Livros aleatórios da biblioteca de ryn_books
Dead Until Dark por Charlaine Harris
The Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side por Agatha Christie
Lady Slings the Booze por Spider Robinson
Death Comes as the End por Agatha Christie
If You Leave Me, Can I Come Too? por Cynthia Heimel
The Sable Moon por Nancy Springer
Singing in the Shrouds por Ngaio Marsh
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amigos: fuchsiaberry, jen_lynch, lizzie, rebecca.richardson, stompy
bibliotecas interessantes: 1001Fantasy, Aquila, AsYouKnow_Bob, Caesia, DerBuecherwurm, haidee, MostDisturbingBooks, reading_fox, ringman, ronincats, ryn_reads, sleary
Autores LibraryThing: Janny Wurts (JannyWurts), Jaye Wells (JayeWells), Sharon Kay Penman (Sharonkay), Jo Walton (bluejo), David Weinberger (dweinberger), Geoffrey Miles (geoffmiles), Monica McInerney (monica_mcinerney), Sharon Lee (rolanni), Shanna Swendson (shannaswendson)
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Membro: ryn_books
ColecçõesA sua biblioteca (1,121), Reference and Learning (13), Lidos mas não possuídos (5), AWOL (ok some had leave but they've stayed out late) (3), Para ler (3), Favoritos (21), Lista de desejos (27), Todas as colecções (1,121)
Resenhas11 resenhas
Etiquetasfiction (980), paperback (865), series (603), fantasy (388), fictional universe (310), 20th century (249), mystery (246), crime (244), strong female (238), magic (234) — ver todas as etiquetas
Nuvensnuvem de etiquetas, nuvem de autores
Grupos1001 Fantasy Roadies, Agatha Christie, Australian LibraryThingers, Board for Extreme Thing Advances, Books in Books, Cats, books, life is good., Combiners!, Cover Art, Covers, Desert Island Books — mostrar todos os grupos
Autores favoritosJane Austen, Patricia Briggs, Steven Brust, Lois McMaster Bujold, Agatha Christie, Neil Gaiman, Kerry Greenwood, Barry Hughart, Guy Gavriel Kay, Katharine Kerr, Sharon Lee, Ngaio Marsh, Armistead Maupin, Lucy Maud Montgomery, Elizabeth Moon, Terry Pratchett, Spider Robinson, Connie Willis, Roger Zelazny (Favoritos partilhados)
Livrarias favoritasGrub Street Bookshop, Hill of Content, Minotaur, Reader's Feast Bookstore
Sobre mimRelease** Feel free to contact me via comments if you find any errors or have any questions about any of the editions in my library. (Combiners - THIS MEANS YOU!).
Or for any combining I've done if you disagree with any combining/separating I've done on LT or any Common Knowledge edits/adds I've made. (release idea from PortiaLong)
Sobre a minha bibliotecaWeighted with fantasy & science fiction, with an interest in most other genres as well. I like books for all moods.
I especially like stories that attempt to examine how our human mindset reacts/adapts to society and change. I've found a lot of science fiction and fantasy addresses those questions; some superbly written and others not. Then there's the sunday avo chill-out books, children's, classics, and mysteries.. even the odd airport timewaster is here..
RE: The desert island tag... if you were stranded on a desert island, what books do YOU want to read & re-read?
Cover art is an interest. I'll often choose a 2nd-hand edition over brand new if the older one matches other books in my set. I'll also choose a UK edition over a cheaper US one if I like the visual style more.
I've got many Agatha Christie 2nd-hand paperbacks because I love how illustrative art has changed each decade to convey the SAME story to new readers ... My favourites are the 1950's for sheer liveliness of image vs. the same story illustrated 20 years later in the swirly 70's. [80's reprints were a new low in ugliness and are funny for their sheer awfulness]. She's the only author I've come across who's been reprinted every decade. That's a huge canvas to view illustrative and advertising changes in society.
Feel welcome to search my library to see all my Agatha Christie , Pan Covers , or the HarperCollins series from over a decade ago retro 30s tribute covers to see the differences.
Profile Image copyright to Paul Shone
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Nome realRyn
LocalizaçãoMelbourne, Australia
Tipo de contapública, vitalícia
Novidades das LigaçõesNovidades das Ligações
URL
http://www.librarything.com/profile/ryn_books (perfil)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/ryn_books (biblioteca)
Conhecimento ComumSéries (332), Prémios (273), Personagens (5646), Lugares (893)
Membro desdeJan 12, 2006









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You appear to be me - with a bigger budget. (Sorry if that sounds creepy) I realise this is what's supposed to happen when you use the 'similar libraries' thingy, but I don't very often. I'm about to spend some book vouchers in Auckland in the weekend & needed some new author pointers.
Yay the NZ stuff! Have you read any Maurice Gee?
publicado por Lyz às 7:12 am (EST) em Sep 25, 2009
And then I saw you have just added a couple of Lindsey Davis's delightful Falco escapades - another of my favourite authors - and one that I find withstands rereading.
Cheers
publicado por Caesia às 9:39 am (EST) em Jun 15, 2009
Thank you so much for thinking of me - it does sound interesting!
I fear I shall to tape it as Tueasday nights are choir nights.
Cheers
publicado por Caesia às 9:24 am (EST) em Jun 15, 2009
Peggy
publicado por LizzieD às 7:15 pm (EST) em Apr 12, 2009
Peggy
publicado por LizzieD às 11:40 am (EST) em Apr 11, 2009
I am pleased you are enjoying the Arthur Upfield. I have seen a few of them recently in second hand shops - Howard Bolton usually has a number - the more recent publications, but Kill city and Basement Books will have a few as well!
I am afraid that your collection of Agatha's has made me think about collecting just a few...the Miss Marple's and perhaps a couple with Hercule... however, I fear that it may take quite a while as I search for an older "set" (half the fun in many ways)
You did inspire me on the tagging, and every now and again I identify another group of covers!!
Take Care
Caesia
publicado por Caesia às 7:19 am (EST) em Apr 1, 2009
There's been a recent mini-outbreak of haiku on the topic of "Waiting for Collections" -- I thought, since you've contributed haiku in the past, you might want to join in the fun... Check out this thread and, of course, the LibraryThing Haikus page.
Silent
publicado por SilentInAWay às 7:44 pm (EST) em Mar 28, 2009
I started doing a bit of tagging - noting cover and author - I have not yet got to the stage of different grops of covers, although I think it may happen over time. There is something rather splendid about the way that the covers look on the screen that seems to enhance the images, which is great.
I have noticed quite a few second hand Upfields around - often of the newer editions, but not always. I do tend to wander in and out of the second hand book shops in the city fairly regularly (almost weekly that is) and I think there were quite a few in Howard Bolton's on the weekend. (I also live in Melbourne, even though I tend to visit Canberra a lot and then go to a bookshop or three or four.)
I am currently enjoying reading Michael Pearce's vision of the class system at work in the British Foreign Office with his protagonist Seymour getting on with the "Natives" in prewar Europe. Apporpirately dated and fun! However, your make me think that I should pick up some more Upfield next!
Cheers
Caesia
publicado por Caesia às 8:12 am (EST) em Mar 17, 2009
I had not thought about using Tags for cover art, but now that you have given me the idea, I am rather taken by the potential... thank you!
I have decided that the number of books in common with another library does not always match my interests - I think that it depends on which books and what the other books are in the collection, rather than numbers. I have to confess that I am also interested in actual collections, rather the "wish" lists that some members have in their libraries.
I am delighted that I have reminded you about Arthur Upfield - I think he is a bit of a gem.
i hope you enjoy the LIndsey Davis' that you have just loaded - I wait anxiously for each new Falco to hit the press
Cheers
Caesis
publicado por Caesia às 4:33 am (EST) em Mar 15, 2009
I rather like your collections of various Agatha covers - the Fontana are just fabulous and the Pan ones are the ones that I first read Agatha under...
I have become increasingly interested in cover art since loading evrytihing onto LT, but have concentrated a bit more on the 70s peguin covers for Margery Allingham or Harry Kemelman, although I am now picking up the old Pan Arthur Upfields when I find them.
I hope you don't mind if I add you to my interesting library list.
Cheers
Caesia
publicado por Caesia às 5:18 am (EST) em Mar 14, 2009
actually, *gleeful dance*
I was starting to think I'd have to write it myself :)
publicado por infoaddict às 1:51 am (EST) em Mar 11, 2009
publicado por infoaddict às 6:17 am (EST) em Mar 7, 2009
publicado por Seanie às 2:17 am (EST) em Feb 11, 2009
publicado por Severn às 12:20 am (EST) em Jan 28, 2009
Your Agatha Christie covers are interesting. When I was a teenager I read through all of Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe novels, mostly buying them at used book stores. So I wound up with books from various different editions ranging from the 50s to the 80s. I also found the variation in both style and content interesting.
publicado por Wombat às 10:37 am (EST) em Jan 8, 2009
publicado por supersidvicious às 4:04 am (EST) em Oct 31, 2008
publicado por fuchsiaberry às 4:32 am (EST) em Mar 28, 2008
Cheers!
publicado por staffordcastle às 11:56 am (EST) em Nov 7, 2007
I copied your two haiku from the Pirate Haiku blog comments to the Wiki.
I hope you don't mind.
publicado por SilentInAWay às 3:19 pm (EST) em Oct 2, 2007
publicado por jp_burton às 5:38 pm (EST) em Sep 1, 2007
Cheers!
publicado por staffordcastle às 11:35 pm (EST) em Jul 31, 2007
publicado por Aquila às 5:57 am (EST) em Jul 20, 2007
publicado por DerBuecherwurm às 9:28 am (EST) em Jul 13, 2007
I was just taking a look around in your library and first thing I saw was the "desert island" tag. I like that very much. Mind if I steal it? My great challenge is that I would really like to get into different genres and leave some of the old behind, so finding people with 'matching' libraries is actually not that interesting to me. I would almost like to find opposites. This is why your library is very interesting to me.
publicado por DerBuecherwurm às 10:38 am (EST) em Jul 12, 2007
publicado por Aquila às 6:13 pm (EST) em May 10, 2007
Well, yeah, but...see the thread I started in the Book Talk group entitled "Anticipation of Tragedy" about reading out of order.
The other stories in Irresistible Forces didn't appeal much to me, except for the one about a collaboration between two mages (male and female, of course...the title of the compilation refers to the magic of love) to defeat the Spanish Armada through the use of storms.
publicado por Linkmeister às 1:47 pm (EST) em May 3, 2007
publicado por Linkmeister às 5:15 pm (EST) em May 2, 2007
publicado por edc135 às 2:31 am (EST) em Apr 28, 2007
Best regards
Lee
publicado por mysticreader às 6:34 am (EST) em Apr 20, 2007
re: the Thomsen anthologies
They're reprint anthologies, so
1) I already have most(all?) of the contents, and thus was under no urgency to pick them up when they were new on the bookstore shelves; and
2) Each one contains work by Orson Scott Card, and he’s hateful enough that I don’t give him money if I can avoid it.
Here are the contents, so you can judge for yourself:
Novel Ideas SF: Ender’s Game (Card), Fire Watch (Willis), Air Raid (Varley), Lady in the Tower (McCaffrey), Postman (Brin), Blood Music (Bear), Beggars in Spain (Kress).
Novel Ideas Fantasy: St.Dragon & the George (Dickson), Unicorn Tapestry (Charnas), Hatrack River, Lost Boys (Card), Gargoyle’s Shadow (Kurtz), Jerlayne (Abbey), Gilgamesh in the Outback (Silverberg) , Midshipwizard (James Ward).
Hope that helps.
publicado por AsYouKnow_Bob às 1:54 pm (EST) em Apr 11, 2007
publicado por hulkling às 11:40 am (EST) em Apr 10, 2007
You bought it for your shelves or for yourself? ;-)
I agree with you. Claire Tomalin's Pepys is really a big book.
publicado por Pepys às 12:29 pm (EST) em Apr 2, 2007
I enthusiastically recommend just about everything Connie Willis has written; you should add Doomsday Book to your list if you haven't already read it.
publicado por ellen.w às 11:21 pm (EST) em Mar 8, 2007
publicado por Doulton às 12:37 am (EST) em Mar 8, 2007
What's with the "ficton" tag? I'd been taking it for a typo, but I guess it isn't.
And wow to your comments. Lots of interesting information.
I've just finished the third of the Merry books, they've been reprinted by GGBP http://www.ggbp.co.uk/ expensive, but I'm sure there are Australian resellers because some of them advertise on the NZ auction sites. However maybe you prefer the originals?
The books of In My Father's Den is quite different in some ways to the movie. I won't say how, let you read it. It was the movie that got me to go and find a copy, and of course all our library ones were out!
Here's my desert island shelf:
http://www.librarything.com/catalog.php?...
And I'll stop going on now.
publicado por Aquila às 6:12 pm (EST) em Nov 9, 2006
I'm tending to list my more esoteric books, odd children's books from the 60's, resulting in my having few books in common with anyone!
I love sci fi. I haven't even begun to list those. Do I really need to catalog my library as it is so time consuming and we own lots of books? I've read almost all of Sheri Tepper. And... well, too many sci fi authors to go into here, feminists, classics, cyberpunk, space opera, etc.. I've never read Sharon Lee though. Would you recommend her? You might like Maureen McHugh, although she can be a bit cold, dark and depressed.
The book covers of sci-fi paperbacks from the 60's are divine.
publicado por oangeLA às 3:36 pm (EST) em Aug 2, 2006
publicado por bookgal71 às 7:36 am (EST) em Apr 21, 2006