Random books from antiquary's library
Seventeenth Century English Literature by C. V. Wedgwood
Hitler and Nazi Germany by Robert G. L. Waite
St. Peter's Fair: The Fourth Chronicle of Brother Cadfael by Ellis Peters
The Development of Social Thought. by Emory S. Bogardus
The Journey Through Wales and The Description of Wales (Penguin Classics) by Gerald of Wales
Pygmalion - A Romance In Five Acts by Bernard Shaw
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Member: antiquary
CollectionsYour library (5,014)
Reviews793 reviews
TagsEnglish literature (742), nineteenth century (647), poetry (533), medieval literature (488), religious history (461), modern literature (402), renaissance (382), drama (359), ancient history (359), medieval history (353) — see all tags
Cloudstag cloud, author cloud
GroupsAncient China, Kingdom of AEthelmearc, West Virginians
About meI am an English and history professor at a small college. I have an interdisciplinary Ph.D. in medieval studies, both history and literature. My published scholarship is chiefly in late medieval English history. My parents were both English professors; my mother's specialty was Chaucer, my father's
18-19th century literature, but he was a Latin major as an
undergraduate and retained a lifelong interest in ancient history and literature. My mother's father and mother were also college professors; her father taught philosophy and her mother French and Spanish. Thus I inherited most of 3 generations of scholarly books. I did not retain all of them; in particular I did not keep a large part of my parents' holdings in post-1700 English and American writing (which I now regret), but I do retain almost everything they had relating to periods before 1700. I have now added about 30 years of collecting of my own. Besides adding more pre-modern European material, I have expanded significantly into Asian material as I spent two years teaching in Korea and visited Japan and China. I have now cataloged virtually all the Chinese, Japanese, and Korean material. I have also cataloged my much more limited and random holdings in Middle Eastern and other Asian/African material.
I also have very large holdings in mysteries (inherited from my parents and added on my own)and science fiction/fantasy (inherited from my father and
added substantially on my own.) These I plan to catalog only after I have completed cataloging the more serious material, but I cataloged a small part of them when I first joined this site. The only significant part of that material I have so far cataloged is the Inklings material.
About my libraryI have divided my "ancient" books into "ancient history" and "ancient literature," and put ancient books of primarily literary interest in the latter category. Some books of both historical and literary interest are double-tagged. I use the headings "Greece" and "Rome" to include both historical and literary materials in those areas. I do not use the term "Classics" which is the traditional term for much of this material, simply because the term has so many other meanings.
In theory "religion" tags represent material discussing
primarily current forms of religions, "religious literature" is material having literary as well as religious interest, and "religious history" is material
on pre-modern forms of religions, but the tagging is not
entirely consistent. I have also been inconsistent on
whether to tag all Christian-related materials "Christian"
in addition to more specific headings such as "Catholic"
"Anglican" "Eastern Orthodox" "Presbyterian" "Lutheran"
etc. In theory, all such material should be tagged with both Christian and a subtopic but that is not true yet.
I rarely use "Protestant" as a tag as I find more significance in some distinctions among Protestant groups than in "Protestant" as a generic category. I also use "Christian" for material I find relevant to the faith as a whole, rather than any particular subgroup. Some might disagree on assignments of particular books in this category. Material used by both Jewish and Christian traditions tends to be tagged "Christian" if prepared for the use of Christians
(e.g.some versions of Psalms, some discussions of other
parts of the Old Testament/Hebrew Scriptures).
Books on eastern religions are usually tagged geographically (China, Japan, India, etc.) as well as with the "religion," "religious literature" and "religious history" tags.
Note that logically "British medieval history" should be tagged as a subcategory of "medieval history" but it was not, simply because my holdings in British medieval (my professional specialty) are so large. Hence my overall
holdings in "medieval history" are really about twice as
large as they appear.
I have now cataloged virtually all my holdings in English literature . Note that currently
"English literature" only refers to post-1500 literature.
Old English literature (c. 700-1100) is tagged as "medieval literature, Old English" and Middle English literature (c. 1100-1500) is tagged as "medieval literature, Middle English." English literature 1500-1600 is tagged "English literature, renaissance" English literature roughly 1600
to 1800 is tagged "English literature, early modern." There is a grey area in early Jacobean literature, as writers active before 1603 (e.g. Shakespeare) are cataloged "renaissance" even if they wrote into James I's reign. I have not been consistent about the tag "criticism," but eventually I hope to add that tag to critical works. As yet, both writers of a period and scholars writing about those writers tend to share the same tags. Hence writers about Shakespeare are tagged "English literature, renaissance, drama, Shakespeare" as are Shakespeare's plays. I have now cataloged about all my serious English literature down through the modern era. Again, there are borderline issues for writers who began in the 1700s and wrote into the 1800s; my choice of where to put some of them is arbitrary, and the same is true of the 1800s/1900s boundary. Those after 1900 are cataloged as "modern" as are some in the late nineteenth century who are seen as forerunners of the modernist movement.
When I cataloged my Asian books, I was not consistent about using temporal tags ("ancient" or "medieval" or "early modern" ) though most of the modern Asian material is labelled modern. I have usually tried to tag Chinese and Japanese works with dynastic or reign names (e.g Tang. Showa) but in some cases they may not be accurate as I was working from memory. In particular, I think I may have tagged some Taisho material as Meiji or Showa. I will try to make corrections as time permits. I should also apologize
to those who read Korean for my very clumsy transcription of
Korean-language names and titles in my Korean collection.
When I was in Korea (1987 - 88), there was a transition from
an older to a newer transcription system; I learned the older one and use it to the best of my recollection, though my own opinion is that the newer system more accurately reflected the pronunication of Korean as I heard it in Taegu/Daegu. Even my application of the older system is not exact, as I am not allowing for a number of diacritical marks on vowels, or for the fact that some letters are conventionally transcribed one way (e.g. k) in some positions and another way (e.g. g) in others.
Membership
LibraryThing Early Reviewers/Member Giveaway
LocationWest Virginia, USA
Emailjleland
salemu.edu
Favorite authorsNone
Account typepublic, lifetime
Connection NewsConnection News
URLs
http://www.librarything.com/profile/antiquary (profile)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/antiquary (library)
Common KnowledgeSeries (284), Awards (168), Characters (4218), Places (836)
Member sinceJun 18, 2007
Most recent activity
antiquary reviewed:Darwin: The Story of the Man and His Theories of Evolution by John van Wyhe (read review) antiquary reviewed, rated, added:Games and Gaming during the Middle Ages by Jonas Ferenius (read review) antiquary reviewed, rated, added:Wandering durch die Mark Brandenburg by Theodor Fontane (read review) |



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posted by Romanus at 12:45 pm (EST) on Sep 10, 2009
posted by IlsaLund at 9:23 pm (EST) on Jul 18, 2009
Churchill is my great favorite. Have you read My Early Life? It is said to be his best writing. I would also recommend Roy Jenkins' biography. It is much more trustworthy than the popular William Manchester biography.
posted by IlsaLund at 5:38 pm (EST) on Jul 9, 2009
posted by theophila at 8:28 pm (EST) on Jul 1, 2009
posted by theophila at 7:43 pm (EST) on May 22, 2009
I have uploaded a cover for Death of an Army: The Siege of Kut, 1915–1916 by Ronald Millar.
posted by DVanderlinde at 5:16 pm (EST) on Apr 26, 2009
I just finished "Journey to the Missouri" and it blew my mind. I can't find very many other people who read it. Absolutely fascinating to be transported to the inner discussions of high ranking Japanese military figures in critical periods in WWII.
What did you think of it? Know anyone else who read it?
Regards,
David
posted by dmk at 5:31 am (EST) on Feb 19, 2009
posted by bhwalker at 4:26 pm (EST) on Dec 15, 2008
posted by Gwendydd at 9:15 pm (EST) on Dec 10, 2008
The Welsh prophecies are quite fascinating. I'm also looking at Bridlington - his prophecy shows up in some of the Welsh manuscripts I'm studying. I'm comparing English prophecies and the English reception of prophecies to the Welsh. So far, one of the really fascinating things I've realized is that the English talk about how the Welsh are weird for believing in prophecies (even outlawing Welsh prophecies in the wake of the Glyndwr rebellion), and yet the English are reading and copying some of the exact same prophecies. It gets even more interesting when you see that the French often speak derisively of the English love of prophecy. I have surmised from this that no one really believed in any of these political prophecies, but that accusing other people of believing in them is a great way to discredit them.
I continue to watch your library with interest!
posted by Gwendydd at 3:27 pm (EST) on Dec 8, 2008
You mention your work "is chiefly in late medieval English history"--on what, specifically, does your work focus?
posted by bhwalker at 6:55 pm (EST) on Nov 26, 2008
posted by yangguy at 9:04 pm (EST) on Nov 22, 2008
posted by blaakopi at 5:55 pm (EST) on Jun 24, 2008
posted by timspalding at 1:10 am (EST) on May 16, 2008
posted by atthesametime at 5:28 pm (EST) on May 12, 2008
posted by sonshi at 8:20 pm (EST) on Apr 24, 2008
posted by sonshi at 8:19 pm (EST) on Apr 23, 2008
Do you enjoy your trips to London? I moved here from London four years ago and return every four or five weeks for research etc at the BL and London Library.
I must say that I drool at the thought of your books - how wonderful that many have been passed to you from your parents. What a marvelous gift.
posted by Stromata at 3:59 pm (EST) on Apr 2, 2008
Only about 20 to 25% of our books are entered, so far.
posted by highland65 at 1:00 am (EST) on Feb 28, 2008
Oh and thanks for all your comments on how you catalogue your titles, its fantastic to have the benefit of that experience (and it sets my mind at rest that by correcting Amazon.com listings I am not wasting my time, but that it is a sensible method of cataloguing). I'm about to embark on the rest of my library when I get some spare time over the Christmas period, so I hope items appear that are of interest to you maybe.
posted by whiteroseofyork at 9:02 am (EST) on Dec 21, 2007
posted by whiteroseofyork at 5:43 pm (EST) on Dec 19, 2007
Honnoria
posted by honnoria at 6:25 pm (EST) on Sep 17, 2007
After reading your story, I went to my shelf, took out the oldest book- an 1860's Bible- opened it in the middle of Acts, and with eyes tightly closed, inhaled deeply, and pretended I stood in your library.
Call me a dreamer!
After I did some work on my LT page, I learned that I have a learning disability in some dyslexic form. As it happens, all of my reading is directed toward the left hemisphere of the brain, and the right- being unoccupied- just makes interruptive noises. Thus my memory is highly selective(my wife does not believe me), and short-term memory performs poorly as well(all my former employers DO believe me). Yet, I am a passionate reader, I write decent letters, love history and biographies(of important people), and surround myself with books all day.
It is a pleasure to visit your pages.
Respectfully yours,
Jer
posted by jarka at 10:57 am (EST) on Sep 15, 2007
posted by MyopicBookworm at 5:22 pm (EST) on Aug 27, 2007
I am looking forward - "in fear and trembling" - to browsing through your Orthodoxy books.
posted by Romanus at 11:59 am (EST) on Aug 16, 2007
posted by Romanus at 9:23 pm (EST) on Jul 27, 2007
posted by Romanus at 8:44 pm (EST) on Jul 23, 2007
posted by antiquary at 4:30 pm (EST) on Jul 12, 2007
I should also note that the older books
in the ancient category (especially the Greek and Latin texts from circa 1900
in the original languages) belonged to my grandfather, while many of the books
on ancient history from the 1930s through 1960s or so belonged to my father. The personal collection is mostly the books published in the 1960s or later. The British medieval history represents my personal scholarly working library. The medieval literature
in Old and Middle english is largely my mother's working library with some additions of my own.
posted by antiquary at 4:26 pm (EST) on Jul 12, 2007