Member: beatles1964
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About meI have worked in a Medical Library since 1978 as a Library Technician and my goal is to one day go to Library School so I can earn a Librarian's Degree.
About my libraryI own a lot of different books ranging from Science Fiction including Femnist Science Fiction about Utopias/Dystopias, Women's Studies,Fantasy, Mystery, British Mysteries, Horror, and the Classics like Emma, Wuthering Heights, Mansfield Park, Jane Eyre, Pride and Prejudice, HERLAND, etc. Some of my Favorite Authors include Stephen King, Ann Rice, the Bronte Sisters. Jane Austen, Marion Zimmer Bradley, Alfred Hitchcock, Marge Piercy, Octavia Butler, Margaret Atwood, Robert A. Heinlein, etc.
Favorite authorsNone
Account typepublic, free
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http://www.librarything.com/profile/beatles1964 (profile)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/beatles1964 (library)
Common KnowledgeSeries (48), Awards (107), Characters (757), Places (140)
Member sinceSep 10, 2007
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I don't have individual lists for various traditions, but you can click on my tags for Celtic, Druidry, Anglo-Saxon, Witchcraft and so on. There are few books for Anglo-Saxon left in my library owing to the fact I am no longer Heathen. However, I have listed some books here:
http://www.librarything.com/topic/12811&...
posted by BrythonWitch at 3:50 am (EST) on Oct 8, 2009
posted by quartzite at 11:15 am (EST) on Sep 17, 2009
posted by quartzite at 8:54 am (EST) on Sep 16, 2009
“The first fifteen minutes of your day should be spent planning your day. Set specific goals as to what you will accomplish. These clear goals will give you focal points on which you can govern your actions and provide you with a template you can live your day from.” -- Robin Sharma
posted by theoldman at 8:33 am (EST) on Sep 15, 2009
Read Grass .... It's my all-time Tepper favorite. Gate to Women's Country is very good too.... and The Fresco. In fact, I just enjoy Tepper. Her mysteries written as B.J. Oliphant are also really good.... Shirley McClintock is a feminist pistol. You can get the list at my library since I have a "Shirley McClintock" tag.
And I second what the person down the page had to say about Shardik and Maia - not that anybody asked.
Trying again!
Peggy
posted by LizzieD at 4:22 pm (EST) on May 5, 2009
Do you know, I haven't read Northshore and Southshore. I have them in one volume and have just been holding on for awhile so I won't run out of SST's. By all means grab a copy of Grass; I think it's her best. I like
posted by LizzieD at 4:17 pm (EST) on May 5, 2009
Look forward to seeing you around!
Peggy
posted by LizzieD at 10:41 pm (EST) on Apr 29, 2009
This just got me miffed. So I forwared the e-mail to LT today. Hoprefully they will take some action since LT is not to be used for solicitations.
DS
{Bruce's evil twim :-))
posted by bruce_krafft at 6:59 pm (EST) on Feb 25, 2009
posted by BTRIPP at 2:39 pm (EST) on Feb 6, 2009
posted by bobmcconnaughey at 4:08 pm (EST) on Jan 13, 2009
Bare-bones plot summary: A hunter named Kelderek stumbles across a gigantic bear that he takes to be the incarnation of his bear-god, Shardik. Kelderek wants to follow his god, others want to use him for their own purposes, and the rest of the book essentially deals with the conflict between these two. The final destinies of Kelderek, Shardik, and the Beklan Empire (in which the story takes place) are the main threads throughout the book.
Shardik is a fantasy, inasmuch as it takes place in an imaginary world, which Adams richly details. The prose is beautiful and vivid, and more than any other book, I'm left with a feeling that I've actually been to these places. There are wars, wanderings across the countryside, conspiracies, slavery, a love story...and of course, the religious undertones through the entire book. Adams is really exploring the relationship between men and their gods, and he wisely avoids taking sides. Indeed, Shardik himself is ambiguous -- is he a god, or just a bear? Adams never says one way or the other, instead letting the reader draw his own conclusions.
There are vastly differing opinions on the book, of course. The main complaint is that it's wordy and boring -- a valid opinion; the book is certainly very introspective, though there are some very vivid scenes of battle and action. In my opinion, the use of language is one of my favorite parts of the book. The slower pace of the book also works for me. Your mileage may vary.
If you enjoy the book and its setting, Adams later wrote a sequel/prequel that takes place probably 7 years prior to Shardik. Maia is an interesting book; clocking in at 1200 pages, it's a bit of a commitment, and the racy first half (pretty girl sold into prostitution) turns a lot of people off. Certainly, it's not for everyone, but the second half of the book takes a turn into an action-packed adventure, and the entire book intricately fleshes out the Beklan Empire and its neighbors.
posted by saltmanz at 1:43 pm (EST) on Dec 3, 2008
posted by theoria at 10:56 am (EST) on Nov 5, 2008
posted by AaronWTimm at 9:25 am (EST) on Sep 29, 2008
posted by AaronWTimm at 6:43 pm (EST) on Sep 25, 2008
When you have finished the Poisonwood Bible there will be a vacuum to fill. How can you resist this amazing quote: "The book sounds like it will be an amazing, exciting and very interesting read."!
We will not start the new book until late October.
-TT
posted by TheTortoise at 7:17 am (EST) on Sep 25, 2008
I should be grateful if you would visit the attached thread and kindly indicate if you would be interested in joining us in the next Group read.
http://www.librarything.com/talktopic.ph...
-TT
posted by TheTortoise at 6:24 am (EST) on Sep 25, 2008
posted by hailelib at 5:07 pm (EST) on Sep 22, 2008
I was trying to get us back to the story where our characters are attempting to get the goods on the Senator.
Sounds like you have a nice dog!
posted by hailelib at 5:04 pm (EST) on Sep 22, 2008
posted by AaronWTimm at 11:31 am (EST) on Sep 19, 2008
beatles1964
posted by beatles1964 at 12:19 pm (EST) on Aug 28, 2008
posted by timspalding at 12:10 pm (EST) on Aug 28, 2008
posted by timspalding at 12:10 pm (EST) on Aug 28, 2008
Thanks for accepting my friends request, Yes I do have some favorite King books. Pet sematary was, for me one of his scariest stories also sad, particularly when the little boy is killed on the highway. I also loved the Stand and It, both really long books but worth the time and effort. I also loved the Girl who loved Tom Gordon and Hearts in Atlantis, both of these books were a little different than the usual King fare, but his talent shines through. The shining was terrifying. I read it alone in an apartment I was renting many years ago. When I finished it I could not sleep just thinking about the terrible things that happened in the book. Yes I am a fan of Manchester United and even went to a game when I still lived in the UK. I too would love to be in London for the Olympics in 2012, but will have to save my money!! I never tire of hearing the fab four's songs and have a friend who is in a Beatle's tribute band in NYC and go to their shows about four times a year.
I wish you much luck with your pursuit of your dream of being a librarian and am sure you will acheive it if you persevere. Even though I feel overwhelmed at times with my responsibilities, married, two children a job and the library school on top , I know it will be worth it when I get my degree.
Ok Beatles1964,
bye for now,
Jane
posted by britalcast at 4:46 pm (EST) on Aug 25, 2008
I have sent you a friends request, and see we are both working in medical libraries and both are beatle fans. I am from Manchester, Uk but have lived in NYC, US for the last seventeen years. I am in library school and have 6 credits towards my degree. Do you live in the US?
catchh you later,
Britalcast (Jane)
posted by britalcast at 7:40 pm (EST) on Aug 18, 2008
Thank's Jay!
posted by eleventhdr at 7:13 am (EST) on Aug 11, 2008
But Beatles uber alles.
bob
... this is something i posted earlier today to the beatles lounge about musical taste formation..
i don't know what the average age is here..but i bet i'm not the oldest @ 58...and there's a LOT of research that indicates that musical taste is generally formed in the relatively early listening years (for me classical/baroque and 60s rock). Now there ARE some 90s and current bands that i like..usually courtesy of my son..but even there, they have sounds that hark back to older styles (Drive By Truckers, The Ravonettes, hell the Magnetics Fields/Merritt isn't that much younger than i am..or rather is probably closer to me than my son in age). Sometimes music takes effort..listening to Schoenberg's piano pieces...i appreciate listening to them sometimes but i really do have to concentrate to enjoy them (as opposed to say, minimalists like Glass or Adams, who are not exactly easy listening, but are easy to listen to).
posted by bobmcconnaughey at 7:10 pm (EST) on Aug 9, 2008
We actually also asked for "#69" since it would reference both beatles '65 and the year of the car and the (unlistenable) song at the end of the White album and "beatls69" but didn't get those (8 letters is the max to play with in North Carolina).
cheers
bob
The_Beatles_Lounge@yahoogroups.com has a listserv that is often fun..i get a daily feed from 'em.
posted by bobmcconnaughey at 7:05 pm (EST) on Aug 9, 2008
I take full blame / credit whichever for stating that Lennon and McCartney are the greatest songwriters of the century. I understand it is just my opinion but that is what it is. The songs, ‘Yesterday’ and ‘Imagine’ are, in my opinion, two songs crafted as close to perfection as humans can get. There are other songwriters that are very, very, good but none I can think of that have two such fine songs and such high quality in the rest of their work.
I have been listening to the Beatles since they were first released and in those 45 years the originals have started to wear thin with me so I listen more to covers now. I misspoke when I said it was Waylon & Willie that covered ‘Yesterday’ it was Merle Haggard and Willie on the “Seashores of Old Mexico’ album.
I am really sorry if I offended you in any way. If you have not heard any Louis Jordan and His Tympany Five I think you might like it.
posted by TLCrawford at 3:20 pm (EST) on May 1, 2008
I like your choices. You mightalso be interested in listening to some music from the pre-Big Band era, as it has, for me, the same kind of vitality that characterized rock before it became mainstream, big dollar, and over-produced. The earliest recorded jazz from Armstrong (the Hot Five and Hot Seven material), Bix Beiderbecke, Sid Bechet, and Duke Ellington (before the Ellington band forgot music should be danceable) is wonderful stuff I used to hear on my parents' 78s, and rediscovered in the mid 70s when the original recordings were being remastered and reissued.
From the same period or slightly earlier is a lot of great Tin Pan Alley. The original recordings are hard to find, but there are some great performers who recreate the sounds in a respectful way, rather than camping it up the way Tiny Tim did when he covered Nick Lucas' original "Tiptoe through the Tulips." My favorite of the groups that play this music is Janet Klein and Her Parlor Boys, featuring that peerless musicologist and ex-British invasion rocker, Ian Whitcomb. Here's a link to her site--watch her videos because you really need to see Janet performing, rather than just hearing the CDs.
http://www.janetklein.com/web/main.htm
There is still a need for modern singers to cover the real Gold Standards of American music--the songs of Irving Berlin, Jerome Kern, George Gershwin, Cole Porter, Hoagy Carmichael, Rodgers & Hart, etc., from the 1900--1940. It is unfortunate that much of this music is now being performed by singers and musicians who don't respect the purity of the original song, but use it as an excuse for tonsil-torturing vocals and/ or instrumental riffs that completely destroy the melodic line, and only serve as a vehicle for showing off their own "virtuosity." There are some singers who pay respect to the material, but it's not easy to find them. At one point, Linda Ronstadt seemed to be moving into that niche, but I haven't heard much from her of late, and her last forays seemed to be in mostly hispanic music.
Hope I haven't rambled on too much, but it's a pleasure discovering someone who shares my disdain for the stuff that is being performed today that I prefer to characterize as Noise Pollution, rather than Music.
posted by Django6924 at 1:02 pm (EST) on Jan 6, 2008
and can't stand any Music past the 80s. I still love the Music from the British Invasion I grew up on as well as Folk, old school R & B not today's R & B crap.
I positively HATE Rap, Hip-Hop and all the other Bloody Noise out there today.
In fact I still have an awful lot of LP's and 45's in my Record Collection and I still love to listen to them and Sing along with all the Songs too. Personally I
listen to the 50s to 80s Rock which is the best period in Rock 'n Roll history as far as I'm concerned and I also like the Music from the World War II era as well.
Librarianwannabe
posted by beatles1964 at 7:54 am (EST) on Jan 2, 2008
posted by MDLady at 7:41 am (EST) on Jan 2, 2008