Lid: jnwelch
VerzamelingenMijn bibliotheek (1,502)
BesprekingenGeen
Trefwoordenliterature (346), mystery (293), graphic novel (189), science fiction (156), non-fiction (134), american (126), young adult (110), british (86), fantasy (71), children's literature (68) — alle trefwoorden
Wolkentrefwoordenwolk, schrijverswolk
Groepen50-Something Library Thingers, Buddhism, Chicagoans, Comics, Crime, Thriller & Mystery, FantasyFans, Historical Fiction, Hogwarts Express, I Love Jane Austen, Midwest Writers/Readers —toon alle groepen, Read YA Lit, Science Fiction Fans, The Green Dragon, What Are You Reading Now?
Favoriete schrijversJane Austen, Raymond Chandler, Charles Dickens, Neil Gaiman, William Gibson, Franz Kafka, Tracy Kidder, Walter Mosley, Haruki Murakami (Gemeenschappelijke favorieten)
Over mijn boekenThese are all books I've read and enjoyed. Many books that I've read that are well-regarded but I haven't liked enough are not listed here, like The Sound and the Fury, for example. The idea in my mind is that,if I could have a large house with its own library room with large windows and comfortable chairs and a fireplace, etc., these are the books that I'd like to have surrounding me.
Werkelijke naamJoe
WoonplaatsChicago, IL
Soort gebruikeropenbaar, levenslang
Verbanden nieuwsVerbanden nieuws
URL's
http://www.librarything.com/profile/jnwelch (profiel)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/jnwelch (verzameling)
Lid sindsJun 3, 2008
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Also, I am getting there! ;) Someone spends her days chasing preschoolers around now, but that same someone should be getting those up in my 75 challenge today ;)
door seasonsoflove op 5:15 pm (EST) om Mar 16, 2010
door mmignano11 op 9:51 am (EST) om Mar 15, 2010
door SylviaO op 6:20 pm (EST) om Mar 11, 2010
door walklover op 10:20 pm (EST) om Feb 19, 2010
door Aerrin99 op 4:51 pm (EST) om Feb 19, 2010
door Aerrin99 op 4:31 pm (EST) om Feb 18, 2010
I loved Old Boy. My sister read the manga so we bought the DVD which, as you say, is nothing like the books. So, I read the books. I thought they took a while to get really interesting, but once the character of the novelist entered I thought things picked up.
I'm also making my way, slowly, through Samurai Executioner, which I'm finding very good.
door QuestingA op 9:44 am (EST) om Jan 24, 2010
My books tagged as wrong cover have covers that aren't listed on librarything when I click change cover so I think I will probably scan the covers in at some point. We have quite a lot of second hand books and I think that's why most of these covers aren't on amazon etc.
Heather
door souloftherose op 11:11 am (EST) om Jan 13, 2010
[Freakonomics]
and see if it touchstones it for you.
T
door timspalding op 4:49 pm (EST) om Jan 12, 2010
We share a lot of books! I've interesting-libraryed you to keep track :)
door wisewoman op 12:17 pm (EST) om Jan 6, 2010
Jennie
door jennieg op 9:39 am (EST) om Jan 4, 2010
Hope you have a happy new year!!! Happy Reading!
door porchsitter55 op 1:41 pm (EST) om Jan 3, 2010
i got 'miss pettigrew' on your recommendation. the narrator is Francis [Frances?] McDormand and while she does a tolerable job, she's really only a tolerably good narrator. i think the book would be better read visually but it's fun in bits and pieces. it's one of those books i'd like to speed read through. i do thank you for the recommendation.
i've found so many wonderful reads in just a shortish time as a librarythingist.
door mirrordrum op 6:08 pm (EST) om Dec 22, 2009
and oh, i see you've added the sense and sensibility screenplay/diaries book above. had me rolling on the floor and also made me realize, yet again, that actors do go through a lot. i was thinking this morning, apropos of nothing in particular, that Kate whatshername got hypothermia shooting S&S and then again on the Titanic shoot. it is so not easy to be immersed in near-freezing water. gawd! the woman has spunk.
anyway, i'd appreciate knowing what you think of 'sphinx.' i have a very full plate but the title is so enticing.
door mirrordrum op 4:47 pm (EST) om Dec 22, 2009
door jennieg op 2:02 pm (EST) om Dec 15, 2009
door jennieg op 10:36 am (EST) om Dec 14, 2009
door susiesharp op 12:31 pm (EST) om Dec 12, 2009
door MrAndrew op 6:55 pm (EST) om Dec 3, 2009
door sweetiegherkin op 10:41 pm (EST) om Nov 29, 2009
I did not see the Wimsey plays, I regret to say. Oh,well, maybe they'll be revived.
door jennieg op 5:53 pm (EST) om Nov 18, 2009
door seasonsoflove op 7:41 pm (EST) om Nov 16, 2009
Do you like Dennis Lehane? He's my all time favorite. I also like Michael Connelly, Harlan Coben, Stephen White...etc. (you can see all my faves on my page).
It really is fun and makes me so happy to discover a writer that has alot of books out.....I don't have to wait to enjoy more if I want! :o)
Thanks for writing, and happy reading to ya!
door porchsitter55 op 1:30 am (EST) om Nov 12, 2009
i read almost no sci-fi anymore. that was primarily a thing of my youth and young(er) adulthood. time travel books, though, have intrigued me since i was very young because they make my mind go all funny.
doomsday was no exception. i wondered throughout much of the book about how willis was going to deal with kivrin's inevitable attachment to the contemps, regardless of what doom befell them. how do you take 2050 sensibilities into mid-14th century England and not have a nutty? how could one not try to save lives that, without your presence, wouldn't have been saved or try to change events, like the marrying of child brides to lecherous older men, that one's 21st century British sensibilities find abhorrent?
i thought Willis' solution, though agonizing, was the only one feasible and it was a good one. but suppose there'd been less slippage? of course, she'd have met other contemps but the morbidity and mortality rates would still have been high, she'd still have been powerless, she'ds still have formed attachments with people whom she would have had to abandon to their fate either through inaction or through physically leaving.
another huge question for me was the plan that the recorder be implanted so that if Kivrin died, they would potentially be able to find it in a 2050 dig. well, but if Kivrin died in the 1300's, then she would never have existed in the 21st century in order to have anything implanted.
that's why time travel books make my head go crazy. from a 'butterfly effect' perspective, how can time travel not change the present day of the people sending the traveler back?
all that having been said, i promptly got another Connie Willis' 'to say nothing of the dog.' 21 hours long. is the woman incapable of writing a short book. ;)
thanks for the comment. i'd be interested in your thoughts.
door mirrordrum op 1:28 pm (EST) om Oct 28, 2009
door seasonsoflove op 10:06 pm (EST) om Oct 26, 2009
door rojse op 6:59 pm (EST) om Oct 24, 2009
door seasonsoflove op 6:03 pm (EST) om Oct 24, 2009
door walklover op 8:36 am (EST) om Oct 13, 2009
door seasonsoflove op 12:45 pm (EST) om Oct 10, 2009
door whymaggiemay op 7:34 pm (EST) om Oct 2, 2009
door seasonsoflove op 3:24 pm (EST) om Oct 1, 2009
door seasonsoflove op 12:53 pm (EST) om Sep 29, 2009
door rankamateur op 8:44 pm (EST) om Sep 27, 2009
Also, have you read Endless Night? If you haven't, its one of my favorites-I must have a copy either on the top shelf of the bookcase in the room formally known as purple, or in the attic on my Agatha/Erle shelf.
door seasonsoflove op 1:56 pm (EST) om Sep 15, 2009
Mary Renault was so irked by it that she wrote 'the friendly young ladies' (US title 'the middle mist') as an antidote, or possibly a form of riposte, published in 1943.
door mirrordrum op 1:55 pm (EST) om Sep 14, 2009
door rfb op 10:25 am (EST) om Aug 31, 2009
thanks!
bob
door bobmcconnaughey op 4:00 pm (EST) om Aug 30, 2009
i used to watch def jam on HBO a lot--and then i found librarything! i have only so much i can do with my eyes. anyway, those 'kids' just rocked my world. totally amazing. ya done good.
and er, if i may ask, what is it you *do* do when you're not librarythinging and engaging in random acts of kindness? not as if those weren't sufficient unto the day, of course. ;)
looking at your books I'm wondering if you might enjoy a book my partner just insisted i read. i got the large print version but their idea of large and mine eyes' differ widely so she's going to get me the audio.
it's *bachelor brothers' bed and breakfast*. i force-read a paragraph and nearly fell off the couch laughing. that was all i could manage but it's pure delight. here's the amazon.com snipurl.
http://snipurl.com/rgsxw
thanks for your very kind comment. i love laughing and i love what people come up with on the silly book game. you've brought yet another smile to my day. how very wonderful to have smiles in this old world. be assured i shall pass them on.
and my awe, best wishes and joy to you and your family,
ellie
door mirrordrum op 6:21 pm (EST) om Aug 28, 2009
(i THINK we have just about everything N Gaiman's done - though we first read the novel of Neverwhere years ago, when a friend gave a copy to our son who was in 8th grade at the time, we didn't get into the Sandmen and follow ons till a good while later. I thought the "graphicization" of Neverwhere was v. well done and generally think that Gaiman is at his stongest when he's thinking and working visually. Neverwhere WAS a tv series first, and it shows.
thanks
bob
door bobmcconnaughey op 7:04 pm (EST) om Aug 21, 2009
nice to know that laughter abounds. :)
what a marvelous group picture, btw. all look like folks I'd like to meet. odd how one makes judgments about people.
door mirrordrum op 2:17 pm (EST) om Aug 21, 2009
door mirrordrum op 12:13 pm (EST) om Aug 21, 2009
we have a fair bit of overlap in our libraries - i thought i'd ask for some graphic novels recommendations. What we have AND liked include:
Sandman etc. (Gaiman is at his best in his graphic novels, i think)
Fables - Willingham
Persepolis, Pride of Baghdad
The Rabbi's Cat (both volumes)
Lucifer (Mike Carey)
V for Vendetta (the only Moore book i've really liked)
I like the Army@Love - Patty hasn't read them yet.
Freakangels
the Josh Whedon Firefly books
Posey Simmonds (Tamara Drewe, Gemma Bovary)
---
generally don't care for the trad. "superhero" books, more SF and fantasy and personal histories (Persepolis/Rabbi's Cat). We've liked a fair bit of anime - but am at a loss as to where to jump into manga.
Serial Experiments Lain, Cowboy Bebop, Miyazaki's movies are among my favorites, if that helps.
thanks
bob
door bobmcconnaughey op 8:03 pm (EST) om Aug 19, 2009
door petermc op 8:47 am (EST) om Jun 25, 2009
door lindasbooks op 9:47 am (EST) om Jun 16, 2009
door timspalding op 1:37 am (EST) om May 18, 2009
Judy
door DeltaQueen50 op 4:38 pm (EST) om May 6, 2009
door DeltaQueen50 op 10:53 pm (EST) om Apr 9, 2009
interesting array of favorite authors..
:)
kath
door mckait op 4:25 pm (EST) om Apr 6, 2009
door seasonsoflove op 9:58 pm (EST) om Apr 1, 2009
door seasonsoflove op 9:36 pm (EST) om Mar 27, 2009
door nancyewhite op 9:49 am (EST) om Mar 17, 2009