Random books from sarajill's library

Twenty days with Julian & Little Bunny by Papa by Nathaniel Hawthorne

The unknown masterpiece ; and, Gambara by Honoré de Balzac

Variable Cloud (Panther) by Carmen Martin Gaite

Inverted World (New York Review Books Classics) by Christopher Priest

The Children's Travel Journal by Ann Banks

The voyage that never ends : fictions, poems, fragments, letters by Malcolm Lowry

Ice by Vladimir Sorokin

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Member: sarajill

Library569 books — see library

Reviews1 review — see reviews

Cloudstag cloud, author cloud

TagsNew York Review Books (314), NYRB (24), favorite (4), childhood favorite (3), Der Nister (2), Alps (1) — see all tags

GroupsAnglophiles, Editors, Researchers, Whatever, New York Review Books, Proust, Reprint Please!, Underappreciated Books and Authors, Virago Modern Classics

Favorite authorsRuth Rendell (Shared favorites)

Favorite bookstoresBook Culture, BookCourt, Community Bookstore, Freebird Books & Goods, McNally Jackson Booksellers - New York City, Three Lives & Company

Other favoritesBrooklyn Book Festival 2008

About me I'm an editor at NYRB Classics—which explains why I've uploaded every book we publish to my library. People often ask how we find out about the books for the Classics series. Would you be surprised to know that the answer is that we love to hear about "lost" books from librarians, bookstore staff, and passionate readers? We're ready to listen to you, so if you have a suggestion for a book let me know (please note that it must be out of print—Amazon is very helpful in determining this). I hope that LibaryThing can be a forum for disccusing the books in our series with the people who make the series possible.

You can also fill out a title suggestion form here:

http://www.nybooks.com/nyrb/recommend

and recommend away.

Check out the nyrb blog, A Different Stripe

http://nyrb.typepad.com/classics/

and our homepage

www.nyrb.com

About my library Right now it's an amalgam of books I have at work, style guides etc., books published by NYRB, and books from my personal library. I don't know if it's best to throw them all in the pot, but there they are for now!

Homepagehttp://www.nyrb.com

Also onLast.fm

Real nameSara Kramer

LocationNew York, NY

Account typepublic, lifetime

Connection NewsConnection News

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

Member sinceMay 30, 2008

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But, no one *does* know it's a type of yarn, so that's why I had to put it in my description. It's my name on a lot of things and I always get a funny look... Except when I give my email address to yarn store employees, then they just look jealous. :)

Also, I would like to say I am a HUGE fan of NYRB Classics!
Consider me joined. And immediately my interest is peaked by the Edith Wharton New York Stories!

Kirsty
re: Daisy Ashford, you must have at some point seen Ed Park's brilliant piece about "Crippled Detectives", something of an American analogue? Online here: http://www.villagevoice.com/2005-05-10/v... - and I think "Crippled Detectives" is still online somewhere as well.
Hi Sara, thanks for the recommendations. I'll definitely check out Rock Crystal when it comes out and also the Handke memoir. I read a decent amount, but there are a lot of people on LT who read much, much more. I'm always impressed by how many books some people have. Are you reading anything else worth recommending (for NYRB or otherwise) right now?

I haven't read it yet, but Moravia's Woman of Rome is sitting on the shelf - I found it in a used bookstore. It looks like it's not available on Amazon or other online stores, and I know you guys already publish a couple of Moravias now.
Hi Sara,

Thanks for adding me to your interesting libraries. I really enjoy reading your blog! My university bookstore was actually having a sale on NYRBs so I bought six - including Life and Fate, which had been on the to buy list for a while now - and might have to go back for more. I noticed that you'll be publishing some books by Peter Handke in the fall - what do you think of his work? I haven't read anything by him, but his bio on Wikipedia sounded interesting (co-wrote Wings of Desire, one of my favorite films)
Hello Sara,
I read "House of Liars" in Italian, many many years ago, and fell in love with it. I have loved Elsa Morante ever since, to me she is the greatest Italian female writer of all times. What I liked about the book was, beside the beautiful use of the language (I hope it did not get lost in translation), and her skill with words, the extraordinary fact that the book held me captive until the end, and even after, in spite of the fact the plot is very minimal. I will have to re-read it, perhaps in English, to see if I still feel the same about it.
I also recommend "Arturo's Island", another splendid book she wrote.
I will be looking forward to your comments. And, by the way, any chance you might republish "House of Liars"? I would buy it immediately!
:-))
Sara, I just created a group for those who enjoy New York Review Books and I noticed a new name in those who share my books only to discover you are one of the editors and on Librarything. I am sure others who join would welcome you. Here is the link to the group if you would like to join us.

Cheers, Maren

http://www.librarything.com/groups/newyo...
Even though I'm on "no buy" mode, I had to succumb and get Stefan Zweig's THE POST OFFICE GIRL last week. My first NYRB purchases were AN AFRICAN IN GREENLAND (refered to by the New Criterion) and Elizabeth David's indispensable SUMMER COOKING. LIFE AND FATE was reccomended by Patrick Stewart during the Q & A for Macbeth at the Brooklyn Academy of Music this spring.

Once I buy Sciascia's book on the Moro Affair, will that be all I can find of his work in English? Are there other titles in his backlist you will be publishing eventually? Please say "si."

My reccomendations: Henry de Montherlant's THE BACHELORS, Digby Anderson's THE SPECTATOR BOOK OF IMPERATIVE COOKING, and you will have to commission an English translation, but believe me, it's great, and I didn't even have any Kathleen Ferrier CDs before I bought it at the French section of the Strand - LA VOIX DE KATHLEEN FERRIER by Benoît Mailliet Le Penven.




Hello, thanks for the interest! You know, I did once suggest a book to the NYRB Classics, Max Blecher's Aventures dans l'irréalité immédiate (the title of the French translation, he was Romanian). I'm still hoping to see it receive due attention in English some day...
I absolutely love the NYRB Classic Series, and would like to suggest an obscure author for publication. Elizabeth Cullinan wrote some fine short stories for the New Yorker in the 60s and 70s. In fact, I believe she was William Maxwell’s secretary for a time. Her books, all of which are out of print, consist of A Change of Scene, House of Gold, Yellow Roses and the Time of Adam. For some unknown reason, she quit writing in the late 70s, early 80s. The last I heard was that she was teaching at Fordham, but I have no idea if she is still there. I’ve tried to obtain her contact information in the past but have been unsuccessful. Here’s a little background on her from Questia:

Elizabeth Cullinan joins company with other important Irish American writers such as F. Scott Fitzgerald, Brendan Gill, and James T. Farrell. She was born in 1933 to Irish parents and raised in New York City where she attended Catholic schools and, later, Marymount College in Manhattan. Many of her early experiences as an Irish American Catholic inform her writing. In 1955, Cullinan began working for New Yorker magazine as a secretary while at the same time launching her literary career. Her early stories were published in the New Yorker; these were later collected in The Time of Adam (1971). During the 1960s, Cullinan lived for several years in Ireland. Throughout the 1960s–1970s, she continued to publish stories in the New Yorker as well as in other magazines. In 1970, her first novel, House of Gold, appeared; it was the Houghton Mifflin Literary Fellowship Novel for that year. In 1977, Cullinan became a faculty member at the Writers’ Workshop at the University of Iowa, where she taught for one year. A second collection of short stories, Yellow Roses, was published that year. Cullinan’s second novel, A Change of Season, a story of an Irish American woman’s sojourn in Dublin, appeared in 1982.

Elizabeth Cullinan’s most important work, House of Gold, develops the themes that are found throughout the author’s canon. These include the domineering Irish American matriarch, the dutiful daughter, and the strong influence of ritual Catholicism on the Irish American family. Catholic themes and symbols abound in Cullinan’s works and are interconnected, lending her writings a sense of continuity.

I would love to one day see her work in an NYRB edition. I've read all of her books over the past two years and in my own humble opinion, they more than stand the test of time.

Slainte!

Sean
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