Marty Reeder
Goodreads Author
Website
Twitter
Member Since
January 2008
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How to Become a Pirate Hunter
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published
2017
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5 editions
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The Evil Harbormaster
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published
2008
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How to Become a Seer
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* Note: these are all the books on Goodreads for this author. To add more, click here.
Topics Mentioning This Author
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| The Green Jell-O ...: Young Adult: Speculative | 215 | 115 | Jul 13, 2023 10:41AM |
“There are two things that men should never weary of, goodness and humility; we get none too much of them in this rough world among cold, proud people.”
― Kidnapped
― Kidnapped
“Now this was one of the things I had been brought up to eschew like disgrace; it being held by my father neither the part of a Christian nor yet of a gentleman to set his own livelihood and fish for that of others, on the cast of painted pasteboard.”
― Kidnapped
― Kidnapped
“Education is experience, and the essence of experience is self-reliance.”
― The Once and Future King
― The Once and Future King
“Leave well alone.”
― The Once and Future King
― The Once and Future King
“Feeling without judgement is a washy draught indeed; but judgement untempered by feeling is too bitter and husky a morsel for human deglutition.”
― Jane Eyre
― Jane Eyre
Goodreads Status Update Writing Contest
— 221 members
— last activity Jun 21, 2017 04:20PM
Join this group to participate in or follow the Goodreads Status Update Writing Contest. Stories must be submitted before MARCH 1, 2009. Everyone on G ...more
The Dona Reeder Book Club
— 6 members
— last activity Sep 10, 2016 06:42AM
Exclusive Elite Prestigious Precocious Righteously Proud Sophisticated Debonair Superior Bourgeois Endearingly snobby And Concise
9th Ward Book Group
— 16 members
— last activity Nov 30, 2011 10:22AM
For those that are or have been Logan 9th Ward Members!!
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I thought that I might as well comment on myself (I've got a big enough ego, why not?). So I'm taking the time to explain my bookshelves. My goodreads bookshelves, though they do match up with real life bookshelves, are more metaphorical than anything, and they correspond with the star rating given to the book. Here is my explanation, for what it's worth (a lot).Front Room Bookshelf-This public place in my home is reserved for only the best books that I have to offer as a recommendation. Books that have touched me or moved me in ways that are exceptional in literature, and are therefore placed in the room that I often sit in to read and also where I can proudly display the best I've read to my family and guests.
Bedroom Bookshelf-This is for the books that I thoroughly enjoy, but that I wouldn't mark as immediate classics or wouldn't necessarily recommend to everyone. In other words, I like having them close to me, where I can see them often, but I wouldn't showcase them to the world as the best I've read.
School Bookshelf-Books that are passable, but I don't really mind if they aren't nearby, nor do I mind if students use and abuse them.
Attic Bookshelf-Out of sight, out of mind. Not really a terrible book, but something about it didn't fit, and I wouldn't put it somewhere I have to be reminded of it too often. I don't throw it away because I don't generally throw books away on principle (and I'm lazy). Someday, however, they will meet an ignonimous end and find themselves in a box going to a thrift store.
Big Black Garbage Can Bookshelf-This book has managed to force me past my natural tendency to preserve all literature; instead I have no choice but to place it and its contents into a bookshelf where I and no one else will ever be able to access it again.








































Now, having said that, I retract my statement that you are invited. Nay, you are commanded. Get going and join the fun.