Livros aleatórios da biblioteca de omaca
1688: A Global History por John E. Wills
The Cambridge Factfinder por David Crystal
Water for Elephants: A Novel por Sara Gruen
In the Wake of the Plague: The Black Death and the World It Made por Norman Cantor
e=mc2: A Biography of the World's Most Famous Equation por David Bodanis
The Matter Myth (Penguin Press Science S.) por Paul Davies
Reflections of Eden: My Life with the Orangutans of Borneo por Birute M.F. Galdikas
Membros com livros de omaca
Ligações a outros membros
amigos: ahsyadpublication, karenmarie, theoldman
bibliotecas interessantes: TerryWeyna
Autores LibraryThing: John Kelly (JohnKelly), Patrick Rothfuss (Rothfaust), Alan Furst (afurst)
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Resenhas dos livros de omaca não incluindo resenhas do próprio
Membro: omaca
ColecçõesA sua biblioteca (493), Lista de desejos (8), Para ler (65), Favoritos (15), Todas as colecções (500)
Resenhas3 resenhas
Etiquetashistory (153), fiction (150), ancient history (75), science (65), historical fiction (43), crime (34), rome (32), military history (23), SF (19), memoir (16) — ver todas as etiquetas
Nuvensnuvem de etiquetas, nuvem de autores
GruposAncient History, Australian LibraryThingers, Historical Fiction, I Survived the Great Vowel Shift, Non-Fiction Readers, Poetry Fool, Science Fiction Fans, Science!
Sobre a minha bibliotecaPrimarily non-fiction; mostly history and popular science. Especial interest in ancient history. Have recently started reading fiction again.
LocalizaçãoPerth, WA
Autores favoritosNenhuma
Tipo de contapública, vitalícia
Novidades das LigaçõesNovidades das Ligações
URL
http://www.librarything.com/profile/omaca (perfil)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/omaca (biblioteca)
Conhecimento ComumSéries (66), Prémios (233), Personagens (1339), Lugares (402)
Membro desdeMay 20, 2009








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publicado por pinkozcat às 12:02 am (EST) em Oct 2, 2009
publicado por shawjonathan às 10:17 pm (EST) em Sep 21, 2009
– Albert Schweitzer
"It is the heart always that sees before the head can see."
– Thomas Carlyle
"The great man is he who does not lose his childlike heart."
– Mencius
publicado por theoldman às 8:30 am (EST) em Sep 8, 2009
Just wanted to affirm that I took your original post pretty much as you described it--more question than attack, and laughing at yourself a bit at the same time. And I tend to roll my eyes at the useless one-liners. But have you seen the ones done as haiku? They can also be frivolous, but at least the writer has a point along with the brevity.
I usually quickly skim the tags and the reviews to prevent being spoiled, but at least they are quicker to skim than the multi-paragraph "serious" reviews. I have only been on this site a few months, lurking much more than I post. I have learned that I won't bother posting a review, since I just don't do analysis well, and many on this site take the review process so seriously.
I'm just glad you didn't take offense at some of the more vehement posts. This is still one of the most reasonable websites I've found, with all the diverse personalities. Of course, readers are bound to be more intelligent and rational--well, almost always. And I am beginning to find confrontation entertaining from the background. Much better than "reality" TV.
publicado por littleshell às 6:25 pm (EST) em Aug 25, 2009
Just came in to say hello and that your comment about not getting enough reading time struck a chord - but I got interrupted by my 2 year old! I have a 5 year old as well and I'm finding a bit more reading time lately, but it still has to be squeezed in.
Looks like you have some fantastic books - I've just looked at the first page of your history ones so far - but I see another Alan Furt fan. I've only read The World at Night so far but really enjoyed it.
Cheers
Cushla
publicado por cmt às 2:15 pm (EST) em Aug 25, 2009
publicado por Esta1923 às 10:30 pm (EST) em Aug 21, 2009
Given your interest in ancient history, it will be interesting to see what we have in common. I notice you have Hopkirk's The Great Game. I recently purchased his earlier book, Foreign Devils on the Silk Road (or something like that), which covers Aurel Stein and his co-adventurers.
Regards,
Maki
publicado por Makifat às 3:27 pm (EST) em Aug 20, 2009
publicado por rcss67 às 9:23 pm (EST) em May 22, 2009
publicado por rcss67 às 2:40 pm (EST) em May 22, 2009
publicado por AsYouKnow_Bob às 8:08 am (EST) em May 22, 2009
publicado por Esta1923 às 11:08 pm (EST) em May 21, 2009
Thanks for the post and welcome to LibraryThing! I hope you love it as much as I do. I started out being interested in cataloging my books, started using tags for locations, then other things, and eventually got involved in some of the groups and threads. It's a great place.
Glad you liked my methodology, too!
I love having books on my shelves for any mood that takes me. I've been using the thrift stores and BookMooch lately instead of buying too many new ones, and that's fun too.
See you around!
karenmarie
publicado por karenmarie às 6:05 am (EST) em May 21, 2009