Livros aleatórios da biblioteca de Hohenloh

Women's Work: The First 20,000 Years : Women, Cloth, and Society in Early Times por Elizabeth Wayland Barber

How to win friends and influence people por Dale Carnegie

Irish street ballads por Colm Ó Lochlainn

The Snapper por Roddy Doyle

Salzburg : Stadt und Land por Jacqueline Hofmann

The Saturday evening post Norman Rockwell book

Nuachúrsa Gaeilge na mBráithre Críostaí por Christian Brothers of Ireland.

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amigos: devenish

bibliotecas interessantes: bercilak, bibliophiles, citizenkelly, devenish, izzybee, poliphilus, slowtravelitaly, STLLibrary, tartalom, tomfitz

Autores LibraryThing: John Reed (easyreeder)

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HelperCommon Knowledge

 

Membro: Hohenloh

ColecçõesA sua biblioteca (1,315)

Resenhas19 resenhas

EtiquetasGerman language (174), Irish history (114), 20th Century English fiction (96), Ireland (90), 20th Century Irish fiction (89), history (74), Travel (66), Irish politics (65), Dublin (64), World War 2 (59) — ver todas as etiquetas

Nuvensnuvem de etiquetas, nuvem de autores

GruposBaker Street and Beyond, German Library Thingers, Irish Librarythingers, Librarians who LibraryThing

Autores favoritosBoris Akunin, Wilkie Collins, Norman Douglas, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, J.G. Farrell, Freya Stark, Robert Gibbings, George Gissing, Curt Goetz, Graham Greene, W. Somerset Maugham, Flann O'Brien, Dorothy Parker, Edgar Allan Poe, Joseph Roth, Robert Louis Stevenson, Hunter S. Thompson, Oscar Wilde, Stefan Zweig (Favoritos partilhados)

Sobre mimI live in Dublin, Ireland. Besides books I'm interested in computers, music, travel, languages, history and lots of other things that I really don't have time for.

Sobre a minha bibliotecaI like Late Victorian/Edwardian literature and crime novels, history in particular first half of the 20th Century, travel/exploration in particular South-Central Asia, and true crime in particular Irish. I have bought very few new books over the past few years as there are so many online books available that cater to my tastes!

Update 22 January 2008: I've completed my German and Italian books (300+) and am now commencing on Travel, Victorian/Edwardian literature and Irish history.

Também emMySpace

Nome realDon

LocalizaçãoDublin

Endereço de correio electrónicodconlaniol.ie

Tipo de contapública, paga

Novidades das LigaçõesNovidades das Ligações

URL http://www.librarything.com/profile/Hohenloh (perfil)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/Hohenloh (biblioteca)

Conhecimento ComumSéries (105), Prémios (174), Personagens (1777), Lugares (409)

Membro desdeDec 13, 2007

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"and true crime in particular Irish." I wonder what publications you have or use. This is an interesting category and I can't think well documented.
"and true crime in particular Irish." I wonder what publications you have or use. This is an interesting category and I can't think well documented.
"and true crime in particular Irish." I wonder what publications you have or use. This is an interesting category and I can't think well documented.
heigh-ho Hohenloh
browsed thru your travel section did not nose out Tristan Jones, do you have him. what did you make of norman douglases Looking Back? clever idea, but hardly a page turner, i thought.
pgt
That must have been amazing, reading the book and realising you knew her. John Dickie's book on the Mafia (Cosa Nostra, 2004) is also very good if you're interested.
Hi there Hohenloh,

Thanks for your comments on my Wicklow Collection. I'm sure you know that Wicklow is full of Byrnes. It was a good job that your gggggrandfather escaped...otherwise you wouldn't be around.

Regarding batch input of ISBNs via Notepad, I have found this to be extremely useful. Ideally you should choose books that can be given the same tags - this will save a lot of time. I input 1 ISBN per line and use upper case X where required. All ISBNs should have 10 or 13 digits. If there is a digit short, try putting a 0 at the front. When the file is ready, log on to LT, add books link, import books link, upload file link, select the 3 libraries to be searched, add the tags that will be added to all titles found, then click on add to queue. The speed of search will depend on how busy the system is, but it is possible to check progress. LT will also tell you any ISBNs that cannot be matched. I hope I haven't missed out on any of the steps, but it is fairly straightforward anyway. Good Luck with it.
vallis-salutis
This is the reply I received on Zosimus:

>>Dear Schmerguls,
Zosimus was one of the last pagan historians and author of Historia Nova written ca. 450 - 503AD
I just didn't realize quite how many german books I have. And yeah, I went a little crazy with the food photos.
You ask why so many moves;I'll give you a very short version. I grew up primarily just outside of Chicago. We lived in five or six different towns, but many moves were within only one or two towns. My father, through his jobs (bartender and musician) had a few unsavory connections. Between bill collectors, mob contacts and home violence, he sometimes moved us rather suddenly. Seldom were my brother and I in a school for a full year.
Once I was 18 I moved 500 miles from home and have made my own moves through Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa and Minnesota...I think I'm fairly settled now...maybe. At least my library makes me think twice about moving!
I understand the purchasing a book because the title was once in your dad's library. I do that sometimes with a piece of china or glassware that I remember of my mom's. She 'lost' her belongings over and over because of these moves. Some items were from her mother. At the same time I try to 'lighten my load' so my adult sons don't inherit piles of 'stuff'! Sorry this is so long.
Hello Don,
I've just checked on the 'friends' connection and it seems to be working Ok from my end.I appear on your 'member connections' as you do on mine. I have also gone to 'connections' at the top of the profile page and checked your books and this also seems to be working alright. Let me know if ypu are still having problems and we will rethink and perhaps start again. I am sure that you will now find it working.
By the way, is that a giotár I see in your left hand? What sort of stuff do you play?
Hallo Don, welcome to Library Thing and thanks for getting in touch - I'm actually just back from a trip to Ireland to see the parents (Birr). I shall return the "interesting library" favour and plan to browse some of that deutsche Literatur! (No good on the Italian side, sorry!).
All the best, Carolyn
Greetings from chilly Minnesota USA,
Your mention of 'Mother Russia' came at a good time; I just finished 'Emma Brown' and have not yet read 'Mother Russia' - perfect time to read it. I found my copy at my book group's annual sale a few years ago.

If your father lost books in the move to Ireland it must have been a difficult move. People (notice I didn't say 'friends') have threatened to fill a dumpster with my boxes during one move!
Hello Don,
Nice to hear from you.I see that you have added me to 'Interesting Libraries' and have also requested 'Friends status',and this latter I'm pleased to agree to. Will add you to my list as soon as I've finished typing this message.
I see that among your favorite authors are some that I have on my list also (ie Wilkie Collins,Conan Doyle and Stevenson) I also see that you are interested in Victorian/Edwardian literature and Crime fiction,which certainly ties in with my interests.
Dublin I like a lot as my wife and I visited there a few years ago and of course found lots of literary connections there.
Anyway all the best from the English Midlands.
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