Random books from FredSmeegle's library
Essential Tomb of Dracula, Vol. 1 (Marvel Essentials) (v. 1) by Marv Wolfman
Promethea (Book 1) by Alan Moore
Three Lives (A Signet classic) by Gertrude Stein
Time's Arrow or the Nature of the Offence by Martin Amis
Walden and Civil Disobedience (150th Anniversary) (Signet Classics) by Henry David Thoreau
Rock Crystal (New York Review Books Classics) by Adalbert Stifter
Members with FredSmeegle's books
Member connections
Friends: ajourneyroundmyskull, gbusters, HornOrSilk, LynSheri, marc_beherec, Nodosaurus, slickdpdx
Interesting libraries: ajourneyroundmyskull, cpcavafy, dutts, eldridgecrayon, fancyconstance, FaustoMaijstral, gbusters, jrosenz, kimballb, marc_beherec, SamDelBiaggio, turingmachine
RSS feeds
Member: FredSmeegle
CollectionsYour library (72)
Reviews11 reviews
Tagsgraphic novel (19), nonfiction (18), novel (14), comics (12), english translation (7), american (6), poetry (6), PSFF (4), psychoanalysis (3), criticism (3) — see all tags
Cloudstag cloud, author cloud
GroupsCthulhu Mythos, French literature, 19th & 20th century, Lingua Latina
Favorite authorsTheodor W. Adorno, John Crowley, Jacques Lacan, Marcel Proust (Shared favorites)
About meFred Smeegle is an alias, of course. I thought I would just take a look at librarything, and typed in the first name that came to me. But soon I had started a list, and one thing led to another. I've decided I like the name, too. It reminds me of evil hobbits. And I do have some hair on my toes, so that explains part of the affinity.
About my libraryPSFF = Previously started, finally finished
LocationPortland Oregon
Account typepublic, free
Connection NewsConnection News
URLs
http://www.librarything.com/profile/FredSmeegle (profile)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/FredSmeegle (library)
Common KnowledgeSeries (23), Awards (45), Characters (421), Places (285)
Member sinceJan 8, 2009









Leave a comment
Sign up or sign in to leave a comment.
posted by marc_beherec at 3:56 pm (EST) on Mar 29, 2009
I'm interested in Modernism as well. I don't know about Owen's book, though. How is that?
posted by marc_beherec at 1:03 pm (EST) on Feb 9, 2009
Of course, Lovecraft read Waite's work and considered him pompous, and I can see why. He is extremely well-read, and his books are rather dense. For his time, he was one of the most brilliant and knowledgeable occultists, though it's possible that some of the new translations that are coming out of the old texts may be better than what Waite had to work with.
posted by marc_beherec at 4:59 pm (EST) on Feb 1, 2009
posted by marc_beherec at 11:26 pm (EST) on Jan 19, 2009