Losowo wybrane książki z biblioteki obsessedbybooks

Little Big Man autorstwa Thomas Berger

Wise Blood: A Novel autorstwa Flannery O'Connor

Miss Rumphius autorstwa Barbara Cooney

Charlie Chan Is Dead: An Anthology of Contemporary Asian American Fiction

Breaking Clean autorstwa Judy Blunt

Spilling Clarence: A Novel autorstwa Anne Ursu

The Oz scrapbook autorstwa David L Greene

Członkowie z książkami obsessedbybooks

Połączenia członka

znajomi: EveBrownWaite, meadowmist, michaelbartley, posthumose, Smethers, TruthSeeker, vhoeschler, writergirl

Interesujące biblioteki: davidabrams, davidliss, joehill, ProdigalReader, sarahwriter, SeriousGrace

Autorzy LibraryThing: Bill Cameron (BCMystery), Brian Keene (BrianKeene), Cleo Coyle (CleoCoyle), Colum McCann (ColumMcCann), David Ebershoff (Debershoff), Diane Chamberlain (DianeChamberlain1), Natalie Tyler (Doulton), Hannah Tinti (HannahTinti), Jacqueline Jules (JacquelineJules), Jean Marzollo (JeanMarzollo), Luis Alberto Urrea (LuisAlbertoUrrea), Maria Semple (MariaSemple), Masha Hamilton (MashaHamilton), Philipp Meyer (PEM09), Jason Quinn Malott (Quinn), Ruth Sims (RuthSims), Shannon Mckenna Schmidt (SMSchmidt), Sarah Addison Allen (SarahAddisonAllen), Sharon Kay Penman (Sharonkay), Stephen Evans (StephenEvans), Susanne Alleyn (SusanneAlleyn), Tatiana de Rosnay (TatianaDerosnay), Alan Furst (afurst), Arthur Phillips (arthurphillips), Betsy Carter (betsycarter), Adriana Trigiani (bigcherryholler), Jo Walton (bluejo), David Kessler (bookstolistento), Cathy Marie Buchanan (cathymbuchanan), Chitra Divakaruni (chitradivakaruni), Christine Rose (christinerose), Dan Chaon (danchaon), Dara Horn (darahorn), David Liss (davidliss), David Mitchell (davidmitchell), Richard E. Dansky (deadguy), Deanna Raybourn (deannaraybourn), Diana Gabaldon (diana.gabaldon), Erica Abeel (ericaabeel), Eric Barnes (ericbarnes2), Harold Evans (harold371), Heather Barbieri (heatherbarbieri), Jedediah Berry (jedediahberry), Joe Hill (joehill), Joshua Furst (joshuafurst), Jack Riggs (jriggs), Lisa See (lisasee), Lisa Unger (lisaunger), Michael Hogan (lulaa), Marissa Moss (marissamoss), Matthew Pearl (matthewpearl), Megan Abbott (meganabbott), Richard Price (rixsal), Sarah Smith (sarahwriter), Scott Heim (scottheim), Hillary Jordan (scribblegirl)

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Recenzje książek obsessedbybooks, wyłączając recenzje autorstwa obsessedbybooks

 

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Thanks for accepting my friendship request...we have a lot of books in common.

My favorite is Shadow of the Wind....I actually went to Barcelona to find all the places mentioned in the book...it was great fun...my son and I went on a scavenger hunt for all the places...he loved the book as well.

Keep in touch.
Wow! I share over half my library with you! (That would, today, mean 422 books.) Read on... :)
We have 90 books in common! I love your nom de librarything.
Hey,

Just a quick note to let you know that my new novel, Dirty Little Angels, is now available. Thought you might like it since it's been compared to Larry Brown, whom I noticed you like. Here's a link to a summary in case you're interested:

http://christophertusa.com/blog/?page_id...

Take care,

Chris
Hi
We share 306 books - Yay! Did you read the Camel Bookmobile? I haven't as yet. I wrote back and forth with her a few times and sent books for the actual camel bookmobile in Kenya. Saw an interesting documentary on remote libraries and they featured part of it on Kenya where half the country is serviced by camel and the other by donkey! Pretty darn cool. Costs a bundle to send a few books there way however, so we donate books via embassies now and they can get stuff overseas much more effectively.
I look forward to reading this book as I have been in that part of the world and it is fascinating.
Cheers
Clamato
Hiya ! I'm really impressed with yer library ! We've got 16 books in common . I'm an Early Reviewer too ! I listed yours as an interesting library , hope ya don't mind !
Wow! Awesome library! We share more than 300 books so far. Yours is a library to watch -- and admire. Cheers!
i have added yours to my Interesting Libraries because..your library is very interesting to me
we have 55 books in common..and my library is only 165 volumes strong
we belong to your two groups together
what say, wanna be Friends...and check out my Library if the spirit moves you.....
I enjoyed browsing your extensive library and found some interesting titles to add to my own. Almost 5,000 books! Where do you keep them all?
We've got lots of the same books! Just saying hi! Leslie (the "L" in "J and L")
Just wanted to say hello.I notice we now have 500 books in common!
Hi-loved browsing through your extensive library as another person obsessed by books. This is a great site; I can get lost in it for hours adding books and seeing what other people enjoy and why. I particularly enjoy the psychological fiction that you have tagged. Thanks, in advance, for sharing.
I agree....I am officialyl addicted to LT. I'm a member of other websites such as BoobBrowse and Random House Reading Circle but I've never found such an amazing platform for avid booklovers. Amazing.
Incidentally, I noticed from some of your "tags" that you like psychological books, which I presume could include thrillers and psychological fiction. I haven't looked through your entire library yet but if you haven't read it, "The Shadow of the Wind" is one of the better books I've read in years. It has all the ingredients for a captivating book. I reviewed it on Amazon.com and I believe my tagline is, "A fine wine that turns into an addictive drug..."
Thanks for the add!
Hi there! Noticed we share 41 books (and I've only entered 101 of mine so far - about 1000 on my shelves I think).
Greetings! Add me to the list of people that share a lot of books with you! I'm relatively new to LT and up to 546 books posted. Of those, we share 54: 10%! That's cool. Anyway, just a quick hello and cheers from San Francisco.
No worries - it only means I just started going through the list. Amazon and I have a long day ahead of us :)
Well.

Your username is always the first on my list of "Members with your books" section whenever I (daily) check my profile.

No matter how many hundreds more books I manage to amass at thrift stores (in order to escape you), there you are. It's ridiculous.

So: "Hi."

Read anything great lately?
Thanks for the future reading ideas from your collection. Any suggestions?
a year ago we shared 319 books and today we share 677! feel free to stop by with suggestions anytime! :) happy reading!
Hi,
can you please send me a book(PDF) : "Chords & progression for jazz & popular" by Arnie Berle ?
I am from vietnam ! My english is very bad.
my email : bat_com_exe@yahoo.com
Thanks
Hi I recently bought "Three Stories and a Reflection" by Patrick Suskind on the net on 15th of August, however I live in Cairo, Egypt and the book never arrived from the United Kingdom! I am in desperate desperate need of the story "Depth Wish" (which is inside the book) as soon as possible. I am a filmmaker and have based my latest short film on that story. The film is however in Arabic and I need to translate it ASAP into English (subtitles). Could you please please please scan just the text of "Depth Wish" and send it to me by e-mail (noharifaat@gmail.com). That would be so so helpful as i am not sure when this book is ever going to arrive. Your help would be truly appreciated.It is too bad we don't have access to as many books as possible in this region!
Thanks so much,
Noha
Hello, we have 237 books in common and I have more to put up. I will return to look for good recommendations regularly. Sandy
I only have 190 books in my library, but I noticed you shared 116 of those. I wondered then if I could add you to my interesting libraries. Have you read all those books in your library?
Hi, I noticed several chess titles in your catalog and thought you may like to check my forum site out- www.ChessForums.org, we have a dedicated section to chess books and recommended reading you may be interested in, thanks, Greg
Hi We share 200 books...that is so far, I am still inputting. When I find someone like you on LibraryThing, who shares so many of my favorites, i am always disappointed when I see that that person does not rate his/her books! Seeing your ratings is really useful. Why. Well, if I find out that you consistently rate similar books in a similar way, then when I find an interesting title on you list that I have not read, and that you rate highly...well, I would be very tempted to read it, too. I am writting to suggest that you begin the exercise of rating your books. I found it fun. It is something you can do "on-the-fly"...in between this and that...when you have five minutes to spare on the internet. If you can't momentarily recall what that book was about, look at the Book Information link in Edit...read a review, look at the tags and subjects that others have given it. You would be surprised by how quickly all the memories of that book come flooding back, including your gut rating of it. In retrospect, your gut rating is always better than what it was at the time you read it. Personally, I think you ratings should reflect you. It doesn't matter how critics thought of each title; what matters, is how you reacted to it...how much pleasure it gave you.

I also have a question for you: When/How do you usually read? ...while commuting, before going to bed, in lieu of TV watching, etc. I am just curious. I assume you are a "speed reader," too. Is that true? How many hours does it take you to read a typical fiction or nonfiction book?
While we only share a mere 136 books at the moment, I can't help but wonder at the wonderful eclectic mix we share. From Thomas Hardy to Octavia Butler, Henry Fielding to Karen Joy Fowler, Margaret Atwood to Jonathan Carroll, P.D. James to Harry Kemelman... I still have thousands to catalog, including lots of children's books (mine, my children's, and the ones I've continued to buy even though my children are in their 20's now). What are you reading at the moment?
hey!
I noticed you also own Artemis Fowl, the Princess Bride and books by Alexandre Dumas. Interested in chatting sometime?
I'm impressed you got your books catalogued so quickly. It took me a couple months in fits and starts. There is something soothing about 10-keying ISBNs....
i thought it was amazing that we shared 319 books until i saw that you had 3519!:)
i can only hope one day my collection will be such!
You work as a corporate finance lawyer and still have time to read? I'm impressed!

I never intended to practice but rather to use my legal education to conduct research and write; it certainly does change the way one thinks and for that I am ever grateful. I spent many years clerking for an appellate court (best job in the world!), taking off 13 years for community work and rearing a family, clerking for a wonderful trial court judge until he died (I would have done that job for free if I hadn't been a single parent), and, for the past 18 years, working for Westlaw's much better competitor :). The work I do here is extremely rewarding and interesting but corporations suck out one's very soul and for that all management should be illegal. I actually did spend 6 months in a large (for Ohio) law firm but p.c. words cannot do justice to the reprehensible attorneys it attracted.

So how do you store over 3500 books? I have only about 2600 and I've run out of wall space for bookcases.
Hi again -- If you search on my library and look for the Smith College tag, you will see that I have 6 books about Smith listed. There are 3 versions of [Smith Voices], one from 1900, one from 1911, and one from 1990, all different stories. I bought the older ones from eBay. I also have one called [Textured Lives] about artists and the Ada Comstock Scholars.
Hi back! I only wish I were a Smithie. My youngest daughter graduated Smith in 2003 but from the moment I dropped her off freshman year, I have pined for the place. Never would I have attended an all-girls school back in the 60s but what did I know then? As a newly hatched senior citizen (good only for getting into the movies for half price), I now appreciate the incredible value of being around my female friends who are so smart, so stimulating, so active, so interesting -- we can talk about nothing and everything forever. We intend to spend our senescence (if we're able to recognize it by then) in the Crone's Cottage one of us will have to buy on the coast of Maine. Dogs (mainly big ones), a few cats, and no men except the hunky young one who chops and delivers the wood in winter; our eyesight may be too weak to see him clearly but we can still imagine. Our children and grandkids can visit on certain designated weeks.

When did you go to Smith? What type of lawyer are you?
OBB: Thanks so much for your message. I am excited that we share so many books, too! I know you will be another exciting LibraryThing addition.
I am most impressed.
A big welcome to LibraryThing to someone who I see owns both Peter Dickinson's Sleep and His Brother and Sheep in a Jeep.
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