Medlemmar med michaelbartleys böcker

RSS-flöden

Nyligen upplagda böcker

michaelbartleys recensioner

Recensioner av michaelbartleys böcker, förutom michaelbartleys

 

Medlem: michaelbartley

Bibliotek966 böckerse bibliotek

Recensioner19 recensionerse recensioner

Molntaggmoln, författarmoln

Taggarficton (1) — se alla taggar

GrupperArt is Life, Books Compared, Nabokov!

Om mig I live in Portland, Oregon besides reading I am a runner and do lots of community volunteering. I volunteer for hospice, I am on a Aids Hotline, work at a middle school, and on the board of directors for a women crisis line. As a school volunteer I love giving the students books as a way of rewarding there efforts and to encourage them to read.

Om mitt bibliotek I was a history and philosophy major in college, I went to Southern Oregon College (now Southern Oregon Universtiy) and the University of Oregon. So my interest are in the world of ideas. Of course I have a lot of fiction.

Medlemsskap LibraryThing Förtids-recensenter

Riktigt namnmichael bartley

PlatsPortland, Oregon

E-postbartleyoregaol.com

FavoritförfattareIngen vald

Kontotypoffentlig, livstid

AnknytningsnyheterAnknytningsnyheter

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

Medlem sedanAug 12, 2007

Lämna en kommentar

Nice to hear from you, Michael. It's hard to believe the summer is almost over! Sounds like you had a great time and achieved some worthwhile goals.
Hello Michael,
Here we are, almost at the end of summer. Where did it go ? I have been so busy this year. I started a part time job, I am working on the Obama Campaign and I am watching my grandsons on and off. Seems like the time slipped away without me noticing. I see that I posted in July, seems like ages ago and yet it went so dang quickly.

Hope you had a good summer. Just wanted to say "Hi"

Read anything "earth shattering" lately ?

Jeannie
Hey! I have a hat just like that!
Hello Michael!
Thanks for adding my library to your list of interesting ones, I am flattered indeed.
I was in Portland less than a month ago and literally fell in love with the city and the coast of Oregon. What a wonderful place!
Not to mention Powell's, of course....;-)
I will browse through your library too, it is always very interesting to see what other LThingers are reading.

Paola :-))
Hi Michael:

I just got your message after just getting an news alert about the Griffey trade! Didn't see that deal coming in any way, shape, or form possible. The White Sox seeminglty didn't have to give up much to get him either as the Reds were so desparate to shrug off the weight of his contract. I think Kenny Williams made a good call---sure, Junior is in the twilight years of his sterling career but I think he could still contribute and maybe being with a new franchise will even energize him a bit. I'm a tried and true Sox fan as well as a born an bred Chicagoan so of course, I would relish the opportunity to experience the once-in-a-lifetime spectacle of a Subway Series!
Hey Michael -

I got your message. I think you might be right about Sartre. I don't feel like he was really the best person for Simone to associate with. From what I've read about him (in his own writing and in Simone's), I get the impression that he was manipulative (possibly even abusive to girls and women in general, as you said) and held her back more than anything. Such as when he told her that 'She Came to Stay' was a good little book or something equally condescending (and then some of the philosophical messages in her book found their way into Sartre's writing).

Even after Sartre was gone, Simone continued to assert that she was not a philosopher, Sartre was. Why do such smart women associate with such awful men?! And why do the abused continue to love and forgive their abuser? I'm a psychologist, so I can understand the mechanisms at work here; I certainly understand why women find it difficult to leave the people who hurt them, but it still makes me sad. It's difficult to love Simone's work without at least having to accept Sartre as part of her life and work. But that doesn't mean you have to like it.

Sara
Thanks, Michael. It's nice to know someone is reading the reviews I write. I envy you Portland---and Powell's. I have heard of it from friends and relatives, but haven't had the pleasure myself.
Hey, Michael! Thanks for putting me on your list. I skimmed the bio on Stegner but ultimately decided to sell it to Powell's. (Aren't we lucky to live in the same town as this fantastic institution?!) Stegner is a treasure - "Crossing to Safety" makes my "Desert Island" list every year.

Right now I'm finishing up "Books: A Memoir" by Larry McMurtry. I agree with the critics who say it's a bit uneven in places but I never could resist a book about books. Not sure what I will tackle next.

From some other posts, it appears that you may be a teacher? or involved in some way with school kids. Our daughter is going into her second full year of teaching third grade in South Carolina. Each year her goal is to get her kids to read and take "advanced reading" or "AR" tests to eventually receive 100 points. My husband and I vowed to send each child who achieved that goal a $10 gift card to Barnes & Noble. We were touched by how grateful all of them were.

Best, Ellison
Hi Michael, thank you for stopping by my library. I'm glad that you enjoyed your time in England.

I have enjoyed my Per Pettersen book and Out Stealing Horses is now on my wishlist as I have heard great things about it.

Spelling is not my strongest thing either .

You sound like you have a very busy time with all the places you volunteer, and I think it is great that you give the children in your school books as gifts and prizes. I like to give books as gifts to the children of my friends and family and try to encourage them to read as much as possible. My eldest nephew is my biggest success, he loves to read. Some of it is achieved by bribery though, I will tell him something, either true or false or ask him a question and then offer a reward if he can look up the answer and tell me about the subject. It usually costs me a pound but if he has to put a lot of effort into it he gets a new book.

I am just about to take a look at your library now but please feel free to stop by and chat again.
Michael,
Having a very busy summer. I just entered a new book on LibraryThing and thought I send a post. I hope you are having a good summer.
I just started working for the Obama campaign and they have kept me pretty busy. I am a volunter and it seems like there are never enough workers to get everything done. I like it though. I especially like seeing all of the young people who work so hard. They offer their time and really hustle. It is good to see young adults doing something constructive with their time.

Hope you are reading something enjoyable and that the weather has been kind in your corner of the world.

Jeannie
Michael,

So far Down and Out is pretty grimey. Perfect for a hot summer in the city though, especially when enjoyed in the shade. You're right, Orwell led a fascinating, if short, life. Between this and Homage to Catalonia, he's clearly had many enriching experiences. Thompson's not a bad comparison.

Best,
Sara
Michael,
You must have sent some of your sunny weather in my direction :>) It has been beautiful the past couple of days.

I almost finished reading "The Book of Joby". I have really enjoyed this novel !

Not much to say but as I was enjoying the nice weather, I thought of you. You posted a couple of days ago and foretold of things to come !

Take care.

Jeannie
Michael,

Introductions to stoicism are a little bit of a problem. They pretty much have to be done by academics. The originals are lost and attested to here and there in other writers. The notions have to be pried out and interpreted in numerous contexts. That said, I have been happiest with Richard Sorabji's Emotion and peace of mind : from Stoic agitation to Christian temptation, a book which I expect to reread within a couple of years, and The Cambridge Companion to the Stoics.

From there you can pick among other commentators and surviving stoics themselves. I just had a slog through Stoicism and Emotion without being sure it was worth it; I did get out of it the emphasis on the propositional nature of emotions. The Meditations of Marcus Aurelius, in any of a dozen editions, is an accessible entree to the practice. I have not read him straight through, but I have looked closely at parts and engaged in a multi-week discussion at church about them. He is not the last word on stoicism; he is a stoic and more saliently he is Marcus Aurelius.

Most of my downstairs books on stoicism are in my Librarything library tagged stoicism.

Have fun,

Robert
Michael,
Putting one's pet to sleep is too much like playing God for me, yet, they do count on us to keep them comfortable and safe. Suffering is not a thing that is easy to watch and they certainly don't understand what is going on. We will get another dog...but we need a little time. I don't want to be without a dog. I have a cat who is trying to make up for the loss of the dog, he is being a royal pest. I am sure he is lonely as well. The dog was already here when my cat came home with me.

My brother is very active in the Gay Pride Festival in Austin TX. He has also taken care of some of his friends through the last stages of Aides.....there is no greater saddness than that !

I started reading an interesting book titled "The Book of Joby" The book is tagged as Fantasy. The back cover blurb kind of compares it to Harry Potter meets King Arthur. I am only on page 40 but so far it is really a good book.

Thanks for you note :>) Good to hear from you !

Jeannie
Hi, Michael,

My only expertise in existentialism comes from looking into philosophy to explain and improve my life.

So I was an existentialist without knowing it. Damn near killed myself with despair. I switched to stoicism and transcendentalism and cry now when I read something existentialist because it seems so true to things, and I can't have it.

I have read some Sartre but not [Being and Nothingness] or [l'Etre et le neant]. But yes, we are desparately free and must lead the authentic life. The universe doesn't care.

Well, among the stoics, the gods don't care; nevertheless, one doesn't indulge one's passions at all, contrary to the pose of the existentialist. The stoic wants not to be unhappy; the existentialist wants not to be inauthentic and doesn't care about happiness or unhappiness for that matter.

In an uncaring universe I was not able to follow my passions. I despaired. Unlike the stoics and contrary to some existentialists (but not say Buber or Kierkegaard), I made God a part of my reality. My reality does not depend on existence (except in some obvious physical ways, I think).

I'll never stop reading Nietzsche even if I have to be circumspect about it.

Sartre was kind of a ____,but so many important people have been that we can't hold it against him.

Have I made sense?

Robert
Hi Michael -

thanks for your note. glad you enjoyed my library - though its not nearly as extensive as yours! I started doing my reviews becuase I'd hate looking at a book on my shelf and know I read it, but have no idea what I thought of it -- kinda sad, really.

Anyway, I just finished drying my tears after finishing The Brothers K. Loved it.

Jen
Michael,
What a nice surprise it was to get your note. I haven't been keeping up with my posts lately. Had a pretty hectic winter and a very sad spring. Lost my little dog a while back. I don't know if you are an animal person but I have always had pets and it never gets any easier to let them go. The Creator designed our pets to be such good companions.

I just finished reading a book titled "The Art of Racing In The Rain" by Garth Stein. The story is told from the point of view of the family dog. This was purely coincidental....we are reading the book for one of my face2face groups. A wonderful book !

We have had a pretty disappointing spring. Wet and cold seems to be the order this year. Next week will be the beginning of summer and we haven't had one full week of nice weather yet. Pretty harsh, since we had one of the most awful winters I can recall.

Two of the best books I've read so far this year are, "The Flea Palace" by, Elik Shakra and "A Fraction of The Whole" by, Steve Toltz.

One of the funniest books I've read in a long time, I read a couple of weeks ago. The book is titled "The Pig Did It" by Joseph Caldwell. It was a short novel, not very complicated but VERY amuzing....Caldwell is planning three "Pig" books.....I am eagerly awaiting the second :>)

Any books that stand out for you so far this year ?

Thanks again for your note.....I know I am remiss when it comes to sending notes, I sure like opening my mail and getting something from a fellow LibraryThinger !

Jeannie
I think you've hit on it regarding Plato and religion. Also, he talked a lot about civic duty, I think, and there is a good bit about ethics in that.

If we are serious skeptics, I think the attitudes with which we lead our lives are picked by judgment that may not be linearly proven. As those attitudes may be called religious, arriving at them might be called religious (it is past time to reread Life of the Mind).

So (I speak as someone who has read much more about Spinoza than of him) he found causation always to be applicable, and further so he was a determinist. Strict determinism constrains our thoughts and attitudes. I am a stoic, and it is in thoughts and attitudes that I am most free; I must disagree with Spinoza.

Reading Kauffman and Penrose I have come to believe that science leaves open the possibility of independent thought.

You are to be congratulated on your reading of Ethics; I still, perhaps irrationally, expect to read it one day.

Robert
Second best because he was wrong about determinism, I think, and because he was not as good a writer. I have a complete Spinoza volume, but I find myself drawn much more to reading about him than to reading him. I find Plato a pleasure to read as I do Nietzsche.

Robert
The link to my website didn't come out right. I'll try again: www.Pathlights-Astrology.com
I do hospice training for our local hospice, so I am very familiar with their work. Good work. I used to work with Jr. Highs in a church, but not so much any more.
Thanks for your note! It’s nice to “meet” someone who has even heard of Murdoch & Davies, but that’s what’s great about Librarything!
I'm just getting around to replying to all my librarything mail! Yes, that photo of Beauvoir is just sublime. When I saw the original at the Chicago Historical museum I was spellbound!
Welcome to Books Compared. I know you'll have interesting things to add to the discussion.
Thanks for the compliment on my post about Life and Death - I can't even remember where I posted it anymore! (Though I do remember posting it.) I enjoyed your post, too, about the comradeship in the conscientious objectors camp and among soliders being similar. I think you'd enjoy Books Compared, so I'm inviting you.
Yeah - same "Olive" - I think she's a therapist (or used to be)
I'm an LPN at Providence - acute physical rehab - you know, strokes, brain injuries, spinal cord inj. etc. I've been there 25 years - we probably do know some of the same people. Maybe i've even met you!
All these years in Ashland - so many people have come in and out of my life. That's one thing I love about reading. A book is always there.
OK. gonna go do some reading!
Summer
Hey Michael - I did work for Helpline in, I think about 1980 or 81. A woman name "Olive" was the one who did the training. Did you work there? I've been working at Providence hospital in Medford since 1983 - I did move to Arcata, Ca. for a year and came back to Ashland for a visit - sat in the sun at an outdoor resturant and knew I had to move back - so I did!
Take care - Summer
Hey Michael - I hope you don't mind a suggestion - I don't see "When Nietzsche Wept" in your collection - if you like philosophy you'll probably love this book - a fictional account about a friendship between Nietzsche, Breuer and Freud - The author is Irvin Yalom. He also wrote "The Schopenhauer Cure" (not nearly as good)

Summer
Hi Michael - we have some books in common - also we have Southern Oregon College in common - I lived in the Greensprings dorm in the early 70's - (still live in Ashland!) When were you there?

It sounds like we share some interests - hospice - working with Aids patients...just interesting to click on something (I clicked on HALO to see who else had read it!) and there you were!

Take care and happy reading! Summer
Well, hello, yours truly in the profile! Glad to see you!
Is that you in the profile picture, Michael?
I wish I could have been in that classroom when you were telling that story. I wish I could have seen the children's faces.
Thanks for the note, Michael. Do you know about the group read for War and Peace that's just getting underway? The group name is Group Reads - Literature. I think it'll be good fun and a nice support for the read.

I too love Portland, can't imagine living anywhere else on the planet (except I'd love a good snowstorm once in awhile!).

Good on you for all your good volunteer work!

See you on the message boards.

Terri
Michael,

Funny you should ask me about Simone DB, and getting older. I thought you would appreciate this wonderful photo of her, in Chicago, when she was lovers with Nelson ALgren. It was taken by their mutual friend, Art Shay:

http://susiebright.blogs.com/susie_brigh...
I am so soory to hear about your cold. Several members of my family and a few of my friends are all down with what I am calling "The Cold of The Year". I have a little internet group and there are members from all over the states and one from Germany. According to the members of this group, the virus has wandered on down south and even made it's way across the pond. Our member in Germany has been ill for at least a week. So far I have been lucky.
I do hope you are feeling better soon.

Sounds like you start the New Year in a good way :>)) I didn't do much....it is too cold here to do all that much. Supposed to be below zero tonight, it was windy and nasty today. Winter blues time.
Thank goodness for books !

Take care of yourself.

Jeannie
Michael,
Just posting to wish you a peaceful New Year. Another year of reading done.....a new one begun. I do hope you had a nice Holiday. Mine was busy as per usual and I am looking forward to things getting back to normal.
I am reading a great mystery (I don't read a whole lot of mystery books, as you can tell from my library, but occasionally I like to read something that is just for entertainment. The title I am reading is "The Tenderness of Wolves" by, Stef Penney. Penney lives in England and it took a while for her book to make it over the pond but it is worth the wait.

Do you keep any kind of list of books you've read throughout the year ? I belong to several face2face groups so keeping a list is helpful when trying to come up with suggestions. It also helps picking my top ten of the year.

Again....I am mainly sending this to wish you a happy new year. Many good books and more than many great friends.....for you in the coming year !

Jeannie
Michael
I thought the Peter Gay biography of Freud was fabulous and also liked his books on the Victorian Era and Vienna culture at the turn of the last century. I attended the University of Utah and received a B.A. in Philosophy and Math and did some graduate work in philosophy and then (because the philosophy firms were not hiring) went to law school. I have practiced law for almost 35 years, most of the time in Salt Lake City but early on (for a short time) I was in Portland.

I love Ashland and the Shakespeare festival (and a few wineries in the Rogue River valley, but more in the Willamette area).

My primary interests other than reading are theatre, opera, wine, Italy (particularly Rome and its church architecture and art) and London. I don't get to Portland much in recent years but have a son in Seattle (rock band and artist) and get there several times a year.

Great hearing from you.
David.
Michael:
Thanks for adding me to your friends and interesting library lists. And I am sorry to be slow in responding due to a vacation and the holidays. I noticed that you are in the Nabokov group (my favorite author), but equally important from some of your messages to others than you are a fan of Angle of Repose, which is one of my four or five favorite novels of all time. I live in Salt Lake (where Stegner spent part of his childhood) and thought you might be interested in something that I discovered a few years ago-in the late forties/or early fifties Stegner and (then obscure) Nabokov jointly conducted a writers' conference at the University of Utah and played some mean sets of tennis against each other. I will fish the picture of them in tennis togs out of my library in the next week or so and try to email it. I like Angle of Repose not only because it is beautifully constructed novel but also because it almost perfectly captures both the exploitation of the western united states in the 19th century and the strength of the people who inhabited it.
David Gee
Hello, Michael. Nice to meet you. I hope that you are having a lovely holiday season. I've only had a moment to glance at your library, but I think I'll find much of interest there, from what I've seen so far. I look forward to talking to you a bit more soon. Namaste.
Thank you for explaining. You are, indeed, a person I can be friends with since we both are interested in how books enter our lives. Many books are interesting to read, but sort of fade away after a while, yet others almost haunt us! I feel strongly about some favorite books (and authors), and am delighted to talk about them with you this way.
What is involved in "being a friend" in this case? I am interested in interacting, of course, as already demonstrated, and one cannot have too many real friends! But I ask because some time ago I was approached by a person who intended to add my info to hers on "My space" or whatever public thing she used, and I did NOT agree to that! ~~~~ keep in touch.
Hi! I think (elsewhere) you meant "Rules for Old Men Waiting" by Peter Poncey. This is such a good book that we ought to be sure others read it too! (And did you mean "Old Filth" by Jane Gardam? This seemed to me to be for fewer readers, whereas the Poncey is so beautiful, and rich, it wants to be in more hands. )
Hi Michael,

Thanks for the comment; fellow Portlanders must unite! In a further coincidence, my parents met at your alma mater, in a SOC Shakespeare class. Small world.

You guessed wrong; the Laura Bush story is actually the lie (it's an anecdote co-opted from my partner's father). I like to think I've become less tone-deaf as time has gone by, though. ;-)

Best,
Emily
Hi Michael,

Thanks for the comment; fellow Portlanders must unite! In a further coincidence, my parents met at your alma mater, in a Shakespeare class. Small world!

Not sure what you mean about not being tone deaf...although if saying so proves I actually am, I will kick myself.

Best,
Emily
Michael,

Thanks for the note. Yes Proust does have some amazing sentences. Check out the proust groups and post some comments. There are a few interesting people that i have come across in that group.

also Nabokov seems to be popular amoung Proust fans.

Currently my reading is taking all over the historical timeline.

David
A little distraction at work is never a bad thing!

Happy running!
thanks Michael, I'm glad you enjoyed browsing my library. I have to admit though that I have not read the book you mentioned. It is one of my husband's books and I am sure he has read it.

B Howell
Michael:

If you are an avowed Cubs fan then I guess we are fated to be sworn mortal enemies. . .or at the very least, archnemeses seeing as I am a life-long Black Sox fan ALL the way. :-) Thank the baseball gods I have my 2005 WS memories to get me through these darker days/seasons.

Thanks for your comments. I have enjoyed reading Lawrence since I was a teen. That title you saw on my Profile was slender litle thing and also a tad less polished than a full-length DHL novel as to be expected with the much of the fiction titles in the Hesperus Classics Series. It is a well-designed, well-produced and lovely series of forgotten titles by typically "Classic" authors but of course the down-side is that they often reflect the authors at earlier stages of their writing development. Still, I think it's good to read them and mentally note any progress one might think the authors made.
Michael.
Thanks for the post....it is so good to hear from other LibraryThingers :>) I found a very interesting article about Chris McCandless in Men's Journal. I was poking around on line and came up with quite a few articles but this one seemed the most credible. The article is titled "The Cult of Chris McCandless" address is http://www.mensjournal.com/feature/M162/....
There are two schools of thought regarding this young man, he was either a martyr or a fool. As a mother, I am somewhat dismayed that a child would do such a thing, on the other hand, some parents could drive a child into all kinds of strange behaviors. I guess when I take the whole story of Chris into account, I feel most for his sister.

I just finished reading a book titled "Strange As This Weather Has Been" by Ann Pancake......(might change my last name ?) Pancake grew up in West Virginia and this novel is about the strip mining that is taking place in that region of the country. The book was not a "happy" read by any means but it was well written and I learned a lot I didn't know about what it means to live in an area where the land is being "reshaped". Good Book !!

Thanks again for posting......I love getting mail. (perhaps I should send some once in a while)

Jeannie
It was so good to hear from you again. That is a beautiful story about the hospice patient. We do have much to learn from the dying, for, in a sense, we are all dying. And we are all living. The trick is to really feel what it means to be alive. I agree that it is hard for many of us to be "in the now." I always want to jump to the future. Or live deep inside my imagination. The "now" frequently eludes me. I believe when I am most in the "now" is when I am experiencing a good poem.
Michael, it's a pleasure to meet you, although your profile makes me feel unworthy! I have not yet read Angle of Repose, but it is on the top of my tbr pile. My life is a bit of a quagmire right now and some books I hold back on until I know I can give them the attention they deserve. I belong to a book club that keeps me reading more trifles than I have a taste for, and I've begun to rebel by showing up not having read the lit-lite of the month; sadly no one really minds. I'm beginning to feel a bit frantic to read the right books next, the ones that matter, the ones I've missed, the ones I don't even know about yet, the ones that resonate. I'm reading Didion's Year of Magical Thinking now, it's very hard for me emotionally, but I love how she can write. I'm also reading Anne Dillards The Writing Life, much to savor there. I'm halfway through Patricia Hample's I Could Tell you Stories: Soujourns in the Land of Memory. I've just finished every Annie Lamott I could get my hands on. And so it goes.
I'll let you know how I like Stegner. I have discovered so many exceptional authors lately, how could I have missed them? Happy Reading, Mel
Michael, it's a pleasure to meet you, although your profile makes me feel unworthy! I have not yet read Angle of Repose, but it is on the top of my tbr pile. My life is a bit of a quagmire right now and some books I hold back on until I know I can give them the attention they deserve. I belong to a book club that keeps me reading more trifles than I have the taste for, and I've begun to rebel by showing up not having read the lit-lite of the month, sadly no one really minds. I'm beginning to feel a bit frantic to read the right books next, the ones that matter, the ones I've missed, the ones I don't even know about yet, the ones that matter. I'm reading Didion's Year of Magical Thinking now, it's very hard for me emotionally, but I love how she can write. I'm also reading Anne Dillards The Writing Life, much to savor there. I'm halfway through Patricia Hample's I Could Tell you Stories: Soujourns in the Land of Memory. I've just finished every Annie Lamott I could get my hands on. And so it goes.
I'll let you know how I like Stegner. I have discovered so many exceptional authors lately, how could I have missed them? Happy reading, Mel
Hi, Michael.

I'm flattered that you've added my library to your "Interesting Libraries List." Hope you don't mind that I've added yours to mine.

Looking over your library I was reminded that I need to add Barry Lopez's "Arctic Dreams." I read the book years ago and loved it. Somehow it became lost during my last move.

Oh, and by the way, I'm a runner too.

Good reading!

Sean
Hi Michael, it's a strange thing about Middlemarch, I am already tempted to reread it. I enjoyed it a lot the first time, with some disappointments I suppose, ie it wasn't quite as good as I expected as you hear so many people calling it 'a masterpiece', but the writing itself and tone are drawing me back. Good luck with the Proust, I bought a set a few years ago and I stroke them from time to time!

I have several books on the go at the moment, the one I am really enjoying, but having to read slowly as it is a tome and more difficult to cart about, is Rebecca West's 'Black Lamb and Grey Falcon' - I am already imagining myself re-reading it!! I will have to, and more than once as there is so much in it!
Hi Michael, and thanks so much for the kind words. Right now I'm finishing up The Best American Short Stories 2007 which I've enjoyed quite a bit, and getting ready to start Tim Jeal's much-anticipated biography Stanley: The Impossible Life of Africa's Greatest Explorer. Happy reading!!

Louis
Thanks so much for your recommendation of Life and Fate by Vasily Grossman. i'll have to add it to my TBR list.
Thanks for saying hello, Michael, and hello yourself! Civil War Times published an article of mine awhile back on the Confederate regiment one of my Texas ancestors served in. You might enjoy it. It's called "The Third Texas Itch" and appeared in the February 2003 issue of Civil War Times. I'm pretty sure you can find it at the Multnomah County Central Library. Thanks for the good wishes on my book. The research process is fun but could easily become never-ending! In some areas, I'm just going to have to hope someone else comes along someday to fill in the parts I couldn't get to.
Michael,
Jeannie again...I should have checked your library before I emailed you. I discovered that we share a wonderfully eclectic mix of literature. I see you read a lot of history and nonfiction. I do read some but my passion is fiction and we share a really interesting mix.

Have a great weekend.
Hello Michael,
Thanks so much for the post. We seem to have a bit in common (age included) as I was very much alive and protesting during the Vietnam war era. I lost a very dear friend in Vietnam !! Vietnam Vets have a very special place in my heart !
I worked for many years as a Unit Secretary in an Intensive Care Unit. I loved my job. I had not put together the similarities between Radar (of Mash fame) and my job but now that you mention it........yes.....it was a lot like that :>))
I miss the excitement of being part of a team but the medical field has changes so much since I was involved.......it is just not the same.
I REALLY miss the bookstore job. I would have stayed forever.
When I think of the afterlife, I remember the movie "City of Angels" with Nicholas Cage and Meg Ryan......all of the angels lived in the library. I love just the IDEA of that!
Kudos to you. It sounds like you keep yourself very busy and most of what you do is so very helpful to others. It is amazing how much one can contribute if they have a mind to.
Again, thanks for the post. Please stay in touch. I will add your name to my friends list. I will puruse through your book shelves (I love looking at other peoples libraries) I find that what people read tells a lot about who they are.

Jeannie
i hope you enjoy the Art is Life group as much as i am. i look forward to your contributions.
thanks for stopping by. you are exactly right about after reading something powerful it is difficult to read something not so powerful. :) i fear i have set my standards way too high and i will continue to be disappointed.

i love that you give books to your students. i usually force my favorites upon my friends and relatives! happy reading!
Hi again Michael,

Thanks for the reply. I like reading reviews - use Bookmarks, New York Times Book Review, TLS, London Review of Books and the Guardian website you mentioned. (not all of these ALL the time!)

Also get alot of good suggestions from other Library Thingers - some of the groups have very good discussions.

Cheers,

KAren
Hi Michael, I have been away for a week or so, teaching workshops in California. I am pleased to accept your friends invitation, and I hope we can get to know each other better. How about joining my group, Art is Life? I will send you an invitation.
Hi Michael,

Thanks for your comments and also for adding me to your interesting libraries. I'm flattered.

I read Birdsong a while ago - absolutely excellent. Subsequently read his other books, all have been very good. His non-fiction debut about three Englishmen was good but not his forte. Human Traces was interesting to me as it was medically based, but not his most engaging. I have not yet got to Engelby - his latest.

I also like Michael Frayn, Julian Barnes, Michael Chabon..............to name a few of many.

'Life and Fate' has been recommended to me by many good readers and is high on my very deep TBR pile.

Thanks for making contact. Always like to hear about good reads.

Karen
You are a beautiful life, mirrored by your books!
Hjälp/Vanliga frågor | Om | Sekretess/Villkor | Blogg | Kontakt | LibraryThing.com | APIs | WikiThing | Common Knowledge | 31,118,279 böcker!