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What books did you get from library, bookstore or online? ~~ 2019


Nice book haul, Jeanette.

It's in a novel format with Manga drawings in it. I was so excited to have found it browsing around Barnes and Nobles.

Let us know if your opinion of the poems if you read them, Antonia.
Deb is our the main person in our group who is into poems. She is away on vacation for awhile.

I haven't read her book Nor Iron Bars a Cage, about her time as a political prisoner, but that may appeal to some more than her (domestic) travel narrative.

Thanks for the titles, John.

American Ulysses: A Life of Ulysses S. Grant is my Presidential bio of Grant. This is by Ronald C. White Jr., who also wrote my reluctantly abandoned (but determinedly-will-return-to) A. Lincoln. He writes well and shares much, so why do i find myself losing reading interest? Hmmm.
The other is the marvelous American Canopy: Trees, Forests, and the Making of a Nation, which is about how trees have played a remarkable part in US history. The details are rich and i'm learning so much about things i previously never considered. Author Eric Rutkow's may be a bit too detailed in covering citizens and their part in the saga but i will stay with it.
AND, worse?, his book led me to purchase The Pecan: A History of America's Native Nut by James McWilliams, which we found at Caddo Mounds State Park earlier this month. We are fans of that nut & thought this was a good book for us. Who knew that the pecan we know is barely like the ones our 10,000 year old ancestors ate? Survival and adaptation, of course, made the difference.
John, thank you for your contributions of titles on travels. Your posts have extended my "arm chair traveling" list to double its original size. What great options!
Antonia, Lawrence Ferlinghetti is such a curious poet. Some of his works are like abstract art. I hope you enjoy them. He's probably better known for being the co-founder of City Lights Booksellers & Publishers than his poetry. Hurrah for him, i must add.


American Ulysses: A Life of Ulysses S. Grant is my Presidential bio of Grant. This is by Ronald C. White Jr., who also wrote my reluctantly abandoned (but determinedly-will-return-to) A. Lincoln. He writes well and shares much, so why do i find myself losing reading interest? Hmmm.
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I am never tired of hearing about the books you are reading. Both positive and negative input are important to me.
As to Grant, maybe you should go with the rare on Amazon 5 star book on him.



My book haul today
The Da Vinci Code
The Burning Room
Dog Gone, Back Soon
The Alchemist
The Devil's Star
Double Fudge Brownie Murder
Phantom
The Redeemer
The Leopard
The Girl in the Spider's Web
The Bookseller
Men and Dogs
The Promise
The Gods of Guilt
The Brass Verdict
The Handmaid's Tale
The Redbreast
The Death Cure
All the Missing Girls
Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life
A Nose for Justice
The Casual Vacancy
The only one I have read before is The Promise by Robert Crais...I got this one for my mother-in-law as she likes his books but was the only one I found of his.

My book haul today..."
Sweet ! Enjoy.


Has anyone here read Jo Nesbo? I’ve been wanting to read his books for awhile but hadn’t gotten around to it and was very pleasantly surprised to see a lot of his boos at the sale :)


I'm appreciating the post-war Brighton England setting, as opposed to the ubiquitous London, featuring a policeman who was the first in his family to attend university, but didn't finish at Oxford with the war intervening. He ended up as part of a small special unit with an older magician. Now, he feels he needs the that fellow's help on a case with a "magic" angle, which is forthcoming, but grudgingly as the guy is rather a pessimistic curmudgeon.

Interesting you mention the IHG hotel loyalty program because i've never had it work for me. At least you got something!

The IHG Kindle books are a buggy lot to redeem! I log into my IHG app account which has a link to the Kindle benefit, and then I can see the available titles, and if there's a book I want it directs me to log into my Amazon account to redeem the free book benefit. However, I could swear with this title it was almost fatalistic as I had it redeemed when I clicked to expand the book description, without logging into Amazon that I recall!
The other two free titles I took were Little Boy Lost and Claire DeWitt and the City of the Dead. I was able to use the free Kindle book to leverage a reduced-priced audio edition of the former book, which I selected as I wanted one set in St Louis. For the latter story, I checked out the audible sample afterwards, finding her Gravely, Smoky voiced very effective, so I ended up downloading the audio as a library book. I figure either it led me to a really interesting title, or if the audio isn't working out I can always switch to the print book. If I end up not liking the book at all, it didn't cost me anything.

Thanks for the info, John, i'm going to give it a try again.

The other was one of those books that catch one's eye from the end of the bookcases, a "tempter" we call them. It is The Art of Found Objects: Interviews with Texas Artists by Robert Craig Bunch. It's not at all satisfying because there are only small photos of the "found object" artworks per artist. The rest is bio & Q&A with the artist. Not that this is bad, only it's not what i wanted. Elsewhere in the library i viewed an exhibit by local artists and saw one piece with found objects, an art form i enjoy. It whet my appetite.
OTOH, as we used to say for "On the Other Hand" (do people still write that?), it included two artists we "discovered" on our recent trip to west Texas. In El Paso's Museum of Art i was delighted by the collage & other art (oils) of Julie Speed. So, i'm a happy camper with that. :-) Below is a link to photos of her oil & collage efforts.
http://www.juliespeed.com/oil-paintings

ANYway, we went there to check it out and were pleased. There are reading areas where visitors can sit and look at books which interest them, as well as a lovely area full of children's books. Indeed, it's been a long time since i lingered near children's books and it was a stroll down Memory Lane, seeing books from the childhood of our children, such as A Child's Book of Poems with the delightful art work by Gyo Fujikawa; Lyle, Lyle, Crocodile which our son adored for some reason, thus assuring Bernard Waber a place in our family's hall of fame; Russell Hoban's Bread and Jam for Frances, an endearing series; and, of course, the one we all relished, Goodnight Moon by Margaret Wise Brown. *sigh*
I also found a couple which intrigued me. My First Book of Haiku Poems by Esperanza Ramirez-Christensen is in traditional Japanese, Romaji, which is a Latin script Japanese (letters we would recognize) and English. The illustrations are watercolor. A YA ,The Miscalculations of Lightning Girl by Stacy McAnulty, drew my attention because it is one of this year's winners of the Texas Bluebonnet Award. My nephew used to fill me in on the winners when he was in Middle School but a high school junior has no need, apparently, of such things. :-( For more info about the book, click here--
https://texasbluebonnetaward2020.word...
So, what did i walk away buying? Only one book, President McKinley: Architect of the American Century. It is written by Robert W. Merry whose bio, A Country of Vast Designs: James K. Polk, the Mexican War and the Conquest of the American Continent, i liked. Because i prefer to read my Presidential bios in the order of their presidencies, i have 5 more to read before this one. However, it's quite hard to find much on the others, so i am jumping at this book now.
Good day in Dallas!

What a great day and sounds like a really great bookstore :)

Good day in Dallas!
It sounds like you had a lovely day. Well done on finding a McKinley book for you challenge !

Revolutionary Ride: On the Road in Search of the Real Iran
Where the Wild Winds Are: Walking Europe's Winds from the Pennines to Provence
Llama for Lunch
Lonely Planet Home With Alice: A Journey in Gaelic Ireland (Lonely Planet Journeys
Nearly finished with the library book I had brought on the trip: Why the Dutch are Different: A Journey into the Hidden Heart of the Netherlands

The book on The Netherlands sounds interesting. We like visiting there, although our last trip in July of '17 was challenging. Not many inns or B&Bs have screens on their windows, nor air conditioners. One gorgeous overnight was marred by mosquitoes seeking us out. Not that the owners hadn't realized the problem...they had a 'skeeter-zapper, which was across the room from the window. Bugs stopped to sup on us before reaching their demise. LOL
Seriously, though, in Amsterdam we were awed by the Very Full multi-storied bicycle parking lots. It was terrific!

My cousin's husband died back in September. She and their only child daughter went to Amsterdam over Christmas, as it was somewhere that held no memories for them as a family who had travelled fairly extensively elsewhere. She reported back that it worked out quite well.
The book is quite well done, I'd find it worthwhile had I purchased a copy instead of a library book.

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Lucky you. I would love to visit Powells one day.


One thing i liked about Powells was that they had a few branches in the city. One was about cooking and food; another was mostly travel books and one in the western suburbs (far from our eastern 'burb), had an enormous children's section. I know the travel shop has closed but i'm not sure about the other.
In addition to the flagship store, across the street there used to be a store for their more technical & science books. I don't know if that is still there but it was more intimate. *sigh* Still miss that place.

Yesterday i read an article about Melinda Gates and her new book, The Moment of Lift: How Empowering Women Changes the World. I turned to my ereader & got a copy of the book. In the prologue i learned she's from here in Dallas. I had no idea. ANYway, i like the premise of the book and am off to read further.

Yesterday i read an article about Melinda Gates and her new book, [book:The Moment of Lift: How Empowering Women Chang..."
I follow Bill Gates on FB and he mentioned her book. :)
Enjoy.


The Tartans Of The Clans And Families Of Scotland by Thomas Innes. My husband has a number of Scots in his family tree. This book has a large illustration of each tartan mentioned.
Spoon River Anthology, connected graveyard poetry by Edgar Lee Masters. Now i own a copy, whereas all previous readings have been from borrowed tomes.
The Country of the Pointed Firs by Maine regional writer Sarah Orne Jewett. It's a pleasure to own this book now.
Prehistory of the Somerset Levels, a good gift-shop type book about finding on bogs in the Somerset area of the UK. I learned much i hadn't previously known (yes, i read it right away, as it's only 60 or so pages), despite having visited a number of bogs and National Parks when were there a couple of years ago. This, by John M. Coles, had good photos as well as nice illustrations. Lucky find!
Incredible Pizarro - Conqueror of Peru by Frank Shay, just because i keep saying i want to read about him. Of course it would probably be wiser to get a copy that isn't over 80 years old, but it was there!
And we bought a number of books by Winston S. Churchill, finally completing his WWII series, The Second World War. We've both only read The Gathering Storm but intend to read further. As well we bought Volume 2, A History of the English Speaking Peoples, 4 Vols, in that series. With this purchase (The New World) we have volumes 2-4. We're on our way!

I'm finding my current library book The Widower's Notebook: A Memoir interesting, both for his description of the experience of unexpectedly losing his wife, as well as the "mystery" of her death as a theme

Wow ! What a hall. Lucky you.
I have the paperback set of the Churchill books. I believe we read The Gathering Storm together.

Widower's sounds close to Joan Didion's The Year of Magical Thinking. We can seldom image the mourning of a loved one's sudden death.
Alias, i was thinking the same thing--that we read it together. My husband read it in the last 6 months and was constantly online figuring out who some of the names were. I told him i was lucky that you & i were reading it together because you were more faithful than i am in looking things up. :-)










Thanks! I'm almost done with Hell's Detective, this pile might not last long =]

John, the Ireland borders book sounds very good. Just today i was thinking about how many walkers we met while over there. We’ve only met one in the US and that was at a Nat’l Park.


I've been doing Intermittent fasting for about 7 weeks. It is supposed to provide a myriad of health benefits. My minimum daily goal is 12/12 (a 12 hour eating widow) My ideal is 16/8.


I am a normal weight, still with IF I have seen the scale move a bit lower. As for the other health markers like cholesterol, glucose, inflammation markers etc. that IF is supposed to improve, I haven't had blood work so I don't know if there is any change.
Here is a link for 10 things IF is supposed to help with know.://www.healthline.com/nutrition/10-healt... )
Intermittent fasting and sleep time are part of various habits I am trying to cultivate with the help of Bullet Journal and Habit Tracking.
Atomic Habits: An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad Ones-James Clear
The Bullet Journal Method: Track the Past, Order the Present, Design the Future-Ryder Carroll
How to Bullet Journal
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fm15c...

Oddly, one curious side effect was that because i knew i “couldn’t” eat late in the night, I felt less stressed. It was tough not thinking about eating but making decisions about what to eat vanished & seemed to make some weird difference. My words aren’t as clear as i’d like them to be but it’s the best i have today.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Giver of Stars (other topics)Inspector Imanishi Investigates (other topics)
Two Owls at Eton (other topics)
Cleopatra's Wedding Present: Travels through Syria (other topics)
Meander: East to West, Indirectly, Along a Turkish River (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Jojo Moyes (other topics)Shamini Flint (other topics)
Robert Tewdwr Moss (other topics)
Nella Larsen (other topics)
Adrian McKinty (other topics)
More...
Use this thread to tell us about the new books you have just acquired.
What interesting books did you pick up from the library, online or book store?
We'd like to hear all about it!