Random books from twacorbies's library
Have His Carcase by Dorothy L. Sayers
Tropical Classical: Essays from Several Directions (Vintage Departures) by Pico Iyer
The Way of Life: Tao Te Ching: The Classic Translation (Signet Classics (Paperback)) by Lao Tzu
The Journal of Hildegard of Bingen: A Novel by Barbara Lachman
Classics: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions) by Mary Beard
An Oxford Tragedy by J. C. Masterman
Lord Jim (Signet Classics (Paperback)) by Joseph Conrad
Members with twacorbies's books
Member connections
Friends: amillay
Interesting libraries: amillay, avaland, citygirl, clm256poetry, coffeezombie, edwinbcn, enkyklios, fannyprice, maupertuis, nickhoonaloon, palimpsestuous, Storeetllr, sycoraxpine, sylphette, tomcatMurr, tredegartrafalgar, victoriahoyle1, wunderkind
LibraryThing authors: David Weinberger (dweinberger)
RSS Feeds
Member: twacorbies
Library797 books — see library
ReviewedNone so far
Cloudstag cloud, author cloud
TagsNovel (243), UNREAD (214), Mystery (126), NOCOVER (63), Drama (45), Poetry (42), Fantasy (33), Religion (28) — see all tags
Groups15th Century Europe, 18th-19th Century Britain, All the World's a Stage, Ancient History, Anglophiles, Art Books, Asian Fiction & Non-Fiction, Awful Lit., BBC Radio 3 Listeners, Biblical History — show all groups
Favorite authorsLouis-Ferdinand Celine, Nikolai Gogol, Thomas Hardy, Henry Miller, Yukio Mishima, Vladimir Nabokov, V.S. Naipaul, Miguel De Cervantes Saavedra, William Shakespeare (Shared favorites)
About me I reside in San Francisco, that little oasis of sanity on America's West Coast.
Random Quote
"It was from the example of Toledo," writes one historian, "that Europe first learnt to understand that learning knows no frontiers, that it is universal, global, and 'human,' and that it concerns mankind as a whole, without respect of race or religion." - Aristotle's Children by Richard E. Rubenstein
About my library Just Finished
Recent Acquisitions
Now Reading

Stalled

Stats
Books read this year: 19
PSA
Want to bold the text in your profile, or display a cover image? Here are some links to get you started. I would try to explain below, but I'm not sure I could display the html tags without screwing everything up. Hopefully the links will do the trick for you:
Bold and Italic text
LibraryThing member GreyHead shows you how to display a cover image in your profile
Creating a link to another page without displaying the entire link
LocationSan Francisco, CA
Account typepublic, lifetime
URLs
http://www.librarything.com/profile/twacorbies (profile)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/twacorbies (library)
Member sinceAug 27, 2006


Comments from other LibraryThing-ers
(Leave a comment.)
How are you?
posted by clm256poetry at 12:33 pm (EST) on May 6, 2008
E C Bentley - somewhat belatedly, I came across some clarification of Bentley`s motives in writing the Trent books in a book I`m reading at present. I`ve added it to the relevant thread in `Anglophiles`.
Hope you are well, and finally finding some time to read !
Best,
Nick
posted by nickhoonaloon at 11:42 am (EST) on Apr 19, 2008
Cheers,
Maki
posted by makifat at 3:01 am (EST) on Apr 19, 2008
I myself would be in favour of a film combining the two genres - maybe Siamese cats with hypnotic powers battle it out with giant robots for world domination.
Actually, I`m not a big film buff at all, but I am fond of Boris Karloff movies - Im sure he`d have been very much in sympathy with your point of view.
posted by nickhoonaloon at 7:43 am (EST) on Mar 19, 2008
Take care!
Cathy
posted by catrn at 2:51 am (EST) on Mar 10, 2008
posted by catrn at 10:53 am (EST) on Mar 4, 2008
posted by jinxwish at 10:49 am (EST) on Mar 4, 2008
Glad you appreciated my posting re : the TV series UFO and in particular the Siamese cat episode.
I will try to uncover a few more pearls of British broadcasting as we go along.
Cheers,
Nick
posted by nickhoonaloon at 2:26 pm (EST) on Feb 27, 2008
posted by catrn at 7:35 am (EST) on Feb 27, 2008
Cheers!
posted by makifat at 6:33 pm (EST) on Jan 11, 2008
I've looked at a few issues of both magazines, and both are good. I don't regularly read them though, since there are so many books I want to read before anything else. They'd probably have good interviews, maybe new translations of sutras, or book reviews. But I suppose it depends on what you're looking for? If you're interested in an overview of Buddhism or a particular school or types of practice, then books might be a better way to go. Hope that helps some!
Best regards,
Amanda
posted by amillay at 1:23 am (EST) on Dec 14, 2007
Myself, I love a good short story. Mind you, just lately, i`m usually too busy/tired to attempt any particularly challenging reading - lack of time by itself works against me on that.
Thanks also for your kind comments re ; my library. One thing you might be interested in - I`m currently re - reading my collection of Sexton Blake Library titles and listing reviewing them as I go along. As you are a bit of an Anglophile you might find one or two of them interesting.
Be good,
Nick
posted by nickhoonaloon at 6:27 am (EST) on Dec 8, 2007
I`ve posted a message in Anglophiles for general consumption, but thought I`d let you know direct in case you missed it.
Happy reading,
Nick
posted by nickhoonaloon at 11:12 am (EST) on Dec 3, 2007
I like the picture of the "two corbies". Is it Japanese?
Living in China is not too bad. Puts some limitations on book availability, though.
Cheers!
posted by edwinbcn at 6:41 am (EST) on Nov 30, 2007
ah, what a great quote! now i need to add The Decameron to my TBR-
ps: how's the 'smoking less' thing working out for you?
posted by aznstarlette at 8:46 pm (EST) on Nov 26, 2007
posted by amillay at 5:40 pm (EST) on Nov 24, 2007
Thanks also for pointing me to Dylanwolf.
posted by makifat at 4:02 pm (EST) on Nov 22, 2007
Ciao again.
posted by makifat at 10:36 pm (EST) on Nov 14, 2007
If you enjoy Potocki and other such rambling gothic tomes, I would recommend an old favorite: Charles Maturin's wierd and wonderful "Melmoth the Wanderer".
Cheers to you too!
posted by makifat at 8:01 pm (EST) on Nov 14, 2007
Cheers,
Amanda
posted by amillay at 1:04 pm (EST) on Nov 14, 2007
I'm envious that you're in San Francisco--that's probably where I'll end up moving eventually.
posted by amillay at 5:27 pm (EST) on Nov 12, 2007
posted by RedQueen at 9:16 pm (EST) on Nov 9, 2007
posted by amillay at 6:35 pm (EST) on Nov 8, 2007
posted by john257hopper at 8:29 am (EST) on Aug 17, 2007
Email me (cliff@librarything.com) your name and mailing address so we can get it to you. Don’t hesitate to share your thoughts on the book!
Thanks,
Cliff (Tim’s intern)
posted by dinner_bell at 2:02 pm (EST) on Aug 1, 2007
The tip-off on neighborhood was the art project with book arrangement. I briefly spent some time living on Albion.
As much fun as it was when I was twenty-two, I can't say that I'm sorry to have left the city, though. Past a certain point, the suburbs are actually pretty nice.
If you happen to make it over to CL some night, tell the peeps that Jesse says "hi". Though they probably thought of me as the nutty guy that would always sit in the store, I still have fond memories.
posted by Jesse_wiedinmyer at 5:24 pm (EST) on Jul 27, 2007
posted by Jesse_wiedinmyer at 4:15 pm (EST) on Jul 26, 2007
I think the book interest level of a given geographical location tends to vary depending on who you're spending your time with. I've lived here for a couple of years and it's pretty slim in general, but every now and then I come across someone who puts my piddling library to shame. On the flip side of that, I went to college at the University of Oregon in Eugene, which is a pretty literate city. But I would meet people who only read whatever was trendy at the moment rather than for any real love of reading, which is depressing in its own special way. Two sides of the same coin, neither really much better than the other and both prone to their own forms of snobbishness (anti-intellectual or intellectual, I can't tell which grates me more)(not to say I'm exempt from my own bouts of free-range snobbery).
I recommend reading Barth or Barthelme when you get a chance. "The Sot-Weed Factor" is my favorite so far for the former, while Barthelme's "Sixty Stories" is one of my favorite short story collections.
Cheers.
posted by coffeezombie at 7:01 pm (EST) on Jul 18, 2007
But enough of this gay banter. Always happy to see someone who list Nikolai Gogal as a favorite author. Happy cataloging to you.
posted by coffeezombie at 10:39 am (EST) on Jul 18, 2007
It's a traditional taxonomy, popularized in the wake of the "New Wave" of the 1960s:
"SF" meaning "speculative fiction" , to act as the higher-level division to include ALL of the 'speculative' genres:
"SF"
|
science fiction / fantasy / magical realism / slipstream / etc.
so for the edge-case stuff, one needn't agonize too much about "Is this particular story 'science fiction' or 'fantasy'?" or whatever, but you can just toss it into the "SF" bucket.
It sidesteps arguments, esp. time-wasting arguments ("Is science fiction a sub-set of fantasy, or vice versa?")
- cheers.
- Bob
posted by AsYouKnow_Bob at 6:36 pm (EST) on Jul 16, 2007
posted by SigmundFraud at 11:14 am (EST) on Apr 15, 2007
posted by antimuzak at 2:50 am (EST) on Feb 1, 2007
I just wanted to share with you that Anna Netrebko in I PURITANI was the best singing i have heard since Joan Sutherland, perhaps 30 years ago. She was magical, spectacular. I say that having heard many, many sopranos over the last 40 some years.
best,
david
posted by SigmundFraud at 11:39 pm (EST) on Jan 15, 2007
I think the idea of tackling the 12 novels in "A Dance to the Music of Time" seems a tad daunting. I did find out that Anthony Powell's name is supposed to rhyme with "coal" and not "trowel". So something gained there then.
Alan Bennett does wonderful talking-head monologues for ordinary middle class North England characters from the fifties and sixties talking about sponge cakes and antimacassars. I haven't started reading "Untold Stories" yet as I'm currently tackling Mario Vargas Llosa's memoirs entitled "A Fish in Water". I've not had too much free-time to get well stuck into it yet. I've not come across "The War With The Newts", it sounds fascinating. Sometimes offbeat stuff works well, for instance "The Third Policeman" by Flann O'Brien, which, I believe, got a burst of new interest after being mentioned on the TV serial "Lost".
I read somewhere that you had been ill? I hope you are better now.
I had a trip to London over Christmas and after seeing a brilliant matinee performance of "Much Ado About Nothing", I saw a play called "Frost/Nixon" about the interviews David Frost did with Nixon after his resignation. I understand it is transfering from the West End to America. I'd be interested to know how it is received by American audiences. Keep an eye open for it.
Cheers Kevin.
posted by dylanwolf at 2:22 pm (EST) on Jan 14, 2007
Palimpsest(uous) is a wonderful word indeed. Glad you agree. I recently finished "London: City of Disappearances" (edited by Iain Sinclair), a delicious & fascinating read if you enjoy retracing steps across London...
Cheers,
julie
posted by palimpsestuous at 6:50 pm (EST) on Jan 12, 2007
going tonight to see I Puritani with anna netrebko at the Met. I like her and i like the opera.
david
posted by SigmundFraud at 5:53 pm (EST) on Jan 11, 2007
As for my Australia challenge, this is the first year I have embarked on anything like this. I chose Australia because I had the most unread books on my shelf from that nation (I may have had more from Canada, but I have read more Canadian literature, so Australia seemed like more of a venture into the unknown). I am not sure what will come in 2008 - perhaps Japan, Israel or India. There are some nations I would like to explore, but the availability of their literature in translation is limited. I predict that at some point in the future I will have to widen my geographic net slightly (i.e. Arabic literature, Eastern European literature, Portuguese literature encompassing Brazil and Portugal). In the meantime, I find it easiest to find literatures from English-speaking and "Commonwealth" countries, in part because the numerous prizes that cover these regions ensure that their longlists are published in America. Otherwise, I check Wikipedia for lists of authors to explore (in the categories section - "Categories: Australian novelists") and LT tags for the country. You could also post a request for recommendations in LT groups like "What are you reading now?" and "Book Talk." Hmm. That is a good idea, come to think of it. Maybe I will go off and see what people recommend for Australia!
What Scandinavian authors did you end up reading?
posted by sycoraxpine at 12:53 am (EST) on Jan 11, 2007
yes the stage version of THE HISTORY BOYS was awesome. i don't intend to c the movie. where do u live> what r u reading now? i started THE RISE OF CHRISTIANITY like it so far.
Sig
posted by SigmundFraud at 6:10 pm (EST) on Jan 4, 2007
How's "The Good Soldier" going? I haven't read a European author for a time now. I ought to think about finding one out. I lost my copy of Bruno Schulz's "The Street of Crocodiles" when I decimated my library a number of years ago and I have been meaning to get another copy so I can reread what is a very idiosyncratic book. Kafka has always been one of authors I admire most and "The Trial" seems to me to be a book everybody should have read once (and probably while they are young!). As for Iris Murdoch I can't tell whether I've intrigued you or put you off! Saul Bellow I haven't read for quite a time and my paperback copies of Herzog, The Dangling Man, Mr Sammler's Planet etc. have all got annoyingly small print. "The Curious Incident of the Dog" does seem quite popular but I wasn't too impressed. It's an easy read because the narrator suffers from Asperger's Syndrome; consequently the language is simple and lacking in metaphors or irony. "Atonement" is a good book but is split in half and if I'd not read any McEwan I wouldn't start with it. Try out "A Child in Time" or "Enduring Love" first (not "Saturday" it's a stinker). I'm not a big fan of memoirs although I've just bought "Untold Stories" by Alan Bennett (who is probably unheard of in the States). I'm currently reading "the Human Stain" by Philip Roth and noting comparisons with David Mamet's play "Oleanna"?
Cheers Kevin.
posted by dylanwolf at 4:02 pm (EST) on Dec 8, 2006
regards,
O.
NRN (no reply necessary)
posted by Osbaldistone at 7:45 pm (EST) on Nov 15, 2006
Thanks for the reply. I'll look forward to reading "Flaubert's Parrot"; I much enjoyed "A History of the World", especially the riff on Gericault's "Raft of The Medusa" which was featured in some other book or TV programme I've seen recently but I can't remember what. A bad memory is one of the perils of turning fifty I suppose.
I've been pretty busy settling in at a new primary school lately so I haven't had much spare time for browsing the internet or hunkering (one of those brilliant American words we don't have over here in Blighty) down with a book. I'm still reading "On Beauty" by a relatively new English author called Zadie Smith. It's modelled on EM Forster's "Howard's End" and so features two at odds families and it's set on the campus of an American college. Most enjoyable.
I have indeed seen "Ripping Yarns" and remember Michael Palin's joyously funny north country folktales. Great stuff. Just to drive home the futility of football supporting, Wolves lost again today at Hull, my old university city.
Iris Murdoch writes habitually about intellectuals living a closeted life away from the real world. They seem to have some undisclosed source of funding for their sedentary lifestyles and are constantly agonising over art and philosophy. Her books are quite claustrophobic, with slow plots featuring artistic geniuses recovering from mental breakdowns in sanatoriums and the like. When I'm in the mood they make good chunky, immersible reads but I don't think I could manage two on the trot. They tend to be a little more depressing than uplifting but I do find I get sucked in by them. I have been meaning to read "The Sea, The Sea" but haven't got round to it yet although I have read "The Black Prince" and "Message to the Planet".
What American authors should I be picking up on? I know the heavyweights like Roth, Mailer, Bellow, Morrison, Vidal and so on. But what about newcomers? Who is building a literary reputation in the States at the moment? Or have you got any favourites that are likely to be less well-known in Britain?
Cheers, Kevin.
posted by dylanwolf at 2:59 pm (EST) on Nov 11, 2006
Thank you for your comment. It's good to have made contact with someone through Library Thing, especially across the pond. I was out in my local town of Stourbridge this morning and trawled the scattering of charity shops that haunt the high streets in England now that out-of-town shopping centres with free-parking have enticed away all the major chain stores. There I can find second-hand copies of paperbacks and hardbacks to boost my library without causing major damage to my bank balance. Typical prices would range from £1 to £2:50 (between $1 and $4). For instance I got nine books today including Julian Barnes' Flaubert's Parrot, John Banville's Book of Evidence, Zadie Smith's White Teeth and Mikhail Bulgakov's Master and Margarita as well as Gore Vidal, Sebastian Faulks, Pat Barker and Margaret Drabble for under £10! Some of them don't even have chewing gum or dog hairs stuck between the pages! Our ubiquitous chain bookstore in England is Waterstones. OK, but often uninspiring if you're looking for something out of the ordinary (like an assistant who actually reads books).
Cheers Kevin (dylanwolf - bit of a Bob Dylan fan see and also of my local perenially underachieving football (soccer) team whose nickname is the Wolves.)
posted by dylanwolf at 8:41 am (EST) on Oct 27, 2006
As I was walking all alane
I heard twa corbies making a mane:
The tane unto the t'other did say,
"Where sall we gang and dine to-day?"
Could it be from the 1970 Steeleye Span album, "Hark! The Village Wait"?
Have you got any Anglo connections? I stumbled across your username looking at the owners of Ibsen playscripts.
posted by dylanwolf at 3:04 pm (EST) on Oct 20, 2006
posted by mathilde1450 at 11:01 am (EST) on Sep 22, 2006
Leave your comment
Sign up or sign in to leave a comment.