Victorians! discussion
Conversations in the Parlor
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Fess up! (TBR Confessions)

Hello... my name is Paula, and I'm a bookaholic. My most recent box of books includes:
Vile Bodies, The Quincunx, Children of England
Edit: Oops! I forgot one: The Meaning of Night A Confession. I hope the book doesn't get mad at me for forgetting it!

Holman QuickSource Bible Atlas with Charts and Biblical Reconstructions
Holman QuickSource Guide to Christian Apologetics
I couldn't help myself. I was at Amazon looking for just one nice map of Israel to match my map of the travels of Paul for a Bible study that I lead, and these books lept into view and stuck out their thumbs.
And a few days ago, Audible had a half-price sale on audiobooks, and I got just a few things:
Short Stories of W. Somerset Maugham, vols. 2 and 3
Flowering Wilderness and One More River by John Galsworthy
A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens
And then there are all those nicely matched Barbara Pym paperbacks (eight or nine, I think), and I wont even mention what's on my Kindle. And I'm not even rich.

In the immediate TBR stack I have just acquired Betsy Tobin's historical Norse fantasy, "Ice Land." Charles Palliser's "The Quincunx," John Gardner's "Grendel," and "The Complete Poems of Anna Akhmatova" round out the stack.
I am off to Death Valley National Park for a few days to indulge my landscape photography passion. I am taking Douglas Clegg's scary little novella, "Isis," to read to the fellas around the campfire; and "The Complete Poems of John Keats" for me. I'll see you all on Monday 11/23! Cheers! Chris

Chris - Anna Akhmatova's poems have been in my TBR pile for about three years. I take it off of the shelf and read one or two every once in a while, but I really just need to set aside a chunk of time and read them. To read poetry, for me, requires a state of calm borderign on meditation and I find it very difficult to achieve that some times.
PS - I am adding everyone's TBRs to my TBR list.

Barbara Pym? What does she write, what genre?
And what is on your Kindle? Do tell! How often do you order books there? I've found I order books there for one of three reasons: I have no desire to own the real copy, the real book is heavier so I get an extra Kindle copy, or I'm just searching around and stumble on a free copy of a book that looks at least semi-interesting.
Edit: I was wrong - there's a fourth reason: sheer lack of patience when I absolutely HAVE to have the book right now!

Barbara Pym? What does she write, what genre?
And wh..."
Paula, Barbara Pym wrote gentle novels, many of them about British women of a certain age and their enjoyment of spinsterhood or their attempts to get out of same. She is a novelist of manners who has often been compared to Jane Austen. You might want to start with Excellent Women . You are in for a treat.

Thomas Mann, Buddenbrooks
Balzac, Pere Goriot
Laclos, Dangerous Liaisons
Forster, Aspects of the Novel
James, The Victorian Novel
Auden, Forewords and Afterwords
Requested or received on Interlibrary Loan in last 30 days:
Goring et. al. Studying Literature: the Essential Companion
Beha, The Whole Five Feet (see my review, it was punk)
The Fireside Dickens
and five minutes ago (thanks, Laurel, as though I needed even more books to read!) Pym, Excellent Women
And I won't even mention the books I got out of the library not on ILL.
Any wonder that my TBR shelf grows rather than shrinking?

Edit: I was wrong - there's a fourth reason: sheer lack of patience when I absolutely HAVE to have the book right now!
If I have a choice between a paper book and a Kindle book, I almost always vote for Kindle. I just don't have any more room for non-virtual books (Is that the UPS guy who just drove up?) Of course, if I want gorgeous pictures or color maps or charts that read well, I choose paper, especially since I don't have a Kindle DX yet (I'm waiting to see how much the Plastic Logic Que is going to be). I have a lot of "Works of..." on my Kindle--Dickens, Charlotte Bronte, Wilkie Collins, Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Trollope, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Lewis Carol, Mark Twain, P.G. Wodehouse, Walter Scott, Victor Hugo, W.M. Thackeray, for instance. These sets are quite inclusive. I choose the ones published by Mobile Reference, because they are really well formatted. I also have a number of obscure things that are no longer in print--things like Chesterton's Return of Don Quixote, a glossary of Lummi Indian words, old British and universal history books, books about slaves, etc. Articles that I find on the Web I download to Kindle to save my eyes. Oh, lots of stuff. My Kindle 1 ("Thackeray") has 100 pages of home page. Kindle 2 ("Tolstoy") has 34 pages plus my subscriptions and personal documents. I'll get a list together for my Goodreads library one of these days.
I use crutches because of childhood polio, and it is so very convenient for me to always have my Kindle library in a cross-body bag. I'll be going to Bellingham soon for my warm-water therapy. While on the bus I'll listen to an audiobook on my Kindle (Les Miserables. Once I get there, I'll make use of my wait time (there is usually quite a lot of that) by reading up on Acts for the Bible class I'll be leading on Tuesday or perhaps reading a couple of short stories by Saki or some of the essays I've downloaded from the Web--whatever suits my fancy at the time.
I have a KJV Bible that has been formatted so I can go quickly to any chapter and verse I'm looking for. I use this for study and in church.
So basically, whatever I want to read I read on my Kindle. I have a very heavy hardcove copy of the Pevear/Velokhonsky translation of War And Peace, but I read the same translation on the Kindle for convenience.

It's in a lot of countries, now, so perhaps it will come. It became available for Canada the other day.

It's in a lot of countries, now, so perhaps it will come. It became available ..."
Laurele, when Amazon announced their Kindle International some time ago, Indonesia and Canada were among the list of the countries that were not covered. Maybe they are expanding their coverage? Where did you read about it?

I get Google news updates every day about Kindle. Canada was added just this week. Indonesia is not available yet.
You can check here:
http://www.amazon.com/Kindle-Wireless...
Click below the blue-banded "Live Outside the U.S.?" for a drop-down list.

Wow - thanks for sharing such insights! I love that the Kindle has helped with all the reading you want to do. I can somewhat understand the need to carry lighter materials; I had back surgery at 29 (2 yrs ago) and am somewhat limited by the weight I can lug around. No more are the days where I would happily lug around a backpack full of hefty hardcovers!
Thanks for mentioning Mobile Reference - I tend to gravitate to Amazon and forget all the other available sites for Kindle books!

Did you find the map? I didn't know Amazon was a good resource for maps...

"
And don't forget the free sites! Almost all Victorian works of any significance are available free, since they're all out of copyright.
Try
http://www.mobileread.com/forums/eboo...
and
http://www.feedbooks.com/
Lady Audley's Secret by Mary Elizabeth Braddon. But I've stopped buying so many classics (despite having this amazing independent shop nearly, selling them new at as low as 99p!) because I never seem to get round to reading them.

Did you find the map? I didn't know Amazon was a go..."
No. There were maps there, but not exactly what I wanted. My Journeys of Paul map did come from Amazon, though. I (or more likely Riley) even put in an order for Amazon to send me a case of Fancy Feast every two months.

"
And don't forget the free sites! Almost all Victo..."
Yes, Mobileread and Feedbooks can send very nicely formatted books directly to your Kindle once you do a simple set up.

Or, you can just download the files, plug in your Kindle, which acts just like another disk drive, and simply copy the files to the Documents folder of your Kindle drive (main drive, or supplemental card if you have one) using Explorer or any other file program -- I happen to like xplorer2lite, which is a free download from cnet, because it shows two disks or directories at one time in parallel columns, so it's easy to move things where you want them.
http://download.cnet.com/Xplorer2-Lit...
But Windows Explorer or any other file management program will do just fine. Just remember that your Kindle works just like any other disk drive, CD, etc.
Before I went on a temporary book buying hiatus I went to an annual book fair fundraiser for our local YMCA. I'm not sure how they acquire their books but most are brand new, hardback, and only $2. Here's what I got:
-The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier Clay by Michael Chabon
-Shanghai Girls by Lisa See
-Light in August by William Faulkner
-The Grass is Singing by Doris Lessing
-Don Quixote by Cervantes (I already have a copy but mine isn't readable - pages crumbling)
-The Master Butchers Singing Club by Louise Erdrich
-The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier Clay by Michael Chabon
-Shanghai Girls by Lisa See
-Light in August by William Faulkner
-The Grass is Singing by Doris Lessing
-Don Quixote by Cervantes (I already have a copy but mine isn't readable - pages crumbling)
-The Master Butchers Singing Club by Louise Erdrich




I love Israel, too. I was there for a couple of weeks in the 1980s and it really made the Bible come to life.

THE VICTORIANS
Daniel Deronda
Uncle Silas
About a Boy
Brave New World
A Room of One's Own
Hard Times
Queen Margot, or, Marguerite de Valois
Germinal
Under the Skin
Anyone else start the year with a book splurge, or get a book for Christmas?

Was That Really Me? How Everyday Stress Brings Out Our Hidden Personality
Lilith's Brood
Tipping the Velvet
My personal splurge a few days ago netted:
Astrology and the Authentic Self Integrating Traditional and Modern Astrology to Uncover the Essence of the Birth Chart
Moon Signs The Key to Your Inner Life
Passage
Anna Karenina
Our Mutual Friend

Glad to see OMF there! Are you reading AK for the Classics group?

Glad to see OMF there! Are you reading A..."
I *bought AK for the Classics and Western Canon group, yes; however, I am on a severe sidetrack with The Wheel of Time fantasy series by Robert Jordan. The horses have their heads; I'll be there when I can :-)
I'm looking forward to Tipping the Velvet. The plots in most books, no matter how gripping or intriguing, are relentlessly heterosexual.


Vanity Fair
The Woodlanders - Thomas Hardy
Les Miserable
Woman In White
The Count of Monte Cristo
and The Little Stranger
All ready for a year of reading the classics :)


Jimmy Nail - Life of a Northern Soul (a well known North East England personality and one of my favourite TV actors)
Roger Moore - My Word is My Bond
Andre Agassi - Open
I've also got:
Under the Lilacs by Louisa M Alcott
With Clive in India by G A henry
&
The Man who Would be King by Rudyard Kipling
in the pile, I'm looking forward to an enjoyable year of reading.

That title is a nice play on words :) Let me know what you think when you read this one - I love Bond movies!!

Will do, I'm hoping to read it soon seeing as it's been waiting patiently for a few months now!

Daughter of Fortune - Isabelle Allende
Cutting for Stone - ? can't remember name!
Precious - Sapphire
The Road - Cormac McCarthy
oh and two by Hilary Mantel - can't remember titles - thats terrible I know.
My partner bought me Every Man for Himself by Beryl Bainbridge as part of my christmas present (along with a Bonny Prince Billy CD - I buy nearly as many CD's as I do books) We are saving for his 50th birthday holiday so pressies were small this year!

I'm hoping that the anticipation will help me control what books I buy in the meantime...
I have to confess that I'm not too sure if I'll manage......

I'm hoping that the anticipation will help me control what books I buy in the meantime...
I have to confess that I'm not too sure if I'll manage......


Reading in all good conscience :-)


Books mentioned in this topic
The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo (other topics)North and South (other topics)
Soulless (other topics)
I Capture the Castle (other topics)
The Strangely Beautiful Tale of Miss Percy Parker (other topics)
More...
(Trust me, you're among friends! Your secret is safe with us!)