Tilfeldige bøker fra oregonobsessionzs bibliotek
Borderland: A Journey Through the History of Ukraine av Anna Reid
The Island at the Center of the World: The Epic Story of Dutch Manhattan & the Forgotten Colony That Shaped America av Russell Shorto
Shipwreck at the Bottom of the World: The Extraordinary True Story of Shackleton and the Endurance av Jennifer Armstrong
Quilts from the Civil War: nine projects, historic notes, diary entries av Barbara Brackman
The Hairstons: An American Family in Black and White av Henry Wiencek
Prairie Children And Their Quilts: 14 Little Projects That Honor the Pioneer Spirit av Kathleen Tracy
The Enchantress of Florence: A Novel av Salman Rushdie
Medlemmer med oregonobsessionzs bøker
Medlemskoblinger
interessante biblioteker: Asahel, benjfrank, carminowe, davidabrams, EarlyReviewers, GeorgeTweney, jbd1, Jesse_wiedinmyer, Mechan1c, MtnSk8tr, nepaquilter, nynjtc, obsessedbybooks, Schmerguls, wastatelib
LibraryThing-forfattere: David Liss (davidliss)
Medlem: oregonobsessionz
Bibliotek1,750 bøker — se bibliotek
Anmeldelser173 anmeldelser — se anmeldelser
Skyeremneordsky, forfattersky
EmneordUS history (477), PNW (241), Easton Press (234), fiction (207), biography (189), presidents (138), WA (123), classics (115), quilt history (114), reference (108) — se alle emneord
GrupperDisaster Buffs, Early Reviewers, Gardening, Knitters Inc., Librarything Local, Needlearts, Outdoor Readers, Pro and Con, Quilt History, Sustainability
FavorittforfattereBarbara Brackman, Ken Kesey, David McCullough, John McPhee, Jonathan Raban, Wallace Stegner, Mark Twain (Delte favoritter)
FavorittbokhandlereAnnie Bloom's Books, Moe's Books, Powell's Books at Cedar Hills Crossing, Powell's Books on Hawthorne, Powell's City of Books, Tattered Cover Book Store - Colfax Avenue, Tattered Cover Book Store - Historic LoDo, Third Place Books (Ravenna), William James Bookseller
Om biblioteket mitt Mostly nonfiction, with some concentration in US history, quilt/textile history, Pacific Northwest (loosely defined), disasters, travel/exploration/mountaineering, and whatever science topics look interesting. Got rid of most of my paperbacks about 10 years ago; I won't catalog titles read earlier unless I replace them.
My catalog mostly represents books actually in my possession, but you will see some tagged ~wishlist. I don't necessarily intend to acquire all of these wishlist books, but it is convenient to have a list of books to be evaluated. I considered moving those to a free account, but I keep hoping for a wishlist function to make them invisible.
I tend to read several books at once, reading a chapter at a time from each in turn. I am trying to rate and review all books as I read them. I applied ratings to some books read in the past, but have done few retrospective reviews. My ratings tend to run high, reflecting my 50-page policy. If the book doesn't grab my attention within 50 pages, it isn't coming home with me.

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http://www.librarything.com/profile/oregonobsessionz (profil)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/oregonobsessionz (bibliotek)
Medlem sidenFeb 6, 2007

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One of my biggest flaws is failing to keep the audience in mind, failing to keep in mind that truth is a dangerous thing, and that we need to let people save face, esp. in public arguments. To try to take it easy, in other words.
postet av deniro kl. 7:00 pm (EST) den Aug 14, 2008
postet av mvrdrk kl. 2:34 am (EST) den Aug 2, 2008
postet av mvrdrk kl. 2:13 am (EST) den Aug 2, 2008
And by the way...I liked your joke. It's pretty funny!
I think it was swell of you to send me a message.....thanks again!
postet av bethann kl. 9:41 pm (EST) den Jul 24, 2008
My user name, by the way, is a combo of my surname and my husband's. It's the Italian version of my surname!
postet av Nickelini kl. 2:35 am (EST) den Jul 19, 2008
I very much want to get to "Crack in the World", after finishing "Krakatoa" and "River of Shadows". Thanks again.
postet av GotoTengo kl. 4:43 am (EST) den Jul 12, 2008
About those haiku reviews.
We shall tout it much
postet av timspalding kl. 1:11 pm (EST) den Jul 7, 2008
postet av nancygrahamogne kl. 11:42 am (EST) den Jul 5, 2008
postet av theoria kl. 8:58 pm (EST) den Jun 25, 2008
postet av steiac kl. 11:23 pm (EST) den May 31, 2008
postet av Jesse_wiedinmyer kl. 10:00 pm (EST) den May 31, 2008
postet av EncompassedRunner kl. 10:35 pm (EST) den May 10, 2008
Camassia is not well known in the UK, and I had never heard of it until we moved house five years ago, and discovered that we were doomed to wrestle with a very heavy clay soil. I started looking for plants that would thrive in clay, and the book said "bulbs: Camassia", so I hunted them out. Camassia cusickii (light blue) and Camassia leichtlinii Alba (very pale yellow, double flowered) are still in bud, but a dark blue one is flowering now. It was sold simply as "Camassia leichtinii", but as it is smaller than the others I suspect it may actually be Camassia quamash, the one grown for food by native Americans; but the Latin names are a bit confused and I have not dared to nibble any of ours! The C. cusickii is getting quite dense, and I'm planning to split it after flowering: maybe I'll risk roasting one of those then!
postet av MyopicBookworm kl. 8:22 am (EST) den May 4, 2008
postet av retrojunkee kl. 9:58 am (EST) den May 2, 2008
postet av EncompassedRunner kl. 12:47 am (EST) den Mar 30, 2008
postet av wikkywikky kl. 10:01 am (EST) den Mar 10, 2008
postet av IaaS kl. 11:10 am (EST) den Mar 4, 2008
I haven't added any events from any of them because I still feel like there may be a way to hopefully add them automatically someway in the future. Might just be wishful thinking. I certainly don't want to go through all the Borders and BNs and post theirs. But maybe a few of the better independent ones would be worth the effort for awhile.
postet av wikkywikky kl. 9:37 am (EST) den Mar 4, 2008
postet av BGP kl. 10:27 pm (EST) den Mar 3, 2008
postet av pdxwoman kl. 2:42 am (EST) den Mar 2, 2008
postet av db_cooper kl. 11:39 pm (EST) den Feb 29, 2008
postet av KimberlyL kl. 7:20 am (EST) den Feb 12, 2008
I'd say Krakota is easily one of my favorites.
postet av KimberlyL kl. 7:16 am (EST) den Feb 12, 2008
Trudy
postet av MissTrudy kl. 12:23 am (EST) den Feb 9, 2008
Kris
postet av krisvalkyrie kl. 12:20 am (EST) den Feb 6, 2008
postet av jimroberts kl. 5:30 am (EST) den Feb 5, 2008
postet av jimroberts kl. 5:33 pm (EST) den Feb 4, 2008
postet av Jesse_wiedinmyer kl. 4:10 pm (EST) den Jan 31, 2008
postet av webecca kl. 3:51 pm (EST) den Jan 22, 2008
postet av wastatelib kl. 5:29 pm (EST) den Jan 11, 2008
postet av sergerca kl. 8:41 am (EST) den Jan 10, 2008
postet av Jesse_wiedinmyer kl. 5:35 pm (EST) den Jan 9, 2008
Didn't they enable a Private Comments field? Aren't you supposed to go public with the library now?
Glad to hear that things are going well with you.
postet av Jesse_wiedinmyer kl. 4:56 pm (EST) den Jan 9, 2008
postet av Jesse_wiedinmyer kl. 4:10 pm (EST) den Jan 9, 2008
postet av Mechan1c kl. 10:48 pm (EST) den Jan 6, 2008
the one on the shelf is volume 1, Columbia River to Stevens Pass. I'll update the catalog to reflect that. thanks for pointing out that we were incomplete.
annette.
postet av nynjtc kl. 1:16 pm (EST) den Dec 23, 2007
I feel like if i had held out one more month i might have given birth to a book baby. Maybe a book baby with a large forehead and mustache. Aww. Adorable! And kinda depressing!
postet av trespassers kl. 3:01 am (EST) den Dec 2, 2007
Sorry for delay in getting back to you. Have now amended the Byzantium item. Re. Turkey. It is completely safe travelling in the country, although one has to be alert in the major cities. Give it a whirl. I am sure you will enjoy it but will have changed after 10 years. David
postet av orientalist kl. 1:26 am (EST) den Nov 29, 2007
That set of races among the redwoods looks wonderful. Did you run any of them this year? Have you ever run the Chicago Marathon, or do you plan to?
Cheers!
Oakes
postet av oakesspalding kl. 4:44 pm (EST) den Nov 12, 2007
Speaking of Applebaum - if I could rate a book as 6 stars, her Gulag would be one of them. That book changed me in a way I never expected.
postet av sergerca kl. 11:10 pm (EST) den Nov 5, 2007
postet av Arctic-Stranger kl. 6:00 pm (EST) den Oct 31, 2007
Anne
postet av amancine kl. 9:12 am (EST) den Sep 26, 2007
postet av NativeRoses kl. 6:45 am (EST) den Sep 21, 2007
Re Jack London, Thirteen Tales of Terror it is.
Darren Courtney
postet av Pretensor kl. 12:39 pm (EST) den Aug 23, 2007
postet av jimroberts kl. 7:49 pm (EST) den Aug 18, 2007
My copy of The Wrong Box is a Scholastic edition, the vintage kind before Scholastic went to ISBN numbers. I'm not sure if it should be part of your edition list or not--it's adapted, so I'm guessing not, unless you want to be so thorough as to add adaptations, abridgements, classic comics, Illustrated versions and such.
postet av Sasha_Doll kl. 3:42 pm (EST) den Aug 16, 2007
postet av Jesse_wiedinmyer kl. 3:14 pm (EST) den Aug 14, 2007
Thanks for taking a pique at my profile.
postet av W_J_Clinton kl. 1:25 pm (EST) den Aug 14, 2007
ISP problems at this end and it looks like a big storm is boiling over the hilltop here, so this one may be brief.
Thanks for the Holbrook lead. I will hit the public library soon and look for it. I know I am conductor on a work train on Friday...this is a train sent out with men and equipment to do track or bridge or right of way repair, and it means that the conductor and engineer don't do much work. We get to watch other people work very hard...or I can turn my back and read a good book for 7 of the eight hours on duty. Greg, the engineer, will probably bring fishing equipment and cast into the Saint Louis River, if we go to where I think we are going.
Dee Brown is certainly worth three dollars. I also have the problem of reading bibliographies and getting sidetracked into other books. Was it Coleridge who dropped what he was reading every time he hit a footnote? I can relate to that.
On Saturday our library is doing something for the kids with a Little Engine that Could event. Of course they asked for two trainpeople and I got volunteered as the railroader known to be a reader. Just got an e-mail from a colleague named Linda...so I guess she was volunteered too.
Well, time for some dinner..alone tonight...my wife volunteered at the battered womens shelter here..and they offered her a job instead...so she is being oriented tonight. Then comes the question of Monday night football or reading.
I suspect the books will win.
Dave
postet av bemidjian kl. 7:05 pm (EST) den Aug 13, 2007
Yes, I understand your point, but you and I are not writing novels and giving public interviews on the topic with our "intellectual" credentials listed below our names. We aren't making any such strong public statements (publishing) and then defending the correctness of our absolutist claims, are we? I thought it was just a discussion and exchange of ideas. Perhaps that's the difference, if we were publishing, I would expect a higher standard to be met.
postet av rawREN kl. 8:16 am (EST) den Aug 13, 2007
Thanks for the leads. The Killer Angels is unread on my shelves. I will move it into the rotation soon. I will also pursue Stegner. Library booksale impends locally, so I will be on the lookout for his material.
Dave in Duluth
postet av bemidjian kl. 3:45 pm (EST) den Aug 6, 2007
The bridge collapse has most of the state in shock. When I heard about it, an hour after the event, I tried to call my sister, a daily commuter over that bridge. Phone traffic overwhelmed the system and it took a long time to get thru. All of my relatives and friends in the area were not directly affected. One long time e-mail friend lives very close to the bridge but seldom stirs from her home/library.
I have seen the movies of Galloping Gertie. Amazing.
Wish I could suggest a good Hill biog. The most recent big one is by Albro Martin, but he is an apologist for any person with a lot of money. So he tends to equate the real creators of things of value, like JJ Hill with those who raid and destroy, like Jay Gould, who built very little, improved nothing, and bled the systems he did control.
In the research I did for my one book I discovered at the turn of the century Hill was being treated as a paragon of efficiency and good public relations by the midwestern press, while other railroad leaders were compared unfavorably with him. He needs a good biography.
One good delineation of the Hill personality may be found in a strange source that I can suggest to you. Larry Millett, a Saint Paul reporter, has written several pretty good Sherlock Holmes novels over the past 20 years, bringing Holmes to the States where there are gaps in the canon.
Sherlock Homes and the Red Demon has Hill as a major character in an historically sound story about a major Minnesota forest fire. Hill also appears in some of the other books too.
I promised I would swear off books with White in the title. And then as I reached blindly into the shelves of aged books yesterday I pulled out The White Nile by Alan Moorhead. Oh, well, should probably just set Didion as the next selection after that.
Any other suggestions? Even with White in the title?
Thanks.
Dave
postet av bemidjian kl. 10:22 pm (EST) den Aug 4, 2007
postet av bemidjian kl. 8:00 pm (EST) den Aug 2, 2007
postet av Jesse_wiedinmyer kl. 3:57 am (EST) den Jul 3, 2007
postet av dianp kl. 1:35 am (EST) den Jul 2, 2007
Good to hear from you again. And after the great lead you provided to me the last time I will certainly check out The White Cascade. And then I will probably refrain from buying any more white books for a while.
I do not know how they figure the affinity. Perhaps that 10% and the shared preference for some authors make you closer in tastes to me than to 99% of the others out there. The fact that you have some railroad books must carry quite a lot of weight. And I know there are a great many people on librarything who share with me nothing except a Harry Potter or a Harper Lee.
I do not recall ever having a quilting book. I do own a quilt, however. Very useful when Duluth and Lake Superior decide that it is winter.
There is enough of the Great Northern Railway in my family that I will probably find it very interesting. I did hear from some online railroad people that the author had approached certain knowledgeable people and sought to get anti Jim Hill material about a malefactor of great wealth letting a town and a train die. From what I hear, the author quickly learned otherwise. (I am a lefty, but I have to say that if there must be filthy rich people it is good that James Hill was one of them.)
Still looking forward to seeing what the complete library of yours looks like.
Take care.
Dave in Duluth
postet av bemidjian kl. 7:33 pm (EST) den Jun 29, 2007
postet av Kade kl. 12:45 am (EST) den Jun 22, 2007
postet av joysgood kl. 1:20 pm (EST) den May 9, 2007
Ivy. Definitely ivy. Thanks for the comment!
postet av madame_urushiol kl. 8:21 pm (EST) den Mar 24, 2007
I worked at HAO/NCAR from 1968 to 1971 and again from 1980 to 1986.
postet av dhoyt kl. 7:38 am (EST) den Mar 16, 2007
postet av darkstream kl. 5:56 pm (EST) den Feb 26, 2007
postet av benjfrank kl. 1:16 am (EST) den Feb 24, 2007
Looks like your getting some more books entered. Look forward to seeing your catalog someday as well. I appreciate the work your doing with the combines. It is nice to see someone concered about the details of their library. I'm afraid i could use a little more detail oriented work on my own collection. I've entered many of the books off of amazon based on ISBN numbers and noticed that there were a few errors, which i've just let slip so far.
Regarding the Charles Morris, Alexander McClure authorship of "The Authentic William McKinley", it seems that it is truly written by both authors. Let me know if there is anything i can do to help fix your problem.
postet av ahystorian kl. 9:25 pm (EST) den Feb 23, 2007
Amazon is not entirely responsible for this mistake. The data they got from MIT Press was no good. In fact, if you go to the book page on their site, you will see that they have gotten John A. Barry the early Sun employee confused with John Barry the Irish environmentalist. So much so that they just included both their bios at the end, one after the other.
I don't even think the LoC data is clean. In addition to the John A. Barry authorities entry (86005707), there is a second John Barry 1948- one (89125718) as coauthor of Sunburst that says John G. Barry. Again the confusion comes from the publisher, in this case through a phone call.
postet av MMcM kl. 11:30 am (EST) den Feb 23, 2007
One of my favorite books with lists of disasters is "The new tablet of memory: Or, Chronicle of remarkable events; with the dates of inventions and discoveries" by Thomas Bartlett. He mentions all kinds of things that other people don't mention such as beaching of whales in the 1500s or the many great fires where cities burned down.
I don't know if Sasquatch exists or not. It seems like it is more likely than most fortean phenomena. I thought they tested some recovered hair for DNA and found it belonged to no known species. The case remains open.
postet av dhoyt kl. 8:13 pm (EST) den Feb 22, 2007
http://webpac.clic.edu:2082/search/aMorr...
which lists many Charles Morris authors. Click on Charles Morris with 19 books and it says Historical Tales and the Volcano's Deadly Work were both written by him. If so, then Charles Morris is Charles Smith Morris.
postet av dhoyt kl. 5:22 pm (EST) den Feb 21, 2007
This book has been in my family since it was published. At the time, my grandfather was a young, married farmer in western Missouri. He bought this one and another subscription picture book on the Boer War in South Africa. They were in an old bookcase in the store room upstairs when I was a child half a century ago.
postet av Illiniguy71 kl. 10:10 pm (EST) den Feb 20, 2007
Which reminds me -- I just finished White Cascade. It was better than I expected and will blog about it in the next week or so. I've got a couple of other titles to write up first.
Keep in touch. I'd appreciate a tap when your catalog is public!
postet av benjfrank kl. 8:34 pm (EST) den Feb 20, 2007
Tom Standage is great on technology and history in general - see http://www.tomstandage.com/ . Another good author in a similar vein is Alex Pang (askpang) from the Institute for the Future.
postet av superpatron kl. 12:46 am (EST) den Feb 20, 2007
Thank you for the suggestion. I will check at Boardwalk Books, our nearest thing to Powells, on Saturday when I will be downtown. I assume this book deals with the megastorm just before WW1 when so many ships wre lost in a few days of November.
I also look forward to you making your list public.
Over two years since I last wandered the stacks at Powells. I will be on the west coast this summer, and you reminded me I need to make an additional stop.
Dave in Duluth
postet av bemidjian kl. 12:39 pm (EST) den Feb 14, 2007
postet av benjfrank kl. 3:21 pm (EST) den Feb 11, 2007
I LOVE POWELL'S! I'm in Portland maybe 2-3 times a year and have two must stops: McMennimans and Powells.
Want to see upcoming books? I maintain a few lists on our website. They're at .
Oh-- have you read White Cascade yet? I haven't, but it's next on my list.
postet av benjfrank kl. 3:16 pm (EST) den Feb 11, 2007
Yes, I work for a library and knew "White Cascade" was coming pre-publication. I was all ready for it. I've known about the story for many years but this will be the first full-length account I've ever read. (I write a book blog for the library -- there's a link on my profile -- and mentioned the Wellington avalanche in the posting for "Washington Disasters" a few months back. I didn't know about 'White Cascade' back then, though.) How did you hear about it?
Please drop me line when your catalog goes public again.
postet av benjfrank kl. 10:21 am (EST) den Feb 11, 2007