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Member: lyzadanger

CollectionsYour library (971), Arts (18), Biography and Memoir (35), Biology, Plant and Animal Care (11), Children's (36), Classical Works, Classical History (31), Drama and Poetry (46), Fiction (281), Food and Cooking (61), Foreign Language (17), History and Humanities (104), Instructional, Hobbies and Technical (56), Natural and Mathematical Sciences (28), Portland, Oregon, Pacific Northwest (83), Reference and Language Tools (17), Science Fiction (28), Self-Help and Special Interest (17), Textbooks (26), Travel (23), Other (Humor, Eclectic, Etc.) (12), Kindle and Audio (3), Rare, Collectible, Old or Favorite (14), To read (178), Books I've Read (274), Read but unowned (8), Currently reading (4), All collections (979)

Reviews150 reviews

Tagsverified (878), read (344), fiction (313), novel (287), tbr (181), nonfiction (168), history (134), reference (97), unverified (89), readin2008 (75) — see all tags

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Groups18th-19th Century Britain, 75 Books Challenge for 2008, Ancient History, Book Nudgers, Group Reads - Literature, Medieval Europe, Portland Readers, Powell's City of Books, TuesdayThingers, What Are You Reading Now?

Favorite authorsT. C. Boyle, Willa Cather, Jonathan Safran Foer, Cormac McCarthy, David Mitchell, Vladimir Nabokov, Joyce Carol Oates, José Saramago, Neal Stephenson (Shared favorites)

Favorite bookstoresPowell's City of Books

About meWell, hello, there.

2009, in terms of reading, has been a quality-over-quantity approach (I won't get near touching last year's count of 75 or so books read). I'm reading some tomes and heavier works: Herodotus, Joseph Campbell (you cannot read that man quickly), Dumas, the complete journals of Lewis & Clark.

I'm currently focusing on expanding my local interest/history collection (see my "Portland, Oregon, Pacific Northwest" collection), as well as reading considerable amounts of geography and historical geography.

My goals for 2010 include expanding my hard science titles and my really pathetic science fiction section, as well as continuing to knock down classics and Important Works pursuant to being "Well Read by 35" (I have three years left!).

About my libraryThings I own and generally read a lot of:
* Modern literature
* 19th-century European literature
* 19th- and 20th-century American literature
* Popular history, popular non-fiction
* Shakespeare
* Classical works (Greek/Roman)
* Geography and historical geography; multi-disciplinary histories

Everything in the "My Library" collection herein is a book that I physically own.

Homepagehttp://www.lyza.com

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Membership LibraryThing Early Reviewers/Member Giveaway

Real nameLyza

LocationPDX

Account typepublic, lifetime

Connection NewsConnection News

URLs http://www.librarything.com/profile/lyzadanger (profile)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/lyzadanger (library)

Common KnowledgeSeries (133), Awards (332), Characters (3696), Places (815)

Member sinceFeb 14, 2007

Currently readingSamuel Pepys by Claire Tomalin
The Landmark Herodotus: The Histories by Herodotus
Justinian's Flea: The First Great Plague and the End of the Roman Empire by William Rosen
Buffalo Gals and Other Animal Presences by Ursula K. Le Guin

Leave a comment

I saw your review of Quicksilver by Neal Stephenson. Just wondering if you had read his Anathem novel?
Noticed that you liked The Heart is a Lonely Hunter, and I was wondering if you'd be interested in reviewing my new novel and posting your comments here (as well as on a few other book-related sites). I thought you might like my novel since it's been compared to that novel by a number of reviewers. I could e-mail you the novel in an e-book format if you'd like. Let me know if you're interested. Here's a link to a summary in case you're interested:

http://christophertusa.com/

Thanks,

Chris
Life is....
by Mother Theresa

Life is an opportunity, benefit from it.
Life is beauty, admire it.
Life is a dream, realize it.
Life is a challenge, meet it.
Life is a duty, complete it.
Life is a game, play it.
Life is a promise, fulfill it.
Life is sorrow, overcome it.
Life is a song, sing it.
Life is a struggle, accept it.
Life is a tragedy, confront it.
Life is an adventure, dare it.
Life is luck, make it.
Life is too precious, do not destroy it.
Life is life, fight for it.
Hi Lyza - I would like to add you to my Interesting Libraries as I have been reading some of your reviews and I like them! We are both in the Group Reads - Literature group which I have just joined which is how I came across you. Looking forward to Pale Fire.

We disagree about Jane Eyre but are in sync on the Alchemist and I completely understand where you're coming from on Midnight's Children - my brother had the same reaction, although I must confess that I, contrary to expectations, ended up thoroughly enjoying it.

Anyway, I'd like to see what you're up to every now and then, bookwise. Hope you don't mind.

Pummz
I just finished Out Stealing Horses and wanted to let you know that I enjoyed your review. I was very impressed with this book and loved the style, the long simply discribed scenes of completing a task or describing a setting. This is a book I will think about for a few days before jumping into to something else. I noticed that you read The Sea by John Blanville. I thought these books had some interesting similarities: the death of a spouse led to going back to a childhood residence, the narrator reviewing the events of his childhood that made a lasting change in his life, etc. Anyway thanks for the review; your insights were appreciated.
I just finished Out Stealing Horses and wanted to let you know that I enjoyed your review. I was very impressed with this book and loved the style, the long simply discribed scenes of completing a task or describing a setting. This is a book I will think about for a few days before jumping into to something else. I noticed that you read The Sea by John Blanville. I thought these books had some interesting similarities: the death of a spouse led to going back to a childhood residence, the narrator reviewing the events of his childhood that made a lasting change in his life, etc. Anyway thanks for the review; your insights were appreciated.
Your review on Midnight's Children captures exactly what I thought too! Thanks for posting it.
Lyza,
Just had to leave a compliment. I, too, am overrun with books as they now create aisles within my house. The TBR piles have run amok. My compliment is for your reviews; I am utterly envious of how brilliantly you articulate a book's weaknesses and strengths. Can't wait to read more! Just finished Monsters of Templeton and felt you hit every nail on the head. (Alas, I am cursed with weak and hackneyed metaphors.....)
Flattered that you find my library interesting. I once had the pleasure to be in Powell's, but it was during a 24 hour layover and I could only buy one book because my bags were packed and had no room.
Hiya Lyza, I started with The Windup Bird Chronicles and moved on from there. Some of the other books are quite different but still uniquely Murakami but TWBC has elements of all of them. So I would say you're on the right track. Hope you enjoy it!
Hi - Thanks for adding my library to your "interesting libraries" list. It is a pretty odd assortment, but I enjoy almost any kind of nonfiction. I hope you find some interesting ideas for your TBR list - I know I have found many while perusing other libraries here.
Hi Lyza,

I just read your comments on Manguel's book about Homer. I have had the same thoughts about Homer, feeling I have to find out more. But I did not go to Manguel's book for it (I may yet) but got from The Teaching Company audio courses by Professor Elizabeth Vandiver, one on Odyssey and one on Iliad. Since I spend a lot of time every day in the car, commuting to work, I have loved the format and each course of 12 lectures is spectacular, presented by a most knowledgeable professor. This might give you more insight if you wish it. The Teaching Company has its own site and the courses are frequently available inexpensively on Ebay. I could also be persuaded to lend them to you.
Hi there. Liked your review of the Iliad. Don't forget that the reason we 'know' everything but don't hear it in the Iliad is because the Iliad is one part of a 12 part Epic Cycle, most of which is lost. The Odyssey is the only other part we still have. Effectively, the only reason we 'know' anything about the remainder of these myths is because parts of it are reported in later sources, such as imperial Roman or later Classical Greek sources (think Aeschylus's Orestia). If we didn't have those later retellings either, we wouldn't know about the rest of the myth. Also, we really don't know whether these retellings were accurate in the first place! All incredibly fascinating stuff, no?
Hi Lyza -- I like your reviews and found I basically agreed with them on the books we have in common -- I, Claudius; Vanity Fair; Thirteen Moons -- to name a few I've recently read. Jen
Hi, Lyza. I really liked and resonated with your review of A Long Way Gone. I read it last summer, and found it disturbing...not just by its subject matter, which I think is true and horrific, but by Beah. There just seemed to be something fishy there -- maybe all that did happen to him, or maybe he added into his experiences some that he saw or happened around him. It was a lack of affect, I think, that was hardest for me to grasp. I also read a similar, but I thought much better, book along the same lines, What is the What? by Dave Eggers about one of the Sudanese "Lost Boys." Here the person's soul and spirit were really engaged in the story, though it was fictionalized and written by a very gifted professional writer, which may have been the difference between the two books. I also thought the main character's Christian faith in What is the What? made a huge difference, both in what happened and in the telling of it. Martha Huntley
Lyza, this is your Irish aunt here, just set up my account (1 book). Love your picture. C.
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