Random books from vpfluke's library
The South Beach Diet Quick and Easy Cookbook: 200 Delicious Recipes Ready in 30 Minutes or Less (The South Beach Diet) by Arthur Agatston
Self Matters: Creating Your Life from the Inside Out by Phillip C. McGraw
Guiding Light: Jonathan's Story (Guiding Light) by Julia London
The Boomer Bible by R. F. Laird
Creative grieving : from loss to enlightenment by Arthur Samuels
Dee'Troit Diet by Bill Laitner
An Introduction to Indian Court Painting (The V & A introductions to the decorative arts) by Andrew Topsfield
Members with vpfluke's books
Member connections
Friends: LorLe
Interesting libraries: aepmc, AnneThomas, bemidjian, catface, Dacia, djryle, dunstan, griffitj, infiniteletters, intres, Jetton, joelwatson, MarillaW, MarthaJeanne, mitchellray, newmancenter, Revenant, sjbuchanan, sslv
LibraryThing authors: Christine Taylor-Butler (ChristineTB), John Broughton (JohnBroughton), Keith Miller (KeithMiller), Kurt Bruner (KurtBruner), Lynn Coulter (LynnCoulter), Sarah Addison Allen (SarahAddisonAllen), Simon G. Brown (SimonGBrown), Swami Saradananda (SwamiSaradananda), David Weinberger (dweinberger), Francis Heaney (francis_heaney), Hope Edelman (hopedel), Chris McGowan (jcmcgowan), Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson (jeffreymasson), Leann Sweeney (leannrs), Lisa See (lisasee), Lisa Unger (lisaunger), Nicholas Nicastro (nicastrobooks), Robert Young (ryoung), Susan Wittig Albert (susanalbert)
Member: vpfluke
CollectionsYour library (5,570), Do Not Own (9), Withdrawn (20), Currently reading (3), Read but unowned (74), All collections (5,592)
Reviews121 reviews
TagsULTB (627), travel (376), novel (334), history (316), illustrated (277), fiction (256), guide (236), fantasy (206), pictorial (199), children (195) — see all tags
Cloudstag cloud, author cloud
Groups25 technical nonfiction books per year, A Pearl of Wisdom and Enlightenment, All Things New England, Amazon's Kindle, Archivists on LibraryThing, Bestsellers over the Years, Book Listers UNITE!, Bookstore Tourism, Build the Open Shelves Classification, Buses Enthusiasts — show all groups
Favorite authorsPatrick M. Arnold, Robert Bly, Jorge Luis Borges, Octavia E. Butler, Moyra Caldecott, Italo Calvino, Orson Scott Card, Agatha Christie, The Episcopal Church, Paulo Coelho, Susan Cooper, St. John of the Cross, Robertson Davies, Diana L. Eck, Shusaku Endo, Clarissa Pinkola Estés, David Hackett Fischer, Northrop Frye, Malcolm Gladwell, Rumer Godden, Edward T. Hall, Roy Harris, Edward M. Hays, Mark Helprin, Frank Herbert, Susan Howatch, Jan Karon, Morton T. Kelsey, Katherine Kurtz, Mercedes Lackey, Madeleine L'Engle, Doris Lessing, C. S. Lewis, Kevin Lynch, George MacDonald, Anne McCaffrey, Gita Mehta, James A. Michener, Desmond Morris, Kathleen Norris, Helen Palmer, Georges Perec, Chaim Potok, Michelin Travel Publications, Raymond Queneau, J. K. Rowling, John A. Sanford, Jack E. Schramm, Moacyr Scliar, Paul Scott, Nancy E. Shaw, Massey Hamilton Shepherd, Dan Simmons, Jane Smiley, Shashi Tharoor, Phyllis Tickle, J. R. R. Tolkien, Charles Williams, Editors of World Almanac, Arthur M. Young (Shared favorites)
Favorite bookstoresBarnes & Noble Booksellers - Country Glen Center, Borders - Manhattan - Penn Plaza
Favorite librariesEast Meadow Public Library, North Bellmore Public Library, North Merrick Public Library
About meManager of Scheduling for Long Island Bus.
About my libraryMy collection includes books that my wife owns. I have about 3000-4000 books, and am in the process of cataloging them, about 100 a week. My interests include public transportation (rail, buses, scheduling), travel, linguistics and languages, some fantasy and science fiction, Oulipo, religion, Episcopal church, Enneagram, mathematics, almanacs. I also collect city maps and public transport timetables.
Flash! By Memorial Day, 2007, I have now reached over 4,000 books.
Since the beginning of 2008, I have 4600 books, some of my catalog includes books withdrawn, or "library books".
I reached 5,000 entries on July 4, 2008 Imnow cycling books out of storage (and some back), but also withdrawing.
Membership
LibraryThing Early Reviewers/Member Giveaway
Real nameRobert (Bob) Campbell
LocationBellmore, NY 11710
Emailvpfluke
aol.com
Account typepublic, lifetime
Connection NewsConnection News
URLs
http://www.librarything.com/profile/vpfluke (profile)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/vpfluke (library)
Common KnowledgeSeries (437), Awards (318), Characters (4857), Places (1126)
Member sinceDec 10, 2006
Currently readingCaring Enough to Confront:How to Understand and Express Your Deepest Feelings Toward Others by David W. Augsburger
The Road to Dune by Brian Herbert
King of the Road. From Bergen-Belsen to the Olympic Games by Shaul P. Ladany








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Lorle
posted by LorLe at 9:49 pm (EST) on Sep 15, 2009
I will try a couple of other places too, and see what happens.
You might have to pull out the old Glass Bead Game, as I and reading that now... and for a humanities person, it is super.
Thanks again, rosinbow
posted by Rosinbow at 12:55 am (EST) on Aug 27, 2009
I have looked at the tags, and I am wondering is it possible to send an invite to folks who have recently added _Siddhartha_ to their collection? is there a way to invite people who have an interest in this book in particular and not necessarily Buddhism in general without going in one by one and sending an invite?
I am in no big hurry, but it is such a widely read book, I imagine there are people here who would like to discuss this book; I'm just not sure the best way to let them know. Thanks, rosinbow
posted by Rosinbow at 1:35 am (EST) on Aug 26, 2009
Thanks for your help with tags and the Readings in the Humanities group i started. I am using tags for my own categorizing, so that I can see what books I have in Religion and in Buddhism, for example, so that is why I have tags like Religion: Buddhism. If I understand what you are saying, i would do better if my tags were just Buddhism or just Islam instead of having the Religion:Islam tag.
I don't really understand how people find my new group. With this first text, I just sent an invitation to the 3 other folks currently reading _Siddhartha_.
I wasn't "getting" how tags affect people with like interest seeing my group.
I realized the group would take time, but I thought being so broad in the humanities would be good...hmmm... well we shall see what happens. I will re-think these tags--thanks... rosinbow
ps yes, I realized that I touchstone the URL and that takes one to the group--thanks
posted by Rosinbow at 1:24 am (EST) on Aug 26, 2009
I am an amature Clarence Budington Kelland historian. I appreciated seeing your 10 best sellers posts, but was disappointed to learn that CBK never had a best-seller. I'll have to be satisfied with his success with the magazine audience, radio and movies.
Great info, thanks.
CBKStuff.
posted by cbkstuff at 10:38 pm (EST) on Mar 27, 2009
posted by cad_lib at 5:39 pm (EST) on Jan 31, 2009
vintage_books
posted by vintage_books at 3:08 am (EST) on Oct 22, 2008
vintage_books
posted by vintage_books at 3:06 am (EST) on Oct 22, 2008
posted by slickdpdx at 4:10 pm (EST) on Sep 26, 2008
Actually, the publisher of The Fire (which was in the July batch, I believe) ended up finding a huge pile of extra copies, but it was after I had already closed the July batch and picked winners. So I quickly gave her a list of more member addresses (people who had requested the book but hadn't won it), and she sent out more books. I just never got a chance to tell everyone to expect a surprise books! Hope you review it and enjoy it!
Abby
posted by ablachly at 11:20 am (EST) on Sep 9, 2008
posted by LynnB at 8:58 am (EST) on Jul 10, 2008
Thanx!
posted by LynnB at 6:51 am (EST) on Jul 8, 2008
~april
posted by Grabbag at 10:14 am (EST) on May 27, 2008
posted by DeusExLibrus at 10:04 pm (EST) on May 19, 2008
posted by MarthaJeanne at 4:54 pm (EST) on May 7, 2008
With the bilinguals, there's no way to tell whether the ancient language is there because the person can handle it or in spite of their not being able to handle it. My Greek is fairly bad. (Latin the same, Hebrew even worse)
I have Song of Songs because it was the only edition available when I bought it. I read the German (some of it anyway) when I was writing a paper. I'm not terribly likely to even look at the German again. On the other hand, I'm working on Greek again, so because I have it, I might just pull it out to get a taste of Origen's Greek. (At the end of the course.)
Synopsis I bought Greek/English deliberately. This way I can use the English most of the time, but check out how the writers varied the Greek when I want to get down to that level.
In general I like the fact that with bilingual editions there is some sort of check on the translation. A lot of early church stuff has been published in Latin or Greek/German editions, and I'm coming around to prefering them to English alone just for that reason. I want to be sure I'm reading what the original author wanted to write, and not what a later scholar thought he should have written. Besides the German slows down my reading pace, which is quite useful for these things.
posted by MarthaJeanne at 3:28 am (EST) on Apr 30, 2008
I just read your review of "Hungry Tide" a book I also loved a great deal. I read it last year before I started writing reviews for everything I read. I, too, gave it a four-and=a-half star rating.
I took a look at your profile and noticed that you love books about "travel, linguistics and languages" so I thought I'd write and mention that "Fieldwork" by Mischa Berlinski is a marvelous book that would fit in that category. It was a National Book Award finalist even though it is a first novel!!!
Also, you say you love "public transportation (rail, buses, scheduling)" ...another good (but not marvelous) book in that category is "The 8:55 to Baghdad" by Andrew Eame. I would never have read a book like this, but it was on one of my book club reading lists, so I gave it a chance and I am happy that I did.
I've written reviews for both those books...in case you're curious.
Reading your review of "Hungry Tide" made me remember how much I enjoyed that book.
Barbara
posted by msbaba at 11:12 pm (EST) on Apr 23, 2008
http://www.bookbarnniantic.com/
It was great meeting you both.
G
posted by Irisheyz77 at 1:21 pm (EST) on Apr 21, 2008
posted by medievalmama at 6:04 pm (EST) on Apr 12, 2008
posted by aepmc at 12:18 am (EST) on Apr 7, 2008
I have looked often at your library since we share, at latest count, 119 books. Since I am still in process of entering books and our libraries have common interests. I had been planning to let you know you were a library of interest to me. So welcome. Faithfully, Ann+
posted by aepmc at 7:12 pm (EST) on Apr 6, 2008
We're up and rolling on the GEB read at http://www.librarything.com/talktopic.ph...
Looking forward to your comments. Jim
posted by torus34 at 7:37 am (EST) on Apr 1, 2008
Sydney
posted by sydaisy at 7:32 am (EST) on Feb 11, 2008
posted by jimroberts at 5:57 am (EST) on Jan 25, 2008
posted by yangguy at 5:48 pm (EST) on Dec 25, 2007
thanks for your reply re bestsellerlists.
You are right - Der Spiegel has had bestseller lists for some decades now - but they do not seem accessible without paying for access to their online archives.
Thanks anyway!
Kind regards
Christian
posted by cnrenner at 1:50 pm (EST) on Dec 17, 2007
I like your bestseller lists. Where do you get them from? I would like to have German bestseller lists for years past, but could not find the right sources.
Kind regards Christian
posted by cnrenner at 5:57 am (EST) on Dec 16, 2007
I wonder, do you read all the entries in the 50 book challenge board?! (o=
mi
posted by mi-chan at 7:48 pm (EST) on Dec 13, 2007
Happy Reading
posted by investory at 1:19 pm (EST) on Oct 24, 2007
posted by catface at 1:47 am (EST) on Aug 16, 2007
posted by yangguy at 9:17 pm (EST) on Jul 17, 2007
It can be a great way of picking books to review when the pile is too daunting. Thought you might be interested. If you are, drop me a message for an actual invitation, or you can, of course, search the group page.
Hope this wasn't spammy.
posted by Caramellunacy at 3:53 am (EST) on Jul 5, 2007
posted by avaland at 3:50 pm (EST) on May 19, 2007
posted by dawh at 9:05 pm (EST) on May 15, 2007
I already had a catalogue of my books, using readerware. I must admit I'm happy I've changed this way, but I uploaded about 2,000 books all at once. Newer books, and some where I've recently added to a series I've tagged. I will fill in other tags as I can, or as I find the time and willingness, but I do agree tags are useful, it's just rather daunting looking at so many to do all at once!
posted by lewispike at 6:08 am (EST) on Mar 14, 2007
Fred
posted by Freder1ck at 12:08 am (EST) on Feb 12, 2007
posted by vpfluke at 12:11 am (EST) on Jan 13, 2007