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Library Bookshelf

Started by Marilyne, March 29, 2016, 03:20:53 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

MarsGal

Via an email from Simon and Schuster, I got reminded of Bookshop.org. They are now selling e-books as well as hardcopy. They also had a blurb about DRM which answered a question I had about e-book ownership. Just because an e-book is DRM free, it doesn't mean you own the book. All the DRM free means is that you can read the book in any e-book reader rather than being restricted to a particular brand of e-reader. At any rate, Bookshop.org seems like a nice alternative, especially because they support local independent books stores through their sales. Has anyone bought books from them?

MarsGal

Aside from still reading the military thriller I mentioned a few days ago, I am also now into Over the Edgo of the World by Laurence Bergreen and enjoying it very much. It is a non-fiction account of Magellan's voyage around the world.

I see that Apple+ is doing Martha Wells' Murderbot Series. That almost makes me want to spend the bucks to get Apple+ just to watch it.
 

Marilyne

I've been trying to read some of the books I got as Christmas gifts, but so far I can't get into any of them . . . "Hang The Moon", "All the Broken Places", and "The Lost Bookshop".  I'll give it another try this afternoon. . . or maybe not?  I've been more interested lately  in rereading some of my old favorites.  My younger daughter borrowed an oldie from me by Anne Tyler,  "A Spool of Blue Thread".  She liked it and wanted to talk about it when she came over here on Friday.  I didn't remember enough about it to have a decent conversation, so I plan to read it again.     
I saw this cartoon on-line yesterday, and thought it was a cute one for us  book lovers.   

BarbStAubrey

:)  :smitten:  :thumbup:  :-* Perfect cartoon - love it...

phyllis

MG, thank you, thank you for the cartoon!  I really needed a good laugh.
phyllis
Cary,NC

Marilyne

I watched another old movie on TCM yesterday.   This one was also a British drama,   Brief Encounter,  adapted from a play by Noel Coward.   This 1945 drama seems very dated by today's standards, but was typical of the way the World was back then.  I recommend it to anyone who enjoys taking a look back into the past,  at the way life used to be, but no longer is.
A man and a woman meet by chance, in a train station coffee shop.  Both are married, with families.  They continue to meet,  and of course they fall in love, and then the turmoil begins.   A story as old as time itself.

MarsGal

Marilyne, I know of the movie, but never watched it. A few months ago I did, finally, watch 84 Charing Cross Road. Of course it was about books and book people.

I just this morning downloaded the NIV, Cultural Backgrounds Bible Study: Bringing to Life the Ancient World of Scripture which is published by Zondervan and includes the New International Version of the Bible. Both of my old Bibles are King James versions which I have had since I was a teen. I am looking forward to this one because it includes photos, lots of maps (and you know how much I like maps), charts, a Hebrew to English translation chart, related ancient texts relating to the old testament, and other references. I was all set to order the hardcover, but the publisher was kind enough to say that the type was set at 8.5 pt. which may be a little too small for my eyes these days, new glasses or not. Also, I think it will be much easier to click on the reference numbers and get back to my reading place much easier in the eBook than the hardcopy. And, of course, the ever present lap cat will be in the way trying to hold such a thick (aka: heavy) book. The publisher, BTW, also has a version NKJV (New King James Version) too.

It looks like I am almost done with the book about Magellan. While, it is interesting, some of the asides made the book drag down a bit. But, I suppose it all adds a bit of local flavor, habits, and political intrigues and bigotry between the Spanish and the Portuguese, not to mention the Spanish Inquisition as applied aboard ship.

Has anyone read any of Rebecca Yarros' books? My online library has a "ton" of them. Most appear to be romances of one sort or other. I have two in my Wish List, one is the first of a fantasy series involving dragons and the other is the first of a modern romance series. Romance - ME! Yes, I know, but it looks like an interesting story to go with it.

 

   

MarsGal

My newest library pick is The Doors of Eden by Adrian Tchaikovsky. Unlike Children of Time, which is a three book series I have but haven't yet read, this is one 600 page book. Both involve, as one reviewer put it, alternate biology. Children of Time involves sentient spiders; I am not sure where The Doors of Eden is going yet. However, although not the same story, Google's AI recommends listen to the Children of Time series first because, it says, the book builds on the theme(s) already postulated in that series. Hmmm!Okay, sounds like a good idea. So, the book goes back to the library for now.

Rats, now I have to check what else is languishing in my library wish list that needs attention. One of which is In Search of a Kingdom by Laurence Bergreen, the same guy that wrote Over the Edge of the World: Francis Drake, Elizabeth I, and the Perilous Birth of the British Empire. Looking forward to it.



MarsGal

Those of you who are Louise Penny fans and haven't already heard, she has canceled her US book tour on, she says, moral not political grounds. Good for her. https://www.louisepenny.com/ I am happy to see that she distinguishes between the president's actions and the rest of us.

MarsGal

I've just discovered a book that looks promising. It is The Paris Express by Emma Donoghue,just released 3/18/2025. She is an author I never heard of, but it seams she has quite a few books out. My online libary lists 14 of them. Has anyone read this author. I've added it to my list. Maybe I'll get to it by the time I am 200.

I am going to have to renew my latest library read because I've only gotten into the second chapter. Haven't read much for the last several weeks. Shame on me.