Random books from lilyfyrestorm's library
The Fallen Spaceman by Lee Harding
Precursor (Foreigner) by C. J. Cherryh
Their Eyes Were Watching God: A Novel by Zora Neale Hurston
Dancing with the Devil (Nikki & Michael, Book 1) by Keri Arthur
Speaker for the Dead by Orson Scott Card
Night Whispers by Judith McNaught
Girlbomb: A Halfway Homeless Memoir by Janice Erlbaum
Members with lilyfyrestorm's books
Member connections
Friends: azeroth, booknutzz, Danie88, ElizaJane, FionaCat, Heather19, jhedlund, KristinWahlund, laini, lilystarbooks, megkrahl, melissasyd, mstrust, oh2read, redpersephone, RidgewayGirl, saraslibrary, smartalecvt, Smethers, sorchah, stephmo, Thalia, thekoolaidmom, ThomasCWilliams, unbridledbooks, virgingloves, www.thisispk.org
Interesting libraries: AlbinoRhino, AsYouKnow_Bob, BeckySue, bluesalamanders, book_maven, Caramellunacy, DieFledermaus, dora_long, EmilyStJMandel, EnriqueFreeque, Essa, ExVivre, FionaCat, fleela, fyrefly98, infiniteletters, Jenson_AKA_DL, jhedlund, LeumasK, lilysea, lilystarbooks, lorax, mandywritesromance, MarciaRoberts, mckait, melissasyd, MostDisturbingBooks, MrAndrew, nykolaibasket, oakesspalding, parlerodermime, readafew, rglovejoy, richardderus, RidgewayGirl, sarahswampwitch, saraslibrary, stephenandcissa, stephmo, Thalia, trollsdotter, WholeHouseLibrary, witchkitten
LibraryThing authors: Colum McCann (ColumMcCann), Constance Cumbey (Constance_Cumbey), Diane Chamberlain (DianeChamberlain1), Emily St. John Mandel (EmilyStJMandel), Erica Spindler (EricaSpindler), Keith Miller (KeithMiller), Stephanie Klein (StephanieKlein), Steven Spruill (StevenSpruill), Marie Brennan (castlen), Deborah Smith (debbsmith), Diana Gabaldon (diana.gabaldon), Erin Hart (erinhart), Janice Erlbaum (jerlbaum), Lisa Unger (lisaunger), Meg Waite Clayton (megwaiteclayton), Melinda Metz (melindametz), Rae Lindsay (raelindsay), Sara Donati (rosinalippi), Stephen Leigh (sleigh), Suzanne Weyn (suzweyn), Charlotte Boyett-Compo (windlegends)
Member: lilyfyrestorm
CollectionsYour library (5,513), Recommendations (2,609), ebooks (1,364), To read (1,606), Read but unowned (1), Reference (191), Childhood Books (1,214), Mr. Fyrestorm's (31), All collections (5,513)
Reviews252 reviews
Tagsfiction (3,212), read (2,198), small paperback (1,995), unread (1,574), ebook only (1,364), juvenile (892), medium paperback (726), romance (656), hardcover (536), non-fiction (484) — see all tags
Cloudstag cloud, author cloud
GroupsAmazon's Kindle, Anne Rice fans, ARC Junkies, Arr, me hearties!, Atheists review books, Avon Readers, Banned Books, Biographies, Memoirs and Autobiographies, Book Collectors, Bookcases: If You Build/Buy Them, They Will Fill — show all groups
Favorite authorsDouglas Adams, Scott Adams, Natalie Babbitt, Amanda Boyden, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Orson Scott Card, Meg Waite Clayton, Roald Dahl, Robert A. Heinlein, Alice Hoffman, Joshilyn Jackson, Jonathan Kellerman, Elizabeth Lowell, Judith McNaught, Thisbe Nissen, Garth Nix, Chuck Palahniuk, Christopher Pike, Nora Roberts, Robert Silverberg, Zilpha Keatley Snyder, Sue Townsend, Kurt Vonnegut (Shared favorites)
About my libraryI own every book in my catalog. I find, having entered them, that I own 1100+ books that I have not read. I am slowly, but surely, working on reading them...in alphabetical order, no less.
Exceptions: Textbooks, reference material, books belonging to my husband prior to my having met him that I have absolutely no interest in reading.
LilyFyrestorm's Rules for Reading
(last updated 11/1/09)
1. Go to www.librarything.com/catalog/lilyfyresto... Filter for tag: 'unread.' Sort alphabetically by title. Read the first book on the list. Write a review, update tags.
2. Filter for tag: 'partially read.' Choose from list at random or by preference. Read book, write review, update tags. (See exceptions A & B)
3. Repeat step 1.
4. Go to LibraryThing group: Go Review That Book. Check what has been prescribed for you. Read book, write review, update tags. Post link to review on game thread, assign book to TPAM. (The Person Above Me)
5. Repeat from Step 1.
Exception A: If there is a LibraryThing Early Reviewer book available, read that in Step 2.
Exception B: If there is a book that has been loaned from a friend, read that in Step 2.
Exception C: Series Rules. If a prescribed book is part of a series that involves a lot of continuity and it is preferable to read the entire series at once, use alternate steps 5-7. When the series is finished, revert to regular rules.
Alternate Step 5: Repeat Step 1.
Alternate Step 6: Read the next book in the series.
Alternate Step 7: Repeat from Step 1.
Who says I'm not OCD?
Also onBookMooch, Facebook, MySpace, PaperBackSwap
Membership
LibraryThing Early Reviewers/Member Giveaway
LocationBrainerd, MN
Emailpsyche136
yahoo.com
Account typepublic, lifetime
Connection NewsConnection News
URLs
http://www.librarything.com/profile/lilyfyrestorm (profile)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/lilyfyrestorm (library)
Common KnowledgeSeries (1078), Awards (417), Characters (11811), Places (1874)
Member sinceAug 23, 2007




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posted by redpersephone at 3:49 am (EST) on Oct 11, 2009
Cheers, see you 'round the Thing,
RMD
posted by richardderus at 10:57 pm (EST) on Aug 18, 2009
http://christophertusa.com/
Thanks,
Chris
posted by cmtusa at 10:08 am (EST) on Jul 15, 2009
You know I'm old school purist myself (I've never seen an e-book, or a kindle, & don't expect to anytime soon) but a book's a book, whether it's bound or electronic, so go for it! I can't believe you've input over 1M e-books & yet you're only in the "c's".
Wow. You may be pushing, what?, 10M books in your library by the time you're through? You'll be up there in the top 10 libraries for sure. Sweet!
The quest was fun. I didn't finish, but several others did. The group has now morphed into a sort of group read club. Here's a link if you're interested. Are next read, beginning Labor Day, is Bulgakov's The Master & Margarita. http://www.librarything.com/groups/thequ...
Take 'er easy,
Brent
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 8:26 pm (EST) on Jul 14, 2009
Just gotta say, I'm in awe of how much you add and how fast you add, books to your library...Impressive indeed!
Best,
Brent
posted by EnriqueFreeque at 11:11 pm (EST) on Jul 12, 2009
That is what brought me here..
Then I find that you not only have the absolute best profile pic on the site, but you have an amazing library!
kath
posted by mckait at 8:22 am (EST) on Jun 12, 2009
posted by redpersephone at 1:47 pm (EST) on Jun 8, 2009
posted by redpersephone at 8:28 pm (EST) on Jun 6, 2009
Is pretty much the same thing, a "radio wave" ie the thing your radio recieves, is electric field radiation just like Xrays, light, heat, etc. All of these are changes in polarity of the field at different frequencies. In Radio the polarity much much less frequently than in light - and hence has a longer wavelength. Essentially, information / sound is converted into changes in electric field polarity, which your radio recieves and reconverts back inot sound.
Wiki probably has a clearer explanation!
'Fox.
posted by reading_fox at 12:41 pm (EST) on Jun 6, 2009
"For example, my concept of the word ‘frequency’ has to do with the number of times a certain thing occurs, i.e. the frequency with which I am able to wear jeans to work. In physics, frequency apparently refers to the lengths of waves and oscillations in electric currents"
If you imagine a wave, with a peak and a trough, then physics "frequency" is the how many times a second a peak of wave passes by. In electric fields the polarity changes, from + to 0 to - and back again, in a smooth curve. The peak of the wave is the point of greatest + .This is related to how far apart the peaks are - wavelength.
Hope this helps.
Keep working on that TBR pile!
'Fox.
posted by reading_fox at 4:32 am (EST) on Jun 5, 2009
Wow! I thought I had a big tbr stack at 300!! You've got me beat. I feel so much better LOL! My husband thinks I've completely lost it for having so many books.
Smiles :-)
posted by Jenson_AKA_DL at 7:33 am (EST) on May 18, 2009
posted by satchmo77 at 8:59 am (EST) on May 6, 2009
posted by satchmo77 at 11:53 am (EST) on May 5, 2009
posted by EmilyStJMandel at 6:28 pm (EST) on Apr 25, 2009
posted by EmilyStJMandel at 12:34 am (EST) on Apr 25, 2009
http://www.librarything.com/profile/Rubb...
posted by infiniteletters at 5:04 pm (EST) on Apr 2, 2009
posted by redpersephone at 1:46 pm (EST) on Mar 29, 2009
posted by nmhale at 12:56 pm (EST) on Mar 19, 2009
posted by infiniteletters at 12:18 am (EST) on Feb 26, 2009
posted by lydiasbooks at 12:03 am (EST) on Dec 11, 2008
I'm trying to rebuild my Sweet Valley collection, too (well, a lot of the 80's series), because I got rid of most of them as a teen. I know what you mean about having to pay for them all over again; I guess that's why I buy most of them used; they're cheaper that way.
I don't have an "unread" tag, because I guestimate my TBR pile by taking my overall total (2,322 right now) and subtracting my "read" books (726), so I'm roughly at 1,596 books to read (though there are probably a couple hundred I actually have read and don't remember, mainly kids books). Sounds daunting, huh? That should keep me busy for a few years. ;)
I've been trying to read Anne Rice's vampire chronicles for the past 10 years but just haven't gotten into them for some reason. Strange, since I love vampires. I'll probably try "Interview..." again in 2009. We'll see. :) And, yes, I love the Taltos. All of her characters were amazing in that series. I can't wait to see how the two series work themselves together.
posted by saraslibrary at 12:17 am (EST) on Dec 8, 2008
LOL! XD Omg, I can totally relate. Even though I'm an atheist, I have several books on Wicca, the occult, and erotica my family would totally freak over (even though they're certain I'm alrady going to hell for not believing in a--well, their--god). And seriously, your mother burned books?? That's outrageous. :o
Some of my favorite authors/books that we both share are V. C. Andrews (yes, big guilty pleasure there!), Anne Rice (especially her erotic and witch series--btw, I saw you read the latter series this year; did you like it?), Judy Blume, Roald Dahl, oddly enough "The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe" by C. S. Lewis (I'm still trying to finish the sequels, though), Christopher Pike ("Remember Me" is probably still my all-time fave since it was my first), John Saul, "Charlotte's Web" by E. B. White (it probably had some subconscious sway in my later becoming a vegan), etc. Plus we share a buttload of Baby-sitters Club books. :) Actually, instead of listing every single book, I'll make my library public for a week or so, so you can peruse through it if you want.
posted by saraslibrary at 11:26 pm (EST) on Dec 6, 2008
200? Ok, now I'm speechless! :D I've maybe read 80 this year.
I made my library private because I didn't want my family seeing some books I own. It'll be great when LT finally allows members to block certain books from the public. Anyway, you're my #8 for most-shared books (we have 296 in common); but I expect that number will increases as I add more of my library online. :)
posted by saraslibrary at 1:44 pm (EST) on Dec 6, 2008
posted by saraslibrary at 10:51 pm (EST) on Dec 5, 2008
Since recently, there is an enneagram group.
Maybe you could consider to take a look?
http://www.librarything.com/groups/ennea...
You would be more than welcome.
Regards,
Richard
posted by Richard. at 2:49 am (EST) on Oct 25, 2008
posted by booknutzz at 3:23 pm (EST) on Aug 20, 2008
posted by mtilleman07 at 11:58 am (EST) on Aug 20, 2008
Clara (booknutzz)
posted by booknutzz at 10:43 pm (EST) on Aug 19, 2008
I hope you enjoy it!
posted by jibrailis at 7:16 pm (EST) on Aug 14, 2008
posted by lilysea at 6:05 pm (EST) on Aug 12, 2008
posted by bluetyson at 9:37 pm (EST) on Aug 4, 2008
A suggestion: Give "The Pillars of the Earth" by Ken Follett a chance.
Ken Follett isn't my kind of writer either, but the book was strongly recommended to me by someone I met at a party, who said he wasn't her kind of writer, but that it was a departure from his usual stuff and she had so enjoyed it. So I read it, and it was a "ripping yarn", un-put-downable.
Mind you, if you have so many books in your library that you haven't read yet...
In case you're wondering, I ended up at your site because of the book "What Your Handwriting Reveals", which only a few of us share.
Don't drop that book in the water now!
posted by sainsborough at 6:58 pm (EST) on Aug 2, 2008
Have fun with Tennessee Williams - and check out Gore Vidal's essay on Williams, it's in his new collected essays.
posted by mtilleman07 at 11:38 pm (EST) on Jul 6, 2008
posted by ElizaJane at 12:13 am (EST) on Jun 23, 2008
posted by Arctic-Stranger at 7:43 pm (EST) on Jun 2, 2008
The series order for the Grace Smith mystery series is...
Who Killed Marilyn Monroe
JFK is Missing
Don't Mess with Mrs. In-Between
Barking!
Sick as a Parrot
Cue the Easter Bunny
Danielle
posted by dbolahood at 8:44 am (EST) on Jun 1, 2008
posted by jennu at 4:33 pm (EST) on May 29, 2008
posted by laini at 3:22 pm (EST) on May 28, 2008
posted by klarusu at 9:52 am (EST) on May 28, 2008
posted by jhedlund at 4:09 pm (EST) on May 27, 2008
Thanks for adding me to your interesting libraries.
Alana
posted by Caramellunacy at 12:01 pm (EST) on May 19, 2008
Laini
posted by laini at 10:53 am (EST) on May 16, 2008
posted by mebrock at 3:56 pm (EST) on May 15, 2008
posted by thekoolaidmom at 3:02 pm (EST) on May 7, 2008
posted by melissasyd at 7:25 pm (EST) on Apr 18, 2008
Brave photo on your profile :)
posted by melissasyd at 8:20 pm (EST) on Apr 17, 2008
It's like complaining that your wine cellar's full or your children and/or cats are too loved. Enjoy your embarrassment of riches!
RidgewayGirl
posted by RidgewayGirl at 3:41 pm (EST) on Apr 16, 2008
posted by readafew at 4:44 pm (EST) on Apr 15, 2008
posted by thekoolaidmom at 12:53 pm (EST) on Apr 15, 2008
posted by thekoolaidmom at 11:37 am (EST) on Apr 15, 2008
Good luck on your reading project. BookMooch can't be very helpful. I had a similar situation but seven years in a non-english speaking country helped with that enormously! I even read some of my husband's before-he-met-me science fiction (still not a fan, but an informed one - makes it easier to make fun of).
RidgewayGirl
Bookmooch userid: kayhardtmann
posted by RidgewayGirl at 4:38 pm (EST) on Apr 10, 2008
posted by fannyprice at 6:38 pm (EST) on Apr 8, 2008
- Bob
posted by AsYouKnow_Bob at 12:59 pm (EST) on Apr 8, 2008
posted by stephmo at 6:33 pm (EST) on Apr 5, 2008
I'm going to have to start thinking about appropriate literary names for the next cats in my life (hopefully not for a few years) so that I'm not caught by surprise like I was last August. Stray Cat 1 and Stray Cat 2 got named Scooter and Bandit by the family. They weren't supposed to be keepers, but you know how kittens worm their way into your heart.
posted by trollsdotter at 3:36 pm (EST) on Apr 5, 2008
I don't think that LT will ever be providing physical book dimensions. Not even bibliographies do that. The best you'll find is that some catalogs (like Oak Knoll Books - provides format -- height nomenclature; or Wessel & Lieberman, who will provide the format, and sometimes height and spine-to-fore-edge dimensions, plus the number of pages in the book, but not the front-to-back dimension). I'm afraid it's going to be a matter of getting out a ruler and doing it by hand. You don't even have to take the book off the shelf -- just line up the nearest inch to one edge and read the mark at the other. I measure down to the sixteenth of an inch, but that's the OCD in me. I'm still maintaining the separate spreadsheet,
You can also download your LT catalog, you know. Then just delete the columns you don't want and add the front-to-back dimension column.
Regards,
Mike
WholeHouseLibrary
posted by WholeHouseLibrary at 3:26 pm (EST) on Apr 4, 2008
posted by FionaCat at 10:01 pm (EST) on Apr 3, 2008
I clicked on your 'calculate shelf space' topic in Site Talk, and found you deleted your own message.
Were you wanting someone else to get the ball rolling, or did you withdraw your question for other reasons?
Parallel to LT, I've got my books cataloged in a spreadsheet where I track (among 2 dozen other bits of information), the dimensions and weight of each book. Some would say I suffer from a bit of OCD. Fools, I say; I revel in it!
I'm able to tell how many feet/inches of specify-genre-here books I've got. Another spreadsheet contains the dimensions of all the book-bearing surfaces we've got in the house, and how many linear feet I have left. Is that what your question may have been about?
Regards,
Mike
WholeHouseLibrary
posted by WholeHouseLibrary at 5:39 pm (EST) on Apr 3, 2008
posted by oh2read at 5:23 pm (EST) on Mar 23, 2008
posted by shuttsie at 9:21 pm (EST) on Feb 21, 2008
posted by Essa at 1:12 am (EST) on Jan 29, 2008
Anyway I have added you to my 'interesting libraries' list. I'm fascinated by all the young adult titles which resonated with me, not to mention the very many very OLD books you have (The Reincarnation of Peter Proud? Wow, I remember when they made that into a movie!), in addition to being the only other person I have encountered who has read Mandarin Orange Sunday. That made me laugh! I loved that book in the '80s but it's very dated now. Funny how our tastes change as we get older, isn't it!
So, just dropping by. Write if you would like!
Take care,
~~~Cyn (aka TheScrappyCat)
posted by TheScrappyCat at 7:49 pm (EST) on Jan 25, 2008
posted by saraslibrary at 2:25 pm (EST) on Jan 14, 2008
posted by jimroberts at 5:47 am (EST) on Jan 3, 2008