Livros aleatórios da biblioteca de shootingstarr7
Emily of New Moon por L. M. Montgomery
Veronika Decides to Die por Paulo Coelho
The Mother Tongue por Bill Bryson
Two Nations : Black and White, Separate, Hostile, Unequal por Andrew Hacker
Eagle's Wings (Golden Filly Series, Book 2) por Lauraine Snelling
PS, I Love You por Cecelia Ahern
Membros com os livros de shootingstarr7
Conexões com outros membros
amigos: ailish, ashestars, bnbooklady, chanale, Nataly, skrishna
bibliotecas interessantes: ailish, bnbooklady, chanale, Christine_Doinel, dczapka, EarlyReviewers, ErnestHemingway, fannyprice, ktleyed, LynCollett, Nickelini, thekoolaidmom, whitewavedarling
Autores no LibraryThing: Christine Blevins (chrisblevins), Meg Waite Clayton (megwaiteclayton), Rosina Lippi (greenery), David Ebershoff (Debershoff), John Green (sparksflyup), Sandra Gulland (SandraGulland), Mia King (Mia_King), Shanna Swendson (shannaswendson), Natalie Tyler (Doulton)
Feeds RSS
Livros adicionados recentemente
Resenhas dos livros de shootingstarr7, sem incluir as resenhas do próprio shootingstarr7
Membro: shootingstarr7
Biblioteca763 livros — ver biblioteca
Resenhas47 resenhas — ver resenhas
Nuvensnuvem de tags, nuvem de autores
Tagsfiction (566), female author (357), tbr (336), Fiction: American (273), 20th century fiction (244), 2008 acq. (182), Fiction: British (172), 21st century fiction (134), 1001 (125), Non-fiction (119) — ver todas as tags
Grupos1001 Books to read before you die, 18th-19th Century Britain, 20-Something LibraryThingers, 50 Book Challenge, 888 Challenge, Amateur Historians, American History, Anglophiles, ARC Junkies, Best of British — mostrar todos os grupos
Autores prediletosJane Austen, Sarah Dessen, Charles Dickens, Alexandre Dumas père, Diana Gabaldon, Philippa Gregory, Kazuo Ishiguro, Jhumpa Lahiri, Ian McEwan, Lucy Maud Montgomery, Haruki Murakami, Sarah Waters (Favoritos em comum)
Livrarias favoritasBarnes & Noble Booksellers - Roseville, Borders - Roseville - Douglas Blvd, The Book Cellar
Bibliotecas favoritasLincoln Carnegie Library
Sobre mim I am a twenty-something college student finishing up my B.A. in History (with an English minor). My future is undetermined, though I am considering going for my Master's in Library Science in a few years.
I am the proud human of a lovely gray calico named Sparkles. The cat pictured in my profile is Sandy, who was very rambunctious and is no longer with us.
I am currently reading:
Drums of Autumn by Diana Gabaldon
A Room With a View by E.M. Forster
Middlemarch by George Eliot (LT Group Read)
My Favorite* Books of 2008
Jan: Amsterdam by Ian McEwan
Feb: Megan Meade's Guide to the McGowan Boys by Kate Brian
Mar: The Seduction of the Crimson Rose by Lauren Willig
Apr: Lock and Key by Sarah Dessen
May: Fingersmith by Sarah Waters
Jun: Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro
Jul: After Dark by Haruki Murakami
Aug: The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafon
Sep: The 19th Wife by David Ebershoff
Oct: tbd
Nov: tbd
Dec: tbd
*(note that the word "favorite" is a relative term, and that it does not mean that the works listed are brilliant, but I may have read crap- or nothing else at all- that month)
I am participating in several challenges on LibraryThing, including the 50 book challenge and the 888 challenge. Progress tickers for those challenges can be found below.
Sobre a minha biblioteca My library is a hodge-podge of books that I've been assigned for school over the years, books that I am personally choosing to read, and some that I (shamefully) read as an escape from the assigned books I'd prefer not to read. It also includes the junk books I read while in high school, though I do still love the mysteries.
This list also includes books that I have checked out from the library, but don't technically own. If nothing else, it's a way to keep track of what I have or have not read.
The tag "tbp" is my version of the wishlist tag. They are all books that I intend to purchase sooner rather than later. If the books are not purchased, they will be removed from my catalog.
I've begun adding some of the DVDs I own, due in large part to a compulsive need to catalog everything I own. Once the DVDs are done, I may start on CDs. My theory is this: if I can check out DVDs at the library, why shouldn't I be able to include them as a part of my personal library?
Some of the reviews I've posted are from my reading journal on LiveJournal, Reading and Ruminations.
My reading progress counters:
Create your own visitor map!
Página pessoalhttp://shootingstarr7.livejournal.com
Também emBookMooch, Lists of Bests, LiveJournal, MySpace, Twitter
Adesão
LibraryThing Early Reviewers
Nome verdadeiroShauna
LocalidadeRoseville, CA
Tipo de contapública, vitalício
Novidade de conexãoNovidade de conexão
URLs
http://www.librarything.com/profile/shootingstarr7 (perfil)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/shootingstarr7 (biblioteca)
Membro desdeJan 31, 2007









Comente
Sign up or sign in to leave a comment.
Hope to see you there in November! Earlier, too, of course, should you want to go boldly forth.
Cheers
RMD
escrito por richardderus, à/s 11:30 am (EST) , Oct 13, 2008
I'm now 43 pages into The 19th Wife. I'm surprised it's nearly entirely set in the present so far. I'm a sucker for well-written historical mysteries - so far so good. It's especially interesting in light of last month's Big Love viewing.
escrito por chanale, à/s 9:59 pm (EST) , Oct 4, 2008
What are you reading this week?
escrito por chanale, à/s 10:52 pm (EST) , Sep 30, 2008
Re Buffy: You were right about Spike's accent - it has drastically improved since season 2 (I'm a third through season 5 now). I've been stalled with Buffy viewing for almost a month now. I've been first in line for Buffy discs 3-5 for a month now, which shouldn't be possible since the check-out period is only 7 days when there are holds; I suspect the first library that received the request is the branch that's closed for renovations for more than a month (if that's the case, it's too bad its requests aren't forwarded to another branch).
E is at a stage where she can make it through a whole day without a nap, but she ranges from slightly cranky to unbearable. It's even harder on C when she's like that because he works long hours only to come home to E at her worst. I do my bit to get her into bed, but I can't force sleep. Sometimes she'll rattle around for a half hour, then emerge from her room to announced she had a good nap (my eye!). I have been absolutely exhausted and am desperately hoping for a quiet day tomorrow.
I really wanted to read Fingersmith tonight, but after dealing with Miss Crabby, then cleaning for an hour, I just don't have the mental energy. Off to bed for me.
escrito por chanale, à/s 12:47 am (EST) , Sep 26, 2008
Today was very busy (5 stops total, gone for 6 hours), and E didn't nap for the second day in a row. No nap for her = no "Angel" for me. I am still hoping to finish Fingersmith before 19th Wife arrives tomorrow afternoon.
escrito por chanale, à/s 8:44 pm (EST) , Sep 25, 2008
When I read that twist, I was kicking myself: "you should have seen that coming!" But I was so swept along by the story that I wasn't analyzing it. Now I'm interested to see how on earth that happened, because it's not clear to me yet whether Maud was in on it from the beginning or whether Gentleman used Maud to turn the tables on Susan at a later point. I guess I'll find out soon.
escrito por chanale, à/s 8:20 pm (EST) , Sep 25, 2008
I see right above this box that you just added What I Loved... My friend "megami" recommended that to me, so I've been meaning to read it.
escrito por chanale, à/s 11:45 am (EST) , Sep 25, 2008
Amazon lists my 19th Wife order as shipping soon with a delivery estimate of Friday, so it will definitely go out today. You may not get credit until the end of business today or start of business tomorrow. I'll let you know. I look forward to reading it! (I still can't believe I ponied up for the Prime membership. At least this will allow me to get just 1 book at a time instead of 2-3 to reach the free shipping threshold.)
escrito por chanale, à/s 5:34 pm (EST) , Sep 24, 2008
Even if it works, you won't get credit until my book ships, but that ought to happen before end of business today.
escrito por chanale, à/s 3:29 pm (EST) , Sep 24, 2008
escrito por chanale, à/s 1:28 pm (EST) , Sep 24, 2008
Fingersmith has me intrigued! I'm eager for E to nap today so I can continue reading.
escrito por chanale, à/s 1:26 pm (EST) , Sep 24, 2008
escrito por chanale, à/s 12:46 pm (EST) , Sep 24, 2008
escrito por chanale, à/s 12:44 pm (EST) , Sep 24, 2008
escrito por skrishna, à/s 9:58 am (EST) , Sep 3, 2008
escrito por chanale, à/s 5:19 am (EST) , Aug 31, 2008
escrito por chanale, à/s 3:58 am (EST) , Aug 31, 2008
escrito por msf59, à/s 9:02 am (EST) , Aug 10, 2008
escrito por margad, à/s 11:34 pm (EST) , Aug 8, 2008
escrito por margad, à/s 11:33 pm (EST) , Aug 8, 2008
escrito por chanale, à/s 4:19 pm (EST) , Aug 3, 2008
escrito por chanale, à/s 10:49 am (EST) , Aug 2, 2008
I enjoyed reading your reviews. You did an especially nice job with Never Let Me Go. I only wish every reviewer of that book had been similarly considerate. I haven't read the book yet, but I know exactly what the school's mysterious secret is, and now I can never have the same experience reading it as someone who doesn't know.
escrito por margad, à/s 12:08 am (EST) , Aug 1, 2008
It's promising to hear Spike's accent improves (I'm a language geek and am overly sensitive to accents). Hugh Laurie's House accent is spectacular (well, I'm fond of his usual British accent, too, but that goes without saying); I'd probably assume him an American if I didn't know better. I've been watching that show since day one - I managed to catch a commercial for it, and my jaw dropped when I saw Bertie Wooster as an American doctor. I don't like this current season quite as much as the first three - the new cast members don't have as good chemistry with House.
I didn't start getting into Heroes until the end of season one. It was Chris's show, and often I'd be in the room but doing other things, but eventually I started watching enough to wonder what was going on, and Chris got annoyed with my questions and told me I should pay full attention or none at all. I got the back story on the characters from the internet, but I never did go back to watch the beginning of season one once out on DVD.
Veronica Mars was astonishingly brilliant. I managed to watch three seasons in as many weeks - I was hopelessly addicted. The bittersweet part was knowing in advance that it had been canceled. The whole cast was amazing, really. I loved the relationship between Veronica and her dad, the writing, the atmosphere... wow... not to mention Jason Dohring (it's almost embarrassing to admit the mad, wild crush I had on Logan Echolls). Season three really fell apart near the end, but I understand why. I'm going to have the watch the series again next year. It's a crime VM was pulled.
I'm eight episodes into Gilmore Girls and loving it so far. Actually, I started watching that one because I saw you had rated it highly. That's one advantage of waiting to watch series until they're on DVD - you have a better idea of what's out there that's worth watching. I have this odd compulsion to finish TV seasons even if I find them so-so, so knowing what friends have enjoyed is very helpful to me. Anyway, I hope my daughter and I are still that close when she's a teen, although she turns 4 in a couple months and just started telling me when she's angry that she hates me (*sigh*). It's a bit odd to realize that in season one, Lorelai is my age (32); I can't imagine having a teenager. I find it interesting that the mom is the bubbly one and the daughter the serious book lover - both lovely characters.
Now you see why I'm not making any 888 challenge progress. ;-)
escrito por chanale, à/s 12:26 pm (EST) , Jul 25, 2008
escrito por chanale, à/s 10:14 pm (EST) , Jul 24, 2008
I used to just watch a few shows a year - in recent years, I've followed House, 24, Heroes and Lost - but this year my TV viewing has exploded thanks to the city library making internet reserves free (in my defense, my reading has doubled over recent years). So far this year, I've finished 3 seasons of Veronica Mars, 6 seasons of Sex and the City, 2 seasons of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, 2 seasons of Weeds, and 2 seasons of Rome (though that one was from Netflix). I'm currently watching season 1 of Gilmore Girls with Big Love and more Buffy to come soon. I heard Jason Dohring of Veronica Mars was playing a vampire on a new show but that it's not out on DVD yet (what is it with me and vampires? On a side note, somehow I'm worried Twilight won't live up to the book though).
I have to say I didn't care for Spike in season 2, and I really couldn't "abide" Drusilla. O think part of it was the clearly fake accents (that gives me new respect for Hugh Laurie on House) and part was that occasionally those characters just got too corny. I hope they grow on me in season 3 because I hear they're coming back season after season. I have seen spoilers for the series, so I do know when Angel leaves the series and also that something develops between Spike and Buffy down the road (I heard that tidbit alongside "jumped the shark" a few times).
escrito por chanale, à/s 10:10 pm (EST) , Jul 24, 2008
escrito por chanale, à/s 8:20 pm (EST) , Jul 24, 2008
Glad to have you!
escrito por MDLady, à/s 2:06 pm (EST) , Jul 16, 2008
escrito por MDLady, à/s 2:04 pm (EST) , Jul 8, 2008
escrito por chanale, à/s 8:43 pm (EST) , Jul 7, 2008
Flute was my primary instrument for 8 or 9 years (I picked up clarinet and sax later to participate in marching and jazz band, respectively), but I haven't played a note in many years now. I still have my old flute, but it's so badly beaten up that it can't play (and was cheap in the first place), so I plan to buy a new flute this summer: solid silver head joint with silver-plated body. Mostly I'd like to play for my own pleasure, but I'd love to join ensembles eventually.
The flute books I checked out from the library cover quite a wide range. There was one too-basic teach-yourself book that would have been suitable only for children and complete beginners. Another was this amazing handbook about anything you could want to know about classical flute from history through performance (it was good I had to buy a used copy because I could picture myself forever renewing it from the library). And just yesterday I read a slim volume that included folk flutes alongside the "Western" flute and had a new age vibe (not my bag, but the book was decent). Anyway, I just ordered a few flute books from Amazon, so I have the materials I need . . . all I'm missing is a (non-broken) flute. :)
Do/did you play anything?
escrito por chanale, à/s 11:19 am (EST) , Jul 1, 2008
I noticed that you read Amsterdam earlier this year - did you enjoy it? Ian McEwan is one of my favourite authors - I don't recall reading one of his novels and not really enjoying it (even Saturday, which I found a little difficult to get into turned out to be a really gripping read).
escrito por LynCollett, à/s 3:40 am (EST) , Jun 24, 2008
The books I got last week were Kept: a Victorian mystery and The Secret Adventures of Charlotte Brontë.
escrito por chanale, à/s 10:48 am (EST) , Jun 17, 2008
escrito por chanale, à/s 12:03 am (EST) , Jun 17, 2008
escrito por bookcrushblog, à/s 12:41 pm (EST) , Jun 9, 2008
escrito por ktleyed, à/s 5:54 pm (EST) , May 17, 2008
escrito por chanale, à/s 3:48 pm (EST) , May 5, 2008
-Paulina is a great character. Takes no guff, speaks her mind, stands up to Leontes (the jerk)
-Look at it as a fairy tale, as the little son starts telling near the beginning. When I view the characters and events as elements of a fairy tale, they make more sense.
-Shakespeare was playing with the audience when wrote the first half as a tragedy, but then turned it into a comedy in the second half. Everything in the story turns with the stage direction "exit pursued by a bear".
-the statue scene at the end is supposed to be ambiguous. 68/70 people in my class voted on it as being Paulina's trick and that there was NO magic involved. Two people thought it was magic. Our professor said the 68 of us had no literary imagination and should drop our English majors and all become accountants. :-)
Does any of that help? I've been meaning to message Cariola about the Winter's Tale, because I believe she teaches it. She was very helpful when I started my Shakespeare course. You may want to ask her (there's a thread about Shakespeare and this play under the What are you reading now? group What Came Home With You Today December 2007.)
I hope that helps! What did YOU think?
escrito por Nickelini, à/s 7:12 pm (EST) , Apr 3, 2008
The two books I just reserved should be at my branch by Tuesday. For sure I'll let you know what I thought.
escrito por chanale, à/s 1:52 pm (EST) , Dec 7, 2007
escrito por chanale, à/s 11:02 am (EST) , Dec 7, 2007
Hi! Good to see ya on here. (I figured you would be! hehe) SO much to catch up on! :) Nice library, btw! You do have great taste, IMO.
escrito por ailish, à/s 8:12 am (EST) , Jul 16, 2007
escrito por nyiper, à/s 6:24 pm (EST) , Jun 25, 2007
I'm trying to get better about giving away books. The public library here sells 99% of donated books for a quarter rather than adding them to the collection, which is fine by me when you're talking about a mass market paperback you didn't like in the first place, but it can be a bit disheartening when I donate a fantastic book in mint condition (e.g. because I had a duplicate) and it gets tossed aside.
escrito por chanale, à/s 1:10 pm (EST) , Jun 20, 2007
escrito por chanale, à/s 10:21 am (EST) , Jun 20, 2007
We're all doing well, although I'm turning meshugge having been housebound with DD for the last two months due to DH's bike accident. There are a few photos of my girl here.
escrito por chanale, à/s 4:43 pm (EST) , May 11, 2007
escrito por chanale, à/s 10:35 am (EST) , May 10, 2007