Slumpade böcker från janiswatsons bibliotek
Elegant Glassware of the Depression Era: Identification and Value Guide (Elegant Glassware of the Depression Era, 9th ed av Gene Florence
The Cooking School Murders av Virginia Rich
Snuffed Out av Tim Myers
40 Acres and No Mule av Janice Holt Giles
Reverend Randollph and the Unholy Bible av Charles Merrill Smith
Talking Rain av Linda French
Goose In The Pond av Earlene Fowler
Medlemmar med janiswatsons böcker
Medlemsanknytningar
vänner: KayeBarley, LesaHolstine, RachelfromSarasota, womyn123
intressanta bibliotek: KayeBarley, LesaHolstine, pagerd, pprothro, readingrebecca
LibraryThing-författare: Susan Wittig Albert (susanalbert), J.F. Englert (JFEnglert), Christopher Hodapp (chodapp), Lynne Murray (Lynnemurray), Eric Peterson (eptcb126), Laren Stover (lstover), Deborah Taylor-Hough (dsimple), Bill Walsh (wfwalsh), Jessamyn West (jessamyn)
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Medlem: janiswatson
Bibliotek5,044 böcker — se bibliotek
Recensioner2 recensioner — se recensioner
Molntaggmoln, författarmoln
TaggarCozy Mystery (670), Mystery (430), Novel (282), Southern Cozy Mystery (261), British Cozy Mystery (244), Home Decorating (220), Humor (144), Midwestern Cozy Mystery (124), British Police Procedural (111) — se alla taggar
GrupperNone
Om mig When I was in first grade (we didn't have kindergarten back then) I remember going to school every day for what seemed like months, not understanding a word of what Mrs. Stewart (fondly remembered as the one who taught me to read) said. Then, one day, I skipped into the classroom, sat at my desk, opened the Dick and Jane book, and could read every single word. It all just came together: one day I couldn't read; the next day I could. I've been an avid reader ever since. I usually have at least five books going at once: a mystery for the car, a mystery for the kitchen, (we all need coffee breaks now and then) a book of essays by my bed in case the mystery also stashed there is too exciting to allow me to sleep, a nonfiction book for the living room, and a mystery for my purse in case I have to wait somewhere for something. I also subscribe to about 10 magazines and buy that many more at the bookstore each month. Current favorites are 25 Beautiful Homes, a British publication that shows real houses and real residents and real lives, and Mental Floss, to indulge my love for trivia. I also like to cook, (when I'm in the mood, which is less and less often these days) to travel, and to garden. My favorite color is turquoise; my favorite number is 9; my astrological sign is Aquarius; and I do not watch TV. Who has time with all the reading waiting? The End.
Om mitt bibliotek Life is messy, so I prefer my reading to be neat. I like mysteries because there is always a resolution at the end. Justice prevails. The good guys usually win, and, if they don't, I don't read that author any more. (Hey! It's my dime!) My library is unconventional, to say the least. One 24 foot wall in our living room is lined with bookshelves. I try to leave space on the shelves for decorative objects, but, somehow, they usually have to find space elsewhere because the books need a place to be. In addition, my husband built 12 feet of bookshelves in the laundry (my least favorite chore) room for me. I also have a night table filled with paperbacks waiting for my attention. The office area has another wall of books. Cookbooks take up two shelves in the kitchen. There's even a magazine rack in the bathroom. I prefer hardback books to paperbacks, so it takes a lot of room to house them. I do try to weed out books each year. Last year I donated over 300 books to a small-town library where I knew they would be circulated, not sold. They put up a display unit labeled New To Us. The librarian sent me a nice note saying she'd received many positive comments on those books. Made my day! As you can see from Library Thing's statistics, I like mostly mysteries. I find new ones all the time by being a devoted reader of DorothyL, a listserv for mystery readers and writers. The End.
Riktigt namnJanis Watson
PlatsCanton, Illinois
E-postjanis.watson
sbcglobal.net
FavoritförfattareIngen vald
Kontotypoffentlig, livstid
AnknytningsnyheterAnknytningsnyheter
URL:er
http://www.librarything.com/profile/janiswatson (profil)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/janiswatson (bibliotek)
Medlem sedanJul 2, 2007


Kommentarer från LibraryThing-are
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inlägg gjort av RachelfromSarasota vid 5:52 am (EST) Jul 21, 2008
Right now I'm finishing Last Breath by George D. Shuman. I'd read his first novel, 18 Seconds, and loved it -- but I'm not liking this one too much. No real character growth, and the plot is plodding along doggedly, instead of whizzing me through the adventure. Oh, and I just finished Lee Child's latest, Nothing to Lose, which I adored! And yesterday I finished a Lucas Davenport book that I'd missed, Hidden Prey by John Sandford. I enjoyed it more than I did most of his later books.
The next book I'm going to read, aside from some ARC books, is Rupert of Hentzau -- the continuation of the wonderful Prisoner of Zenda. And I read quickly through The Early Stories of Louisa May Alcott 1852 - 1860 collected by Monika Elbert a few weeks ago, but now I want to write an in-depth analysis of them, so I'm going to read the stories through again. And there's another book I am working on: IT by Stephen King. I gave up on King in the nineties -- after Cujo or Pet Cemetery. I just can't stand books where animals are hurt or killed, but my daughter just read It and enjoyed it, so I'm plowing through it. Say what you like, the man can really write!
Boy, now you know far more than you wanted to about my current adventures in reading! Sorry -- I tend to burble on and on. . .the perils of being single, I guess, with no one permanently around to talk to -- except the dogs, and I mostly talk baby talk to them!
Rachel
inlägg gjort av RachelfromSarasota vid 9:40 pm (EST) Jul 13, 2008
But I do very much enjoy READING cookbooks -- especially the kind where you learn as much about the author or the time period or the country as you do the recipes. That's one reason why I love Jane and Michael Stern's cookbooks -- they're as much a history of American life as they are a collection of recipes. I just discovered a whole series of cookbooks, published by Time-Life Books, from about 1965 through 1971, called FOODS OF THE WORLD. The 27 volume series was put together by a number of food writers and chefs, including James Beard and Michael Field, and though the photography isn't impressive to 21st century eyes, the chapters are so well-written and engaging, and the recipes so intriguing and informative that I'm now on the prowl to own all the books. I've been finding one or two at a time in places like Goodwill and other used bookstores -- so right now I only own three or four -- one on Scandinavian foods, one on African food, one on classic French cuisine, and my personal favorite -- the American Melting Pot. One of my students is going to be an exchange student this year, in Finland, and she was thrilled when I lent her the book on Scandinavian cooking. It gave her a hint about what she'd find over there.
Some of my other favorite food books: Food in History by Reay Tannahill; Great British Cooking by Jane Garmey (nope, it's not an oxymoron!), Lewd Food by Robert Hendrickson; The Delectable Past by Esther Aresty; Hallelujah: The Welcome Table by the incomparable Maya Angelou, who's apparently a chef of no mean stature; Reading Between the Recipes by Leslie Land; Feast Here Awhile by Jo Brans; and The Medieval Cookbook by Maggie Black.
I love your rationale for enjoying mysteries! I too love neat endings, where justice is mostly served. A fairly chaotic life has left me with little interest in twisted or unhappy or dark endings. So when I see a movie or read a book, I'd like to know that in the end most things will turn out to be okay.
But oddly enough, I'm not a big fan of "cozy" mysteries. Don't know why -- they're just not my cup of tea. I love character-driven novels -- but I want the characters to be folks I wish I could meet, or else people I'd like to emulate. And somehow, the cozies I've read just didn't have characters I really took to. Have you read any of Susan Wittig Albert's stuff? In particular, her China Bayles herbal mysteries? They're not my favorites, but they've come as close to cozies as anything I've read recently.
I love Dick Francis' books (the originals, not the continuation of his "name" by his son), some of Dorothy L. Sayers, most of Josephine Tey, much of Elizabeth Peters/Barbara Michaels, Lawrence Block's Scudder series, the Travis McGee books by the late, great John D. MacDonald, all of Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe series, and the first five Stephanie Plum books. I have been disappointed in her later offerings -- even in comedy I like to see a little growth in my favorite characters, and the last Plum book I read (11 or 12) still had Stephanie poised on the horns of her eternal dilemma -- Joe or Ranger. So now when I read Evanovich, I reread the first five, which still draw belly laughs from me.
When I'm in a certain mood I enjoy Jonathan Kellerman (but can't stand the stuff his wife writes), and Stephen White. A fellow LTer just recommended Bruce Zimmerman's four books about Quinn Parker to me, and I loved them. Parker's a more down-to-earth and slightly more realistic McGee, IMHO.
I gave up watching TV for about a year -- with very few exceptions. One is the local morning news -- I leave for school at the ungodly hour of 6:00 a.m., and I need the sound of artificially cheery voices to drag me from my comfortable bed. My kids got me hooked on Battlestar Galactica, and we used to watch the episodes together -- or at least talked on the phone after every episode. And I loved the series Life that premiered this year -- another show the kids and I connected to. Aside from that, I avoid the boob tube in favor of the written word.
I too read a great deal -- anywhere from three to five books a week -- but some of those are rereads, so I don't know if they really count. I couldn't live without books -- which is what finally drove me to the eye doctor after years of avoidance. I was starting to haunt the large print books stacks, and I'd pretty much cleaned them out -- so heigh ho, heigh ho, it was off to the optometrist's I go! The syntax is wrong, but you get the point.
I've sent you a friends invitation -- I hope you accept it. Happy reading! Rachel
inlägg gjort av RachelfromSarasota vid 9:21 pm (EST) Jul 13, 2008
inlägg gjort av RachelfromSarasota vid 7:35 pm (EST) Jul 13, 2008
inlägg gjort av cathyskye vid 3:34 pm (EST) Jun 2, 2008
inlägg gjort av kateblu vid 5:35 am (EST) Mar 3, 2008
It looks as if we have a lot in common, including geographic location!
inlägg gjort av kidpiper vid 1:59 pm (EST) Dec 21, 2007
I am only about 30% done with cataloging. I have been a "Book Person" since I can remember - sometimes I forgot that Borders isn't a library and I am surprised when I get to the checkout.
I had quite a dilemna deciding if I was going to catalog library books that I had read too. Finally I decided that if they were part of a series (say of mysteries, for example) that I would, so to give the complete picture of my interest in that author or topic. Otherwise, if it was just a random choice, I don't include it.
Regards,
Christine
inlägg gjort av ckbrouwer vid 6:35 pm (EST) Nov 21, 2007
inlägg gjort av sisaruus vid 6:34 am (EST) Nov 19, 2007
inlägg gjort av wordwanderer vid 3:39 pm (EST) Oct 21, 2007
inlägg gjort av BMK vid 3:49 pm (EST) Oct 19, 2007
Sorry this took so long. If you liked the Mary Lasswell books, you might also like the Larkin family books by H.E. Bates--"Darling Buds of May," "A Breath of French Air" and (I think) "When the Green Woods Laugh." They were written after WWII, but not terribly long after and are a lot of fun. If you've seen any of the attempted movie adaptations of the first book, please give them a try anyway. The movies were absolutely horrible. If you like mysteries at all, the Asey Mayo mysteries by Phoebe Atwood Taylor are set in New England just prior to and during WWII. They've got a fair amount of humor in them as well.
Happy reading!
inlägg gjort av BMK vid 3:48 pm (EST) Oct 19, 2007
I do very little with tags myself, so I'm not well versed in the problems and solutions that others have worked out. Good luck.
Os.
inlägg gjort av Osbaldistone vid 10:38 am (EST) Oct 14, 2007
We now share 418 titles....wow!
The house expansion is about 90% complete; I have moved back into the house (w/out HVAC); I am unpacking books with a vengeance. The library/"wine cellar" is about 90% complete - no sliding ladders, no big center table with current reading, no leather chair . I do have a chaise lounge, a sleeper sofa, a couple of small tables, a huge desk with plenty of lighting and a cherry two-step ladder - I think this will be perfect!!!!! It is, of course, my favorite room in the house.
Keep in touch.... we need to discuss authors we don't share in an effort to expand our reading dimensions (lol).
inlägg gjort av infantgirllass vid 3:53 pm (EST) Oct 9, 2007
I also tend to read moderately cozy, and I've never taken to Patterson. But I love the Dexter books; go figure.
inlägg gjort av pprothro vid 2:20 pm (EST) Oct 9, 2007
inlägg gjort av pprothro vid 5:47 pm (EST) Oct 7, 2007
When asking Vicki Ingham permission to upload her photo she wrote:
"Actually, on Trade Secrets I was the editor but Jean Norman was the author."
inlägg gjort av DromJohn vid 7:41 am (EST) Oct 2, 2007
inlägg gjort av readingrebecca vid 9:30 pm (EST) Sep 29, 2007
We love our collection of dictionaries, and this one is really precious!
inlägg gjort av mosaic42 vid 11:39 am (EST) Aug 11, 2007
Can hardly wait to get my books out of storage and onto the shelves - lots of work. The results, I am sure, will be worth it.
Stop by again sometime just to see what I have added......
inlägg gjort av infantgirllass vid 2:35 pm (EST) Aug 10, 2007
inlägg gjort av LesaHolstine vid 10:10 pm (EST) Jul 28, 2007
I'll bet as we keep adding books, we'll find we have lots more of the same, don't you think?!
take care!
Kaye
inlägg gjort av KayeBarley vid 1:15 pm (EST) Jul 24, 2007
Hugs!
Kaye
inlägg gjort av KayeBarley vid 1:21 pm (EST) Jul 21, 2007
inlägg gjort av LesaHolstine vid 7:49 pm (EST) Jul 11, 2007
Sounds like you're realistic with most books being average, not super critical!
inlägg gjort av LesaHolstine vid 2:23 pm (EST) Jul 8, 2007
Mental Floss. I found this magazine when I read some book I don't even remember, and now I faithfully buy it for Jim's back to take to the Coffee Bean. I don't get a chance to read it much, but it's a terrific magazine.
inlägg gjort av LesaHolstine vid 5:04 pm (EST) Jul 5, 2007
Don't wear yourelf out! This is supposed to be fun. But, I bet your book covers look gorgeous by now.
Enjoy!
inlägg gjort av LesaHolstine vid 5:01 pm (EST) Jul 5, 2007
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