Livros aleatórios da biblioteca de peterdmark
The Armchair Universe: An Exploration of Computer Worlds por A. K. Dewdney
The Cancer Ward por Aleksandr I. Solzhenitsyn
If I Were a Word, Then I'd Be a Song por Bill Staines
The Great Conductors por Harold C. Schonberg
The Annie Dillard Reader por Annie Dillard
Strange Attractors: Stories por Rebecca Goldstein
Book Row: An Anecdotal and Pictorial History of the Antiquarian Book Trade por Marvin Mondlin
Membros com livros de peterdmark
Ligações a outros membros
amigos: appleby, EdwardEinhorn, elmark, nevet, peterchristopher
bibliotecas interessantes: appleby, avatiakh, boklusen, elizabethleewilmer, HarvReviewer, kettle666, mindy, smcwl, TheBookImp, YaelAgmon
Autores LibraryThing: David Gries (DavidGries), Harold M. Edwards (HMEdwards), Yaacov Lozowick (YaacovLozowick), Clare Bell (rathacat), David A. Curry (tnstatc)
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Resenhas dos livros de peterdmark não incluindo resenhas do próprio
Membro: peterdmark
ColecçõesA sua biblioteca (2,285)
ResenhasNenhuma
Etiquetashistory (337), literature (267), mathematics (196), novel (138), computer science (126), music (110), memoir (98), philosophy (97), jewish history (92), biography (91) — ver todas as etiquetas
Nuvensnuvem de etiquetas, nuvem de autores
GruposAmateur Historians, Ancient History, BBC Radio 3 Listeners, Classical Music, Early Reviewers, History: On learning from and writing history, Medieval Europe, Purely Programmers, Second World War History, Veritas — mostrar todos os grupos
Sobre mimOnce while I was teaching computer science at Seattle University, I asked a history professor if he had read all the books which lined his office walls (all four, floor to ceiling). His response: "Peter, would you buy a library in which you had already read all the books?" Another friend who teaches philosophy at Georgetown University commented on the size of her collection by noting that "one has to buy books out of self-defense anymore because they go out of print so fast." I mention these quips to friends who look at my own library a bit quizzically, and ask "Have you read all those books?"
When I'm not reading, I develop software and enjoy a lot of the outdoor activities the Northwest is known for, like hiking, sailing, skiing, kayaking, and especially rowing. I also play the clarinet and do a bit of photography.
Sobre a minha bibliotecaI concentrated in mathematics in college and computer science in graduate school, so my collection reflects those long-term interests. I also have a lot of history and literature. I lived in Israel for a couple of years after college, which explains all the books of Israeli songs, poetry, novels, politics, and history. I wanted to understand how the situation there became so troubled, so when I returned to the States, I frequented the used bookshops around Harvard Square (which, alas, have largely disappeared) and picked up a modest selection of books about middle east history, including a few by Howard Sachar. I've also enjoyed reading Barbara Tuchman and Simon Schama, historians who, like Sachar, combine careful scholarship with narrative flair. In one of those same Harvard Square bookshops, I came across a set of Churchill's six-volume account of WWII, which is a marvel. Much harder to find is his earlier account of WWI (also six volumes). I found it, along with some of his war speeches, at a small bookshop in New Hampshire that specializes in Churchilliana. I have a nice collection of Martin Gardner's books on mathematical games and Raymond Smullyan's books on logic puzzles and Godel's theorem. Other well-represented authors include Milan Kundera, Vladimir Nabokov, Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy, Shaw, Mark Twain, Charles Dickens, Heinrich Boll, Vikram Seth, Ethan Canin, Calvin Trillin, and Rebecca Goldstein. The most unusual books I own are the artist books created by my mother, Enid Mark, published by the ELM Press. They are certainly the rarest; each was printed in an edition of 40 or 50.
Catalogue Status: I have yet to catalogue a few books on economics and finance, a few mathematics and mathematical puzzle books (mostly paperback), and few dozen miscellaneous mass market paperbacks. In total, only 100 to 200 titles remain.
Página pessoalhttp://www.petermarkphotography.com
Também emSkype
Adesão
LibraryThing Primeiros Resenhistas/Ofertas de Membros
Nome realPeter Mark
LocalizaçãoSeattle, Washington
Endereço de correio electrónicopeter
post.harvard.edu
Autores favoritosNenhuma
Tipo de contapública, vitalícia
Novidades das LigaçõesNovidades das Ligações
URL
http://www.librarything.com/profile/peterdmark (perfil)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/peterdmark (biblioteca)
Conhecimento ComumSéries (135), Prémios (197), Personagens (1561), Lugares (405)
Membro desdeMar 4, 2007
Actividade mais recente
peterdmark adicionou:Jerusalem 1913: The Origins of the Arab-Israeli Conflict por Amy Dockser Marcus |









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I check my account about as often as you do.
I did some grad work in DSP. My text books were by Oppenheim and Schafer. I thought it was quite good, of course having Ron Schafer teaching the class helped. I thought McClellan's book is good, as is Merserau's.
That is about my limit on DSP.
Sorry.
Pete
publicado por pw0327 às 11:53 pm (EST) em Oct 9, 2009
I see that you have a copy of Plato's Ghost. What did you think? I have not taken the plunge yet. Not a mathematician but I am a math enthusiast. I have a PhD in electrical engineering so I have done some advanced mathematics.
Much Thanks.
publicado por pw0327 às 10:05 pm (EST) em Jul 13, 2009
It's true, once I get my library up in LT, I am not sure how frequently I will look at it. I like the idea of user groups on LT, but have not (yet) found one for me (I'm accepting recommendatons). I had considered getting "The rest is noise", but I don't think I can afford to read it -- I am sure it would send me buying too much new music. Right now, I am reading (in fiction), "The Moviegoer" by Walker Percy, "The Discovery of Heaven" by Mullisch (sp.), and "Radon Daughters" by Iain Sinclair. I also have in the rotation "The Age of Entanglement" (an (sort-of) oral history of quantum theory), "The Rise of Western Christendom" (the last 100 pages have been waiting to be read for a few weeks), and "Between Barack and a Hard Place" by Tim Wise. There is also the technical stuff. I am trying to learn some symplectic geometry and mechanics (Books by Berndt, Kirrilov, and Marsden and Raitu) in hopes of being able to read some papers relating to my research, but this project may take some time.
I do (think I) recall seeing, several years ago, some mimeographed notes of a projective geometry book by Hartshorne. Are these being published? For whom are you writing the review?
I saw you added "Deciding the next decider." Have you read "The Golden Gate"?
regards,
Glenn
publicado por appleby às 12:50 pm (EST) em Mar 18, 2009
publicado por carterchristian1 às 2:56 pm (EST) em Mar 15, 2009
No apologies for any delay. I do wonder how often one returns to this page once the library is on-line, we shall see. As for where I teach, I think you could probably determine this by googling "appleby silicon valley algebraic combinatorics". If that is insufficient, let me know. Algebraic combinatorics is using one side (algebra, for example) to answer questions about combinatorics (and vice versa). I am more on the algebraic side, but I have a colleague with whom I frequently work who is more versed in combinatorics.
What are you reading? Do you set goals, or follow what interests you at the time?
Glenn
publicado por appleby às 1:27 am (EST) em Mar 10, 2009
I'm reading an early reviewer book too, got it in the March batch. Pandora in the Congo by Albert Sánchez Piñol, I'm much impressed, so much so that I'm considering buying his previous book too.
publicado por TheBookImp às 7:36 pm (EST) em Apr 3, 2008
Thanks for reciprocating and adding me to your list of interesting libraries. Lots of questions! :)
How did I find your profile? – well I was reading some of the posts in Talk and came across something you’d written, can’t remember what it was but I must have thought, "hmm I’ll go have a look". So I did and then almost got lost in your catalogue. That to me is an interesting library you see… easy!
What's Birmingham like? – At this precise moment it’s cold and damp, other than that it’s like any other big city I guess. I’d prefer to live in the countryside but needs must.
Is it far from London? – 121.1 miles away. London is about 3 hours away by our roads give or take an hour or so depending on traffic.
Are there some good bookshops there? - Major chains yes, Waterstones, W H Smith’s being the ones that spring to mind and then there’s an awful lot of little charity shops that sell books, unfortunately the second hand bookseller seems to be going out of business, not too many of them around anymore.
Have you been to the States? Seattle? – Yes I’ve been to the States though not Seattle; I spent quite a lot of time in Ohio a couple of years ago.
Ok my turn HAH! – What’s Seattle like? Have you ever been to the UK? What books are you reading now?
Jacquie
publicado por TheBookImp às 5:34 pm (EST) em Apr 1, 2008
I started browsing your photo site. Pretty extensive and pretty impressive.
I went to graduate school at Cornell, so I was pleased to see a gallery of Ithaca photos. I've taken quite a number of pictures there myself - starting with slides in the early 70's on up to digital photos in 2003. Your take on Annabel Taylor Hall showed me perspectives I'd never considered before.
-- Dick
publicado por hashiru às 9:29 am (EST) em Mar 9, 2008
PS,
Thanks for the kind comments regarding my essay!
publicado por jasfaulkner às 4:24 pm (EST) em Mar 5, 2008
I have done other things since I started on LT, but this week has been pretty intense. Still on Monday, Julie and I went to the new Borders in Ann Arbor, got me a "Great Clip", went to the local Apple Store to paw over the new MacBook Air, stopped at Zingerman's Roadhouse for lunch and probably a couple other things I've forgotten about.
I've also managed to finish reading 5 books since the 6th: "Jesus Out to Sea" by James Lee Burke, "offshore" by Penelope Fitzgerald, "Mister St. John" by Loren D. Estleman, "The Shadow Riders" by Louis L'Amour, and the "Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane" by Kate DiCamillo. I'm also over half way through the latest Dortmunder novel: "What's So Funny"
I have gotten pretty good at typing ISBN's quickly and also psyching out exactly what combo of info to type when there is no ISBN in order to narrow down the choices. The biggest frustration has been the "Rampaging Elephants" and the other inexplicable "dead air" from LT. I guess it really is still Beta. OTOH, you can't complain for $10 a year.
Sorry to ramble, but it's late and I'm keyed up over all the books I entered today. I'm now tied for 270th in the Largest Libraries (but who's counting ;-)
We won't be back to Seattle/Shoreline until early August. It would be nice to meet you if you're interested. Send me email (it's on my profile)
-- Dick
P.S. I still have to find time to peruse your photography.
publicado por hashiru às 9:53 pm (EST) em Feb 21, 2008
Anyway, I meant to say that one of my most interesting places in Seattle is here. Hope I got it right this time ;-)
publicado por hashiru às 5:36 pm (EST) em Feb 21, 2008
I found you since we are the only two members of LT who have claimed "Adventures Among the Toroids" in their libraries. I have it since I went to MSU and actually took classes from Bonnie Stewart (Number Theory and the Theory of Finite Groups) in the early 60's. I went on to take a PhD in Mathematics (Algebraic Topology) at Cornell University, but only stayed in academia for 8 years after my degree. Since then I have been a computer scientist / software developer, so our paths have taken somewhat similar directions.
My daughter and her husband live is Seattle (actually, Shoreline, but close enough) and we visit there quite often. I would love to retire there in a few years. One of my favorite places in Seattle is. I would be surprised if you didn't know about it, but I mention it just in case.
-- Dick Vile in Dexter, MI USA
publicado por hashiru às 5:15 pm (EST) em Feb 21, 2008
What a great description/book review (of Churchill's book). I haven't read that book, except maybe parts of it growing up (my father had it), but your discussion of it is compelling. The History of the English Speaking Peoples is great though- I bought this set at a used book store in the Berkeley 'suburbs'. I like his writing style, blending his opinions with his knowledge. Now, after learning that his habit was to write while standing at a desk, his individual viewpoint and voice seems more apparent.
The background story of the venetian affair is, as you say, possibly even more interesting than the story told. I wonder if the author will ever explore that story, his father's story and the recent family history - as well as the art world murders.
Sue
publicado por smcwl às 9:08 am (EST) em Jan 15, 2008
I stumbled upon your library and noticed you have a good deal of works on the history of mathematics. I have a BS in math and will be starting my PHd next fall and am looking for a good, concise history of 20th century mathematics that doesn't skimp on the math itself, doesn't assume the reader doesn't know any math. Any suggestions? Thanks alot.
-Justin
publicado por eulivius às 5:47 pm (EST) em Oct 28, 2007
I just moved over near the UW. Just saw your comment to me from two months ago - obviously I don't log on here too much!
I see you have some George Eliot - one of my favorite oldies. I've read several of hers.
I've got 9 weeks of grad school left - not that I'm counting down or anything. =) Not sure what my profs think of LibraryThing. There are so many book sites and applications out there I don't know that they have the chance to evaluate it all.
Thanks for your comments. =)
aimee
publicado por aimee às 1:13 am (EST) em Oct 3, 2007
I'm at the Jewish Literature department of the graduate school of the Jewish Theological Seminary. I take courses in Yiddish, Hebrew, German and Comparative Literature at JTS, Columbia and NYU (almost done with coursework!). I only wish I could afford the time to study Russian and Arabic as well...
I spent most of my life in Israel (from the age of 9 until recently), so Hebrew is my strongest language (and the one I write in most comfortably).
Looking at your library, I feel the same. I've always been drawn to mathematical games and logic, but never had the time I would like to have for it... I didn't even catalog my Martin Gardner books, so bad do I feel about never really investing in it!
If you're interested in Hebrew literature as well, you're also welcome to the "Hebrew Literature" group.
Stay in touch -
Miriam
publicado por mirmir às 12:58 pm (EST) em Jul 6, 2007
publicado por gregfindley às 6:23 pm (EST) em Jul 2, 2007
Since LT (for some reason) doesn't support Hebrew characters, could you enter the author names in Latin characters? Authors with a name in Hebrew characters don't even get an author page...
publicado por mirmir às 2:39 pm (EST) em Jun 30, 2007
publicado por clamairy às 12:33 pm (EST) em May 19, 2007
publicado por clamairy às 9:33 am (EST) em May 19, 2007
I guess we're all having this problem.
http://www.librarything.com/talktopic.ph...
publicado por clamairy às 6:49 am (EST) em May 18, 2007
I have nothing hidden, but sometimes you have to give libraries/catalogs quite a bit of time to load. LibraryThing can get slooooooooow at times. So far we only have 54 books in common, but once you get your Dickens and Twain loaded, we'll be a bit higher.
Clare
publicado por clamairy às 6:39 am (EST) em May 18, 2007
The novel is set in 14th century Strasburg. I'm a long way from putting pen to paper. I'm doing the research.
Cheryl
publicado por cvjacobs às 9:05 am (EST) em May 11, 2007
I'm very interested in history in general and Jewish history in particular. I'm just starting the research for a historical novel that takes place in the 14th century. I've read about the contemporary Middle East from various perspectives.
Cheryl
publicado por cvjacobs às 8:07 pm (EST) em May 9, 2007
First of, thank you for noticing my collection.
Second, the tag "hebrew" suppose to note that this is a translation into hebrew or an original hebrew language book.
And third, I AM living in Israel, and like it a lot :).
dalmoz
publicado por dalmoz às 11:14 am (EST) em May 4, 2007
Christophe
publicado por ktov às 1:47 am (EST) em May 1, 2007
publicado por AndrewB às 12:40 am (EST) em Apr 26, 2007
Das Lied von der Erde- Klemperer, Ludwig and Wunderlich, The Philharmonia orchestra on Angel/EMI Classics CDC;
Symphony no.1 Haitink and the Berlin PO;
Symphony no.2 Klemperer and the Philadelphia orchestra;
and Bernstein with the new York Philharmonic (live);
Symphony no. 5 Bernstein with Vienna Philharmonic (live);
symphony no. 9 Horenstein and the French national Orchestra.
I won't know what versions I have until I get home in May. I though you might want to pass this along to the person who asked about the Mahler if you think they are worth discussing. Cheers, Miriam
publicado por almigwin às 12:27 pm (EST) em Apr 25, 2007
Sorry I missed your comment; I've been traveling in South America recently and haven't used LibraryThing in a little while. I just logged on to catalogue the complete works of Borges that I bought in Spanish today here in Buenos Aires.
I believe I've catalogued around 90% of my collection (excluding the boxes that are still sitting in the back of my father's bookstore). I'm still working on cataloguing; I think that I have at most several hundreds books left uncatalogued in my apartment, and I'm pretty sure I know which shelves they're on.
I've lived in San Francisco for eight years; I work in computer politics and haven't written many computer programs recently (although I sometimes hope to get back into that, since programming can be very satisfying). I'll take a look at your collection when I get home.
I'm excited because I get to visit the National Library of Argentina tomorrow!
publicado por schoen às 10:08 pm (EST) em Apr 16, 2007
publicado por gailT às 11:43 pm (EST) em Apr 15, 2007
publicado por ComplexZeta às 9:07 am (EST) em Apr 14, 2007
publicado por almigwin às 4:18 am (EST) em Apr 13, 2007
There is a recital at Glyndebourne with Bryn Terfel that is a prize.
publicado por almigwin às 4:08 am (EST) em Apr 13, 2007
I am speechless over your mother's work, and your photography. I have only been able to look at some of your pictures, and they are so beautiful i just don't know what to say except thank you and bravo. it's curious how some people can begin something and just carry it to the top of the tree. my stepdaughter, who has a doctorate in Pharmacy, and works in a hospital, made friends with a dog breeder and got a pharoah hound puppy. She learned how to handle it, and show it, and he advanced to being the #1 pharoah hound in the country. She was not a professional breeder, trainer or handler, and this was her first pharoah hound. Now she is a breeder, and has four or five of them, all champions or about to become champions. She is single, and the dogs fill her life. I don't mean that photography and traveling are like dogs, but to become so very successful with your first camera and then go on to becoming the kind of photographer whose work is fine art- well I'm awestruck. And your mother's work is even more awe inspiring. My son's book was done in the early 70's and if he had known about your mother's work, I bet she would have been interested in his book. But he didn't have any original art in it. The poems were all based on chinese scrolls that he located as a consultant to the New York Graphics Society. Many of them came from the collection of John Crawford, who gave permission to the Graphics society to publish them. Some even were published with my son's poems on them. I guess this is a weird digression, but your mother's books and my son's book have a great deal in common. Also, my son's book was done in Massachusetts, when he was a student at Amherst. It will take me some time to look at your pictures, so I won't try to comment yet, but I did love the brick wall with the blue shutter in Florence. THANK YOU AGAIN< Miriam
publicado por almigwin às 10:28 am (EST) em Apr 12, 2007
I just noticed I hadn't taken in your question about 'Le Ton Beau de Marot', I get the pun, but no I haven't read the book. I'll try to find out some more about it.
Entering the books here rather takes away time from reading and possibly even the desire to really read rather than consider books.
philippe/
I see your picture's come up. One of my daughters tells me I ought to change my picture, so I sat in front of photobooth ( apple ), but I can't figure how to remove the existing photo to make way for a (probably) better one.
publicado por lascaux às 4:02 pm (EST) em Apr 9, 2007
I was glad to hear from you and get a peek at your library. I'm blessed with parents, grandparents, and a husband who are also all readers, and that accounts for some of the variety in my library.
If you enjoy reading aloud, check out Will Duquette's site "The View from the Foothills." He reads aloud a lot to his wife, and to his children and has good suggested reads.
I read aloud to my children and to my husband, and generally speaking, whatever I read it aloud to my husband, the children enjoy also. We've read Wodehouse, Trollope, C.S. Lewis, Tolkien, and some non-fiction aloud for the entire family.
publicado por LauraLLD às 2:31 pm (EST) em Apr 9, 2007
I'm glad to hear from you.
'The Golden Gate' I found clever, intriguing, a juggling trick, but the constraints of rhyming pairs prevented him from taking some distance from real life; whereas 'Two Lives' which is closely based on real lives and even reproduces whole chunks of what ought to be prosaic material with the author in an odd situation, being very respectful of the two persons' material and experiences ends up being very good literature, I find.
The translation you mention of 'Eugene Onegin' was the spring-board for Seth's novel. It's fascinating at first, then irritating, to me; and I didn't finish it; and i'm certain it doesn't have the feel of Pushkin. I wish I could read Pushkin for real.
I worked for the European Commission for 31 years and retired a year ago when I became 65.
I'd like to keep in touch.
Philippe
publicado por lascaux às 4:05 pm (EST) em Apr 5, 2007
So I encountered your library and your profile and also your photos, all of which I've enjoyed. I especially liked reading what you wrote about your experiences and your books and cataloguing.
I get a bit of a feel for the North West too - where I have never been.
Florence I know quite well.
Lascaux
publicado por lascaux às 5:15 am (EST) em Apr 5, 2007
publicado por antimuzak às 4:53 am (EST) em Apr 3, 2007
Love your photos! (Patti and I honeymooned in Florence.) You asked how we store/display our books. We are blessed with a house that is two stories (plus basement) on the outside, and four stories (plus basement) on the inside. (I just tried to paste an outside and an inside basement picture with no luck.)
More than half of our some 7,000 books are on shelves that line 2/3rds of the basement walls; most of the rest are on two four-section (30 inches wide, 7 shelves high each section) shelves in our living room (the third level, counting the basement) and a loft (the fourth level counting the basement). The rest are on waist-high foldable four-shelf units in our bedroom (the fifth level) and in the kitchen (cookbooks) or stacked next to either side of our bed or near reading chairs and sofas. All of the shelved books are on edge (spine outward) except very large books (atlases, etc.) that are on their sides.
When I look at our shelves throughout the house, and particularly in the basement, I see books, of course, but for location purposes, I also see a spreadsheet: The left column of shelves is column A, each shelf is a row (the uppermost, row 1, the next down, row 2, etc. Thus the upper left niche is A1. I add the level designator, e.g., the basement is level 1, the bedroom, level 5. So the complete location tag I use in LibraryThing for books in the upper left shelf in the basement is "1A1". The same location in the bedroom is "5A1".
We are lucky to have a great house for books. We are not rare book collectors. We are readers. We have created several places in the house to read.
This is, no doubt, lots more than you asked about. Sorry. The location system works and I thought it might benefit others. (Against the "spreadsheet system" we also do subjects: i.e., philosophy, European history, geology, economics, U. S. history, literature, education, mathematics, foreign language, computing, engineering, law, and current affairs, are in the basement; other subjects are in the floors above.
'Nuf said.... More than enough.
Don and Patti
publicado por donandpatti às 6:02 pm (EST) em Mar 20, 2007