Willekeurige boeken van GaneshakaAn Adultery: A Novel door Alexander Theroux Break of Day door Colette Complete Short Stories Volume 2 door Ambrose Bierce Antonin Artaud: Selected Writings door Antonin Artaud Madame Bovary door Gustave Flaubert Snow Crash ( Snowcrash ) door Neal Stephenson The Enormous Room (Modern Library Series, 214) door E. E. Cummings Leden met boeken van GaneshakaVerbanden tussen ledenVrienden: 2wonderY, anniemktx, asgalbraith, BenjaminHahn, BlackSheepDances, bookjunkie, CelesteM, ClayLord, copyedit52, DavidX, dchaikin, dcozy, ekebivibeke, ellengryphon, English99, EnriqueFreeque, eyescorp, floyd_dangle, francescocaligiuri, g0ldenboy, jcmcgowan, jmorian, kambrogi, kandinsky, keylawk, kjellika, KoobieKitten, kswolff, ladygata, libraryhermit, lil_ghostcrab, LolaWalser, Macumbeira, Makifat, mccardey, mediavirus, merry10, Michael_P, ncgraham, nobooksnolife, nohrt4me, Pfanner, PghDragonMan, Porius, pueben, Pummzie, redpersephone, RSHabroptilus, saraslibrary, slickdpdx, thenaughtyhottie, theoldman, WillowOne, wunderkind Interessante bibliotheek: alibrarian, antiquary, bfrank, DameMuriel, DavidX, dr_zirk, francescocaligiuri, Hoagy27, LolaWalser, LordNigelKnickKnack, Makifat, miskatoniclibrary, Pfanner, Porius, scarletslippers, slickdpdx, tiffin RSS feeds
| ||
Lid: GaneshakaVerzamelingenMijn bibliotheek (1,497), Aan het lezen (5), Alle verzamelingen (1,497) Besprekingen90 besprekingen Trefwoordenlittrature (58), american as coca cola (34), very french (21), old school (21), poetry (20), genuflect (16), scifi (16), fantasy (14), hippie daze (14), money (13) — alle trefwoorden Wolkentrefwoordenwolk, schrijverswolk Groepen50 Book Challenge, Famous voluminous novels, Le Salon des Amateurs de la Langue, Le Salon Litteraire du Peuple pour le Peuple, The Chapel of the Abyss, The Hamsun Group, Virago Modern Classics Favoriete schrijversDjuna Barnes, Charles Baudelaire, Barbara Comyns, Emily Dickinson, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Lawrence Durrell, Robert E. Howard, Jack Kerouac, D. H. Lawrence, Tanith Lee, H. P. Lovecraft, Douglas Preston, Jean Rhys, Alexander Theroux, Henry David Thoreau (Gemeenschappelijke favorieten) LievelingsboekhandelsBooks Books Books, Books in Stock, Books On The Avenue, Bounce Back Books, Inquiring Mind, Lyrical Ballad Bookstore, Old Saratoga Books, Paradox Books, Title Wave Books - Midtown Store LievelingsbibliothekenAnchorage Public Library - Z. J. Loussac Public Library, Ohio County Public Library Over mijzelf"I'm Nobody! Who are you? Over mijn boeken Ook opTwitter Lidmaatschap Werkelijke naamGregory WoonplaatsDown by the River (but NOT in a van) E-mailgreg.granquist Soort gebruikeropenbaar, levenslang Verbanden nieuwsVerbanden nieuws URL's
http://www.librarything.com/profile/Ganeshaka (profiel) Lid sindsMar 20, 2008 Aan het lezenThe Abyss: A Novel door Marguerite Yourcenar Recente activiteit
|










(
(



Laat een opmerking achter
Registreer je of log in om een opmerking achter te laten.
But of course, Chekhov had a better plan. He made the man sick and worn out, and ambivalent about his reading, and not caring about the money. I feel that if I could just read all the time, my stress level would go down, and my health would be better, and that the only reason I am stressed out is worrying about having enough money to feed my family and pay all of the bills.
I think what Chekhov accomplished was to describe the eternal issues about existence, ones that are beyond the mundane issues that we are so preoccupied with: family, money, status, etc.
Of course, that is just what is proven by the wealthy banker: sure, you can have a fortune, but what if it dissipates and you have nothing left for all your efforts? There are more fortunes lost than gained. Or another way of saying it is that wealth is created, and temporary pockets of wealth gather in the hands of the few, but the law of entropy pulls wealth out of the hands that are grasping it. Just like sand slipping through your cupped hands. Even though the investment industry says that capital will generate new wealth, the increase in population and the destruction of buildings in floods, wars and earthquakes, means that the wealth is disappearing.
Maybe this is the ultimate message of the story. Even my practice of reading as an enjoyable escape from reality cannot mitigate this, and the 15 year man in solitary confinement saw through all the facade of wealth and any other pursuits, including reading.
door libraryhermit op 8:14 pm (EST) om Mar 4, 2010
(For the second time in my LT history, the map thingy picked up my location correctly. It doubleposted, but I certainly don't expect everything to work.)
AND I've browsed your profile with interest. You remind me to push *D's Cat* and *Abyss* higher up Mt. Bookpile. If I continue to mess around here, I'll never get to them, alas.
Peace,
Babbling Peggy
door LizzieD op 10:55 am (EST) om Mar 1, 2010
door Booksloth op 3:18 pm (EST) om Feb 22, 2010
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Irwin_Thompson
You tube has a great long interview with him.
door Porius op 7:58 am (EST) om Feb 20, 2010
http://www.rawilsonfans.com/writing.html
door Porius op 7:47 am (EST) om Feb 20, 2010
Glad to hear from you. I’m enchanted by this virtual world. I’ve been so busy poking into other people’s libraries that I have read very little else. But I have been making lists of my shelves in preparation to loading my library. It’s been a great exercise. I’ve re-visited old friends, re-positioned a few stray items, and made a short pile of immediate re-reads. Only a very few have been put on a discard pile.
Welcome to Almost Heaven. Do you have ties here, or did you have other reasons for stopping?
HOW CAN YOU LIVE WITHOUT YOUR BOOKS BEING OUT???!!! That’s almost like holding your breath.
I definitely intend to find Paradox Books soon. I thought I had found the proprietor on LT, but maybe not. I got the impression it was a she. TransAllegheny is worth a visit or two, but for some reason, their stock doesn’t seem to change. So once you’ve gleaned what you like, the exercise becomes frustrating.
I worked as a childrens librarian in Belpre, OH and accumulated a partial ton of discards as well as having most desires met by the Ohio Interlibrary loan system. After that I helped open the Borders bookstore at our little Mall. That was good while it lasted, though I’m not at all impressed by the depth of their shelves. Barnes and Noble has better buyers.
I’m just a meek bureau-rat now, but the pay is better. Most of my purchases are from Half.com and abebooks.
I look forward to chitting and chatting.
door 2wonderY op 12:18 pm (EST) om Jan 27, 2010
ha, very funny, but only a few of those are true :P
I'm still in college, so you'd probably still consider me a kid.
I enjoy your reviews too. Lots of honesty, even in the face of so-called classics.
A more coherent and specific comment when I get a chance to read another of your reviews. CYA!
door g0ldenboy op 4:06 pm (EST) om Jan 16, 2010
Anyway, I'll be checking for more of your reviews, so take care and cheers! (*wink-nod*)
Vibeke
door ekebivibeke op 3:01 pm (EST) om Jan 13, 2010
Did you like Hunger or GOTS more?
Take care!
Amy
door BlackSheepDances op 8:12 pm (EST) om Jan 2, 2010
I still hate Olene.
Look forward to more of your reviews!I saw you are reading about Durrell, I'm just starting the Alexandria Quartet series. So far I'm not quite hooked, but hope I will be.
Amy
door BlackSheepDances op 8:32 pm (EST) om Jan 1, 2010
door EnriqueFreeque op 2:07 pm (EST) om Dec 25, 2009
I take pleasure in calling you my friend.
p
door Porius op 11:17 pm (EST) om Dec 24, 2009
door richardderus op 10:27 am (EST) om Dec 21, 2009
door tomcatMurr op 1:25 am (EST) om Dec 14, 2009
door tomcatMurr op 8:51 pm (EST) om Dec 7, 2009
door tomcatMurr op 3:35 am (EST) om Dec 7, 2009
Sorry to pester you so soon but Markale will be great help on your Quest for Durrell. I've read most of his books and while I can't claim that I have the knowledge to solve all the mysteries you bring up in your review I know that Markale will be of invaluable assistance. He and Lionel Fanthorpe are the best around who deal with these knotty issues. They are sober scholars, and as you know a lot of nuts surface when things like the Templars and other Damned Things surface.
Immensely satisfying review, BTW.
door Porius op 7:09 pm (EST) om Dec 5, 2009
In the NYRB article, Bloom approaches Crumb with a knowledge of how others have written about and interpreted Genesis. Good stuff, I thought. A confession: what with editing manuscripts and working on my own writing, when I want to unwind, it's usually not books I turn to but pieces in such as the NYRB, the New Yorker, even the Daily Freeman(!) No, I'm kidding about that last.
Yes, the thread is going well. I enjoy explaining myself, and when no one comes around to ask questions, finding excerpts that will stand alone and hopefully intrigue prospective readers. What you said to me about communes--the charismatic types who take over, and (in your comment), about people dropping in--why not drop by the thread and say something about communes? It would be interesting, and give me a break from listening to myself pontificate.
door copyedit52 op 7:36 am (EST) om Dec 5, 2009
If you would take HBHG to Kafka's Penal Place I think you would like anything by JJ Markale. He writes sensible stuff about those eldritch matters. He's a scholar with a deep understanding of Myth and related matters and something of a poet, too.
I'm sure you and yours will have a fine holidays.
Best wishes
p
door Porius op 1:23 pm (EST) om Dec 4, 2009
door mjai op 12:20 pm (EST) om Dec 4, 2009
You might have come across this yourself: that Enrique (what an interesting, dynamic character!) has set up a strand for underappreciated writers on the Salon, featuring me in December:
http://www.librarything.com/topic/77721
door copyedit52 op 8:48 am (EST) om Nov 25, 2009
door tomcatMurr op 7:31 pm (EST) om Nov 23, 2009
I just wanted to pop over and congratulate you for your HOT REVIEW on "Monsieur". It sounds very interesting and a little different.
Anyway, congrats,
belva
door rainpebble op 5:00 pm (EST) om Nov 23, 2009
door kandinsky op 4:14 am (EST) om Nov 23, 2009
door keylawk op 8:09 pm (EST) om Nov 22, 2009
door tomcatMurr op 8:05 pm (EST) om Nov 22, 2009
door EnriqueFreeque op 12:01 pm (EST) om Nov 21, 2009
door copyedit52 op 9:51 am (EST) om Nov 11, 2009
Oh, lucky you. Finding green spines in the good old U.S. of A. Whoo Hoo!~! I never can find them and so must get all of mine online and the shipping kills my credit card. Tee Hee!~!
Your trip sounds lovely. I am sure that the foliage along the rivers must have been gorgeous. I would love to do that one day. Perhaps when the hubby retires we can.
I know there is major Hemingway bashing going on all over L.T. right now, but I have always enjoyed his works and his "The Old Man and the Sea" is an all time favorite of mine from my childhood days and I can't seem to go more than a couple of years without reading it. I noticed that you added "Green Hills of Africa" to your library. I read that one several years ago (pre my L.T. days) and enjoyed it. Can't help it; I'm a "papa" fan.
Enjoy your day and your Viragos. Elizabeth von Arnim is the "Author of the Month" on L.T. so I am reading some green spines myself this month.
You take care,
belva
door rainpebble op 2:55 pm (EST) om Nov 8, 2009
"In progress" is pretty accurate, really. I've added around half my books to LibraryThing, the ones easily accessible from my computer chair. One of these days I'll get around to entering the titles in other parts of the house.
door lucienspringer op 4:03 pm (EST) om Nov 5, 2009
door Porius op 3:36 pm (EST) om Nov 5, 2009
I'll check out your recommendations!
Anne
door anniemktx op 11:09 pm (EST) om Nov 3, 2009
I have been kidnapped by Nabokov, who is torturing me with bad translations of Pushkin.
door tomcatMurr op 5:57 am (EST) om Nov 3, 2009
Thanks!
door EnriqueFreeque op 1:10 am (EST) om Nov 3, 2009
door tomcatMurr op 11:27 am (EST) om Nov 2, 2009
door EnriqueFreeque op 11:22 am (EST) om Nov 1, 2009
door laytonwoman3rd op 10:13 am (EST) om Oct 16, 2009
door anniemktx op 8:46 pm (EST) om Oct 11, 2009
Best,
David
door dcozy op 4:26 am (EST) om Sep 29, 2009
I came across this yesterday in my rounds:
http://www.librarything.com/work/32770/book/51322492
It won the pulitzer in '43. Had no clue it was anything significant when I bought it. The publisher says it does for Columbus what Boswell did for Dr. Johnson. We'll see!
door EnriqueFreeque op 7:29 pm (EST) om Sep 27, 2009
Keep your reviews comming !
door Macumbeira op 4:10 pm (EST) om Sep 26, 2009
Just ordered redburn from amazon !
door Macumbeira op 11:55 am (EST) om Sep 26, 2009
door EnriqueFreeque op 10:56 am (EST) om Sep 26, 2009
door ncgraham op 8:22 pm (EST) om Sep 21, 2009
Thanks--a lot--for the five stars and the review. And I like that you read the book as quickly as you did; in one sitting, it seems. That always warms my heart.
--Peter
door copyedit52 op 8:54 am (EST) om Aug 27, 2009
That's awful! Triple bypass. Man I hate it (as I'm sure you do even worse right now) when real life interferes with LibraryThing. I'm very very glad to hear your surgery went well and you're home from the hospital. Damn. Horrible. But you made it through. You get'cher rest now ya hear! And listen, we're practically related now, as I've got me one of those nasty sternum scars myself from when I had open heart surg. at the ripe old age of 30, a decade ago, to fix a congenital heart defect: "aortic insufficiency," that had they not caught it, would've knocked me flat on my face like it did Pistol Pete Maravich. You take your walks like a good Grampa and do your breathing exercises like you're told now ya hear! Did they make you wear those weird socks for circulation after? Aaaahhhh, morphine. Good times.
You do take care, G, you've definitely been missed around here.
Brent
door EnriqueFreeque op 3:45 pm (EST) om Aug 7, 2009
Awful quiet over here in these parts. Hope all's okey dokey. I just happened upon a copy of Harold Frederic's, The Damnation of Theron Ware, dirt cheap, then finally got around to entering it, and there's a review there by none other than Ganeshaka sitting in obscurity that I somehow missed previously. Can't wait to read this book, especially after reading your review.
Best,
Brent
door EnriqueFreeque op 10:23 pm (EST) om Aug 5, 2009
One star for DROOD. I thought it suuffered from longueurs and a touch of flatulence here and there, but one star? Would you care to let me in on your reasons?
Have you read Zuleika Dobson by Max Beerbohm? Am reading now and enjoying it very much. Beerbohm can write some fine English. Wodehouse comes to mind but not really.
Having a good summer, I hope.
pgt
door Porius op 12:01 am (EST) om Jul 15, 2009
I really enjoy reading your reviews.
Thanks again!
door KoobieKitten op 2:36 am (EST) om Jun 19, 2009
door laytonwoman3rd op 11:44 am (EST) om Jun 17, 2009
Tui
door tiffin op 9:51 am (EST) om Jun 8, 2009
Tui
door tiffin op 12:50 am (EST) om Jun 8, 2009
door ncgraham op 6:58 pm (EST) om Jun 4, 2009
door ncgraham op 3:11 pm (EST) om Jun 3, 2009
door Porius op 2:09 pm (EST) om Jun 2, 2009
Very happy to see the stars next to A FEW SELECTED EXITS. A fine review, by the way, of that Kate O'Brien novel. Your reviews have the ease and facility of a passage from Lawrence Sterne.
Here's L.S.:
I define a nose as follows,-----interesting only beforehand, and beseeching my readers, both male and female, of what age, complexion,and condition soever, for the love of God and their own souls, to guard against the temptations and suggestions of the devil, and suffer him by no art or wiles to put any other ideas into their minds than what I put into my definition.------For by the word NOSE, throughout all this long chapter of noses, and in every other part of my work where the word NOSE occurs,------I declare, by that word I mean a Nose, and nothing more, or less.
pgt
door Porius op 1:16 pm (EST) om May 26, 2009
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RQBHM__30ZE&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GlXB4fgj_5Y&feature=related
Pgt
door Porius op 12:32 am (EST) om May 16, 2009
A little humor for the ride. Have finished Dan Simmons DROOD, if you get some time it's very good. Exhausting, but very good.
door Porius op 12:16 am (EST) om May 9, 2009
Anyway, I ran it home last night with a couple of stiff, straight glasses of rum (no whiskey in the house!), and flashed through the review somewhat under the influence. I'm glad it's not too embarrassing. There were things I wanted to mention, but I'd probably have to get shnonkered again before attempting a revision. It will have to do as it stands, paling next to my illustrious fore-reviewers.
Regards,
Maki
door Makifat op 2:58 pm (EST) om Apr 28, 2009
door copyedit52 op 11:09 am (EST) om Apr 25, 2009
I am waiting for a response.
YOU have a great day.
belva
door rainpebble op 2:51 pm (EST) om Apr 19, 2009
Wonderful review on "Devoted Ladies". I don't even know what drew me to that page, but I am glad it did. "Virago Modern Classics"; I didn't even know there was such a group/thing. Interesting. Anyway, never having heard of either the titled book nor the author, I have this now on my "to buy/check out" list. You have made it sound to be some very good reading. Thank you.
Also beautiful photo shots. Lucky you to live in such a lovely spot in the world.
Well, back to "Crime and Punishment.
Belva
door rainpebble op 1:40 pm (EST) om Apr 19, 2009
The film class is going well, but we hadn't changed over to the new titles until just this week. I picked One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Fahrenheit 451, and Goodbye to Berlin (Caberet). They delayed the start so actually tomorrow is my first lecture. Course development axed Goodbye to Berlin at the last minute, so now I only have the two titles, but we'll see how it goes.
I likes the thematic arc of individuals struggling to maintain their autonomy during challenging times/circumstances of social control and oppression.
I'll fill you in as we go forward-
door English99 op 10:29 pm (EST) om Apr 7, 2009
yes, it's prob'ly at this point every 16th account, got lotsa work to do to get it up to every 6th! Though I'm trying.
and I never saw that PBS flick, but it sounds awesome, I'm going to try and hunt it down on YouTube, that is if I can stop laughing....
door EnriqueResurrected op 8:19 pm (EST) om Apr 7, 2009
"There is another world, but it is in this one."
I suspected as much!!!
***off on a quest***
door LolaWalser op 3:17 pm (EST) om Apr 4, 2009
splendidious review of the Peake novels. your imaginative powers take a backseat to no one. i too love old Peake's works. i don't recall whether or not i've mentioned the work of the Welsh novelist Gwyn Thomas, but i think you might like THE WORLD CANNOT HEAR YOU, and VENUS AND THE VOTERS, or just about anything by this wonderful wordsmith.
happy trails
pgt
door Porius op 8:10 pm (EST) om Apr 3, 2009
door EnriqueFreeque op 7:23 pm (EST) om Apr 3, 2009
Now back to my Henry James and Edward Gorey.
door kswolff op 2:58 pm (EST) om Apr 3, 2009
I noticed you have Le Petit Prince in your library - I'm learning French so have been translating this into English as an exercise which is proving fun... but taking longer than I thought! A beautiful book though. I have never read the English version so it may be a while before I find out how it ends!
door bluenettle op 3:02 pm (EST) om Mar 31, 2009
door copyedit52 op 10:14 am (EST) om Mar 31, 2009
Titus makes me groan with pleasure!
door spacegod op 5:38 pm (EST) om Mar 27, 2009
P.S. Anne Hathaway would make a perfect Rachaela. I always loved Ruth, though (Rachaela's li'l spawn). She was just so evil. :)
door saraslibrary op 1:16 pm (EST) om Mar 25, 2009
door saraslibrary op 1:07 am (EST) om Mar 25, 2009