Slumpade böcker från devenishs bibliotek

The Outline of History av H.G. Wells

The Earth Made of Glass av Robert Edric

The Sunday Night Book Club av Various

The Cat Who Blew the Whistle av Lilian Jackson Braun

From Sarajevo to Potsdam av A.J.P Taylor

Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials: The Definitive Guide av Laurie Frost

The British Campaigns in Europe 1914-1918 av Arthur Conan Doyle

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Medlem: devenish

Bibliotek10,711 böckerse bibliotek

Recensioner114 recensionerse recensioner

Molntaggmoln, författarmoln

TaggarCrime Fiction (2,606), British Crime Fiction (1,159), American Crime Fiction (620), Biography (525), Short Stories (423), Ghosts & Horror (409), Conan Doyle Collection (372), WW2 (371), Travel Writing (353), Classic Fiction (326) — se alla taggar

GrupperBritish & Irish Crime Fiction, Crime, Thriller & Mystery, E.F.Benson, Hardboiled / Noir Crime Fiction, Historical Mysteries, Short Stories, Thing(amabrarian)s That Go Bump in the Night

FavoritförfattarePeter Ackroyd, John Aubrey, John Banville, H. E. Bates, George Bellairs, E. F. Benson, Ambrose Bierce, Algernon Blackwood, Leo Bruce, John Buchan, J.L. Carr, John Dickson Carr, Sarah Caudwell, Raymond Chandler, Bruce Chatwin, Reginald Evelyn Peter Southouse Cheyney, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Wilkie Collins, John Connolly, William Cowper, Edmund Crispin, Charles Dickens, Arthur Conan Doyle, Roger Jon Ellory, Jasper Fforde, Neil Gaiman, Robbert Hans van Gulik, Cyril Hare, Michael Innes, Montague Rhodes James, James Lees-Milne, H. P. Lovecraft, Adrian Magson, R.H. Malden, Alberto Manguel, A. N. L. Munby, Frances Partridge, Mervyn Peake, Mary Roberts Rinehart, Byron Rogers, Sax Rohmer, Saki, C. J. Sansom, pseud. [i.e. Herman Cyril MacNeile.] Sapper, Sir Walter Scott, Robert Louis Stevenson, Anthony Trollope, Edgar Wallace, Evelyn Waugh, H.G. Wells, Henry Williamson, P.G. Wodehouse (Delade favoriter)

FavoritbokhandelBlackwell's (Oxford), Heffers Bookshop (Cambridge), Murder One (London)

FavoritbibliotekBritish Library, Northamptonshire Central Library

Andra favoriterThe British Museum, The Cowper and Newton Museum

Om mig It is only during the last couple of years that I have been dragged kicking and screaming into the age of technology by my son-in-law. Before that my library records were kept,if not with a quill pen,then with something very like. In April 2006 I stumbled,quite by chance,across LibraryThing,and I just cannot get over how clever and indeed how elegant the whole thing is.I am a life-long reader and book-collector whose interest,and indeed passion for books is all-consuming.My wife Vivien (who also reads and collects) adds greatly to the already vast numbers of volumes that we own. We live in the English Midlands,and although our town is somewhat of a bookish desert we are lucky enough to live fairly close to many useful places for obtaining the type of books that we collect. These include Oxford and Cambridge and of course London itself.
We also live a short distance from the beautiful little town of Market Harborough which apart from several good bookshops,also has an abundance of charity shops which specialise in books.A great place.

"The Bookman appraises towns by the number of their bookshops:if they be few,the towns are dull,monotonous,ugly;to be shunned,disliked,or,at best endured.He that should be admitted on a sudden to the sight of such places as Charing Cross Road or Farringdon Road in London wherin all manner of books are displayed for sale in numerous shops and on many stalls,could not choose,though he were never so poor of purse,but be much recreated by the sight--"
From 'The Anatomy of Bibliomania' by Holbrook Jackson

"Isn't it strange what happens with old books? They choose you.They reach out to their buyer - Hello,here I am,take me with you.It's as if they were alive."
From 'The Nautical Chart' by Arture Perez-Reverte

"I often stand in the centre of the Library here and think despairingly how impossible it is ever to become possessed of all the wealth of facts and ideas contained in the books surrounding me on every hand. I pull out one volume from it's place and feel as if I were no more than giving one dig with a pick in an enormous quarry. The Porter spends his days in the Library keeping strict vigil over this catacomb of books,passing along between the shelves and yet never paying heed to the almost audible susurrus of desire- the desire every book has to be taken down and read,to live,to come into being in somebody's mind. He even hands the volumes over the counter,seeks them out in their proper places or returns them there without once realising that a Book is a Person and not a Thing."
From 'The Journal of a Disappointed Man' by W.N.P.Barbellion

Om mitt bibliotek The library now totals over 10,700 items,and comprises mainly Books,but with a certain number of CD's and Audio Tapes too. The books are fairly evenly divided into Fiction and Non-Fiction.The CD's ect include Classical Music and Spoken Word items. Our main interests are Crime Fiction,with particular emphasis on the life and works of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Also Classic Ghost Stories.On the non-fiction side,books about Northamptonshire, Diaries ,Travel Writing,The French Resistance and SOE in WW2.I have also a great interest in John Aubrey the antiquary.(as you see from the picture which heads this profile.)
The ever present problem is storage! A few years ago we had an extension to our house built,and the idea was to move all our books into it,and clear the rest of the house.This has not worked I'm afraid.They have again spread to all rooms except the kitchen and bathroom! Just how long it will be before they get in there too is anybody's guess.As well as this I have had to resort to a certain amount of double-shelving and stacking.Oh well if you are a true book-lover you just accept it and go with the flow. I was reading recently about a compulsive book-collector from many years ago whose house was so full of books that he had to edge around stacks of them on his way round the house,and he finally accumulated so many volumes that the house collapsed! Oh help!!!

A note on the thorny question of whether to use LT to catalogue only owned items or otherwise.In my particular case I firmly belong in the former camp.. All the items to be seen here are physically part of my collection. Everything listed here is actually owned by me There are no wishlists,borrowed books,once-hads but no longer have's and the like.
What I want here is a record of my Library in terms of what I own. When a separate listing does eventually appear for wants,then I'm sure that it will be very useful and that I shall use it.
I have pondered long and hard wondering if I should use this for books only,or if I should use it for cataloguing other things too,such as CD's,Tapes and DVD's. I have finally decided to follow The British Library who have holdings of sound recordings as well as books in their collections,and what's good enough for them is certainly good enough for me. Also as lots of members seem to be going down the road of entering all sorts of things besides purely books, and as I need somewhere to enter my sound recordings (both on CD and on Tape) and keep a record of them,it seems a sensible idea to go ahead. I have decided however,that for the time being,(ie June 2008) I will not list the 200+DVD's that I own.

With regards to the ever-growing number of Reviews that I have written (well over 100 to date) With a few exceptions these are for books either with no other reviews written at all,or with only a very small number extant. This is because I can see no point in adding yet another write-up to a book which has a large number already. Whereas at least,if anyone wants to know something about a title then,if there is one review of that title. then at least they will have some sort of an opinion about it to refer to.

Också påLast.fm

PlatsNorthampton,UK

E-postpeterbiblio.eclipse.co.uk

Kontotypoffentlig, livstid

AnknytningsnyheterAnknytningsnyheter

URL:er http://www.librarything.com/profile/devenish (profil)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/devenish (bibliotek)

Medlem sedanMar 26, 2006

Kommentarer från LibraryThing-are

(Lämna en kommentar.)

Hello Peter,

Just a short note to let you know that I have bougt my first book by George Bellairs.
You are probably already aware of the folowing web site, but in case you have not heard of it, here is the link:
http://www.classiccrimefiction.com/georg...

All the best,
Bengt
Hi, Devenish!

Well my friend, I'm sorry to report that while I've made progress on "A Carrion Death" I still haven't finished it off (around 190 pages to go; it's a pretty long book, or maybe it just seems that way:) Anyway, as I just wrote HorusE, I've been side-tracked by Richard Stark/Donald Westlake's Parker novels that are being re-released over here in groups of three. Hop on over to Horus's page for a bit more info on them, if you're so inclined, please. They're pretty dark books, so I'm not sure if they'll be your cup of tea, or not. I also recently read Polish fantasy author Andrzej Sapkowski's 1993 novel, "The Last Wish," which has finally been translated into English, and I can safely say I was very impressed. Mr. Sapkowski's apparently long been a star in Europe and I hope he'll get his due in our countries, as well; here's a link to his book if you're interested: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Last-Wish-Andrze...

Now, besides the above, the other thing I wanted to tell you about was this link sent to me by my friend jackanaples here on LT: http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entert... I don't know if you've seen the article already as I have no idea where The Independent is based and/or if you read it. I found several new authors on the list, so hopefully you will, too.

By the way, thanks for mentioning me to Bengen. It's always good to meet another "right-thinking" LT'er with a nice crime library. I'll be investigating a couple of recommendations he's made along with yours to him:)

Take care,

bookstothesky

P.S. I just broke across 6,000 books a couple of weeks ago, so watch your back (I have to be extra competative about this right now, what with having caught Olympics fever and all that:)
Hello Again,

I look forward on Sundays to getting the book reviews from The Washington Post and The New York Times. A friend provides the latter; I just got the last two issues today and saw the review of Read the OED. I will have to work on my deipnophobia before the next dinner party. The same publication, at the end, had an interesting literary discussion of gout by Geoff Nicholson; in the August 10th issue there was was a nice article (Cover Stories) on connections between some authors and book cover designers--but no comment on British vs American book covers.

I noticed you had comments from "Bengan" regarding Swedish authors. I have just started The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo by Steig Larsson. I think "Bookstothesky" recommended it to me. It is starting out great.
Hello Peter,

Thank you very much for you message. Yes I have been in contact with Bookstothesky and I hope I will find the time to study booth his and yours libraries more in detail. So far I have been no fan of fantasy fiction but perhaps he can talk me into it.
You asked about other Scandinavian crime authors and, as I wrote to Bookstothesky, we have a lot of new Swedish female authors who are beginning to be well known, I can recommend Anna Jansson, Asa Larsson, Karin Alvtegen, Mari Jungstedt, Camilla Lackberg and Liza Marklund. A few male crime authors I have not mentioned before are Ake Edwardsson, Leif G.W. Persson, Mons Kallentoft and Bjorn Hellberg. Note that I am not sure if all of them have been translated to English.

Thank you for the useful information about Peter Cheyney, Edgar Wallace and George Bellairs. I have a few books by PC and I have read a few by EW but I have never heard of George Bellairs. The last author seems very interesting. I will try and find some of his books.

All the best,
Bengt
Hi Devenish,

thanks for your comment! There are so many interesting books in your library, looking through it I keep seeing ones I think I should get a copy of too. I don't have all my books on librarything yet -- I have about 1/4 or 1/3 of them on at the moment, and still more to go. But still nowhere near as many books as you have. I'll look through more of your library when I get a chance -- I'm sure I'll come across lots more interesting books

thanks

gavin,
Hi Devenish
Thank you for your message – I am absolutely in awe of your collection, and can only imagine the number of shelves you have in your house! For the past couple of years I have been reading mainly “Golden Age” mysteries and after reading a few reference books I realise I have a few more years of great reading ahead in that genre. I have just finished three books by Nicholas Blake and really enjoyed them. If his others are just as good I will add him to my favourite authors list. It is on my list of "things to do" to peruse your library in more detail.
Best regards,
Monica
Hi Devenish,

I checked my profile page and I did find an author with no books listed in her library. She did have other information however, which doubled as a search for information related to her popular science books.

HorusE
Recently I read Dark Hollow by John Connolly, continuing the Charlie Parker series and well as An Expert in Murder by Nicola Upson.

I particularly like the sense of place in Connolly’s works. This last one I read brings out locations in Maine, where I spent my first 18 years. Dover-Foxcroft, briefly referred to, I visited once since that is where one grandfather was born. Connolly also referred to the Sandy River narrow gauge railway. My other grandfather had come from Nova Scotia to help lay a connecting railway, the Rangeley & Phillips RR (Sandy River passes through Phillips, Maine).

Nicola Upson has a character refer to John Dickson Carr as a master of the locked-room mystery, which might be a slight anachronism. The story takes place in March 1934 but information on Carr’s books that have been characterized in Wikipedia indicate that his first locked-room mystery might be The Hollow Man, which was not published until 1935. A minor point, of course, in a enjoyable book. I thought the guilty parties were well concealed until the end.

I am currently reading Motherless Brooklyn by Jonathan Lethem, particularly because of the place. Since my younger son lives in Greenpoint, Brooklyn I have become increasingly familiar with its highways and byways. Fortunately he lives next to a precinct headquarters. Connolly had some action in Brooklyn also.

Horus is doing just great, always finding some new chair or bed to claim as his throne. He and another cat, Oscar, get to go out during the daytime (we have seen a fox and coyote around so no overnight outside).

Best Regards
Hi, Devenish,

Just a quick update with more to follow when I finish the book. I'm about 150 pages into "A Carrion Death." I'm not loving it, but I'm not hating it, either, and it's just starting to pick-up, action-wise, so I'm hoping for a strong second half. I am determined to finish it despite many new acquisitions tempting me to stray, so that I can discuss it with you. I apologize for the delay in getting back to you. It's been a hectic work week and I kept hoping to have read the book so I could respond to you, but it just didn't happen. Anyway, I hope to have it read within the week and, thus, I will write more at that point.

We had a 5.4 "roller" earthquake (as opposed to the more serious "shaker" type, as I call them) here last week that livened up a meeting I was in, and which pulled one of my bookcase earthquake supports out of a wall (luckily, the bookcase didn't fall over). It's made me re-think the adequacy of my bookcase earthquake preparations, so I think I'll be visiting the local hardware store on my next day off to buy more wall attachments. Anyway, I hope everything's stable in your part of the world with pleasant weather and good reading all around:)

talk with you soon,

bookstothesky
Hello Devenish,
Yes, that certainly was [The Fog] that I had read when I was in my teans. I believe it was the very first book that scared the wits out of me. I might be wrong it saying that it was the first but I can tell you this, I will always remember {The Fog].

I forgot that it took place in England. No futher investigation neccessary. It is the right book.

Many times when I search for something in my Whitby I get your Whitby. I even joined a book blub in your whitby where everyone meets at someones house. I can't possibly make it. LOL

Thanks so much for describing your Whitby. I enjoy hearing about other places that other people have been to. I didn't know about the 199 steps. Not my kind of trek. It would kill me. I bet it is fasinating to see all those stairs. I will take the elevator and meet you at the top. LOL

My Whitby doesn't have a tourest attraction. It in on Lake Ontario but it's water front needs much inprovement. I grew up in the next town, called Ajax. Now, their waterfront is very nice. What a difference a town makes.

I would very much like to keep in touch. Can't wait to hear from you again.

Jacqueline
Hello Devenish;

After reading [The Fog] I had asked around to see if anyone I knew ever read it. For years and years no one has said they even heard of the book. I can't remember how I got my hands on it. I don't remember the story line. What I do remember is that I couldn't but it down and after all these years I could remember the name of the book. I am usually really bad at remembering the names of books, the author's name and even what the book was about.

I feel that I didn't have that much of a hard time but instead was blessed with being ill and later really feeling a connection with books. It was a re-awakening, a re-birth, another chance. I had always enjoyed reading but now I get so much more out of it. I read a variety books now where before I got ill I would usually only read thrillers and mystery. There is so much more out there. I want to read it all.

Wow...totally amazing that you have such a ledger of books that you have. Have you read the books that you have put on "Librarything"? I wish I had started something like that years ago. Good for you.

Ummm...I guess I should tell you something. I am based it Whitby but I highly doubt that you have been here. See, it is in Canada. lol I wish it was in your Whitby. Probably is a very nice place.

I am so thrilled that you accepted to be on my friends list. It may take me a long time but I would like to go through your list and see if there are any more books that you have that I might have read. I am sure I will enjoy seeing all the books that are in your library.

Thanks again for taking the time out to write to me. Bestest wishes to you and I sure hope that I hear from you again. Soon would be nice :)

Jacqueline
I am very interested in your library and will take a closer look sometime real soon. In a thread you mentioned the book [The Fog]. I read that book also many years ago and have never been able to get it out of my head. Nice to know I am not the only one that feels that way.

Jaqueline
Hi, Devenish,

Sorry about changing the photo on you. I'm trying to curb my narcissistic tendencies these days:) I've updated my profile page to reflect the reasoning behind the photo change, in case you haven't read through it lately (not sure why you would have unless you've been suffering from a massive case of ennui).

I'm just finishing up the first Moe Prager mystery novel from Reed Farrel Coleman, called "Walking the Perfect Square," and it's really good. He's an excellent writer, having won the Shamus, Barry and Anthony awards, and I believe he's been twice nominated for the Edgar. So, I recommend the book and author to you, highly.

I've had an ARC of "A Carrion Death" for several months now and actually read the first 20 pages, or so. I set it down, though, when something else "shinier" came along and, as often happens, it got buried in one of my many "to be read" stacks and was forgotten. Then, about a week ago, I ran across the book on Amazon and saw the reviews were pretty much uniformly positive, so I decided I'd like to own the true first edition (it's a very beautiful book with good quality paper and a nice heft, too). So, I think I'll get back to reading it in an hour or so when I'm done with the Coleman book and I'll let you know what I think when I'm done. I'm interested in what the authors had to say, as well.

Talk with you soon,

bookstothesky
Hello Devenish, Many thanks for the warm welcome and offer of help. Yes, I have the two Birmingham Branches of Waterstones listed, but must admit to rarely buying a book from them these days as I use the internet more often. I do a have a browse there and been to some talks by Authors at Waterstones. There was until recently a 'Bookends' shop in Brum, which was fabulous. A number of times I came out with armfuls of books. I have been suffering withdrawl symptoms ever since the shop closed,(although I know there are other 'Bookends' further afield).

Yes,Library Thing appears to be excellent and it's been good to delve through my collection, and find some books I'd forgotten about - like Christmas all over again. My Library is very modest against yours. Maybe you have some surprises hidden there - Lord Lucan maybe?!

Regards,

Stilestrider
Hello Devenish,

I hope everything is well your end. I am very impressed by your huge library. Where do you house them? My approximately 2900 books take a lot of space in my house.
Let me say that I completely agree with you that LT should be used for books which you actually own. It is a great way to record them. My intention is also that all books should have a photo which shows the the right cover.

All the best,
Bengt
Hi Devenish,

You asked a while ago if I was finding the crime/mystery/thrillers or the historical books best (or indeed both).

I enjoy them about the same, but read more crime/mystery/thrillers. I like historical fiction, even better if a mystery is thrown in, since it gives provides history in a less intense mode, with some human interest thrown in. Sometimes I get inspired to read some history in nonfiction form.

I have been reading Bernard Cornwell’s Saxon series, which gives me some feel of the battles between the Saxons and the Danes. Although Cornwell invents a number of things such as a fortress at Durham before the Norman Conquest, he did get me interested in the Durham Cathedral. Bryson mentioned the Cathedral in “Notes from a Small Island.” He suggested taking his car to go there, but the road from New Hampshire is not too good.

I just finished “Every Dead Thing” by John Connolly. It was a great thriller. I particularly enjoyed the geographical references ranging from Scarborough, Maine, Greenpoint (in Brooklyn, NY, where one son lives, to Rehoboth Beach (which we have visited occasionally) to New Orleans (and the beignets at Café du Monde). I note Connolly’s reference to Madam LeLaurie's old mansion where it was rumored that slaves were chained and tortured—John Dickson Carr referred to that tale in “Papa La Bas”. Connolly had a lot of characters to keep track of; it seemed like one or two were superfluous.

Will be in touch.
This is from Tim, August 12, 2006:

"Well, you can add books that you don't own. Many do, and LT will be making that more clear when we add a robust concept of "collectons" (ie., own, read but don't own, want, etc.)"

Should we laugh or cry?
Devenish,

You're too fast for me! I just added that Benjamin Black book and was going to let you know about it yesterday, but it slipped my mind. Here's some info on the book:

"Commissioned as a high profile serial by the 'New York Times Magazine', 'The Lemur' is a stylish new thriller from a rising star of literary crime. William ('Wild Bill') Mulholland is an Irish-American electronics billionaire. An ex-CIA operative, he now heads up the Mulholland Trust, with the help of his daughter Louise. When Mulholland gets wind of a hostile biography planned for him by the investigative journalist Wilson Cleaver, he commissions his daughter's husband, John Glass, to pen the official line. But Glass' young researcher tries to blackmail him, and Glass is horrified, fearing that his own secrets, as well as the Mulhollands', are at risk. He slings him off the project, only to hear from the NYPD that this man he has nicknamed 'The Lemur' has been found shot to death...Silence cannot be bought - even by one of New York's wealthiest families. Riddled with explosive secrets, 'The Lemur' is a brilliant contemporary thriller that sees Benjamin Black at the top of his game."

It's only 132 pages long in the U.S. trade paperback size, so it's really more of a novella than a novel, in my opinion. It appears to be on back-order on Amazon.co.uk, so maybe try your local bookstore(s) or, possibly, just read it on-line from the New York Times. I suspect it's probably still available to read, possibly for a nominal fee, but I don't really know.

I finished the first John Connelly novel and thought I would love it, but ended up just liking it; not sure why, exactly, but it just didn't do it for me. I have read the synopsis' of R.J. Ellory's books before, including "A Quiet Belief in Angels" but had forgotten about them until your reminder. Of all his books, I'm most attracted to this one: http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/e/roge... It's good to know he's a talented writer, so I'll look around for his books over here.

Regarding the "Hindenburg" libraries (i.e., over-inflated and needing to come down to earth), I'll believe something will change when I see it. And, the whole home page thing doesn't do much for me, either. Still waiting for collections, the "next" thing they were going to work on a year or so ago:)

Take care,

bookstothesky
Hello again,

I am afraid I have spent even more on John Connolly. I purchased three on your list on line at the Strand Bookstore, including “Every Dead Thing”. I looked at a local used bookstore, Wonderbooks, but they had nothing by John Connolly. The local public library has only “The Black Angel”. I look forward to reading the series. Thank for the list.

I just finished “Newton” by Peter Ackroyd. It was as a great, albeit “brief” biography. I followed that by “The Devil in Velvet” by John Dickson Carr, where Isaac Newton makes a brief appearance. The latter book was fun and had an interesting twist on a murder investigation, with time shift of some 350 years. The devil must check birth dates (i.e., December 25th) before he makes his deals.

Fortunately we have not had any tornadoes or flooding, but did have some very heavy winds last week. As I was heading home I saw many trees with large broken limbs and trees ripped up by their roots in the nearby Antietam Battlefield.
Um...may I say I'd like my $25.00 back:)

That library is growing as I write. Every time I refresh windsorpl's profile page, the count grows by 1 book; probably at 70,000 by now. Hey, it wouldn't be the Windsor Palace library would it:)

I'm about 200 pages into John Connolly's first book and really enjoying it (why do I always wait so long to start the good books/series?). And, even better, Connolly will be in Los Angeles signing next week, so I may well go to one of two possible events, though I mostly only have ARC's for him to sign. But, with gas prices now at $4.29/gallon, I may just skip the whole thing, though; we'll see.

Talk with you soon, when we find out where that monster library ends up,

bookstothesky
Hi again!

There was something else about "The Reapers" that caught my attention: the nitrogen triiodide that was in the whistle that finished of Dever. When I was finishing up in secondary school, I did a skit with a chemical theme (something in a book published by Science Service). Part of the skit related a story about a chemistry teacher during the war (WW II) trying to create a substitute for butter. There was some accident and the product of his research was spattered around the school. Even today, so the story went, someone may step on a remnant and a small explosion will result. Prior to the skit, I had spread some nitrogen triiodide around the school, which represented the unstable butter. It went off as planned, as members of the audience left. Of course such a stunt would not get far today. As Oliver Sachs noted in "Uncle Tungsten", much has changed in the availability of chemicals in the last 50 years, as well increased sensitivity to explosives. I thought Connolly's use of NI3 very clever, based on my limited experience, I wonder if enough could be packed in a whistle to that kind of damage. there are some interesting comments on NI3 at http://www.bombshock.com/forumsarchive/e....

Watch out for Horus!
Hello Devenish,

Just returned from South Carolina. The weather was perfect, relatively low humidity and in the high 70's F.

Since I had brought my laptop, I got your information about "The Reapers" by John Connolly, and while my wife went shopping elsewhere, I stopped at the local Barnes and Noble, "The Reapers" jumped out at me. It was a great read. A friend from the local university, who is very much into political science and civil rights in particular, had previously loaned me "Sundown Towns: A Hidden Dimension of American Racism" that Connolly quoted from. I had not read the whole of book on sundown towns, as there was too much statistics-but enough to get the idea.

I would very much like to hear more from you regarding John Connolly. Thanks for the information regarding the "Silver Swan" by John Banville.

Good Reading!
Hello devenish!

Have you ever read anything by Phil Rickman? He does mystery on the Welsh and English border. In his first book of his Merrily Watkins' Series, "Wine of Angels", he has a character named Lucy Devenish :-)

This site has been a Godsend for me, as I needed to have an efficient system of cataloguing because I will have books at home and at my office. I haven't had a chance to use all the features yet because I am moving from one place to another, thus the perfect opportunity to do the cataloguing! However, hearing what was useful to you was helpful to me.

I looooove to read, so the best part of this for me so far is getting new ideas from other bibliophiles about good authors.

I lived in Aberdeen, Scotland for awhile because I attended the University of Aberdeen and my grandmother is from Edinburgh, so I have been around the UK quite a bit. I can't wait to go back!

Thanks for your kind welcome and I look forward to chatting in the future :-)

~BuffyAnne :-)
Hi Devenish!

Thanks for dropping me a note and for the positive comments regarding book ownership.

Oil (or, rather, gasoline/petrol) prices just crossed $4.00/gallon last week for regular unleaded in my neighborhood, so that's really waking up my normally somewhat apathetic countrymen. I heard on the radio a couple of days ago that some agency (the Dept. of Transportation, I think) reported Americans drove 11 billion miles less in March, 2008 compared to March, 2007, which is the sharpest decline since the agency began keeping records in the 1940's.

Thanks for the Benjamin Black recommendation. I came really close to ordering a signed UK copy of "Christine Falls" last year given the author's true identity and award win, but ultimately decided to wait for it to come out in paperback over here; I bought it in trade paper a month or so ago, but haven't yet read it (man, I get tired of saying that:) Same situation for John Connolly; I've been buying his books every year (unless I get an arc, which I've gotten the last few years) based on positive reviews but haven't yet read him (I agree he's a very jolly fellow, as I did get to meet and joke with him a bit 3-4 years ago at the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books. He told some story that I recall being very funny, but darned if I remember the details now).

Just a couple of weeks ago I bought 3 new book cases and I've now got all my trade paperbacks and hardcovers on shelves where I can see them, and I've been making a concerted effort to read some of the authors whose books I've been buying for a long time but not reading. Last week, I read Ken Bruen's "The White Trilogy" and "Blitz" which are the first four DS Brant books (not sure if they're your cup of tea given that the characters in the stories aren't always very sympathetic). I also read my first Peter James novel, "Dead Simple" which was pretty good but maybe not a character/series I want to continue with since it didn't really grab me hard. I read a first novel by Patrick Lennon called "Corn Dolls" and found it entertaining if not wholly believable insofar as how the Cambridge area police acted, but since I'm watching through American police-colored lenses, so to speak, maybe their actions (or, really, inactions) were appropriate. Then, today, I finished re-reading Deon Meyer's "Dead at Daybreak" as I'd recently sent him an e-mail telling him how I'd enjoyed his books, to which he very quickly and courteously replied. He--along with many translated foreign authors--has had trouble breaking into the American market and I wanted to give him a bit of encouragement. Luckily, he seems to be doing well in other markets, if quitting his job to write full-time is any indication of monetary success. Anyway, I started reading book one of Barry Eisler's John Rain assassin series today, called "Hard Rain" and once I'm done with those books, I think John Connolly's are next up in the on-deck circle. After those, I think it'll be a switch to science fiction as I just learned today that Charles Stross is coming to Los Angeles in July and I own 11 hardcover books of his, none of which I've read, so I need to read at least a couple before his book signing. And, somewhere in there, I need to finish off "Child 44" as both HorusE and another friend have given me the thumbs up on it (have you read it yet?).

That's all for now. Time to hit the hay over here so I'll talk with you later.

Take it easy,

bookstothesky
Devenish

Oh how I wish I could learn to proof read properly before I submit a note to the ether!

Can I just confirm that yes, A L has been writing for years, but only in the 2othC - not since the 11thC!

The Award was actually in 1947..

C
Devenish

Thank you for such a quick response. I think your point about having a picture of the complete works of the author is spot on. Thank you for the perspective! It then brings up the question of how to identify the works that haven't been published in books.

Maxine McArthur (http://www.librarything.com/author/mcart...) is a good example of an author. There are a number of short stories that have been published in various journals (including those that are paper based as well as those that are online, or both. If you go to her website (www.maxinemcarthur.com), there are details on how to access the various short stories – where they are published, both on paper and electronically.

A number of these short stories have been added to the LT author page (ie Bakemono, Remembering Bathys, Breaking the Ice) but there is absolutely nothing on either the main page or the details page (ie no information on where or how the stories are published). I also noted that sometimes there is a link to the e-version is in a review, but not all the works have reviews.

It may be something to do with Journals being one of those maybe in, maybe out areas in LT, but on the other hand, if e-publishing is going to continue, perhaps there should be space for the links?

I don't know the answer, and am not sure if my irritation at not immediately being able to easily find a new story that is on the author list for an author I enjoy, is a personal idiosyncrasy, or potentially a more general issue.

A L Barker seems to have been writing for years (she is now dead, but won the first Somerset Maugham Award in 1047, and has been shortlisted for the Booker. She has written a number of novels and volumes of short stories. I think she fall into the class that can be thought of as “under-recognised excellent british female writers”. In her introduction to “Submerged” Jane Gardam states that A L Barker saw herself as “a writer’s writer – a kind way of saying that nobody reads me”. I enjoy her writing, not the least for the times when she is extremely funny.

Regards

Caesia
Hello

I thought I would drop you a note, now that I have managed (much to my delight) to have got just about all of my books onto LT (I think I have finished finding the little ( or no so little) piles of books that seem to hide in dark corners and multiply all by themselves...). This means that I have been browsing LT more.

I have noticed, and thoroughly agree with your views on the issues of the differences in LT collections that are of actual books on an individual's shelf, and those that include a number, or a very, very large number of "wants" or "wish list".

However, I was wondering how you felt about entries which are not actually books, but, for example, a short story that ends up "online". This I find really challenging, as, when I look at the author's page, these very short, electronic items are listed in the same way a book, usually without reference to where they are exist in cyberspace, in the same way that publication details provide this information. It seems to occur more with speculative fiction. I find this frustrating with authors that I know - for example, one author I know well has three actual books published, but the author page shows another seven items that are not actually books (although at first glance it appears as though they are). I find this extremely misleading (and I am not sure what the author would feel...).

Anyway, I was wondering what you thought about this. I would appreciate another point of view on the matter.

I hope you are well and enjoying reading - I am catching up on some A L Barker who is just a delight - and makes a change from my usual diet of crime.

Regards

Caesia
Thanks for your message. I'm a little in awe of your library!
Hi Devenish,

Thanks for the John Dickenson Carr references. I just received them, from Abe.

I understand that The Hungry Goblin was the last book that Carr wrote. I suppose the title was inspired by the old poem “Tom O’Bedlam.”

I just returned from New York City, where I had a chance to visit the Barnes & Noble on 5th Ave. It was a terrible temptation. I did find an Janwillem van de Wetering novel there; it is rare to find his books on the shelf in bookstores around here.

I just finished “Papa La-Bas” by John Dickson Carr. I was amused to read about Senator Benjamin hunting the devil-fish at Port Royal Sound in South Carolina. This area is where we are heading tomorrow for a week stay. I have never seen any devil-fish (rays) there however.

Regards
Hello Devenish,

I forgot to mention that I had checked out one of your favorite authors, John Dickson Carr. One of the local libraries has about 12 of his mysteries. I picked out "The Hungry Goblin" at random. It stars Wilkie Collins as a detective of sorts. It was a pleasure to read. I got a laugh out of one short conversation:

“On every possible occasion, you know, this man insists on being there hours ahead of time.
hereas this woman, like most women,” retorted Nigel, “likes nothing better than to cut it so fine she almost misses the train …” My wife and I frequently have this conversation.
Hello Devenish,

Actually I have not yet obtained “100 Favorite Mysteries of the Century”, although I note that it shares a common author and Edgar award with “They Died in Vain”. The other book we discussed was “A Catalog in Crime.”

“Revelation” has not been published yet in the US, but is due out in May. I look forward to reading it. I am glad to hear that Shardlake has returned. I had an extra copy of “Dark Fire” that I gave to our local public library, and I note that it has been well received there.

I have been exploring the statistics and there was an odd thing about “You and none other.” It seems to mean: You and one other. There was an odd bug, but it appears to have been fixed. How do you interpret “book obscurity?” I also find Local useful and Legacy of no interest. I have not pursued Talk and am not sure I will, but think Series is a great feature.

I recently finished “Pelagia and the Black Monk” by Boris , which was full of surprises and well paced. A friend loaned me “The Worst Hard Time”, a National Book Award winner by Timothy Egan. It gives the history of the American Dust Bowl, which I am reading now. It covers some of the Depression stories as well.

One feature that someone suggested was to have the profile show book or books currently read. It would e useful. Actually I thought I saw it once on someone else’s profile, but it did not reappear--maybe it was a test.

Horus is fast asleep after spending most of the great day we had (about 75 F).

Best wishes to yours
Ooops - Michael Cox ..
Devenish

Thank you for the thoughts about english crime books - unfortunately at this stage I still have not yet popped all of my books into librarything - including crime fiction A-H .... However, you have managed to note a number of authors I enjoy - particularly the Matthew Shardlakes - I do have a number of the others - except Andrew Taylor - whose earlier works I read avidly, but then I lost interest. I don't know the Mathew Cox however, so shall look out for it. With regrads to the fourth Imogen Quy, living on this side of teh world often meands a longish wait for the books to appear here ( although not always)

Happy reading
Devenish

I am delighted that you think my library is "interesting"! I have had a look at your Books about Books and fear that it will result in an increase in books in my bookshelf...

I find it hard to recommend Australian Crime Fiction - partly because I am not sure what sort of crime you like reading, and partly because some of it I really like because it describes bits of Australia so it is a nice change to read about a place you actually know rather than one which has(generally) only been accessed through books - or TV. I don't know how well it will translate to another country. However, I can outline some of my favourites ...

I really like Shane Moloney - his protagonist is interersted in politics and it is set in Melbourne. I find him very funny - some of the scenes in the later books are really quite wicked. This is a series and although the books are possibly stand alone, i would recommend starting with Stiff.

Robert Wallace wrote four books in the late 80's/early 90's starring Essington Holt - (To Catch a Forger is the first)followed by a fifth in 2003 under his real name Robin Wallace-Crabbe. To me, Essington is a very Australian character.

Peter Temple writes well - Bad Debts is the first of the books that have Jack Irish as a protagonist, and he has written others.

Then there is Peter Corris - possibly the most prolific of current Austrailan crime writers - in general he is good.

Kerry Greenwood has written a number of novels set in the Twenties in Melbourne - of which I think the first couple are the best - Cocaine Blues and Flying Too High - the series then becomes much more formulaic and looses tightness of plot and detail.

I rather like Garry Disher who has written a series with Wyatt as the protagonist - perhaps more thriller than crime as Wyatt is a villain - Kickback is the first of these. He has written a second series with Detective Insector Hal Challis - as the protagonist - starting with the Dragon Man.

And of course there is Barry Maitland - with his Brock and Kolla series - although I am not sure if he is classifed as "Australian" he lives here - and his books are set in Britain - but he is good.

Happy hunting ...

By the way are there any BrRitish crime writers that you particularly like - whilst some of the more mainstream (ie big selling) authors get here, I think there are many that never grace our shores ... so any thoughts would be welcome ...

Regards
Hi Devinish,

Thought of you when I saw this travel section on Cathar territory:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/con...

Horus
Hi

My library is now public if you were still interested. I note that we have (for me) a relatively high level of common interest) although your library is significantly larger and I am still trying to load existing books. ( And yes, like you, I am only putting in books that actually exist on my book shelf now / hence also providing a picture of actual book cover.) I too am considering CDs and DVDs but so far have no moved beyond books...

All the best
hello again Devenish,

Thanks for responding (and from the other side of the world, too. Isn't the Internet wonderful!)
Yes, I have several HP Lovecraft books. I started reading him many years ago, and as I remember had some sleepless nights as a result. As a matter of fact, I have only some of my collection here; you can find a full list (by shelf, not by author or topic, so it's a fun mixture) on my website.
Salley Vickers was kind enough to reply to the email I sent her about her books; that's a nice thing!
If you look at the fiction for adults page on my site, you should find some of the fan fiction I wrote about Blake's 7. As 'fanlit' goes, it's not too cringe-making.
Nice to chat with you,
Regards,
Hi Devenish,

I figured out how to change the location under local. I had to click on the pencil.

I note that Bookstothesky referred to changing the library columns from ISBN to Google. I did not find ISBN under B, but under D. However I changed the cover under B to Google to get that Google.

As to the two books, I definitely recommend The Catalog of Crime.

Til later
Hi Devenish,

I wrote up a "review" of the two books and you can find them under their titles.

"They Died in Vain" I should note does have rather through reviews of the 103 books selected by individuals who take their mysteries very seriously. Probably its "companion" book would be better as the books reviewed would be the favorites.

I am beginning to like the local material better as I get to understand it or as it improves. I was glad to find out how to remove a venue that I had duplicated. It is not clear exactly what is meant by "location"--it seems to refer to "state" only. in the US--but there is a limit to 100 miles. The zip (postal) code works well however. The zoom feature helps breaks up the clusters in Manhattan.
Dear Devonish
Manning Coles is actually the pseudonym of two people, a man and a woman - can't remeber their names but I believe they were neighbours. The series features Tommy Hambledon, ex-school master and intelligence officer. The first one Drink to yesterday is about the first World War and ends with Hambledon falling into the harbour in Germany. Pray silence starts with him being rescued and losing his memory. He believes he's German and builds a new life and becomes involved in the rise of fascism. The night of the Reichtag fire he gains his memory just after being made Chief of Police in Berlin. The rest of the book has him putting spokes in the Nazis plans. The rest of the books takes him through the war and the cold war. The humour is mostly in the writing and the dialogue not the situations. I would recommend Pray silence as a starting point - the later books are not as good but have their moments. It's like most authors and Tv series, they always go on too long. Agatha Christie is a case in point, she lost her grip on plots as she got older.
Harrogate's not far away, I need two trains (one into Leeds and one out to Harrogate). I hope you patronised Bettys both in Harrogate and in York. The York one has the best atmosphere with the big windows looking out on to St Helen's Square and the fascinating World War 2 RAF mirror with the signatures downstairs.
Cimorene
Devenish,

Thanks for the Reginald Hill recommendation. Since I only "discovered" Hill six-ish months ago, and think his writing is great, I'm quite interested in finding the book.

I'm 124 pages into "Child 44" and it's definitely gripped me. If Smith's research is accurate, it really drives home how lucky we are to be living (or have lived) in Western society. More positive reviews have gone up on Amazon UK, so I'm moderately optimistic that a signed UK first/first would be worth tracking down and buying, either for later gain or just for the satisfaction of owning it. According to a photocopy of a Wall Street Journal article about the book/author, Smith is contracted for at least one more book, so maybe he'll turn into a big name thriller writer. I've ordered a signed copy for myself just for the speculative fun of it.

Last night I actually put to use one of the recent LT innovations, namely the ability to link to Google's Book information. I have my library set to the suggested "B" viewing type, so I took out the ISBN listing and substituted the Google book info in that column, because Google shows the ISBN of the book you enter and that information can also be found in the social info in the next column. What I like from Google is that a book's story synopsis usually comes up, plus there are sometimes links to book review sites. All in all, it will be a site improvement I will use frequently, I think, or others can use if they look at my library.

Speaking of my library, I haven't yet had the "pleasure" of a private library finding it of interest (at least, I don't recall any). The fact that you've had a couple of requests makes me laugh for the inequitable reason you set forth. I read on one of the talk threads of a private library that adds read, but not owned, books to its library, so that's one private library (ironically with "more" books than me, of course) I know is inflated; there are probably more.

That's all for now. Keep the faith:)

bookstothesky
Dear Devenish,
thanks for the lovely note you left on my profile. I have not actively sought out other LibraryThingers to chat with, but I noticed your library and was very interested in the comments you made on your page. I have heard a lot of talk about what can and cannot, should and shouldn't be catalogued on LibThing and I haven't come up with a definite opinion on it. I am torn between being repelled by the idea that people make their libraries look big by filling it with anything but the books they actually hold - much like Facebook and MySpace users fill their sites with 'Friends' they have never and will never talk to - and a resentment to yet more rules on what we can and cannot do. I like to leave everything up to the individual, with a hidden proviso that it may irritate me if it is done for the appearance of the thing rather than for its usefulness. After all, I cannot help it if something irritates me, but I'll try not to harp on about it.
If I had more (or any) time on my hands I would put my attention to creating a site that would hold all these extra things that we like to have listed - something especially for all us List people.
As it is, I agree that you should put your CDs on. You have the need to catalogue and so you shouldn't deny yourself. And if I look in any Library catalogue I can see CDs listed alongside books, and DVDs and videos and so on. Here I have contrived two arguments For, which makes me feel slightly better about the whole thing. Enjoy your Adding.
hello there Devenish,

What a wonderful collection you and your wife Vivien have. I also am envious and am adding you to my interetsing library list. I actually own a lot more than the slightly less than 200 I have listed; the full list can be found, if you are interested (along with other bits and pieces) on my own website (http://members.westnet.com.au/ariom ) Like you, I actually possess all my listed books, although I have probably slipped up on getting the exact edition for some of them. Aren't Sally Vickers' books a delight? And I see you also have Blake'7 - the books are pretty woeful compared to the series.
regards from Western Australia
Hi Peter,
Glad you find some of my books interesting. I'm in the process of putting all my books on, which is taking so long. I shall have more Northants books on soon and some crime, particulaly art crime. I am so enjoying putting all my books on and I'm doing that when I should be working (I work from home).
Where do you store all your books? Mine are taking over the house; there's nowhere for any more bookcases. I did suggest to my husband that we could buy a bigger house but I didn't receive a positive response!
Best wishes
Zoe.
Hello, Peter!

Thank you for the kind words about my reviews. I think my inclusion of the first line dates back to a continuing game a penpal from Middleborough and I had when we were teenagers. We'd send a series of first lines of various books we'd read and see how badly we could stump each other. Some first lines are much more memorable than the rest!

Hope you and yours are well, and that you aren't being torn apart by the high winds in the UK. A friend in Durham had to catch the train to London today, but the train schedules were such a mess due to the weather that she wound up returning home and tele-conferencing instead!

--Cathy.
Hello Devenish,

Glad to hear that the earthquake was not too severe. I do not recall any of note here in eastern WV. I recall being in a slight earthquake in souther Greece (Naplia) once, just thought is was someone very heavy walking around in the floor above.

I have picked up one book by van de Wetering as a remainder: Just a Corpse at Twilight. It particularly caught my eye at it is set along the coast of Maine. I grew up in that state, but way inland. Most of the relatives I have left there now live along the coast however. It is pretty depressing inland. Since you mentioned this author I decided to make it my next book to read. Just finished it and found it a pleasure, will have to pursue his mysteries further. The author has an amusing way of disposing of the bad guys (the bad sheriff and his deputy). Mentions marijuana growing along the coast. Had not hear that before, but had heard of some pretty good crops grown further inland.

I had not seen that poetry reference before, but I see that they have it at the local university library in the reference section. Will have to check it out.

I notice that one of your favorite authors is John Dickson Carr. Although most of his books are out-of-print, there is a public library in the next county, 8 miles away, that has a very large building and has kept his books. I picked out "The Hungry Goblin", at random, and it was fun, has Wilkie Collins as an assisting amateur detective in investigating an attempted murder at a home called Udolpho.

Talk to you later
Whoops, I just re-read the part of your profile about entering music and I see that you did not, in fact, enter your movies as I thought, so my apology for my faulty memory. Maybe I'm wrong about Tim, too:).
Hello Devenish,

Very nice to hear from you, amigo. I saw one of your posts yesterday on someone else's library and thought to myself that I hadn't checked to see what you're up to for a while, but you beat me to the punch.

I am fully recovered from the nasty sinus infection (I think. I'm turning into a bit of a hypochondriac now whenever I get any little headache-ish pain:), thank you for asking. I'd never had such an infection before and, natch, I got the less common type above the eye, so it felt like someone was drilling into my brain through my forehead; I don't recommend it, at all.

"Court of the Air" hasn't been released over here yet and it hadn't come up on my radar while doing one of my periodic UK website searches, so I wasn't familiar with it. Your review seems to mirror some of the reviews on Amazon UK regarding the confusing aspects of the story. Since 1/3 of the people reviewing it really disliked it, and you're review was only so so, I think I'll pass on it. I've got way too much stuff I'd rather read. Speaking of that, I'm about to embark on the reading of an advance copy of one of your countryman's books called "Child 44." It's a mystery/thriller set in Stalin-era Russia. The book has received all sorts of positive hype and Ridley Scott is supposedly making it into a movie and, so far, the book seems to be living up to the hype if the Amazon reviews are anything to go by. I've become increasingly fascinated with Russian set mysteries and thrillers over the last 5,6,7 years, though I'm not completely sure why; I'll let you know what I think of the book when I finish.

I hope your earthquake didn't do much harm. In the first few years that I lived in Southern California the only quakes I experienced were these kind of rolling ones where the clothes swing back and forth in the closet; kinda fun, I thought. Then the Northridge quake hit around 4:20 a.m., if I recall correctly, and I thought the world was ending. There was no chance to get out of bed for the first 20 seconds or so, the shaking was so ferocious. My antiquated computer monitor was thrown 6 feet off the desk and landed right next to my wife's head (I was still living like a college student with a mattress on the floor in those days). I thought for sure that my old apartment complex would collapse, but it came through relatively unscathed, while many of the newer buildings around me were seriously damaged. The condo complex next door fell completely off it's foundation and went from 20 feet away from our building to around 5 feet away. The very scariest thing for me though, where I really thought I was going to die, was one of the aftershocks. I was leaving work on a Sunday afternoon (back in my "corporate" days when weekend work was fairly common), and I was taking the elevator down from the 16th floor. Next thing I know, the elevator is shaking from side to side, the lights are blinking on and off, and I'm thinking I'm a dead man with a 12 floor drop about to happen. Luckily, those tiny signs that say there's little chance of an uncontrolled drop are correct. I was stuck in the elevator for a couple of minutes, then it went up a floor and let me out. I was down the emergency stairs in a flash and was quite shocked to find the world going on as usual when I hit daylight. It sure felt like a major quake had hit, but it was just another aftershock in the 5.3 range on the Richter scale. So, those are my scary earthquake stories, so I can definitely sympathize with being rudely awakened in the wee hours by Mother Nature.

With regard to our presidential race, I'm not following too closely, though I heard on the radio today that Obama won in Mississippi, with the votes seriously skewed along racial lines (91% of blacks for Obama, and 73% of whites for Clinton, I believe). I've been following the scandal erupting around Eliot Spitzer, the Governor of New York, much more closely. I just don't get how people in positions of power (and the former Attorney General of the State of New York, to boot) think that their sexual escapades are not going to get exposed to the world, sometime, somewhere. It seems to be a relatively minor legal violation, so far, in that he was "just" paying for sex, but the ethical violation bothers me a lot more. Everywhere I turn these days, it seems ethics are being freely disregarded. I sometimes wonder if having a sense of ethics and/or a conscience shouldn't be considered a handicap in today's world.

Sorry to hear about your lousy weather, too. It was just another boring day of 76 degree sunshine over here:) It's going to drop to a teeth-chattering 72 degrees tomorrow, so I'll have to bundle up, heh.

I haven't read that Philip Kerr book yet (big shock) but it's good to know you liked it; I'll get to it someday.

Don't get me started on the LT local pages. They're cool, no doubt, and will get even cooler, as you say (if I may paraphrase), as more content is added, but...didn't Tim say a few months ago that collections was next on the agenda?? Is my memory that defective? I'm just getting fed up with being passed on the Zeitgeist list by schools, actual lending libraries, businesses, private libraries (who cares how big these are, we can't admire their contents, so give 'em there own list, I say), and the usual inflated library suspects. I'm seriously thinking of joining you in the addition of music and movies to my library, and one of my friends is constantly encouraging me to enter my comic collection under the theory that comic books are a) called comic "books" and b) are sold in bookstores; I'm sorely tempted, let me tell you.

I'm also annoyed right now, because I just found out that what I thought was the third book in Jo Nesbo's Harry Hole series (called "Nemesis") may actually be the second book, despite being published third; makes me want to give the publisher a collective smack upside the head.

On a brighter note, I've been reading books by Australian author Peter Temple, and I'm really enjoying his writing style. I highly recommend "The Broken Shore," as well as his Jack Irish series beginning with "Bad Debts." The Aussie slang is very entertaining to try and decipher, too; reminds me a bit of reading Ken Bruen and trying to figure out your UK slang.

Well, that's all for now. Keep yourself dry over there and I'll talk to you later,

bookstothesky
Dear Devenish
I'm always pleased to find people who own similar books. My collection is by no means as large as yours, but I have had to be ruthless recently as I don't think under the bed in boxes is a good place for books. Being a retired cataloguer I've been enjoying inputting books again, even though Librarything is nothing like the system I used at work.
I don't collect all of Edgar Wallace, merely the Sanders books and the Four Just Men. My father started me reading detective stories when I was a child, beginning with Margery Allingham and Naomi Marsh. I suppose that's why I've continued to like the "cosy" genre rather than the hardboiled - my father didn't like the Mickey Spillane school of writing so that genre didn't cross my horizon until I was old enough for the adult library. You'll remember the days when the librarian didn't allow you to take adult books on junior tickets.
I have recently completed my Manning Coles and Phoebe Atwood Taylor collections, but am still searching for hardbacks to replace collapsing paperbacks - perfect binding is the bane of book collectors! I find Skipton the best charity shop location but I think all charities know the value of old books and it's rare to find anything but modern fiction. Old children's books are a dying breed except at book fairs. Have you noticed the dearth of old books in your charity shops? I'm going to the big fair in Harrogate at the end of the month. It used to be in a hotel in the centre but it's moved to the Yorkshire Showground, so it'll be fun getting there on public transport.
Cimorene
Hello Devenish,

Thanks again for the reference to The Secret of Lost Things: A Novel. I enjoyed it but had to reread the final pages a couple of times to understand the ending. The store reminds me a bit of The Strand Bookstore in Manhattan. The store does sell review copies. Needless to say it has more than one cashier and has a bag storage on entry. I am somewhat puzzled as to what time frame is presented in which the protagonist could survive on $70/week in Manhattan.

Just finished Appleby and Honeybath, by Michael Innes. Fun reading. Enjoyed the literary references--my poetry background is limited--but Google came to the rescue. A few words beyond my American Dictionary.

HorusE
Thanks for leaving my first comment! I am slowly building up our list and it will take a while to make it more representative and to apply some tags. So if you do want to check it out, you might want to wait a bit. Getting used to how this site works, I doubt I've scratched the surface. Unlike your collection, ours resides largely at the public library--the idea of owning 10,000 books makes my head spin! Best regards, arbjrm
Hello Devenish

Hope you don't mind but I had to add you to my Interesting Libraries as most of the books we share are 4+ stars! Must admit to the green eyed monster at the size and scope of your library - one day, one day. I see you are adding your music collection, I haven't attempted that as yet but will be interested to see if we have a kindred taste in music, although my musical tastes are even more eclectic than my reading.
Somewhat later than expected, I`m about to start reading Cheyney`s Dark Wanton - I`ll let you know how I get on with it !

Best,

Nick
Hallo.
Your collection is amazing, and I am actually a bit envious :-)
I see you like misteries, crime fiction, wich is also a passion of mine. I am uploading my books, a few at a time, I home to be finished before the spring. It will be interesting then to see how many books we share.
Also, your library gave me a lot of new titles-ideas!

Cheers from Canada
Caterina
Hello,

I have started The Yellow Cross, but it is requiring some considerable concentration. The first chapters deal with the geography of the area, the villages, the rivers and other essential elements of the topography. The third chapter lists all the families of Montaillou and where their houses are located, and it begins to outline the characters (religious affiliations in particular). There are some beautiful photographs of the area described. Interesting history.

I found the book by Emmaneul Le Roy in the university library in town under the title: Montaillou: The Promised Land of Error (American edition). In examining the surrounding stacks, I noticed that this libary has a large number of volumes related to inquisitions. Since the school has not recently taught courses related to religion, this is somewhat surprising. Probably some faculty member who had an interest had requested them to be ordered.

Thanks for the reference to Lynne Truss. I remember a review of some recent book related to punctuation, but can't remember the author.

Please that you enjoyed the article. I was surprised to find it outside the Book Review section.

Am also reading the Prodigal Spy, by Joseph Kanon--he writes good thrillers. The story relates to both the Joseph Mcarthy Senate hearings on communists infiltrating the State Department and the Vietnam War.
You have a most desirable library! I will be looking at your mysteries! And you even addressed the question of not enough space. You are fortunate to have a house - I have a small townhouse and no way to build any additions!
sara
Hello Peter,
It is very nice to hear from you and I am sorry I have not sent you any message for a while, but I have been rather busy fixing photos to my books on Librarything.
I do think that a lot of crime and mystery books by authors from Sweden have become very popular in the English-speaking world lately. There are Hakan Nesser, Henning Mankell and Steig Larsson to name a few. Sadly enough Steig Larsson died before his books became famous.
My favorites are Colin Dexter, Ruth Rendell, Ian Rankin and Peter Robinson so if you can recommend books by some other author who write that kind of books I will be very grateful.
As we have 416 books in common I feel that we must like the same kind of crime and mystery books.
It is supposed to be winter in Sweden but the climate is not what it used to be. Since the middle of December it has been snowing for two or three days and then it has been warm for a couple of days and the snow has disappeared. After that the snow has returned again only to vanish in a few days and so on.
All the best,
Bengt
Hi Devenish,

Thank very much for passing on the book references. I have not yet read the book about the Cathars, but will let you know my reactions when I do.

I came across and interesting essay about mysteries, thrillers, romances, and horror stories as great literature in the Week in Review of the Sunday edition of The New York Times. There are references to a suit by Joan Brady and some discussion concerning John Banville,Ian Rankin, and Stephen King. You might catch it at:

www.nytimes.com/2008/02/03/weekinreview/...

There is a final comment on "The Turn of the Screw", where the writer notes that James talked about "trash", but his ghost story was one of his best.

My wife and I just returned from an Elderhostel class in Key West, Florida--the southernmost spot in the "48" states. An Episcopaleon priest gave a talk describing his congregation, which has two very different groups--a winter group from the North (snowbirds) and the full-timers. Part of the congregation is very high church (three services). I had just finished Sovereign by C. J. Sansom, where there was a reference to Henry VIII frowning on rosaries--so I was startled to see rosaries for sale in the Parish Hall.
Hi,
I've added you to my "interesting libraries" list, if that's alright. I especially admire (and covet) your collection of books about espionage and the Special Operations Executive. I don't know if you watch "Foyle's War", but there's one episode where the fledgling SOE plays a key part in the mystery and most of the action takes place at one of their training facilities.
Cheers,
Erin
Hello Devenish

I was just looking to see who else had books by Celia Dale and you popped up !

Your catalogue of books is fantastic,I have about 1500 and am running out
of space !
I myself am a Midlands girl, (Nottingham) although have not been there for a few years now.
I love Celia Dale books and am always looking for them,but have not yet managed to find a photo of her anywhere to add to my catalogue.
I am reading an Edmund Crispin book at the moment "The Moving Toyshop" saw someone mention him so am assuming he is also in your library !
I love reading these vintage books possibly because I am also vintage !

Regards........Shirley
Hi,

I appreciate your comments about having only catalogued the books (and only books) that you physically own. I have just about finished cataloging my library (count = 2433) excluding my wife's cookbooks which haven't been started, and am interested in seeing how our library stacks up against other libraries. One of us, if not both of us, have physically read or at least referred to every book in our catalog. Our catalog would be 3-4 times larger if we listed everything we had read, but not owned or been able to keep. I am distessed to find that many of the larger libraries are inflated by not-reads, like-to-haves, once-owned, etc..., so I really don't know where we stand overall.

And then there is the question of music recordings, video and the like. Library thing offers an attractive tool for cataloging this stuff as well - but they should not be confused with the genuine article - books! What I plan for our collection of CDs and vinyl records is to count these in a separate non-book catalog.

Regards,

Bill
Hello Devenish.
Thank for getting in touch. I'm going to go back in in a minute to delete that bit about being very elderly. As I explained to another LTer, I was just feeling a bit elderly on the day I made the entry and was also suffering from recently having joined in with another forum (which shall remain nameless) and finding that everyone else there seemed to be about 15. I'm even beginning to suspect that I was subconsciously longing for people to write in and tell me I'm not really so elderly at all, as you have done, so it's starting to feel a bit self indulgent. You're right - I'm a mere spring chicken - thanks for that!
Couldn't agree with you more about this being addictive. I always thought I was a great lover of reading but I suddenly find I'm spending more time logging and talking about the books than I am reading them, so not sure what that says about me. Some self-discipline is going to be needed. I haven't actually got bad enough yet to start buying books just to bump up the numbers but I am falling victim to the syndrome where, every page I look at mentions some book or other that I start wishing I had, so my wish-list is getting longer and longer. I shudder to think how long it must have taken you to add all your books!
I'm definitely adding your list to my 'interestings' - there are so many there it would be a poor soul indeed who couldn't find something of interest.
Happy reading!
:D I know what you mean when you say that it just makes you want to buy more and more books. In my case however I always want to buy books. As Erasmus says "When I have a little money I buy books... if any left over i buy food and clothes." :) I'm always buying books. Thank you for the welcome!
SanityDemolisher
Hi Devenish,

We thank you for your good wishes and wish you the same.

I have The Templars, by Read, but have not had a chance to read it yet. I got interested in the subject after reading The Last Templar, by Michael Jecks.

I noticed that you recently added to your catalog: The Yellow Cross: The Story of the Last Cathars: 1290-1329, by Rene Weis. I bought one after I saw your entry, as the subject is of particular interest.

I actually did not see the movie, The Golden Compass, since I did not think my wife would be interested--but did see The Atonement, which we both enjoyed. Maybe I will catch the DVD.

My introduction to Gorey was the Mystery series on our PBS system (mostly of
English origin). I just recently started collecting some of his books, but nothing on his life.

I will have to keep my eye open for The Fall of Troy, I don’t think it has been published here yet.

Among other I got a new book on World War I, by Meyers I recall.
Hello Devenish,

I think you're right, everything does seem to be functioning correctly. I may have mixed up the functionality of LT (which I'm still learning!) with that of other services such as MySpace and FaceBook, which I use for music contacts.

Thanks for your help.

Don
Devenish,

Well, Sandman is where Gaiman made his name, so you may want to try out a graphic novel and see if you like it. Though I do own some comics and the Absolute Sandman, Vol. 1, I've never read any of the stories, so I'll refer you to these reviewers: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Sandman-Library-...
It appears the graphic novel Preludes & Nocturnes reprints comic issues 1-8, but you may need to go to the next graphic novel, The Doll's House, before the storylines really begin to take off.

I went through about 20 of my mass market boxes, but no luck with American Gods. I'll continue next weekend when my back has recovered from throwing the boxes around (really, from bending over them searching, I think:)

Enjoy your wife's books. UK science fiction author Peter F. Hamilton wrote on his blog, after he brought Fletcher Christian back from the dead in a book, how he was surprised by how many people didn't know who he was, mostly Americans. Sadly, that kind of describes me when you start mentioning various 'shires and parliament vs. royalist, etc:)

Thanks for the recommendation for The Secret of Lost Things; I'll give it a look when it comes out in paperback over here in March. If you haven't done so already, you may want to recommend it to HorusE, what with his recent trip to the Strand bookstore, the apparent basis for the Arcade Bookshop.

Talk with you later,

bookstothesky
Hi Devenish,

Happy New Year to you! Did Father Christmas bring you lots of books or were you a bad boy last year?

I just thought I drop you a note about a forthcoming Edward Marston book that I hope will live up to the lofty description, here: http://www.amazon.co.uk/SOLDIER-FORTUNE-...

I figure you probably know about it, but just in case... I hope it's better than C.C. Humphreys' "Jack Absolute," the supposed revolutionary war 007.

I'm spending the day pawing through my paperback boxes to find Gaiman's American Gods since I figure it's high time I read something by him and that's the book that most interests me. If only I'd thought to tag and number the contents of each box while I was entering them on LT; Ah, well, it'll motivate me to get them out of boxes, I guess:)

Take care,

bookstothesky
I think I could learn a lot by keeping an eye out for your library - so I hope you don't mind if I add you. I like many of your favourite authors and could do with some more inspiration.

Cheers,
Karen
Hi Devenish,

I did finish The Golden Compass, by Pullman. I enjoyed the fantasy. It was interesting how the author introduced the radiometer. I did get to New York City and while there one son, wife, and I went to see Atonement--which we enjoyed. I know my wife would not care for The Golden Compass, no interest in fantasy. Over Christmas my other son introduced me to Good Omens; which was the first Gaiman book I have read.

I was given Agent Zigzag, by Ben Macintyre, for Christmas. A true story and a great thriller. Alway fun to see how the Enigma machine was used. Zigzag was certainly one-of-a-kind.

I wallowed in the Strand Bookstore in NYC, but mainly picked up paperbacks, which are lighter to carry. Did get one hardback, Book Row, "anecdotal and pictorial history of the antiquarian book trade" in NYC as well as the history of the Strand. Most of the bookstores mentioned succumbed to rising rents, TV, and urban development.

Horus the cat and I
Hello Peter,
"The Anatomy of Bibliomania" was the book that conducted me to your library and made me decide to put you on my "interesting libraries"list. I visited your profile sometimes before, but now Holbrook Jackson gave me just that little push...

When you have a look at my catalog, please remember everything is still under construction and will be for some time to come for the reasons I enumerate in my profile, but also because there is a life outside LT. Actually I've done only some 10% of my whole library. The picture is therefore very incomplete as it is now. But some elements are emerging. This authorizes me to think we will have many more things in common once I have made some progress...

Happy reading,
Jan Willem (the Dutch version of John William)
Dear Devenish,
Today I added you to my "interesting libraries" list. Why? Well, because you have so many interesting books and also because you speak of your books in a way I recognise very well...
Greetings from Paris!
Thanks for the recommendations,
The only author on your list that I'd read is Andrew Taylor - I especially loved 'The American Boy', but I've read anything I can find by him; his style of writing is easy and his plotting sound.
The others I'll look out for - McDermid sounds worth chasing down, so I've made a note of it, to look for sooner rather than later :)
Thanks again!
To be fair, I only clicked 'add to interesting libraries' because there isn't a tab for 'add to libraries of which you are deeply envious and to which you aspire', although I suppose it's implied!

I would love any crime/sci-fi recommendations you could throw me - anything a little out of the norm or overlooked.

And yes - I spotted your Jackson quote and thought of the similarities to Gaiman's: both are meaningful to me, as I have moved to a town in the West Midlands with no bookshops at all, and - tho charity shops abound - none are particularly book-friendly. It's like living in a desert. Thank god for Amazon... but how I miss my second-hand rummaging!
Glad your Two Antiquaries has found its mates. From your library, you'd probably be interested in one of the books Santa Claus left for me -- Butchery on Bond Street by Benjamin Feldman. The jacket claims "sex and butchery" in 1850s New York. It's near the top of the to-be-read pile.
Hello again,

Delighted to hear that you have acquired the Two Antiquaries!

I thought you might also be interested in Michael Willaims as John Aubrey - Theatre Programme 1998. It was a great show - an experience I will never forget!

Kind regards, Zoliomastix
Hi Devenish,

Just back from a few days in Co.Wicklow and a Xmas Day swim in the Irish sea !!

There are a few copies of the Correspondence available on www.abe.co.uk
The ISBN is 1900838117. Hope this helps.

Wishing you and yours a Very Happy 2008, Zoliomastix.
Hi Devenish,

I just ran across the author of one of my fantasy recommendations to you (Patrick Rothfuss/The Name of the Wind) recommending--on his blog--the "Russian setting fantasy novel with a positive Gaiman blurb on the cover" that I mentioned to you, and that novel is "The Secret History of Moscow" here: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Secret-History-M...

And, a very Merry Christmas with wishes for lots of books right back at you (though it's maybe a bit late by the time you read this:).

bookstothesky
Hi Devenish,

I have not had a chance to read the Pullman books yet, but got them since I had read so much favorable about them as fantasy. I have not seen the movie either, but I have been following the movie reviews of the Golden Compass. The Week, a weekly news review, collected a few reviews.

San Francisco Chronicle: “children’s version of an adult book … the film retreats from its controversial source and settle for being a run-of-the-mill …”
Time: “To avoid controversy and attract holiday audiences, director … has purged his film of most religious allusions. What’s left is a ‘secularized and sanitized’ version …”
The Atlantic Monthly: “… it does present his actual story in an often-thrilling manner … proves The Golden Compass to be a myth with some meat.”

The review confirms that the book is considered an adult book in the US. It is interesting that it is viewed differently in the UK. I had thought of it as in the juvenile genre.

I look forward to seeing the movie as well as reading the book.

Probably the most interesting books I have read recently were The Book Thief by Markus Zusak and The Radetsky March by Joseph Roth. I recently finished The Devil’s Doctor (Paracelsus) by Philip Ball, a London denizen. It was somewhat slow reading, but interesting history of science. The last books I’ve read were Disco for the Departed by Colin Cotterill. and Excursion to Tindari: An Inspector Montalbano Mystery by Andrea Camilleri. The latter were both good mysteries, the former involved a coroner in Laos.

Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!
Oh and I forgot to add about Travels in the Scriptorium by Paul Auster. Strangely enough it is one of the few books I have catalogued that I have not yet read (I haven't given it a rating, all my titles without ratings are unread, about 5% of my current librarything catalogue), but one of my new years resolutions is to read some Auster, although I don't think I'll start with Travels in the Scriptorium, its a metaphysical novella 'on the exploration of language and the passage of time', or so the dustjacket says, I'll probably read the Brooklyn Follies first.
Merry Christmas
Hello Devenish,

I was intrigued when I discovered your catalogue - it is so impressive! I just HAD to add it to my interesting libraries. My little collection is a drop in the ocean compared with yours!

My username is the title of a 17th century work by an Irishman called Philip O'Sullivan Beare. I studied him once upon a time and each time I wrote about that particular work I persisted in misspelling it (much to the annoyance of my tutor)! It has always stuck in my mind and I thought it would be a fun and somewhat mysterious username to have! The correct spelling is actually Zoilomastix but I never have managed to get it right!

I notice you like John Aubrey. I have a couple of Folio Society editions of his work and also some letters. I first became interested in him when we saw Michael Williams do his one man show of Brief Lives.

I also like crime fiction, though almost all of mine is Scandinavian - I am addicted! I'm reading Henning Mankell's Depths at the moment.

Anyway - I was nice of you to send a message. I hope you and your wife have a lovely Christmas and that Santa brings you lots more books!!

Best Wishes,

Zoliomastix
Just a very hasty note to wish you All the Best for Xmas and New Year.

If we`re fairly quiet over the Xmas period, I`m planning to spend a bit of time looking at people`s libraries/reading reviews etc. I had a look at a few of your reviews earlier today. I quite like them - succinct, but informative and helpful.

A lot more succinct than me anyway !

I think cataloguing of (some of) my sound recordings is on the horizon too !

Best,

Nick
Cambridge is certainly a fantastic place to buy books, and unfortunately I work for Borders on Charing Cross Rd, so I can hardly get away from them even at work. I like to see other fans of Perez-Reverte, he never gets the acclaim that he deserves I reckon. I'm at about 10% of my books in Librarything, and it's a good incentive to get them out of boxes and onto proper shelves where they deserve to be.
Dear Devenish,
Thank you for contacting me regarding my list of Interesting Libraries. Your book collection is extremely interesting. I also appreciate Your thoughtful system of ratings and Your kind words on my country
Happy Christmas,
Voglioleggere
Happy Christmas to you and yours! (And may you get plenty of good books!) I have the inside of the house decorated for Christmas, and Denis did a fine job on the outside. He's a fan of motorcycles, and when I found an inflatable Santa on a motorcycle, I had to get it for him. It's now perched on the roof with a spotlight trained on it. I have thirteen trees here in the house. All artificial, since housekeeping isn't one of my favorite occupations, and I have no desire to constantly sweep needles. One tree is two feet tall and is decorated with bookmarks and an angel on top complete with the quote: "For she has read too many books, and it has addled her brain." It might be the perfect tree for all of us here at LT.

I'm glad you mentioned the books I have on architecture. I went to have a look and discovered that something rather dire has happened--duplicate entries and several covers have gone missing. If I ever find the time, I'll have to get everything sorted.

I have to admit that I've never been one for church architecture, so I'm not sure if churches here in the US are locked or open for business. The only two that I've visited in the UK are St. Nicholas Church in Letchworth and Durham Cathedral. Both are beautiful in their own ways. Most of the books I own on architecture are about homes--from the types of houses the commonfolk lived in all the way to the stately homes on both sides of the pond. My favorite house in the US is Thomas Jefferson's Monticello. I could easily see myself moving in. Two of my favorite "homes" that I've visited in the UK are Hardwick Hall in Derbyshire and Bolling Hall in Bradford. The interest is personal in Bolling Hall--some of my ancestors lived there in the 16th century before they made their way to London and on to Virginia. Bolling Hall is a museum now, and I've been there twice to wander around and take photos.

Well, time to rejoin Jasper Fforde and The Fourth Bear.

All the best!
Dear Devenish

thank you for your reply. The author whose picture appears on my profile is Theodor Mommsen.

A few more works by John Buchan will appear in my library, but none very interesting. Several of the works tagged 'John Buchan' are anthologies with a single contribution by John Buchan (in some cases, the first appearance of a work).

yours

Messpots
Dear Devenish,

I hope you don't mind: I've added my Nelson's History of the War by individual volumes, and I split up (and paired) our respective volumes on the John Buchan page. Some of these volumes are more sought after than others, and I expect certain individual volumes will turn up on LT from time to time.

Yours,

Messpots
Whoops, that's Caroline Stevermer, not Severmere.
Okay, well, as I begin writing this it's still barely tomorrow for me, but the day after tomorrow for you:) My apologies for that.

Judging from the authors you've read, it seems to me you're not interested (yet?) so much in the Tolkeinesque Wizard, Elf, Dwarf, Human, "endless trek to recover the magic weapon to stop the all-powerful dark lord/bad-guy" type of fantasy novel, so I'm going to mostly skip those books/authors. I'm also going to stick to authors I've read myself and look for works I hope will match up with this statement from you some time back: "in any book I must have sympathy (empathy) with the main character." So, onward, in no particular order:

Steven Brust's "To Reign in Hell" and "Brokedown Palace." Two stand-alone novels I enjoyed reading very much. I've been meaning to re-read both of them for a while now.

Naomi Novik is one of the hottest rising stars in the historical fantasy realm. She has four novels out in a planned 6 book series in an alternate Napoleonic War setting with intelligent dragons used as an air force by various nations. There's more to it than that, of course. For what it's worth, the entire series has been optioned by Peter Jackson (director of the Lord of the Rings trilogy films). The first novel is "Temeraire" in the UK and "His Majesty's Dragon" in the USA. Just as a[nother] side note, Ms. Novik is married to Charles Ardai, publisher of the Hard Case Crime line of noir mystery novels.

If you ever read any Doc Savage pulp novels, you may enjoy Aaron Allston's "Doc Sidhe" and "Sidhe-Devil."

Kim Newman has written, amongst many other things, an alternate history, vampire-filled trilogy that I enjoyed:
1. Anno Dracula (1992)
2. The Bloody Red Baron (1995)
3. Judgment of Tears (1998)
aka Dracula Cha Cha Cha

Virtually anything by Roger Zelazny, though there's still some of his stuff I need to get to, including, oddly enough, his bestselling 10 book Amber series. I especially like "Jack of Shadows," "Lord of Light" and "Isle of the Dead."

I enjoyed the first 3 of Orson Scott Card's "Alvin Maker" series, with the first book being "Seventh Son." I don't remember much about book 4, thought book 5 was just filler and haven't read book 6 yet. If you feel like dipping your toes into Science Fiction, Card's "Ender's Game" is a great place to start.

Nina Kiriki Hoffman's "The Thread that Binds the Bones" was excellent and different. I think it won the Bram Stoker Award, though it's not all that horror-filled, in my opinion.

Ellen Kushner's "Swordspoint" was excellent. It's been quite a few years since I read it and it may not fit in with the sympathetic character idea; I honestly don't remember the character well enough to say. Also, to be blunt, if you harbor any anti-homosexual feelings, then this book's not for you.

Sergei Lukyanenko is huge in Russia with his books being made into hit movies, too. I've read the first two of his bestselling trilogy, "The Day Watch," "The Night Watch," and "The Twilight Watch." I found them to be superior and different.

I've been going back and forth about whether to mention George R.R. Martin. For my money, he's maybe the best author writing epic fantasy today when it comes to characterization (though Kay's right there, too, and I haven't read everybody, of course). His Song of Fire and Ice series, starting with "A Game of Thrones" is flat-out excellent. But, it's years in-between each book and he's only through book 4 of 7. He has lots and lots of characters, with some you root for, some you hate, some you start out hating then begin to see some grey areas and vice versa.

Patrick Rothfuss' "The Name of the Wind." Very, very strong debut, with lots of critical and reader acclaim. Still selling