Tilfeldige bøker fra AsYouKnow_Bobs bibliotek
The Hollow Lands Vol. Two of a Trilogy the Dancers at the End of Time av Michael Moorcock
The Hidden Injuries of Class av Richard Sennett
Bridges at Toko-Ri av James A. Michener
On Stranger Tides av Tim Powers
Tortilla Flat av John Steinbeck
Redburn: His First Voyage, Being the Sailor-Boy Confessions & Reminiscences of the S (Penguin English Library) av Herman Melville
Royal Charles av Antonia Fraser
Medlemmer med AsYouKnow_Bobs bøker
Medlemskoblinger
venner: 2pac, alibrarian, amysisson, Arctic-Stranger, avaland, BenjaminFranklin, bluetyson, bradley_sands, bslavin, dd-b, Doug1943, dukedom_enough, ErnestHemingway, Existanai, fidelio, Fledgist, fleela, Instigatrix, Jesse_wiedinmyer, JohnDee, languagehat, Linkmeister, LolaWalser, lquilter, LWMusic, MaggieO, makifat, marydell, matociquala, Morphidae, Musereader, nickhoonaloon, SamuelJohnsonLibrary, supergeniuscoyote, TashaV, Theodosia, TheresaWilliams, ThomasJefferson, yoyodyne
interessante biblioteker: ablachly, alibrarian, Atomicmutant, bluetyson, bookzombie, cshalizi, emily_dickinson, greenery, inkdrinker, JohnAdams, JosephPriestley, JulesJones, kassetra, katatthelibrary, languagehat, lquilter, luxarific, MaggieO, makifat, mamajoan, markflanagan, Nanaimo, scifichick, timepiece, timspalding, TinazReading
LibraryThing-forfattere: Kenn Amdahl (KennAmdahl), Elizabeth Bear (matociquala), Chris Carlsson (ccarlsson), Stephen Dedman (StephenDedman), Rosina Lippi (greenery), S. L. Farrell (sleigh), Stephen Leigh (sleigh), Naomi Novik (naominovik), Joshua Palmatier (jpsorrow), John Reed (easyreeder), Lawrence Schoen (LawrenceMSchoen), Kristine Smith (Kristine_Smith), Delia Marshall Turner (dmturner), Natalie Tyler (Doulton), Martha Wells (marthawells), Carl Zimmer (cwzimmer)
Medlem: AsYouKnow_Bob
Bibliotek13,046 bøker — se bibliotek
Anmeldelser120 anmeldelser — se anmeldelser
Skyeremneordsky, forfattersky
Emneordsf (7,246), science fiction (5,654), DAW (1,401), fantasy (1,314), new (1,205), anthology (1,196), 1995 (1,147), 1996 (1,053), 2007 (1,027), main sequence (983) — se alle emneord
Grupper18th-19th Century Britain, 20th Century British Realism, Ace Doubles, Albany NY Area Science Fiction Fans, American Politics, American Revolution & Founding Fathers History, anarchism, Annus mirabilis, Astronomy & Astrophysics, Baker Street and Beyond — vis alle grupper
FavorittforfattereAbdul Alhazred, Kingsley Amis, Poul Anderson, Anonymous, Assorted Authors, Ann Beattie, Elizabeth Bowen, Buddha, Noam Chomsky, Avram Davidson, Richard Dawkins, Samuel R. Delany, Peter DeVries, Barbara Ehrenreich, Loren C. Eiseley, Brian Eno, John M. Ford, Frederick R Ewing, Alice Fulton, Gang of Four, Anonymous, Almighty God, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Stephen Jay Gould, Michael Harrington, George Herriman, Christopher Hill, Nick Hornby, The Jam, Joy Division, R. A. Lafferty, Ken MacLeod, John McPhee, George Orwell, Samuel Pepys, Barbara Pym, Keith Roberts, Sonny Rollins, Bertrand Russell, Marquis de Sade, Satan, Robert Sheckley, Cordwainer Smith, Sonic Youth, Neal Stephenson, Max Stirner, Charles Stross, The Smiths, Hunter S. Thompson, Gore Vidal, John Wain, Howard Waldrop, Gerrard Winstanley, P.G. Wodehouse, Various Writers (Delte favoritter)
FavorittbokhandlereAmherst Books, Bakka-Phoenix, Blackwell's (Oxford), Bookmarks, Fantasy Centre, Hay Cinema Bookshop, Librarium, North Country Books [closed], Raven Used Book Shop, Strand Bookstore, The Cranbury Bookworm, Troubadour Books, World's Biggest Bookstore
FavorittbibliotekerBerkshire Athenaeum, Bodleian Library, Library of Alexandria, New York State Library, The Library of Congress
Om meg "Book collecting is a full-time occupation, and one wouldn't get far if one took time off for frivolities like reading" - A.N.L. Munby
Which, these days, seems to be more than a little true: for the past few months, I seem to have been spending more time cataloging my books and reading the book groups on LT - and now book-swapping - than I have spent actually reading.
- - - - - - - - -
"As you know, Bob..." is one of the traditional ways to refer to the typical clunky exposition found in bad science fiction, when characters turn to each other to patiently explain the obvious. (SEE, for example: Jed Hartman's How I explained infodumps and saved humanity)
I use the name occasionally as a nom de internet, so I might as well use it here on LT, as I've certainly read more than my share of clunky exposition.
I'm a minor civil servant. My partner in this book madness is my wife [MaggieO] (who has a major library of her own); and we have three kids. Our house is now officially Full of books.
(People who visit us are at first staggered by the number of books. Then they usually manage to remark politely, "Welll...errm...I guess you can't HAVE too many books." Uh, no, sorry: we are living proof that you CAN in fact have too many books....)
I have a B.S. in Communication Theory, a reasonably numerate branch of the social sciences. (I washed out of Physics because I'm only reasonably numerate.) While beating my head against upper-division physics courses, I somehow picked up three minors - in Philosophy, in History, and in something called "The Human Dimensions of Science and Technology."
Our friends also tend to be fairly high-powered nerds; between myself, my wife, and our friends, we're interested in a wide swath of human activities, from flint-knapping and (fiber) spinning to nanotechnology and astronomy. You can of course get the gist of our interests from our tags.
E.g.: see the above photo of the 2004 transit of Venus: I made it myself, with some not-so-simple tools found around the house. Note that the photo is of an earth-sized planet half-way between us and our star: our entire planet set against the sun would be about half the size of that black dot. The photo serves as a reminder to keep things in perspective.)
Om biblioteket mitt No, I have NOT read everything here. (I've read more of it than you might think, though.) I custom-built a couple hundred feet of bookshelves for our family room. Yes, we have now officially run out of shelves (we've been forced to resort to the barbarity of double-shelving (*Gasp!* The horror!), and - until the kids leave the nest - we've just about run out of wallspace to put bookshelves. Consequently, some of the older/rattier/less-referred-to stuff has Gone to Storage.)
We are gradually coming around to the strategy of building a library put forth by Samuel Pepys: "For every book that comes into the house, a book will have to leave the house."
{Diaries February 4, 1668: I all day at home, and all morning setting my books in order in my presses for the fallowing year, their number being much increased since the last, so I am fain to lay by several books to make room for better, being resolved to keep no more then just my presses will contain.}
Right now, I'm using LT as a catalog of my BOOKS. I know that a "library" can include more than just books, but that's not how I think of LT.
For about a year, I seemed to have had the largest library of books on LT. This of course was temporary - in the real word, I know a guy who has about 40,000 books, and I'm sure there are plenty more out there.
I have a huge collection of SF, but my non-SF collection is a respectable library all by itself. If we're keeping count, I also have several thousand CDs, several thousand LPs, and probably 4,000? science fiction magazines. I have not yet included these in my LT catalog, although if I ever get some sort of hand-held LT-reader, that may change. (How is "porting LT to the iPod" going?)
Some highlights of my SF collection: I have all of the "Ace Science Fiction Specials" (all three series); (Somewhat surprisingly, this seems to be the only complete set on LT, even after two years here.) I think I have all of the Ace (and Tor...) SF "Doubles"; I have most of the DAW Books (all of them through #1,000). I have every "Year's Best SF" collection that I've been able to find (well over two hundred of them...).
It's said that "the Golden Age of science fiction is 'twelve'". Which is certainly correct in my case - I had been reading the stuff as soon as I could read, but discovering the Wollheim/Carr World's Best Science Fiction anthology when I was, yes, twelve, made my head explode. I've been hooked ever since.
So I seem to be strongest on the SF of the late '60s and then the 1970s - all the stuff that I read as a kid. (E.g.: I bought DAW #1 as a teenager, when I first spotted it in my local store.) As the field has grown, I've made relatively less effort to keep up.
There are some notable gaps for a major SF collection: no Rowling - those are the kids'. No Gaiman or Pratchett or Doug Adams, either - those are either my wife's, or the kids'. The magical-realists are under-represented, simply because they aren't to my taste. "Fantasy" is over-represented (for my taste), largely because for a couple of decades I was a DAW completist. (I'm better now.)
Some thoughts on taxonomy:
For a decade or so, I've kept a catalog of my SF (after a few thousand volumes, I could no longer remember just what I owned, and increasingly found myself accidently buying duplicates). "Tagging" my books has forced me to sit down and think through the taxonomy. My "SF" tag includes not only "speculative fiction", but all sorts of associational stuff: lit crit, biographies and memoirs of sf writers, poetry by Leonard Nimoy, horror by Ambrose Bierce, mainstream novels by PKD, writing guides, etc. So under my 'SF' tag, I place several major subdivisions: I have a couple hundred titles that are "non-fiction about the SF field" ("sf nf"); and the fiction proper is now somewhat arbitrarily divided into "science fiction" and "fantasy". Poul Anderson's Tau Zero is clearly "science fiction", Tolkien's The Hobbit is clearly "fantasy"; but in between, the border between SF and F is of course a question of taste. (Are the "Darkover" books SF or F?). So, each of my 6,000-odd {oops, now 7,000-odd} "SF" books now gets (at minimum) two tags.
I'm going back through to tag some information that applies only to the book-in-my-collection (and not to the work) - where and when I bought it, where I keep it, etc. Sorry if this personal info distracts from the 'tag cloud' for any particular book.
(One reason I immediately joined LT is because Tim used the word "folksonomies" in a sentence. Clearly, I belong here.)
My library is large enough that there really ARE books that I've forgotten I own. One of the pleasures of signing up for LT has been reacquainting myself with books on my shelves that I have not opened in decades.
I find the social aspect of LT to be endlessly fascinating - book lovers are certainly an interesting bunch of people.
Hjemmesidehttp://asyouknowbob.blogspot.com/
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Medlem sidenJul 2, 2006








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Well, actually, I still view yours that way. There are four on Zeitgeist that show larger:
* I believe Tim has already posted that one is not a real library, but the result of an application gone wild.
* Anyone with a private library could have 20,000 copies of invented books, ruling out two ahead of you.
* The last says in their comments that they own only about 5000 of the books listed, while you seem to own all.
Congrats!
*smile*
postet av TadAD kl. 4:15 pm (EST) den Sep 2, 2008
As for looking at the world and seeing oneself, I've done enough dramamine (see #14) to be wary of pointing fingers at others...
postet av Jesse_wiedinmyer kl. 3:38 pm (EST) den Sep 1, 2008
My
God.
postet av Arctic-Stranger kl. 4:24 pm (EST) den Aug 31, 2008
postet av Jesse_wiedinmyer kl. 8:24 am (EST) den Aug 31, 2008
i've added the canonical title.
btw -- it won't satisfy your collecting need, but if you want to *read* the book before you find it, i've got it. < g >
cheers,
laura
postet av lquilter kl. 10:44 am (EST) den Aug 25, 2008
postet av lquilter kl. 9:02 am (EST) den Aug 25, 2008
postet av iansales kl. 3:52 am (EST) den Aug 24, 2008
Cheers,
Richard
postet av richardm123uk kl. 10:04 pm (EST) den Aug 20, 2008
"We see things, not as they are, but as we are."
- Anais Nin
postet av AsYouKnow_Bob kl. 6:32 pm (EST) den Aug 16, 2008
postet av yoyodyne kl. 7:35 pm (EST) den Aug 12, 2008
"Sheer unadulterated brillance!"
postet av supergeniuscoyote kl. 8:55 pm (EST) den Aug 9, 2008
postet av supergeniuscoyote kl. 4:06 pm (EST) den Aug 9, 2008
postet av supergeniuscoyote kl. 3:54 pm (EST) den Aug 9, 2008
Hope you're both well (and reasonably dry).
postet av Eurydice kl. 9:09 pm (EST) den Aug 4, 2008
(Now, if I were ever tempted to form a band...)
postet av LolaWalser kl. 6:18 pm (EST) den Jul 14, 2008
If you're having a party, I hope the soundtrack is worthy... :)
postet av LolaWalser kl. 3:14 pm (EST) den Jul 4, 2008
pop trash
We'll see how your esteemed friendship holds up when I start entering mine. Two words: cabaret, ukulele. :)
postet av LolaWalser kl. 10:23 pm (EST) den Jun 22, 2008
Daaaaaamn! Er, most excellent! :) It's more than I can say... but from the recs, she's really very good (one always feels apologetic when it comes to near-unknowns). Eh, did you catch the circus in the first home page thread? I got a bit excited yesterday.
Music account--GO for it. It's clearly far from perfect (I couldn't decide where to stick catalogue numbers so skipped them entirely--there will be hell to pay once I enter all cca 3-4K recs and have to go back to comments or something for the lot), but I'm not fussy. It'll do. And aren't the CD covers nifty? Googling them can become a bit of an obsession though. Still, I discovered dozens of cool music sites doing that. Bottom line, I'd love more music-catalogue company. Most people didn't bother to separate them from books. Out of curiosity, which way do you lean, pure or mixed catalogue? Can't say I have very well-worked out reasons for separating them, and if collections allow integration, I may meld the two accounts. Then again... it's one thing to have a whole set of music recs called "books", and another to mix them up with actual books.
Let me know your thoughts on this that and other!
postet av LolaWalser kl. 10:17 pm (EST) den Jun 22, 2008
I guess they must not do ARCs for the best-of-year - usually someone has an ARC by the time one gets one's copy.
postet av dukedom_enough kl. 7:30 am (EST) den May 30, 2008
=================================
"caveman fiction, that is a good tag! Hope to see that one expand!"
Oh, hi.
Yeah, thanks, me too - that tag occurred to me as I cataloged a couple specimens of the genre. I don't actively read or collect that tag, but long ago I did read a children's "caveman fiction" story that I would not mind finding again. (It's too bad I don't know the title or author.) Maybe if the tag spreads, someday I'll find it.
posted by AsYouKnow_Bob at 11:47 pm (EST) on Jul 14, 2006
=================================
I strongly suspect the book you were thinking of is "Fire Hunter" by Jim Kjelgaard (yes, the guy who wrote the "Big Red", books--though I never read any of those myself. Wasn't interested in dog fiction). But "Fire Hunter" was a great book when I read it in 4th grade. I don't know what I'd think of it now. I notice that it doesn't exist on LT anywhere.
postet av unclebaldrick kl. 11:32 am (EST) den May 27, 2008
postet av kdough03 kl. 8:18 pm (EST) den May 14, 2008
Don't you dare. Maggie would have my hide on a toothpick. :)
Yeah, Pankrti are one of the glories of the old YU music scene...
postet av LolaWalser kl. 1:11 pm (EST) den May 3, 2008
postet av Doug1943 kl. 4:51 pm (EST) den May 1, 2008
postet av LolaWalser kl. 11:12 am (EST) den May 1, 2008
postet av Garp83 kl. 6:22 am (EST) den Apr 24, 2008
postet av BGP kl. 4:49 am (EST) den Apr 24, 2008
postet av bslavin kl. 9:49 pm (EST) den Apr 23, 2008
postet av Vonini kl. 3:14 am (EST) den Apr 16, 2008
Unfortunately, there doesn't seem to be much action in the Delany group. Perhaps we can change that! Anyway, I am in awe of your library!
postet av atthesametime kl. 8:24 pm (EST) den Apr 14, 2008
Sincerely, ReneeMarie
postet av ReneeMarie kl. 1:50 pm (EST) den Apr 2, 2008
-Bob
Thanks, Bob. I bow to the superior selection and volume of your collection. I look forward to getting lost in your library. --KR
postet av Artemis26 kl. 11:09 pm (EST) den Mar 26, 2008
postet av LordNigelKnickKnack kl. 10:33 pm (EST) den Mar 26, 2008
postet av KatsBooks kl. 10:10 am (EST) den Mar 26, 2008
Yrs,
Spunky Brewster
postet av JNagarya kl. 6:05 am (EST) den Mar 24, 2008
I'm just starting my cataloging efforts, but since I've moved my bookshelves and left most of their contents on the living room floor, I'm having no trouble finding inspiration to continue the efforts. I was recently pleased to discover that it was possible to include my Analog Science Fiction - Science Fact periodicals. They seem to be uncommonly collected though - I've the only registered copy of most issues. Perhaps I'll have to scan in some covers and do some cleanup once I get all these beasts entered.
postet av sangretu kl. 7:43 am (EST) den Mar 20, 2008
postet av PDExperiment626 kl. 11:14 am (EST) den Mar 17, 2008
postet av alibrarian kl. 9:04 pm (EST) den Mar 9, 2008
And, you've got at least one of my novels on your overcrowded shelves. For which, many thanks.
postet av greenery kl. 7:54 pm (EST) den Mar 4, 2008
But it is quite disturbing that almost every 'cyberpunk' book I've read that I should have absolutely adored... well... hmmm, my grandmother's bowel movement updates are more interesting to me... ugh. That should say a lot.
*snicker*
postet av kassetra kl. 5:15 am (EST) den Mar 3, 2008
Thanks ever so for the link, and for the thought! Both tickled me immensely. I just adore the pic!
Hope you're well--
Tavia
postet av Instigatrix kl. 1:57 pm (EST) den Feb 29, 2008
postet av BenjaminFranklin kl. 4:01 pm (EST) den Feb 4, 2008
And thanks for the good words.
postet av Arctic-Stranger kl. 2:30 am (EST) den Jan 9, 2008
postet av SaintSunniva kl. 11:44 pm (EST) den Dec 28, 2007
By the standards of the LT heavy hitters we have hardly any books at all. My wife and I looked each other one day and simultaneosly said (of our books) "Too many notes, Mozart, too many notes". We havent actually uh "de-accessioned" a whole bunch, but we've been trying to hold the increase down to a dull roar.
Its not obvious so far, because I've only got about 250 which is just maybe 10% or so, wont be sure till the job is done, of our books onto LT ; BUT we are also big Sci Fi addicts.
We may have mentioned that our "master plan" (quit giggling back there!) is for us to retire to Colorado. We spend summers at our Colorado house and winters in Manhattan. Its a "bicoastal" life style that we've been enjoying so far, but figure we wont be able to support once both of us have completely quit having earned income.
postet av modalursine kl. 3:23 pm (EST) den Dec 24, 2007
postet av MagisterLudi kl. 2:42 pm (EST) den Dec 22, 2007
It certainly is.
I don`t know if you do Xmas, but Season`s Greetings anyway,
Nick
postet av nickhoonaloon kl. 6:04 am (EST) den Dec 20, 2007
postet av bookzombie kl. 9:07 am (EST) den Dec 18, 2007
Keep seeing your posts in the Pros and Cons thread, so thought I`d just say hello as we`ve not come accross each other for a while.
How are you keeping ?
As you can imagine, Ann-Marie and I are currently viewing the world through a haze of exhaustion, but are basically very happy indeed. The new arrival is largely a very contented little lad, but can certainly make his presence felt when he wants to !
Nick
postet av nickhoonaloon kl. 3:28 pm (EST) den Dec 9, 2007
I know, it's funny!
I see you like Joy Division. I collect JD concert bootlegs in a small way, and have about twenty or so. Quality varies wildly. I note you catalogue music on LT too. I'm intrigued, but part of me really doesn't want to know how you do it, as I have around 5K albums...
I have reserved the sfcollectorseditions.blogspot url, which indicates to me that my subconscious is gearing up for another book binge. Many of the editions I have found seem pretty cheap, but one or two are hideously expensive, which is putting me off somewhat.
In light of the sheer number of books you have, when you say you 'like' Penguin Classics, I envisage that you have about 400 of them!
Regards, Andrew
postet av Diamat kl. 6:32 am (EST) den Dec 9, 2007
foreign-born population:
http://www.census.gov/population/www/doc...
15% at 1900. decline from 1930 until ca. 1970, waxing since then.
(googling for 'recent-immigration-by-year' mostly turns up a bunch of RW trash - a freeper link is hit #2)
postet av AsYouKnow_Bob kl. 3:51 pm (EST) den Dec 8, 2007
postet av Diamat kl. 2:34 pm (EST) den Dec 8, 2007
postet av marydell kl. 8:53 pm (EST) den Nov 29, 2007
Say, I see you're on flickr as well, I'll go check out your pix!
postet av marydell kl. 8:44 pm (EST) den Nov 29, 2007
postet av slpeterson kl. 9:43 am (EST) den Nov 29, 2007
postet av bluetyson kl. 11:15 pm (EST) den Nov 15, 2007
postet av StephenDedman kl. 7:41 am (EST) den Nov 14, 2007
Have you seen The Unofficial Alan Garner Website, by the way? It has some wonderful interviews and articles; the one by Charles Butler called "Red Shift and the Shifting Ballad of 'Tam Lin'" is particularly worth a read.
Incidentally, I was going to recommend to you a video I found on YouTube called "Barthomley and Mow Cop"; effectively a slideshow of photographs taken by a local, and set (disconcertingly) to the tune of "The Old Rugged Cross"! However, it's since been removed by the owner - no idea why. As it happens, when I lived in England a few years back, I made a side trip to Barthomley (couldn't manage Mow Cop). St. Bertoline's Church is exactly as it's described; I kept expecting Jan and Tom to come in the door and examine the rood screen or "that dead her" (= Lady Houghton's memorial, just as lifelike as described in the book - the locals like to put flowers on her marble from time to time). Who knows, given the fluidity of time in [Red Shift], perhaps Jan and Tom were there, I just couldn't see them...
postet av chamekke kl. 11:06 am (EST) den Oct 31, 2007
Well spotted, didn't even tihnk of there, being in more of a find the contents thought mode.
postet av bluetyson kl. 11:58 pm (EST) den Oct 26, 2007
postet av bluetyson kl. 8:36 pm (EST) den Oct 26, 2007
postet av bluetyson kl. 8:33 pm (EST) den Oct 26, 2007
postet av bluetyson kl. 1:07 am (EST) den Oct 26, 2007
postet av bluetyson kl. 1:05 am (EST) den Oct 26, 2007
postet av amysisson kl. 1:25 am (EST) den Oct 24, 2007
Funny you should pick Tau Zero as an example; it's one of the top three most important/influential books in my life. The other two are The Songs of Distant Earth by Clarke (not considered one of his better books, but I differ on that) and A Tree Grows in Brooklyn.
So I bet we've been at the same Albacon before. We lived in Waterford 1996 to the end of 2002, and got to at least three Albacons in that time period. We were planning on coming for World Fantasy in Saratoga Springs this year, but I changed jobs and have not yet accrued vacation yet.
Perhaps we'll cross paths somewhere down the line!
postet av amysisson kl. 1:20 am (EST) den Oct 24, 2007
But I lived in upstate NY just before we moved here.... Waterford, near Albany. My husband went to RPI and I worked at PEF. We went to Albacon several years; do you go to that?
Anyhow, thanks for the answer on Artifact by Benford. That was the quickest I've had a book mystery solved, I think!
I'm curious, what is the difference between your sf tag and your science fiction tag, if you don't mind my asking?
postet av amysisson kl. 11:33 pm (EST) den Oct 23, 2007
I wasn't aware!
Hi, Bob, I just got back from a very unrestful vacation... Altho', I was a Woman Who Swims With the Squid for a while... :)
postet av LolaWalser kl. 7:38 am (EST) den Oct 15, 2007
You're lucky that Pepys didn't specify "for X new pages coming in, X old pages have to leave." That means for any book coming in you can launch some skinny little item into the abyss. Maybe you'll want to stock up on a shelf of skinny little things before the Pepysian Rule becomes mandatory, so that you have a stockpile of ejectables. Oh, wait, you'd still be in the shelf space crunch, wouldn't you?
Never mind.
postet av Melanchthon kl. 10:00 pm (EST) den Oct 4, 2007
Here in Hoonaloon land things are going well, and the new arrival is expected early November.
For all the difficulties of running our own business, I think it will be good when that time comes that we`ll both be around so much to enjoy the experience, much better than in my own father`s day, when he actually didn`t see that much of my early years due to working long hours.
Living in Derbyshire is also appealing, after a very rough start, and things are settling down nicely now.
How are things with you ? Say `Hi` to Maggie for us.
Best,
Nick & Ann-Marie
postet av nickhoonaloon kl. 4:24 am (EST) den Sep 30, 2007
Thanks indirectly for the "Birdland" link. I also associated SilentInAWay to InASilentWay. Another also for associating Joe primarily with "Mercy, Mercy, Mercy." RIP.
postet av DromJohn kl. 12:12 pm (EST) den Sep 14, 2007
postet av SilentInAWay kl. 12:06 am (EST) den Sep 12, 2007
postet av SilentInAWay kl. 10:26 pm (EST) den Sep 11, 2007
postet av badgerthorazine kl. 11:43 pm (EST) den Sep 1, 2007
I read it, and can't think of what the bug might be. I do catch a great many such bugs in the sf I read, actually in nearly all, though I usually can enjoy the story anyway. What's the problem?
postet av dukedom_enough kl. 7:53 pm (EST) den Aug 21, 2007
postet av FourSeasons kl. 9:42 am (EST) den Aug 20, 2007
postet av almigwin kl. 9:34 pm (EST) den Aug 19, 2007
postet av almigwin kl. 1:54 am (EST) den Aug 18, 2007
postet av freezotic kl. 11:43 am (EST) den Aug 11, 2007
postet av TheresaWilliams kl. 7:28 pm (EST) den Aug 1, 2007
postet av ggchickapee kl. 10:46 am (EST) den Aug 1, 2007
postet av ggchickapee kl. 7:49 pm (EST) den Jul 30, 2007
postet av dukedom_enough kl. 8:09 am (EST) den Jul 30, 2007
postet av Pepys kl. 3:58 am (EST) den Jul 26, 2007
>patron of civil servants: Yes I noted this afterwards in your profile. It's rather logical. Do you intend to rise in the pecking order as He did?
François
postet av Pepys kl. 3:16 am (EST) den Jul 25, 2007
Best,
Nick
postet av nickhoonaloon kl. 12:30 pm (EST) den Jul 24, 2007
But how do you do with so many books?
postet av Pepys kl. 3:26 am (EST) den Jul 24, 2007
Finding a web site like this is akin to "coming home again" for anyone who loves books and reading.
LOL!...After reading some of the many comments directed your way, I'd have to say you "lead an interesting life." Best to you,
--Murray in Colorado
postet av FunnyGrampa kl. 12:34 pm (EST) den Jul 23, 2007
Since we moved house we`ve had quite a lot to contend with - the house turned out to be more neglected than we realised and our relatively small budget for improvements was soon eaten up, also the business has needed constant atention to keep it afloat. Plus, I must admit, I can only spend so much time on the computer before I long to be outdoors - this is much more pronounced now we can see Derbyshire countryside from the back windows of our house.
We`re actually finding some time to relax now and I`m getting a bit of reading done - currently making my second attempt on David Levering Lewis` Du Bois biography.
Anyway, we moved, we saw, we conquered and all OK now, plus we`re expecting our first child in November ! You can be the first LTer to hear about it.
Hope you are well, regards to Maggie.
Nick & Ann-Marie
postet av nickhoonaloon kl. 7:12 am (EST) den Jul 18, 2007
Thanks for responding to my comment-
Twa Corbies
postet av twacorbies kl. 6:48 pm (EST) den Jul 17, 2007
I popped over to your profile because of the Talk discussion about cool profiles (it is quite nice, by the way). When you were discussing your tags, you mention "speculative fiction." I was wondering if you consider it a term interchangeable with Sci Fi and Fantasy or something quite specific or even a sub genre. I was reading "Darker Than You Think" before work at a cafe and noticed one of the blurbs mentioned something like "a remarkable work of Speculative Fiction." I'm sure some could cynically compare it to the use of "Graphic Novel" in place of Trade Paperback Comic Book (or whatever), but since your library and experience with Sci Fi seems vast, I thought you would have an interesting answer (my own experience is quite small- the only thing Sci Fi I've read in my adult years that I can think of is "The Stars My Destination" so you can take my lack of knowledge on the subject as a given).
Anyway, if you get a chance, I'd love to hear your thoughts on it. In any case, great profile page- the lot of you on the Talk thread have inspired me to do a bit more work on my own!
Thanks,
twacorbies (Sean)
postet av twacorbies kl. 3:48 pm (EST) den Jul 16, 2007
Vive la liberté, égalité, fraternité!
postet av LolaWalser kl. 12:52 pm (EST) den Jul 14, 2007
postet av bluetyson kl. 9:32 pm (EST) den Jul 10, 2007
Thanks :)
postet av bluetyson kl. 12:46 am (EST) den Jul 9, 2007
If that is handy in the Measureless Caverns of books sometime in the future I'd be interested, in knowing what is in it.
DAW 334 I think, if you have all those organised.
Thanks,
bt
postet av bluetyson kl. 12:40 pm (EST) den Jul 6, 2007
postet av Quaisior kl. 1:23 pm (EST) den Jul 5, 2007
postet av bluetyson kl. 11:38 am (EST) den Jul 1, 2007
postet av gregfindley kl. 5:19 am (EST) den Jul 1, 2007
postet av gregfindley kl. 6:06 am (EST) den Jun 30, 2007
He is also working on a reference work, the URL below will give you an idea. Myths has a great John Picacio cover too with a fab Modesty Blaise as part of it.
http://www.pjfarmer.com/woldnewton/Chron...
postet av bluetyson kl. 11:34 pm (EST) den Jun 29, 2007
Thanks for your post on my question about the Readercon. *Love* your library! I live in a small apt , so I have to do the Samuel Pepys order as well. I hope to see you an your family at the Readercon. I'm doin a bit of volunteering, so you'll most likely find at registration the first day or so.
All the best, Kris
postet av krisa kl. 11:03 pm (EST) den Jun 29, 2007
"no Rowling - those are the kids'. No Gaiman or Pratchett or Doug Adams, either - those are either my wife's, or the kids'."
Those are also the writers my own kids enjoy, and that I have not always been as drawn to, but I have enjoyed the sharing as we pass books back and forth. I have learned to appreciate Gaiman, and they also introduced me to Neal Stepehnson, whom I thoroughly enjoy. I started them on Orson Scott Card (whose Ender's Game I would teach if I ever had a Middle School English class again), and they read him more voraciously than I ever did. I also shared Philip K. Dick to general acclaim. They passed on their graphic novels (and I have really enjoyed both Y:The Last Man and Finder: Sin Eater by Carla Speed McNeil), and I passed on mine (Maus), much-loved by all of us. They gave me Godel, Escher and Bach, too, which is waaay over my head, but fascinating as an afternoon snack. Very nice to connect with one's kids in this way!
Yes, had I read Dhalgren in my youth I am sure I would have enjoyed it more -- it was a world I partially inhabited then and only remember with some surprise today. But the challenge of the read was quite pleasurable even now -- it kept those creaky brain cells stimulated.
postet av kambrogi kl. 9:23 am (EST) den Jun 29, 2007
postet av quartzite kl. 1:56 pm (EST) den Jun 28, 2007
postet av marydell kl. 9:05 pm (EST) den Jun 27, 2007
postet av dodger kl. 10:54 pm (EST) den Jun 26, 2007
postet av quartzite kl. 3:16 pm (EST) den Jun 26, 2007
We likely agree on very little and would probably get into it on a variety of subjects, ideologies and points of view. Nonetheless, I respect your right to disagree with me vociferously and hope you will continue to defend your way of thinking with articulateness and grace. I remain willing to be persuaded and to change my mind if I'm wrong. Otherwise, I'd be a dunderhead and an arsehole.
postet av CliffBurns kl. 12:12 am (EST) den Jun 25, 2007
~M~
postet av Morphidae kl. 8:12 pm (EST) den Jun 24, 2007
Never try to teach a pig to sing. It wastes your time and annoys the pig.
~M~
postet av Morphidae kl. 7:32 pm (EST) den Jun 24, 2007
postet av kambrogi kl. 12:33 pm (EST) den Jun 22, 2007
Hmmm, I hadn't actually realized we had stopped speaking. I must not have received everything you've been writing to me since last December before you cut me off! Anyway, I'm so glad we've now finally got that mix-up sorted out. :)
Addressing your last point first ...
"My refutation of point "c" remains: Good writing is good writing, we recognize it when we see it, and it sometimes occurs even in the genre ghetto of SF. Because good writing can appear anywhere, even in a genre as 'low-brow' as, oh, say, golf stories in WWI-era copies of Redbook."
In 1910 Wodehouse wasn't considered "classic literature" or even "literary"; because very few people knew of his existence back then. His popularity clearly changed as he entered his purple prose period (let's say 1920 through the 60s) and it progressively increased throughout that period. However, he was still not considered "classic literature" in 1920 (just after the Redbook period you mentioned), nor was he considered that in 1930, 1940, 1950 ... 2000, or even today. But I do believe he may be getting there ... each generation he progresses further up the literary squash ladder, as it were. But one isn't generally acknowledged as being a literary master over night, any more than you go straight to the top of the squash ladder the day you join a new racquets club, even if you are the best player in the club the day that you join. You have to demonstrate that superior skill set to a fresh opponent (read each new batch of literary critics for the analogue) at each rung of the ladder.
Plum's writing was almost fully matured by the WW1 period you referenced, and by the early twenties he had definitely hit his stride - The Awakening of Rollo Podmarsh (which appeared in Redbook in 1923? I believe) is, IMHO, one of the funnier and best written pieces that he created. In fact, all of the golf stories in The Heart of a Goof appeared in Redbook that year or thereabouts. And yes, his writing then was definitely "good writing" - regardless of whether anyone labeled it as such then, or even labels it that way now. Because, I too, recognize it when I see it. However, that quality assessment is only from my OWN PERSONAL PERSPECTIVE. Just like the Supreme Court, I also recognize pornography when I see it! :)
If Plum remained a literary outsider, or was even considered absolute rubbish by the literati crowd, as long as he is still popular enough to remain in print such that I am able to currently read him I would be quite content. Yet it is so much nicer for my own ego, isn't it, if I also know that my own personal favorite author is well respected in all the best corridors of literature, and that my own choice of reading material is vindicated by people possibly much smarter than me, better qualified academically than me, and possibly even with provably better taste than me, too? And isn't that what parts of that sci-fi thread were really all about (at least in those places where the actual OP topic was forgotten)?
****************
BTW, you loaded your last argument there with quite a bit of hyperbole, IMO. "Because good writing can appear anywhere, even in a genre as 'low-brow' as, oh, say, golf stories in WWI-era copies of Redbook." I am personally not acquainted with the status and quality of the Redbook publication - unlike, say, The Saturday Evening Post or Playboy magazines, I have never actually seen one. But even if I accept that that particular publication normally churned out abysmal, lowest of the low-brow pap, the fact is, each of those golf stories were published in the Strand magazine in London about two months prior to their appearing in publication on this side of the pond in Redbook. So however much you may claim that those Plum stories were pearls hidden amongst a bunch of crap from, say, other areas of the genre ghetto(s), over in London Plum was being published in what was considered to be the best magazine in its class - one in fact that he had read assiduously as a child when one of his own literary heroes, Arthur Conan Doyle, was still publishing Sherlock Holmes short stories in it.
So Plum's writing had clearly already been recognized sufficiently in Britain for it to be published cheek-by-jowl with the best other top commercial-selling authors of the day. Now I fully realize that "top-selling" doesn't equate to "literary", nevertheless the situation is also far from being the "hidden bright spot in a dismal genre ghetto" scenario that you just tried to paint. Good writing may indeed occur within the genre ghetto of SF - for instance, I think Vonnegut would obviously fulfil that description, but no one on that thread knew enough to mention him - but IMO Plum's stories (or at least the Redbook era ones that you specifically referenced) are simply not very good examples of some of that kind of writing.
Later.
postet av Rule42 kl. 1:10 pm (EST) den Jun 20, 2007
I really have no idea why you found my post "borderline offensive" but hopefully I addressed your concerns somewhat with my response. However, having just reread that second post I now realize that it may contain something that could well be misconstrued due to my poor sentence structure. At the end I wasn't calling you a numpty; only the people that have previously flagged other innocuous posts of mine. I probably need to go back and remove that comment.
The problem with aesthetics is that it's such a thorny discipline. If you insist that there is an aesthetic in whichever field of endeavor you're addressing - art, music, literature, or even just the sci-fi genre thereof - then someone is bound to call you an elitist and a snob. If you acknowledge that all tastes are somewhat valid then you've just destroyed the concept of their being an aesthetic hierarchy (i.e., good all the way through bad, by whatever value system you choose to use in order to determine that progression). Finally, if you try and take the middle ground between these two extremes (as I think you were doing), in the end all your arguments will end up sounding like something that is straight out of Orwell ... all tastes are equally valid but some are more tasteful than others!
So you can choose to be an elitist snob (in the eyes of others), or you can adopt the skeptical viewpoint that you cannot discern between different values (what I was calling intellectual nihilism), or you can try and walk the middle ground and end up sounding like a hypocrite! Elitism, nihilism, hypocrisy ... not a pretty choice! I never enjoyed aesthetics. :( Of the three, I prefer to be an elitist simply because I don't want to be a nihilist or a hypocrite.
I think that Warhol and Duchamp pretty well destroyed the elitist position in art (if Brillo pads and urinals are art, what isn't art?) which might be one of the reasons why nihilism is now so prominent in post-modernist thinking. Anyway, I'm sorry you thought I was trying to put words in your mouth ... I really wasn't ... it's just the nature of the beast. To my mind, aesthetics is just one big slippery slope. Personally, I prefer not to think about it too much and read Plum instead! :(
Take care.
postet av Rule42 kl. 11:40 pm (EST) den Jun 17, 2007
I've only listed 68 books so far - 11 of them non-fiction - and we share 50 of them, so I naturally admire your taste!
The SF and warships groups look interesting - I'll have to join those.
Tony Williams
postet av AnthonyGWilliams kl. 10:09 am (EST) den Jun 4, 2007
Thanks for the heads up on the Utica group, nice of you to think of me. I took a peek, it looks like she wants to begin a reading group and as you suspected, Utica is a bit too far for me to drive for that. Thanks though:)
postet av cckelly kl. 10:58 pm (EST) den Jun 3, 2007
thanks for offering to help me get the utica ny book lovers grp goin
nice profile
postet av bookwhore78 kl. 7:10 pm (EST) den Jun 3, 2007
I'm gobsmacked. Thanks for the info on the author site...and Inman. The book has been of interest to me for years, one of those niggling titles that you can never really get out of your head. The only thing comparable was this short sports novel called THE ONLY GAME IN TOWN a friend gave me when I was in Grade 7. Only problem was, the last five pages were missing so I never knew how it ended. A couple of years ago, thanks to abebooks.com, I found the book super-cheap and read the conclusion. A mystery stretching back 25 years solved. Doncha love when that happens? I'll follow up your tips in the a.m. I'm a bit tired and 50 pages into the new Lee Child "Jack Reacher" novel. I find the series bloody addictive. Reacher solves the crime and viciously exacts punishment on wrong-doers. Often with fatal consequences. That gibes well with my northern Irish genes, methinks. Be well--undoubtedly there will be further contact between us.
postet av CliffBurns kl. 12:25 am (EST) den Jun 2, 2007
Having trouble paring down the "LT Author" site you alluded to. Is there somewhere specific you have in mind? I'm getting something like 60 entries...keep in mind I'm a technological moron and make the appropriate adjustment in terminology/approach.
C.B.
postet av CliffBurns kl. 10:49 pm (EST) den Jun 1, 2007
Thanks for the invite and I'm intrigued that of all the people in LT I think I have the most books in common
with you. I appreciate your modesty (describing yourself as a "minor civil servant"). No inflated egos there. I shall have a look at the group you mentioned and hope I fare better there than with the SF fandom crowd. I envy your collection and have a feeling that if I dropped by to browse your collection you'd have to get rid of me with mace and a Taser.
Regards to you,
Cliff
postet av CliffBurns kl. 10:40 pm (EST) den Jun 1, 2007
You have a VERY impressive collection here.
I guess that makes me just another admirer of your library. *chuckle*
Although, by the looks of things, and after reviewing the number of books we share (167 works, 197 books) I'm not really that surprised that so many eventually wander into the corners of your library to gaze at, wander around and hopelessly stare at the collection you have amassed here. Will Durant in common, very nice. :)
Anyways, just rambling about and thought I would throw a smile/comment your way.
Much bliss & happy reading! :)
~PandorasRequiem
postet av PandorasRequiem kl. 7:39 pm (EST) den May 31, 2007
Harry Harrison
1967 : The Left Hand Way - A. Bertram Chandler
Judith Merrill
07 : Parky - David Rome
08 : Change of Heart - A. Bertram Chandler
10 : It Could Be You - Frank Roberts
11 : There's A Starman in Ward 7 - David Rome
postet av bluetyson kl. 10:32 pm (EST) den May 20, 2007
Thank you for the welcome - some people are lumpers/some people are splitters - I'm a lumper is all.
I am very excited about this site - I have been looking for something like this for years and have contemplated actually, in the past, buying software to do the job. (Usually when I get home from the library booksale and find I have bought another duplicate...)
I imagine that I will run into you a few times - you have 58 of the 75 books I have entered - and I have only put in my Heinlein and one shelf of anthologies!
Thanks again for the welcome.
PortiaLong
postet av PortiaLong kl. 10:32 pm (EST) den May 16, 2007
Even though I have less than half as many books as you, I too have to double-shelve and keep finding books that escaped the first cataloguing. One side benefit is that I discover (after years or decades of ownership) that two or more books that I kept in completely separate mental drawers were written/edited by the same person! Another benefit is that people can finally dare to give me books as gifts, since they can easily find out whether I already have them.
postet av languagehat kl. 3:49 pm (EST) den May 12, 2007
Thanks for the welcome!
It's always nice to come across another Keith Roberts fan--in fact it's always nice to come across someone else who has heard of Keith, it amazes me that a writer so good can be so little known, but then I suppose the the old "lowest common denominator" rule comes into play, and that means the best known and the most liked of anything, books, music, movies, is . . . . um....ordure!
postet av solarisbooks kl. 9:23 am (EST) den May 12, 2007
postet av mamachunk kl. 8:32 pm (EST) den May 11, 2007
this thread on least favourite works by Card?. Some interesting discussion to read, at least for me, in finding others who liked some of the works but really disliked some of his other opinions. I remembered your previous comment on the throwing a book across a room.
postet av ryn_books kl. 7:46 am (EST) den May 3, 2007
postet av bluetyson kl. 10:35 pm (EST) den May 2, 2007
http://adventuresinscifipublishing.blogs...
May be of interest, there is a SF book club editor one in the middle episodes.
Also saw Dozois has a Best of the Year's Best book out too, while browsing ABE. Lol.
postet av bluetyson kl. 3:41 am (EST) den May 2, 2007
I do believe someone was asking about $50 for that issue of Interzone. I wondered if Angela Carter might have been the British equivalent of our John Crowley within the genre. You know? Not in writing style, but in their relationship to the genre.
Dealer list is up on the Readercon website now. Start saving your pennies:-) Best, Lois
postet av avaland kl. 12:52 pm (EST) den Apr 29, 2007
To collect them if they keep going at this rate you would need a titanium reinforced bookcase (and probably floor) as they ain't small.
postet av bluetyson kl. 9:32 pm (EST) den Apr 24, 2007
http://www.yearsbestsf.info/
Population of world much bigger than in DAW's day, so should be able to fill a few more books I guess. :)
postet av bluetyson kl. 10:35 pm (EST) den Apr 23, 2007
http://www.bestsf.net/reviews/wollheim19...
When it said review, I figured that is what it was, not a story list!
postet av bluetyson kl. 7:41 am (EST) den Apr 23, 2007
I think the 1979 has Creator by David Lake, which is in one of Paul Collins' anthologies here, but not one I have found at other than very keen collector prices.
So he may be the earliest local in one of those.
Thanks,
bt
postet av bluetyson kl. 7:39 am (EST) den Apr 23, 2007
-- Clarke's Fourth Law.
(I don't see why Arthur should be the only Clarke who gets to formulate them.)
-- Paul Clarke, rec.arts.sf.written
postet av bluetyson kl. 3:00 am (EST) den Apr 21, 2007
PZ rocks!
Highly recommended: "Evolution" by Carl Zimmer.
postet av monado kl. 2:58 pm (EST) den Apr 18, 2007
Thanks again and have fun with the shelf checking.
postet av ryn_books kl. 10:21 am (EST) den Apr 12, 2007
On a more positve anthologies note....when you get a moment I'd welcome any opinion on the Brian M Thomsen Novel Ideas anthologies. They look interesting, but would be an import/bookstore order for me to get down here.
postet av ryn_books kl. 6:07 am (EST) den Apr 11, 2007
postet av ginmar kl. 9:27 pm (EST) den Apr 9, 2007
I like some of you blog entries. Particularly the home ownership analysis.
And I'm not so keen on SF, but I notice we have a lot of other books in common. The question of tagging is an interesting one, though the divisions for me were slightly different - I puzzled over the divisions between national/language-bound literatures and settled on an inadequate compromise, but I did go over some of the points in detail on a thread started by LolaWalser. I'll dig it up if you're interested.
postet av Existanai kl. 1:43 pm (EST) den Apr 9, 2007
I've started reading your blog too - interesting. See you around!
postet av Existanai kl. 12:07 am (EST) den Apr 9, 2007
postet av NativeRoses kl. 11:05 pm (EST) den Apr 7, 2007
http://gregegan.customer.netspace.net.au...
postet av bluetyson kl. 1:44 pm (EST) den Apr 6, 2007
I will look at the Bookmooch list, but there is the whole tyranny of distance/postage! :)
postet av bluetyson kl. 9:53 pm (EST) den Apr 5, 2007
postet av bluetyson kl. 8:09 am (EST) den Apr 5, 2007
postet av steinbock kl. 11:06 pm (EST) den Mar 23, 2007
postet av NativeRoses kl. 8:19 pm (EST) den Feb 27, 2007
postet av Fnarf kl. 4:23 pm (EST) den Feb 23, 2007
I saw your post about selling duplicates on ebay. I have a few I'm thinking of selling but I've never done the ebay thing. What were the advantages of ebay over, say Amazon, for you? Any pointers of wisdom you'd be willing to impart?
I keep trying to get through your Bookmooch inventory btw, however, I'm always about 10 pages in when the site becomes ungodly sloooooow. Probably just as well since I could blow all my measly few points and not get through half your offerings.
postet av cckelly kl. 12:24 am (EST) den Feb 7, 2007
postet av andyl kl. 4:30 am (EST) den Jan 30, 2007
AND "Growing Up In Tier 3000"!
postet av doubtfulpalace kl. 12:12 am (EST) den Jan 19, 2007
postet av MyopicBookworm kl. 6:46 am (EST) den Jan 11, 2007
You're high on my list of "raw" booksharers at present, but I think that's because my catalogue currently prioritizes books in boxes under the bed, and that's where most of the SF is!
postet av MyopicBookworm kl. 12:29 pm (EST) den Jan 10, 2007
thanks for your reply. "Site Talk" is there such a group, or is it a fishing expedition.
I seem to miss a help link (for some of my basic questions) on this site.
anyway, belated A Merry Christmas and a Happy new Year.
postet av bolger kl. 12:26 am (EST) den Dec 30, 2006
postet av selfnoise kl. 7:07 pm (EST) den Dec 29, 2006
postet av DeadGoodBooks kl. 6:03 am (EST) den Dec 25, 2006
postet av howie kl. 9:20 am (EST) den Dec 24, 2006
Anyway, I sympathize about shelf space. Of course, I have far, [i]far[/i] fewer books than you do, but I also only have a single room to put all my belongings in. Right now I have all the books I've read in storage, and the unread ones are all piled onto a single bookcase, all jumbled and out of any sort of order (which drives me nuts). Whenever I get around to getting my own house, I think I'm going to have to get at least one extra bedroom to function as a private library.
Maybe I can get them to build shelves into the walls.
postet av stochasticooze kl. 12:20 am (EST) den Dec 20, 2006
postet av Fnarf kl. 12:38 pm (EST) den Dec 15, 2006
I remember the Konica T3 as being quite an important product in some ways; though not to me personally. I didn't have an auto-exposure camera until 1987, when I got an Olympus OM-4T; I'm a bit of a curmudgeon on the topic of exposure automation still. My first SLR was a Miranda Sensorex; decent enough, but a clear mistake for me (courtesy of Consumer Reports; I like them better than any other consumer review magazine, they're the only one that understands statistics for one thing, but they're not so good at reviewing things for specialized markets, and for me camera and computer gear isn't just ordinary consumer toys). I eventually traded that for an Asahi Pentax Spotmatic and a Leica M3, then replaced those when they were stolen out of my house with a Nikon FM (about 1980). Switched to Olympus in 1987 for the multi-spot metering, and back to Nikon in 1994 for auto-focus. My first DSLR was a Fuji S2 (Nikon mount) in 2003 (well, 30-Jan-2002), and I upgraded that to a D200 last spring (in time for Minicon of course). I've still got a darkroom in boxes around the basement here, including an Omega D5 enlarger and three lenses (there are 4x5 and 6x4.5 cameras around too, though little used). At this point the darkroom is not, I think, going to happen again. There's some slight possibility I might shoot B&W film and develop it weirdly and then scan it still, but that's about all.
"Dave Powell" rings a bell -- but maybe I'm wrong, because he doesn't seem to show up on the seating chart for where I worked. I was a Large Computer Group guy, Marlboro MA, from 1981 to 1985.
Yes, my photos certainly were linked from Making Light, and I comment there occasionally also. We've known Patrick and Teresa for quite a while at this point, though I didn't really meet him when he came through Minneapolis as a 16-year-old wandering around fandom.
Well, pleasant as this is, I think there are some people expecting some code to be commmitted today, so I'd better type at the other keyboard for a while.
Cheers!
postet av dd-b kl. 12:17 pm (EST) den Dec 12, 2006
Huh; strange commenting/discussion system here, clicking "reply" on your comment that showed up under my profile shows me making a new comment under your profile, with your response to my comment nowhere in sight.
I've liked the idea of cataloging my library for more than 30 years. I first started doing so on punch cards. I next started, *much* later, using ReaderWare and a cuecat scanner, and I've still got that data. That was new books and books I reread, fairly consistently for a while. At this point it'd be all four of our libraries, with owner codes and location codes (since there are very few rooms in this house with no books -- just the bathrooms and kitchens, water and books don't mix). But taking it on systematically is a HUGE job, and then I think of the high risk of it getting out of date; recovering from an out of data situation is almost as big a job as entering it in the first place. (We're talking somewhere around 15k volumes I'd guesstimate).
I certainly like the idea of having the listing with me -- and in fact I've got the Palm Pilot module from Readerware so I can do that with that database.
But LibraryThing has its own charm, too. I'm a sucker for online communities, starting with Arpanet mailing lists, then Usenet, and I ran the Fidonet SF echo and their WRITING echo for a while in the late 80s/early 90s. I don't know if that's an attraction for LT or a reason to run screaming :-).
I lived out in the Boston area 1981-1985 (working for DEC), then came back to Minneapolis. I've been pretty visible various online places, and in some parts of SF fandom; I was in charge of photography for the retrospective slide show at Noreascon III. We could have overlapped any number of ways. I'm the only David Dyer-Bennet on the planet so far.
postet av dd-b kl. 12:01 am (EST) den Dec 12, 2006
I was indexing with ReaderWare, but not too heavily; I haven't systematically attacked the shelves yet. And the shelves actually have *four* people's books on