Random books from bibliotheque's library
J.R.R. Tolkien: A Biography by Humphrey Carpenter
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Blindfold and Alone: British Military Executions in the Great War by John Hughes-Wilson
Songs of Innocence and Experience: Shewing the Two Contrary States of the Human Soul (Oxford Paperbacks) by William Blake
Asylums: Essays on the Social Situation of Mental Patients and Other Inmates (Peregrine Books) by Erving Goffman
The Diary of a Nobody (Essential.penguin S.) by George Grossmith
Us by Richard Mason
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LibraryThing authors: Andrew Brown (seatrout), Joe Hill (joehill), Lance Parkin (lanceparkin), Lynn Peril (lperil), Deanna Raybourn (deannaraybourn), Sarah Smith (sarahwriter)
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Library1,682 books — see library
Reviews56 reviews — see reviews
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Tagsnovel (682), mystery (198), 19th century (189), historical fiction (161), non-fiction (126), drama (118), biography (109), poetry (90), history (86), horror (74) — see all tags
GroupsAsian Fiction & Non-Fiction, Awful Lit., Baker Street and Beyond, British & Irish Crime Fiction, Crime, Thriller & Mystery, E.F.Benson, Flashman and Fraser, Hardboiled / Noir Crime Fiction, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Historical Mysteries — show all groups
Favorite authorsW. H. Auden, Alison Bechdel, Albert Camus, Thomas H. Cook, Theodore Dalrymple, Ben Elton, Carlo Goldoni, Carlo Gozzi, Victor Hugo, Bernard Levin, Gillian Linscott, Patrick Mcgrath, John O'Farrell, Greg Palast, Derek Raymond, Graham Robb, Robert Louis Stevenson, Josephine tey, Sarah Waters (Shared favorites)
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Member sinceMar 1, 2006


Comments from other LibraryThing-ers
(Leave a comment.)
Cindy
posted by malinablue at 12:47 pm (EST) on Jan 11, 2008
Many thanks for your kind words, and I'm delighted that you enjoyed A Treasury of Regrets. Hope you enjoyed Game of Patience just as much.
I'm currently working on the next novel--no title yet. OK, I admit it, not much of anything yet! ;-)
Cheers, Susanne Alleyn
posted by SusanneAlleyn at 4:08 pm (EST) on Oct 11, 2007
posted by 100pph at 12:10 am (EST) on Jul 20, 2007
posted by InigoMontoya at 9:00 am (EST) on Apr 21, 2007
posted by InigoMontoya at 7:58 am (EST) on Apr 21, 2007
Trawling through my memory, author lists etc. has been strangely therapeutic - a sort of long-winded version of my life flashing before my eyes. So far, I'm managing to resist the impulse to seek out some of them to re-read. Life's too short and there are so many books out there to discover! (But 'Here's Mumfie' would be great - one of the first books I read. I know I loved it but can't remember why.)
I read Rachel Roberts' book some years ago during one of my autobiography phases - borrowed from the library. I confess that I will read about nearly anyone's life, but her book was certainly memorable. I like to 'read round' the subject if possible, so moved on to Rex Harrison, his son, other wives etc - not yet catalogued.
Just spotted Jemima Shore on your random list - loved those - need to get searching again.
Happy reading!
posted by Thoughtshapes at 7:57 am (EST) on Apr 12, 2007
I'm reading The Sonnet Lover now (just starting it). Haven't read enough to form an opinion!
Cheers,
Bibliofool
posted by BiblioFool at 11:04 am (EST) on Apr 10, 2007
Remembering how you mentioned that you and your dad are big John Biggins fans, I thought that you might like "To The Last Salute" by Georg Von Trapp.
Yes, that Von Trapp - K.U.K. U-Boat Commandmant, and father of the Von Trapp Family Singers ala "The Sound of Music"....
Apparently, he penned a memoir of his wartime experiences that was printed in Austria in the 1930s. But never translated, until now.
One of his granddaughters, Elizabeth M. Campbell, has translated this work, and it's available at the University of Nebraska's Bison Press: http://unp.unl.edu.
It's a quick read, told in the first person, and chock full of vintage photographs.
Sort of "A Sailor of Austria" meets "The Real World" - without the annoying houseguests....
Thought that you might be interested...
Regards,
mbahawk
posted by mbahawk at 2:11 pm (EST) on Mar 14, 2007
Just in case you didn't my post on Book Talk today, McBooks Press will be releasing John Biggins' Tomorrow the World on or about September 25, 2007.
You can even pre-order on Amazon.com now...
Enjoy.
posted by mbahawk at 6:32 pm (EST) on Jan 26, 2007
posted by Eilonwy at 1:00 pm (EST) on Dec 22, 2006
Thanks!
Eilonwy
posted by Eilonwy at 3:29 am (EST) on Dec 22, 2006
Your dad is one of the few who know of John Biggins's novels. I hope that you've read them as well.
I think that they're great.
I know that he'll like "Tomorrow the World". I picked up my copy several years ago - before copies exploded in price.
You're right, I do like a good historical mystery.
Never having been shy about expressing my opinion, if you could ping me back the with LT Group for Historical Mysteries, I'll weigh in with my favorites.
MBAHAWK
posted by mbahawk at 9:14 pm (EST) on Sep 24, 2006
posted by papalaz at 12:02 pm (EST) on Jul 26, 2006
I enjoyed The Eight. I do like these ancient conspiracy theory books, provided they're well written. ;)
posted by Only2rs at 2:24 pm (EST) on Jul 22, 2006
posted by gibbon at 4:28 am (EST) on Apr 27, 2006
Best wishes from Gibbon, Bristol, England
posted by gibbon at 4:09 am (EST) on Apr 27, 2006
And yes, you're right. Even taking into account our duplicates, the numbers are scary... *giggles*
posted by gibbon_plinth at 3:37 pm (EST) on Mar 12, 2006
Thanx again
posted by papalaz at 4:30 am (EST) on Mar 11, 2006
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