Lid: Makifat
Verzamelingenonline text (84), Mijn bibliotheek (7,371), Music (1,013), Aan het lezen (4), Alle verzamelingen (7,617)
Besprekingen331 besprekingen
Trefwoordenliterature (2,514), history (924), makimusic (848), cd (634), english (628), american (624), lp (394), religion (383), classical (382), french (373) — alle trefwoorden
Wolkentrefwoordenwolk, schrijverswolk
GroepenAncient History, The Chapel of the Abyss
Favoriete schrijversCharles Baudelaire, Samuel Beckett, William Blake, Jorge Luis Borges, Paul Bowles, Italo Calvino, Bruce Chatwin, Joseph Conrad, Umberto Eco, Graham Greene, Ṣādiq Hidāyat, Ernest Hemingway, Robert Irwin, James Joyce, Ernst Jünger, Primo Levi, Alberto Manguel, Henri Michaux, Vladimir Nabokov, Friedrich Nietzsche, Orhan Pamuk, John Cowper Powys, Thomas Pynchon, François Rabelais, Arthur Rimbaud, François Villon, Marguerite Yourcenar (Gemeenschappelijke favorieten)
Over mijn boekenA sanctuary.
Homepagehttp://www.makifat.blogspot.com
Werkelijke naamNo
Woonplaatsoccultation
Soort gebruikeropenbaar, levenslang
Verbanden nieuwsVerbanden nieuws
URL's
http://www.librarything.com/profile/Makifat (profiel)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/Makifat (verzameling)
Lid sindsNov 5, 2006
Aan het lezenOpium and Other Stories door Geza Csath
The Dedalus Book of German Decadence: Voices of the Abyss door Ray Furness
Devil Worship: The Sacred Books and Traditions of the Yezidis door Isya Joseph
Ugetsu Monogatari: Tales of Moonlight and Rain door Ueda Akinari
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actually, he's more rigorous than that, but useful for multiple purpose!
door theoria op 3:00 am (EST) om Mar 18, 2010
door benwaugh op 11:41 am (EST) om Mar 16, 2010
door timspalding op 11:06 am (EST) om Mar 11, 2010
door timspalding op 10:59 am (EST) om Mar 11, 2010
door timspalding op 10:55 am (EST) om Mar 11, 2010
Not due to any lack of quality in the book. On the contrary, I could tell that it was of the highest quality.
The reason I discontinued it is that I am an extremely undisciplined reader. Some day I want to finish up all the books that I have on the go and only read one book at a time. This may never happen, given my previous behaviour.
What I remember of the first 100 pages definitely motivates me to read the rest. I will use your prompt as a way to motivate myself to pick it up after I finish World Without End.
door libraryhermit op 6:20 pm (EST) om Mar 4, 2010
In [The Evolutionof God],[[Wright]] spends hundreds of well documented pages showing Jews, Christians, and Muslims that they are all descended from the same pagan roots. He then suggests that this commonality be used by people of good will to find peace in our time. When the powers that be realize that he is holding up "those old dark devils of Egypt" as positive examples, he may receive the academic equivalent to the treatments meted out to Hypatia and Bruno.
door quicksiva op 6:51 pm (EST) om Mar 3, 2010
Great place, though. I love private libraries, and libraries that, you know, still have real books in them. Sigh.
Tim
door timspalding op 12:38 am (EST) om Feb 27, 2010
Power edited
Used the tag view to make major changes to tags
Used the tag view to swap a lot of stuff into a collection
Change collections preferences
?
door timspalding op 11:42 pm (EST) om Feb 26, 2010
door benwaugh op 8:49 am (EST) om Feb 26, 2010
door benwaugh op 7:07 pm (EST) om Feb 24, 2010
door benwaugh op 1:54 pm (EST) om Feb 24, 2010
My "Gallery" is better! ;-) Pretty feeble effort Maki! Star Wars Monopoly?
door tros op 2:36 pm (EST) om Feb 21, 2010
I totally agree with sometimes leaving the search up to chance. It seems to me that the selection of books in the big stores is narrowing, so when I go to a used book store I usually take the time to check out all the isles. The only two genres I don't look at are romance and sci-fi (I don't know enough about sci-fi to make a decision.) Still, sometimes I'll scan the sci-fi section for publishers rather than titles- anything by Penguin and a lot by TOR are good bets. I remember once I elbowed a bunch of books aside and cam up with A History of Roads. Loved it.
I hope you like Books of Blood, it's really amazing.
door SomeGuyInVirginia op 3:47 pm (EST) om Feb 15, 2010
"I particularly like the ruffian taking post-coital leave of the alabaster skinned lovely."
"Rolla" by Henri Gervex, scandalized the academy, of course. Based on a De Musset story. The guy has spent his last dime for a good time and is about to jump out the window! Dumb!
door tros op 5:36 am (EST) om Feb 12, 2010
door tomcatMurr op 9:54 pm (EST) om Feb 11, 2010
Bruisov is well down my TBR pile. Might be a while.
door tros op 3:39 pm (EST) om Feb 11, 2010
I hope you enjoy Severin. Happy belated new year back to you! ~ NR
door NativeRoses op 8:42 am (EST) om Feb 2, 2010
door anoceandrowning op 9:53 pm (EST) om Jan 28, 2010
door cemanuel op 5:04 pm (EST) om Jan 27, 2010
door benwaugh op 8:48 am (EST) om Jan 4, 2010
door drneutron op 3:28 pm (EST) om Jan 3, 2010
Robert
door Mr.Durick op 5:58 pm (EST) om Dec 21, 2009
door benwaugh op 9:28 am (EST) om Dec 14, 2009
I agree, though, it's a super super book.
door tomcatMurr op 8:50 pm (EST) om Dec 10, 2009
door OldSarge op 11:14 am (EST) om Dec 3, 2009
door OldSarge op 7:16 pm (EST) om Dec 2, 2009
I found the Bachelor's Quarters anthology in a local thrift shop - if I recall correctly, it had a ton of interesting out of print stuff in it. Stuff that only untamed roue old celibates could handle ;). What's great about things like this is that they open up new alleys of interest for us and help us do our part in beefing up the economy. The $2 anthology of 19th c. Swedish short stories I found, in the long run, cost me close to $100.
By the note below mine I see you too have enjoyed John Collier's His Monkey Wife. I used to grab copies to send to friends every time one turned up in a used bookshop. Now it seems it has been reprinted in several different editions - and about time! Collier also wrote some great supernatural stories (in Fancies and Goodnights... and some others whose titles escape me).
Any way - happy holidays to you and your family!
door benwaugh op 9:21 am (EST) om Nov 26, 2009
door solla op 9:16 pm (EST) om Nov 9, 2009
door cemanuel op 6:18 pm (EST) om Nov 6, 2009
door slickdpdx op 4:35 pm (EST) om Nov 4, 2009
door theoria op 11:58 am (EST) om Nov 4, 2009
I just ordered a book, "A Study of Spiritual Motion in the Philosophy of Proclus", that I've been hunting for several years. It is now selling for $128, but sometimes (I believe this is related to seasonal college courses) it goes for around half that. I picked it up for $12.00! Since I am only a reader, not a collector, I am prepared to take books in almost any condition. - Well, no fungus or spine missing; books like that are on the verge of disintegrating. I already have enough books in two or three pieces thanks to my note writing! I know, some people fill notebooks; but all that whitespace in the texts themselves is sooo tempting.
door pomonomo2003 op 4:04 pm (EST) om Oct 10, 2009
Ten years ago, when I was new to the internet, and the internet itself was a fledgling monster, I used to print out long essays/chapters at my university and spiral-bind them (talk about being stuck in the analog world!) from the Marxists Internet Archive, which already had an impressive collection of philosophy texts/excerpts online. It's even more of a behemoth now. A Kindle would have been nice then! I haven't bought one, but I think it might be an eventuality. Certainly preferable to trying to pack, move, unpack and reshelve thousands of volumes.
And yes, even though the Internet has boomed and software has come a long way, there is still no comprehensive, consistent and cross-referenced database of classical music anywhere! It drives me crazy when I try to look up obscure recordings (fortunately, there is one excellent and almost always reliable site for the Bruckner discography - http://www.abruckner.com/ - which is a model in terms of the kind of information a typical CD database should contain. Unfortunately, it is not well cross-referenced and the search is iffy (you need to stick to one term at a time.)) I have fantasized about designing a site like http://www.allmusic.com which was even more detailed, inclusive, etc. but it would require the efforts of dozens of committed, highly knowledgeable people, at least, so it's unfeasible. Not to mention the computer skills are lacking, and there would probably be no revenue I can foresee that would offset the costs of building and maintaining such a site. This is especially painful when it comes to tagging your music in software like iTunes. I have a little book in me when it comes to the frustrating combination of classical music and iTunes!
Sorry - I do go on - and there's even more coming up. I don't meant to take up so much of your time, so just think of this as future reference.
Bruckner: below are some of my favourite symphonies/recordings (i.e. among the ones I have heard/own; there are some famous ones missing from this list simply because I don't yet own them, though I would love to).
No. 5: almost any Jochum recording of the 5th (with the Concertgebouw in 1964 on Philips is a standout); Sinopoli/Staatskapelle Dresden (DG); Matačić/Orchestre National de France (Naïve); Karajan/Berlin Philharmonic on DG (1976); Shuricht with the Vienna Philharmonic from '63 (rare, bad sound, but worth finding if you've already heard the others.) The most recent, recommendable and easily available recording of the 5th is by Zander on Telarc, in excellent sound, and it's accompanied by a bonus disc that goes into detail about the structure of the symphony.
No. 7: Matačić/Czech Philharmonic (Supraphon); either Giulini recording (on BBC/DG), or Karajan's on EMI and DG; Jochum again, pref. with Concertgebouw again; and Furtwängler with the Berlin Philharmonic.
No. 8: Too many to choose from here! Boulez on DG; Giulini on DG; Furtwängler and Jochum and Karajan (multiple recordings); Wand on RCA in Lübeck cathedral, recording '86, released '88 (I think) - rare, but definitely exceptional.
No. 9: Giulini/Vienna Philharmonic on DG is a first choice, followed by multiple recordings by the usual suspects: Furtwängler; Karan with Vienna on Andante; Jochum's mono recording, Horenstein's from '53 with the Vienna Pro Musica, etc.
A famous Bruckner conductor I haven't mentioned is Celibidache, mostly because I am trying to save up to buy a now rare set of his Bruckner recordings for EMI . He has a partial, earlier cycle on DG but it didn't sound quite as interesting to me based on a small number of samples. Didn't select Horenstein for most; still in the process of collecting more of his recordings. Harnoncourt's 7th is on my list; conflicted about Walter on Sony; Dohnányi with the Cleveland Orchestra on Decca is interesting, excellent sound; Barenboim and Blomstedt and Haitink are yet to be heard, but not enough curiosity on my part so far; Knappertsbusch is another famous historical figure, I have an eye on Konwitschny. Goodall on BBC is also of interest, and Tintner on Naxos draws a lot of praise. Tintner was the first Bruckner conductor I heard but for some reason I am not intrigued by these recordings now; maybe my opinion will change again. Sawallisch on Orfeo and on EMI is also very good.
Sorry for posting/correcting this multiple times, but I can't believe I left out Klemperer, one of my favourite conductors! For some reason most of his Bruckner recordings are out of print or hard to come by. Another day...
I'm sure there are others that will come to me later.
Safest best for an overall cycle: Jochum's first complete cycle on DG with the Bavarian RSO/Berlin Philharmonic, or his second (which I haven't yet heard, and will probably hold off on for a while) with the Staatskapelle on EMI - both sets are very affordable, well-known, usually mentioned as first choices by every other critic/guide/etc.
I have to warn you, though you probably know this, that buying CDs can be far more expensive than buying books, which might explain why I have been cutting back on adding to my library as of late.
door existanai op 8:42 pm (EST) om Oct 9, 2009
Thus I hope to read:
Part 1: Causes of Error
Part 2: Philosophy
Part 7: Moral Philosophy
this weekend in order to see for myself how Bacon was influenced by his great Moslem contemporaries. If it is as good as I hope it will be I will begin to look around for more secondary sources.
Most of my books I pick up used. Got these two volumes for $8.00 each!
Joe
PS.
"Location: occultation"
How long do you intend to remain 'occulted', or is that up in the air because of the Will of the One God or the (Ha!) 'free will' of your innumerable minions?
PPS. There don't seem to be many bookstores in occultation... Pity.
door pomonomo2003 op 11:14 pm (EST) om Oct 8, 2009
door richardderus op 5:56 pm (EST) om Oct 8, 2009
door benwaugh op 4:17 pm (EST) om Oct 6, 2009
door cemanuel op 8:56 pm (EST) om Sep 28, 2009
door benwaugh op 9:03 am (EST) om Sep 5, 2009
http://www.amazon.com/Master-Margaret-Margarita-ENGLISH-SUBTITLES/dp/B000EANSXM/...
door PimPhilipse op 3:52 pm (EST) om Aug 29, 2009
door omaca op 12:22 am (EST) om Aug 20, 2009