Member: ArmyAngel1986
CollectionsYour library (925), To read (341), Home (106), Kindle Edition (174), Currently reading (29), Read but unowned (409), Available for Kindle (500), Not Available for Kindle (537), Storage :( (23), With Parents (650), Star Wars (204), Newbery Medal (22), Newbery Honor (16), 1001 Books...Before You Die (29), Graphic Novels (10), Ambleside Online Main List (36), Ambleside Online Free List (47), Discworld (43), Jig the Goblin (1), Joe Grey (17), Royal Diaries (13), Sarah Prine (2), Temeraire (7), Wicked Years (3), Mom's books (16), Loaned (3), Can't Find (2), Need to Inventory (16), Favorites (16), All collections (1,342)
Reviews106 reviews
Tagsfiction (947), No Review (806), series (441), non-fiction (380), young adult (294), Sci Fi (281), fantasy (183), children (179), History (161), meddling kids (113) — see all tags
Cloudstag cloud, author cloud, tag mirror
About meIf you are interested in receiving a spreadsheet of locations from both the original and America/Canada editions of 1000 Places to See Before You Die, please visit my website below.
-----------------------------------------------
I'm an army brat and college graduate (BA, History). At one point or another I called all of the following places home: Ft. Bragg, NC; Ft. Ord, CA; Sulphur, LA; Bad Tolz, Germany; Stuttgart, Germany; Ft. Benning, GA; Ft. Jackson, SC; Falls Church, VA; Garmisch, Germany; Tashkent, Uzbekistan; Lawrence, KS; Sulphur again, Hammond, Louisiana; Jerusalem, Israel; and now I'm back in Hammond.

visited 22 states (9.77%)
Create your own visited map of The World or another interesting project
Books I think everyone should read (list may change depending on my mood):
Dante's Inferno
These is My Words
Perilous Gard
Anne of Green Gables series
Diamond: History of a Cold Blooded Love Affair
Where the Red Fern Grows
Books I think should never be read:
Gone With the Wind
About my library"Your Library" means I own it, either a hardcopy or Kindle edition. I was very surprised by how few non-fiction books I have (I know I read a lot of series, but still...), so if you want to recommend a favorite history book, please do! I'm especially interested in filling the gaps in my history collection: if you notice I don't have any books from your favorite era or subject, don't assume I'm not interested in it; I'm just not that well-read outside of a handful of historical issues/events.
Groups1000 Places to See Before You Die, 1001 Books to read before you die, 20-Something LibraryThingers, 2013 Category Challenge, 50 Book Challenge, A Quieter LibraryThing, Aboard the Jolly Roger, Adoption, All Things Discworldian - The Guild of Pratchett Fans, American Revolution & Founding Fathers History —show all groups, Ancient and Medieval Manuscripts, Ancient China, Ancient Egypt, Ancient History, Arthurian Legends, Awful Lit., Baker Street and Beyond, Banned Books, Bloggers, Board for Extreme Thing Advances, Book Collectors, Book Fiend, Book Lovers Who Love Fountain Pens, Books & Letters & Newspapers, Cats and Crime, Cats, books, life is good., Children's Fiction, Classically Liberal, Cozy Mysteries, Crime, Thriller & Mystery, Diana Wynne Jones Fans, Etiquette and Manners, Fabalous Emerald City, Fairy Tales Retold, FantasyFans, Fiber Arts, Fifty States Fiction (or Nonfiction) Challenge, Firearms Bibliogroup, Gardens & Books, Harry Potter/Hunger Games/Twilight/Every Series You Know You Love, History at 30,000 feet: The Big Picture, History: On learning from and writing history, Hogwarts Castle, Holocaust and genocide, Homeschool Home Libraries, Indian History, INTJ, ISTJ, Kindley Book Club, Kindred Spirits, Knights Templar, Letters & diaries, LibraryThing Gatherings and Meetups, LibraryThing Singles Group, Medieval Europe, Most Disturbing Books, Myers-Briggs: All Types, Name that Book, Needlearts, Newbery Challenge, Outdoor Readers, Pedants' corner, Post-apocalyptic Literature, Pro-Life Association, Quilters & Co, Read YA Lit, ReadaThing, Reading Globally, Reading in Red Stick, Reading Resolutions, Reading the States, Serious Series Lovers, Star Wars Books, Starting Your Own Personal Library, The 12 in 12 Category Challenge, The Globe, The Green Dragon, The Random Group for Fogies and Curmudgeons of All Ages, The Well-Educated Mind by Susan Wise-Bauer, The Well-Trained Library (WTM Homeschoolers), Travel and Exploration literature, US Presidents Challenge (USPC), Weavers
Favorite authorsDante Alighieri, Aaron Allston, Diana Wynne Jones, Shirley Rousseau Murphy, Naomi Novik, Ellis Peters, Terry Pratchett, Philip Pullman, Ursula Vernon, H. G. Wells, Patricia C. Wrede (Shared favorites)
Homepagehttp://travelsandbooks.blogspot.com/
Also onKiva
LocationLouisiana
Account typepublic, lifetime
URLs
http://www.librarything.com/profile/ArmyAngel1986 (profile)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/ArmyAngel1986 (library)
Member sinceMay 30, 2006
Currently readingThe Daily Bible: New International Version by F. LaGard Smith
Greek War of Independence by David Brewer
The Arabian Nights: Tales from a Thousand and One Nights by
Beowulf: A New Verse Translation by
Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer
Paradise Lost by John Milton
The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins
Paradise by Dante
Sarah's Quilt: A Novel of Sarah Agnes Prine and the Arizona Territories, 1906 by Nancy E. Turner
Le Morte d'Arthur by Thomas Sir Malory
Edgar Allan Poe: Complete Tales & Poems by Edgar Allan Poe
God's Chinese Son: The Taiping Heavenly Kingdom of Hong Xiuquan by Jonathan D. Spence
The Private Life of Chairman Mao by Li Zhi-Sui
The Blade Itself by Joe Abercrombie
Chiang Kai Shek: China's Generalissimo and the Nation He Lost by Jonathan Fenby
Paul Revere's Ride by David Hackett Fischer
For Cause and Comrades: Why Men Fought in the Civil War by James M. McPherson
The Master and Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov
The Faerie Queene by Edmund Spenser
Shakespeare's Sonnets by William Shakespeare
Beyond Belief: The American Press And The Coming Of The Holocaust, 1933- 1945 by Deborah E. Lipstadt
Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer
Life, Death and Everything in Between by Steven "Kelly" Grayson
The Cajuns: Americanization of a People by Shane K. Bernard
The Story of Mankind by Hendrik van Loon
The Burgess Bird Book for Children by Thornton W. Burgess
Home education by Charlotte M. Mason
Politics In Israel: The Second Republic, 2nd Edition by Asher Arian
The Gift of Fire by Richard Mitchell
show all (29)
Leave a comment
Sign up or sign in to leave a comment.
posted by PolymathicMonkey at 2:53 pm (EST) on Dec 29, 2012
Deacon Solomon
posted by dekesolomon at 12:59 am (EST) on May 2, 2012
I was thinking the same thing, and hence am slightly surprised to learn that the movie has already been comissioned and is due for release in 2014. Though you might like to know.
'fox
posted by reading_fox at 5:09 pm (EST) on Mar 30, 2012
posted by system at 11:41 am (EST) on Sep 21, 2011
posted by ladylenneth at 5:23 am (EST) on Jul 11, 2011
posted by BeckyJG at 11:14 am (EST) on Jul 7, 2011
The US military base in Bad Tolz was originally built by the nazis as an ss training camp, later occupied by the Allied forces. I just Google mapped it and I think I live on Gen. Patton street, although I doubt that's what it was first called. I can't be sure that's the place because there's no street view. The base was also where the concentration camp commandant from Shindler's List was executed. Even with the great skiing I was glad when we left.
posted by SomeGuyInVirginia at 2:14 pm (EST) on May 13, 2011
posted by SomeGuyInVirginia at 11:31 am (EST) on May 13, 2011
My email caroleamparo@hotmail.com
Carole
posted by caroleamparo at 10:49 pm (EST) on Feb 26, 2011
posted by LucasTrask at 7:54 pm (EST) on Dec 16, 2010
posted by jenniebooks at 4:46 pm (EST) on May 8, 2010
posted by jenniebooks at 3:26 pm (EST) on May 8, 2010
It's for my book, Lost & Found: A Memoir of Mothers, about my birthmother finding me through my mom's obituary.
My memoir has been featured on national ABC news and in major metropolitan papers across the country. Hope you get a chance to check it out! (And may we never be stuck in Dante's 9th circle of hell!)
Best,
Kate St. Vincent Vogl
posted by KateVogl at 2:10 pm (EST) on Jan 25, 2010
posted by Collectorator at 2:33 pm (EST) on Mar 13, 2009
posted by Garp83 at 9:16 pm (EST) on Mar 10, 2009
posted by Garp83 at 9:35 pm (EST) on Mar 9, 2009
I finished Justinian's Flea and to be perfectly honest, was very disappointed. If you want a book about The Roman Empire and wars and a biography of Justinian and his generals and wife, read this book. If you want a book on the larger context of protoEuropean history, go for it. Most of the book was about battles and money and different groups and their rise and fall.
If you want a book about plague, its epidemiology and its impact at a microeconomic, agricultural, psychological, and personal level, this is not the book for you. For that I'd read The Black Death by Robert S. Gottlieb.
It never picked up for me, sad to say. I had such high hopes for it.
It may be perfect for you and your paper, though - I'm just responding honestly about what I thought about it.
karenmarie
posted by karenmarie at 3:58 pm (EST) on Feb 7, 2009
I'm about 66 pages into Justinian's Flea and it's sloooooow going. I've heard from several folks that it takes a while to pick up and we haven't talked about a single flea yet.
I'll keep you posted!
karenmarie
posted by karenmarie at 11:30 am (EST) on Feb 4, 2009
I'm very proud of Justinian's Flea - I had been trying to get it on BookMooch and kept looking at the Thrift Store and couldn't find it - I finally broke down and bought it when it was on a special sale at Amazon for $7.98 - brand new, no shipping (I have Amazon Prime).
But I don't know when I'll read it. It's on my 999 challenge Epidemiology category and I want to read it sooner than later. It just depends on my mood. Right now I'm reading a book called Napoleon's Pyramids, historical fiction, and need to read Too Soon Old, Too Late Smart for my January 11th bookclub meeting.
I'm going to put a comment on my book to let you know when I read it.
Thanks for writing!
karenmarie
posted by karenmarie at 5:45 am (EST) on Jan 2, 2009
http://www.geocities.com/bestine2/
Now that you're back in Louisiana, you're just hours away from more fun than the law doth normally allow: Scarby in the spring (scarboroughrenfest.com) and TRF in the fall (texrenfest.com). Come on out and play!
posted by Bestine at 5:58 pm (EST) on Dec 17, 2008
I'm just enjoying my time resting now, lots of books to keep me entertained.
posted by Jodyreadseverything at 1:49 pm (EST) on Oct 12, 2008
posted by PhoenixTerran at 12:51 pm (EST) on Sep 15, 2008
posted by kcasada at 3:58 pm (EST) on May 27, 2008
posted by kcasada at 1:58 pm (EST) on May 27, 2008
posted by valleymom at 11:10 pm (EST) on May 23, 2008
posted by Dragonfly at 8:34 pm (EST) on Apr 9, 2008
posted by Dragonfly at 8:33 pm (EST) on Apr 9, 2008
If you'd like to see my work on Flickr (its new to me) my name there is Photomaggie.
posted by maggie1944 at 4:00 pm (EST) on Apr 8, 2008
Thanks for taking over MostDisturbingBooks.
All the books or stories in What is the most disturbing book you have read? through message 245 are already in the library.
I was in the Army for 13 years, I got aut SSG in 2005. Never was stationed at any of your posts. I have been (briefly) to the posts you were stationed at in Germany. I have also been to Bragg and Jackson. I was also in Tashkent once but as a civilian.
posted by petersfamily at 12:50 pm (EST) on Apr 8, 2008
I was very amused by your comment on Gone with the Wind. Way back in the early 70s I got my first professional librarian job as a genealogy and local history specialist in a small town in Georgia. Gone with the Wind was right up there in the local pantheon with War and Peace. So I tried to read it. Scarlett was not only annoying but boring (still one of my top insulting epithets). I finally skipped the middle, read the last few pages to find out what happened, and put the thing down with a great sigh of relief.
Haven't thought about that in years! Thanks for the smile.
posted by Dragonfly at 8:46 pm (EST) on Apr 5, 2008
Thanks for your interest in my library, although I haven't as yet worked out what piqued your interest in it.
Grammath
posted by Grammath at 5:26 pm (EST) on Jan 23, 2008
Seriously, just thinking of you the other day. Hope school is going well and hope I get to chat with you more this year! :Þ
posted by punkypower at 4:51 pm (EST) on Jan 23, 2008
posted by MrsLee at 12:58 am (EST) on Jan 9, 2008
posted by MrsLee at 3:44 pm (EST) on Jan 8, 2008
I'm fine, feeling my way around... lots of places to go, topics to read. This place can be addictive I think... in fact, I should be doing laundry and running the vacuume (I can never spell that word right) right now... but I'm not.
I should at least put some soup on...
I hope you are having a wonderful holiday season!
Bonnie
posted by bereader at 12:02 pm (EST) on Dec 25, 2007
So, thank you for inviting me, I feel honored. I'm not sure why the accept part didn't work, but I tried (insert confused grin here).
Bonnie
posted by bereader at 10:32 am (EST) on Dec 25, 2007
siubhan
posted by siubhank at 1:05 pm (EST) on Dec 23, 2007
posted by trinah at 10:58 pm (EST) on Nov 13, 2007
I'm in Vienna now and having a great time getting to know the city. The whole
etiquette thing isn't that difficult to remember, just have to rewire things a little.
The city is gorgeous, the food is amazing and I'm having a blast. Love your library.
Cheers,
sollocks
posted by sollocks at 6:26 am (EST) on Nov 8, 2007
posted by seimeis at 1:15 am (EST) on Nov 4, 2007
posted by philosojerk at 10:41 am (EST) on Nov 1, 2007
posted by SeriousGrace at 5:47 pm (EST) on Oct 14, 2007
posted by buchleser at 10:22 am (EST) on Oct 9, 2007
posted by shannahc at 10:47 pm (EST) on Oct 8, 2007
posted by shannahc at 10:47 pm (EST) on Oct 8, 2007
Must be the army brat thing had you over there.
Tell me how you found the new series you discovered.
posted by kennethrbesser at 5:20 pm (EST) on Aug 24, 2007
posted by DeputyHeadmistress at 3:40 pm (EST) on Aug 24, 2007
Thanks for taking a look at my library. Please accept my apology for my delay in responding to you.
I've been trying to decide what interested you about my library. At first, I thought it might be Aaron Alston, but after seeing your cat pictures, I think it may be my comment about wanting a cat (probably in combination with some books too)?? I'm quite envious of your cat(s), I have to say. My wife won't let us get one at the moment because we have new couches, and I won't stand for declawing a cat, so we're at an impass (sigh! The compromises one must make in a marriage are sometimes disheartening).
Judging from your reading list, you're a much more well-rounded reader than I was at your age (or now, for that matter). You don't need me to tell you to keep it up, but I will wish you good luck with your studies.
Take care,
bookstothesky
posted by bookstothesky at 4:55 pm (EST) on Jul 28, 2007
Catalog
posted by catalog_theLTcat at 8:53 pm (EST) on Jul 2, 2007
You pointed me in the right direction for a book search I was doing and helped me joined my group. I never came back and said Thank You, so here I am. It was rude of me when you were so helpful and I apologize. Thank you so much for your courtesy.
posted by DaintyC at 2:07 pm (EST) on May 31, 2007
posted by Romanus at 9:51 am (EST) on May 3, 2007
"but I want to be able to say, "Why, yes, I have" when people ask me, "Have you really read all these books?!" :)"
There's a quote (and wish to goodness I could remember who said it) that goes something like this:
"If someone can walk into your home and ask you if you have really read all of your books, you don't own enough books."
(Take that with a grain of salt. I own a ridiculous number of books and I show no signs of stopping my buying soon. In my defense, if this can really be used as a defense, most of them are used. So in a way I am recycling.)
posted by inkdrinker at 8:20 am (EST) on May 3, 2007
I'm glad to hear you liked "Under the Black Flag" - I have to start reading it by Friday. At the beginning of this term, my history instructor had us each pick one of about seven books to read during the semester, do chapter reviews of, and do a group presentation on. I was one of the last to reach the desk, and was stuck with this one. (My other choice was called "Cod," I think, about a type of fish.) I figure at least I'm familiar with some of the terms in "Under the Black Flag" because of the 'Pirates of the Caribbean' movies. Thank you for the happy reading note - hope you have this as well!
posted by Kerian at 1:42 pm (EST) on Apr 3, 2007
posted by aluvalibri at 7:46 am (EST) on Mar 13, 2007
posted by stringcat3 at 2:34 am (EST) on Mar 12, 2007
posted by MrsKroeger at 10:39 am (EST) on Mar 3, 2007
posted by MrsKroeger at 12:14 pm (EST) on Feb 22, 2007
I'm loving our discussion on banned books, and just realized another thing we have in common--we're both from Louisiana!!
I'm also doing the 50 book challenge--I think I'm going to need another bookshelf by the time I'm done!
Since I've had "Gone With the Wind" on my bookshelf with the intention to be read for years, curious to know why you think it shouldn't be... ;)
Have a great weekend!!
Tanya
posted by punkypower at 2:41 pm (EST) on Feb 3, 2007
You left me a comment that I think was meant for another person (avaland). I copied and left it for them, explaining that you had meant to give the message to them.
What I'd left you was a comment on the possibility that you may like a group I've created on LibraryThing. It's called "Fabalous Emerald City." I was going through a list of people who have Gregory Maguire's books, and saw you have all five. Suspecting you as a fan, or someone who greatly enjoys his books, I sent you an invitation to the group. I'm sort of trying to annouce it to readers of Gregory Maguire, or fans of the "Wicked" musical. Anyhow, feel free to join (or read comments of) the group. It's new, so things are kind of slow right now, but I'm hoping it will build up as people become more aware of it.
posted by Kerian at 6:40 pm (EST) on Jan 18, 2007
Good for you! Best of luck! - Lois
posted by avaland at 9:58 am (EST) on Jan 17, 2007
posted by laytonwoman3rd at 7:46 am (EST) on Jan 10, 2007