Satunnainen kirjavalikoima kirjastosta, jonka omistaa aviddiva

Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle Treasury - tekijä: Betty MacDonald

The Writer's Handbook - tekijä: Sylvia K. Burack

Peter and Wendy - tekijä: J.M. Barrie

Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone (Book 1) - tekijä: J. K. Rowling

Henry the Explorer - tekijä: Mark Taylor

Schon lacht der holde Fruhling - tekijä: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

THE NEW AMERICAN ROGET'S COLLEGE THESAURUS IN DICTIONARY FORM.

Nämä jäsenet omistavat samoja kirjoja kuin aviddiva

RSS-syötteet

Viimeksi lisätyt kirjat

Arvostelut, jotka on tehnyt aviddiva

Arvosteluja kirjoista, jotka omistaa aviddiva, lukuunottamatta hänen omia arvostelujaan

 

Kommentteja muilta librarythingaajilta

(Jätä kommentti.)

I received 'Love' today! I love the reassuring thump a book makes when it falls through my letter slot! Looks fantastic! Can't wait to start reading!!!
Thanks so much for sending it all the way to London!
heather
Excellent! Thanks Liz, I'll let you know when it arrives! I can't wait!
heather
Thanks for your comments about my folklore collection1 I have had an absolute passion for folklore and myth since I first learned to read, so I have been building my library for decades now, but I am really going a bit nuts lately since discovering how easy it is to find out of print titles online. There have been a few titles recently that I have had an incredible time finding, but I've found that with time and ingenuity, you can really find almost anything. If I have any titles you are searching for, and you want to know where I got them, please just let me know. I have discovered some sources that are really off the map.

Cindy
Good point! I've just put a notice on the Lionel Davidson author page, but the children's books were published as David Line. I'd been thinking I might look up some of Davidson's crime books given how much I love Under Plum Lake so I might just have to look into it :-)
Well caught! thanks very much for that. I did, of course, mean southern america. Please do let me know of any other mistakes you find. I'm just glad to know that there are people out there reading my reviews. That you mostly enjoy them is an added bonus!
Will do! Hope you had a great day!
:o)
Clare
Aviddiva thank you for adding me to your interesting libraries. I am happy to return the compliment because we seem to have a shared interest in Children's literature and Virago Modern Classics.
You were the first to request On the Side of the Angels, so it's all yours. Just leave your address on my profile page and I'll get it on its way in a day or two. Enjoy!
You're welcome.

I do hope it came across as a polite FYI, as Tim doesn't want us asking people to change their data, but I knew I would want to know,and your profile looked like you were as interested in the connections as much as the cataloging on LT.

Happy reading.
I saw your posts on the Complete Sentence Parlour Games discussion and just had to say that I love Mo Willems. He's come to Austin, Texas for book signings twice now and is so great to see in person.
Thanks! I think both have been on my unofficial, in-my-head TBR list for a while. I'll have to bump them up to higher priority! ;-)

~fd
Hi. Thanks to your recommendation, I just ordered A Man Lay Dead. I'll let you know how I like it.
We are almost neighbors (I'm in Walnut Creek) and we share Theodore Bonnet's "Mudlark," one of the most charming books I own. (When I wrote my review I grouped it with 2 others. . . think I'll go back and give it a solo as it deserves. . . or do you want to do that? Esta1923
Just wanted to thank you for being LT Secret Santa for my brother. I spoke with him last night and solved his latest mystery: he found an Amazon box at home Friday with the two books and was mystified as to why he should have received them. He even went so far as to think that maybe Amazon was sending bonus gifts to people who ordered from them - ha! ;-) I finally explained what I had done with LT and he was very impressed. He thinks the two choices look interesting and has moved them to the top of his TBR pile.

Thanks again!
Thanks for the tip on Amahl. Happy Holidays to you and yours. - Karen, aka Maggie1944
Nice idea on the 12 Days of Christmas, Diva! I'm enjoying it!

-Danny
Thanks for noting me in the "Interesting Libraries" box! I've looked at your page and see we do share several intersts. It would be interesting, to look at our libraries and see the ways we divetge. As a first step I enjoyed looking at your tqg and author clouds. Good reading to you! -- JLH
Inexplicably, I assumed our Richard wrote "Scarey" stories for young children, and having a nervous disposition I wasn't sure I could cope with them. The excellent "A tiger came to dinner" for example, gave me nightmares for a month, and whenever I read it, to the little ones, I have to take a tranquiliser first. Am I a spineless nincompoop or what?

I was mildly intrigued that the one and only book we SEEM to share, according to LT, is a title I don't possess, let alone list.
Spooky, I reckon.

It was good of you to acknowledge my response, and to qualify your aversion to writers I like. I am touched (but you can tell that already).

One of the things I take to, in "Wuthering Heights", say, is the strangeness of it, the wuthering involved (what a word!) The very fact that Cathy and Heathcliff are NOT easily identifiable with, or comforting exactly. I'm not sure that's what YOU look for in a book (frankly I doubt it) but it isn't what interests me (I prefer a sloppy joe to a close-knitted number, if I can put it like that.)
The moors seem to 'work' for the Brontes (esp Emily), much like the sea works for me; seen in a certain light (or night) the one thing they're NOT is predictable, or re-assuring.
I daresay this is a clumsy and jejune answer to your question; I'll try to give it deeper thought (I am always trying)

R.
Quel malheur!

I love "Wuthering Heights", and "Emma" has to be my favorite Austen.
Now I feel vaguely suicidal. Not your fault of course; I shouldn't be so sensitive or paranoid, but critics are always plotting against me and mine. undermining our judgement.

ps. I have never read (or seen) Richard Scarry's Best Storybook Ever (though it sounds as if I should've). According to the "Books You Share" feature, on the right, it is the one title we have in common. In fact, I have approx thirty from your (interesting) list - not counting all the Harry Potters - and particularly like Susan Cooper, Peter Beagle, and Madeleine L'Engle. So there!

pps. you have a neat name.

R.

Jätä kommentti

Kirjaudu sisään tai rekisteröidy voidaksesi jättää kommentteja.

Apua/FAQ | Lisätietoja | Yksityisyys/Käyttöehdot | Blogi | Ota yhteyttä | LibraryThing.com | WikiThing | Common Knowledge | 29,306,916 kirjaa!
Cached: e1e25c8263e218dba768822785fde18e