Catching up on Classics (and lots more!) discussion
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Archived Chit Chat & All That
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What Book(s) have you just Bought, Ordered or Taken Delivery Of?




Cat's Crade, Breakfast of Champions, Mother Night, The Sirens of Titan, Slaughterhouse Five. One of them will be my classic satire/humor for Bingo.
I looked at the American Library set, but I didn't like the thinness of the pages. They would never survive a reading or two by me. lol



I love M.M. Kay, Teri-K! I have read Death in the Andamans, Death in Kashmir, and Death in Berlin, along with The Far Pavilions, and Shadow of the Moon.
You have a lot of good reading ahead of you! Enjoy :)


You have a lot of good reading ahead of you! Enjoy :)."
Thanks! The local library had Death in Kashmir and I really enjoyed it. So when I looked around and found I could get this collection of 3 mysteries for $5, I couldn't resist! I started it last night and I'm having so much fun already.

You have a lot of good readin..."
$5?? That's wonderful!! Glad you're having fun reading already :)
I just received a book I ordered in the mail. It is Death of a Gossip by M.C. Beaton. We watched the Haimish MacBeth BBC TV series a couple of years back, and I have always wanted to try one of the books. This is the first in the series. I hope it will be fun. One of my goals for this year is more fun, light reading.



It came today! I thought it wasn't coming till Monday! Yay! I'm excited to read this one! :)

Oh, that looks like a good one! For some reason I never thought I wanted to read Georgette Heyer. But once, for a challenge, I read The Grand Sophy and absolutely loved it! Since The Unknown Ajax is one of your top three, I'll have to add it to my list :)
What are your other top two of hers?

My top three are The Grand Sophy, lol, The Unknown Ajax and Frederica. If you enjoy her funny stories you might also like The Talisman Ring, which will be the March read in the Georgette Heyer Fans GR group. It's very silly, like a French farce, I think. Should be lots of fun. I really enjoy her amusing, light stories. Some of the others, not so much.
(Don't let the dialect one of the characters uses in Ajax put you off reading it. His accent goes away - for a reason you'll learn in the story.)

OK! I will add those two to my TBR. Not sure when I'll get to them, but when I'm tired of some of the heavy classics I'll be reading, I'll look to Georgette for some levity ;)
Thanks!!


latest two acquisitions:
1954 paperback edition of E. Phillips Oppenheim's 1934 The Strange Boarders of Palace Crescent
1956 (first published year of English translation!) 3rd impression hardback (with dustcover!) of Alejo Carpentier's The Lost Steps


I'm a Murakami fan. Some disturbing scenes in that one, but overall one of my favorites.






on kindle, and not kidding when it says volumes - maybe roughly 200 - 300 works (could be more). The file is under 60mb and works better on Android. I got it more for reference, but will read some parts in full.
It covers subjects on: History , Poetry , Natural Science , Philosophy , Biography , Prose Fiction , Criticism and the Essay, Education, Political Science, Drama, Voyages, Travel and Religion
And authors - it's a really, really long list.
Inkspill wrote: "
on kindle, and not kidding when it says volumes - maybe roughly 200 - 300 works (could be more). The file is under 60mb and wo..."
I also downloaded that on kindle a couple of years ago and I am ashamed to say I haven't really read from it I have read a couple of the selections, but it is so big and unweildy, plus the books are usually free, I end up downloading another copy that is smaller and listed individually.
I actually listed all the contents on a spreadsheet, but that didn't help me use it.

on kindle, and not kidding when it says volumes - maybe roughly 200 - 300 works (could be more). The file is under 60mb and wo..."
I also downloaded that on kindle a couple of years ago and I am ashamed to say I haven't really read from it I have read a couple of the selections, but it is so big and unweildy, plus the books are usually free, I end up downloading another copy that is smaller and listed individually.
I actually listed all the contents on a spreadsheet, but that didn't help me use it.

Two of them were tattered hardbacks they gave away for free - Kenilworth by Walter Scott and Touch Not the Cat by Mary Stewart. I probably won't keep the second book, but I am looking forward to reading it again, it's been decades.
I picked up 6 Fairacre books by Miss Read, since my collection was in a shipment of books that were lost some years ago. It makes me happy to have them back on my shelf again - I've been reading and collecting her since the 1970s.
I also picked up a lovely copy of Murder Must Advertise by Dorothy L. Sayers to replace worn out mmpb, Death in Captivity by Michael Gilbert, Murder for Christmas by Francis Duncan and a pristine Folgers edition of Hamlet by William Shakespeare.
I need to stay out of that store for a while now!

A Passage to India by E.M. Forster
The Air You Breathe by Frances De Pontes Pebbles
Public Library and Other Stories by Ali Smith
44 Scotland Street by Alexander McCall Smith
Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman
From the Ashes: My Story of Being Métis, Homeless, and Finding My Way by Jesse Thistle
Such a Fun Age by Kiley Reid
The Years Before Anne: The Early Career of Lucy Maud Montgomery, Author of Anne of Green Gables by Francis W.P. Bolger *The edition I have was published in 1974. I met Father Bolger at UPEI in the late 80s.
Janice wrote: "Even though I don't need any more books! My local library had a book sale last weekend, and I thought I should help and purchase some books. :)
A Passage to India by E.M. Forster
[b..."
Interesting list Janice. Last year I starting reading ebook collections of L. M. Montgomery short stories. She published many short stories before she started her Anne series. In particular, I was reading the Christmas stories. I liked them.
A Passage to India by E.M. Forster
[b..."
Interesting list Janice. Last year I starting reading ebook collections of L. M. Montgomery short stories. She published many short stories before she started her Anne series. In particular, I was reading the Christmas stories. I liked them.

The Four Adventures of Richard Hannay by John Buchan,
A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens, I want to reread this and realized I don't have a copy. How did that happen?
The Mark of Zorro by Johnston McCulley. A reread, this book can be hard to find but is really fun to read.


The silver stallion is actually the first cabell i've bought without actually reading it first but he hasn't let me down yet so i'm sure it'll be fine :) .
Neither book has ever been read if the uncracked spines are any indication.

A Passage to India by E..."
I have the Christmas book on my too-long TBR list. Maybe this Christmas, I will read these stories. :)

Dracula
The Secret Garden
Murder on the orient express
Murder of Roger Ackroyd
Ramchandra trilogy
Samsara
Gallant
House of Cards
Janice wrote: "Lynn wrote: "Janice wrote: "Even though I don't need any more books! My local library had a book sale last weekend, and I thought I should help and purchase some books. :)
[book: A Passage to Indi..."
About the L., M. Montgomery Christmas stories, I have just decided that I will read a few stories each year and even if it takes several years to finish the collection, that is ok. And well done helping out your library like that, lol.
[book: A Passage to Indi..."
About the L., M. Montgomery Christmas stories, I have just decided that I will read a few stories each year and even if it takes several years to finish the collection, that is ok. And well done helping out your library like that, lol.

[book: A ..."
That's a great idea to spread out the stories over the years; a long time to savor each story. And yes, us book readers, do a public service by helping out our libraries at their books sales! ;)


Also putting in a plug for libraries! My local one is small and not super well stocked, but I can request anything for $1 and so far they've found every obscure book I've ever requested. And I can keep them for six weeks, so that's wonderful. Plus, I, my kids and grandkids would never have been able to read so much without them!

I will gladly send it to anyone who wants it for their own challenge, let me know!

[bookcove..."
Congratulations on experiencing Trollope frenzy. It is a privilege not granted to many. I've read all the Barsetshires, and almost all the Pallisers. I reckon my favourite of the lot has to be "The Way We Live Now", which is Dickensian in its scope and some of its characterisation. But I think very highly of almost all his work.

Thanks! I came off of a bad reading experience with a classic that was new to me, and was reluctant to take on another unknow-to-me author, but I love Trollope so far. He's funny, interesting, lively, seems to like his characters - just a pleasure to read.



411 pages of 21 stories dating back to 1975 including such as :
Master Snickup's Cloak
The Schinocephalic Waif
The Great Wheadle Tragedy


Dancing Girls and Other Stories by Margaret Atwood
Fearless Girls, Wise Women & Beloved Sisters: Heroines in Folktales from Around the World by Kathleen Ragan
The Norton Anthology of English Literature, Vol. 2: The Romantic Period edited by M.H. Abrams
Begin Again: James Baldwin's America and Its Urgent Lessons for Our Own by Eddie S. Glaude Jr.
The Power of Babel: A Natural History of Language by John McWhorter

Unthinkable: Trauma, Truth, and the Trials of American Democracy
*****
Today these will be arriving:
Insane Consequences: How the Mental Health Industry Fails the Mentally Ill - I'll be getting the paperback version. I have it in hc, but I've been wanting to get the pb for a while.
The Myth of Normal: Trauma, Illness, and Healing in a Toxic Culture - I've tried reading this before, but it's so long that I never finish. I was recently diagnosed with PTSD though so I'm hoping that with a fresh perspective, I'll finally be able to get through it.
Bittersweet: How Sorrow and Longing Make Us Whole - I've read this 3 times already, but the paperback was finally released this week so it calls for a re-read.

He has a new book coming out The Maniac about John von Neumann in October 2023.
Wow! Easily the book I am most eagerly awaiting now.


The Mother
Uncle Tom's Cabin
Something Light
The Green Years
Shannon's Way
The Royal Box



Cabell has mostly never been reprinted since the 1920’s and the few reprints were only during the fantasy boom of the 60’s/70’s so even those are rare enough. And since I’m in ireland and he’s a rather obscure american writer, everything had to be bought from overseas.
I also really hate boring hardbacks, and didn’t want any unless they had the original dustcovers which make them much more expensive.
Anyway, i’ve ordered, 1 hardback with dustcover, 2 paperback reprints from the 60’s, 1 new paperback print from a small publisher (probably be worse than the PoD stuff) and 7 print-on-demand.
Since PoD paperbacks are crap, i opted for hardbacks with leather spines and corners. 2 from a place with free delivery in a style I’ve already bought a sample from.

Its pretty good, a bit diary-ish on the thin books but still the best format IMO for print-on-demand.
Then there was another similar printer who didn’t have free delivery but does have a variety of coloured leathers, couldn’t resist so bought the last 5 from there one in each color.
Based on past experience it’ll be months before they all arrive. Which is good as that was a lot of cash for me and I’m feeling quite guilty, so I’m already shaving bits off my budget here and there until i feel better :P . The guilt should have dissipated long before they get here, leaving an unpacking of only joy ;) .
Sidenote: Much of cabell's mythos is set in the fictional medieval french land of Poictesme, which i only just found out how to pronounce. Apparently its just Pwa-Tem , which i like to say with a terrible attempt at a french accent :P .
Anyway, no way was i ever figuring out how to pronounce that without googling it.

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Collected Stories by Roald Dahl"
I can visit five LFLs in a three-mile walk around my neighborhood and many more in adjacent neighborhoods. I have picked up some excellent finds in them, including a brand new copy of Wuthering Heights this past summer.