Livros aleatórios da biblioteca de TLCrawford
The God-Seeker por Sinclair Lewis
The Enemy Within: Hucksters, Racketeers, Deserters, and Civilians During the Second World War por Donald Thomas
The Brass Ring por Bill Mauldin
There Will Be War por Jerry Pournelle
The Ethnic Frontier: Essays in the History of Group Survival in Chicago and the Midwest por Peter Jones
The History of Sexuality: An Introduction por Michel Foucault
A Blood-Dimmed Tide: The Battle of the Bulge by the Men Who Fought It (Dell World War II Library) por Gerald Astor
Membros com livros de TLCrawford
Ligações a outros membros
amigos: cnewhall, KellyDiNardo, TheBookImp, TKKenyon
bibliotecas interessantes: ABVR, amberalicia, amytguth, antioch_college, baskerville11, bfertig, Booksloth, burnit99, Cateline, cathleend, DebRinker, ejj1955, ElizabethPisani, emaestra, emaestra, emcelroy, eromsted, Fogies, Garp83, GregMiller, GwenH, ironrail, jcmart, jennieg, JFCooper, LamSon, ljfeminist, lprieto, miramar, oakesspalding, ostrom, premiumshlock, rixsal, sfertenbaugh, sfertenbaugh, timepiece, tommyatkins, unionman, usma83, walbat, YoungCD
Autores LibraryThing: Libby Fischer Hellmann (Libbyfh), Ben Rehder (Rehder), Sharon Kay Penman (Sharonkay), Alan Furst (afurst), David Liss (davidliss), Don Winslow (donwinslow), Erin Hart (erinhart), Gene (E. C.) Ayres (geneayres), Lisa See (lisasee), Matthew Pearl (matthewpearl), Richard Price (rixsal)
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Resenhas dos livros de TLCrawford não incluindo resenhas do próprio
Crachás de colaborador
Membro: TLCrawford
ColecçõesA sua biblioteca (2,030), Non-Fiction (467), Fiction (950), Anthologys (66), Bill Mauldin (20), Sinclair Lewis (49), Poetry (22), Cookery (157), Reference (41), Office (25), C1 (63), Lista de desejos (181), Lidos mas não possuídos (87), Em leitura (7), Todas as colecções (2,185)
Resenhas11 resenhas
Etiquetasmystery (602), history (544), SF (265), C. (254), 1940s (100), labor (78), 1960s (77), working class (75), WWII (72), anthology (67) — ver todas as etiquetas
Nuvensnuvem de etiquetas, nuvem de autores
GruposAmateur Historians, American History, Banned Books, Book Care and Repair, Bookcases: If You Build/Buy Them, They Will Fill, Books in Books, Build the Open Shelves Classification, Cookbook Collectors, Cookbookers, Genealogy@LT — mostrar todos os grupos
Autores favoritosMark Billingham, Peter Blauner, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Rachel Kramer Bussel, A. Bertram Chandler, C. J. Cherryh, Lee Child, Michael Connelly, Eugene V. Debs, Ernest K. Gann, Dashiell Hammett, Carl Hiaasen, Dennis Lehane, Sinclair Lewis, Herbert Lieberman, Jeffrey Marks, Bill Mauldin, Walter Mosley, Larry Niven, Studs Terkel (Favoritos partilhados)
Livrarias favoritasBooks in Shandon, Cameron's Books & Magazines, Half Price Books - Springdale, Ohio Book Store, Powell's City of Books
Bibliotecas favoritasKenton County Public Library - Mary Ann Mongan Library, Public Library of Cincinnati & Hamilton County, The Oxford Lane Library
Outros favoritosThe Mad Anthony Writers Conference & Book Festival
Sobre mimFifty plus years old and back in college.
Sobre a minha bibliotecaThe books with ISBN's were easy to enter, except for some strays in my wife's office, the rest are done, except for cookbooks. The cookbooks, mostly older books and pamplets, are going to take some time.
Adesão
LibraryThing Primeiros Resenhistas/Ofertas de Membros
Nome realTim Crawford
LocalizaçãoOxford, Ohio
Endereço de correio electrónicotcrawford
woh.rr.com
Tipo de contapública, paga
Novidades das LigaçõesNovidades das Ligações
URL
http://www.librarything.com/profile/TLCrawford (perfil)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/TLCrawford (biblioteca)
Conhecimento ComumSéries (390), Prémios (365), Personagens (3798), Lugares (995)
Membro desdeJul 12, 2007
Em leitura"Takin' it to the streets": A Sixties Reader por Alexander Bloom
Readings in Sociocultural Studies in Education: EDL 204 por Kathleen Knight Abowitz
The World Transformed: 1945 to the Present: A Documentary Reader por Michael H. Hunt
Resistance: A Woman's Journal of Struggle and Defiance in Occupied France por Agnes Humbert
The United States and Argentina: Changing Relations in a Changing World (Contemporary Inter-American Relations) por Deborah Norden
esconder extra" extramore="mostrar todas (7)" onclick="LibraryThing.profile.crToggleShowMore('4b15a3da02a6a3.35214482', '4b15a3da02b0b7.09055186');return false;">mostrar todas (7)



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publicado por LisaCurcio às 5:06 pm (EST) em Sep 2, 2009
Saw your post on the History at 30,000 feet thread that you are getting Resistance--me, too. Do you know anything about the translator? I have not been able to find anything except her description of how she found the book.
publicado por LisaCurcio às 5:02 pm (EST) em Sep 2, 2009
LamSon
publicado por LamSon às 4:58 pm (EST) em Jun 26, 2009
publicado por jennieg às 3:34 pm (EST) em May 29, 2009
I'd talk to the placement center. Companies always need bright people on hand.
publicado por jennieg às 10:46 am (EST) em May 28, 2009
publicado por jennieg às 4:10 pm (EST) em May 27, 2009
publicado por Garp83 às 11:35 am (EST) em Mar 14, 2009
For 9 years I lived in Huron, Ohio, near Sandusky, before relocating to Florida. My husband went to Miami.
Do you have an interest in slavery issues? If you are interested and have some time, you might check out my library under the tag: African American Cook Book. The contribution of African American women and men to our culinary heritage is finally becoming elevated to its proper station.
As a food historian there are other sub specialties that interest me: English language early Asian, Hispanic, French, Italian, so on.
You can see my "shop dawg" Jaime in the profile photo. We both love dogs. Thank you for contacting me. If you have any cookbook questions, give me a shout out. Best, Lynn
publicado por kitchengardenbooks às 4:59 pm (EST) em Jan 28, 2009
publicado por kitchengardenbooks às 1:30 pm (EST) em Jan 23, 2009
I had to return the compliment and add your library to my list of interesting ones; as we share 47 books in common, it's safe to say there are some areas of overlapping interest! Quite a lot, actually--looks as though we both like mysteries, sci fi/fantasy, history, and cooking, at least.
Your random list of books shows one by Roberta Isleib; I've been wondering how her books are. I think she's married to someone I used to work for, in the weird connections department.
Happy Holidays!
Elizabeth
publicado por ejj1955 às 6:35 pm (EST) em Dec 22, 2008
publicado por Booksloth às 6:53 pm (EST) em Apr 30, 2008
publicado por Booksloth às 6:45 am (EST) em Apr 30, 2008
I don't know whether you have anything like the Open University over there? It's a wonderful organisation that allows people of any age (well, over 18) and any academic background to study from home for a real degree which is not only comparable to degrees from any other university but is considered by many employers to be superior as they realise OU students have often had to study while running a home, working full time, bringing up children, caring for elderly relatives etc, etc. The course for a full degree usually takes six years (that's part-time and the equivalent of three years' full time study) although many people take breaks in between (I took a year off at a time when I had a lot of other things happening and didn't think I'd be able to do the course justice), while some study full-time and graduate in three years or even less, so you can see it's all very flexible. I graduated in 2001, the year after my daughter graduated from 'normal' university. She was very proud of her achievement but I was practically bursting with pride over mine (and hers, too, of course). I used to work in Adult Education at one time so I'm a massive fan of returning to study.
My reasons for wanting to return to study were many and varied (as I'm sure yours are too) but one of them was obviously in order to progress within my career and that's how I justified the expense to myself. Unfortunately,a year into the course, I was hit with a major back problem that eventually meant my having to retire on health grounds. Much as I loved the work for my BA, I don't really think I can now justify going on to a Masters as I would have hoped to do - the courses aren't exactly cheap - but I will never regret what I have done so far. I do you get everything from your study that I did from mine - isn't it wonderful to know we're not 'over the hill'?
publicado por Booksloth às 5:24 am (EST) em Apr 18, 2008
publicado por Navigator7 às 5:07 am (EST) em Mar 28, 2008
publicado por Navigator7 às 1:17 pm (EST) em Mar 27, 2008
Indeed! Granted, ERB may not be a literary genius in his line-by-line writing, but if you go by the ability to touch lives and your work survive the years, surely he's stellar. Between Barsoom, Tarzan, and The Land That Time Forgot, he'll live forever.
TK
publicado por TKKenyon às 4:58 pm (EST) em Mar 25, 2008
All the characters in my books are adults and, while some of them have some issues stemming from childhood abuse, all of them have survived and are making their way through life, coping and healing. I think it's a positive message, that even if something bad happens to you, you can survive and heal and connect with other people, even heal others.
Like I said, essentially positive. I read a lot of SF as a kid, including Edgar Rice Burroughs. I supposed I've been unduly influenced by John Carter of Mars: "I still live!"
Hope you'll try me, or chat with me around here,
TK Kenyon
publicado por TKKenyon às 11:40 am (EST) em Mar 25, 2008
publicado por TheBookImp às 9:35 am (EST) em Mar 24, 2008
publicado por TheBookImp às 10:02 am (EST) em Mar 22, 2008