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kraftiekortie
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24 Aug 2018, 4:05 pm

Gerson, to me, wrote sort of a straightforward biography of Shelley. He is, obviously, a great fan of Shelley; not such a great fan of her father, William Godwin.

It was easy to read, and pretty good for an introduction to Shelley. But as a serious work of scholarship, there's leaves much to be desired. I am not sure if that was Gerson's intention, actually.

I am now in the process of reading "Frankenstein."



IsabellaLinton
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24 Aug 2018, 4:08 pm

Hey, me too!


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HighLlama
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24 Aug 2018, 5:00 pm

IsabellaLinton wrote:
HighLlama wrote:
IsabellaLinton wrote:
Yes! That's me! I have a shameful number of editions of Brontëana including their novels and biographies. I only have one copy of Frankenstein and this is my first time reading it. I'm reading the original 1818 edition. I love reading the academic essays and notes as well. Kortie recommended that I read a biography of Mary Shelley's life and that was fascinating too! I used to write in my books in Uni so those ones are full of marginalia but I don't write in them any more. Mine are full of sticky tabs with notes exposed.

(PS I like Norton Critical. I have several of their publications as well :) )


You must have an amazing collection. What is the Mary Shelley biography called?

Yeah, Norton Critical is fantastic. I love their editions of the Old and New Testaments, among many others.


The Shelley bio was called Daughter of Earth and Water (Noel Gerson). Fascinating info, although nothing was cited so I found the style a bit odd. I'm going to invest in Mary's private journal publications as well.


Thanks!



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28 Aug 2018, 7:25 pm

Extreme Horror, by Matt Shaw.

A psychopath who has been a lifelong horror movie fan is making his own movie about his acts of murder and mutilation. He even tells one of his early victims that he will be remembered forever, now.
Author Matt Shaw wrote a warning at the beginning of the book to warn away the lily livered.


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HighLlama
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28 Aug 2018, 7:34 pm

Freud - Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis

Lovecraft - Tales (Library of America)



Skilpadde
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29 Aug 2018, 1:08 am

Madeleine Roux: asylum


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Sianann
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30 Aug 2018, 7:14 am

Computing with Quantum Cats: From Colossus to Qubits by John Gribbin


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Redxk
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01 Sep 2018, 2:51 pm

Mrs. Dalloway. But, then, I'm usually reading Mrs. Dalloway. It's the book I read in between reading other books. Virginia Woolf is a long-standing special interest of mine.



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01 Sep 2018, 5:50 pm

"The dead and the gone" - again

I dislike the protagonist every bit as much as I did the first time around.


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simply the best and one of a kind
love you and miss you, dear boy

Stop the wolf kills! https://www.thepetitionsite.com/takeact ... 3091429765


AnonymousAnonymous
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04 Sep 2018, 3:55 pm

Prelude To Foundation by Isaac Asimov.


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10 Sep 2018, 1:33 pm

Days of Rage: America's Radical Underground, the FBI, and the Forgotten Age of Revolutionary Violence - Bryan Burrough


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10 Sep 2018, 1:40 pm

The Humans, Matt Haig

A view of human behavior, annoying and pleasurable, from the eyes of a visiting e.t.



IsabellaLinton
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12 Sep 2018, 4:44 pm

Image
(artwork: John William Waterhouse, The Lady of Shalott, 1888)

Alfred, Lord Tennyson, Poems, Chiefly Lyrical (1830) and in particular The Lady of Shalott :heart:

Image


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IsabellaLinton
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13 Sep 2018, 12:23 am

This is a shout-out to everyone who has previously expressed interest in reading Emily Brontë's only novel, Wuthering Heights, (1847), as a Reading Group in tribute to her 200th birthday which is celebrated this year.

I read it every year as a ritual, always beginning mid-October when the weather wuthers where I live. It is a short novel, in two volumes, approx. 210 pages (I'd have to go check). Its gothic, twisted and perverse, and not at all the Hollywood romance that screenplays attempt to produce:

Graham's Lady Magazine wrote: “How a human being could have attempted such a book as the present without committing suicide before he had finished a dozen chapters, is a mystery. It is a compound of vulgar depravity and unnatural horrors.”

Please indicate below or PM me if you are interested in reading this masterpiece, which has been called "the greatest achievement of literature in the entire English canon". I'm posting now so that people who are interested can get a copy of the novel and / or ponder the complex family tree chart which precedes it :)

I wish I could tag people, but I recall that sianann, redxk, alirat and kraftie have shown interest.

Any and everyone is welcome to read with me! The more the merrier!

I'll start mid-October, or whenever it's best for others.

Thanks,
Isabella Linton :heart: :skull: :heart:






Sianann wrote:
IsabellaLinton wrote:
Sianann wrote:
IsabellaLinton wrote:
IsabellaLinton wrote:
Redxk wrote:
IsabellaLinton wrote:
Sianann wrote:
IsabellaLinton wrote:
Sianann wrote:
IsabellaLinton wrote:
Sianann wrote:
IsabellaLinton wrote:
The Cambridge Companion to the Brontës, Edited by Heather Glen

Yes, I'm that predictable.


I daydream anout having a massive oak bookcase filled with a copy of every version of Wuthering Heights ever published. Sigh.


WAIT WHAT?! DO I HAVE A PARTNER IN MY LOVE OF THIS BOOK???? :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart:
I have a walnut "Brontë Cabinet" with 49 (soon to be 58) Brontë books -- multiple biographies of each of them including Branwell and Patrick, social histories, poetry, juvenilia and novels -- multiple copies of every novel. WH is my thing. It's my spirit novel and unending obsession, along with Emily.

:heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart:


O, lol, perhaps!

I read WH every year for years...not so in the last few years. I used to have biographies, etc. but my interests started to cast a bigger net and I gave books away (I know, I know...) in order to make room for other worlds. I actually went to Haworth two decades ago as a sort of pilgrimage...the house is a museum but I was not happy walking around it as I felt it to be so very intrusive on Emily’s still lingering sense of privacy. However, the moors were absolutely beautiful.

I am so impressed with your book-filled walnut Brontë cabinet...sounds like a work of art in itself. :heart:


How nice to hear from you! I also read WH once a year, always in the late autumn so I might enjoy tumultuous storms and dreary weather turning to snow along with Lockwood's travels. My ancestors were woolcombers who lived in Haworth at the time of the Brontës, and for generations beforehand, most having been baptized and / or buried by Patrick himself at St. Michael's. I'm intensely drawn to the area but also aware of Emily's desire for privacy. What a shame you gave away your books. If you decide to reread WH, let me know. I'd love to have a Brontë book club :) By the way, The Cambridge Companion is extraordinary. I love Juliet Barker's work in particular.

Do you think you will seek an assessment for neurodiversity?


Wow! The only connection I have with the Brontes is that Patrick was Irish...a very tenuous link indeed! Yes, and I did have a copy of Barker's biography, which I thoroughly enjoyed and now feel an overwhelming urge to get my hands on again. I would love to reread WH and I think October would be the perfect month (it's my favourite month of the year...although November was vying for top spot last year with its very Gothic-romantic vibe and lots of dawn mist here in the Midlands). I will let you know so that we can read at the same time.

Hmm, I will seek an assessment eventually. I'm so comfortable with being considered 'different' now that the need for a diagnosis just isn't there...unlike many other aspects in my life that have me super-focused...but yes, I would like to know one way or the other, in time.



It's a deal! October and November are my favourite months as well!! Wow! You're my kindred spirit as I love dark weather too!

I was only assessed this year and I found it extremely valuable.

Keep in touch!

Isabella :)



My favorite month is October as well... seriously! I would love to reread WH and join in on the discussion.



Please do!! ! ! That would be marvellous!! !

Readers, take your mark! :heart:



Redxk is a very kind and well-read academic, Sianann! We'll have fun and recruit more literati along the way!

Have you read Villette? I adore its gloominess, too.

:skull:


O, welcome - Redxk! Yes, I read Villette many, many years ago. I feel like I need to revisit everything...right now!
This feels like home.



Welcome, welcome! Yes, you're home!
Let your friend know you'd love to have your Brontë books returned, if he / she has finished with them (wink)!

:heart: :heart: :heart: ... and I love your Wittgenstein quote, as well!

:study:


I actually gave my Bronte collection to one of my sisters years ago...we had the same interests and so it was like a safe harbour for the books...until we became estranged three years ago and that was that. I'll start collecting again.

Yes, Wittgenstein is one of my obsessions, lol. Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent. Love it. :heart:


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shortfatbalduglyman
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13 Sep 2018, 12:52 am

"Citizen Girl" is about a 24 year old with a bachelor degree.

She works filing and making coffee


She is having a hard time paying the bills


Her name is <"Girl".

There is another character named "Guy"



Not boy, girl. Man, woman

Guy, girl. :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll:



Sexist sexist sexist



feeli0
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13 Sep 2018, 1:06 am

IsabellaLinton wrote:
This is a shout-out to everyone who has previously expressed interest in reading Emily Brontë's only novel, Wuthering Heights, (1847), as a Reading Group in tribute to her 200th birthday which is celebrated this year.

I read it every year as a ritual, always beginning mid-October when the weather wuthers where I live. It is a short novel, in two volumes, approx. 210 pages (I'd have to go check). Its gothic, twisted and perverse, and not at all the Hollywood romance that screenplays attempt to produce:

Graham's Lady Magazine wrote: “How a human being could have attempted such a book as the present without committing suicide before he had finished a dozen chapters, is a mystery. It is a compound of vulgar depravity and unnatural horrors.”

Please indicate below or PM me if you are interested in reading this masterpiece, which has been called "the greatest achievement of literature in the entire English canon". I'm posting now so that people who are interested can get a copy of the novel and / or ponder the complex family tree chart which precedes it :)

I wish I could tag people, but I recall that sianann, redxk, alirat and kraftie have shown interest.

Any and everyone is welcome to read with me! The more the merrier!

I'll start mid-October, or whenever it's best for others.

Thanks,
Isabella Linton :heart: :skull: :heart:


I'd like to join in please. I am not nearly as well versed as others here, but keen to be a part of the October reading adventure - whatever form that takes.



Sianann wrote:
IsabellaLinton wrote:
Sianann wrote:
IsabellaLinton wrote:
IsabellaLinton wrote:
Redxk wrote:
IsabellaLinton wrote:
Sianann wrote:
IsabellaLinton wrote:
Sianann wrote:
IsabellaLinton wrote:
Sianann wrote:
IsabellaLinton wrote:
The Cambridge Companion to the Brontës, Edited by Heather Glen

Yes, I'm that predictable.


I daydream anout having a massive oak bookcase filled with a copy of every version of Wuthering Heights ever published. Sigh.


WAIT WHAT?! DO I HAVE A PARTNER IN MY LOVE OF THIS BOOK???? :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart:
I have a walnut "Brontë Cabinet" with 49 (soon to be 58) Brontë books -- multiple biographies of each of them including Branwell and Patrick, social histories, poetry, juvenilia and novels -- multiple copies of every novel. WH is my thing. It's my spirit novel and unending obsession, along with Emily.

:heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart:


O, lol, perhaps!

I read WH every year for years...not so in the last few years. I used to have biographies, etc. but my interests started to cast a bigger net and I gave books away (I know, I know...) in order to make room for other worlds. I actually went to Haworth two decades ago as a sort of pilgrimage...the house is a museum but I was not happy walking around it as I felt it to be so very intrusive on Emily’s still lingering sense of privacy. However, the moors were absolutely beautiful.

I am so impressed with your book-filled walnut Brontë cabinet...sounds like a work of art in itself. :heart:


How nice to hear from you! I also read WH once a year, always in the late autumn so I might enjoy tumultuous storms and dreary weather turning to snow along with Lockwood's travels. My ancestors were woolcombers who lived in Haworth at the time of the Brontës, and for generations beforehand, most having been baptized and / or buried by Patrick himself at St. Michael's. I'm intensely drawn to the area but also aware of Emily's desire for privacy. What a shame you gave away your books. If you decide to reread WH, let me know. I'd love to have a Brontë book club :) By the way, The Cambridge Companion is extraordinary. I love Juliet Barker's work in particular.

Do you think you will seek an assessment for neurodiversity?


Wow! The only connection I have with the Brontes is that Patrick was Irish...a very tenuous link indeed! Yes, and I did have a copy of Barker's biography, which I thoroughly enjoyed and now feel an overwhelming urge to get my hands on again. I would love to reread WH and I think October would be the perfect month (it's my favourite month of the year...although November was vying for top spot last year with its very Gothic-romantic vibe and lots of dawn mist here in the Midlands). I will let you know so that we can read at the same time.

Hmm, I will seek an assessment eventually. I'm so comfortable with being considered 'different' now that the need for a diagnosis just isn't there...unlike many other aspects in my life that have me super-focused...but yes, I would like to know one way or the other, in time.



It's a deal! October and November are my favourite months as well!! Wow! You're my kindred spirit as I love dark weather too!

I was only assessed this year and I found it extremely valuable.

Keep in touch!

Isabella :)



My favorite month is October as well... seriously! I would love to reread WH and join in on the discussion.



Please do!! ! ! That would be marvellous!! !

Readers, take your mark! :heart:



Redxk is a very kind and well-read academic, Sianann! We'll have fun and recruit more literati along the way!

Have you read Villette? I adore its gloominess, too.

:skull:


O, welcome - Redxk! Yes, I read Villette many, many years ago. I feel like I need to revisit everything...right now!
This feels like home.



Welcome, welcome! Yes, you're home!
Let your friend know you'd love to have your Brontë books returned, if he / she has finished with them (wink)!

:heart: :heart: :heart: ... and I love your Wittgenstein quote, as well!

:study:


I actually gave my Bronte collection to one of my sisters years ago...we had the same interests and so it was like a safe harbour for the books...until we became estranged three years ago and that was that. I'll start collecting again.

Yes, Wittgenstein is one of my obsessions, lol. Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent. Love it. :heart:


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