MarthaJeanne's Challenge

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MarthaJeanne's Challenge

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1MarthaJeanne
Editado: Dic 24, 2009, 11:30 am

I'm going to set this up differently this year. This Message has the categories and totals in it, and I'll update the totals as I go along. The next messages will be for the various categories, and I'll put the books into them as I go along. Then if I feel like commenting on individual books, those will be separate messages. I've also added in a classics category.

(I was at a used book sale before Christmas, and came home with several biographies. So I have two extra categories.)

Sorted by how many I've read in each category so far (30 Jul)

Humour 7/9 http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#1089847

India 9/9 +1 http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#875429
Books on the Bible 9/9 http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#1560029
! Other Nonfiction 9/9 +2 http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#1627305
! Books by Marion Zimmer Bradley 9/9 http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#1631513
! Biographies 9/9 http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#1489431
! Books in German 9/9 + http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#1615963
! Fiction located in Europe 9/9 http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#1640203
! Science Fiction and Fantasy is filled twice.
! Other Fiction is filled twice

! Classics 9/9 http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#890769
! Southern Hemisphere 9/9 http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#1514284
! Other fiction 9/9 + 9 + 1 http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#875432
! Cookbooks 9/9 http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#1014985
! British Fiction 9/9 http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#1108450
! Needlework and Crafts 9/9 http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#875425
! Theology 9/9 http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#875424
! Our Travel 9/9 http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#875427
! (Pre- and) historical fiction 9/9 http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#1448164

! Austrian Cookbooks 9/9 http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#1479365
! Fiction about Religion 9/9 http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#1312856
! History 9/9 http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#875431
! Science 9/9 http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#875426
! Autobiography 9/9 http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#922136
! Valdemar Books by Mercedes Lackey 9/9 +2 http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#1218416
! Fantasy and Science Fiction 9/9 +9 + http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#875430
! Austria 9/9 http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#875428
! Modern novels about women 9/9 http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#1508345

Categories Finished 9/9 (12 07 2009)
9 + 9 (23 10 2009)
Current 9+9 + 9

Just to see where my reading comes from

New Books bought in 2009 79
Library 80
Other 88
a To be read pile (and second hand books) 37
b To be reread pile (things I come across when entering and doing other LT tasks) 30
c Just picked up 25

Having learned how to link to individual messages, I'll just keep adding in categories as I see trends. I am curious to see how many categories I can fill this year, so I'll be moving books between categories as they are more useful somewhere else. Parentheses will keep track of books that could be used if they were freed up elsewhere and where they could be moved from or to.

8MarthaJeanne
Editado: Dic 3, 2009, 4:41 am

!! Fantasy and Science Fiction

Double Star
Starship Troopers
Contact
Eva by Peter Dickinson

Crystal Singer trilogy
Restoree
The Skies of Pern

Deryni Rising
Deryni Checkmate
High Deryni

The Wizard of London
Fortune's Fool
Reserved for the Cat
One Good Knight

The Sparrow

Over sea, Under stone
The Dark Is Rising
Greenwitch

Edited to make Mercedes Lackey's Valdemar books a separate category.
Edited to make Marion Zimmer Bradley's books a separate category.

9MarthaJeanne
Editado: Dic 12, 2009, 11:24 am

History

The Scratch of a Pen
Foxfire 6
1858
Women at work in medieval Europe
Far Traveler: Voyages of a Viking Woman
A History of the Amish
Die Seidenstraße: Mythos und Gegenwart
Promised the Moon
Declassified : 50 top-secret documents that changed history

Moving towards Journalism and current affairs. One more in Science.

10MarthaJeanne
Editado: Dic 19, 2009, 3:04 pm

! Other Fiction

The fields of yesterday
The Goddess Letters
Tandia
Neanderthal
The seventh son
Darcys give a ball
The Grey King
Silver on the Tree
Amazonentochter
Secret for a Nightingale

Losing Isaiah
The Learning Tree
Lovers by Judith Kranz
Lightning by Danielle Steel
Kaleidoscope by Danielle Steele
Love and work by Gwyneth Cravens
Blessings by Anna Quindlen
The spiral path
One True Thing

Edited to remove British fiction
Edited to remove fiction about religion
Edited to remove (pre)historical fiction
Edited to remove modern novels about women.
Edited to remove Southern hemisphere books

11MarthaJeanne
Editado: mayo 27, 2009, 6:27 am

Este mensaje fue borrado por su autor.

12MarthaJeanne
Editado: Jun 4, 2009, 2:13 pm

Este mensaje fue borrado por su autor.

13MarthaJeanne
Editado: Jun 2, 2009, 8:10 am

Este mensaje fue borrado por su autor.

14MarthaJeanne
Editado: Jun 1, 2009, 3:39 pm

Este mensaje fue borrado por su autor.

15sjmccreary
Nov 9, 2008, 8:09 pm

I will definitely be watching to see what you read and how you liked them. I like your categories. I'm curious about your needlework and our travel headings - is needlework going to include non-fiction, or novels which include a focus on some kind of needlework? "Our travel" sounds like places that you have already visited - true? In any case, am anxious to see your books.

16MarthaJeanne
Nov 10, 2008, 3:20 am

'Needlework' is basically non-fiction. (Things tagged 'Textile' in my library.)

'Our Travel' will depend on where we go next year. This year was Iceland and Venice, and included everything from guidebooks to fiction to books on Vikings... (If I had started 888 before our trips I could have made each into a separate category.)

18MarthaJeanne
Editado: Sep 10, 2009, 1:42 am

Autobiographies

Mommie Dearest
Thunderbolt Kid
I Married a Priest
Child of the Covenant
Dreams from My Father
Slide Rule
Billie Jean
Die Olive & Wir
Ich bin der Weisse Clown

I've divided this into one section of biographies and one of memoirs and autobiographies. Autobiographies left here. Other biographies moved out.

19cyderry
Dic 17, 2008, 9:30 pm

Hadn't thought about tracking where my books for the challenge came from. I like that!

20MarthaJeanne
Editado: Ene 2, 2009, 3:52 am

The Private World of Georgette Heyer

I really enjoyed this. She was a lovely person, as well as a wonderful author.

I didn't always agree with Hodge's ratings of the books. Of course, I just love ALL Heyer's regnency romances. Now I have a better understanding of why I love hers, and can't stand reading others. I'll just have to keep rereading my pile of Heyer, won't I?

21MarthaJeanne
Ene 4, 2009, 6:03 am

Persuasion

This was wonderful! Especially after watching the BBC video, and being upset by the weaknesses of the story there. Turns out the weaknesses were all in the video - not in the book.

22MarthaJeanne
Ene 8, 2009, 8:25 am

Dr. Tatiana's Sex Advice to all Creation

This was just plain fun. I won't remember many of the details, but just getting an overview of the wide and wonderful variety of ways that different species manage their reproductive life was an eyeopener.

23MarthaJeanne
Ene 12, 2009, 5:37 pm

Emma is not my favorite Austen heroine, nor did I particularly like the book.

24MarthaJeanne
Editado: Ene 13, 2009, 8:45 am

Two Plachutta cookbooks

Plachutta: Meine Wiener Küche
Kochschule : Die Bibel der guten Küche

The first one is more geared to normal house use. Yes, it's heavy on the boiled beef, but why else do you buy Plachutta? The occaisional essays on aspects of Wiener Küche are interesting and informative.

The second is not really designed for home use. The 'beginner' is a restaurant beginner. Most recipes are too fancy for everyday, require more room or equipment that most homes have. Fish farces are required for several recipes, but nowhere can I find directions for making them...

If I were looking for a book to give away, I would buy the first one. If I were going to buy one for myself, it would be the second. I borrowed them to compare, fully intending to buy one of them. Now I don't think I will. But I will go out and pick chard for the chard-potato 'nockerln' today or tomorrow.

25MarthaJeanne
Ene 13, 2009, 8:46 am

Cookbooks

(Plachutta: Meine Wiener Küche) (Austria)
(Kochschule : Die Bibel der guten Küche) (Austria)

26MarthaJeanne
Ene 13, 2009, 12:53 pm

Dreams from My Father

Interesting to learn more about where he is coming from.

27MarthaJeanne
Ene 16, 2009, 3:27 pm

Oathbound
The Rainbow and the Rose

Oathbound isn't the best of Lackey's books, but for those already aquainted with the characters it fills in some background. Fun.

The Rainbow and the Rose is vintage Shute. It combines both the English and Australian flying themes, dream sequences that pull different time frames together.

28MarthaJeanne
Ene 18, 2009, 7:28 am

Ich bin der Weisse Clown

This isn't in any particular order, which I found confusing at first, as I am not 'up' on all the people she taked about, but as I got into it I really enjoyed it.

29MarthaJeanne
Editado: Nov 16, 2009, 11:42 am

Cookbooks

Slow cooking properly explained
Real Food from your slo-cooker
Favourite Boating Recipes
Cook your own Veg
The barbecue! bible
Koch-Büchlein : Gaumenfreuden des Mittelalters
Das Buch vom Knödel
Not Your Mother's Slow Cooker Cookbook
Artisan baking

Edited to take out Austrian Cookbooks, although there is overflow from that here.

30MarthaJeanne
Ene 23, 2009, 11:28 am

Helpmates, Harlots, and Heroes

A good book, easy to read, provides plenty of food for thought. Bellis gives short explanations of various Feminist readings of each character. What is missing is comprehensive readings of any of them.

It's a good place to start if you are working on any of the individual women, but not the place to finish.

It isn't a book to use for a study group on women of the Bible - but a good book for the leader to have read. A lot of the points brought up would be good to use for discussion.

All in all a book I'm glad to have in my library, but not the book I had hoped it would be.

31MarthaJeanne
Ene 25, 2009, 3:04 pm

Went to a lovely exhibit today. A creche exhibit at the Museum fuer Volkskunde (Vienna). It was a guided tour by a restorer given for the Viennese club of Crechebuilders, so very interesting. I bought the catalog and immediately read it. Good catalog, too.

http://www.librarything.com/work/7701922/book/40925364

32MarthaJeanne
Ene 28, 2009, 7:01 am

The Dedalus Book of Austrian Fantasy

The stories were mostly morbid. A few I would classify as macabre. Some were merely wierd, and almost enjoyable. I really liked 'The trouble with Time Travel' by Martin Auer.

33MarthaJeanne
Editado: Feb 2, 2009, 2:33 am

Slow cooking properly explained

A very British cookbook with lots of steamed puddings (Steak and Kidney, Christmas, Date and Walnut). Very good basic instructions on how to use the slow cooker, as well as a variety of good sounding recipes. I'm going to enjoy using this!

34MarthaJeanne
Feb 2, 2009, 3:20 pm

Die Vermessung der Welt.

Seltsam. Sehr seltsam.

35MarthaJeanne
Editado: Feb 3, 2009, 7:46 am

Demels Großes Weihnachtsbuch
Attila Dogudan
Dear me, it is beginning to look like my Austrian category is really a cookbook category, and no end in sight. I have two more waiting already.

This one is a fun collection of baked things for Christmas. Probably just as well I'm so stuffed up - the temptation to go bake is limited when you can't taste anything.

36MarthaJeanne
Feb 6, 2009, 7:51 am

Mommie Dearest

I understand why people were upset by this book. It was fun to read, but I'm sure it wasn't fun to live through. I feel sorry for both of them.

37MarthaJeanne
Feb 7, 2009, 4:35 pm

Sotah

I think this is the book I read several years ago, and couldn't forget. Having found it through 'Name that Book' and having come to the conclusion that it must be the book I read back then I'm not sure whether

A) The book got a lot deeper while I wasn't looking.

B) I got a lot deeper while I wasn't looking.

C) The bit of Hebrew I learned in the meantime, and the experience of knowing practicing Jews as opposed to just reading about them made more difference than I would have thought.

Anyway, I was right to want to read this book again.

Black Opal

This wasn't one of her best. Too many subplots, and at the end one got the feeling that she had reached the number of pages allotted and just wrapped the ends up without weaving them in properly.

39MarthaJeanne
Editado: Dic 1, 2009, 5:40 am

British Fiction

Tilly Trotter
Masqueraders
House at Harcourt
Cotillion
The Round Tower
Inherit the Wind by Susannah Curtis
Hamilton by Catherine Cookson
Katie Mulholland
Flowers in the Rain

40MarthaJeanne
Editado: Ago 21, 2009, 4:00 am

I reread Heinlein's Double Star last night. Great vintage Heinlein. A short book, but lovely to read again.

This morning I finished Bryson's 'Thunderbolt Kid'. One day this will count as Vintage Bryson. In the meantime it brought back memories of my earliest years. I'm a few years younger than him, and we left the US for India 1964. When I returned in 1968 the place I had considered home was gone forever.

41MarthaJeanne
Editado: Mar 12, 2009, 3:53 pm

I am really pleased that the earliest Deryni boook by Katharine Kurtz are being reprinted. I finally got my hands on them, and Deryni Rising has certainly been all I hoped.

Perfect Hostage is interesting to have read. I could have done with a lot less on her father's life.

Beaded Garden was not what I really was looking for when I bought it, but I can imagine using some things in it someday.

42MarthaJeanne
Editado: Mar 12, 2009, 3:57 pm

Este mensaje fue borrado por su autor.

43cmbohn
Mar 12, 2009, 5:35 pm

Was that The Masqueraders by Georgette Heyer? I love that one! It's not entirely believable, but I love it anyway!

44MarthaJeanne
Mar 13, 2009, 5:03 am

Yes. She's such a good writer that I am ready to believe all sorts of wierd things while I'm in the book. I think it's because she is so good at characterizations. The people are real even when the situation isn't.

45MarthaJeanne
Mar 14, 2009, 4:13 am

Die Google Falle

I suspect that Reischl is right, and Google knows more about us than is safe. But he doesn't seem to have an answer for that, which I suspect is also right.

46MarthaJeanne
Mar 29, 2009, 5:33 am

Kronländer Kochbuch by Christoph Wagner and Adi Bittermann

Yes! Very good cookbook.

My two disappointments with it since we bought it in December were that there didn't seem to be recipes for Grammelpogatschen and Haluschka. The recipe for Grammelpogatschen is on page 28 - I assume the 20 in the index is from the illegible font used for the page numbers. The Haluschka recipe is on page 143 - the recipe title is more complicated than that and therefore somewhere else in the index. I have changed my index so that I can find these very important recipes.

I very much enjoyed the notes about the cooking of the various countries involved, how the recipes were adapted when they were adopted into the Viennese cuisine, and other historical aspects of the dishes described.

I particularly enjoyed the gulasch chapter, as I made gulasch yesterday without a recipe. My variation on the theme is just one of many differing opinions on how this ought to be made. Note: the packages in the freezer are marked 'Gulasch base'. I will add letscho and sour cream before serving the last portion for today's dinner. That's the way we - or at least I (and the men haven't complained yet)- like it best.

I think I will find the 'Zwischengerichte' chapter most useful. What the authors consider snacks, we will eat as main courses. But the meat chapters will also get used. I'm highly tempted to splurge on a rabbit after reading the recipe for 'Znaimer Kaninchen'.

Last, but certainly not least, the dessert chapter is full of things I would like to try out.

This is the 'Austrian' or 'Viennese' cookbook I've been looking for. It tries to tease out some of the influences that created the food I've learned to love, and make it easier to play the variations instead of simpllifying and declaring one variation to be 'classic'.

47MarthaJeanne
Editado: Mar 29, 2009, 12:56 pm

I end March with three categories filled.

Science Fiction and Fantasy
Other Fiction
Austria

I am going to be able to move more cookbooks out of Austria, as I read other books on Austria. it will be interesting to see if I end the year with a separate Austrian Cookbook category (four so far)!

Science Fiction and Fantasy will certainly have offshoot(s) before the year is over. I'll also be looking for ways to move additional books out of Other Fiction.

I have 5 other categories with at least three books read. I need to work on some of the ones I'm not reading much in.

48MarthaJeanne
Abr 3, 2009, 5:37 pm

Beginner's Guide to Blackwork

This is a good book for beginners, but doesn't go beyond that.

49MarthaJeanne
Abr 12, 2009, 4:17 pm

Buchmalerei in hebräischen Handschriften

This is wonderful! I really enjoyed looking at all the illustrations of manuscripts. I tried to find a poster of one of them, but had to settle with scanning and printing it for my wall.

50MarthaJeanne
Editado: Oct 17, 2009, 8:37 am

Valdemar Books by Mercedes Lackey

Oathbound
Moving Targets
Oathbreakers
Oathblood
Arrows Trilogy
Winds Trilogy
Storms Trilogy
Owl Trilogy
Brightly Burning
Magic Trilogy
Sun in Glory

51MarthaJeanne
Abr 20, 2009, 3:08 am

Die Genussformel

I was less than impressed by this one. See my review for details. http://www.librarything.com/work/6407809/reviews/44298518

52MarthaJeanne
Editado: Abr 24, 2009, 7:33 am

Wir kochen Sie ein!

After trying to do preserving in Austria to the standards of the 'Ball Blue Book' and 'How to put Food By' for so long, it no longer surprises me to find a new Austrian preserving cookbook that recommends procedures those books condemned as unsafe decades ago.

On the other hand the recipes are exceedingly interesting, and I have learned ways of getting supplies that I had not known of. I'll follow the recipes, but use the other procedures.

53MarthaJeanne
Abr 25, 2009, 1:30 am

Fahrenheit 451

I was quite underwhelmed. Very 1950s. Inconsistant: The firemen carry around rule books; after so long without books, Captain Beatty can quote a lot of classics and expects his hearers to know what he is talking about.

I'm not sure why I never read this before. I've counted it as a classic.

54MarthaJeanne
Editado: Abr 29, 2009, 4:35 pm

Moveable Feasts

This book was interesting, but there were a lot of jumps where it was not clear why the author thought that two paragraphs belonged next to each other.

The book includes a lot of UK information. More available, or an attempt to be useable on both sides of the Atlantic? Aha! A Brit living and working in New York. That explains it!

55MarthaJeanne
Abr 30, 2009, 2:41 pm

The Wizard of London

I'm sure Mercedes lackey has read as many British boarding school books as I have, and a LOT more books on magic. The book is full of what ought to be cliches - but the way she transmutes them is - well, magic.

56MarthaJeanne
Abr 30, 2009, 2:49 pm

End of month 4

Finished categories - 4

Categories being worked on:

Biography 7/9
Needlework and Crafts 5/9
Science 4/9
Classics 4/9
Other non-fiction 4/9
Cookbooks 3/9
British Fiction 3/9
Theology 1/9
Humour 1/9

57MarthaJeanne
Editado: mayo 2, 2009, 3:51 am

Bones, rocks and stars

This is about time, as scientists use it. Not the metaphysics, but how it is measured, and how we use it. Turney does radiocarbon dating, and his story of the Flores 'Hobbit' and his involvement in that story was the highlight of the book for me.

Very well written. I think I probably learned a lot without even noticing.

58MarthaJeanne
Editado: mayo 3, 2009, 4:26 pm

Ware Frau

Rather horrendous stuff to read about, but well written. (Book about the trade in women from Nigeria to Europe who are forced into prostitution.)

59MarthaJeanne
mayo 5, 2009, 2:35 am

The Miracles of Jesus

Hugh Montefiore offers the hypothesis that at least some of Jesus' miracles might be examples of paranormal gifts. I'm not sure I go along with him in his interpretation, but the idea is very interesting, he writes as well as ever, and many of the stories of the saints are not well known outside of the Roman Catholic church.

I found this the least satisfying of the books by Montefiore that I have read. It opens up more questions than it even tries to answer.

60MarthaJeanne
mayo 9, 2009, 4:49 pm

Judges and Method

The articles vary a lot in the amount they actually say about Judges, and when they do talk about Judges, they use different stories to make their points. This makes comparing the various methods rather difficult. I think a concluding chapter to pull the book together would ahve been useful.

Having said that, I do think I learned a fair amount, both about Judges and about methods of studying the Bible.

61MarthaJeanne
mayo 18, 2009, 2:27 am

The Secret Supper

I thought I would try this when the library had it on display, although I rather cringed at the thought of reading a Da Vinchi Code clone.

Turns out it was almost certainly in the works before Brown's book came out, and besides the fascination with him and Mary Magdalene, they have little in common. Not the best book I've ever read, (not really my genre), but certainly readable, well researched, and the reader isn't constantly cringing at the story depending on factual errors.

62MarthaJeanne
mayo 29, 2009, 10:01 pm

The Sparrow and Children of God

The Sparrow was more powerful, but The Children of God wrapped up the loose ends. Both are exceedingly good books.

Anthropology, Ecology, Faith, Music, the direction that technology will take in the next few decades, all are believable (although the last pushes things a bit, IMHO).

63MarthaJeanne
mayo 31, 2009, 3:40 am

Jesus and the Eyewitnesses
This made a lot more sense to me than the theories of oral tradition.

64MarthaJeanne
Jun 1, 2009, 3:41 pm

A Thread of Grace

She can write non-science fiction as well. Which is very well indeed.

65MarthaJeanne
Editado: Nov 26, 2009, 4:33 am

Fiction about Religion

Children of God
Pieces of dreams (=The Wine and the Music)
Agnes of God by Leonore Fleischer
Sotah
The Secret Supper
The Vicar of Christ
A thread of Grace
Heaven Can Wait
The Sacrifice of Tamar

66MarthaJeanne
Jun 8, 2009, 9:04 am

Alles wandert
A very interesting collection of essays. Each worth reading, and interesting in how they fit together. Whether it is the Earth itself, plants, animals or people, everything is in motion. The interplay between these various motions and beween them and our moving climate is the theme of this book.

67MarthaJeanne
Jun 12, 2009, 2:17 am

Drawn thread embroidery
by Moyra McNeill

Not a pattern book, but very good instructions for a wide variety of styles of Drawn thread work. The chapter on experimental work is very good. I would have liked to see some of the pictures in colour. That lack is the strongest sign that this is a reprint, and not a new book.

68MarthaJeanne
Jun 15, 2009, 5:02 pm

How INvention Begins

A fascinating study on the way technology develops.

It was also really great to finally be able to read Cotillion again. (My old copy had fallen apart, and I have a new copy now.)

69cmbohn
Jun 15, 2009, 6:07 pm

I am so happy they are back in print!

70MarthaJeanne
Jun 18, 2009, 3:20 am

A Field Guide to the English

I enjoyed this. Like any ex-pat, the author isn't always consistant about whether or not she enjoys living in the UK. Neither praising all the time, or always finding fault, but commenting on the sorts of things that outsiders notice.

Loved the hedgehog chapter, but then, I love hedgehogs.

71MarthaJeanne
Jun 18, 2009, 11:35 am

Grendel

My son has been enjoying his IB Theory of Knowledge class, and I have recommended that he read this with an essay for that class in mind. Interesting to read, but leaves me feeling blah about it now that I have finished. With all the philosophy being spouted by everyone, in the end there seems no meaning to anything.

I've put this into classics, and will now try to also read Beowulf.

72cmbohn
Jun 18, 2009, 11:54 am

I have never read Grendel, but I love Beowulf.

73MarthaJeanne
Editado: Jun 21, 2009, 2:33 pm

Living Dolls

This was interesting to read, but not anything that will send me off to read more.

I'd hoped to get 9 categories finished this month, but we leave on holiday on Tuesday, and the only way I can do it before then is to combine Cookbooks and Crafts temporarily, so I guess next month.

Wait a minute. I've moved things around a bit. I have at least one more cookbook waiting to be read. If I read that and another two cookbooks OR books on Austria (to move Austrian Cookbooks from Austria to cookbooks)...

74MarthaJeanne
Jun 21, 2009, 4:39 pm

real food from your slo-cooker by Annette Yates
I thought I would probably discard this one - until I got to the vegetable recipes. Those look really good. Also the puddings.

75MarthaJeanne
Jul 11, 2009, 12:34 pm

Got back from the holiday. Lots of new books to enter, but didn't read much.

Nürnberg is a guide book.

Ceremony of the Innocent was awful. Discarded.

Billie Jean was interesting once. Discarded.

In God We Doubt was very good, he stated the problem very well, even if I come to other conclusions than he does.

The Round Tower. Cookson is always good.

Favourite Boating Recipes. I enjoyed reading this, and we will use several of the recipes. As a record of wht the narrowboat people actually ate, I don't think it is reliable.

76MarthaJeanne
Jul 12, 2009, 6:02 am

Cook Your own Veg

Rather predictable selection of vegetables, but the recipes themselves are often unusual. Generally two for each veg. Good advice on growing and harvesting.

And that makes 9 categories fiinished.

77MarthaJeanne
Editado: Jul 16, 2009, 6:14 am

Creative machine stitching : special effects for quilts and more

There are a lot of good ideas in here, and I should make the sampler flower pillow, just to learn the techniques.

2 things I don't like:
A lot of it is too fiddly for me for machine work. (I'll happily fiddle in hand work, but constantly changing colours, and finishing off threads every few stitches on the machine) is for the birds.

She is apparently unaware of the problems that can arise from some of the methods she recommends. The marking pens and adhesives usually work well with most materials, but can make big problems with some materials, and even testing beforehand isn't enough of a safety net. (The problems can appear months or years on.) The only safe thing is not to put such chemicals into any item meant to have a long life.

78MarthaJeanne
Jul 16, 2009, 6:12 am

The Potato Factory

The story of how Mary Abacus starts her dynasty in Australia with the help of Ikey Solomon is immensly engrossing. Luckily it is only the first of a trilogy.

79MarthaJeanne
Editado: Sep 16, 2009, 11:08 am

Bad Science

How and why the media (particularly in the UK) misinterpret science.

80MarthaJeanne
Editado: Jul 26, 2009, 5:08 am

The last Mughal

Good book. Very different perspective from the usual.

81MarthaJeanne
Jul 26, 2009, 5:09 am

Life, the Universe and everything
Andy Fletcher is a teacher writing for teenagers. Personally I would leave out a lot of his cutsie language. But he does manage to get a lot of the science over fairly clearly.

As far as the theology goes, he shows that belief in some sort of God is not irrational. This is important, but I am immensly more interested in what sort of God.

Bottom line: I am happy that my son's TOK teacher assigned this. It is interesting to have read. I wouldn't recommend it to anyone past teenager mental age.

82MarthaJeanne
Jul 28, 2009, 2:49 am

Inherit the Wind by Susannah Curtis

Interesting book. It feels like a sequel, but I don't find any indication that there was a first book.

83MarthaJeanne
Ago 2, 2009, 3:27 pm

Making babies : stumbling into motherhood

Fun. Brought back those years very clearly.

84MarthaJeanne
Ago 4, 2009, 12:35 pm

Der erste Walzer

The individual essays were mostly quite interesting. As a collection, it got a bit tedious towards the end.

Grieser would have done better not to have included the introduction about 'firsts'. The various essays did not use the same definition of a 'first', and some were just historical trivia about Austria, and not really about any sort of 'first' at all.

85MarthaJeanne
Ago 6, 2009, 3:50 am

Celtic art in cross stitch

Not the kind of thing I normally buy, but when I see it really cheap on a used book table... Good move. The patterns are lovely, and I particularly like the smaller designs in the back. The descriptions of how the larger designs were put together were very interesting, and could help someone get up the courage to start designing themselves - especially with all that design material at the back.

(When leaflets advertise large numbers of designs for small charts with no additional material about them, I see no reason to complain about the '75 beautiful designs' on the cover. They are not all full projects, but they certainly are designs.)

86MarthaJeanne
Editado: Ago 9, 2009, 6:53 am

Sacred and Confidential

I'm not sure if it's cheating to add this one. I just entered it, and started looking through it. It was quite fun, but it's a very short book of cartoons.

Edited to add: Now I've entered a second book by the same artist. Top Sacred . I've counted it as part of the same book.

87MarthaJeanne
Ago 7, 2009, 4:09 am

Hebrew for the rest of us

I would recommend this book to any Christian wondering whether learning Hebrew would be useful and/or within his/her capabilities. If going on, nothing here would be wasted, rather it would help at many of the difficult bits, and if the decision was made not to go on, at least a partial step would have been made. Certainly it is the best introduction I have yet seen aimed at Christians.

The full review is a lot longer.

88MarthaJeanne
Editado: Ago 9, 2009, 6:11 am

Narrow dog to Carcassonne

I didn't think it would be possible to write a book about narrowboating that would be totally boring. I was wrong.

edited to add:
My husband has now said that we will not discard this book, but that we will keep it on his shelves. He says my problem with it is that I haven't spent enough time in British pubs discussing things after several beers and other alcoholic beverages.

89MarthaJeanne
Ago 8, 2009, 4:04 am

Das Glasperlenspiel

It has been decades since I last read this book. It pulled me in again. When I'm not actually reading I see a lot of problems with it - first and foremost, of course, that women aren't real people in it. The whole idea of the game is unrealistic ... But when you are reading, none of this matters.

I think I need to get back to Jane Austen.

90MarthaJeanne
Ago 9, 2009, 3:05 am

A boy off the bank

A delightful book. I really enjoyed the descriptions of canal life. This one is fiction, about a young boy entering canal life during WWII. I've got to get the sequels.

91MarthaJeanne
Ago 11, 2009, 1:32 am

Hallstatt: Dachstein, Salzkammergut

Lovely photographs, the German text is well written, although it sometimes get too much into tourist advertising. The English summaries skip much of the interesting material, and the translations of the picture captions are often much less than optimal.

92MarthaJeanne
Ago 16, 2009, 3:31 pm

Dreamers of the Day

To take the premise of a nobody hobnobbing with Lawrence of Arabia and Winston Churchill (and a German spy) while they shape the Middle East after WWI, and make it both exciting and believable is an amazing feat.

I'd have left off the final chapter, but it does serve to remind us that we are talking fiction, which I had trouble remembering during the book.

93MarthaJeanne
Ago 16, 2009, 3:49 pm

Valley of the Horses - Rereading,as this is one of my favourite series.

For Love - it was just about worth the one or two euros I paid for it second hand.

Whose word is it? - Well written for the lay public.

94MarthaJeanne
Ago 17, 2009, 4:26 am

The barbecue! bible

What a great refernce book! A wonderful collection of recipes for direct fire recipes from around the world.

Which translates as 'Why do I have to take this one back to the library?'

96MarthaJeanne
Ago 20, 2009, 5:21 am

Contact

I enjoyed this much more than I thought I would. Talking to Jerry, it seems that the novel is different from the movie (which I haven't seen, but he hasn't read the novel.)

BTW, I returned it to the library this morning, only to have my son borrow it immediately.

97MarthaJeanne
Ago 20, 2009, 3:12 pm

A Girl at the Tiller

A package of books on canal themes arrived today. I have already finished A Girl at the Tiller and a booklet on handling a narrowboat alone. The Geoffrey Lewis trilogy is really good, and the temptation to finish it, too before going back to the Currently Readihng is great.

98MarthaJeanne
Ago 21, 2009, 3:37 am

Hamilton by Catherine Cookson

The basic plot is the same as in 'The Thursday Friend': (Warning: spoiler) Woman marries abuser because she believes noone else would have her. Writes book and meets publisher. Crisis in marriage leads to happy end with publisher. I think The Thursday Friend worked better.

99MarthaJeanne
Ago 27, 2009, 3:03 am

Die frische Küche

Wow! Lots of recipes for each vegetable, including several that aren't well represented in my other cookbooks.

100MarthaJeanne
Ago 28, 2009, 3:31 pm

Ben Hur

I made it through. I'm fairly sure I read it once before. I doubt that I will do it again. Very 19th century.

101MarthaJeanne
Editado: Ago 28, 2009, 5:49 pm

G'schichten vom Land

Another library book I would rather not return. Lots of good ideas for unusual trips around Vienna.

102MarthaJeanne
Ago 29, 2009, 4:57 pm

Justification : God's Plan and Paul's Vision

A good starting place for learning part of Wright's opinions about Paul while we wait for the next volume of 'Christian origins and the question of God' to come out.

This is more difficult reading than usual for a boook listed as Tom Wright. I got a lot out of it. I will get a lot more out of Romans and the other Pauline letters the next time I read them. But I should also come back to this in a few months and try again to get all of what Wright is trying to say. As usual, what I understand of Wright makes a lot of sense.

103MarthaJeanne
Editado: Ago 30, 2009, 5:07 pm

The New Number One

I really enjoyed this trilogy. The rest of it is in 'Our Travel', but that's full, so I used it to fill up 'British Fiction'. Within the next day or two, I expect to fill up 'Needlework and Crafts' as well, which leaves me with 'Classics' at seven. That gives me 6 in my second challenge.

I will soon be able to separate Austrian Cookbooks out from the general cookbook category. I currently have 5 non-Austrian books in there. That one should fill up. (Maybe moving two other food books from other non-fiction if it doesn't anyway.) Makes seven.

There are several extras in various fiction categories. I ought to be able to make the other two in there. It isn't clear right now whether I'll get both a biography and an autobiography category filled, but that is another possibility. I don't think I'll have the second done by 9.9., though!

104MarthaJeanne
Ago 31, 2009, 3:42 pm

Fünfzig Jahre Appetit

Interesting once. This one can go back to the library.

105MarthaJeanne
Editado: Sep 1, 2009, 2:18 am

Jelly roll quilts

I'm ready to start making one of these as soon as I get to the quilt shop. (Which doesn't open for another two hours!)

106MarthaJeanne
Sep 3, 2009, 6:49 am

The hero's walk
An interesting book. But I don't understand what the title has to do with it.

107MarthaJeanne
Sep 3, 2009, 3:33 pm

Neanderthal

Paeleontology, the cold war, parapsychology, this book has them all. Read once.

Catholic and Christian : an explanation of commonly misunderstood Catholic beliefs

Why Catholics beliefs differ from Protestant ones, but are Christian. This is 25 years old, and could use some updating.

109MarthaJeanne
Sep 4, 2009, 12:09 pm

Losing Isaiah

Full disclosure: I grew up with a younger brother who was both adopted and of a different race.

This is a powerful story that gets down to some of the real emotional truths in adoption in a way that only fiction can. If there is a weak point, it is that Selma's lawyer does not bring out the way proper legal procedures in an adoption protect all parties.

111MarthaJeanne
Sep 10, 2009, 1:45 am

Both Women as Bishops and Donaustadt were informative, and I enjoyed them.

112cmbohn
Sep 10, 2009, 2:55 pm

How was the Georgette Heyer book?

113MarthaJeanne
Sep 10, 2009, 5:21 pm

The Biography? http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#968840

or Cotillion? http://www.librarything.com/topic/49196#1331779

My recollection is that I enjoyed both. I've linked to what I wrote at the time.

114MarthaJeanne
Sep 15, 2009, 4:19 am

Foxfire 7

This is a themed volume of Foxfire - about religion in the mountains. As such, it is more organized than some of the other books.

115sjmccreary
Sep 15, 2009, 2:32 pm

Just stumbled onto your thread after having lost it several months ago. I won't lose you again. Lots of great titles - my only complaint is that my library doesn't have many of them. I wonder if some of your UK publications aren't available in the US? I do own the Jelly Roll Quilts book in #105. It is fabulous - I made a quilt right away and before I could decide which to make next, my mother stole my book! She made several quilts from it before we saw the book for sale in a quilt shop and bought it, so now we each have our own copy!

116MarthaJeanne
Editado: Sep 15, 2009, 3:25 pm

Be glad you have access to English language library and bookstores. Luckily I do read in German, too, and between that, the school library and the small section of English language books at the city library, I don't have to buy everything I read. This year it seems to be working out to about even thirds of books I've bought new, books I've borrowed, and books I already owned.

Which ones did you look for and not get?

117sjmccreary
Sep 15, 2009, 4:30 pm

I can't remember just which ones, now, except Bad Science which looked especially interesting to me. I am very aware of how fortunate I am to have a wonderful library only a mile from my house. Plus bookstores all over town. But, the more you have, the more you want! I try to stay focused on the thousands of books I can read, and not dwell on the handful that I can't.

I don't have a second language, so living in a non-English speaking place would be very hard for me. I'm not sure how I would handle a situation where (legible) books suddenly became scarce.

I was interested that your son is in an IB program, and taking the Theory of Knowledge class. That diploma is offered at our local school as an option for the kids who want the challenge. Unfortunately, none of mine were interested in working that hard. I wish it had been an option when I was in school.

118MarthaJeanne
Editado: Sep 16, 2009, 12:14 pm

That's a very British one.

The schools the boys have gone to are organized around the IB, and it seems easiest to go with the flow. If one of them had really complained about the extended essay, we would probably (have) let it go, but since their friends are (were) in the same boat, they don't seem to mind. Steven has a really good IB program going.
Language A is English (standard)
Language B is German (Higher. He took the standard level exam as a sophomore and got a 6, so this was obvious)
Math (Standard)
Physics (Higher)
Environmental Science and Society (standard as his social science)
Theatre Arts (Higher) as his sixth subject.

He is really enthusiastic about all the techie stuff backstage, and wants a college where he can continue to study that as a minor.

I'm not sure my boys have been enthusiastic about working this hard, but they have been interested in most of their classes, so they have been willing to put in the effort. At least most of the time.

Edited because I had the Higher and standards wrong.

119sjmccreary
Sep 16, 2009, 3:15 pm

#118 Ah, the positive side of peer pressure! Of my 4 children, 3 are in creative fields (one is in culinary school, one is studying art, the third is a musician and composer). Only one is drawn to more academic subjects and actually enrolled in a couple of the preliminary IB courses while he was in school. However, he is interested in biology and the IB science curriculum (here, at least) was limited to either chemistry or physics. So he gave that up and took the advanced biology classes instead.

Here, the students are permitted to take isolated IB classes for advanced credit without seeking the IB diploma. In our large public high school, there are typically less than a dozen IB diplomas granted each year, out of an average class of around 500 graduates. The students who receive the IB diploma are truly the cream of the crop - they do it because they are driven to achieve that accomplishment.

I'm sure your boys will not regret the extra work they're doing when they reap the rewards later. That is what I could never convince my kids of - the value of working so much harder than they were required to, in order to benefit later. Now that they are in college, they're beginning to see what I meant and are having some regrets about not listening to me. Small comfort.

120MarthaJeanne
Editado: Sep 16, 2009, 4:31 pm

Kids can also take individual exams here, too, but last year 36 were awarded the full IB diploma, which is a bit over half the class, I think. The whole school is 800 students from preschool through grade 12. The difference is that this is a private school, most of the kids' parents are either in the diplomatic service of their countries, or are high managers in international business. (Vienna has a tradition of being where the families stay while the husbands are working in Eastern Europe. This is less so now, as many capitals in Eastern Europe now have facilities for international families, but it is still a favourite base for the families of people whose jobs require a lot of travelling.)

In the first place there are very few students who are not capable of doing the full program. In the second place there is a lot less opportunity to do other things than there might be in a US city, particularly for those who don't speak German. They can't drive, most activities in English for their age group are school related. English language TV is limited. I think three movie theatres regularly show films in English. And most of the parents know each other, too.

Even those doing art stuff at school find themselves in IB classes. AIS has IB courses in Visual Arts and Theatre Arts. Edward did IB Music in Geneva when we lived there. AIS also requires a fairly full schedule. Juniors have to have at least 7 subjects. Seniors at least 6. It just makes sense to take the IB curriculum, since you are going to be in IB courses for most subjects grades 11 and 12, anyway. If you chose to take non-IB classes (like the one year classes offered in Bio Chem and Physics) you are going to be in classes that are mostly sophomores. That is below the dignity of a senior.

121sjmccreary
Sep 16, 2009, 4:57 pm

Your school sounds like the world-wide norm regarding the IB program, as it was presented to us. There are relatively few schools in the US which participate, and many of those are private schools. Most American students do not have this opportunity. I think that is the basis of much of my frustration with my kids - they had a chance that few others have and they didn't take advantage of it.

I hope your sons are able to recognize how privileged they are to have such an environment for learning. What a tremendous opportunity to learn about the world by being in close contact with people from so many places. And you are absolutely right, the opportunity cost (to use a business term) for committing to a rigorous study program is much less there than here, where the kids have so many other choices about how to spend their time. What do they plan to do next? Stay in Vienna?

122MarthaJeanne
Sep 16, 2009, 5:47 pm

Neither Frank or Edward finished college. Frank is the computer techie at a small college in Miane, and will have his second child in November. Edward just finished Basic training in the Navy. He is getting married in October when we are in the US. That same week Steven will look at three colleges. (Will I still be alive when we get home?) He wants a computer major and technical theatre minor. I think part of the problem for both Frank and Edward was that after the IB, the first year of college was just too easy. They got used to coasting, and didn't keep working they way they could have.

Steven will have to really work very hard to do both computing and theatre, so maybe he will do better.

I'm going to bed now. It's almost midnight here.

123MarthaJeanne
Sep 17, 2009, 2:16 am

The Glass Palace

Moving between Burma, India, and Malaya from 1985 (Third Anglo-Burmese war) to the 1990s, this book follows the fortunes of a few interconnected families that today would be called 'Third Culture'. It investigates personal identity and shifting loyalties in a setting where there is no solid ground of belonging.

Although it starts and ends in Burma, most of the main characters are not Burmese, and many have mixed national and/or racial backgrounds. I have put this in my India category, and it is certainly as much about Indian identity and history as Burmese.

124MarthaJeanne
Sep 20, 2009, 5:32 am

Modern setting novels about women - full

Out with the Old by Linda Page
Woman to Woman by Cathy Kelly
Danielle Steel's Heartbeat
The Promise by Danielle Steel
Star by Danielle Steele
For Love by Sue Miller
The Memory Keeper's Daughter
Toxic Bachelors
High Noon

125MarthaJeanne
Sep 21, 2009, 2:58 am

Die Wiener Märkte

Out of date, but I enjoyed the history sections.

127MarthaJeanne
Sep 25, 2009, 3:59 pm

Women before God

The most interesting thing about this book is that it has stayed fairly readable over the decades. On the other hand I never quite figured out what the point was of most of what she says. Most of it I agree with, but it doesn't seem to be leading anywhere.

128MarthaJeanne
Editado: Sep 26, 2009, 11:00 am

Joe's allotment

The only reason I didn't read this all in one go is that I got so eager to get out and work on my own garden.

This isn't the best book I have for advice on specific topics, but a good read for inspiration, advice and enthusiasm.

Home-grown chard for supper --Yum!

129MarthaJeanne
Editado: Oct 1, 2009, 2:53 am

Der Napoleonbauer

The middle of the 19th century was full of both social and technological change throughout Europe. In the Semmering region of Austria, the building of the train line across the mountains and freeing the farmers from serfdom came together only 40 years after Napoleon came through. Bauer Polleros, who had been active in harrying the French, tries the same methods on those building the train line and changing the established order of society, but the modern age comes anyway.

This is a well written novel about the period. This novel should only be attempted by those who have some aquaintance with Austrian dialects. All dialogue is written more as less as it would have been spoken. "I red', wann i will. Da steh' i; kömmts her, wann eunch was nit paß. Und g'fragt hat den dort ah koan Mensch!" or "Moanst? So müasset ja alles wieder auf'n selben Fleck z'ruckkömma? Und däs is g'wiß nit wahr!" No dictionary is going to help with this, but if you can read it, the book is well worth reading. (And then take a train ride across the Semmering to see it all.)

Rax König was similar, but dealt with the protestants who lived as woodcutters rather than give up their faith. (Joseph II, 18th century)

130MarthaJeanne
Oct 2, 2009, 1:50 pm

Heart and Soul

Binchy makes you sink into her world. I'm sorry to leave it behind - but there will be more Binchy books to read, I'm sure.

131MarthaJeanne
Editado: Oct 5, 2009, 3:57 am

Das Buch vom Knödel

Yes, I saw another cookbook in the piles outside a bookstore I walked past today, and it somehow ended up being bought before I got past. Read it right away, too. I think we'll have broccoli dumplings with cheese next week. And the Apple and poppy dumplings as well. Just to get started...

132MarthaJeanne
Oct 5, 2009, 3:57 am

Aches and Pains

I sent my mother a copy of this before her hip operation to cheer her up in hospital. It didn't make it to hospital - she read it before going. It was fun finding it and reading it again.

133MarthaJeanne
Oct 13, 2009, 12:46 pm

Remember me

Very good!

134MarthaJeanne
Oct 17, 2009, 8:48 am

Die Seidenstraße: Mythos und Gegenwart

Very interesting, but I couldn't help contrast this with BBC books based on their documentaries. This would have been so much better with more pictures, and those pictures where they belonged in the text.

Sun in Glory

The Lackey story is very good, and fills a 'hole' in Valdemar's history.

The first story is also good and also tries to fills a hole. The writer may be only 12, but she knows Valdemar well.

The other stories did not seem to really belong in Valdemar. This sort of anthology is always a gamble, but this one was a lot less well done than most.

135MarthaJeanne
Oct 17, 2009, 2:04 pm

Schlaraffenland und Gaumenlust

Another great one by Andrea Karrer.

137MarthaJeanne
Oct 21, 2009, 3:19 am

Not without my neighbour : issues in interfaith relations

An intelligent, thoughtful and well-informed series of essays on the issues involved in inter-faith relationships (from a Christian/World Council of Churches point of view). Ariarajah doesn't present us with readymade answers, but he sets some of the questions in a perspective that is not only very personal, but also keeps the larger picture firmly in sight. Anyone who deals with people of a different faith would benefit from reading this.

138MarthaJeanne
Nov 9, 2009, 7:19 am

Mallen Trilogy. First two 2009-11-08 Litter 2009-11-09 Not entered yet.

139MarthaJeanne
Editado: Dic 17, 2009, 1:49 am

Books in German

These have been pulled out of other categories that were overfilled.

Klosterarbeiten
Kaiserstadt Nürnberg
Bremen : das Reise- und Lesebuch
Weihnachtskrippen
Die Österreichische Vorratskammer
Sind Sie noch zu retten?

Der Napoleonbauer
Die Sonne im Zentrum
Die Vermessung der Welt

140MarthaJeanne
Nov 23, 2009, 3:55 am

At this point I'm trying to see if I can finish a third challenge by the end of the year. I've got two categories filled towards it.

Three underfilled categories can be filled if I point my reading that way.

I'm allowing second fillings without splitting the category, and Valdemar would be refilled now if I counted the trilogies as three books instead of one.

Other fiction and other non-fiction should refill without a problem.

That makes 8. I may end up with one overlap refilled category to make up the third challenge.

141MarthaJeanne
Editado: Dic 16, 2009, 2:36 pm

Other Non-fiction

Moveable Feasts
The middle of everywhere
Fast Food Nation
Joe's Allotment
Out of the East

Ware Frau
Alltag auf Arabisch
Die Google Falle
Buchmalerei in hebräischen Handschriften
Die Genussformel
Kürbis bringt Farbe in Ihre Küche Teil 2

143MarthaJeanne
Dic 8, 2009, 4:10 am

Fiction taking place in Europe

Across the bridge of sighs
Heart and Soul
Michel, Michel
Poland
Quentins
Mallen Streak
Mallen Girl
Mallen Litter
Der Katalane (The Bogeda)

144MarthaJeanne
Dic 13, 2009, 2:53 am

The mouse that roared

Read it as slap-stick humour. Read it as political satire. Read it as a commentary on post-WWII ethical philosophy. But read it!

I was first introduced to this as a theatrical production at my school in the sixties. I still love to reread it, now with the personal history of having a husband who worked at the International Atomic Energy Agency - supporting those who inspect nuclear facilities worldwide. The issues haven't gone away.

145sjmccreary
Dic 13, 2009, 10:16 am

I think I've heard of this book - or maybe it was the movie. Either way, it sounds good. I'm going to read the book first, then watch the movie! Thanks for the recommendation.

146hailelib
Dic 13, 2009, 11:29 am

I have a sequel, The Mouse on Wall Street which I have enjoyed more than once. Wonder if the library has The Mouse that Roared?

147MarthaJeanne
Dic 14, 2009, 3:52 am

The Queen and I

I think this was meant to be funny.

It wasn't, but I still included it in Humour. After all, that's why I read it.

148MarthaJeanne
Dic 17, 2009, 1:53 am

That makes 7 categories. I should finish an eighth today as well.

149MarthaJeanne
Dic 19, 2009, 2:37 am

OK, so I didn't get much reading done for a few days. But I'm at 8 now.

150MarthaJeanne
Dic 21, 2009, 2:40 am

Third challenge finished. I'll continue logging books here, for the next few days, but it will be nice to start fresh on 2010-01-01