Random books from Ex_Libris's library
Of Human Bondage (Bantam Classic) by W. Somerset Maugham
The Passion of Emily Dickinson by Judith Farr
Annotated Wizard of Oz (QPB Book Club Edition) by L Frank Baum
The Soul Thief: A Novel by Charles Baxter
The daughter of time by Josephine Tey
From Love Field : our final hours with President John F. Kennedy by Nellie Connally
The Spanish Bride by Georgette Heyer
Members with Ex_Libris's books
Member connections
Friends: 3M3m, abarree, Ambergold, ann163125, Bbexlibris, Cinnamon-Girl, Cronshaw, DameMuriel, dovegreyreader, dtorres, HippieLunatic, jdthloue, JeremyCShipp, jillmwo, judithkaye, Kasthu, LisaMM, lisaunger, LiteraryFeline, MrsChocolate, pagesturned, redrabbit, SamHouston, SleepyReader, writestuff, yourotherleft
Interesting libraries: 3M3m, abarree, AllieW, almigwin, amanaceerdh, Ambergold, angrystarlyt, ann163125, ashby220, bjbookman, bleuroses, bookworm12, brunhilde, CandySchultz, Cariola, CelesteM, Cronshaw, dovegreyreader, dtorres, fallaspen, FleurFisher, HarvReviewer, HippieLunatic, izzybee, jdthloue, jillmwo, jmartin135, juliette07, jyangelo, kholmden, lindsacl, logostoni, MissWoodhouse, MusicMom41, nbcarmel, pagesturned, PandorasRequiem, redrabbit, ReneeMarie, rudyleon, SamHouston, SleepyReader, tara35, teelgee, xenchu
LibraryThing authors: Libby Cone (reademwritem), David Liss (davidliss), Deanna Raybourn (deannaraybourn)
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Member: Ex_Libris
Library2,431 books — see library
Reviews19 reviews — see reviews
Cloudstag cloud, author cloud
Tagsfiction (1,549), novel (1,138), 20th century (841), english (532), american (517), non-fiction (362), 21st century (343), 19th century (256), 1001 (239), short stories (212) — see all tags
Groups1001 Books to read before you die, 999 Challenge, Banned Books, Cookbookers, Early Reviewers, Fans of Russian authors, Girlybooks, Group Reads - Literature, Northern Cincinnati Book Club, Reading Globally — show all groups
Favorite authorsJohn Banville, Sebastian Barry, William Boyd, Ray Bradbury, Emily Brontë, Truman Capote, Lewis Carroll, Mary Cavanagh, Joseph Conrad, Ronald Frederick Delderfield, Charles Dickens, Dorothy Dunnett, Adele Geras, Ivan Goncharov, Winston Graham, P. D. James, Jane Kenyon, Daphne du Maurier, Carson McCullers, Ian McEwan, John McGahern, Czesław Miłosz, Margaret Mitchell, Joyce Carol Oates, Flannery O'Connor, Marge Piercy, Ali Smith, Amy Tan, Kurt Vonnegut, Evelyn Waugh, Edith Wharton, Émile Zola (Shared favorites)
Favorite bookstoresBarnes & Noble Booksellers - Dayton Mall, Half Price Books - Dayton, Half Price Books - Springdale, Joseph-Beth Booksellers - Cincinnati
Favorite librariesGardner-Harvey Library, Middletown Public Library
About me I love reading and I love being surrounded by books. I enjoy reading a wide variety, including literary fiction, classic fiction, mysteries, and non-fiction (primarily history and biographies).
CURRENTLY READING
Nana, Emile Zola
The Book Thief, Markus Zusak
The Open Door, Elizabeth Maguire
RECENTLY FINISHED
Strangers on a Train, Patricia Highsmith
Cat's Cradle, Kurt Vonnegut
About my library My home library is undergoing some necessary changes. When completed, my LT account will reflect a combination of books that I own and have read, books that I own and have not read, and books that I have read but do not own.
Homepagehttp://exlibris.typepad.com
Also onMetaxuCafe.com
Membership
LibraryThing Early Reviewers
Real nameSharon
LocationMiddletown, OH
Emailslgoforth
ameritech.net
Account typepublic, lifetime
Connection NewsConnection News
URLs
http://www.librarything.com/profile/Ex_Libris (profile)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/Ex_Libris (library)
Member sinceSep 23, 2005








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posted by tara35 at 12:06 pm (EST) on Sep 11, 2008
although I'm not on your "Members with...Books" list, you are on mine so I come by sometimes to see what's new. I'll also be watching for you and the heyer site.
posted by MusicMom41 at 7:58 pm (EST) on Aug 26, 2008
I've "seen" you around LT and you are on my "Top similiar Libraries" list--I think I recognize you because your user name is the name of one of my favorite books (a book about books) by Anne Fadiman. I've thought several times about leaving a comment telling you that and asking if you've read that book. Have you?
But now I have a more compelling reason for contacting you. Last week I found a Georgette Heyer challenge and I noticed you had signed up. I wanted to join but couldn't figure out how to sing up. Since I was pressed for time I decided to wait until the weekend. Today I went back and I still cant figure out how to sign up.. I click on "sign up here" but where it takes me I can't find any place to sign in. Can you give me a clue what I'm missing so I can look for it? I'm not terribly computer savvy and I often don't notice things in front of my nose--but I really searched.
I'm a huge Heyer fan and just this year decided to start a project to reread all her historical novels. I haven't read them for quite a while and it's time. It will be a lot more fun to do it with others!
posted by MusicMom41 at 9:49 pm (EST) on Aug 24, 2008
posted by lindsacl at 7:45 am (EST) on Aug 20, 2008
posted by teelgee at 12:56 pm (EST) on Jul 31, 2008
posted by lindsacl at 5:39 am (EST) on Jul 31, 2008
posted by jdthloue at 9:45 pm (EST) on Jul 6, 2008
I look forward to perusing your library for library plunders :)
posted by angrystarlyt at 10:49 am (EST) on Jun 19, 2008
posted by Bbexlibris at 11:45 am (EST) on May 23, 2008
Anyway, I just thought I'd say hello while I was passing through. Take care!
-Callie
posted by Violaine at 9:03 pm (EST) on Apr 1, 2008
posted by lisaunger at 7:08 am (EST) on Nov 12, 2007
posted by lisaunger at 12:16 pm (EST) on Nov 8, 2007
What else by Smith would you recommend? I couldn't find a thing in my local Borders last weekend, so I'll likely have to order online.
I'm about to start The Yacoubian Building, which has been highly recommended by a number of LTers. What are you reading these days?
posted by Cariola at 7:33 pm (EST) on Nov 6, 2007
Happy reading!
Deborah
posted by Cariola at 5:19 pm (EST) on Oct 28, 2007
posted by ablachly at 12:14 pm (EST) on Oct 18, 2007
Take care.
posted by CandySchultz at 4:25 pm (EST) on Sep 26, 2007
You're more than welcome. Your library really does look interesting and I'm looking forward to having a detailed nosey through it soon.
Thanks!
Allie
posted by AllieW at 2:34 pm (EST) on Sep 25, 2007
I see we share quite a wide taste in books. I will be getting some for my themed read from the library rather like the Newbery award books I've been reading. Then I tag them with library plus the subject, say Newbery.
I very much enjoyed browsing your blog, really liked the clear, simple and uncluttered layout. The 2007 books read down the side section was also impressive.
Regards
Julie
posted by juliette07 at 11:27 am (EST) on Sep 25, 2007
Thank you for accepting my invitation. To answer your question -- I read Nightwood for a college class in the seventies, so I had to go back and look at it before writing what I think of it. I can see why it fits into an Outmoded Authors category. The language is very descriptive, almost bizarre at times, however, Barnes was daring in her exploration of female sexuality and relationships. I think it is still an important piece of literature.
Patricia Highsmith is another interesting writer I am just getting into. I am reading her biography -- Beautiful Shadow -- fascinating!
posted by abarree at 2:42 pm (EST) on Sep 4, 2007
posted by abarree at 9:46 pm (EST) on Sep 1, 2007
posted by redrabbit at 4:47 pm (EST) on Jun 2, 2007
posted by redrabbit at 10:24 pm (EST) on Apr 16, 2007
Ann
posted by ann163125 at 3:29 am (EST) on Apr 6, 2007
posted by redrabbit at 9:05 am (EST) on Feb 26, 2007
posted by redrabbit at 3:31 pm (EST) on Feb 24, 2007
posted by redrabbit at 11:41 pm (EST) on Feb 2, 2007
posted by redrabbit at 7:52 pm (EST) on Feb 2, 2007
posted by antimuzak at 2:43 am (EST) on Jan 4, 2007
I've read News from Paraguay and liked it...it's quirky and different, which may be why I liked it. I do have Siam but have not read it. Just this morning I saw another of her books at a library sale; one I'd not heard of. I didn't care for the premise of the story and thus didn't pick it up. Currently, i'm trying to finish up the Inheritance of Loss so I can start the reader's copy I got of the forthcoming Lionel Shriver novel (it's 500 pages!).
Did you like We Need to Talk about Kevin? I found it slow at first and certainly disturbing, ultimately I found it to be one of the most powerful books I've read since Handmaid's Tale. I read Joyce Carol Oates' Rape a Love Story not long after...that is also disturbing, the subject matter unpleasant but it's necessary, I think, to shake the reader up, make us think. In that book, it's about justice.
posted by avaland at 5:57 pm (EST) on Oct 27, 2006
posted by avaland at 10:02 pm (EST) on Oct 26, 2006
You asked, did I go to OSU. Ha ha, I certainly "hung out" there quite a bit when I lived in Columbus, but I am a Virginia Tech alumna myself.
Other Southern authors I enjoy: Eudora Welty is a classic one, and a more recent favorite of mine is Robert Morgan (Gap Creek, The Truest Pleasure).
posted by SnoopingBunny at 1:06 pm (EST) on Oct 14, 2006
posted by SnoopingBunny at 11:30 am (EST) on Oct 13, 2006
posted by artymiss at 1:40 pm (EST) on Sep 25, 2006
thank you for joining the Virago Modern Classics group!
Paola :-))
posted by aluvalibri at 12:52 pm (EST) on Sep 19, 2006
posted by artymiss at 12:07 pm (EST) on Sep 19, 2006
posted by bookishbunny at 3:27 pm (EST) on Sep 13, 2006
We are cut from the same cloth, you and me!
:)
posted by annabethblue at 9:33 am (EST) on Jun 15, 2006
posted by dovegreyreader at 11:46 am (EST) on Apr 17, 2006
Thanks
Dana
posted by dkeish at 12:50 pm (EST) on Mar 22, 2006