Livros aleatórios da biblioteca de kokipy

SUN CROSS SEQUENCE - Book (1) One: The Rainbow Abyss; Book (2) Two: The Magicians of Night por Barbara Hambly

Mary Queen of Scots por Antonia Fraser

O Jerusalem por Laurie R. King

Soldiers' Pay por William Faulkner

The Road to Middle-Earth por T. A. Shippey

Talking with Young Children about Adoption por Mary Watkins

Brasyl por Ian McDonald

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Colecçõesebook (3), Kindle (3), HIstory (4), China (54), Mystery (574), Science Fiction (397), A sua biblioteca (2,895), Para ler (1), Todas as colecções (2,901)

Resenhas8 resenhas

Etiquetasmystery (573), fiction (511), science fiction (397), fantasy (303), Children's literature (124), history (84), English Literature (73), Drama (68), Poetry (66), biography (64) — ver todas as etiquetas

Nuvensnuvem de etiquetas, nuvem de autores

GruposAlmack's, Cthulhu Mythos Homeschoolers, E. F. Benson, History at 30,000 feet: The Big Picture, Le Salon du Faulkner, Science Fiction Fans, The Green Dragon, Virago Modern Classics

Autores favoritosC. J. Cherryh, William Faulkner, William Shakespeare, Tom Stoppard (Favoritos partilhados)

Sobre a minha bibliotecaRead this year (2009), to the best of my recollection (and not in order):
1. On Basilisk Station (David Weber)
2. The Honor of the Queen (David Weber)
3. The Short Victorious War (David Weber)
4. Field of Dishonor (David Weber)
5. Flag in Exile (David Weber)
6. Honor Among Enemies (David Weber)
7. In Enemy Hands (David Weber)
9. Ashes of Victory (David Weber)
10. War of Honor (David Weber)
11. At All Costs(David Weber)
12.The Black Moth (Georgette Heyer)
13. Powder and Patch (Georgette Heyer)
14. The Masqueraders (Georgette Heyer)
15.The Spanish Bride (Georgette Heyer)
16.The Corinthian (1940)(Georgette Heyer)
17. Faro's Daughter (Georgette Heyer)
18. Friday's Child (Georgette Heyer)
19.The Foundling (Georgette Heyer)
20. The Grand Sophy (Georgette Heyer)
21. Cotillion (Georgette Heyer)
22. Bath Tangle (Georgette Heyer)
23. Sprig Muslin (Georgette Heyer)
24. Sylvester, or the Wicked Uncle (Georgette Heyer)
25. The Nonesuch (Georgette Heyer)
26. False Colours (Georgette Heyer)
27. Frederica (Georgette Heyer)
28. Cousin Kate (Georgette Heyer)
29. Charity Girl (Georgette Heyer)
30. Lady of Quality (Georgette Heyer)
31.Hestia (Cherryh reread)
32. Learning the World (McLeod)
33. Regenesis (Cherryh)
34. After the Ice
35. A Talent For War (McDevitt)
36. Polaris (McDevitt)
37. Seeker (McDivitt)
38. Moon of Three Rings (Norton)
39. Atrocity Archives (Charles Stross)
40. Jennifer Morgue (Charles Stross)
41. Halting State (Charles Stross)
42. Accelerando (Charles Stross)
43. the Final solution (Michael Chabon)
44. The Accidental Time Machine
45. The Peace War (Vinge)
46. Deepness in the Sky (Vinge)
47. Broom of the System (David Foster Wallace)
48. girl with the Curious Hair (David Foster Wallace)
49. The Last Chinese Chef
50. Lost in Translation
51. The Road Home (Rose Tremain)
52. Home
53. Glasshouse (Charles Stross)
54. These Old shades (Georgette Heyer)
55. Be My Enemy (Brookmyre)
56. The Doom Machine (Mark Teague)
57. The Reluctant Widow (Georgette Heyer)
58. Pistols for Two (Georgette Heyer)
59. The Convenient Marriage (Georgette Heyer)
60. The Talisman Ring (Georgette Heyer)
61. God's Chinese Son
62. A Civil Contract (Georgette Heyer)
63. The Devil's Cub (Georgette Heyer)
64. The Unknown Ajax (Georgette Heyer)
65. The Toll Gate (Georgette Heyer)
66. The Black Sheep (Georgette Heyer)
67. Music and Silence [Rose Tremain]
68. The Lucky Strike (Kim Stanley Robinson)
69. Perdito Street Station (China Meiville)
70. Why Shoot a Butler? (Georgette Heyer)
71. They Found Him Dead (Georgette Heyer)
72. Lord of Light (Zelazny)
73. The Battle that Stopped Rome
74. Death in the Stocks (Georgette Heyer)
75. No Wind of Blame (Heyer)
76. An Infamous Army (Heyer)
77. Royal Escape (Heyer)
78. Shantaram (Gregory David Roberts)
79. Before the Dawn

Tipo de contapública, vitalícia

Novidades das LigaçõesNovidades das Ligações

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

Conhecimento ComumSéries (458), Prémios (439), Personagens (9682), Lugares (1767)

Membro desdeJan 10, 2008

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Hi S, I'm very pleased to hear that you like the books. I hear the east coast is getting some bad snow storms; I hope they aren't too bad where you are.
Happy Christmas! :)
sqdancer/B
HALLELUIA!!!
I'm glad that you love your brother, as you apparently do.
William on audio must be for you what "Wodehouse Playhouse" has been for us on video. Back in the '70's we found the 1/2 hour Mulliner stories introduced by Sir Plum himself and acted by Pauline Collins and John Alderton. They remain stand-bys for us when we get into any kind of rut or doldrums.
Hope you're weathering the storm safely, warmly, and happily!
Peggy
GOOD for you!
(What's the game? I can spend hours at Spider Solitaire which shows my level of expertise.)
We're about to stand the tree up, so I'm off!
Ho Ho Ho
Peggy
Now that is quite handsome of you!
Thanks, Koki.
(Oh well. I do read horror and I do like steam punk, a true gothic bent --- I guess you would loathe Tim Powers! I don't worry about different species on the same world or any other considerations that might occur to a more scientific person. I'm sorry to have gotten your hopes up, but de gustibus still works. If I had had him handy when I read what he did to Lin, I would have hurt him. When I reread it, it will be for the descriptions of New Crobuzon.)
FOUR little girls for the weekend! Bless your heart! The holiday train looks like an adventure, and the American Girl Store must be a great favorite. Enjoy!
I find myself longing for times past when Christmas didn't start until about the 15th and was short and intense. Husband's family didn't put their tree up until Christmas Eve, and then it stayed up for the 12 days. Out of step makes an old person feel older.
Have a merry, safe time!
Peggy
Seems a long time since we last spoke - now I see that it wasn't. You read *PSS*? How did you like it?
(Time out to play with kitties.) I can't really settle to much of anything except GH, but I will soon have read Well of Shiuan, so I'll be ready to babble about getting into *Azeroth* maybe in time.....
I'm hoping to spark with Wolf Hall; I like it very much, but I can easily put it down. Drood is so-so. My Virago/Beacon Traveler, Unbeaten Tracks in Japan is pretty good, but I haven't gotten her into the wilds yet. May have to start Maps of Time to justify my existence. Next week will be as wild as it gets here with luncheon on top of luncheon on top of dinner --- I'll put on several pounds even while trying not to. Maybe I should be swimming 5 days a week instead of 3; makes my skin scalier just thinking about it.
Hope all is well with you and yours.
Peggy
(What's with the Teutoburg Forest?)
I see you read Perdido St Sta recently. How did you like it?
Whoo! WHoo!!! I've just added book #5,000! When I click on "Your Library," I see that we have 880 in common; the lists haven't caught up. I'm almost through with what's downstairs.
Hope you and your family have a wonderful, joyful Thanksgiving!
Love,
Peggy
I'm over there now butting in, but I'll soon have to butt out because chores must be done.
Thanks for the heads-up on the Faulkner group. I'll be interested to see what transpires.
Happy weekend!
P the L or L the P
Thank you, Koki! K.MacL. arrived safely and I may have to bump him up in the queue. I'm getting antsy for some hard space scifi along with my more ladylike reading.
Peggy
You got rid of all your Helen MacInnes too, didn't you? I've been adding some......oh well.
Peggy

(Do you like Michael Chabon? I certainly enjoyed *Yiddish Police* but haven't been obliged to buy the others.......oh well, again.)
"Downsizing" A concept antithetical to my very bones. I think that when we die, our nieces and nephew are just going to have to make one quick trip through to divide the antiques and then burn the place. I do have a slight hope that the reading niece and her husband will want some of my books.......
If you know Sharpe already, you may not be in any hurry. I would lose him before I lost my Poldarks, for instance. On the other hand, Cornwall also wrote some nifty mystery/thriller types that do for sailing what Dick Frances did for horse racing. I haven't recorded those few yet.
I do need to get back to O'Brian. I think I read only one or two and didn't really get the fever although I certainly enjoyed them. That will be after I finish even one thing that I'm reading officially (because it's in my "currently reading" list) OR A Civil Contract that I picked up last night just because.......And there's also the Barbara Pym that I'm carrying in my pocketbook in case A.Flora goes to sleep while I'm out there. Madness!
Love it!
Off and away.
PLD
Uh oh. I hate to do this to you, girl, but you really should at some point investigate Bernard Cornwell's Sharpe novels, set on the ground in the Peninsular Wars. I think that they are pretty much the equal of Hornblower or Aubrey/Maturin. If it's the navy that appeals to you, you won't like them as much. I haven't read them all, but I do enjoy them.
Sorry!
Peggy Again
What a lovely day! (When I click on "your library" it shows 872.)
I certainly would! The Stone Canal blew me away, and while the other two I've read didn't pack that punch, I definitely enjoyed them and bought more while I was buying a lot of scifi. I find that retirement and LT has dampened my scifi addiction and nearly killed the mystery one.
Thank you, K!
Peggy the Liz with a Grin!
Thanks for the input, definitely welcome. I guess the TBR piles grows ...
Thanks for the input, definitely welcome. I guess the TBR piles grows ...
(I just read your message to Garp. Just so you'll know, I actually liked Blind Assassin too. I didn't think it was up to her usual high standard though.)
SERIOUS BOOKS? I can't read anything straight through. I do own a Jonathan Spence (The Memory Palace of Matteo ?; good, Peggy Ann), but I haven't gotten to it. (I'm currently exercised because I have hidden my copy of The Siege of Krishnapur from myself. I had it when I catalogued it, thought I'd like to read it soon, and have apparently put it somewhere "more accessible" than where it used to live. I get so tired of myself.) On the other hand, I'm within 100 pages of finishing Gravity's Rainbow. It has been quite a voyage. I doubt that I'll try to reread it, but I'm glad I went along with him the first time.
I have also posted a couple of comments at Almack's just to reprime the pump. PBS promises me a copy of Cotillion in another week. I wish somebody wanted the junk I have on offer there. Oh well.
Bedtime approaches and coherence ebbs.
Goodnight.
Peggy
Ma'am, you probably need to get right on over to Almack's and join the group. They could use some new contributors, I think! (What are you doing with all your spare time anyway?)
Moi
Let's see - sort of in order. Aunt is not likely ever to be well; she's 90, with sepsis, maybe MRSA again (we are having to wear protective items), with dementia, and with delusions for the past two days. This is better than her demanding to go home and being as miserable as she was last week. On the other hand, she is still her dear self, and I am trying to protect my 88 year-old mother from spending too many hours at the hospital.
I'm enjoying Morgaine - about to finish *Ivrel.* I don't think it's outstanding, but it's quite good. I'm a sucker for fantasy.
Heyer..... I bought most of mine used at the local library sale or at yard sales. Those outlets seem to have dried up, and I'm appalled at the cost of the ones on amp. As you know, they don't show up on pbs either. Since I haven't read all that I have, I don't know why I'm concerned about it. (I did read your conversation about *Cotillion* elsewhere.)
AH! Dorothy Dunnett! Keep checking VMC authors. I've found several this year as a result of the group.
Happy Halloween!
Peggy
Hope all is well with you and yours.......My aunt is back in the hospital - this time with sepsis, but they're sending her back to the nursing home tomorrow; I have a hard time understanding what they think or if they think.
Meanwhile, by one count we are up to 872 books in common. If I ever get back to recording, I will expect to arrive at the 900, a worthy goal.
Peggy
*ML* is yours and I'll take it off the duplicates list.
Wouldn't real time conversation and food be wonderful? You both would adore my husband too - and he, you.
I had a lovely birthday and think I need to go read in bed. Retirement is so wonderful that I think I was born to be old!
P the L or L the P
Kokipy,

Yes, I loved Swallows and Amazons - found most of them in my very small=town library. I have no idea how they got there. When I was in my 20s I bought the whole collection from Blackwells in England; big deal, ordering books from abroad and figuring out how to may for them in pounds. Some time in the 1970s my small-town library burned. I ordered a whole set of the Swallows and Amazons series and presented them to the new collection so someone else can have that serendipitous find as I had.

Coots in the North is the last, incomplete book. I've seen but not read it. From what I know - another LT person told me - The youngest Coots, Joe et al. travel north and meet up with Nancy. It is short, and far from complete. It was published with some other Ransome essays on fishing; unpublished work found by a person going through his papers. That book is out of print now, but can be found, for a price. I searched Amazon.uk; 91 pounds was a popular price. Searching bookfinder.com produced some slightly cheaper copies; a number of them are paperback printings in Canada.

The other LT member also sent me a link to a couple of Ransome sites. I will hunt through my old comments and see if I can find them and send them to you.
863 what with my Hornblowers and your Tremains and PSS. YAY!
Yep, your new additions make 853.........I'm not sure that we'll make 900 with what I have yet to add. On the other hand, I'm always buying. (Shhhh)
Pistols for Two --- Oh My!
It looks like I could pull down one more book so that we could share 850. Maybe next week! S-in-Law did beautifully with the hip replacement, DG! How it will improve her quality of life! She is also looking forward to her time in the extended care facility where they know her from her other surgery; she is my model for genuine interest in other people and making the best of bad situations.
Tomorrow I'm all about good works and looking forward to Sunday when I can rest. I wish you and your family a fulfilling weekend!
Peggy
Looking forward is good stuff.....So is living in the moment. My moments are not my own right now. On the other hand, I'm not getting up at 3:30 this morning to drive to Laurinburg with sister-in-law for her hip replacement surgery. Niece Susan (!) is here and doesn't sound needy, so we'll go later in the morning. And today my Aunt Flora was in a positive mood having played BINGO and on her way to PT. Her pneumonia has recurred, but they have changed her antibiotic, and she seems to be improving. AND my mother, who has been putting up with a stiff neck without so much as a Tylenol unless I badger her, is finally doing better. So all in all, things are calming down.
I do look forward to finishing my history ARC so that I can get back to my own reading. On the other hand, I really, really want 2 from the September ER list, so we'll see.......
I'm just now looking at your "Read in 2009" list, and grinning about all the Honors and Heyers. McDevitt is a favorite - especially the earlier ones. I tend to like Ken McLeod although only Stone Canal blew me away. What do you think of Charles Stross? I tried Accelerando but put it aside as not what I wanted at the time. I think something else might be an easier first one. What do you think? Anyway, there's plenty of stuff for me to explore there when I get exploration time. Oh! And you read A Deepness in the Sky, a real favorite. I am very happy to have more VV to read!
You have a number of welcome messages on the "Duplicate Copies" thread of VMC if you haven't been there.
I'm going to play around here a minute, and then it's time for quality time with Mama Elle, Tully Tubby, and Hilfy Bit.
($0.00 sounds like a bargain price for anything - much less *PSS*! Hope you enjoy it!) When your copy comes and you look hard at the third row, I'll bet you see your mother!
WOW!!!!
(I don't much care for F. O'Connor either - no surprise there.) But to have your mother's picture in a national publication - that's great! I'll look forward to seeing the book in your library. And speaking of pictures, what is your picture on your profile page? I don't see it.
(Back to the picture, I can only come a little close by having captured my mother on video leaving church on the Sunday morning when Eugene Istomin played a program here on his small town tour, and CBS broadcast it.) (I got to hear Istomin in person here: gorgeous, gorgeous tone quality!)
I had not thought about the possibility of having the classics on Kindle cheaply. That's great. One day the things will be in my price range or we will have sold the place at the beach, and I'll get one. I'm going to assume that *PSS* is also reasonably priced for Kindle. (The other novels that follow it don't compare for me although our nephew preferred The Scar. They're all interesting though.) Be forewarned, if I ever get one, I'll ask whether you'll let me network with yours if they're still allowing that some few years down the road.
Hope all is well with you and yours.
I'm been VERY, very busy -- as I know you are too, esp. with your recent move! At least my mind is finally starting to heal & I'm actually able to concentrate & read again. It's been a long 9 months, and not being able to focus enough to read anything of substance was been unsettling to say the least.

You would be amazed how often I talk about the wonderful times I had visiting the NYC Association. I'm certain a day never goes by without expressing my love & yearning. I can't wait to visit you all again -- and Steve is threatening to come w/ me, to see what all the fuss is about, lol! Of course, you must come visit us -- isn't this your year to visit WA??
I have absolutely no recollection of an Anne Perry note, but thank you for responding anyway. I'm totally unfocused right now with a lot of volunteer stuff hanging over my head, my aunt continuing not to eat in extended care, and sister-in-law going into a hospital some miles away for hip replacement on Thursday. Thank God for retirement!
I'm glad you have GH for escape.
I like it when you're in touch.
Peggy
Dropping in to snoop!
Good Grief! No wonder you haven't been haunting this place!
Hope you are able to take a breath now; and that when you do, the air is good! Actually, you sound like an episode of "House Hunters," my favorite TV show. If you're being broadcast, you should let me know! I hope your whole family remains thrilled with the move.
As to my weekend ---- I did go for an hour or so both Sat. and Sun. and enjoyed the time with those wonderful people very much. My aunt went into the hospital here with pneumonia a couple of weeks ago and is now in an extended care facility, also here. I love her and would have visited often in any case, but my mother thinks that somebody should be with her at least 12 hours a day. If I don't help considerably, Mama will be there. At 87 - going on 88 - she just isn't able to do as much as she thinks she should. Then too, my cousin (son of said aunt) had a colonoscopy today, and I was the "responsible adult" who took care of him. So I'm not getting in much reading either.
I did finish Foreigner and I simply loved it. I won't change the kittens' names, but Invader is trying to jump line. The thing I love about owning books is that I can pick them up and put them down just as I please. Right now it has pleased me to pick up Sea of Poppies again. I'll probably keep on with it now until I finish it and damn the rest of the list including ER ARC's. And I'm carrying around Fifty Degrees Below to read when Aunt Flora is asleep: most enjoyable!
The only other thing of note is that our only night-blooming cereus flower of the summer opened tonight. It is beautiful as it always is and smells better than usual.
More than you wanted to know!
I'm glad to hear from you!
Peggy
I just bought His Majesty's Dragon since I see that you have a bunch of NN's. Looking forward to it! (And that puts us up to 840 or 843 depending on where I look.)
I'm off over the weekend to White Lake for a mini-reunion with my best high school friends and their husbands. MY husband will not be going even though they're his friends too. He says, "I just saw them year-before-last; I don't need to do that again." Oh well. Hope you get to do something fun!
Peggy
YAY! You did join VMC, and I trust that you will enjoy meeting those very generous women and finding lots of women's lit that you didn't know. Real life reading groups have gotten in the way lately, but I'm about to finish A Jest of God which is a wonderful Virago title (although my copy is not) and Forty Signs of Rain which is scaring me to pieces and entertaining me royally. THEN I'll get back to *G'sR* and my ER book. I'm afraid it's not very well written, but I haven't read much and am trying to keep an open mind about the scholarship.
Weekend coming up.
Peggy
I do know the feeling except for the having small children part. I did realize that if I continued to teach private piano lessons, I would never get to retire. (I could see my last words being, "That's a B flat, dear.") I somehow don't have any worries about your employability. Aren't you glad? (The women at VMC group are lovely and generous. I started collecting those green-spined pb's when our Indian neighbors received a stash of them in their Penguin remainders. For a long time I thought that I was the only one!)
Just checking in with my resident *GR* guru. The thing that is annoying me most is the promiscuous use of "that" in the Slothrop passages. Is it supposed to be an Americanism? (Our 'local' NPR station has a business manager who consistently tells us to "Pick up that phone....Make that call....Give us that pledge.....Enjoy that sense of responsibilty." [Tote that barge / Lift that bale] I don't know exactly why, but it drives me nuts, and the passages with that Slothrop are even a little edgier because often the "that" could possibly be justified.
Hope your weekend is pleasant and includes a little The Road Home - not to nag.
Peggy
Nice to see you! I have to say that I'm a sucker for all that Weber stuff, political and military. I certainly couldn't explain why. I've also enjoyed his non-Honor books set in the Honorverse except for the story collections which I don't do. And oh my goodness - on your random books page I see C.S. Forester, and I haven't put any of those here yet.
Whooo. That's a very quick turnaround. Hope you catch your breath soon!
Peggy

(And I am, again, a firm believer in global warming.)
AhHa! I mailed Saki off at noon, so he should arrive in a few days!
801! Laurie King and a random other few finally carried us over the top.
I'm stopping this for awhile and READING!
I just came by to congratulate you on your good taste in not having any Anne Perry mysteries catalogued. I bought them as she produced them (sort of like a frog) in the 80's, and I've never moved them off the top shelf in my library for something better. Now I may do that. Meanwhile, I'm still looking for our last 10; I know they have to exist!
Wishing you a peaceful and productive Monday,
Peggy
790, ma'am!
Hope you're well as the week winds down.... I'm curious as to how you would have answered this question if, in fact, you had tagged Angela Thirkell as (gentle, I think) irony?

Aren't the Angela Thirkell books satire rather than irony?
posted by jimroberts at 12:42 pm (EST) on Jun 24, 2009 | reply | archive | delete
I ordered Shantaram today - figured that since it came out in pb in '05, it wouldn't get any cheaper. I am fascinated with all things Indian, so I expect to love it! 783!!!
As you well know, I'm not averse to buying books. I have another several hundred to catalogue, though, and then there are the ones boxed in the attic, so I think we'll get there with out any extraordinary efforts. Still 779 and counting.
(BTW, Shantaram is piquing my interest. I'll be glad to know what you think of it whenever you read it.)
(And I see the Rosses Thomas and Macdonald over in your random books this morning and don't think I've done those.......)
Glad to hear that you're well and Honoring (both your father and Dame Harrington)..... that's really awful, and I apologize.
We're up to 779. I'm determined that we have at least 800 in common if I have to go out and buy some to make the count. Don't really think that will be necessary, but I would have guessed that you had more of Dame Agatha. Hope your loins are girded for a new week.
Peggy
I've missed you. I hope it's because you've been reading up on Lev in *Road Home.* Can't wait to hear how you like it......
I've been elsewhere for a great part of the week although I add a few books each day. Unfortunately, the conversation at the other place seems to have wound down. Maybe later.
Hope your weekend is cool and pleasant.
Peggy
LOOK, Koki! They've fixed ----- Well, shoot. It's not fixed on your page. My "Members with LizzieD's books" shows you with 772, but yours still shows the 715. Excitement for not nothing, but surely a lot less than complete happiness.
Evening, K. I'm wondering tonight why you don't collect Virago Modern Classics? (I can't afford the stuff from Persephone Press, so I won't ask about them.) They certainly have published some duds just because they're eager to keep women writers from disappearing, but sometimes I come upon somebody who is really wonderful, like Winifred Holtby whose Poor Caroline is consuming my women's time and other reading time too. I'd never have found her had I not been alert to the possibility of those lovely green-spined pbs. This one is witty and well-crafted and pleasingly thoughtful.
I have also never asked whether you follow the Orange Broadband Prize. Do you? I found it last year, and have read several of the '08 long list. I haven't found a bad book yet although this year's crop is not quite so appealing to me. I'm reminded again how much I love to read and love owning the books!
L the P
I confess that I have skimmed but not read the Peake bio. What I read made me sad; he had mental and health problems and apparently tried really hard to beat them. Maybe in a year or two when I'm really mellow, I'll try it seriously.
No, I think maybe the collections deal has interfered with the "members with" lists - don't know why it should, but then I just use the stuff; I don't understand it. We still stand at 715 on my list too, but when I come over here, the books in common shows us at 760.
I'm just a chapter away from the end of *C'sPride.* Enjoying it! I think, though, I may give her a rest and read something different like Alastair Reynolds just to cleanse my palate..... I like Chanur very much although it seems more like fantasy with a futuristic setting than scifi to me....a fine distinction, but my own. I have several other things that are calling to me in very demanding voices. Have you read Denis Johnson's Resusitation of a Hanged Man? I read the first sentences and knew that he was my kind of writer: "He came there in the off-season. So much was off. All bets were off...." That's how I would write if I could write.
760!
Isn't it wonderful to have a great sufficiency of books!!??!! I really don't understand people who don't want to own them..... and we're up to 744 with the addition of my Emma Lathens..... I make that out to be about 26% of your total.
Thank you for the scoop on James B. Cabell. I won't seek him out, but if some come my way, I'll grab them. (I got rid of my *Worm Oroborous* (?) trilogy back in leaner years than these. I haven't felt the need to replace them either.)
Back to *GG&S* which I enjoy - just not often enough or long enough.
Peggy
You are right about everything! Sometimes I find that series lag in the middle, but I didn't find that true with Honor..... and, unfortunately, you'll want to read the other books set in the Honorverse like Shadow of Saganami and Crown of Slaves. I'm not enthusiastic about everything that Weber does, but I also have enjoyed the *March* series.... March Upcountry, March to the Sea, etc.
I have been browsing in your library from time to time. Since I haven't rated much, and I can't recall whether you have, I guess we should check with each other before we go on buying sprees. I just got rid of some things I hadn't catalogued because I was ashamed to admit that I owned them. I expect could do that with a lot of my stuff. Meanwhile, I'm overwhelmed with CJC and trying to do my other reading too. But who, for instance, is James Branch Cabell?
(I thought that I had put my Nero Wolfes in. Maybe not all of them.... Hmmmmm.)
Hope you've had a happy weekend!
I'm ecstatic that you're enjoying *BS.* You could so easily not have liked it. AND I went shopping in Fayetteville today with an old friend, and spent way too much money at their only decent used book store. I bought a whole pile of CJC; watch our totals take a leap forward!
I also bought a copy of a Patrick White, The Living and the Dead, which I haven't read and couldn't remember if I owned. I do. So --- look at the reviews to see whether you'd be interested. I'm a great fan of his writing, but we aren't the same person. If you decide you'd like to try it, I'll send it on.
PtheL
Sheesh, Koki. You don't have anything by R.F. Delderfield, and I thought surely that you would. I've actually read only To Serve Them All My Days but I reread it from time to time because it's such a comfort..... English public school led by a humane headmaster and the safe haven for a shell-shocked soldier who is a born teacher. And he marries. And so on. I'd think anybody who reads Thirkell and wants the story (and he is a story-teller more than a writer) to last longer would enjoy RFD. I guess I should put away *TSTAMD* (which I have on the reread pile) and pick up one of the others just to be sure before I run my mouth to you.
If fact, I should shut up and read. I'm just excited that my total has almost crossed 4,000 though. And we are up to 718.
Hope you've had a good day.
Peggy
Back again. (I thought I was projecting about the teachers and the reading. Maybe not. And, yes, back when I was teaching rather than baby-sitting, I adored to strike chords that resonated in kids' hearts and minds. The joy of teaching, for sure!) If the series picks up after the first 82 pages, I'm going to be incommudicada for however long it takes to read it. I love it! Now!!
(I am also entering the few Allinghams and the one McClure that I seem to have left downstairs..... I grin when our numbers rise.)
Peggy Do
Oh, Friend, I hear the frustration in your voice as you speak of your daughter's teachers. How difficult it must be to be diffident or reticent or shy as a child today! It was bad enough in the 50's. You are right; the school year is coming to a close, and she will be away from those self-righteous pedants who probably don't find much pleasure in reading anything themselves. I wish you both a happy summer of reading just exactly what your hearts desire!
Peggy
Lovely! Foreigner arrived today, but I can't read it yet because of Chanur. I took a friend to Duke today for a doctor's appointment at very short notice. As it turned out, there was a mix-up about time, so she will have to put in four extra hours on the road to get the treatment she needs. (I hope that I won't have to take her; she talks non-stop all the way there and back......including, "Oh! I've talked so much my throat is sore. I'll get a lozenge. I tear off a strip and keep them in my here they are this one has a tear in it but it's all right I'll use it anyway.") Very frustrating all around! I took *GG&S* but didn't read a lot of it for moving from waiting room to waiting room.
Usually when I have a new author, I buy up as much as I can and then save some so I won't run out. I'm happy to see that I can read Cherryh for a good long time before having that problem.
I'm eager to see whether Honor entertains you. That's what she's for!
Hope your Monday was decent.
I don't know Brookmyre. Yet another name to add to my growing list. As to Card, I haven't read any of the others after *Ender* or maybe I did read *Shadow* (?). Since he's a Greensboro boy, I have picked up used copies cheaply through the years but never made a commitment to read them. By the time I read *EG* the technology seemed dated. I did enjoy The Lost Boys for its look into Mormon society - always assuming that was at all accurate. It has stuck in my mind as a rather strange little book.
I'll see whether I can find my Allinghams again. I want to like her. I sort of enjoyed the BBC or Granada productions on Mystery years ago. I certainly prefer the later Wimseys, so the same may be true for the later Campions.
I started Pride of Chanur this afternoon, and I am very taken with it. Whereas I was happily familiar with the whole setup of *DbS,* I haven't ever read anything like this. I predict that it will be awhile before I get back to *GG&S,* but maybe not. Happy days!

P the LD
In no particular order ----
I FINISHED Downbelow Station. REALLY enjoyed it! LOVE the hisa and the other characters only a little less. Now I can finally get to Chanur!
I have a fair number of McClure, but they are scattered here and there and some are even in the attic. I enjoyed them when I read them a long time ago.
I have a few Delano Ames.
I have a great number of Marjorie Allingham, but I like her a lot less than Sayers, Tey, Christie, and Marsh. I have never been able to figure out precisely why. The whole whimsical (as opposed to Wimsical) atmosphere is off-putting to me. I do like Lug.
I kept the Cadfael on the shelf and boxed Allingham & Peters, my equivalent of letting things go because of space considerations..... de gustibus---.
I see that you have some Orson Scott Card, and I haven't gotten to him yet.
And have you had time to get to *Basilisk Station*?
Happy weekend!
Peggy
Elizabeth Peters is Barbara Michaels! I'm always surprised, and I always forget. Maybe I'll retain it this time. (And no, I didn't read many A. Peabodys.)
What an idiot I am! I have been corrected, but I continue to think that Elizabeth and Ellis Peters are the same woman. Elizabeth writes under another name that I'll look up directly, and Ellis is Edith Pargeter..... I think that's right.
You will eventually notice that we now share 702 books!!!
I'm going to stop this and read!
Peggy
I did add them, and at some point last night the totals corrected themselves. As it happened, I had the box that most of the EP's are in downstairs unloading other things, so I'll keep out a Vicky Bliss just to see what I think. (If I like it, I have no idea where I'll put it. Uh oh.) It may be that EP is my Iain M. Banks!
Something is definitely not right. Look at the 677/3819 and then at "Shared" at my place. We actually have 693..... Pfui.
Oh my, indeed! Our first major disagreement! I do have quite a number of EP's boxed and in the attic. While I enjoyed the first few, they became too cozy for me. (Maybe I should look at them again.) On the other hand, I do have a great number of Brother Cadfaels which I guess I haven't entered yet and which I continue to enjoy. I even have a few Edith Pargeters.
Meanwhile, something's up with their listing. I entered 11 this morning - J.K. Rowling and Diana Gabaldan. When I come to your site, the "books you share" lists 688, but we both have 677 in our "Members with ____'s Books." I'm about to put in a few Shirley Jacksons, and I'll be interested to see how the numbers change........ I guess I could put in the EP's.......
Hooray! I'm tickled to be able to help you enjoy more Heyer!
"Wodwo"??? I am able to check my reference books and find that that is a poetry collection, but I don't think I have one word that the man wrote in the house. I'll have a look online. Meanwhile, my poetry addiction has to struggle to get out of the mid-20th century. That's also a result of my college training, I expect. As a matter of fact, those guys and women were hot stuff when I was in college. Hmmmmmmmm.
Meanwhile, I'm trying to get things settled back down in the Pell system. LOVE this book, but CAN'T WAIT to get to the next one. What a life!
P the LD
I just took a spin through your poetry. I'll be adding almost everything that you have except Ted Hughes. I suppose that I should look at him now.....
I don't know, Ko..... I really look like my father, but now when I look in the mirror, I see Mama...... As we say around here, "Where you frum?"
You and LizzieD must be long lost siblings: Southern origins and each at the top of the other's "Members with...Books" list
---- spending the last two days at the UN watching sausages getting made ----

???????

Oh look at the G. Heyer! I'm still reading Frederica at intervals when I want to be delighted without having to pay a lot of attention. Hope you've had a good week. I've missed hearing from you. (Oh! And my volume of the first three Chanur novels arrived yesterday, but I'm still going upabove and downbelow. I think, having looked at it, that I may share your preference; anyhow, I know I'll love it. AND the admin at the other place are being slow to check me out and approve my membership there. Oh well.)
Peggy
Yes indeed! I confirm my taste by checking your library.
I'm headed away to watch "Guns, Germs and Steel" on PBS. Lucky find!
Liz
(Can't wait for you to try Honor!)
That link in my other message doesn't work. It should point to www.arthur-ransome.org .

j.
Hi kokipy,

The volume, with whatever ISBN I put on atrethusarose's page(!), brought together a variety of Ransome writings, including the first part of his unfinished 13th "Swallows and Amazons" books, where it appears that all the Ransome characters meet up at the Lake.

The Arthur Ransome Society will have lots of details. They have a kind of online bookshop.

Best wishes
josiasporter
Oh yeah! I just happened to think of Guy Gavriel Kay, and I see that you are well-supplied. Tigana is my all-time favorite stand-alone fantasy. I can do well without Fion?var, but I pretty much love the others - some more than the rest.
YEP!
Art of War = Use of Weapons? I'm a fan all right. Maybe I need to see a doctor .......
Oops. And two more responses.
I think of buying at amp as supporting small, independent booksellers - a salve to my conscience.
And I haven't tried paperbackswap because most of mine are in pretty wretched condition. But I might. I'll check it out.
AhHa! You're here!!!!
Oh yes! Richard Morgan is in the second rank of my scifi pantheon.
Although Consider Phlebas was Banks's first scifi novel, I don't think that it's so wildly different from the rest of the Culture novels that you'd like them any better. I did like it although I thought that segment with the Eaters was the most disgusting thing I had ever read. (It's been awhile, but I'm pretty sure you know what I mean if you got that far.) I even wrote a review of Art of War which I was finishing just as I found LT. And speaking of reviews, I laughed out loud at yours. Thanks. And I'll head right over to that group that is doing the group read. Thanks again.
Peggy
Oh yes indeed, I want to be your friend! You are still at the top of my list of overlapping titles of people with reasonable (I hesitate to use the word) libraries. Only Devinish has more; but then, he's working from 10,000+. We could have almost nothing in common, and he'd still have huge numbers of them. Anyway, I enjoy your comments here and there and look forward to seeing you around for a long time!
Peggy
I need to say hello to you because nobody has as many of my books as you. I don't even think I need to introduce myself since we have so much in common. There's a fallacy in that somewhere. Anyway, ---- lovely library!
Peggy
It hadn't clicked for me that you didn't see the play(s). I deeply regret not having done so. What was I thinking?

I am wondering if perhaps you would like Berlin's Russian Thinkers after all. I know I didn't encourage you before, but given your interest, I'm going back firmly on the fence. While the thrust is the philosophy, there is much about the people, the thinkers, the culture, etc.

http://www.librarything.com/work/89655/b...
Phoenix, and the infamous Sky Harbor airport! With the equally infamous Green Bus! I was telling someone about it only this morning!

I'm halfway thru an Early reviewers book, a biography.
Hi Kokipy,
It's just me, snooping again in your library! ;)
Yes indeed. If you are so inclined the story I mentioned is very very striking, especially because it purports to be true.
I came across this book while cataloging: http://www.librarything.com/work/139490/...

AKA The Good Women of China: Hidden Voices by Xinran Xue.

I wonder if you have read it? It is a series of portraits of Chinese women, often depicting moving and very disturbing traumas. I have been haunted for years now by the chapter "The Girl Who Kept a Fly as a Pet".
Indeed! One is most pleased and excited. Be aware that these new ones are among the very last books PA wrote after a half-century of work. It is probably no accident that they feature means of radical life-extension!

Some might prefer his earlier work, though I thoroughly enjoyed the Boat of a Million years, which I think you read recently (Please remind me!) That book and Harvest of Stars should be read before The Stars Are Also Fire,
Harvest the Fire, and The Fleet of Stars.

I liked Harvest of Stars quite a bit, but I'm a little hazy on the subsequent ones.
Exciting to see the new nonfiction entrries!
Unless I decide to add the children's books....
Perhaps the 6000 or so books in our combined libraries is most important, as we can each borrow any desired volume from the other!

I only have another 200-400 to go (hard to tell exactly).
I have the book too but haven't read it - just haven't gotten around to it. Should I look for the Berlin book as well?
Missing those Russians is one of the more foolish things I've done (in my adult life). I have the texts, and the Isaiah Berlin book that helped inspire that work.

I guess, as regrets go, it could be worse.
I just noticed you list tom stoppard as one of your three named favorites. I don't know why this comes as a surprise to me. Not the fact of it, the not knowing. He is one of my very favorites too!
Ah, but you all introduced me to Patrick O'Brian .... and G G Kay and Scalzi and...

and as I said that's just the collection as it has survived all these years. The mysteries, regencies and historical and romances were consumed in like quantity but not kept. *sigh*
I completely agree with both comments on Asimov. But I still think I should do a reread check for you, rather than send you to a recommendation I will not feel comfortable standing behind. Cooper was one of my favorite authors, but that was when I was 15.

To send you to him now would be like defrosting something from the freezer wrapped in foil when I invited you for dinner, without being sure exactly what was inside. You deserve a recommendation delivered with more care and intention.
No, I seriously think you will find him the kind of old-style offensive sexist SF that drives you away from that era in general. I felt that even then, but overlooked it for the adventure-escapism of his books. But I don't think I could do it now, and I have doubts about whether such a trade-off would be a good exchange for you.

I reread one of the less macho-dominated last year, and I didn't love it the way I once had. I may reread the one that I suspect has the best ratio of pleasure-to-offense and see how it shakes out. Then I'll let you know.

But that'll be after our cape cod trip next week.
A lot of new entries. Have you read Gilead yet?
At the very bottom of the "your profile" page, there is a scetion called "RSS Feeds". If you go to the page of anyone whose entries interest you, click on the orange "XML" box next to "Recently-added books". You can also do this for your own library, enabling you to review your own recent entries at a later date. To view the feeds, there is usually a "feeds" option associated with your "favorites" or bookmarked sites. This should give you the option to view recent activity on any of thre feeds to which you subscribe. It can also be used to subscribe to certain blogs, columns, or other information sources that are periodically updated.

Too bad about TGWTJGE. Not surprised really; the one I liked best was TLSFE.
And you got The Girl with the Jade Green Eyes too.

Do you know how to subscribe to the feeds which will show all the latest books entered by persons of interest? I subscribe to your feed.
Oh my god! You got A Boat of a MILLION YEARS! Did I influence that? Yay! ANd the Unveiling of Timbuctoo! Too.
No hurry, I'm still imputing. :)
Kokipy Hi. I just past 200 books 81 of which we share. Is it just me or do you prefere female authors too.
I think your copy of Erich Fromm's The Art of Loving comes up with only two members having it because it is entered funny, er ... funnily.

Who plays volleyball in your tribe?
Hi Kokipy Please disreguard the aelithtourblanc account I'm back in my original one now.
Greetings Kolipy ji.
Oh, too bad. I found it in my collection as I was LTing, and remembered someone had given it to me, having liked it.
I see you have A Conspiracy of Paper.

Did you like it?
Well met again! :)
oh Kokipy-ji, thank you very much. I regard your opinion most highly. I too would love to sit around the kitchen table and discuss our books; maybe in the future I can aim for a gathering of the Eastern association :D
is it working now? I think it's working now. the site has been running a bit slowly for me; I agree that it must have quite a bit of traffic.

if it is not working now for you, then I shall edit About My Library under my profile and add as the first remark: Kokipy is wonderful and she is my friend. ;)
kokipy-ji, my account shows you as friend, and when I click to add or accept invitation just to check, it says I am already your friend.

must be gremlins. gremlins who savor the irony of the person responsible for me being here not showing up as friended.

well, I hereby overrride them. cast them out. begone, gremlins!
Yay, I'm finally here! XD

Thank you so much for your encouragement; I'm sure I'll thoroughly enjoy this.
Or fang (216/2339) at the top of your weighted list.
It's only the weighted numbers that befuddle me. The raw are clear. It's libraries that are listed high under "weighted" when our ratio is greater. A good example is chilperic (226/3014) toward the bottom of your weighted list under "see more" when my number with respect to you would be 228/1720.
I am interested in the "Members with your books" feature. You are high up on the list of members with my books, but I have just barely winked on and off the tail end of your list. I'm not currently on your list at all. This despite the ratio of our books in common to my total books owned being higher than that of many on your list. I imagine it must have to do with this "weighting" thing -- others must have more uncommon books in common with you. Or something. Or else there are fewer people who own my books than own yours? I'd like to understand this.
I'd love to see the precious volume sometime.
Our Shakespeare won't register as mutually owned as your appears to be in a large (one-volume?) collection and mine is in 50 or so individual books (not yet entered mostly)
Congratulations on all the hard work, BTW! I hope you will feel it has been worth all the effort.
I loved In Search of Reagan's Brain! You just reminded me that I am not sure where my copy is. It may be in a room of bookcases that is full of kid's playstuffs making access very difficult.
You've been busy, I see. We are developing a large number of books in common, which will likely increase as I enter more fiction. Wasn't it you (or was it Surtac?) who was recommending the last Scalzi book as perhaps more worthwhile than the others? I see you gave it one star only. I note neither of us is in love with Robert Sawyer.

What does one star mean in your system?
Thanks! I'm sure by now you've figured out how to rate them, by clicking on the little dots in the "Rating" column on the "Your Library" page. I'm certainly not rushing you to rate before the proper time, just eventually. I believe that you and I have very similar tastes in books and I am shopping around for new authors, not that I think I'm going to have the chance to do much reading for about two years, to be honest.
Thanks. Now I have to get those ABCDE thingies to work properly -- they are not cooperating!
Hmmm. You're another one who's not rating their books. How am I to know what's good? Unless, of course, they're ALL good! ;-)
Hearing you describe your method to sk8er, I fell over in a dead faint!
I do have an extra copy of "Miss Bianca in the Orient" that's looking for a good home...

As far as "Lilith" goes I have read it, about three years ago. I really enjoyed it - it's probably one of my favorite MacDonald books. I wouldn't recommend MacDonald to everyone because sometimes you have to take a long, strange and barely comprehensible journey to get to the goal. It reminds me of the long contemplative journey on foot that you take to get to certain Buddhist temples. Along the way you might see things that illuminate or confuse you or just plain bore you to death. He's a pretty alien writer to me in many ways. One of the best things about my copy was the brief biography of him that was in the foreward. I found his story fascinating.

I would say that "Lilith" is the most adult of MacDonald's books that I've read. Whereas "The Princess and Curdie" or "The Wise Woman" or "The Light Princess" could be read to children because children are the protagonists and they are couched as fairy tales I do not think that "Lilith" can be. The main character is an adult. It reads more like a myth or an epic. In fact, it does remind me of reading "The Iliad".
Kokipy-ji,

One is astounded at the number of books you have catalogued in such a short time!!

I LOVE being able to browse each other's libraries!
You have really managed to get a lot of books in quickly. And judging from my experience, it isn't due to the CueCat!
You are very positive and supportive, I truly thank you. I'm pretty serene about the whole thing. I've been in flux for some time now - it's totally felt like birth pangs (not that I would know - LOL). I feel like that recurring sentiment in "2010" - "Something wonderful is going to happen". It makes my toes curl with happiness and I often start singing in the bathroom.

One word of caution about my reading habits, I do enjoy the Anita Blake Vampire Hunter books by Laurell Hamilton. Especially the earlier ones. They've pretty much devolved but I keep plugging along because I want to see what happens to the characters. Even if they annoy the stuffing out of me sometimes.
As am I (looking forward to getting reading ideas by snooping through your library)! This seems like an incredibly cool resource. Of course, the big problem for me is that I find myself not reading just now. Almost nothing. There's something going on under the surface of my personality.
Kokipy! I'm charmed to see how many books we have in common when I've managed to enter so few. This should be a very entertaining and enlightening experience!

Peace,
Suzdal
Hello! :-)
I see you do some progress with the Cuecat?!
I saw we share more than a few works by Neal Stephenson; that's unusual! A lot of people seems to be disappointed in his Baroque Cycle, and I really enjoyed those books.
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