Satunnainen kirjavalikoima kirjastosta, jonka omistaa omf

Krieg der Sterne II. Das Imperium schlägt zurück. Filmbuch. - tekijä: Donald F. Glut

Storm Bd.12 Die Monster von Aromater - tekijä: Martin Lodewijk

Gefährten des Todes. Roman. - tekijä: Barbara Hambly

Animania 2006.06 DVD-Edition

Ärztlicher Ratgeber für Auslandsaufenthalte - tekijä: Eckhard Müller-Sacks

Aquablue II Bd.1 Der weiße Stern - tekijä: Thierry Cailleteau

Grendel. Roman. ( Phantastische Bibliothek, 227). - tekijä: John Gardner

Nämä jäsenet omistavat samoja kirjoja kuin omf

RSS-syötteet

Viimeksi lisätyt kirjat

Arvostelut, jotka on tehnyt omf

Arvosteluja kirjoista, jotka omistaa omf, lukuunottamatta hänen omia arvostelujaan

 

Jäsen: omf

Kirjasto4,250 kirjaakatso kirjasto

Arvostelut82 arvosteluakatso arvostelut

Pilvetavainsanapilvi, tekijäpilvi

Avainsanatcomics (1,674), sf (1,547), cover scannen (1,143), fantasy (877), manga (852), crime (382), horror (288), romantic comedy (218), fairy tales (189), d&d (185) — kaikki avainsanat

RyhmätComics, FantasyFans, Gamers, German Library Thingers, Manga!, Science Fiction Fans

LempikirjailijatDouglas Adams, Kiyohiko Azuma, Enki Bilal, François Bourgeon, Marion Zimmer Bradley, C. J. Cherryh, Elaine Cunningham, Hiroki Endo, Tohru Fujisawa, Kosuke Fujishima, Juan Giménez, Ed Greenwood, Drew Hayes, Robert A. Heinlein, Masakazu Katsura, Yukito Kishiro, Don Lawrence, Roger Leloup, David Mack, Anne McCaffrey, Jean-Claude Mezieres, Moebius, Katsuhiro Otomo, Terry Pratchett, Paul Preuss, Luis Royo, Chris Scheuer, Francois Schuiten, Masamune Shirow, Kenji Tsuruta, Naoki Urasawa, Paul O. Williams (Yhteiset suosikit)

SuosikkikirjakaupatComic Dealer, Comicfachhandel Zeitgeist, OCS Bookshop - Filiale Frankfurt, T3 Terminal Entertainment, Thalia.de - Filiale Wetzlar

SuosikkikirjastotPhantastische Bibliothek

Tietoja kirjastostani Still in construction!

System of Tags
It´s divided in four groups of tags.
1. Publishing Form Tags
- Like books, comics, manga and more, books themselves are not taged as such but all others.
- For example comics are taged as "comics" and manga are taged as "manga".
2. Theme Tags
- Like science fiction, fantasy or horror.
- For example science fiction is taged as "sf".
- One book can have more than one of these tags like "sf, art".
3. Series Tags
- Using the name of the series in the original language as tags (if it´s known to me).
- For example the german science fiction series Terranauten is taged as "terranauten", the french comics series Im Schatten des Neumonds is taged as "les eaux de mortelune" or the japanese manga series Kyoko Karasuma is taged as "karasuma kyoko no jikenbo".
4. Expanding Tags
- Like "cover scannen".

Mukana myösI Heart Movies, ICQ

Oikea nimiOliver

SijaintiLeun

Sähköpostiosoitebeeblebroximail.de

Käyttäjätilin tyyppijulkinen, elinaikainen

YhteysuutisetYhteysuutiset

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

RekisteröitymispäiväMar 20, 2007

Kommentteja muilta librarythingaajilta

(Jätä kommentti.)

"I spent a whole day in Paris searching for the Le Corbusier-Museum and when I found it it was closed."

Oh, nooo. ;)

When I was in London, I decided to go to this decadent costume/ clothes store that I had heard rave reviews about. I mapped out how to get there, took the tube to the far edge of the city where I hadn't been before, navigated through a long tunnel of scaffolding at the under-construction train station, and took a long flight of stairs down into a basement where it was located. (No joke.) And when I got there, I found out they only sold men's clothes. ;)

"the first thing I did in Paris after checking in with the hotel was to take the metro out to La Defence."

In a way, my mind doesn't grasp that Paris even has La Defence - it's so modern and shiny, LOL. And when I think of Paris, I think of the old Paris skyline like it was in the beginning of the movie 'Moulin Rouge.' Those will always be my favorite - the older buildings.

What does the area of Germany that you live in look like? City or suburb? Modern or not? I just love the picturesque German villages I've seen pictures of. Oh, yeah, and this place in Bavaria ;) http://mutrus.deviantart.com/art/Neuschw...
"Yes. I was there too."

LOL, you weren't there in the fall of 2002, were you? Otherwise I'd suggest that maybe we walked past each other. ;) That would be funny. Trips in Europe seem to make all sorts of odd coincidences - when I was in Paris, for example, I met a couple who were from Newport Beach, a town just down the road from where I live. And, on a train, I chatted with a man who was from Muncie, Indiana, the town in which my mother was born. :)

I didn't get to the Madame Tussaud's in London, but I've been to the one in Las Vegas.

I really enjoyed my trip through France, especially the architecture. A few other highlights: Walking the ramparts in Carcasonne, make-believing I was a knight or something; eating steak tar-tar (which, I believe, is illegal to serve in the US because of strict health departments. Or at least very, very uncommon); and driving through viewing the Bois de Boulogne at night. (Have you heard what goes on there? That was SO amusing!) ;)
"it is a choise you know, die long and painful or die quickly."

In England I went to this tourist attraction called 'The London Dungeon.' http://www.thedungeons.com/en/london-dun... They had displays of wax figures of people undergoing all these different torture techniques from times past. It's really enough to turn one's stomach. (Okay, that's an understatement....) They were so 'creative' with their methods of torture, it's easy to get the impression that the people doling it out must have enjoyed it to some degree. :( Eesh, they had all these things like benches with big spikes where the seat should be, and things that looked like oversized meat tenderizers. And this was just a museum and it was scary. I'm so glad I didn't live in that those time periods....

Have you visited other countries besides England? I really enjoyed my tour through France. In the south there were some little villages that are some of the most idyllic-looking places I've seen.

This morning I bought a bunch more yardsale book for 25 cents each to trade on Bookmooch. LOL.

- Lisa
'Braveheart' was sort-of required viewing for me - I'm part Scottish. (On my Dad's side. I have a traditionally Scottish last name - Cunningham.) Geez, remember that part where they disemboweled him with the thing that looked like a shepherd's pole? And they told him, "If you don't say that what you did was wrong, we'll use this thing on you. Say what you did was wrong, and *all* we'll do is cut off your head." Yikes...

In 2002 I went on a trip to England and France. In England, I stayed at a hotel in Piccadilly Circus, saw London, and went on some day trips to Stonehenge, Salisbury, Stratford-on-Avon, and Oxford. I love the abundance of theatre in London's West End. (My favorite was 'Les Miserables.') And it's fantastic just how easy it was to get around, what with the tube and all.....public transportation here in CA via trains is practically nonexistent.

I hope to go back someday, and to see other areas of Europe, as well. :)
I often think how lucky I am not to have been born back then instead. :)

-"farmers where no free man they where the property of lords (aka landowners)."

The most recent example I've seen of this was in the movie, 'King Arthur.' (The one with Keira Knightley.) An elderly farmer was being flogged in the fortress courtyard. His crime? Trying to keep some extra of the grain he grew, for his family.

A similar thing to this was the droit de seigneur or droit de cuissage, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Droit_de_se... (although it's debated whether it really happened.) where the landowners had the right to sleep with any of the women on their land. I tried once to write a story involving this as part of the plot. (emphasis on 'tried to.' I never finish my stories...) ;)

- "except ... if we were lords ;)"

LOL, I think I would make a rather benevolent dictator. Of course I would still arrange debauches, mind you, I'd just keep it limited to *consenting* participants. ;)

Mata ne,

- Lisa
The paintings are very cool, now that I see them up close. :)

Kloster. Ah, like 'cloister' in English, I take it. That's actually *very* funny. She must relish the irony in that. ;)

Yes, I've read Eco's 'The Name of the Rose.' It was kind of hefty and hard to plough through, but nevertheless, enjoyable. I liked the ambiance of it, being set so far back in time as it was. (1327.)

Mata ne,

- Lisa
The painting is very cool, but very crowded. :)

I hadn't heard of "Heart of Darkness" before. It sounds intriguing. Right now I'm reading "Hannibal Rising," by Thomas Harris, and "Foucault's Pendulum," by Umberto Eco. The latter of these is starting to make me feel dumb, it's so incoherent. When I read a book, I like to make a list of the words I haven't seen before and look them up - this one's provided a lot of them so far. ;)

Have you been to this site? http://www.doriskloster.com I was browsing it the other day. I just love her photographs - some of them are in that "Fetish" book I have by Tony Mitchell I told you about once.
Heh, and I already have gotten a few points to use for trade. Problem is, I can't decide what to order with them. ;) Nothing on my wishlist that I really coveted is available, so I just wait for people to add more books to the site. I'm thinking about requesting Doug Wright's play, 'I Am My Own Wife.' Have you read any of his stuff? His 'Quills' is my all-time favorite play and movie (for which he also adapted the screenplay himself.)
Yeah, I'm the same way - I hardly ever give away a book once I've read it. I was sneaky, though, with the Bookmooch: I bought up a handful of really inexpensive books that I wasn't particularly interested in, at a yardsale, and used them as my inventory. I have high hopes of trading them for something really rare and expensive - or at least saving a couple of dollars off what something costs on Amazon Marketplace. ;)

Mata ne,
- Lisa
Regarding the cathedrals, they're tremendously beautiful, but I can't visit them - I melt if I set foot on hallowed ground. ;) Nah, they're very cool. We certainly don't have any of them around here. I was briefly in England once, and I went in an Anglican Cathedral in Salisbury. (I don't know if that counts as Gothic. It looked similar.) The thing that stuck with me after I left, was that they said there were people buried inside the church, *under the floor.* That struck me as vaguely creepy, I was walking on people without even knowing it. ;)

Have you been to this site yet? www.bookmooch.com It's pretty fun. It's a book-swapping site. I just put in my inventory the other day, and already I got requests for 2 books. :)
Regarding the link: Very, very cool! Really edgy artwork. I like it a lot. You have a great eye, as always...

I'm fascinated by the Victorian era. It's sort of a paradox - so much prim-and-proper-ness on the one hand, and all the famous debauchery and fin-de-siecle decadence on the other. (Of which, of course, I prefer the latter...) :) The architecture from that time period is some of the most beautiful I've ever laid my eyes on. (My favorite, however, is still Gothic castles, but I digress. I could never be an architect, because I would annoy everyone by putting so many towers, and turrets, and parapets on everything I built. ;) Not to mention the gargoyles....)

You wrote: "As for the nudes, I definitely prefer todays work "

I was going to post some pictures from my Victorian collection here and say, 'C'mon, what's wrong with that?!' But I can't post pics on the comments board, so I guess you luck out in not having to see them. ;)

-Lisa
Hello, Oliver,

Nice to hear from you. By now, I would have thought you'd have had well enough of me. ;) LOL, anyway, what's new with you?

Thanks for the link. Yuri Bonder's work is fantastic. I especially like black-and-white pictures, and his undoubtedly have something very captivating about them. Shame to lose such a talent. I hadn't been to photo.net before. It looks like a great site. I have a feeling I'm going to be spending some time there... :)

Lately I've been looking at a lot of books of risque pictures from the Victorian era, like the book, "Exposed: The Victorian Nude," by The Tate Britain Gallery. The pictures in them are quite beautiful. They're all black-and-white, obviously, since that's what they had back then, and the women usually have very elaborate hairstyles. The models tend to look a bit different than a lot of the women in modern nude photography. I like it, they even have little pot bellies like me, LOL.

Mata ne,

- Lisa
Hallo Oliver,

ich hab mir deine CDs angeschaut - meiner Meinung nach sind alle Infos die man braucht dabei. Würde ich nichts ändern.

Squirl ist für mich, glaube ich, auch erledigt.

Rate Your Music kenne ich - von dort hole ich mir meine CD-Infos, die ich in LT eintrage :-).
In RYM die CD aufrufen und eintragen - Cover kopieren - Tracks kopieren und in LT einfügen. Ist zwar wieder etwas umständlich, aber ich spare mir das Cover scannen und die einzelnen Tracks händisch einzugeben.

Mit meinen DVDs bleibe ich bei OFDb (http://www.meine-filmsammlung.de/?62008) - da hab ich alle Infos die ich will.

Grüße
Günter
Hallo Oliver,

ich habe mir gerade das Profil von TwilightBlue angeschaut.
Mann-o-Mann, das muss ja eine Mörderarbeit gewesen sein sogar die einzelnen Tracks einzugeben. Aber die Idee ist auf jeden Fall gut.

Bei Squirl wäre der Vorteil, dass dir das Cover automatisch hinterlegt wird.
Aber leider komme ich mit 200 Einträgen nicht aus - laut Squirl hätte ich sogar einen "Unlimited Plan" - trotzdem geht nicht mehr. Ich werde nochmal mit jemanden von Squirl Kontakt aufnehmen und dann schau ich weiter.

Liebe Grüße
Günter
Die Seite kenn ich schon. Was meinst Du, wie ich auf den Comic *gekommen* bin? ;-) Ich komme eigentlich nur dank Internet auf Leseanregungen usw., denn ich kenne im realen Leben wenig Leute, die auch nur annähernd meinen Geschmack teilen.

Nett finde ich bei Artesia insbesondere, daß Mark Smylie auf der Webseite Links zu ca. zwei Dutzend Kritiken bereitstellt. Für Finder, meinen Lieblingscomic, gibt es solch einen praktischen 'Service' nicht, da mußte ich mich selbst hinsetzen und ein paar Stunden mit Google verbringen...
Artesia - bisher nur den ersten Band - habe ich gerade erst angeschafft - im Rahmen der Recherche zu meiner Magisterarbeit. Soll keiner sagen, daß wissenschaftliche Arbeit keinen Spaß macht... :-) Bisher gefällt mir die Serie sehr gut; das Worldbuilding ist großartig und Artesia ist eine ziemlich faszinierende Hauptfigur, die nicht so ganz ins 'butt-kicking chick'-Klischee paßt (den albernen Schamhaar/Kettenhemd-Vorhang und die nackten Beine im Gefecht im allerersten Kapitel verzeihe ich Mark Smylie mal; später hat Artesia ja sinnvollere Sachen an. *g*) Und mit dem ganzen Sex/Macht/Politik/Geschlecht-Zeugs paßt Artesia auch wunderbar ins Konzept meiner Arbeit.
Ja, das war echt ein super Zufall. *g*

Ich hab's aufgrund der Hals-über-Kopf-Natur des Wetzlar-Ausflugs letzte Woche nicht geschafft, mich vorher bei Dir zu melden, aber ich komme bestimmt mal wieder da hin - muß ja die Bibliothek mal genauer in Augenschein nehmen. Und *hüstel* wie's aussieht, soll ich beim nächsten Treffen dort über meine Magisterarbeit reden. *fürcht*
Ich werde mich definitiv mal melden, bevor ich meinen großen Wetzlar-Trip mache. :)
Ja, die Bibliothek kenn ich schon und werde da auch sicher demnächst mal hinfahren. Aber eine Bibliothek kann einem auch nicht wirklich Fragen beantworten bzw. ein Gespräch mit einem führen. Ich brauche letztlich einen Gesprächspartner, der mehr Ahnung von 'Phantastik-Forschung' hat als ich... weiß bloß nicht, wo ich so einen herkriegen soll. (Ich wünschte, meine Professorin würde sich mit meinem Thema auch nur annähernd auskennen, dann könnte ich mich ja mit ihr darüber unterhalten...)
Hallo Oliver,

heh, das Kommunikationssystem hier ist etwas gewöhnungsbedürftig. So ein bißchen wie Myspace für Literaturliebhaber... (mit Myspace und der dortigen Kommentarliste ohne erkennbare Gesprächskohärenz komme ich auch nicht so recht klar ;-) - allerdings fehlt mir da auch der Anreiz, mich damit ernsthaft auseinanderzusetzen...)

Sag mal, wo wir anscheinend so einen sehr ähnlichen Geschmack haben - vielleicht hast Du ja auch zufällig Ahnung von der Theorie hinter dem Ganzen? Also, von theoretischer Beschäftigung mit SF und Fantasy? Ich sitze gerade an der Vorbereitung meiner Magisterarbeit, die sich wahrscheinlich um meinen absoluten Lieblingscomic, "Finder" von Carla Speed McNeil, drehen wird, und weiß nicht so recht, wo ich anfangen soll. Also, natürlich recherchiere ich bereits wie wild, aber im Moment einfach wahllos in alle Richtungen, und das Feld ist so riesig, daß die Recherche bisher der Suche nach der Nadel im Heuhaufen gleicht. Ich habe den Verdacht, daß das auch wesentlich effektiver ginge, aber dazu wäre vermutlich erstmal etwas Gedankenaustausch mit jemandem nötig, der etwas tiefer in dieser Materie drinststeckt. Bist Du zufällig so jemand? ;-) Oder kennst Du so jemanden, vielleicht?
Hallo Oliver,

ich habe gerade festgestellt, dass Squirl wieder da ist - leider aber wieder nur mit 200 Einträgen.

Das mit mehr als 200 Einträgen habe ich auch irgendwo gelesen. Ich würde ja schon dafür bezahlen - so wie bei LT auch.

Aber natürlich wäre es besser, alle Sachen zentriert bei LT unterzubringen - keine Frage !

Grüße
Günter

Jätä kommentti

Kirjaudu sisään tai rekisteröidy voidaksesi jättää kommentteja.

Apua/FAQ | Lisätietoja | Yksityisyys/Käyttöehdot | Blogi | Ota yhteyttä | LibraryThing.com | WikiThing | Common Knowledge | 29,165,993 kirjaa!
Cached: 7dccd60ee442bc44df32f0be4001b551