| | Leden met boeken van rolandperkinsVerbanden tussen leden Vrienden: 56Hypocrites, AlexAustin, annacomnena, callmejacx, EdwardEinhorn, LochItes, olive123, orangewords, RevolutionBooks, SigmundFraud, TheoClarke Interessante bibliotheek: A_musing, AAKECK, abecedary, Aberjhani, ablachly, abrego, AbsentQualia, ACDoyleLibrary, Acheron, Aerrin99, afewgoodpens, agilham, Ain_Sophist, ajsomerset, Akrasiac, alarob, aleguc, AlexAustin, Allacci, Allie_Mag_79, AmandaKT, amandameale, AmanteLibros, Amiziras, Ammianus, AmorDiCosmos, anamchara, angelrose, anggarrgoon, angstrat, anisoara, annacomnena, annajcook, annakellywv, annamorphic, AnnavanGelderen, anndoug, Annenzed, AnnieMod, AnthonyBurgess, antiquary, antisyzygy, appaloosaman, argyriou, ArnoldJMeagher, Arten60, Assumpta_Rainer, AssyriaQ, AstronArgon, asukamaxwell, AsYouKnow_Bob, atthesametime, aulsmith, axarca, BalanceArte, baoyu, BarkingMatt, beelzebubba, Belisaurus, BelleStewartGardner, Belletrista, BenjaminFranklin, Benthamite, benwaugh, 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Lid: rolandperkinsVerzamelingenMijn bibliotheek (301), Verlanglijst (371), Alle verzamelingen (672) Besprekingen3 besprekingen TrefwoordenPoetry (49), Lei's book (41), Philosophy (31), Religion (27), History (26), Culture (25), Celtic (21), Met author (13), Hawaii (13), Greece (12) — alle trefwoorden Wolkentrefwoordenwolk, schrijverswolk GroepenAll Things New England, Amateur Historians, American Civil War, Ancient History, Baseball, Christianity, Crambo!, Fifty States Fiction (or Nonfiction) Challenge, History Fans, Lingua Latina —toon alle groepen, List Five Books Parlour Game, Playing games and solving puzzles, Reading Globally, Rejoyce 5, Religion Studies, The Globe, The Highly-Rated Book Group, Too Obscure, Wir Philologen Favoriete schrijversAbd Rahman Ibn Khaldun, Dawn Adrienne, Aeschylus, Perry Anderson, Aristophanes, Robinson Edwin Arlington, Arthur D. Nock, Michael Astour, Peter Bamm, William Barclay, Saul Bellow, Benjamin Farrington, Martin Bernal, Niko Besnier, Anders Bodelsen, Bertolt Brecht, Fredric Brown, Robert Brown, Jacob Burckhardt, John Lewis Burckhardt, Albert Camus, Lou Cannon, Catullus, John Cheever, G.K. Chesterton, Cicero, I. Bernard Cohen, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Joseph Conrad, Frederick Copleston, Gregory Corso, Louis William Countryman, Hart Crane, Stephen Crane, St. John of the Cross, E. E. Cummings, Fazil Hüsnü Daglarca, Joseph Dallett, Basil Davidson, Vine Deloria, Nancy Dorian, Nancy C. Dorian, Ludwig Edelstein, Stanley Elkin, Pierre Emmanuel, Ennio Flaiano, Ennius, Caradoc Evans, Anne Fadiman, Nuruddin Farah, Francis Pollini, Ernest J. Gaines, John Kenneth Galbraith, Gary W. Gallagher, Mahatma Gandhi, Gavan Daws, Jaqueline Girdner, Nikolai Gogol, Yvan Goll, Graham Greene, Bede Griffiths, Thich Nhat Hanh, Barbara Hardy, Eric A. Havelock, Václav Havel, Herodotus, Hesiod, George V. Higgins, August De Belmont Hollingshead, John Dominis Holt, Homer, Thomas Hood, Michael G Horowitz, Dell H. Hymes, Futa Helu, Muhammad Iqbal, Molly Ivins, Russell Jacoby, Donald D. Johnson, Ben Jonson, James Joyce, Ernst Jünger, Ismail Kadare, Samuel Manaiakalani Kamakau, Lilikala Kame'Eleihiwa, ed. {Kate Tuckett]], Susan Kelly, Thomas Keneally, Noel J. Kent, Jack Kerouac, Clyde Kluckhohn, Leopold Kohr, Alfred Korzybski, Paul Kriwaczek, Pär Lagerkvist, Leialoha Apo Perkins, Adele Leonhardy, C. S. Lewis, Sinclair Lewis, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Robert Lowell, Lucan, Georg Luck, Lucretius, Antonio Machado, Abraham H. Maslow, Hamilton Maule, Eugene J. McCarthy, Herman Melville, Thomas Merton, John Michell, C. Wright Mills, John Milton, Multatuli, Barack Obama, William Ockham, Kenzaburo Oe, Liam O'Flaherty, Paul van Ostaijen, Ovid, Eric Partridge, Blaise Pascal, Claude Emmanuel Joseph Pierre Pastoret, marquis de, Alan Paton, John Perkins, Kathy J. Phillips, Plauto, Plutarchus, Edgar Allan Poe, John Polkinghorne, Maurice Procter, Sextius Propertius, Jacques Prévert, Marshall Pugh, Antonio Regalado Garcia, John E. Reinecke, Suzanne Romaine, Juan Rulfo, Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, J. D. Salinger, Sappho, Arthur M. Schlesinger, Rupert Sheldrake, Isaac Bashevis Singer, Sophocles, Robert Louis Stevenson, Rex Stout, Esaias Tegnér, Alfred Lord Tennyson, William Makepeace Thackeray, Leo Tolstoy, Toyohiko Kagawa, G. B. Trudeau, Amos Tutuola, Laozi, 'Umi Perkins, Miguel de Unamuno, John Updike, Virgil, Joost van den Vondel, Marina Warner, Brooke Foss Westcott, Alfred North Whitehead, Cedric H. Whitman, William Appleman Williams, Alban Dewes Winspear, John Womack, W. B. Yeats, Howard Zinn (Gemeenschappelijke favorieten) Over mijzelfRetired (1986) Professor of Classical Studies, ʻAtenisi University, Nukuʻalofa, Tonga; also re tired librarian, Boston University, Hawaiʻi Public Library System, and others (ret. 1993). Free lance writer and translator. Author of "A Sense of Order; [translations from French, Greek, Spanish, and Hawaiian"; "Greek and Hawaiian Terms of Authority and Emotion in [the Hawaiian Bible]"; and others.
Over mijn boekenA collection of about 1,500 titles in English, Greek, Latin, Spanish, and French; with a smattering of Italian and Portuguese; few or no other languages, except for translations of the Bible. Small colleciton of U.S. and U.K. poets, mostly post-1900.
I rarely acquire any book that is available in most public libraries, unless it is something that I would want to consult frequently. Thus, though there is much on literary subjects, there are few novels, except some out of print ones. I am not, in general, much interested in rare or scarce books, or in first editions -- only interested in the content. Besides literature, my main interests are history (mostly Western and Polynesian), and religion and hisotry -- with or without emphasis on the interfaces between those two.
Werkelijke naamRoland F. Perkins
WoonplaatsWaiʻanae, HI USA
Soort gebruikeropenbaar, levenslang
Verbanden nieuwsVerbanden nieuws URL's
http://www.librarything.com/profile/rolandperkins (profiel)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/rolandperkins (verzameling) Lid sindsJun 28, 2009
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Laat een opmerking achter
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You have an interesting library too!
door Seamusoz op 3:56 pm (EST) om Mar 18, 2010
Cheers!
Oakes
door oakesspalding op 10:16 pm (EST) om Feb 21, 2010
He has everything inside the collections wish list and your library, and has both set not to be used in connections. Therefore, he will never show connections with anyone.
Cheers,
Sonya
So apparently it is something about the way you have your site set up which makes your "Members which share your books" not show who else has the books you have, though why it shows that I share 15 of your books I do not know.
door Schmerguls op 3:43 pm (EST) om Feb 18, 2010
door Schmerguls op 6:52 am (EST) om Feb 15, 2010
door cemanuel op 8:57 am (EST) om Feb 14, 2010
door Schmerguls op 12:10 pm (EST) om Feb 12, 2010
door sibyx op 7:40 pm (EST) om Feb 1, 2010
door AlexAustin op 9:12 pm (EST) om Jan 27, 2010
door kathymoo op 9:19 pm (EST) om Jan 26, 2010
door DavidHFears op 5:39 pm (EST) om Jan 26, 2010
door orangewords op 2:25 am (EST) om Jan 22, 2010
door Wolcott37 op 10:37 pm (EST) om Jan 21, 2010
door Wolcott37 op 9:25 am (EST) om Jan 21, 2010
door DavidHFears op 3:59 pm (EST) om Jan 18, 2010
As a 13 year old, I left for summer camp when he was 7-7, and when I came home he was 17-7. That was the year he finished 27-10 with the fifth-place Phillies, with a 1.97 ERA.
All that washed away my disappointment at the departure of Wise. The year before he was traded for Carlton, he'd pitched a no-hitter and hit two home runs in that game. The he had another two-homer game later that year. I knew not of Steve Carlton. Who knew he was destined to be one of the finest left-handers in baseball history? I just knew we were losing a hero.
Carlton never made me forget Wise, but he put a balm on the injury!
door stellarexplorer op 12:31 am (EST) om Jan 16, 2010
Just don't die before you get the whole lot catalogued, that would negate the 'lifetime' membership. No, wait! You got a second one for when you reincarnate. ;)
door justjim op 3:12 am (EST) om Jan 15, 2010
passage à tabac
nm beating, beating-up
I got this definition from the url below - after simply putting the expression (passage à tabac) into Google.
http://dictionnaire.reverso.net/francais-anglais/passage%20%C3%A0%20tabac
door UtopianPessimist op 11:27 pm (EST) om Jan 12, 2010
door susanbooks op 5:08 pm (EST) om Jan 7, 2010
door justjim op 7:47 pm (EST) om Jan 1, 2010
door e.e.cummingslibrary op 6:32 pm (EST) om Dec 19, 2009
Best.
Deke
door dekesolomon op 9:49 am (EST) om Dec 18, 2009
Regards, Jamie S.
door JNSelko op 5:36 pm (EST) om Dec 12, 2009
Thank you for your reaction; I don't know the poem of Withman, but I'll look for it, thanks for the suggestion. Concerning Henri de Montherlant, I read almost everything from him and I like it more than a lot of 'modern' writers, I like his sharp, ironic pen, his wit, his style; Although that he isn't really a "saint", just on the contrary, he's a genius, but nevertheless almost forgotten. Au revoir et merci (a Flemish reader)
Michel
door POWYS op 9:25 am (EST) om Dec 6, 2009
You'll just have to ask Roger Waters -
http://www.amazon.com/Final-Cut-Pink-Floyd/dp/B0001KZM3O/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&...
door Makifat op 4:43 pm (EST) om Nov 9, 2009
Thanks for the vote of 'interesting library'. You've sure got a slew of 'em! I've spent a lot of time over the years (mostly in a professional capacity) on all the islands, primarily Oahu, where I've relatives in Waikiki and Kailua.
I'll keep an eye on your progress here.
Cheerio,
Tom
door oroboros op 11:52 am (EST) om Oct 28, 2009
We lived in Ewa Beach and watched some of our grandchildren for nine months in 2007 while our oldest son was in Iraq. And we got to explore the "other side" of the island.
I'm pretty sure I umpired a high school game or two in Wai'anae in the early 80s. While I was stationed at Hickam, I umpired both Little League and High School baseball.
I will give you a call in April. We'll be vacationing with two other couples: our newest best friends here in Florida, and our oldest best friends of over forty years from California.
best,
Jerry
door moibibliomaniac op 8:48 am (EST) om Oct 24, 2009
Thanks for your comments!
Regarding Twain, I had thought my comments were soo unique. He had some other strange endings. HF was just silly at the end. The Mysterious Stranger (which was aapparently incomplete) and CT Yankee, were just plain weird. I prefer his funny, sadistic, slapstick short stories. I'd hate to have to think too much...
Regards,
Steve
door Sandydog1 op 7:54 am (EST) om Oct 24, 2009
You asked about Rod Lyon's book on Cornish. No, he doesn't include any view about continuous survival of the language (or indeed any of the debates that have surrounded the Cornish language movement over the last few decades about the appropriate version of the language to revive) - basically the book is a primer in Unified Cornish for beginners and doesn't stray from that task.
HTH, will have a look at the Jean Markale page and see if I can link up your version with anyone else's (if that hasn't already been done)
Regards
Ffred
door Ffred_Clegg op 5:50 pm (EST) om Oct 7, 2009
door timspalding op 2:25 am (EST) om Oct 6, 2009
About Petrarch, that book was thought to have been written by him (at the time it was published). Later the paternity of the book is in doubt, especially because it contains the narration of facts that happened after the author died. Well, at least something was added by someone else, who knows, maybe the editor. Unfortunately that book is not in great conditions but besides the first 2 or 3 pages it's easily readable.
Diego
door diego-m op 4:14 am (EST) om Sep 21, 2009
Diego
door diego-m op 8:08 am (EST) om Sep 16, 2009
I am curious what you find interesting about my library.
door ebbrooks op 10:59 pm (EST) om Sep 12, 2009
door PsibrReadHead op 7:37 pm (EST) om Sep 9, 2009
door PsibrReadHead op 7:34 pm (EST) om Sep 9, 2009
door PsibrReadHead op 12:19 pm (EST) om Sep 7, 2009
There is a program found by going to Programs -> Accessories -> System Tools -> Character Map which comes up with a grid of characters, and a choice of fonts, too. All you do is choose, by "selecting" and "copying" and then you can paste.
The acute accent over an "e" looks like this: "é", right? Now, I am hoping that this works in Library thing in the comments! I know it does when I want to spell a foreign name for a book's author or title, etc. It's even neat for non-Latin letters, so that I can write about King Ælfred, for example. Try it! It's fun.
door msladylib op 10:38 pm (EST) om Aug 22, 2009
door walf6 op 10:13 pm (EST) om Jul 27, 2009
door walf6 op 3:46 pm (EST) om Jul 27, 2009
door walf6 op 2:01 pm (EST) om Jul 27, 2009
Yes, I thought that was what pagans originally meant too - country folk. Regarding the stance of Philosophy to Christianity, some steeped in Philosophy accepted it (perhaps surprisingly, neoplatonism often seemed the royal road to acceptance) while many did not.
To me, the City (i.e. civilization) always rises on myth, not philosophy. Therefore, my prediction that a new extra-philosophical religion rises is descriptive, not normative. It is, in my mouth, a prediction, not a prophecy.
Can Christianity survive the coming religious upheaval? Don't know. Perhaps if it returns to its gnostic roots via a 'third testament' based on a 'new age' of the Holy Spirit... But that really doesn't look very likely at this point.
Since we share an interest in late antiquity what do you think of Tardieu's conjecture that the exiled neoplatonists gathered around Simplicius ended up in Harran? I wonder how long a neoplatonic school might have lasted there?
You said, in your 'About my library' section, "I am not, in general, much interested in rare or scarce books, or in first editions -- only interested in the content." That describes my library too. - Used paperbacks whenever I can find them...
door pomonomo2003 op 5:19 am (EST) om Jul 27, 2009
A hopefully helpful hint: You transposed some letters in "history" in the last paragraph of your profile.
door Smiley op 12:58 pm (EST) om Jul 26, 2009
Liz Wilson
Oakham
UK
door lizwil op 8:05 am (EST) om Jul 24, 2009
All best; hope you're enjoying your summer.
Martin
door booksfallapart op 5:35 pm (EST) om Jul 22, 2009
Oh. I see the problem now. Your touchstone goes to a book entered by someone with a private library who entered the editor in the author field. And in your own library, you have entered your book with your great-grandfather's name in the author field. So they are showing up as two different works. On the book in your library I see the review. On the book in the other library, I see the cover and the link to the conversation in the Fifty States Challenge group. I do not know how to combine the two books into one work, so I'm going to ask the Combiners for help. OK. Done: http://www.librarything.com/topic/69216#1391646 . Now, hopefully, they will be able to make that combination. When you see a cover picture show up for the book in your own library, it shows that they were able to do so.
After they get combined, it would be nice to see a book description (maybe there is a description on the back cover which you could enter?). And also CK about the book. On books like this, I especially like to read the Dedication, First Words, Last Words, Important Places, Quotations, etc. Perhaps seeing that kind of information will whet the appetite of others to read the book!
Regards,
countrylife
(For continuity)
You said:
"[Three Years a Soldier] by Perkins (,) George* already has a short review on its page. (If Iʻm understanding rightly what you mean by "its page". It is about half way down the page, following the time-honored "...not enough copies...to evaluate" statement, which almost everything Iʻve looked up seems to have. Certainly true in this case. I know of only 4 copies, counting my own, that are owned by individuals. Then there is the Woburn MA Public Library, and, probably some larger libraries in Massachusetts, and in libraries specializing in the civil War.
*Clicking on Perkins George, you donʻt get my great-grandfather, but another George Perkins, so click on hte title."
~and~
"... the blue for the title didnʻt come through. I guess you would have to go the [rolandperkins] member page."
door countrylife op 6:36 am (EST) om Jul 19, 2009
I am shocked and humbled to have someone with your background find my library interesting. Thank you. I am very interested in Greek writing, mostly so far the NT. Right now, working more in Hebrew with Isaiah. I look forward to engaging you directly and I hope in some of the groups.
Thanks,
Richard
door richardbsmith op 8:31 pm (EST) om Jul 17, 2009
Wearing a different mask, I am reading the Mahabharata slowly and, insofar as possible, completely. We have a group here for it: Mahabharata Anyone, not very active at the moment because we have been snagged by that very snag you mentioned.
The Mahabharata has, all of it, been translated, but not necessarily well. Buitenen took it on for the University of Chicago Press; but he died. I have read the three complete volumes that he did, taking me through book 5, the book just shy of the one that contains the Bhagavad Gita. Chicago claims that it is going on, but it is taking its time. Meanwhile The Clay Sanskrit Library has picked up the challenge. I have the first volume of book 6 containing the Bhagavad Gita and am awaiting the publishing of the second volume in August. In the Buitenen translation it is readable and glorious.
I first saw the Buitenen translation when Borders first came to Hawaii in Waikele and was good. It took me until this year actually to try to read it, and I was into in a snap.
This library which you find interesting is the remnant of a wish list. My wish list is now mostly on the Barnes and Noble web site, so this list will fade away after awhile. I'm keeping the mask, however, for talking about Hawaii, Alcoholics Anonymous, and other things that it might be better not to have tied to my real name.
Best regards,
Specto
door Dubito op 2:01 am (EST) om Jul 17, 2009
I'm consumed with wonder that you would find my library interesting. While I love it much too much, my reading defines my wide and shallow nature. If I had unlimited money, I would order Black Athena now. When would I read it? - probably no time soon. At any rate, I look forward to reading what you have to say here.
Peggy
door LizzieD op 10:53 am (EST) om Jul 14, 2009