Livros aleatórios da biblioteca de BeckyJG
Driving Blind de Ray Bradbury
One Day of Life (The Vintage Library of Contemporary World Literature) de Manlio Argueta
Indigo de Graham Joyce
Storm Runners: A Novel de T. Jefferson Parker
Love Medicine: A Novel de Louise Erdrich
Fucking Frankenstein de Mr. Matt R. Allen
DEVIL IN A BLUE DRESS: An Easy Rawlins Mystery (Easy Rawlins Mysteries) de Mosley
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amigos: Aeyan, EnriqueFreeque, MikeRubens, PICADOR, rolhirst, SGBrowne, userbinry4n
bibliotecas interessantes: gwendolyndawson
Autores no LibraryThing: David Moody (DavidMoody), Doreen Orion (DoreenOrion), Jill Ciment (JillCiment), Luis Alberto Urrea (LuisAlbertoUrrea), Mark Henry (MarkHenry), Michael Rubens (MikeRubens), Arthur Phillips (arthurphillips), David Liss (davidliss), Diana Gabaldon (diana.gabaldon), Don Winslow (donwinslow), Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson (jeffreymasson), Michelle Richmond (michrichmond), Darlene Arden (petxpert), Robert Dunn (rgdunn), Richard Price (rixsal), John Green (sparksflyup), Susan Wittig Albert (susanalbert), Teri Coyne (tericoyne), Timothy Hallinan (thallinan)
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Membro: BeckyJG
ColeçõesPor ler (2), Review Only (75), Sua biblioteca (2,284), Todas as coleções (2,361)
Resenhas113 resenhas
Tagsfiction (1,417), history (146), military (128), humor (114), wwi (104), thriller (98), mystery (85), autobiography (79), reference (74), biography (73) — ver todas as tags
Nuvensnuvem de tags, nuvem de autores
GruposAgatha Christie, Book Care and Repair, Crime, Thriller & Mystery, Le Salon Litteraire du Peuple pour le Peuple
Autores favoritosThomas Berger, Lee Child, Gabriel García Márquez, Charles McCarry, Tim Powers, Thomas Pynchon, J. K. Rowling, Richard Russo (Favoritos em comum)
Livrarias favoritasBorders - El Segundo
Sobre mimI'm a lifelong reader, book lover, and inveterate book collector. Yeah, I've just got to have them.
Random Member Random Work Random Tag
Sobre a minha bibliotecaMy library is large and eclectic. I pretty much only read fiction, but I love all kinds of books. When I want to learn about something, I buy lots of books on the subject. My library is actually *our* library. It's blended, and some day all of the military history books will be cataloged as well.
Página pessoalhttp://thebookfrog.blogspot.com
Adesão
LibraryThing Primeiros Resenhistas/Ofertas de Membros
Nome verdadeiroRebecca Glenn
LocalizaçãoLos Angeles, CA
E-mailbooksnob1
earthlink.net
Tipo de contapública, vitalício
Novidade de conexãoNovidade de conexão
URLs
http://www.librarything.com/profile/BeckyJG (perfil)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/BeckyJG (Biblioteca)
Conhecimento CompartilhadoSéries (362), Prêmios (490), Personagens (5943), Lugares (1126)
Membro desdeMar 20, 2008






Comente
Entre ou afilie-se para deixar um comentário.
My apologies for any offense. I assure you none was intended.
escrito por dekesolomon, às 10:40 am (EST) , Dec 17, 2009
escrito por dekesolomon, às 11:09 pm (EST) , Dec 16, 2009
escrito por EnriqueFreeque, às 12:20 pm (EST) , Dec 15, 2009
Tey is also wonderful. When I read The Franchise Affair, a certain character from it showed up in my dreams that night, lol. It was a little nightmarish. Miss Pym Disposes is probably my favorite of hers. I haven't read them all yet though.
I haven't yet read any of Heyer's mysteries, as I'm new to her work and have been blissfully enjoying her Regency period stories, but I've heard the mysteries are decent. Some of them are being discussed in the group Almack's if you wanted to take a look: http://www.librarything.com/groups/almac...
I wonder, have you ever used online bookswap sites like BookMooch or PaperBackSwap? You list books you own and don't want, someone requests them, you get a point per book and mail the book(s) at your cost, and then you can spend that point requesting a book from someone else. I've received well over 300 books that way, and I absolutely love it. I'd be happy to show you the ropes if you wanted to try either site!
escrito por wisewoman, às 3:21 pm (EST) , Dec 14, 2009
escrito por wisewoman, às 7:57 am (EST) , Dec 14, 2009
Ya know, just in the last two months or so, I've begun collecting any Agatha Christie I can find. I'm up to around 20 or so. Only about 300 more to go!
I'm glad you've wisely given her a chance. She rarely disappoints.
escrito por EnriqueFreeque, às 10:13 pm (EST) , Dec 13, 2009
Just a note to say I happened across your profile here. I am a not infrequent customer in your bookstore, and we seem to have some tastes in common. I'm not sure why this prompts me to leave this note to say "Hi", but it does. So, again, hi.
escrito por Capybara_99, às 3:10 pm (EST) , Dec 9, 2009
You might already know this, or not: I'm featured on the following thread through the month of December, as an "underappreciated writer" (Enrique's idea):
http://www.librarything.com/topic/77721
escrito por copyedit52, às 9:13 am (EST) , Dec 4, 2009
Reminded me of a 3-D book art link - http://izismile.com/2009/05/21/ibook_aut... - that slick posted in the "cool book oriented links" thread in the salon, but your link trumps this one.
escrito por EnriqueFreeque, às 9:42 pm (EST) , Nov 30, 2009
Okay I feel better now knowing that you'll do your darndest for IJ. I'm not as insistent about Les Miz but, man, is it a powerful, profound read, if you're able to do it. And I'm soooooo sorry that I had to resort to possible down-the-line verbal threats of what I realize now in hindsight would have been repugnant, inexcusable retaliation (what came over me?) to coerce foster your erudite participation. What can I say, DWF means a lot to me (I've never been obsessed w/him or anything, though) and I merely want him to mean a lot to everybody else too (not that I'm proselytizing) so that we can all obsess communicate (even in our unconscious perhaps) regarding him and all writings him and books him, together.
escrito por EnriqueFreeque, às 9:51 pm (EST) , Nov 21, 2009
You never answered, btw, when I inquired as to whether you'd be reading Les Miz with us. I can only assume your silence means NO. Well fine then! Just fine!
You better think twice about saying NO to Infinite Jest in March, though, or else...or else I'll think of something very dire to say to you in retaliation!
escrito por EnriqueFreeque, às 11:32 pm (EST) , Nov 18, 2009
escrito por EnriqueFreeque, às 11:04 pm (EST) , Nov 13, 2009
Is it possible to go a week w/out buying a book? No. It isn't.
escrito por EnriqueFreeque, às 8:22 pm (EST) , Nov 13, 2009
That SK story in the NYer btw, OMG, is it cringe-inducing (too real perhaps? yes, definitely too real) and dark comedy as dark comedy gets. I refuse to say what happens to the dog. Perhaps I've said too much. Do read it when you can, and tell me King couldn't be a literary golden boy (grampa) if he so chose to be.
escrito por EnriqueFreeque, às 8:31 pm (EST) , Nov 7, 2009
So I get my mail today, open up The New Yorker, and who's Fiction is featured?: Stephen King's??? in the New Yorker??? First thought: Must alert BeckyJG.
"Premium Harmony" is the story. Check it out. Am reading it as I write.
escrito por EnriqueFreeque, às 6:29 pm (EST) , Nov 7, 2009
I've gotten a few other confirmations about the policies of book-pushing at Borders. Kind of disappointing, this lack of regard for customer satisfaction. (Though I'm glad you mentioned The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo in your list of worthwhile books since I have a copy sitting on my shelf waiting to be read.)
Thank you very much for the advice and information. :)
escrito por amandapsychedelia, às 6:59 pm (EST) , Nov 4, 2009
Bummer that the new Koontz garnered such a mediocre rating. I was hopin' he'd turned a corner (like King) back toward his glory days.
escrito por EnriqueFreeque, às 1:22 am (EST) , Nov 3, 2009
escrito por EnriqueFreeque, às 4:51 pm (EST) , Oct 27, 2009
Hey, if you need some more optimism (besides reading more Koontz, which is always a good idea) I hope you'll consider the salon's December-Feb. read: Les Miserables. I didn't see it in your library, but knowing you, I'd be surprised if you haven't read it. It's my all time favorite novel. Yes, it does get dark at times, very dark, but overarching all the despair and misery, is the sublime triumph of the human spirit overcoming grave injustice: Love winning over Hate; Good winning over Evil; Freedom over Imprisonment; Faith over Unbelief; Grace over Law....Optimism, in other words, over Pessimism.
Don't know if you still lurk thereabouts in the salon, but I do hope you'll consider giving Les Miz a go. It's a surprisingly easy, compelling read, that enrichens the soul as you read. If you do, (and I'm crossing my fingers you will) I'd avoid the recent Julie Rose translation just released in paperback, and stick with the fat, Signet, MacAfee trans. pb ed. (1,400+ pages!) - the fastest 1,400+ page read you'll undoubtedly ever read. Or the Wilbour trans. is good too.
And I can't wait either for that Koontz review. Know why? To quote a certain BeckyJG I know in a recent review of hers: it's that darn feel-good factor that keeps me coming back for more.
I sent this post a few minutes ago and somehow duplicated it in a mish-mash of unreadablity toward the bottom. Weird. Don't know how I did that! This is the corrected post.
escrito por EnriqueFreeque, às 11:23 am (EST) , Oct 24, 2009
I love love love Watchers. A friend of mine met him at the Buena Park Mall back when it came out; not for a signing, he just happened to be there and she recognized him; said he was cordial and cool and actually spoke to her (and her dog!) for awhile. Dogs are huge in his books. Especially Watchers. Haven't read that recent one of his featuring a dog on the cover.
I could also rave about Phantoms and Seize The Night and The Door to December, the last which was originally released under a pseudonym, you may know, that I saw (the original version) selling at a specialty sci-fi shop in, well, Orange of all places, not too long ago, for a whopping $160.00. Needless to say, I did not buy it. I've read that Koontz has slipped of late, say the last 10 years or so, but I thought False Memory was good nevertheless, and the first Brother Odd book too. He's one of the most likable writers out there; I don't know what his secret is - it's probably his optimism and hopefulness in the human spirit - but I think he's a really cool author and a super great guy. Holy shit, I think it's time I stopped posting now. Sheesh, stop adding Dean Koontz to yer library will ya? and then I won't be forced to post so long! Yer fault!
escrito por EnriqueFreeque, às 10:10 pm (EST) , Oct 22, 2009
and I just searched his books and found this: Don't Bump the Glump!: And Other Fantasies. I ask you: What parent in their right mind would allow this man to share his fantasies w/their precious children?!
escrito por EnriqueFreeque, às 1:04 pm (EST) , Oct 18, 2009
This creepy looking guy was a children's author?! He makes me think of Goliath, for some reason, a brutish beast. And he was also the founder of the Church of Satan? I am shocked!
escrito por EnriqueFreeque, às 12:52 am (EST) , Oct 18, 2009
escrito por EnriqueFreeque, às 11:40 pm (EST) , Oct 14, 2009
But wait...how did you know just right off the bat like that, Lavey's & Silverstein's mysterious similarity of features? Oh no! Can it be? Is BeckyJG **whispers** a closet Satanist?
escrito por EnriqueFreeque, às 6:37 pm (EST) , Oct 14, 2009
I'm curious what you liked about my library, given that we only have 25 works in common. But then, I suppose anyone who has Thurber in their library has a pretty good library by definition? ;-)
escrito por Noisy, às 9:34 am (EST) , Oct 11, 2009
Scott
escrito por SGBrowne, às 10:15 am (EST) , Oct 5, 2009
Scott
escrito por SGBrowne, às 2:04 am (EST) , Oct 3, 2009