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

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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 Globallyshow 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

Emailslgoforthameritech.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

Leave a comment

Thanks for adding me to your interesting libraries list! I really enjoyed the new Atkinson book you've just added!
Thanks, Ex_Libris! I've joined. Unfortunately I won't be able to post any reviews there because I don't have a google blog. I do have a blog, though, so I will post what I've read and as soon as I learn how, I will leave a ling to my blog. My son needs to teach me how to make links and since this is the start of a new teaching year we are both rather swamped right now.

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.
Hi Ex_Libris

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!
I just noticed on my homepage that you recently rated The Jungle 4 stars. I had to chuckle, since my 15yo daughter just finished this book as part of her summer reading requirement. She was less than enthusiastic about it, especially as compared to some of the other books on her summer reading list, like Water for Elephants. She found the writing style difficult, or in the words of a teenager, "boring." But then on your profile page I saw you tackled this as an audio book -- I wonder if that was any easier?
Well back at ya'! I already have you marked as interesting library, so I was stalking you before the Orange group! ;o)
Hello ... this is Laura, from the new Orange Prize Yahoo group. Just wanted to identify myself here on LT.
yes i have read the Djuna Barnes biography...twice in fact since there is so much info there-and it's quite well-written...give it a try...then try NIGHTWOOD...or maybe not...that is a hard book to get into...i'm still not sure what it is ABOUT...duh
I am indeed a big Rushdie fan. The Enchantress of Florence, however, was really different than the rest of his works; his preoccupation with postcoloniality is more muted, or maybe just allegorized a lot more in this book. But I think his writing in all forms is just delightful.
I look forward to perusing your library for library plunders :)
Yes, I am happy to find more of my book blogger friends on here!! you have so many books in your librarything. I have not gotten all mine on there...did you use the scanner???? I am wondering about it!
Heya. I found your page completely at random (was poking through some of the old Early Revier books to add to my Amazon wishlist) and when I clicked on your name, I saw that we share a hometown in common. While I no longer reside in M-town, I visit often. Small world! :)

Anyway, I just thought I'd say hello while I was passing through. Take care!

-Callie
Thanks for your comment. I hope you enjoy the books and look forward to talking soon!
Thanks for your friendship! I look forward to checking out your books and hope you enjoy mine.
Hi, Sharon. I finally got to the end of The Accidental. It took a little extra effort, but it was worth it. I admit that when I had finished it, I felt totally confused, so I went back and reread the last 80 pages or so to sort it out in my mind. Ultimately, I loved it, especially the ending. Once Amber is gone, everything gets worse--which is better! Life is like that sometimes . . . I was totally blown away by the chapter in which Amber is telling her "life story"--a series of lies made up from movies, TV, songs, and the news. "I was born free, I've had the time of my life and for all we know I'm going to live forever."

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?
Hi, Sharon. I'm about halfway through The Accidental. I wasn't too sure if I was going to like it, but it has certainly grabbed me. I'm not a big fan of the adolescent narrator, so the first section, narrated by 13-year old Astrid, put me off a bit, but the next one (17-year old Magnus) sucked me right in. In reading some other readers' comments, I see that a lot of people are disturbed by the fact that they don't learn more about the background of Amber, the mysterious visitor who changes the lives of the Smart facmily members. So far, that's not bothering me, and I doubt that it will. I'm not a reader who needs all the ends neatly tied up. Have you read the book yet?

Happy reading!

Deborah
Well, I just talked to Unbridled again yesterday, and they're looking into it. So sorry about that delay!
That is only a small part of my library in the photo. Obviously I think you have some very interesting books also. This Library Thing lets one be a book voyeur. You can troll through people's books which is a great deal of fun for a book lover.

Take care.
Hi Sharon,

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
Hi Sharon - yes I love LT and like you I love being surrounded by books. Joining LT got me into the whole virtual world of challenges and sharing thoughts about reading. The Novel Challenge group has given me loads of inspiration and I am planning my next ones already!
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
Hi Sharon,
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!
Hi Sharon -- You have a great library! I have just started putting my books in LibraryThing but I see we share 60 titles. I also like Joyce Carol Oates, the Brontes, Margaret Mitchell, Amy Tan, P.D. James, Kurt Vonnegut and Charles Dickens. I just joined BookMooch, too.
Hi!! I picked up The Accidental to read this week, and tore through it-- finished it maybe two minutes ago. What a FANTASTIC read, thank you for recommending it to me! The end left me a little confused-- care to discuss?
Hey! I happened to luck upon an Ali Smith book (The Accidental) at Border's, on their 3-for-2 table. I've ALREADY learned a new word: "solipsistic." :D Thank you for the recommendation... see you in a month!
Hi there! I never thought for looking for friends here. I'm only logging those books I actually read. So my back catalogue won't be here. This is going to be my current record as it were. Have a wonderful Easter.

Ann
I've never found any Saunders books at discount stores, and I've looked. Good luck with that. You're always welcome to borrow mine if you want a taste before you order (I know, I know)! :)
I am waist-deep into The Falls by JCO and I am absolutely enamored of the book. Thank you so much for sparking me to read it... god knows how long this beauty would have been ignored on my shelf! You're a good influence on me... ;)
I have not read the Flannery O'Connor collection yet, but I was just deciding what to start tonight (since I finished the Vonnegut). I guess that's what I'll pick up next! Let me know when you get the Vonnegut-- can't wait to hear what you think of it.
Hi Ex_Libris! This is Erica, from the Northern Cincinnati Book Club! I'm trying to figure out who's who on LibraryThing... and just saying hi! I added you to my watch list... I aspire to the day when I can have 2k+ books in my catalog!
Thanks for your message Ex-Libris, but you can indeed listen to Radio 3 - by visiting the BBC Radio 3 website and using either the streaming media service or the "Listen Again" service. I'll put details on the group page.
Ha! Then you are like me, collecting Jane Urquhart books but not reading them! 2007 is the year!
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.
Hi, I see we share quite a bit, including several Jane Urquhart novels. Difference is, I haven't read mine (I have been collecting her over the years with the intent to read her...). Any suggestions which one to start with?
I find Siddons and Frank to be very similar in writing style and subject, so I'm betting you, too, would likely enjoy both.

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).
I saw your post in the Deep South group, and thought I'd say hello. We share some books in common, as well as some places. I currently live in North Carolina, but I'm from Virginia (lived in Roanoke, Blacksburg and Radford) and moved to Ohio (Columbus) right after college for a couple of years. As for books: I have a lot of Anne Rivers Siddons and Dorothea Benton Frank, too. They make great beach reads, don't they? I see you have E.L. Doctorow's City of God, a Novel. I keep thinking about reading that one. Did you enjoy it?
Hi again, I really enjoyed Marjory Fleming - far more than I was expecting to. I was more interested in Marjory (why I got the book) than in Oriel Malet but now I'm interested in OM too. I found it very intense, and evocative of a child's view of the world. I will read it again.
Sharon,
thank you for joining the Virago Modern Classics group!

Paola :-))
Hi there. I just popped in after reading your comment on the Virago group. We certainly share a lot of books! What did you make of Oriel Malet's 'Marjory Fleming'? I was fascinated by it.
Yay! Another Tin-Houser. Welcome!
"literary fiction, classic fiction, mysteries, and non-fiction (primarily history and biographies)." and music, and Ohio...

We are cut from the same cloth, you and me!

:)
I've done our LP collection today, it's been like a trawl through a past life! And yes Neil Young!
Hi Sharon, Thanks for your comments on my profile page. We do share a lot of books in common! I am currently reading The Once and Future King by T.H. White, which is actually really good! For some reason, I thought it was more of a children's book but it isn't at all. Highly recommended. I am saving Team of Rivals for this summer when I have to take a couple of business trips. I like to make sure I always have a good book for a long trip. So you are into Joyce Carol Oates. I read Bellefleur (I think the spelling is correct) years ago. Can you recommend any of her others?
Thanks

Dana
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