Random books from nwhyte's library
Swords and Ice Magic by Fritz Leiber
Elric (Millennium Fantasy Masterworks) by Michael Moorcock
Teranesia by Greg Egan
Churches Together in Pilgrimage
The kite runner by Khaled Hosseini
The Bible New International version
Better to Have Loved: The Life of Judith Merril by Judith Merril, 1923
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Friends: ailbhe, Altariel, andyhat, andyl, annafdd, AnnaOok, Antiqueight, arwelp, Astromachy, athenasowl, bastardsnow, bellinghwoman, bluetyson, bookzombie, BoPeep, brightglance, bunnygirl, Calapine, cirdan, claudinec, cygny, DavidWeman, daxman, Donachca, dowd, dryad_wombat, elmyra, fanf, feorag, fictiontheory, Fledgist, gcoupe, gwyneira, hlynna, iainbham, iansales, JudithProctor, Korenmolen, Kushana, LeahMoore, Liadnan, lizbee, Lucy-S, MaryNovik, MatGB, mscongeniality, msggoat, mummimamma, MylesC, nuala, padraighart, paranoidangel, pgmcc, pipecad, raycun, redfiona, saroz, sbisson, slovobooks, Stevil2001, tamaranth, tarshaan, UAkronPress, wyvernfriend
Interesting libraries: dowd, iainbham, iansales, ochre24, PaulHassett, paulhurtley, rowens, Stevil2001, tangerinealert, the_red_shoes, tonnvane
LibraryThing authors: Luis Alberto Urrea (LuisAlbertoUrrea), Mark Michalowski (MarkMichalowski), Stephen Dedman (StephenDedman), Derek Blyth (TheAccidentalWriter), Lisa Carey (axel), Jo Walton (bluejo), C.E. Murphy (cemurphy), David Banks (davidbanks), David Mitchell (davidmitchell), Jessica Gregson (hypermobility), Lance Parkin (lanceparkin), Elizabeth Bear (matociquala), Mags L. Halliday (moosiferjones), Naomi Novik (naominovik), Richard Price (rixsal), Robert Shearman (shearrob), Dale Smith (terrypin)
Member: nwhyte
CollectionsYour library (4,282), Read but unowned (180), All collections (4,462)
Reviews1,793 reviews
Tagssf (945), doctor who (765), non-fiction (626), children (565), non-genre (412), unread (407), 2008 (371), 2009 (316), CD (307), religion (269) — see all tags
Cloudstag cloud, author cloud
GroupsBloggers, Comics, Doctor Who, Editors, Researchers, Whatever, Feminist SF, Flaggers!, I Survived the Great Vowel Shift, Irish Librarythingers, Language, Livejournalers — show all groups
Favorite authorsBrian W. Aldiss, Iain M. Banks, Alan Barnes, Nicholas Briggs, Lois McMaster Bujold, Jacqueline Carey, Arthur C. Clarke, Daniel Clowes, Paul Cornell, Roald Dahl, Robertson Davies, Philip K. Dick, Neil Gaiman, Misha Glenny, Graham Greene, Jon Courtenay Grimwood, Ursula K. Le Guin, Carl Hiaasen, Zoran Živković, Ismail Kadare, Guy Gavriel Kay, David Langford, Fritz Leiber, Barry Letts, Rebecca Levene, H. P. Lovecraft, Ken MacLeod, Ian Marter, Mark Mazower, Ian McDonald, Juliet E. McKenna, C.E. Murphy, Flann O'Brien, Terry Pratchett, Christopher Priest, Marcel Proust, Kurban Said, Saki, Bob Shaw, Neal Stephenson, Charles Stross, Sheri S. Tepper, Eric Thompson, Hunter S. Thompson, J. R. R. Tolkien, Mark Twain, Jo Walton, John Wyndham, Roger Zelazny (Shared favorites)
Favorite bookstoresFNAC Brussel, Het Besloten Land, Sterling, Strand Bookstore, Treasure Trove, Waterstone's Brussels
About meHusband, father of three, Irish, European, UK citizen, liberal, Catholic, political analyst, science fiction fan, psephologist, lapsed medievalist, aspiring polyglot.
About my librarylanguages, politics, history, science fiction
(most religion books belong to my wife)
What I am reading/listening to at present
What I might read / listen to next
I am experimenting with running various reading lists, each tagged with a single letter:
a: sf, in order of entry onto my LibraryThing catalogue.
b: sf, in order of popularity on LibraryThing as a whole.
c: sf, as owned by me before start of this year and previously read by my livejournal f-list.
d: fiction other than sf, in order of entry onto my LibraryThing catalogue.
e: fiction other than sf, in order of popularity on LibraryThing as a whole.
f: fiction other than sf, as owned by me before start of this year and previously read by my livejournal f-list.
g: non-fiction, in order of entry onto my LibraryThing catalogue.
h: non-fiction, in order of popularity on LibraryThing as a whole.
i: non-fiction, as owned by me before start of this year and previously read by my livejournal f-list.
j: books I have already read but haven't reviewed on-line, ranked by LT popularity.
k: Hugo-award winning novels which I haven't previously reviewed on-line, in order of winning the award.
l: unread Doctor Who books, in order of internal continuity.
m: unread New Series Doctor Who books, in order of LT popularity.
n: Ian Rankin's Rebus books, in internal chronological order
o: books owned only my me on LT, in order of entry into my catalogue.
p: books by PoC, in no particular order.
Homepagehttp://nwhyte.livejournal.com
Also onAIM, Dopplr, LiveJournal, Skype, Yahoo Messenger
Real nameNicholas Whyte
LocationLeuven, Belgium
Emailnicholas.whyte
gmail.com
Account typepublic, lifetime
Connection NewsConnection News
URLs
http://www.librarything.com/profile/nwhyte (profile)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/nwhyte (library)
Common KnowledgeSeries (673), Awards (446), Characters (8934), Places (2059)
Member sinceSep 16, 2005
Currently readingTeach Yourself Irish (Teach Yourself Complete Courses) by Diarmuid O Se



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http://christophertusa.com/
Thanks,
Chris
posted by cmtusa at 2:00 pm (EST) on Sep 9, 2009
posted by archivesman at 10:56 pm (EST) on Jul 16, 2009
posted by bardsfingertips at 3:01 pm (EST) on Apr 1, 2009
Thanks again!
posted by kevinashley at 1:26 pm (EST) on Oct 8, 2008
I read 4 years ago and 3 years ago I visited this Nagorno Karabagh. It is very beautifule there. I recomend a book by V.A. Shnirelman. I have not looked through your library. But you can contact me if you are interested.
I think I will have a further look into your library
Sincerely
Rune Norheim
posted by Girkner at 7:58 am (EST) on Oct 12, 2007
Just read your review of "The Dispossessed" which I just finished myself. Was intrigued by your view on the Le Guin's treatment of Thu as the most stereotyped and least explored of the forces in the book. My personal take on this, as someone who comes from the other side of the Iron Curtain, is that she chose well not to give us any "direct" experience of Thu. I can cope with characters' prejudice against something they've never experienced. I don't think I could have coped with Le Guin trying to describe something she had never had any direct experience of, and I did. Not sure if that makes any sense...
Mili
posted by elmyra at 12:58 pm (EST) on Aug 13, 2007
posted by NoirSeanF at 11:57 pm (EST) on Aug 10, 2007
thanks for joining the proust group
David Perrings
posted by dperrings at 4:33 pm (EST) on Jul 15, 2007
>>I'm a bit shocked by your comment that the Mabinogion is "full of people with silly Welsh names". Some might say that "Tseng" is a silly name!
Hullo Nicholas.
Now in general there are two categories of "silly" names (note the use of quotation marks. Ones which have a alternative meaning (either inadvertant or advertant) and ones which sound unusual or just plain weird.
In the first category you have names which are descripive of something (often the subject) e.g. "Colonel Blimp" "The Knights Who Say Ni". This can also include good old fashioned puns (often sexual) e.g. "Damien Thong". You also can get combinations of the two e.g. "Dick Manual" (often these could be crudely called "porn-star names" - both descriptive of the subject AND incorporating punning/sexual innuendo).
In the second category you have names which are grammatically convoluted or just extremely lengthy such that they sound both discordant and amusing to the ear. "Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwll... (coincidentally also Welsh) is an example. A slightly less politically correct example is the batting line-up of the Sri-Lankan cricket team, where names are generally extremely long, convoluted and sound "silly" (note the use of quotation marks) to the untrained ear.
Welsh names in the Mabinogion fall into the second category. The issue of whether names sound "silly" in this case is largely a vowel/consonant thing. In Welsh a number of letters which are consonents in English are vowels in Welsh. Therefore to the untrained (English) ear many of the names employed in the work sound grammatically convoluted and slightly wacky (in a word: silly). QED.
You will note two adjuncts to this:
a) One's categorisation of a name as "silly" is highly culturally conditioned. A Welsh or Irish person would obviously not find names in the Mabinogion remotely silly. A llama-seller from slightly south of Cuzco would probably struggled to see why Anglo-Saxons find "The Knights Who Say Ni" (or even "The Knights Who Say Ecky-ecky-ecky-ecky-P'tang, Zzoo-Boing, gdgdbaaoizen") remotely amusing.
b) The name "Tseng" does not qualify as "silly" under either category 1) or 2).
Regards
J
PS Good to see someone reads my reviews!
posted by jontseng at 2:40 am (EST) on Jun 29, 2007
posted by liamfoley at 8:25 pm (EST) on Jun 1, 2007
posted by MyopicBookworm at 7:46 am (EST) on Apr 27, 2007
posted by MyopicBookworm at 7:45 am (EST) on Apr 27, 2007
posted by paperpusher at 10:01 am (EST) on Apr 16, 2007
posted by paperpusher at 7:15 am (EST) on Apr 15, 2007
posted by dryad_wombat at 4:21 pm (EST) on Feb 25, 2007
Have a great day.
posted by gazzy at 2:22 pm (EST) on Feb 2, 2007
posted by parelle at 3:21 am (EST) on Dec 16, 2006
posted by MatGB at 7:18 pm (EST) on Nov 26, 2006
posted by Pidge at 3:22 pm (EST) on Oct 22, 2006
posted by Packrat at 7:10 pm (EST) on Oct 2, 2006
With best wishes, gibbon
posted by gibbon at 10:22 am (EST) on Sep 1, 2006
I wish I had half of your sci-fi collection, though. Unfortunately, it seems like people don’t want to let their sci-fi go into the used-book circuit around here, so I’ve been semi out of luck. But I’m working on it.
posted by blueacademia at 5:23 pm (EST) on May 13, 2006
(I should add that I haven't read most of our "religion"-tagged books, and have only tagged as "unread" those that I do intend to read someday!)
posted by nwhyte at 6:32 am (EST) on Oct 16, 2005
posted by a.vincent at 9:37 pm (EST) on Oct 10, 2005