Random books from Tracyobrien's library

The Last Lecture by Randy Pausch

Gerald's game by Stephen King

Eclipse (The Twilight Saga, Book 3) by Stephenie Meyer

Wuthering heights by Emily Brontë

The Moonstone (Modern Library Classics) by Wilkie Collins

The Representation and Processing of Compound Words (Oxford Linguistics) by Gary Libben

The Great Brain Reforms (Great Brain) by John D. Fitzgerald

Members with Tracyobrien's books

Member connections

Friends: alynnk, misskandi

LibraryThing authors: Joe Hill (joehill)

RSS feeds

Recently-added books

Tracyobrien's reviews

Reviews of Tracyobrien's books, not including Tracyobrien's

 

Member: Tracyobrien

CollectionsYour library (128)

Reviews1 review

Tagsrock n roll (1), nirvana (1), India (1), story telling (1), imagery (1), religion (1), haunting (1), ocean (1), fiction (1) — see all tags

Cloudstag cloud, author cloud

GroupsNone

Favorite bookstoresGranny Bates Children's Books‎, Sweet Relic

Homepagehttp://www.tracyobrien.ca/

Also onAIM

Membership LibraryThing Early Reviewers/Member Giveaway

LocationSt. John's, Newfoundland

Favorite authorsNone

Account typepublic, free

Connection NewsConnection News

URLs http://www.librarything.com/profile/Tracyobrien (profile)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/Tracyobrien (library)

Common KnowledgeSeries (16), Awards (160), Characters (734), Places (166)

Member sinceNov 20, 2008

Leave a comment

You're welcome! I'm so glad you like the books. The Moonstone is one of my new favorite 'classics', and while I've never read Dorian Gray, I hear it's excellent and it's on my 'to be read' list. And as for The Gunslinger books, they are *easily* some of my favorite King works. One thing I like the most about them is how so many of his other stories tie into them. Happy reading!
Hi Tracy

Just wanted to thank you for my santa thing books. I don't have either one and I am looking forward to reading them. Thanks again, and Happy nEw Year

laura a
Help/FAQs | About | Privacy/Terms | Blog | Contact | APIs | WikiThing | Common Knowledge | 46,555,202 books!