Livros aleatórios da biblioteca de irkthepurist

The Tale of Euphemia Raphash por M P Shiel

Paris Peasant (Picador Books) por Louis Aragon

The Wandering Wombles (Puffin Books) por Elisabeth Beresford

Dark duet por Peter Cheyney

A Month of Mystery - Book Two por Alfred Hitchcock

Hellblazer, No. 113 por Paul Jenkins and Sean Phillips

Myths from Mesopotamia: Creation, the Flood, Gilgamesh and Others (Oxford World's Classics) por Stephanie Dalley

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Membro: irkthepurist

ColecçõesA sua biblioteca (6,266)

Resenhas67 resenhas

EtiquetasHumour (1,066), Crime fiction (1,014), 20th century literature (682), Horror (617), Graphic art (524), Ghost stories (478), Comics (417), Science fiction (416), History (404), Cartoon books (374) — ver todas as etiquetas

Nuvensnuvem de etiquetas, nuvem de autores

GruposBaker Street and Beyond, BBC Radio 4 Listeners, Book Design, Comics, Crime, Thriller & Mystery, Drawn!, E. F. Benson, Early Reviewers, Everything Illustration and Comic Art!, Ghost Stories, Past and Presentmostrar todos os grupos

Autores favoritosD.J. Watkins-Pitchford, Robert Aickman, Margery Allingham, Denys Watkins-Pitchford, John Bellairs, E. F. Benson, Nicolas Bentley, Anthony Berkeley, J.L. Carr, John Dickson Carr, G. K. Chesterton, Jonathan Coe, Wilkie Collins, Susan Cooper, Edmund Crispin, Freeman Wills Crofts, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Alan Garner, Edward Gorey, Peter Haining, Cyril Hare, MacDonald Hastings, Hergé, George Herriman, Russell Hoban, Gerard Hoffnung, Kevin Huizenga, Michael Innes, M. R. James, Harry Stephen Keeler, Garrison Keillor, C. H. B. Kitchin, Hugh Lamb, C. S. Lewis, J. P. Martin, J. B. Morton, Flann O'Brien, Dorothy Parker, Mervyn Peake, Frank Richards, L.T.C. Rolt, Saki, Ronald Searle, Seth, Clifford D. Simak, E. Temple Thurston, Mark Twain, H. G. Wells, Raymond Williams, Roger Wilmut, P.G. Wodehouse (Favoritos partilhados)

Livrarias favoritasBookthrift, Border Bookshop, George Kelsall's Bookshop, Lyalls Bookshop, Nantcol Antiques, Picture House Antiques Centre, Piece Hall Book Shop, The Book Case of Hebden Bridge, Waterstone's Manchester Deansgate

Bibliotecas favoritasTodmorden Public Library

Outros favoritosTodmorden Railway Station

Sobre mimEver since I can remember I've been fascinated by books. I've always read and been a prolific reader but it was the books as much as anything else I adored. I regularly went to school laden with at least three or four reading books (in case I finished one and to give me a range of choices for my next book in case one of the others turned out to be a bit of a duffer) and most pictures of me before I hit my teens have me with a book *somewhere* on my person.

And then came the awkward teenage years. Which were even more awkward for me considering I decided that rather than try and catch up with the modern world my bullies and assailants seemed to live in (I didn't listen to a note of music that wasn't jazz or classical until I was seventeen to further prove this point) I would immerse myself into the past even more - and specifically seemed to devote my life to books. Thusly I never went anywhere without some Wodehouse on my person and spent all my pocket money Bedford's two great second hand bookshops - the terrifying Wildman's (now defunct) and the very much still with us Eagle Bookshop. It was probably by now too late to do anything about it - I'd become a bibliomaniac, forever asking my parents to take me on detours during family holidays to do the local bookshops. Even though second hand bookshops in the UK seem to be a dying breed, I will always check Inprint at the very least to see if there's a second hand bookshop anywhere near wherever I'm visiting. I tell you - I can smell them out. Now I'm married to an American I have all the shops and wonders out *there* to discover as well!

Further to this, I'm also now a librarian (although looking to try and get the funding at some point to do a PhD in Cinema Studies/ Film History somewhere and get back into teaching in Higher Education) and so am forever stockpiling books deleted from the catalogue of wherever I'm working. I think its terminal. I don't think I can ever do without books. Even when my wife persuaded me to get rid of a box of them a few weeks back I exchanged them for credit and as such... got yet more books.

Ah well. Welcome to my world.

Sobre a minha bibliotecaLast year, when my wife and I moved into our first flat together, I was finally confronted by just how many books I'd amassed over twenty odd years of book buying. I've been buying books regularly since I was about ten and now I saw them all together (after a few years of storing many of them at my parents' house in Wales - they still have about half an attic full of my books still to follow at some far off stage when we can afford a bigger house) I realised just how many I'd actually got. Needless to say a year later we've now moved to a three storey house with one room on the top floor being my study/ library (worryingly the floor dips slightly) and most of the rest of the books being crammed in the front room. Amazingly there is now also room for things that aren't just books. Although my wife would add to that: only just.

The collection pretty much reflects my interests at different stages of my life. The only real area I've foresaken is my Doctor Who collection because I fell drastically out of love with the series when I was about fourteen and have never really fallen back in with it(which is sad in a way as collecting the Target books - that I've since all given away - was definitely my first book collecting mania). Otherwise, in one way or another a book buying obsession for one genre may give way to yet another at the drop of a hat - but I never really give up on any of them and will always snap up books on any of the subjects if they look tempting enough (or are cheap enough - librarians don't get particularly well paid I'm afraid).

As such, my teenage book buying tastes explain: humour books; books related to Punch magazine; books on music hall; books on British radio; books on British comedy; Sherlock Holmes books; Sherlockiana (by which I mean Doyle biographies, books on Holmes, parodies and pastiches); crime novels (which is probably the one genre I've always collected with a mania - basically if it's a Penguin green and white, it's British and I can afford it then I will buy it); classics (I very nearly did classical studies at university).

My late teenage book buying tastes explain: the books on music; the beginnings of my books on film; esoteric books and oddities.

My post university/ pre MA book buying tastes: all the books I felt I ought to read but never had as I'd always rather been tucked up with a copy of a book by H F Ellis than one by Emile Zola (basically all the Penguin classics).

My Cinema MA book buying tastes: oddly enough all the film books. I'm very proud of my cinema book collection, even though my bank account really suffered due to my desire to actually buy copies of ALL the books on my reading list. This is also when I started buying books on the English landscape (all the H V Morton type of stuff) as I used them for my dissertation.

Post MA book buying tastes: lots of history and biographies.

Most recent book buying tastes: graphic novels/ sequential art (something I dipped into when young but fell out of love with but have now come back around to); ghost stories/ horror (mainly English).

Now: basically what I can find in Hebden Bridge's excellent antique and charity shops and from Todmorden's two wonderful bookshops - Lyalls and Border Bookshop. Todmorden even has a wonderful free book sharing system at the railway station. That plus the fact that as a librarian I can cream off the better books being deleted from wherever I'm working mean I'm ticking over really rather nicely at the moment, thank you very much...

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Nome realChris Browning

LocalizaçãoTodmorden, West Yorkshire

Endereço de correio electrónicoirkthepuristyahoo.co.uk

Tipo de contapública, vitalícia

Novidades das LigaçõesNovidades das Ligações

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

Conhecimento ComumSéries (651), Prémios (421), Personagens (7197), Lugares (1326)

Membro desdeSep 24, 2007

Faça um comentário

Hi,
in view of your chosen name and you being a librarian, I hope you won't mind a small suggestion about your catalog. The background is, I've been doing a bit of tidying on the Alan Coren combine/separate page. You have three of the Punch annuals edited by Coren, Pick Of Punch 1984 and two with unspecified year. If you add the years to the titles or enter the ISBNs, it will be clearer where they belong. Actually there's something strange about your 1984 one - you have its publication date as 1976!
(Standard disclaimer) You can enter whatever you like into your own catalog.

Regards, Jim Roberts
Hello there,
Just a note to send you seasons greetings for Christmas and the New Year.
Your collection seems to be growing apace,and with some very interesting books appearing there too.
I look forward to having another browse through you catalogue soon.
Regards
I'm glad someone else has read Waiting for Bardot! I met Andy Martin, and he's a funny guy. Scary obsession with Bardot though.
Oh, so that's how it goes!

Fantastic!
Hello; Have you just joined the John Bellairs mailing list? Your name feels so familiar - it may be that I noticed it on Librarything because you were a rare UK-based Bellairs fan, or are you also a Russell Hobanite? An Alan Garneroid? You mention falling out of love with Doctor Who, but is there still some Magrsian devotion from which I might know your name? I'm curious - and I hope wherever it was, you're reading well, with a happy heart.

Nick
Thanks for the friendship, Chris! If you end up checking out my novel, or any of my other work, I'd love to hear what you think.

Here’s wishing you a fantastic day filled with fabulous fates, fanciful festivities, and frolicking phantom footstools.

-Jeremy :)
Thanks for your friendship! I look forward to checking out your books and hope you enjoy mine.
Half Man Half Biscuit, magic!
Hello Chris,
I have just been having a look at your excellent Profile page and noticed your comments about the bookshops in Bedford. I was in the Eagle Bookshop last week and I don't know if you know but they have considerably expanded their stock now and and interesting find can usually be found there. Wildman's ! Ah,yes I remember him. He had a notice taped to the door "NO AIMLESS BROWSERS", and we used to say that he was one of the best named men in the country,Boy was he wild.
I see that we now seem to share 601 books now (that has certainly jumped up) Not only that but we have entered 10 shared favourite authors With this in mind I have taken the step of adding/applying for 'friends' status. Perhaps you will let me know if you agree (or not as the case may be)
In any case all the best.
Peter
Hello again,
Thanks for the reply. Yes the R.S.Thomas book was great-what a wonderful character he was to be sure,and Rogers really produced a fine study of his life in this book. Have you come across the other three books by Rogers I wonder. 'The Green Road to Nowhere : The Life of a English Village" is one I would recommend,not least because it tells in a quirky sort of way about a village quite near to where I live,and that I know rather well too.
I like the sound of the J.L.Carr map. I knew he produced some but have never seen one in the flesh.I have a few of his 'little books which are rather fun as well as most of his fiction.
Speak to you soon.
Hi
I see that you have added me to your 'Interesting Libraries' list,for which Many thanks. It is always gratifying to find that someone out there finds it of interest and maybe useful. I also note that we share 298 books which can't be bad. J.L.Carr,who we both have as one of our 'favorite authors', came from quite near to where I live,and I do find his work to be excellent. Have you read his Biography by Byron Rogers ?
Best wishes
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