Membros com livros de acajjou

Fontes RSS

Livros adicionados recentemente

Resenhas de acajjou

Resenhas dos livros de acajjou não incluindo resenhas do próprio

Crachás de colaborador

HelperCommon Knowledge

 

Membro: acajjou

ColecçõesA sua biblioteca (1,094)

Resenhas3 resenhas

Etiquetasadult (446), children's (370), young adult (345), own (330), 2006 (192), pre HS (161), fantasy (146), 2007 (144), series (132), high school (121) — ver todas as etiquetas

Nuvensnuvem de etiquetas, nuvem de autores

GruposGetting Boys To Read, MyPeopleConnection Book Clubs, Read YA Lit, SLIS-Indy, T h e . C a n d y . D a r l i n g s``

Autores favoritosWilla Cather, Roald Dahl, Sarah Dessen, Charles Dickens, Cornelia Funke, Neil Gaiman, Nikki Giovanni, K. L. Going, John Green, Tanuja Desai Hidier, David Levithan, Gabriel García Márquez, Hilary Mckay, Stephenie Meyer, Alan Moore, Garth Nix, Mary E. Pearson, Susan Beth Pfeffer, Meredith Ann Pierce, Terry Pratchett, Tom Robbins, David Shumate, Noel Streatfeild, Rob Thomas, Brian K. Vaughan, Kurt Vonnegut, Scott Westerfeld, Bill Willingham, Ellen Wittlinger, Markus Zusak (Favoritos partilhados)

Sobre mimI'm a 20-something library student and I'm also lucky enough to have a job in YA services in a library. I enjoy mostly teen books, and I think you would, too, if you gave them a chance.

Sobre a minha bibliotecaI'm trying to record all of the books I've read at one point or another. I'm marking the date read in my tags (generic pre-high school and high school tags for those before I can pinpoint dates). I'm also trying to be rather specific in my tags, but I'm way behind updating them. The smaller selection of books I actually own are tagged as such. Since starting, I've tried to add books as soon after I've finished reading them as possible, so the entry date sort gives a rough list of what I've read recently.

LocalizaçãoIndianapolis, Indiana

Endereço de correio electrónicoacajjouyahoo.com

Tipo de contapública, vitalícia

Novidades das LigaçõesNovidades das Ligações

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

Conhecimento ComumSéries (250), Prémios (421), Personagens (4531), Lugares (1040)

Membro desdeSep 19, 2006

Faça um comentário

Hi,

Saw you liked Trainspotting, and I was wondering if you'd be interested in reading my new novel and posting your comments here (as well as on a few other book-related sites). Thought you might like my novel since it's also about a group of disturbed kids and a bit dark. I could e-mail you the novel in an e-book format if you'd like. Let me know if you're interested. Here's a link to a summary in case you're interested:

http://christophertusa.com/

Thanks,

Chris
hi there,

I am reading The Best American Short Stories of the Century

by John Updike
but as i am not english native speaker, i jave some problems ig understnading the stories. now ia have a question.

in GOLDEN HONEY MOON it says:

ANOTHER NAME FOR THE TOWN IS " THE POOR MAN'S PALM BEACH", BUT I GUSS THEY'S MEN THAT COMES THERE THAT COULD BORROW AS MUCH FROM THE BANK AS SOME OF THE WILLIE BOYS OVER TO THE OTHER PALM BEACH



would u please paraoherase it for me. esp what does WILLIE BOYS mean?

is it possible to mail my other questions?

thanks alot,

m.g
golestanie@yahoo.com
I love reading teen fiction, too. We have a fair amount in common, most notably GWTW and Outlander, a couple of my favorites. Have you tried Jennifer Donnelly yet? Her book The Tea Rose is adult fiction (and absolutely fantastic), but A Northern Light is young adult; I plan to read it soon.

~Jenny
hey, 20-something library student, join us over here =)
Hi,

Thanks for your message! I've enjoyed many of the books we share. My list is an attempt to keep track of all the books I've read as a reference for readers' advisory, and some I definitely love more than others.

Have a great week,
Emily
You took a class with Shumate? Where was that? I would love to do that. I couldn't imagine just a quick sit down with him because I would wonder what to say, but over the course of taking a class I could probably get my act together.

You asked where I had heard of him. Three of his poems are included in Good Poems for Hard Times which is just a great collection. I then hunted down some more of his stuff that's online. Finally, for the holidays, my wife got me a copy of High Water Mark which is simply amazing. The guy is amazing.

Do you have any idea if he's going to publish another book? I'd buy it for twice the price.

Talk to you later.
It would seem that you and I are the only one's so far to know David Shumate's High Water Mark. What a great book. Here's hoping that others join us. Thanks for including it.
First of all, you're awesome for including "Sixth Grade Can Really Kill You" on your list. It was a total favorite of mine when I was younger. I don't hear much about it these days. Perhaps because I'm not a school librarian.

Secondly, I notice we share "Survivor" by Chuck Palahnuik in common. I just finished it. I was curious if you've read it and what you thought of it.
Hi again! In answer to your question, no, we didn't have another class together, at least, not that I know of. I was just working on Fiesta 6 and thought I'd pick your profile to comment on, since I have more books in common with you than anyone else who's joined the SLIS-Indy group so far. Also, I'm a big fan of LibraryThing, so I like to get to know other SLISers who use it.

I'm happy to know that we see eye to eye on Clan of the Cave Bear. Any time you want to talk books, you know where to find me!
Hi there. This is Katy Balma, from your SLIS-Indy class. It's nice to see that we have many books in common, and your profile image is cute. I wonder, what is your LibraryThing collection philosophy? Do you list all books that you've read, books that you own, your favorites only, books read for school or for pleasure? Also, just out of curiosity, of the books we have in common, which would you say impacted you the most? I would like to say that for me, it was The Awakening, or even The Handmaid's Tale, but it would probably be more accurate to say that it was The Clan of the Cave Bear. I was only twelve when I read it, and it really sparked my imagination and got me interested in my natural science and social studies classes for the first time. It also, stangely, helped me to cope with puberty (if that's not too much information for you), as it was a very frank coming-of-age story about a girl who had to deal with survival as well as social and sexual issues of a kind that I had never imagined before. It was both humbling and comforting to read about how she managed to tackle and overcome all of that. Plus, it was such a unique story at the time, wasn't it? It still is, in many ways.
Ajuda/Perguntas Frequentes | Acerca | Privacidade/Termos | Blogue | Contacto | LibraryThing.com | APIs | WikiThing | Conhecimento Comum | 46,720,982 livros!