Losowo wybrane książki z biblioteki SaintSunniva
Farmer Boy autorstwa Laura Ingalls Wilder
The Ballad of the White Horse autorstwa G. K. Chesterton
Trail and Timberline (No. 663 March 1974) autorstwa Kaye E. Bache
Sea Pup autorstwa Archie Binns
Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr: their lives, their times, their duel (Landmark Books) autorstwa Anna Erskine Crouse
By Secret Railway autorstwa Enid La Monte Meadowcroft
Encyclopedia of World Geography autorstwa Graham Bateman
Członkowie z książkami SaintSunniva
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Interesujące biblioteki: aninha, annamorphic, bookwormless, FlanneryOConnor, Hamburgerclan, HCHLibrary, lillesmilla, muumi, NefretEmerson, principii, Psierut, Sasha_Doll, Schmerguls, shauneeh, Shinwa, suslyn, tarpfarmer, WalkerPercy
Autorzy LibraryThing: Amy Stewart (AmyStewart), Joan Holub (JoanHolub), Kenn Amdahl (KennAmdahl), maureen wittmann (mwittlans), Vicki Cobb (vickicobb)
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Recenzje książek SaintSunniva, wyłączając recenzje autorstwa SaintSunniva
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Członek: SaintSunniva
ZbioryTwoja biblioteka (3,594), Book Club (7), Norway (51), MMW (2), JTW (1), ADW (4), Given Away but remembered fondly (3), Lost Books (5), SDW (1), MREWs (91), MRW (2), Lista życzeń (1), Ulubione (31), Wszystkie zbiory (3,610)
Recenzje30 recenzji
TagiChildren's (491), Catholic (357), ultb (322), YA (221), Author-Illustrator (199), Children's Fiction (196), England (189), Biography (177), Fiction (165), 19th Century (157) — zobacz wszystkie tagi
Chmurychmura tagów, chmura autorów
GrupyAll Books Africa, Arab, North African and Middle Eastern Literature, Best in Children's Books Collectors' Group, Bestsellers over the Years, Book Care and Repair, British & Irish Children's Fiction, Canadian History for Canadian Kids, Cathedrals, Catholic Homeschoolers, Catholic literature, family & homeschool — zobacz wszystkie grupy
Ulubieni autorzyPaul Berna, Wilfrid S. Bronson, Geraldine Brooks, Elizabeth Coatsworth, Rumer Godden, René Goscinny, Paula Grogger, Tony Horwitz, Takashi Nagai, Irène Némirovsky, Flannery O'Connor, Walker Percy, Nevil Shute, Aleksandr Soljenitsin, Hilda Van Stockum, Angela Thirkell, Philip Turner, Sigrid Undset, Sheldon Vanauken (Współdzielone ulubione)
O mnieI really love my books, and cataloging them has lead to some interesting discoveries. Mainly, the number of books which are unique to my collection is staggering, or does everyone think that, and notice the same thing with their libraries, I wonder? Occasionally I'll check on some of these unique treasures, to see if maybe another LTer has listed it. I've collected most of my books in the last fifteen years, as a result of teaching my kids myself, and wanting them to have good books around. I do have some older books from my childhood, that I am thrilled I still have for their own sakes, and to share with my children.
O mojej biblioteceLots of Catholic books, or with the Catholic tag. Lots of children's vintage fiction and non-fiction "living books", illustrated by inspired illustrators. I have quite a few books of Norwegian folk tales, crafts, and customs; books by Norwegian authors, mainly Sigrid Undset. Lots of English village novels by authors like Miss Read, Angela Thirkell, Margery Sharp, and Rumer Godden, and my husband's Patrick O'Brien's. Now I am going through my books yet again, to find the best of the best, and pass on the rest, so my collection will not be so unweildy, as in taking over the house.
LokalizacjaWest of the Mississippi
Typ kontapubliczne, dożywotnie
Wiadomości z połączeńWiadomości z połączeń
Adresy URL
http://www.librarything.com/profile/SaintSunniva (profil)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/SaintSunniva (biblioteka)
Wiedza ogólnaSeria (387), Nagrody (181), Postacie (2972), Miejsca (662)
Zarejestrowany odJun 28, 2006
Ostatnia aktywność
SaintSunniva dodał/-a:THE ARKANSAW BEAR, A TALE OF FANCIFUL ADVENTURE autorstwa ALBERT BIGELOW PAINE |









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I really liked Fire in the Blood too. It's a different kind of story from Suite Francaise, but I really like how it's told, with an understated sense of mystery. And when I read about Madeleine's family in Suite Francaise, I thought about Fire in the Blood - you can sort of see another story forming in the story-writing process.
wysłany przez Kryseis o 8:26 pm (EST) dnia Sep 13, 2009
I just read China Court by Rumer Godden and time in that book (or maybe I should say in that house) seems to all happen at once. I liked that effect, too.
wysłany przez muumi o 6:55 pm (EST) dnia Sep 7, 2009
Besides, if I actually delete the books my reviews disappear. I also wonder, does LT keep the covers if you added a book and cover and then delete the book? What if it's the only copy? (Admittedly, in that case one might want to keep it for the scarcity alone - one out of how many books on LT? I went to find that number and discovered that I can't get to LT's own homepage, as long as I am logged in it insists on sending me to my own LT home.)
wysłany przez muumi o 8:26 am (EST) dnia Sep 7, 2009
Maren, her daughter died just before wwII, and Anders her beloved eldest son was one of the first norwegian soldiers to die during the same war. She was never close to her second son, Hans Undset Svarstad. He married Christianne Neraas in 1951, 2 years after her death. (Christianne had acted as a kind of secretary to the PR department for the norwegian political nazi party, and there was no lost love between them). I do not know of any decendant from the pair - Bjerkebæk S.U´s home, went first to Hans, then to her daughter-in-law, and then to one of her nieses (sister´s daughter) who eventually sold the place to the norwegian state in 1983. In 1997 the cultural department started a restauration of both houses and the garden (she was a keen gardener, and loved house plants), and it is now a museum. (www.maihaugen.no/en/bjerkebak/) M.
wysłany przez Mikalina o 2:36 am (EST) dnia Aug 30, 2009
Skille´s book is a biography, i.e. it does not mix in hidden literary criticism. As far as the chronology of Undsets life goes - it is good, and I was at least left in awe, wondering how she had time to write at all, given the wide responsibilities she took to be hers. (she wrote mostly at night). I enjoyed the book! I was touched by the relationship to her daughter, and pleased that the difficult relationship to her artist husband was treated neither sentimentally nor sensationally.
(If you like Undsets novels, you should try her essays, she is razor sharp. Her themes ar catholicism, history and politics. Her battle (newspaper debate) with Knut Hamsun (another Nobel prize winner) in the late 20ties and through the 30ties is famous. She started to delineate nazism for what it was before the ideology had got a name anyone new of).
Enjoy your new book! Mikalina
wysłany przez Mikalina o 5:13 am (EST) dnia Aug 28, 2009
wysłany przez lernerarchives o 8:26 am (EST) dnia Jul 28, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 11:41 pm (EST) dnia Jul 26, 2009
wysłany przez Toolroomtrustee o 12:19 pm (EST) dnia Jul 22, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 11:42 pm (EST) dnia Jul 18, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 7:55 am (EST) dnia Jun 29, 2009
Another Early Reviewer book I didn't get was at the Rome airport bookstore too. They also had Dewey (the cat), I was sorry afterwards that I didn't buy that one because the other book I had bought turned out to be a re-issue of a book I had read under another title. However, I didn't own it already and it was a good book, so I didn't mind much aside from the fact that it wasn't a NEW book to read on the plane!
China Witness (which I'm barely into, but is excellent) is from a large, indie French bookstore in Montreal, as is Stolen Innocence. We left for Montreal 32 hours after we got home... 12 hours on the train each way... need books... although I mostly knitted and chatted with my husband and looked out the window, there's still a good amount of reading time.
The rest of my recent additions are mostly secondhand thrift store or library sale finds which I've finally decided not to sell. Flying O'Flynn was from the library stacks (Historical Collection, Reference Loan Only) in a big city library -- !!! How could they toss it?! I decided to keep it since it is a 1958 Canadian children's fantasy, rather scarce, and decidedly undervalued on the internet... not to mention it's an enjoyable story... and then found that the only other copy on LT is in the collection of Harry_Vincent whom we both know (I believe I Go By Sea was probably his, if you got it recently). It's a small world.
wysłany przez muumi o 4:57 pm (EST) dnia Jun 24, 2009
My using multiple tags to make sure my collections would appear properly when I called them up did contribute to my coveted position in the Top 50 Taggers. I'm probably still there although I have slowed down adding books; I was about #25 last time I checked. :)
I see 5 of the last 6 books you added are books we share. And I'm STILL not in your top 10 similar libraries! I must need to buy more books!
wysłany przez muumi o 5:44 pm (EST) dnia Jun 23, 2009
Collections-by-owner is a good idea. I might do collections-by-room? I have those tagged already. :)
wysłany przez muumi o 6:08 am (EST) dnia Jun 18, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 7:46 am (EST) dnia Jun 3, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 5:06 am (EST) dnia Jun 2, 2009
Let me know about Far Pavilions. I see it around all the time & wonder. It looks pretty good but a huge time committment to read.
wysłany przez muumi o 12:47 pm (EST) dnia Jun 1, 2009
You were so enthusiastic about The Door in the Grimming that I thought I should try to find a copy. So far I am about halfway through it and I find it rather confusing because a lot of the time I can't figure out what is really going on. However, a lot of people make the same complaint about Charles Williams who is one of my three favourite authors, so it can't be that I am entirely obtuse. There is just something about the way the author (or translator?) expresses things that my mind doesn't seem to fasten upon. Examples: is the oldest son legitimate, was she raped, or what? What on earth was happening with the old witch and the priest?
I should get more specific later, when I get home to the book again. I am in Italy now.
wysłany przez muumi o 2:27 pm (EST) dnia May 30, 2009
Glad you liked the reviews. I usually use the comments space for provenance ("Bookswapped from such and such a person") but several times recently have used it for my impressions that I didn't really have time to put into well-reasoned prose to make a proper review. So some of my reviews are still lurking. :)
wysłany przez muumi o 4:50 pm (EST) dnia May 19, 2009
wysłany przez alivanmom o 1:15 pm (EST) dnia May 15, 2009
wysłany przez alivanmom o 1:14 pm (EST) dnia May 15, 2009
wysłany przez slemmons o 10:19 pm (EST) dnia Apr 19, 2009
wysłany przez avarberg o 1:29 pm (EST) dnia Apr 17, 2009
wysłany przez tuckerresearch o 12:30 am (EST) dnia Apr 7, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 11:37 pm (EST) dnia Apr 5, 2009
wysłany przez ArmchairWarrior o 1:55 pm (EST) dnia Mar 29, 2009
And maybe something to do with her umm, ample figure.;)
wysłany przez muumi o 12:03 am (EST) dnia Mar 13, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 8:20 am (EST) dnia Mar 12, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 4:27 pm (EST) dnia Mar 11, 2009
And speaking of typos, I derived my screen name from an attempt to sign an email to one of my daughters "Mummy" -- !
wysłany przez muumi o 8:28 am (EST) dnia Mar 11, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 2:46 pm (EST) dnia Mar 10, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 12:17 am (EST) dnia Mar 10, 2009
wysłany przez allthesedarnbooks o 11:26 pm (EST) dnia Mar 9, 2009
wysłany przez allthesedarnbooks o 11:11 pm (EST) dnia Mar 9, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 9:33 pm (EST) dnia Mar 9, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 8:53 am (EST) dnia Mar 8, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 3:43 pm (EST) dnia Mar 7, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 8:08 pm (EST) dnia Mar 4, 2009
It could well be, as you suggest, that E.G. had in mind King Arthur's Glastonbury Tor as it might have been if a Cathedral town had grown up at the ancient site of the Abbey. It has different and humbler legends (founded by a pious swineherd and his miraculous pigs iirc) but it's quite a magical place nonetheless.
wysłany przez muumi o 8:06 pm (EST) dnia Mar 4, 2009
Right, of course it's not the "same" Dean in the books b/c DW is Ely and the C of B three are Torminster. But Torminster is a made-up name, isn't it? Is it modelled on a real city? Perhaps Ely?
wysłany przez muumi o 9:43 am (EST) dnia Mar 4, 2009
Dean's Watch is pretty clearly Victorian, probably early or mid, but like many of EG's juvenile books, takes place in a somewhat timeless environment. I'm pretty sure that Towers in the Mist is much, much earlier -- Elizabethan even?? Am I thinking of the right one? NOT the book had Hugh and Henrietta in it?
Yes, Hugh and Henrietta were in City of Bells which was even more timeless than The Dean's Watch. Possibly Edwardian or perhaps late Victorian. That's part of a Torminster trilogy which actually has the same characters in it and takes place in more or less the same place and time, as well as being packaged in the Cathedral trilogy. C of B "feels" rather like "DW" and you could almst believe it's the same Dean, but I feel TM is very different from either.
Then she has the WWII books - Castle on the Hill and well, I guess WWII happens in between book 2 and 3 of the Damerosehay trilogy, and other 20th century books like Scent of Water and Rosemary Tree; and The White Witch is English Civil War, so after Towers; and Gentian Hill is late 18th/early 19th century (think Napoleonic Wars and the heyday of the British Navy); and Green Dolphin Street is early settlement of New Zealand, I guess that's mid-19th century. I'm not too sure about Island Magic, but I think late Victorian. The children's books have fantastic elements that make them very hard to fix in time, but Linnets and Valerians is pretty clearly Edwardian (rather E Nesbit) or possibly late Victorian with a parent in India and all.
That pretty well covers the lot, I think.
On a completely unrelated note, I "won" an Early Reviewer book this month, Kitchen Linens. I love it!
wysłany przez muumi o 12:07 am (EST) dnia Mar 4, 2009
Hmm, anything new and Hebridean. They're not exactly falling into my lap unbidden these days. I requested a bunch of titles from my library and they found *one*, Sea Room, which was excellent -- but it looks like I'm going to actually have to buy some of my wishlist new! I haven't actually added anything tagged "hebrides" to my library since last July!
wysłany przez muumi o 11:29 pm (EST) dnia Feb 28, 2009
wysłany przez McAllisterHomeschool o 10:20 pm (EST) dnia Feb 26, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 7:30 pm (EST) dnia Feb 23, 2009
Mathographics shouldn't be hard to find though, as these things go, being a Dover reprint. If it didn't weigh a ton, I'd just send you mine. :D It looks like a fun workbook, and I wish I had the time to do it right now. Sometimes I miss homeschooling a LOT. I got to educate myself in all sorts of ways.
wysłany przez muumi o 1:25 am (EST) dnia Feb 23, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 2:29 pm (EST) dnia Feb 22, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 10:57 pm (EST) dnia Feb 19, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 1:05 am (EST) dnia Feb 7, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 4:36 pm (EST) dnia Feb 6, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 11:41 pm (EST) dnia Feb 5, 2009
Catholic and Japanese. . . I should like to see the Church flourish more in Japan, there would be some great results.
Of course I have read plenty of non-Catholic Japanese authors, and the more famous books such as Natsume Soseki's works.
wysłany przez Shinwa o 7:50 am (EST) dnia Feb 5, 2009
wysłany przez mariacle o 11:00 am (EST) dnia Feb 3, 2009
wysłany przez Shinwa o 4:01 am (EST) dnia Feb 2, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 12:59 pm (EST) dnia Jan 31, 2009
Today I did light reading. Friday Night Knitting Club. We're snowed in here so I missed my real, Thursday night knitting club. Hoping our neighbour can plow out the driveway tomorrow, and hoping the tractor mechanic can get our tractor going Monday so life can get back to what passes for normal in the 21st century. Normal in the 19th century would be, stay snowed in.
wysłany przez muumi o 9:54 pm (EST) dnia Jan 30, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 10:13 pm (EST) dnia Jan 27, 2009
Some books just shouldn't be ultb's. When I buy books, I'm often looking for resalability and I am quite good at picking scarce books, but I'm often shocked how little monetary value a quite scarce book with lots of intrinsic value can have. A lot of really great YA books are in that category, this is just one example. I tend to keep those. :)
I remember the Childhood of Famous Americans books well from my school days in California and Wisconsin, but don't see that many of them showing up here in Canada. I don't think I have any in my library. Big job entering the series!
wysłany przez muumi o 11:00 pm (EST) dnia Jan 16, 2009
I have been doing a lot of knitting lately... with all the traveling first and now with the extreme cold keeping me largely away from the (unheated) stair landing where I keep my computer and in front of the woodstove just to keep warm. Today has been very windy with snow drifting deep across our (300-yard-long) driveway. I can log on to the internet from my son's old laptop but the keyboard is sort of wonky and I keep having to go back to put in letters that it missed out. My own typing is bad enough without this! So I am 75 rows into a lovely mohair shawl for my sister. I think I am bonding with the project. It's going to be hard to send it away when it's done.
wysłany przez muumi o 12:11 am (EST) dnia Jan 14, 2009
Not appropriate to put the teacher's guide with the series it guides? What's your reasoning, and do you feel strongly enough about it to actually remove it (if so I shan't go putting it back in, life's too short)?
wysłany przez muumi o 12:15 am (EST) dnia Jan 13, 2009
Thankyou for your comment. I checked [the worm ouroboros] and I don't know where that 'etc' came from! When I re-entered it with the isbn it came up as[the worm ouroboros: a romance] and LT still thinks that only I have it, but that can't be right. I'm still not quite clear on this combining lark - but I'm sure that it is the same book.
I must admit I haven't read it yet - I bought it because I saw it 2ndhand, and remembered that CSLewis mentions reading it. One day I'll get round to it!
I must add that I'm in awe of homeschoolers - it's all I can do to get mine to do their homework properly! But we do score some brownie points for our boys' good history knowledge!
wysłany przez Goldengrove o 10:02 am (EST) dnia Jan 12, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 10:07 pm (EST) dnia Jan 11, 2009
Found another copy of St Pius X at a booksale yesterday; I see you have one already as well as Fr. Marquette. There was St Margaret Mary (yess!) and Frances what's her name and the sisters of charity (ALL those first-nuns-of-their-order in the USA books are SO similar I might just sell that one!) too. I also found a LOT of Taylor Caldwell, about 4 or 5 books iirc... and Frances P Keyes, including one duplicate which I thought was a new book but was merely a new title. Interested in either?
wysłany przez muumi o 9:54 pm (EST) dnia Jan 11, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 1:26 am (EST) dnia Jan 10, 2009
I have gone and deleted incorrect isbns on the edit book page, but never checked to make sure it didn't put them back. In the case of the Amazon covers, I'm pretty sure it would put them back, but otherwise I don't know.
Did you find the ER list for January quite thin? I saw one or two I wouldn't mind requesting if I were in the USA I think, but nothing that actually disappointed me not to be able to request. Not a thing to request in Can
wysłany przez muumi o 1:22 am (EST) dnia Jan 10, 2009
I wouldn't know where to run down HOw to Live on Nothing if I wanted to find it fast, but as far as I can recall it is pretty typical frugality etc. of the 1970s and was useful at the time. For more up-to-date information I think I'd recommend The Tightwad Gazette books. I was a serious selfsufficiency wannabe back in the day, but my idea was always to spend next to nothing on essentials so as to have money to spend on books and art. And art supplies. So when someone said I was quite frugal, in all honesty I had to deny it. :) But my son claims he never had a new pair of shoes until he was 12 (he forgot all the cheap canvas shoes from the budget store, lol) and if he said the same about jeans and shirts that would be fairly accurate too. However, the homeschool was supplied with really good books and math manipulatives and science stuff... Lego technic galore... :D
wysłany przez muumi o 12:44 am (EST) dnia Jan 10, 2009
thanks - I have a cover for it, but believe me, it is deteriorating badly.
wysłany przez kate545 o 10:28 pm (EST) dnia Jan 9, 2009
Yes, it's the same. Mine is the 7th edition, revised and reset.
Good point about what to call "reverts" like you - maybe we do need a new term! No longer a "baptized pagan" (JPII's term), but not really a revert. Cradle convert - cravert for short? :D Just thinking out loud . . .
wysłany przez amilburn o 2:27 pm (EST) dnia Jan 9, 2009
wysłany przez muumi o 10:06 am (EST) dnia Jan 9, 2009
Yes, yes, yes...read East of Eden. If you like strong storytelling and loveable characters you will love that book. I have read it so many times!
And thanks for your book recommendations. I have never heard of either one of them...but I will definitely take a look!
wysłany przez coloradoreader o 7:00 pm (EST) dnia Jan 8, 2009
wysłany przez morningsidefamily o 4:26 pm (EST) dnia Jan 8, 2009
wysłany przez Schmerguls o 7:15 am (EST) dnia Jan 7, 2009
wysłany przez geitebukkeskjegg o 3:23 am (EST) dnia Jan 7, 2009
Thanks for your comment about Joker One. It was a magnificent book, wasn't it? FOUR SONS? You ARE a saint. I have two sons---sometimes my husband and I joke that it feels like we have 17 kids!
Donnell
wysłany przez coloradoreader o 4:10 pm (EST) dnia Jan 5, 2009
I've looked into the first chapter, and it's truly a translation, so our books are actually the same work.
If you need any more information, just tell me :-)
Greetings,
DigiTalk
wysłany przez DigiTalk o 3:55 pm (EST) dnia Jan 5, 2009
Honestly, I don't know for sure, but as it's the same author, I strongly suspect also, that you have an english translation.
I translate it's covertext for you, so that you can check if it matches the content of your book:
"The six children of Pieselang can be really satisfied with their Oma (Grandma): nothing can scare her - no thief, no horse which enters though the door suddenly. They don't have to fear boring holidays."
wysłany przez DigiTalk o 7:09 pm (EST) dnia Jan 3, 2009
The Landmark series looks fabulous. You must have done a lot of research to track down all the titles. I wonder what is the MLK book (that someone put in the series before we got started)?
wysłany przez muumi o 6:13 pm (EST) dnia Jan 2, 2009
324 Kristin Lavransdatter The Bridal Wreath - The Mistress of Husaby - The Cross, by Sigrid Undset (read 24 Apr 1947) (Book of the Year)
2412 Sigrid Undset: A Study in Christian Realism, by A. H. Winsnes translated by P. G. Foote (read 28 Sep 1991)
2414 The Master of Hestviken: The Axe The Snake Pit In the Wilderness The Son Avenger, by Sigrid Undset (read 10 Oct 1991)
You will note Kristin Lavransdatter was Book of the Year in 1947. I, frankly, liked it much better than The Master of Hestviken. Have you read anything by her I have not?
wysłany przez Schmerguls o 1:40 pm (EST) dnia Dec 31, 2008
wysłany przez muumi o 9:13 am (EST) dnia Dec 31, 2008
I don't own any of the Background series that I know of... and the book you linked to looks really interesting but I have never seen it.
Now I am going to enter my books... and maybe even read a little. :)
wysłany przez muumi o 11:02 pm (EST) dnia Dec 30, 2008
OR in each book's CK at the bottom use the dis-whatsis field for a note
OR ignore the whole thing because Credo is the name that most (probably all) of us know it by, and anyway, LT allows for a book to be in multiple series and if someone feels very strongly about "junior bios" they can create a series for that.
I would go for the third solution myself, but maybe I just had a long day. ;)
Guess what I did in Toronto! My daughter wanted a nativity set. So we discussed what was available and she decided on Fontanini b/c they are widely available, completely unbreakable, and reasonably attractive. And I searched and searched online and found a site that sells them "bulk", no boxes, free shipping in USA. Only could get holy family and 3 villagers (2 shepherds) but I found a slue of sheep at the thrift store so they had a decent creche this year. And I had searched and searched and even eBay never had half-price pieces, nor was any discount to be found in Italy. WELL. I went to a sale at the Anglican Book Centre knowing that they carry Fontanini and hoping they would mark it down after Christmas. It was unprecedented in over 25 years of ABC sales. Most of the Fontanini was 75% off and the rest was 50% off. I bought everything they would need (Magi, animals, angels) and a few extras (villagers, St Francis). (Skipped the stables b/c too big to carry, and easy to buy in Italy.)
I don't often feel this good about a shopping story, but this was such a blessing.
I got a couple of good Catholic books at a deep discount too. Off to read them now -- after entering them on LT of course. :D
wysłany przez muumi o 10:04 pm (EST) dnia Dec 30, 2008
234 The World, the Flesh, and Father Smith, by Bruce Marshall (read 2 Feb 1946) (Book of the Year)
307 Father Malachy's Miracle A Heavenly Story with an Earthly Meaning, by Bruce Marshall (read 7 Feb 1947)
323 Yellow Tapers for Paris, by Bruce Marshall (read 18 Apr 1947)
627 Vespers in Vienna, by Bruce Marshall (read 25 Sep 1960)
4427 The White Rabbit, by Bruce Marshall from the story told to him by Wing Commander F. F. E. Yeo-Thomas, G.C., M. C. (read 14 Apr 2008)
Each year I pick the best book read by me in that year. In 1946 Bruce Marshall's TheWorld, the flesh, and Father Smith won that designation
wysłany przez Schmerguls o 5:01 pm (EST) dnia Dec 30, 2008
wysłany przez muumi o 8:45 am (EST) dnia Dec 30, 2008
wysłany przez muumi o 8:43 am (EST) dnia Dec 30, 2008
wysłany przez IreneF o 9:04 pm (EST) dnia Dec 29, 2008
I'm glad you have the Credo Books information -- but yes by all means let your arm rest up before you use it, though! You don't need to get your Gold CK Helper badge all in one night!
I'm off to bed now and travelling tomorrow -- so I get a rest too. Sort of.
Good work, pat yourself on the back if your arm still can reach... ;o)
wysłany przez muumi o 11:10 pm (EST) dnia Dec 28, 2008
Cheers-
vintage_books
wysłany przez vintage_books o 11:01 pm (EST) dnia Dec 28, 2008
I want to direct you to (Rabbi) Irvin Unger at Historicana http://www.historicana.com/ and his Szyk website located at: http://www.szyk.com/ and the Arthur Szyk Society located at: http://www.szyk.org/society.html
I've known Rabbi Unger for years, but only socially. He is the foremost expert of Szyk, and can be found spearheading Szyk art exhibitions and doing presentations around the world.
We also have the Szyk Andersen Fairy Tales in common. :)
Cheers-
vintage_books
wysłany przez vintage_books o 8:01 pm (EST) dnia Dec 28, 2008
We are SO going to get that CK Helper Badge -- bwahahaha!
wysłany przez muumi o 2:53 pm (EST) dnia Dec 28, 2008
wysłany przez muumi o 10:24 pm (EST) dnia Dec 27, 2008
There are two OTHER stacks of Vision Books downstairs. ;o)
wysłany przez muumi o 10:14 pm (EST) dnia Dec 27, 2008
wysłany przez muumi o 9:26 pm (EST) dnia Dec 27, 2008
wysłany przez muumi o 8:54 pm (EST) dnia Dec 27, 2008
wysłany przez muumi o 8:52 pm (EST) dnia Dec 27, 2008
Well, it's a good thing they weren't cream puffs, or I'd be SO sick.
:(
wysłany przez muumi o 8:52 pm (EST) dnia Dec 27, 2008
Good on ya (as my Aussie friend says) for starting World Landmarks. If you do a search for "world Landmark" in works, you get 99 results. Lots with numbers!
wysłany przez muumi o 8:13 pm (EST) dnia Dec 27, 2008
wysłany przez muumi o 7:45 pm (EST) dnia Dec 27, 2008
wysłany przez muumi o 6:42 pm (EST) dnia Dec 27, 2008
Did you really say that LT doesn't have a Landmark Books series? I am going to take a look at that! I happen to have a LB on my desk right now.
wysłany przez muumi o 6:39 pm (EST) dnia Dec 27, 2008
and another one that I didn't create (actually "begin" is a better work, as LT creates the page automatically once you make an entry in the Series field in CK), but was checking recently:
http://www.librarything.com/series/Fell+...
and another one that I started:
http://www.librarything.com/series/Magic...
and one that I didn't start, but put in some work on:
http://www.librarything.com/series/The+W...
Hope that helps!
wysłany przez muumi o 1:56 pm (EST) dnia Dec 27, 2008
I think that some Combiner has been at work though, because most of the books have only one Work page -- and that must mean that someone has combined the authors at some point, although not very consistently.
wysłany przez muumi o 12:32 pm (EST) dnia Dec 27, 2008
wysłany przez muumi o 11:10 pm (EST) dnia Dec 26, 2008
Fail.
First off, it's translated into Italian "dall'americano" (from the American, LOL). Secondly, it's $63.
There are cheaper copies. :D
wysłany przez muumi o 7:31 pm (EST) dnia Dec 23, 2008
All About well that is another whole series as I bet you know. ;)
I own those too.
wysłany przez ChristineMM o 7:16 pm (EST) dnia Dec 23, 2008
wysłany przez muumi o 2:02 pm (EST) dnia Dec 22, 2008
Thanks for the comment. I really like the Alan Thomas book, and old homeschooling books generally. I searched for it on the web and ordered it because I read it while visiting "High Desert Home." The quotes you posted on the power of informal learning are typical of why I like the book.
What article did you find about him, and what new book does he have coming out? I think I'll Google it when we get back from our Christmas trip.
Merry Christmas!
Laura
wysłany przez morningsidefamily o 11:17 am (EST) dnia Dec 22, 2008
wysłany przez muumi o 8:30 am (EST) dnia Dec 22, 2008
wysłany przez muumi o 11:35 pm (EST) dnia Dec 21, 2008
I don't quite understand the LT system when I correct data in my book's entry does it correct everyone's or does it just edit my own info? Do you know?
wysłany przez ChristineMM o 11:02 am (EST) dnia Dec 20, 2008
All things considered, it's amazing that we share only 10% of our libraries.
wysłany przez muumi o 11:22 am (EST) dnia Dec 15, 2008
>Your ultb tagged books are also pretty interesting. I notice you *also* have a unique book by Eric Kelly. Sad, that, for a Newbery author!
>I've never read River and Empty Sea, so if you ever, ever come across another copy.... ;)
>I used to be quite fluent in Chinese. I majored in Classical Chinese & wrote my senior thesis on Classical Chinese linguistics. Unfortunately, it's not something that stays with a person indefinitely and I don't read Chinese very well these days. Lack of practice.
About uniqueness. Many of the Catholic pamphlets probably could be combined with something, but it is sometimes hard with books that don't have an author. For the present, I'm content to leave them unique and let someone else do the work when they get around to it. :)
wysłany przez muumi o 10:18 pm (EST) dnia Dec 14, 2008
The book Jeanette Eyerly won the Christopher Award for was Escape from No Where. I read several of her books as a young person and I would have to say she probably was my favorite author at that age. I did not know until a few years ago she was from my home state. She actually served on the board at the Iowa Comission for the Blind and wrote a book about blindness called Seeing Summer. She was probably one of the first authors to address drugs, teen pregnancy at that time. I wonder if those books would seem dated now. I remember her books fondly.
Dara
wysłany przez dara85 o 8:31 pm (EST) dnia Dec 11, 2008
I got over to Michigan today. Thanks for the dust jacket!
St Margaret was a surprising find in a thrift store (one of those Ladies' Auxilliary type thrift stores where you never expect to find anything good, or anything affordable) in Half Moon Bay, California (a town where a lot of stuff is unaffordable). I've never seen any other books in the series. Too bad!
wysłany przez muumi o 1:21 am (EST) dnia Dec 11, 2008
wysłany przez muumi o 12:50 am (EST) dnia Dec 10, 2008
The power edit is the best tool for tagging. I hope to see you in the ultb stats soon. I update them about once every couple of weeks.
wysłany przez misericordia o 2:14 pm (EST) dnia Dec 9, 2008
wysłany przez misericordia o 8:05 pm (EST) dnia Dec 8, 2008
2647 Beyond the Glass, by Antonia White (read 11 Sep 1994)
2651 Frost in May, by Antonia White (read 29 Sep 1994)
2661 The Lost Traveller A Novel by Antonia White (read 9 Oct 1994)
The first book in the trilogy is The Lost Traveller, the second is The Sugar House, and the third is Beyond the Glass. Unfortuantely I read Beyond the Glass (because it was the only one I could find in a Sioux City library)first, so when I read The Lost Traveller (which I obtained through inter-library loan) I knew what was going to happen in The Sugar House, having read Beyond the Glass. I strongly recommend you read the three books in order. I have never read The Sugar House because I had read Beyond the Glass, which spoiled, I thought, The Sugar House for me.
I was much impressed and caught up by Antonia White in 1994.
wysłany przez Schmerguls o 10:42 am (EST) dnia Dec 1, 2008
What are you reading at the moment? I am reading a couple of books by Anne Fadiman, among others! I tend to read five or six books at a time. I see you have Flannery O'Connor as one of your favourite authors. I am getting the Complete Works for my birthday at the end of December. What have you read of hers?
- TT
wysłany przez TheTortoise o 3:51 pm (EST) dnia Nov 20, 2008
Susan
wysłany przez suslyn o 5:58 pm (EST) dnia Nov 19, 2008
I had "my life for my sheep" right but it gave me nothing. Nor did Thomas or canterbury, but Becket was the key :)
Thanks for adding me :) What a compliment. I don't know (or really care either way--that's meant in a nice way!) what your politics are, but one of the most fascinating current Catholic figures out there, in my opinion, is Phyllis Schlafly. Her biography is a pretty good read too: The sweetheart of the silent majority : the biography of Phyllis Schlafly by Carol Felsenthal.
wysłany przez suslyn o 5:28 pm (EST) dnia Nov 19, 2008
Just thinking I might find this kind of comment very annoying! LOL If you do too feel free to delete it. Sorry for the nonproductive ramble.
Cheers,
Susan
wysłany przez suslyn o 8:55 am (EST) dnia Nov 19, 2008
I hope your kids enjoyed Wall-E. I will always remember it as the film that my oldest actually enjoyed, inasmuch as he is very sensitive to loud noise, and movie theaters are a big problem for him. Most of the movie is very quiet, with nary but a few bleeps and blips...
Regards,
Maki
wysłany przez Makifat o 8:33 pm (EST) dnia Nov 15, 2008
Good night,
Andrea
wysłany przez AndreaandSamantha o 8:49 pm (EST) dnia Oct 29, 2008
I thought you were up too late too, until I realized you are two time zones to the west of me. oops. G'night. I'm still not half packed, leaving for Italy tomorrow after Mass.
wysłany przez muumi o 1:31 am (EST) dnia Oct 26, 2008
wysłany przez muumi o 6:54 pm (EST) dnia Oct 24, 2008
wysłany przez buriedinbooks o 11:19 pm (EST) dnia Oct 11, 2008
Yes, my Ball Blue Book has that same subtitle.
Blessings,
Mary Ann
wysłany przez maryanntherese o 10:51 pm (EST) dnia Oct 9, 2008
wysłany przez AndreaandSamantha o 10:17 am (EST) dnia Sep 10, 2008
wysłany przez Schmerguls o 11:59 am (EST) dnia Sep 7, 2008
wysłany przez homemommy o 9:22 pm (EST) dnia Sep 1, 2008
wysłany przez muumi o 1:24 pm (EST) dnia Aug 13, 2008
I just added an Ann Bridge book that you also have -- noticed that you have several but because of your omnibus edition and I suppose just the general difficulty of finding Ann Bridge books, this is the first we have in common (and you have a cover picture, but mine's an old orange Penguin, so I have to scan my own this time). I've read more of Ann Bridge's books than I actually own. I especially enjoy the Julia novels. Bridge readers are pretty scarce so it's nice to find another, and yet another similarity in our libraries.
wysłany przez muumi o 2:00 pm (EST) dnia Aug 11, 2008
wysłany przez muumi o 12:52 am (EST) dnia Aug 10, 2008
It does sound like we have similar circumstances! I do have six kids, love being Catholic and love books, but am not homeschooling any longer. I'm finding LT to be quite a draw also. It's pretty fun!
Therese
wysłany przez therese.jones o 10:35 pm (EST) dnia Jul 31, 2008
wysłany przez DollyBantry o 5:06 pm (EST) dnia Jul 28, 2008
Barbara Cooney is an excellent illustrator and I like her books also, although I don't have very many.
Cordially,
Laura
wysłany przez LauraLLD o 4:45 pm (EST) dnia Jul 26, 2008
wysłany przez LauraLLD o 12:39 am (EST) dnia Jul 26, 2008
I see that you're a Catholic homeschooler; you might enjoy the following blogs by Sally Thomas, a writer who is also a Catholic homeschooler herself!
http://fineoldfamly.blogspot.com/
http://saintdanielstylite.blogspot.com/
wysłany przez echo o 9:08 pm (EST) dnia Feb 17, 2008