Willekeurige boeken van Makifat

The Angel of Darkness door Caleb Carr

Biographia Literaria, or, Biographical Sketches of My Literary Life & Opinions door Samuel Taylor Coleridge

The Washing of the Spears: The Rise and Fall of the Zulu Nation door Donald Morris

New Poems [1908]: The Other Part door Rainer Maria Rilke

I, etcetera door Susan Sontag

The History of Hell door Alice K. Turner

The Welsh door Wyn Griffith

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which ever way Blaise blows...

actually, he's more rigorous than that, but useful for multiple purpose!
I like how you actually have space to move in your library. I also have the fire hazard top-of-shelf-to ceiling stacks. I'm thinking of putting up shelving in the living room to drain off some clutter. We'll see how that goes over. I'll probably be checking in from "Shutter Island" soon....
Yeah, Dawkins is like dinosaur bones—there to test our faith.
Well, I think there's a good argument to be made that in some sense we don't fully choose our beliefs. Obviously this is true for most people, but I think it's more true for even the ones who think they have. But wriggles of psychology aside, we choose it as much as many other things.
Ha. Very true. I wish I could tweet or post that observation...
I own the book and started it several years ago, but never finished it.
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.
Makifat:
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.
I love them. Favorite library. I'm no longer a member, now, because I'm in Portland and they have no "away" membership. It's hundreds of dollars. Blech.

Great place, though. I love private libraries, and libraries that, you know, still have real books in them. Sigh.

Tim
Might you have:

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

?
Salted it down - and set aside a few others for when in funds again. Thanks! Here's one for you: http://www.lulu.com/content/7158233
If not for you I'd have missed the boat! And I had totally missed the train connection, but you've got it (I did miss the boat/train on the Grabinsky hardcover... The Motion Demon).
Thank God (or his son Tim) for the intrusive features here: If my "home" page didn't show me that you had added the book, I might have never known the Rolt stories were back in print. They were an arm and kidney when I was timidly in the market a few years back.

My "Gallery" is better! ;-) Pretty feeble effort Maki! Star Wars Monopoly?
Thanks for the post, Maki. The Goodwill book sale has been canceled for years, but I used to budget and ask for time off for it. Man I loved that; I'd take a large cart with me and just start throwing books in and I really would have five or six hundred when I was finished. I think they sell online now, but some Goodwill stores have what they call Book Nooks, with several thousand volumes.

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.

"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!
Thank you, my friend. I have had my purge and will be back in Russia forthwith.
"respectable Victorian soft porn"? More like 19th c. masterpieces. Bougureau is probably rolling in his grave. (He did the Nymphs and Satyr.It's in my living room.)
Bruisov is well down my TBR pile. Might be a while.
Hi Maki -

I hope you enjoy Severin. Happy belated new year back to you! ~ NR
All my books were transferred from a Goodreads text file. It didn't stop when it was supposed to.
Your welcome. I was pleasantly surprised myself. I think I picked it up at a conf for a discount. Pizarro's good - he wrote an essay for Long Morning of Early Medieval Europe which was very good and I believe I've read something from him in either Early Medieval Europe or Speculum.
Ah yes, the jackass who tried to set off a terminal "blue dart" on the Delta flight. All I can say re flight home: god bless Fiumacino for spiritual fortitude (or do I mean fortified spirits? pah! Comes to the same) available at 6AM. Italy was amazing... I am having severe gastronomic withdrawal symptoms... food was amazing. The shot on CotA, btw is a medieval thing I came across in an alley in Florence. Hope happy holidays were had your way!
Blum doesn't mention Fechner in Ghost Hunters. I'm interested in James' intro now, so I'm going to see if I can find a copy somewhere.
Thank you for your reference to 'apophatic theology.' I want to look at the Wikipedia article longer, later. I have known that notion for some time. My sympathy for it comes from my being finite and expecting God to be infinite. I don't know whether I have seen the word before or read more than several mentions of it.

Robert
Kind of hard to make out the details, but I don't believe I've laid eyes on him before in my life.
Thank you for your kind comment on The Lectern. As always, it's harder knowing what to leave out of the review, than knowing what to put in.

I agree, though, it's a super super book.
I like the work of the old school type paranormal investigators and local historians/story tellers. Ghost Hunters on tv is just another dumb reality show.
Nice addition of works by Hans Holzer. I've got a few of his books myself.
Thanks - we will be leaving in a couple of weeks... I think I have picked up enough Italian to order beer and acquire coordinates for the consequences.

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!
Thanks for the tip (His Monkey Wife). It looks like it could be a fun read. I'm reading the other one because my daughter handed it to me quite awhile ago and said she thought I would like it. She's usually pretty accurate.
Appreciate that. Not sure how much of a handle I have on it but it's a debate I always enjoy. I tend to waffle sometimes though - I'll read Peter Heather and he'll be very persuasive, then I'll go to Halsall and think something else.
Great treatment of Brunists. BTW I recently read somwehere something that made me realize the title of Pricksongs also refers to the female organ.
On Levi-Strauss, it's hard to know where to start such a thread; I'd be willing to chime in a few thoughts though.
I am pretty good at hunting down scarce books at a decent price. But most people are not as prepared as I am to wait for books to come to them. I will wait for a hardcover book to be released in a paperback before buying. If a PB is unlikely I will hunt down the hardcover used. There are books I've been looking for well over a decade! I have no problem with underlining/notes because I am a guilty of this practice too. However, I do not usually do that with Lit/Fic/Crit books and those are the only books, for the most part, that I've reluctantly let go over the years.

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.
I just noticed that archive.org collection in your library today.

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.
Thanks for the headsup about archive.org. I've just added the link. Amazing that Bacon was sending this (the "Opus Majus") to a Pope! God almighty, he quotes ancient pagans and contemporary (i.e., his contemporaries) Moslems long before getting to some Christians! I just got the books in today and am halfway thru part one... I am more interested in the "political/theology" than I am in the Science. To me, science is method (experiment + mathematics); that is what matters. - Not the results of that method at any particular time. The results of the scientific method are but fashion; the method is Truth!

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.
Really enjoyed your review of "Tuck Everlasting". Thumbs up!
I'm not certain - I think they probably are original stories. I came across teh book years ago and dismissed it for the same reason. The after I saw your post I mixed up Tom Ahern/Tom Moran and took a shot. Luckily, I think, the item was not in stock and my order was canceled(likely the shopkeeper saw his competition are trying to hawk the think for way more than he was offering it). I have a query into one of the LT floks who owns a copy - but have as yet no response.
Thanks! Considering your collection, I'll definitely take that as a compliment. My problem's not letting my wishlist outnumber what's on my shelves. My reading always falls off in the summer. And if you want a great Late Antiquity Collection, check out Chilperic - fantastic stuff. I raided his library extensively.
Loved your review of Insatiability. Just oredered a copy: likely beaten to hell, but under $20.
The english Master and Margarita DVD can be ordered through Amazon Marketplace:

http://www.amazon.com/Master-Margaret-Margarita-ENGLISH-SUBTITLES/dp/B000EANSXM/...
Thanks for your review of the Master and the Margarita. Based on it, I have ordered a copy.
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