Slumpvist valda böcker från mariethereses bibliotek

Tom Stoppard: Plays 4 : Dalliance, Undiscovered Country, Rough Crossing, On the Razzle, The Seagull av Tom Stoppard

The Rose and the Beast: Fairy Tales Retold av Francesca Lia Block

The Works of Rupert Brooke av Rupert Brooke

Koula av Menis Koumandareas

The slightest provocation av Pam Rosenthal

The Silence of the Sirens av Adelaida Garcia Morales

Retreat from love av Colette

Medlemmar med mariethereses böcker

RSS-kanaler

Nyligen inlagda böcker

mariethereses recensioner

Recensioner av mariethereses böcker, förutom mariethereses

Medhjälparmedaljer

HelperCommon KnowledgeWork CombinationAuthor Combination

 

Medlem: marietherese

SamlingarDitt bibliotek (2,807), Romance and Related Books (78), Cookbooks (24), Favoriter (32), Alla samlingar (2,809)

Recensioner27 recensioner

Taggarnovel (810), contemporary literature (334), British literature (329), American literature (308), anthology (242), short stories (233), poetry (230), French literature (228), fantasy (221), art (215) — se alla taggar

Molntaggmoln, författarmoln

GrupperAboard the Jolly Roger, All the World's a Stage, American Postmodernism, Anglophiles, Art Books, Art History, Asian Fiction & Non-Fiction, BBC Radio 3 Listeners, Biographies, Memoirs and Autobiographies, Californians Who LTvisa alla grupper

FavoritförfattareLouis Aragon, Gaston Bachelard, Beryl Bainbridge, Pío Baroja, Donald Barthelme, Roland Barthes, George Borrow, Charlotte Brontë, Emily Brontë, Brigid Brophy, Italo Calvino, Anne Carson, Angela Carter, Constantine Cavafy, Paul Celan, Arthur C. Danto, Samuel R. Delany, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Marguerite Duras, Frantz Fanon, Elena Ferrante, Ronald Firbank, Gustave Flaubert, Michel Foucault, Anatole France, Henry Green, H.D., E. T. A. Hoffmann, Ted Hughes, Henrik Ibsen, Robert Irwin, Kyoka Izumi, Henry James, Yasunari Kawabata, Heinrich von Kleist, Pär Lagerkvist, Halldór Laxness, Alexander Lernet-Holenia, Mina Loy, Stéphane Mallarmé, Thomas Mann, Harry Mathews, Guy de Maupassant, Patrick Modiano, Michel de Montaigne, Vladimir Nabokov, Natsume Sōseki, Ovid, Thomas Love Peacock, Fernando Pessoa, Robert Pinget, Luigi Pirandello, Ezra Pound, Marcel Proust, Thomas Pynchon, Raymond Queneau, Ann Quin, Kenneth Rexroth, Jean Rhys, Rainer Maria Rilke, Pierre de Ronsard, Joanna Russ, Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, Anne Sexton, Lucius Shepard, Shiga Naoya, Murasaki Shikibu, Susan Sontag, Sophocles, Gertrude Stein, Stendhal, Laurence Sterne, Tom Stoppard, Junichiro Tanizaki, James Tiptree, Jr., Leo Tolstoy, Michel Tournier, Miguel de Unamuno, Paul Verlaine, Voltaire, Marina Warner, Sylvia Townsend Warner, Mary Webb, Oscar Wilde, Virginia Woolf, W. B. Yeats, Marguerite Yourcenar (Gemensamma favoriter)

FavoritbokhandelCity Lights Bookstore, D.G. Wills Books, Farenheit 451 Booksellers, Mysterious Galaxy, The Book Works, Warwick's

Också påRate Your Music

Medlemskap LibraryThing Förhandsrecensenter/Ge bort en bok

PlatsSan Diego, CA

E-postfeldmarschallingmail.com

Kontotypoffentlig, livstid

AnknytningsnyheterAnknytningsnyheter

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

Allmänna faktaSerier (196), Utmärkelser (303), Gestalter (2671), Platser (538)

Medlem sedanJan 9, 2006

Lämna en kommentar

Thank you. I will look for them. My friend sent me a CD of Kaufmann singing romantic arias and I just keep playing it over and over again.
I saw a wonderful tenor named Jonas Kauffman sing in Carmen. He was so good as Don Jose that he made me cry. You may have heard of him but he was new to me. If you get a chance, try to listen to him singing Le Fleur from Carmen. It is truly spectacular.
Hi!
A little while ago you asked me to give som feedback on Tessa Dare's Surrender of a Siren.
So, if you still want it/need it here goes:
The book suffers from to much nice. But since it is a fairly light read it kind of fits prettily.
If you want more info just ask

Happy reading!
/Hallontass
Thank you so much for the note. We have not had much direct communication, but I have admired your profile and collection from the other side of the screen; I'm sorry we didn't start a conversation sooner. I hope you will visit often and stay in touch!
She was amazing. So was Barry Banks -- very, very short but a wonderful tenor. The opera was wonderful but I was disappointed in the scenery. The Met had the old set for about 20 years and it was quite wonderful. Now they have a minimalist background with a bunch of moving doors.

I mostly hate the new productions, although there are a few good ones. The new Tosca set actually detracts from the opera. Why is it that they take glorious Franco Zefferelli sets and replace them with this minimalist stuff?
Hi marietherese,

I know you like opera and I wanted to let you know that The Barber of Seville is being broadcast live from the Met tonight (10/27) on Sirius radio. I am on my way to to it.
I've added you to my interesting libraries -- I hope you don't mind. I was intrigued by the odd mixture of books we have in common. Usually I overlap with others in one area or another (fantasy, romance, classics) but the books we share range from Sartor Resartus to the Iron Chef! I also note we have musical interests in common, though we don't share many titles.
Hello MarieTherese,
I saw on a Talk group that you collect recordings of Les nuits d'été - which one is your favourite? I collect everything by Berlioz, especially the Fantastique, but I've managed to gather a few Nuits too. My personal favourite is one I recorded off the radio - with Katarina Karneús and Philippe Herreweghe. I seem to remember BBC Magazine once included another Karneús recording. If you know somebody at a recording label, please pressure them to make a commercial recording! :-D

Anyway, I noticed that you only have 'Berlioz remembered' in your library and I was wondering if you have ever read Berlioz's own Memoirs? They're absolutely worth it!
marietherese, there is a copy of The Infernal Life of Branwell Bronte on the Virago message board. I don't know how often you check but I thought you might want it since it is on your wishlist. Just post a message there if you want it. Cheers, Maren
I think you put your tags for Feminist philosophy and science fiction in the review column by mistake. If it is as you intend, well never mind.
hello,

thank you for your long and thoughtful message. i apologise for my late reply. i have not had much internet access recently. i am getting to the stage here i need to upgrade my account to add more books! it is wonderful to peek into your library and see what we have in common. i hope to steal ideas from you when i get a chance! i love the tagging system, it really makes you think about why you like certain books over others. i also like the neatness of having no capitalisation. looking forward to exploring your library x
Dear MarieTherese,
I do so appreciate your response to my request to identify an author (Simonson, it is). I'm a former librarian, long-since retired, formerly married to a writer and now happily reading all day long. My only fear is that I won't live long enough to read all the books I want.

I haven't posted my books on this site, because it would take too much time. (I have about 7,000.)

After a lifetime of reading the great classics of literature I am now bent on entertainment. (Those wonderful 19th century british women writers -- Edgeworth, Oliphant, Mrs. Gaskell-- whom I previously overlooked.) And, at a friend's suggestion, began reading contemporary writers who set their novels (mostly romances) in the Regency period. Hence the request about Simonson.

Happy reading,
Marianne Dunleavy
PS "The Village That Died For England" is all about the way that the English countryside has been mythologised (from various different ideological angles), so it seems appropriate that it is quoting Mary Butts.
Thank you so much for your explanation. The book does sound incredible (in several senses - not to mention almost indescribable!). I think I will be looking out for it, though. I like books which set out to be ambitious and fail much more than books with a narrow remit, however successfully they fill it...
Marietherese

I've just been looking at comments on Mary Butts' work, and I was very intrigued by what you said about Armed with Madness ("Unequivocally oddest book I've read all year - about which I am hopelessly ambivalent and can't make up my mind whether to class in clunkers or top five). Could you tell me more?

I was looking her up because I'm currently reading Patrick Wright's "The village that died for England" - it's a very interesting examination of the way that the English countryside has been perceived over the last 150 years or so, focused on part of Dorset (Mary Butts' came up because that's where Armed with Madness and some of her other books are set).
Hello!

I just uploaded the cover of Pfaff's biography of M.R. James, and noticed that you had tagged it "no cover art". So I thought I'd let you know that there is now cover art available!
Hope you don't mind if I exert some voyeurism over your library - it looks very fascinating.
Nice to see someone else that likes Anne Carson. I have been meaning to read Marguerite Yourcenar but have yet to locate any of her books (I am waiting for a Bookmooch opportunity!)

Cheers!!

Karen
Oh yeah, and also Nicaragua (or is it Honduras?)
I was looking at your world reading map on the Reading Globally page, and noticed you had Slovakia turned red. I was just wondering what you had read from there, and if it was worth a look.
Marie,

The picture is very striking. I like the other pieces as well, but i think this one is approriate for librarything.

David Perrings
Could you tell me about the picture in your profile ?

david perrings
Thank you for the message on the Kis page! It's taking a little longer than I thought, but I should be done by the end of the week.
Thanks, I'll order it!
I see you have Richard E. Goodkin's Around Proust; would you recommend it? I'm currently reading Proust, and it looks like it might be interesting.
Thank you for the lovely comment! It's always nice to come across people who have not just similar books but books on a similar range of subjects. Glad you found the links useful!
Just posted a couple of links on the Girlybooks group for you. I like the range of books we share - Re/search and Julian Cope on one hand and Jane Eyre on the other - and lots in between. Like your pic too! Anne
We share the Rubayyat and the Wine Course: What a exciting combination!
Thanks. I'll look forward to your posts wherever and whenever they occur on LT!
Happy listening to Radio 3 too!

Good to hear that there are listeners from across the world - easy to do these days with streaming media and the BBC "Listen Again" service. It will be good to compare notes about these broadcasts.
It's nice to meet somebody else who loves Hagiwara Sakutaro. (I saw your Google Groups posting just now. Unfortunately, eromsted also "owns" Howling at the Moon, so it doesn't show up on my "You and None Other" list...)

One of my favourite poets is Tamura Ryuichi, who died in 1998, I think. There's a book of his poetry out by a press in Palo Alto. He led me to Sakutaro - figuratively, of course.
What a delight to discover that someone else enjoys the wit of Thomas Love Peacock.
Never thought I'd run across another fan of Zagajweski's poems. Jeffrey
Wow, someone else who has James Elkins' Pictures and Tears, the Oxford Book of Ghost Stories, and Adam Phillips! Some very cool overlaps.

(And is that Marie Therese as in "Marie Theres', wie gut Sie ist"?)
hey marie therese: the jane eyre was a birthday present from my mum... it's absolutely gorgeous. i sometimes think that paula rego, anne carson, sally potter & a couple of others are manifestations of my subconscious (not in a self-obsessed way, but because their work seems so particular & so strikingly different from the mass of what's out there). hope you enjoy the blog -- it's a little irregular but entertaining. tell me about the pic!!!
We share YES, just wanted to say hi. Also share a love of Anne Carson, and agree with Sarah Laughs about the photo.
We share some interesting books!
Keziah
I can't stop looking at your photo. It's the most amazing thing.
Howdy Marie Therese-

There are others who have more books in common with me, but you have more "Books That Matter" in common with me.

Have a good Life,

Douglas
Hjälp/Vanliga frågor | Om | Sekretess/Villkor | Blogg | Kontakt | LibraryThing.com | APIs | WikiThing | Allmänna fakta | 46,728,034 böcker!