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Asimov's Science Fiction (No. 289) Febraury 2000 - tekijä: Gardner Dozois

Noir - tekijä: K.W. Jeter

Cadair Idris and Bala Lake/Llyn Tegid (Outdoor Leisure Maps) - tekijä: ordnance survey

Interzone 162 - tekijä: David Pringle

Ambient - tekijä: Jack Womack

Interzone 83 - tekijä: David Pringle

Asimov's Science Fiction (No. 305) June 2001 - tekijä: Gardner Dozois

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Kirjasto3,000 kirjaakatso kirjasto

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Pilvetavainsanapilvi, tekijäpilvi

Avainsanatscience fiction (2,063), short stories (658), first edition (456), doctor who (387), magazine (352), needs cover (329), fantasy (243), collection (199), role playing game (141), anthology (125) — kaikki avainsanat

Ryhmät0101010101 - alt. binaries, 1001 Fantasy Roadies, Altered States, Ask LibraryThing, BBC Radio 4 Listeners, Best of British, Bicycle mechanics, Bikes and Bicycles, Cycles, Cyclists and Bikers, Bits for Brits, Board Game Geeksnäytä kaikki ryhmät

LempikirjailijatStephen Baxter, Paul J. McAuley, Terry Pratchett, Ian Watson (Yhteiset suosikit)

SuosikkikirjakaupatFantasy Centre, Forbidden Planet - London, Heffers Bookshop, Stanford's

SuosikkikirjastotPeterborough Central Library

Tietoja minusta I'm a work at home software developer.

Tietoja kirjastostani Mainly SF and software development but a smattering of other stuff. I also have quite a number of journals and magazines which I would like to catalogue here as well (hint, hint).

Mukana myösBoardGameGeek

Jäsenyys LibraryThing Early Reviewers ("varhaiset kirja-arvostelijat")

SijaintiPeterborough, UK

Käyttäjätilin tyyppijulkinen, elinaikainen

YhteysuutisetYhteysuutiset

URL:t http://www.librarything.com/profile/andyl (profiili)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/andyl (kirjasto)

RekisteröitymispäiväSep 11, 2005

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(Jätä kommentti.)

ok..so you're legitimately awake @ 4:AM EST (NCarolina time), geing in GB an all.(unlike myself who is just a crap sleeper) Thanks again, if i bother to make tables...maybe i'll see if i can just go ahead and do that!
bob
Andy,

Thanks! - I've deleted the manual entry Gonthieu. I also only discovered quite late how many racy 18th century French novels are tucked away in the Bodleian. Sadly, my reader's card expired a long time ago.

Most of the manual entries I've done I managed to cross-check through Google - usually the Chateau d'Oron library or the wWriters site come up, occasionally book dealers.

I'm sure there's going to be a lot more checking and tidying-up to do - I had a bit of a trawl through the data last night and fixed a number of inconsistencies in author names and the like. Lacroix is clearly full of mistakes and transcription errors, DP doesn't always get it right, and when we copy-paste from Google Books we add their OCR errors, as in Durand/Lurand...

Mark
Andyl, I'ev been adding some awards to the common knowledge fields. It looks like we were working our way through the same list in opposite directions. Any thought for continuity purposes: British Science Fiction Association Award vs. BSFA Award?

Looks like I've been using the long form, would you prefer I change it?
Ok, cool. Was just wandering what you thought whenever you get around to reading it, as looks somewhat interesting.
Hi Andy,

Are you going to get the Moorcock Interzone issue?

bt
Wow, we have 99% affinity. I see McAuley is a favorite of yours, although I didn't see any ratings or reviews about his works in your catalog. I haven't read him yet, but I own: Whole Wide World, Mind's Eye, and White Devils. Which should I read first?
I admit I'm trying to cram the Roberts' novel inbetween stuff I should be reading for my classes. I'm about 2/3 the way through the book and I have to give Roberts some credit...at just about the point where Cavala's revenge mantra (and his pledge of undying love for this women) was becoming tedious, he throws in a totally bizarre (and riveting)scene inserted as a 'vision'. Certainly prevented me from dozing off:-) I thought the battlefield had an artificial feel, like it was a set and they were the actors and some of the speech is somewhat 19th century, no? Perhaps he is playing his hero in the vein of the 19th romantic heroes? I'm very much enjoying the book. It is really too bad that more readers haven't been exposed to Adam Roberts'novels. Best, Lois PS: Dukedom was home with a cold after the convention and polished off MacLeod's 'Execution Channel' and Elizabeth Hand's 'Generation Loss' - both of which he really enjoyed.
You left us a note a while ago about Robot City 2, I have spotted the problem and will ask John what he wants to do about it. We have an edition called Book 2 which is actually VOLUMES 3 (by Wu) and 4 (by someone else, name escapes me for the minute). Which is a pain ...
Just got my copy of McAuley's Players, did you read it yet? If so, what did you think? Best, Lois
Yay, Kaeti and Company . It's good to see someone else track that down.

- bob
Oops, thanks for that!
Thanks for the help. I think I now have the books comined correctly. Of course someone will not believe me and separate them again, but I can only try.
Arrgh - mental crossed wires! Thanks for pointing this out. I've fixed it.
Hi Andyl - dunno if this interests you but I have an Excel file listing all the short story entries in my many SF magazines, anthologies and collections. It's 22,300 lines. For instance under Asimov I have Marooned Off Vesta thrice - twice in two paperbacks and once in the 1939 Amazing. It also tells you things like this was his first publication. Seeing as we have many of the same magazines, I thought you might like a copy of it.
Yes, I'm aware of that. The tag's strictly for my own convenience--you'll notice I've got Master Jonson tagged as Elizabethan too, when the bulk of his career took place after 1603.

"tudor or stuart england," you see, takes too bloody long to type, and the series of novels I have those books for research on starts in about 1583.

cheers!
Thanks for the Grimwood suggestion Andy. Will definately have a look at that. Like your SF collection, will have a look for more ideas as well. Have you ever read any Hugh Cook stuff? I would definately advise you looking at his books. Its a bit of a cross between Pratchett and Gemmell and some of the best SF/Fantasy I have ever read. On a slightly different note I liked the way you have catalogued your journals. I think we do need a SerialsThing type site. Don't know whether you have tried http://www.citeulike.org/, its not bad for recording articles and let you link to the online version if you have access.
Oh, hi. On the subject of duplicates -

Yes, part of it is from 'acquiring books cheaply and not being ruthless in weeding'.

More of it, though, is having variant editions -- hard- and soft- covers, British and American, ex-library copies that I keep on hand as a loaner after I find a better copy - there's really little resale value in most ex-library book,s after all) - that sort of thing; and a bit of it is overlap from annexing my wife's old sf into 'my' collection.

Some of it - say, Philip K. Dick - is from my being sentimental about ratty old paperbacks that I read as a kid, books that I've since replaced with less fragile reprints. (Sometimes the BETTER copy gets treated as the Reading Copy...).
Nah, I think what matters is the original language of the text(s) not the language this collection of them was published in.
Thanks for cleaning up the Philip K. Dick listings.
I suppose I should use TOE in the usual physics sense as I have books on that too. So many of my evolution books however refer to "theory of evolution" though, so I'm not sure. I think some re-tagging is in order. Thanks for the comment.
Quite a nice sf collection. Don't know if you've read it, but you might like Octavia Butler's "Kindred" too.
Whoops! It's always when criticizing things that I make stupid mistakes. Teach me not to look it up. Thanks for the heads-up!
I disrecommend Vurt for a couple of reasons; the sexual nastiness is secondary, but the primary one is that the central conceit of the book just didn't work for me. The idea of being able to exchange physical objects between reality and virtuality seemed ludicrous, and the only way I could reconcile it was to assume that _everything_ in the book was all virtual, something which is not even hinted at by the text. If I have to go to such lengths to make the basic premise of the book work, I'm not going to recommend it to anyone.

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