Random books from _Zoe_'s library
The Wolves of Willoughby Chase by Joan Aiken
Circle of Magic #4: Briar's Book by Tamora Pierce
Many Waters by Madeleine L'engle
Sinister Paradise (Nancy Drew Files 23) by Carolyn Keene
Ancient Greece and the Near East by Richard Mansfield Haywood
The origins of Greek thought by Jean-Pierre Vernant
Shon the Taken by Tanith Lee
Members with _Zoe_'s books
Member connections
Friends: Branimir, Herzophia, Kira, lmew, srw, xaverie
LibraryThing authors: Clare Bell (rathacat), Florence Chatzigianis (fchatzigianis), Terrence Cheng (tcheng), Clare B. Dunkle (clarebdunkle), Sylvia Louise Engdahl (SylviaE), Tim Footman (TimFootman), John Green (sparksflyup), Larry Portzline (lportzline), Patrick Rothfuss (Rothfaust), Brandon Sanderson (BrandonSanderson), Paul Sloane (Laretal), Martha Wells (marthawells), David Wilton (dwilton)
Member: _Zoe_
Library2,167 books — see library
Reviews15 reviews — see reviews
Cloudstag cloud, author cloud
Tagsfiction (1,110), unread (696), read (483), non-fiction (383), read by Kira (376), young adult (354), classics (350), fantasy (320), children's (290), ancient world (200) — see all tags
Groups50 Book Challenge, 888 Challenge, Ancient History, Board for Extreme Thing Advances, Canadian Bookworms, Children's Fiction, Combiners!, Dewey Decimal Challenge, Dystopian novels, Egyptian Fiction Galore — show all groups
Favorite authorsEdwin A. Abbott, Gillian Bradshaw, Robin Hobb, Diana Wynne Jones, Tamora Pierce (Shared favorites)
Favorite bookstoresBMV (Annex), World's Biggest Bookstore
Other favoritesTrinity College Friends of the Library Book Sale
About me I'm 23, working on an MA in Classics at the University of Toronto.
About my library As well as my own books, I'm listing a lot that really belong to my brother and sister - it seems ridiculous to include only half of the books by a given author when they're all on the same shelf. So this is a partial justification for the huge number of unread books that I own: some of them I never particularly intended to read. But really, I just buy far more books than I can ever hope to get through, and will probably continue to do so.
Membership
LibraryThing Early Reviewers
LocationToronto, Ontario
Account typepublic, lifetime
Connection NewsConnection News
URLs
http://www.librarything.com/profile/_Zoe_ (profile)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/_Zoe_ (library)
Member sinceJul 24, 2006









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posted by Heather19 at 4:57 pm (EST) on Aug 24, 2008
posted by EncompassedRunner at 2:28 am (EST) on Jul 27, 2008
posted by timspalding at 12:48 am (EST) on Jun 12, 2008
posted by timspalding at 1:39 am (EST) on Jun 9, 2008
posted by timspalding at 1:38 am (EST) on Jun 9, 2008
But, so did everyone else
I am going to send messages to the other members and try and revise the interest in the list.
posted by keren7 at 11:51 am (EST) on Apr 11, 2008
Are you coming back to Lt's list of interesting reads? Everyone seems to have abandoned the group and I thought we were having fun.
posted by keren7 at 6:39 pm (EST) on Apr 10, 2008
posted by conceptDawg at 5:31 pm (EST) on Apr 8, 2008
We're up and rolling on the GEB read at http://www.librarything.com/talktopic.ph...
Looking forward to your comments. Jim
posted by torus34 at 7:33 am (EST) on Apr 1, 2008
posted by EvilPlatypus at 5:46 pm (EST) on Mar 28, 2008
posted by SunnyLea at 8:25 pm (EST) on Mar 25, 2008
Thank you so much for the kind words on my profile page. It's hard not to give up, I requested over tweleve books...sad. But, true....
I'm happy that you got your book. Again, thank you for being so sweet.
xoxo
Star*
posted by AStarIsBorn at 4:42 pm (EST) on Mar 18, 2008
posted by alcottacre at 7:37 pm (EST) on Mar 10, 2008
So, if you went deleting like mad, we could restore.
posted by timspalding at 10:05 am (EST) on Mar 5, 2008
Anyway, as a serious scholar of languages I hope you agree that there is no such thing as "bad" grammar anyway.
posted by timspalding at 7:22 pm (EST) on Mar 1, 2008
But then, the hoi poloi irks me. We are all irked by what irks us.
T
posted by timspalding at 7:10 pm (EST) on Mar 1, 2008
posted by elvisettey at 10:18 pm (EST) on Feb 4, 2008
posted by starrylady at 4:58 am (EST) on Jan 12, 2008
posted by scaifea at 8:30 pm (EST) on Jan 11, 2008
posted by SheReads at 10:42 pm (EST) on Jan 8, 2008
posted by XenaBallerina at 12:33 pm (EST) on Jan 4, 2008
I just read your post on the Reading Goals thread, and had to come check out your profile, since I'm a Classicist and had my suspicions that you might be too. And now I see that you're at Toronto - my dissertation adviser and one of my secondary readers just moved to your department in the last year (Erik Gunderson and Victoria Wohl, respectively)! Also, one of my advisees from Kenyon College (where I teach) is currently in the MA program in the Medieval Studies program there (Kelly Henry). Small ol' world, innit?
posted by scaifea at 7:23 am (EST) on Dec 29, 2007
posted by gregfromgilbert at 4:21 pm (EST) on Dec 10, 2007
posted by gregfromgilbert at 1:33 am (EST) on Dec 10, 2007
Today I received this very new The Blackwell history of the latin language. So far, I have only glanced in it, but it looks great. It's a more modern version of the classical The Latin language by Leonard Robert Palmer. A description of the book can be found here:
http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/book....
Higly recommended for those interested in the history of the latin language.
Best regards
Hans
posted by hnn at 11:55 am (EST) on Nov 8, 2007
I don't find that editing gets in the way of reading all that much - like any job that uses the brain it eats time and saps the will to do anything that involves thought, but after a day of reading a dull, badly written manuscript it's a relief to relax with something interesting and well written. I think teaching has somewhat the same effect only more so - it's a very tiring and time-consuming job, but something intellectually engaging can be a good escape from it by contrast.
Depending on research topic, a PhD can be death on free choice of reading, but OTOH it's a great way to avoid the real world!
posted by dressel26 at 5:31 pm (EST) on Nov 4, 2007
posted by dressel26 at 3:36 pm (EST) on Nov 3, 2007
prezzey.
posted by prezzey at 3:03 pm (EST) on Nov 3, 2007
posted by DoctorRobert at 1:01 pm (EST) on Nov 2, 2007
DoctorRobert
posted by DoctorRobert at 11:41 am (EST) on Nov 2, 2007
posted by dressel26 at 11:23 pm (EST) on Oct 29, 2007
posted by reading_fox at 11:01 am (EST) on Oct 26, 2007
I like reading the citations - I find all sorts of interesting stuff in them :) I find it irksome when they're put in the back, because I have to keep the book open two places at once to follow along the endnotes. I'll confess that I don't read the critical apparatus on editions of ancient texts, though, unless I really need to be picky about the wording of a particular passage.
Regarding the Annals, it's that indeterminacy of translation thing. The translator made an analogy on one point, which is the number of soldiers - a legion of 5000 soldiers is reasonably close to the size of a British WW2 brigade, for example - the problem is that the system worked differently enough that using some other point for the analogy would give a different equivalent. For example, the legion was the largest permanent focus of identity as a unit, so the British WW2 analogy there would be a regiment rather than a brigade. But it was a self-contained combined-arms force, so the best British WW2 analogy for that would be a division. And so on. It's an interesting problem really, because the same problem occurs even with less technical terms that people normally do translate, but it is a lot worse when it's a technical term like "legio" or "primipilaris" or whatever.
posted by dressel26 at 6:56 am (EST) on Oct 26, 2007
Thanks for inviting me to the Dewey Decimal Group - what a great idea! I won't be joining it (I have enough problem reading the books I've got, and controlling my growing wishlist, without trying to complete a challenge like this) but I'll definitely watch some of the threads (and I've added Dewey categories to my library...)
posted by wandering_star at 6:48 pm (EST) on Oct 24, 2007
posted by aemilys at 4:16 am (EST) on Oct 24, 2007
posted by Storeetllr at 11:27 am (EST) on Oct 20, 2007
posted by Kell_Smurthwaite at 5:32 pm (EST) on Oct 13, 2007
posted by Eurydice at 12:45 am (EST) on Oct 13, 2007
posted by mthibault at 9:46 am (EST) on Oct 12, 2007
posted by SheReads at 12:20 am (EST) on Oct 11, 2007
posted by Heather19 at 9:03 pm (EST) on Sep 11, 2007
posted by shewhowearsred at 7:37 pm (EST) on Aug 23, 2007
posted by shewhowearsred at 10:18 am (EST) on Aug 23, 2007
posted by Kira at 5:41 pm (EST) on Jul 11, 2007
posted by timspalding at 10:58 am (EST) on Jul 6, 2007
posted by sapiens at 3:46 am (EST) on Apr 7, 2007
We seem to share a fairly eclectic mix of books - a bit of fantasy a bit of classics and a bit of "others"!
posted by reading_fox at 5:34 am (EST) on Mar 15, 2007
posted by SimonW11 at 11:05 pm (EST) on Mar 3, 2007
How is your 50 book challenge coming?
I'm on my 17th and 18th books....both non-fiction and am anxious to get back to some fiction, but can't see starting a third at this time!
posted by LynnB at 12:46 pm (EST) on Feb 14, 2007
posted by punkypower at 1:16 pm (EST) on Feb 4, 2007
posted by Kailana at 5:53 pm (EST) on Jan 4, 2007
posted by Branimir at 4:22 pm (EST) on Dec 27, 2006
posted by Eilonwy at 7:35 pm (EST) on Dec 22, 2006
Thanks!
Eilonwy
posted by Eilonwy at 3:25 am (EST) on Dec 22, 2006
posted by SheReads at 2:22 pm (EST) on Oct 9, 2006
posted by Herzophia at 9:15 pm (EST) on Sep 6, 2006