Slumpade böcker från elvisetteys bibliotek
As I Lay Dying av William Faulkner
House of Smoke av J. F. F. Freedman
The Rosewood Casket av Sharyn McCrumb
Flight of a Witch av Ellis Peters
Naked Lunch av William S. Burroughs
Pictures Showing What Happens on Each Page of Thomas Pynchon's Novel Gravity's Rainbow av Zak Smith
Black Cat (Gemini) av V.C. Andrews
Medlemmar med elvisetteys böcker
Medlemsanknytningar
intressanta bibliotek: 2pac, ablachly, biloquist, caseydurfee, chellerystick, deannaraybourn, drsol, eshowalter1, gio, Irisheyz77, jglassow, joehill, ostrom, rampaginglibrarian, redredshoes, SqueakyChu, stricken, the.ken.petersen, timspalding, unfinishedperson
LibraryThing-författare: Janice Erlbaum (jerlbaum), Anne Frasier (AnneFrasier), Joe Hill (joehill), Deanna Raybourn (deannaraybourn)
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Medlem: elvisettey
Bibliotek1,755 böcker — se bibliotek
Recensioner39 recensioner — se recensioner
Molntaggmoln, författarmoln
Taggarfiction (335), series (139), murders (135), mysteries (130), humor (102), suspense (76), guilty reading (71), religion (59), children's books (55) — se alla taggar
Grupper1001 Books to read before you die, 888 Challenge, Bloggers, Bookcases: If You Build/Buy Them, They Will Fill, Carolina Gold, Catholic Tradition, Crime, Thriller & Mystery, Early Reviewers, Librarians who LibraryThing, Name that Book — visa alla grupper
FavoritförfattareDouglas Adams, Edward Albee, Sherman Alexie, Woody Allen, Margaret Atwood, Saint Augustine, Simone de Beauvoir, Samuel Beckett, Vereen M. Bell, Augusten Burroughs, James M. Cain, Albert Camus, Truman Capote, Raymond Chandler, Eldridge Cleaver, Diablo Cody, John Connolly, Don DeLillo, Joan Didion, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Marguerite Duras, Frantz Fanon, William Faulkner, Hollis Gillespie, Allen Ginsberg, Lewis R. Gordon, Edward Gorey, Thomas Hardy, Thomas Harris, Martin Heidegger, Joseph Heller, Ernest Hemingway, Shirley Jackson, Sebastien Japrisot, Gish Jen, Walter Arnold Kaufmann, Jack Kerouac, Stephen King, Dean Koontz, Betty MacDonald, Ross Macdonald, Norman Mailer, Sir Thomas Malory, Cormac McCarthy, Carson McCullers, Margaret Millar, Toni Morrison, Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche, Julian of Norwich, Blaise Pascal, Walker Percy, Sylvia Plath, Thomas Pynchon, Ian Rankin, Rainer Maria Rilke, Celia Rivenbark, Philip Roth, J. D. Salinger, Jean-Paul Sartre, David Sedaris, Wallace Stevens, James Thurber, J. R. R. Tolkien, G. B. Trudeau, Kurt Vonnegut, Robert Penn Warren, Tennessee Williams, Ludwig Wittgenstein, Thomas Wolfe, Richard Wright, Émile Zola (Delade favoriter)
Om mig I am:
-A lifelong reader who, in childhood, slept with books in her bed so she'd never wake up in the night without something to read or have to fall asleep without a book;
-a college English and philosophy major, which delighted the reading senses but left me unfit for any job whatsoever, so I am also;
-a former English grad student with a master's in English and partial PhD work in an English-and-philosophy field, but teaching wasn't for me, so I am now,
-a librarian at a small-town library who is considering getting her MLIS.
Om mitt bibliotek I started out on Library Thing at work, experimenting with it to see how it might relate to our library, where I'm the circulation manager. It quickly became an addiction, an obsession, and all of those other good things. Now, every time I get a new book, I have to race to a computer and add it in. Of course, that means that the several thousand books I *already* have aren't anything like fully added. Ah, a challenge!
I think I can honestly say that I'd be happy with my nose in a book (as long as the book isn't horribly dusty, of course) all of the time, provided food and water were available. Or maybe food and coffee. Anyway, I'm also a true bibliophile who loves to acquire books and refuses to let them go (which is creating a critical mass situation in the house) as well. I'm not discriminating-- I don't care if it's a first edition or a tenth. And I'll read pretty much anything, cheap horror novel or nonfiction account of WWII or medical textbook or complicated novel. I love memoirs, especially funny ones, or biographies of people who had a major impact on history or were just plain quirky. The history of middle ages Europe is good, too. As are histories of 20th century fashion. I just want the book in my greedy hands. But no romances! It's all follow-the-bouncing-reading-ball with me. My "bedtime" book might be about psychosurgery, and my "daytime" book might a hilarious, foul-mouthed memoir. My brain, such as it is, will easily slip between the two (which is probably some sign of mental illness-- probably better check my DSM-IV!).
As of right now, my Librarything library consists of a tiny fraction of my actual library (which might better be described as piles and boxes of books, which is especially true now that my bookcases have been stolen). I would looove to get it all in there, but I think we have to call that a long range goal, unless I win the lottery and hire staff! (and buy replacement bookcases)
Keep dreaming, huh?
Perhaps I should stop writing now . . . and choose what I'm going to read next.
Hemsidahttp://elvisettey.blogspot.com
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LibraryThing Förtids-recensenter
PlatsSouth Carolina
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URL:er
http://www.librarything.com/profile/elvisettey (profil)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/elvisettey (bibliotek)
Medlem sedanDec 9, 2006







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Anyway, have you heard of half.com? A professor of mine recommended it to me and I use it a few times of year, usually to get readable copies of out-of-print books. Often the shipping costs more than the book itself, but it has been a way for me to afford decent, readable copies of books I could not otherwise afford. Just a thought.
I have had to pause in my library cataloging lately. So many books, so little time. I just got another batch from my local library (the librarians at both the main branch and my neighborhood branch know me well by sight if not by name) and I have been seduced by the pleasure of curling up in my favorite chair, Tucker on my lap, and reading, reading, reading. So even though it is far easier to add books to my library catalog on LT than it was on shelfari (ugh!), I've taken a break for a while to luxuriate in a pot of my favorite herbal tea and a pile of books. Heaven!
Here's a disturbing thing that you might get a kick out of: I was at my neighborhood branch library on Thursday, a fairly small pile of books in my hand, waiting to use the automatic check-out machine (they're fabulous, by the way). An older woman behind me (I'm about to turn 50, she looked to be about 70) looked at the 5 or 6 books I held and said to me, "Oh my, look at all those books. Are you going to read them all? I guess you don't do much housework!" I was literally speechless for a moment. I had to glance around to make sure I hadn't been transported back in time to the Leave It to Beaver era (shades of Pleasantville!) I did muster up the wits to reply, "Actually, I do as little housework as possible. I find reading so much more rewarding than dusting, don't you?" And that ended that little confrontation.
I'm enjoying LT, but finding it a wee bit frustrating that so many people leave such short posts. I live in the southernmost outpost of what is supposed to be an "arts center" in southwest Florida, but I am finding that even my most well-educated colleagues read very, very little -- and almost never for pure pleasure. And even fewer folks seem to enjoy writing, in detail, as conversation -- meaning being open to engaging responsa, about what they read. So I'm looking for e-friends who read and may want to indulge in some lengthy dialogue about what they read and think. That said, would you like to become e-friends with me?
inlägg gjort av RachelfromSarasota vid 11:11 am (EST) Jun 27, 2008
inlägg gjort av avaland vid 12:39 pm (EST) Mar 19, 2008
Best, Lois
PS: It might be cheaper to find used copies on ABE or buy from the Book Depository in the UK (free shipping!) where they seem to come out first.
inlägg gjort av avaland vid 2:17 pm (EST) Mar 16, 2008
I read your review of "Sephardi Entrepreneurs in Jerusalem: The Valero Family 1800-1948" on the email newsletter from Gefen Publishing House.
Wonderful, thoughtful, educated writing. I am reading the Aaronsohn Saga and am enjoying reading the LibraryThingers reviews. I haven't written my review yet. I read a lot, and read a LOT of professional reviews, but have a hard time cutting down what should be said about the book. Like you, the book has much information I did not know about the beginning of the European Jews going to Palestine to start settelments and the making of the state of Isreal. Great History.
Also, you have many of my favorite books.
inlägg gjort av robertsgirl vid 1:32 pm (EST) Feb 21, 2008
inlägg gjort av Xiguli vid 7:04 pm (EST) Jan 24, 2008
inlägg gjort av Xiguli vid 4:41 am (EST) Jan 24, 2008
inlägg gjort av chellerystick vid 11:24 pm (EST) Dec 23, 2007
inlägg gjort av chellerystick vid 11:06 pm (EST) Dec 23, 2007
-drsol (Kelly)
inlägg gjort av drsol vid 11:57 pm (EST) Dec 19, 2007
inlägg gjort av ostrom vid 4:40 pm (EST) Dec 12, 2007