Slumpade böcker från jadelennoxs bibliotek

The Wild Hunt (Point Signature) av Jane Yolen

A Swiftly Tilting Planet av Madeleine L'Engle

Traveling Shoes av Noel Streatfeild

The King of Attolia av Megan Whalen Turner

The Love Of Friends av Nancy Bond

Paddington Helps Out av Michael Bond

Up a Road Slowly av Irene Hunt

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jadelennoxs recensioner

Recensioner av jadelennoxs böcker, förutom jadelennoxs

 

Medlem: jadelennox

Bibliotek1,542 böckerse bibliotek

Recensioner18 recensionerse recensioner

Molntaggmoln, författarmoln

Taggarchildren's literature (1,033), graphic novel (117), fiction (116), non-fiction (98), poetry (68), literary theory (62), romance (49), children's literary theory (48), computing (38), reference (25) — se alla taggar

GrupperAccessibility on LibraryThing, Bostonians, Children's Literature, Combiners!, Early Reviewers, Librarians who LibraryThing, Read YA Lit, בעברית LT in Hebrew

FavoritförfattareJoan Aiken, John Anthony Bellairs, Lois McMaster Bujold, Emma Bull, Jennifer Crusie, Sid Fleischman, Pete Hautman, Jaime Hernandez, Angela Johnson, Diana Wynne Jones, Margaret Mahy, John Marsden, Judith Martin, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Garth Nix, Megan Whalen Turner, Sally Watson, Nancy Werlin, , Ysabeau S. Wilce, Connie Willis, Tim Wynne-Jones (Delade favoriter)

FavoritbokhandelCurious George goes to Wordsworth, McIntyre and Moore Booksellers, Pandemonium Books and Games, Porter Square Books

FavoritbibliotekEdith M. Fox Branch Library, Robbins Library, Arlington

Om mig Librarian, reviewer, children's literature person.

Jade Lennox is the heroine of Sally Watson's Jade.

Om mitt bibliotek I've made a good start on entering my books. Children's lit and literary scholarship is in, now, barring a few outliers. Graphic novels are in, and now mass market romances. Adult fiction and non-fiction are barely touched. Poetry and plays are mostly in. The to-be-read shelf is untouched, and will remain so -- I don't enter them until I read them. There's a fair amount of flux on the children's literature; I don't keep them in my library unless I keep the physical copy, and I've been trying to get better about giving my ARCs away.

Right now my tagging scheme is very simple, mostly to correspond with home cataloguing. "Children's literature" means children's books, YA books, and children's literature scholarship. "Fiction" means adult fiction. "Non-fiction" goes to all non-fiction, although I've got some fine tuning on those as well (eg "reference", "computer", "biography"). But I'm focusing on entering books, not improving the social tagging scheme.

Yet.

Också påLiveJournal

Medlemsskap LibraryThing Förtids-recensenter

Kontotypoffentlig, livstid

AnknytningsnyheterAnknytningsnyheter

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

Medlem sedanDec 2, 2006

Lämna en kommentar

Hi. Want to take a look at my re-rendering of your accessibility thoughts on the accessibility page of wikithing? Also, I read and loved "Arrabel's Raven," by Joan Aiken when I was a kid, and noted she's one of your favorite authors listed above. I read it via LOC NLS talking book, and recall it had an audio recording of church bells at the beginning of it which is extremely unusual for talking books. Just a memory out of the blue.
Hello from one Sally Watson reader to another, Jadelennox! (Guess I'd better not call you "Melanie", huh?) Are her newer stories ('The Outrageous Oriel' and 'The Wayward Princess') as good as the older tales?
Thank you. I think you have found it. I have asked people for years. You really helped me out. Also, thank you for the insite into the newer editions being altered, I'll definitly get an older copy.
It is about two or three children that go for a visit to a country house of a relative. In the back of the garden or grounds is a gate. I don't think they are supposed to go through it because it leads to the woods. They break the rule and sneak out one day. When they enter the woods they find a very big tree. Something attracts their attention up the tree and one of them decides to start climbing up. I don't know if it is a call for help or just a noise. The climber looks into the tree and see something or meets an animal that lives in the tree. He/ she calls down for the other/s to climb up and see. That is how the adventure begins. They always climb down before then end of the day and make it back to the house/cottage. The next day they climb higher and on and on. This was read to me in first or second grade. The adventures always happen up in the tree. That is all I can remember. Thanks for the help.
Can ask about a childrens book that I remember but don't know the title?
What a great library! And it's lovely to find someone else with a Helen Bradley book!
I have a lot of work to fill this up.
Hi, I just started here today, but we have a few books in common. :)
I love your library... I could spend a long time there. Surprised? :P
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