Lähettänyt: oakesspalding 3:54 pm (EST) Sep 30, 2005
I haven't actually read The Moving Toyshop, though I've taken it with me on a number of trips, in anticipation. I have a wonderful dusty and yellowing old Penguin paperback edition that savors of mystery. Seeing that it is one of your favorites-out of so many good ones-it will be read within the week.
My recommendation to you, though I don't really consider myself an expert in mysteries-I can never solve them-is The Three Coffins, by John Dickson Carr. People say that it is the best "locked-room" story, and it features Dr. Gideon Fell, a sort of fictionalized Chesterton. Perhaps you have read it but haven't catalogued it yet.
Cheers Julie! I hope all is well.
Oakes
Lähettänyt: oakesspalding 12:29 am (EST) Sep 28, 2005
Lähettänyt: Linkmeister 1:49 pm (EST) Sep 26, 2005
I've read and reread all my Wolfe books many times. They're my 'comfort books'.
Lähettänyt: zandra 11:34 am (EST) Sep 26, 2005
Lähettänyt: Linkmeister 3:59 am (EST) Sep 26, 2005
Lähettänyt: mcorcoran 9:10 pm (EST) Sep 24, 2005
I presume, from your query about Roy Moxham's book, that you are curious about tea beyond its taste. I've just added URL of a very good review, better than what I could write.
Kris
Lähettänyt: krishh 8:32 am (EST) Sep 21, 2005
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