Livros aleatórios da biblioteca de Jesse_wiedinmyer
Over Here: How the G.I. Bill Transformed the American Dream por Edward Humes
Breakfast of Champions por Kurt Vonnegut
Siddhartha por Hermann Hesse
Gun, with Occasional Music (Harvest Book) por Jonathan Lethem
The Dim Light Bar Guide por Jack Yaghubian
BUtterfield 8 (Modern Library Classics) por John O'Hara
Deep in a Dream: The Long Night of Chet Baker por James Gavin
Membros com livros de Jesse_wiedinmyer
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piccoline (122/492), abbot (184/1236), gabebaker (161/873), cbulman (99/378), ygNYC (124/715), bishware (129/861), angstrat (193/2781), NativeRoses (114/846), eswnr (127/1237), judithz (189/1920), KromesTomes (195/3186), mjlivi (109/650), abductee (187/2880), RSHabroptilus (192/1685), kbuxton (244/3785), donaldmorgan (87/655), DavidLouisEdelman (165/1281), robthew (166/1736), Nicholae (153/1571), j_miah23 (154/1253), jjk (157/2114), greenlantern (79/482), vernonlee (190/3186), kolmstead (98/407), mattgetz (150/1125), stavthewonderchicken (105/323), MyaKevin (64/301), squeakjones (167/1405), hayduke (139/2587), nog (108/663), twomoredays (174/1706), davidabrams (253/5784), flanerie (136/2020), coreymesler (199/3203), Briphelia (133/802), piano3646 (239/3518), georgehawkey (139/1098), freudslip (150/1610), Grammath (159/1682), clsnyder (155/1883), wanack (97/880), christ_on_toast (159/1502), istekizt (150/2252), thivaia (91/731), arwencrawford (117/798), jmsommer99 (120/971), dreams99 (165/2201), majoraphasia (116/734), CliffBurns (82/905), zanix (140/1115), obsessedbybooks (257/5681), eshep (77/694), Auto_Da_Fe (170/2422), 10mountainmatt (78/853), TMA (181/3335), browner56 (98/502), shimauta (162/1399), eenie17 (97/827), rhondagrantham (98/882), nishmael (144/1609), hubcapiv (97/1136), linspec (116/1663), buddydon (138/1322), kinofile (124/1016), pittpanther66 (83/619), kenf (180/2415), amanaceerdh (182/2824), jebysgirl (120/560), johnpkane (166/2941), VisibleGhost (163/3000), humberstone (114/758), gracie68 (139/1551), princemuchao (132/1819), kticesk8s (173/1783), saotwilight (188/2702), wordtron (111/1880), gwoodrow (158/1422), phgulley (94/461), timorousme (104/788), sanford9850 (88/904), sokrayblue (81/506), Frits (152/1757), ehines (105/1509), tshubert (120/1003), jenn_the_eskimo (87/518), LouisBranning (98/1239), shaneb (99/830), candice.fehrman (119/757), slickdpdx (111/1639), humblenarrator (88/564), hvhay (158/2278), mumbly (112/1061), bouillabaisse (164/3853), lostcosmonaut (147/1740), bookjones (157/3979), gintautas (141/3054), Scratch (107/1415), falkman (158/2507), albarinos (123/961), — (mostrar mais)Ligações a outros membros
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Membro: Jesse_wiedinmyer
ColecçõesA sua biblioteca (843)
Resenhas1 resenha
EtiquetasFiction (163), Novel (139), Non-Fiction (46), Memoir (46), Collection (34), Social Commentary (33), Biography (33), Satire (29), Classic (28), Short Stories (26) — ver todas as etiquetas
Nuvensnuvem de etiquetas, nuvem de autores
GruposAlternative Sexuality, American History, American Revolution & Founding Fathers History, Arab, North African and Middle Eastern Literature, Ask LibraryThing, Banned Books, Books that made me think, Buddhism, Californians Who LT, Canon — mostrar todos os grupos
Autores favoritosJorge Luis Borges, Joan Didion, Richard P. Feynman, Paul Fussell, Michael Lewis, Gabriel García Márquez, George Orwell, Studs Terkel, Mark Twain, William T. Vollmann, David Foster Wallace, Elie Wiesel, Oscar Wilde, Richard Yates (Favoritos partilhados)
Livrarias favoritasCity Lights Bookstore
Outros favoritosReaderville
Sobre mim"Harold Bloom weeps for me." ~ Chris Bauman, from "Not Fade Away", Bookmark Now: Writing in Unreaderly Times
"...a little charming and very mad." ~ Appropriated from Whitehead. Mangled by me.
I can also be found at...![]()
"You see, one thing is, I can live with the doubt and uncertainty and not knowing. I think it's much more interesting to live not knowing than to have answers which might be wrong. I have approximate answers and possible beliefs and different degrees of certainty about different things, but I'm not absolutely sure of anything and there are many things I don't know anything about, such as whether it means anything to ask why we're here.
I don't have to know an answer. I don't feel frightened by not knowing things, by being lost in a mysterious universe without any purpose, which is the way it really is as far as I can tell. It doesn't frighten me." ~ Appropriated from Feynman
Sobre a minha bibliotecaThis is a list of the books I've read. (My apologies to the library catalogers out there.) At some point or another in my life, I've read all book listed here. I don't currently own most of them. It's most definitely not a complete list. There are books I'm pretty sure I've read that I've not added because I'm not certain I've read them. There are books I know I've read that I haven't added, as I'm not sure I remember enough about them.
There very much seems to be a dynamic in my life where the books I own are not the books I've read. The books I've read and not been completely stunned by are very easily parted with. The ones I've read AND been stunned by are very often passed into someone else's hands.
I'm not a fetishist, nor a collector. Over the course of the past four years, I've had to move way too many times, and the books that I now have kept, either by porting them around with me or by pawning them with the option of re-buying are either the cream or the ones I've not yet read, but definitely do intend to. There's no way I will part with my seven volume set of Vollmann's Rising Up and Rising Down, though this is probably the only title that I will say this of. And this may change once I have a chance to actually read it.
Books, for me, are largely about the transmission of information. So the library, for me, is largely about acquaintance with the information within.
I do realise that this can lead to interesting conundrums. For example, I've not been picky about which particular printing of a book I've read. While I do understand that differing translations or printings can offer an entirely different perspective on the text, I'm much more a dilettante than a completist. As far as I can tell, my reading of the text may change simply as I get older and change myself, so I'm not tied to a static or completist reading of the text.
I'm a bit up in the air about the idea of listing the books that I've not read. Is there somewhere aside from the "tags" portion of the entry to label them as such. I've no problems with listing the books that I own. At this point, what I love about LibraryThing is it's ability to give me recommendations based on what I've already read. I'd rather not have these recommendations diluted by the titles that I've not read. If there's a way to circumvent this quandary that I'm not aware of, I'd be more than happy to oblige.
Please understand that because of this, my ratings are rather wonky, as quite a few of these books were read about 10 years ago. I've done my best to place the book in my memory and assign it a value that matches the book's place in my head and heart. As this changes from day-to-day, I'm sure that in another week I'll look at quite a few of these ratings and wonder what the heck I was thinking. If you've a question about any title, feel free to ask and I'll do my damnedest to give you an answer.
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Nome realJesse Wiedinmyer
LocalizaçãoHuntington Beach, CA
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http://www.librarything.com/profile/Jesse_wiedinmyer (perfil)
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Conhecimento ComumSéries (79), Prémios (321), Personagens (3762), Lugares (661)
Membro desdeJun 6, 2007









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Did you get involved in that counseling position, and if so, how is it going?
publicado por oregonobsessionz às 10:04 am (EST) em Nov 22, 2009
* Is the Takaki any good?
* I've GOT to get around to Moneyball one of these days.
* STILL don't believe you read the Sullivan.
publicado por NativeRoses às 6:16 am (EST) em Nov 17, 2009
publicado por NativeRoses às 1:11 pm (EST) em Nov 6, 2009
What does this have to do with the price of tea in China? Nothing. It just shows not all stats are what they seem. If I take the ball five yards deep and return it to the nineteen every time, I have a return average of nineteen yards. That's good enough for some bonus money to kick in, people look around and say, wow, what a great returner, when in reality my lack of judgment has cost my team one yard with each return.
This is how I approach everything, including economics. Straight ahead it seems one thing. Up close, it's not what it appears.
publicado por geneg às 4:55 pm (EST) em Oct 27, 2009
publicado por krolik às 8:00 am (EST) em Oct 15, 2009
publicado por krolik às 4:17 am (EST) em Oct 15, 2009
publicado por BTRIPP às 4:57 pm (EST) em Oct 12, 2009
publicado por agorelik às 8:49 am (EST) em Oct 11, 2009
publicado por lilithcat às 8:53 pm (EST) em Oct 10, 2009
publicado por dchaikin às 7:30 am (EST) em Oct 6, 2009
publicado por Carnophile às 6:58 pm (EST) em Aug 26, 2009
publicado por krolik às 4:28 am (EST) em Aug 24, 2009
The major problem for me is that I couldn't really identify with anyone, including the title character. She's corrupted. She doesn't even hold on to any kind of integrity for one semester. That's the point, but it's so bleak.
The amgdylectomized (sp?) cats at the beginning illustrate Wolfe's point I suppose: Charlotte is naturally pure (not just talking about sex here, but in many ways) but plonked down into the crazy DuPont environment she becomes a cat thrusting its pelvis against someone's shoe.
Overall it's bleak without seeming to offer, even implicitly, any kind of alternative.
publicado por Carnophile às 11:00 pm (EST) em Aug 22, 2009
As always, thank you for the additional recommendations.
publicado por Carnophile às 6:27 pm (EST) em Aug 8, 2009
publicado por Carnophile às 11:14 am (EST) em Jul 23, 2009
http://christophertusa.com/
Thanks,
Chris
publicado por cmtusa às 11:25 am (EST) em Jul 15, 2009
publicado por LolaWalser às 5:25 pm (EST) em Jul 2, 2009
publicado por BTRIPP às 10:56 pm (EST) em Jun 11, 2009
BTW, since you used to trade equity options, you might be the only LT person I know who can appreciate the Accelerando quote. Although I'm a bit baffled as to how "Internet servers" can be irrationally exuberant.
publicado por Carnophile às 7:55 pm (EST) em Jun 6, 2009
But I've digressed!
publicado por ravengirl às 11:49 pm (EST) em May 24, 2009
publicado por timspalding às 11:58 am (EST) em May 8, 2009
publicado por timspalding às 10:41 pm (EST) em May 7, 2009
"I greatly enjoyed Soldier Boy. [Bazzett] has a rare talent - I've seldom encountered the like in fifty years of college teaching: the ability to keep the reader moving forward!"
Paul Fussell
author of the WWII memoir, Doing Battle: The Making of a Skeptic, and The Great War and Modern Memory, winner of both the National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award
Hope you'll look me up on Amazon or my website, RatholeBooks.com . And you're right, your readings of certain books do - and will - change as you get older. But the important thing is to keep on reading. We never get too old to learn something - I hope. Be well, Tim
publicado por TimBazzett às 8:49 pm (EST) em May 7, 2009
I never know if people like that realize what they're doing or actually believe everything they say.
publicado por bluesalamanders às 6:00 am (EST) em May 7, 2009
publicado por bluesalamanders às 7:27 am (EST) em May 5, 2009
publicado por bluesalamanders às 7:23 am (EST) em May 4, 2009
publicado por NativeRoses às 3:57 pm (EST) em Apr 24, 2009
publicado por copyedit52 às 4:40 pm (EST) em Mar 17, 2009
http://www.librarything.com/profile/csha...
He often complains about people incorrectly deducing the existence of a power law when the data doesn't support that, e.g. here:
http://www.cscs.umich.edu/~crshalizi/web...
http://cscs.umich.edu/~crshalizi/noteboo...
Hope this helps.
publicado por dukedom_enough às 8:27 am (EST) em Jan 13, 2009
Which is a sore spot for me - and, while I got my fill of statistics, it still gnaws at me that higher math defeated me. And, much like people enter religious vocations in their old age, I do plan on taking it up again when my kids are grown and my life isn't so full of distraction.
You might try user dukedom_enough - he's a nice guy, and a working physicist.
publicado por AsYouKnow_Bob às 7:57 pm (EST) em Jan 10, 2009
publicado por oregonobsessionz às 1:13 am (EST) em Dec 3, 2008
I wasn't aware it was that many postings this morning. Since I didn't bother to count them. I'm Sorry about that. I was just saying what I was feeling at the moment and also feeling very down and Sorry for myself. I still am feeling kind of down right now too. It is going to take me awhile to get over this Election. I just felt it was time for me to leave Pro and Con. Who knows maybe in 6 or 9 months I might decide to try and
give Pro and Con another chance. Anyway, I just felt there
aren't a lot of people that really like me in Pro and Con.
And that sometimes they must really hate my guts. And that I
would be better off if I just left the group.
Beatles1964
publicado por beatles1964 às 3:04 pm (EST) em Nov 5, 2008
Oh, sure, I read your account - but that's still what Amazon used to call a "statistically improbable" phrase to encounter.
You have hidden depths, friend.
(P.S. And on the use of a simple "what" as an all-purpose interjection of surprise-tinged-with-incredulity:
LT's own languagehat blogged about it recently - ah, here it is:
http://www.languagehat.com/archives/0032...
I started seeing the usage on Metafilter a while back, and rarely have had such need to use it. )
publicado por AsYouKnow_Bob às 1:41 pm (EST) em Nov 4, 2008
what
publicado por AsYouKnow_Bob às 9:29 am (EST) em Nov 4, 2008
publicado por drwho às 9:24 pm (EST) em Oct 7, 2008
Thank you for joining Pro and Con (Religion). I hope this is a place where the comfortable are afflicted and the afflicted are comforted. Let’s go it with all seriousness, but I hope we can have great fun at the same time. If I were God, I would part the waters of distance, and instantly transport us all to this great pub I used to frequent in Germany with a group of other Auslanders, but alas, I am but a lowly mortal, and so we have to do this via the internet.
All I ask is that every one remain respectful, even if there are times when you are spewing your coffee over the screen.
publicado por Arctic-Stranger às 1:45 pm (EST) em Oct 2, 2008
publicado por Carnophile às 11:34 pm (EST) em Sep 23, 2008
-Nancy
publicado por Clueless às 7:37 am (EST) em Sep 18, 2008
Regarding Black/Gray markets and the rule of law: Alas, it's not my area of specialization. The only name that leaps out at me is [Hernando de Soto]. I've never read any of his stuff, but he comes to this topic from a particular political point of view, I'm told (probably everyone who writes on it does). His ideas were responsible for more than a million people in Peru being given formal titles to land they lived on (whereas legally they'd just been squatters before that). He has also written on "institutions" and law and economics more generally.
Regarding the law and property rights, a tidbit: It is a commonly held idea in economics that the drug trade is so violent not because there's something magical about drugs that makes it violent but because the industry cannot appeal to normal law enforcement measures. Everyone in the industry must be a vigilante regarding perceived violations of contracts.
publicado por Carnophile às 9:32 pm (EST) em Sep 9, 2008
The post that you have singled out for (what I would consider excessive) praise was only a semi-clever substitution for something that I was advised against submitting. I could share it with you, but I must urge upon you the same discretion that I had urged upon myself. If conveyed via "private message", it may only be seen by you and the proverbial "flies on the wall" that are the LibraryThing administrators.
Again, you are too gracious.
publicado por LordNigelKnickKnack às 4:58 pm (EST) em Sep 6, 2008
...a map is a map primarily by virtue of what it excludes...Can one view scientific modeling as a form of narrative technique?
On the first part, here Borges makes this point in a witty way: A completely detailed map would be of little or no use.
Regarding the second part, we do a lot of modelling in Economics and I always start undergrad classes with a little section about models being a framework/structure/narrative that we impose on data. It seems that “models” is the standard word in mathematically-inclined fields and “narrative” is the word of choice in the humanities. They’re very similar if not identical concepts though.
Finally, if you find this intrusion into your exchange with Bob irritating, my apologies. It piqued my interest because I just went over this in class yesterday.
publicado por Carnophile às 11:58 am (EST) em Sep 4, 2008
Gee, I'm flattered you'd ask me. I have all of two courses in the POS (...and some grad work in experimental design, which sort of counts, I guess) - but that was over thirty years ago.
I found What is this thing called science? to be a useful survey of the state-of-the-art in POS (most of the sources cited there are later than my formal exposure to the field...) but it's probably more superficial than what you're looking for.
Seriously, you could do worse than to ask user cshalizi: he's a stats/physics genius at CMU, AND an LT user. He's blogged extensively about POS-related issues. And he's approachable.
publicado por AsYouKnow_Bob às 4:05 pm (EST) em Sep 1, 2008