Random books from ejj1955's library
The Random House Dictionary of the English Language, Second Edition by Dictionary
Four Queens: The Provencal Sisters Who Ruled Europe by Nancy Goldstone
Venus in Copper by Lindsey Davis
Washington: The Indispensable Man by James Thomas Flexner
79 Park Avenue by Harold robbins
The Star Scroll (Dragon Prince, Book 2) by Melanie Rawn
Fifty Letters of Pliny by Pliny the Younger
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friends: aglaia531, alcottacre, Audacity, biblioholic29, bluesalamanders, clamairy, elisa.rolle, EricCGibson, foggidawn, jenapincott, Kerian, libreria04, LizzieD, Lovelifesmile27, mirrordrum, moibibliomaniac, mrgrooism, MsDonna, MtnSk8tr, Renald128, sally2025, TFS93, TheresaWilliams, wisewoman
interesting libraries: abecedary, Amtep, AnnaClaire, Booksloth, bookstopshere, cameling, Celebrimbor, DeltaQueen50, dreamlikecheese, DWWilkin, EricCGibson, FicusFan, Flit, Fourpawz2, Fullmoonblue, Garp83, JannyWurts, JohnAdams, littlebookworm, mistyroa, mmignano11, moibibliomaniac, mrgrooism, ninjapenguin, readhead, reading_fox, ringman, Schmerguls, setnahkt, staffordcastle, TLCrawford
LibraryThing authors: Eric Clifton Gibson (EricCGibson), Janny Wurts (JannyWurts), Sharon Kay Penman (Sharonkay), Jonathon Green (abecedary), Jo Beverley (creed), Elizabeth Jewell (ejj1955), Erin Frances Schulz (erinfrancesschulz), Jessamyn West (jessamyn), Susan Wittig Albert (susanalbert)
Member: ejj1955
CollectionsYour library (960), Read but unowned (9), All collections (968)
Reviews28 reviews
Tagssci fi/fantasy (213), mystery (204), history (98), cookbook (91), BookMooch (59), children's (51), worked on (47), reference (46), biography (41), travel (35) — see all tags
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Groups1001 Fantasy Roadies, 50-Something Library Thingers, 75 Books Challenge for 2009, Battlestar Galactica, BookMooching, Cookbookers, Crambo!, Crime, Thriller & Mystery, Dictionaries & other reference books, FantasyFans — show all groups
Favorite authorsDonna Andrews, Jane Austen, C. J. Cherryh, Lindsey Davis, Charles Dickens, Elizabeth George, Georgette Heyer, Mercedes Lackey, Anne McCaffrey, Robert B. Parker, Ellis Peters (Shared favorites)
About meI'm a freelance writer/editor/proofreader/copy editor; I live in a small town in upstate NY, which can be a lovely area except for the five or six months of winter, which I hate more each year I endure it. Spring and fall are beautiful; summer is also lovely if sometimes humid; real estate is cheap, neighbors are great, local farmer's market is fabulous, choice of decent restaurants is nearly nonexistent. Good used bookstores are a bit of a drive. The local library is fairly good and belongs to a four-county system from which it will get books on request. I belong to a book club; I like the members much, much more than I like most of the books they pick to read.
About my libraryI keep thinking it's quite lopsided, as I started by separating out and entering my science fiction and fantasy; I do have a lot of that, but also lean heavily toward mysteries, cookbooks, history, reference books, travel books (many of which I have because I used to proofread these and had copies given to me by the publisher--but I do, in fact, like to travel) and some odds and ends. Eventually it'll all be entered and this comment will be moot!
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Real nameElizabeth
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Emailejj1955
fastmail.us
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http://www.librarything.com/profile/ejj1955 (profile)
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Common KnowledgeSeries (272), Awards (237), Characters (3225), Places (607)
Member sinceFeb 25, 2008
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ejj1955 rated, reviewed, added:Six Geese A-Slaying (Meg Langslow Mysteries) by Donna Andrews (read review) ejj1955 reviewed, added:Eat, Drink and Be Wary (Pennsylvania Dutch Mystery) by Tamar Myers (read review) |






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posted by foggidawn at 6:48 pm (EST) on Dec 23, 2009
posted by foggidawn at 9:25 pm (EST) on Dec 22, 2009
posted by foggidawn at 5:26 pm (EST) on Dec 21, 2009
I wonder if the list of 100 SF books to recommend to a newbie ever got put up anywhere. Can you give me a pointer to it? I'm curious how it came out.
Here's one interesting idea. Two lists from the same data. First, a list sorted by number of recommenders. Second, assume the suggesters are a randomly selected bunch of folks and divide the number of mentions of a given book by the number of LibraryThing members who include that book in their libraries. The second list comes from the thought that somebody who hasn't read the book can't really say anything about how good it is. If read in the past = in library (not really true, but the best guess possible), then the second list ranks books only according to the opinions of people who read them. If results seem a little weird, then eliminate titles that are in three or fewer members' libraries, because the data is inadequate. But if a book is in only 6 members' libraries and two people say it's in their top Sf books ever read, then that really says a lot about the book. It would be rare, and hardly anybody ever read it; but it was absolutely great and is worth digging up somewhere.
Just a thought, that second list. That would be the kind of list that can ONLY be generated on a Web site like LibraryThing - a normal Internet opinion list could never get the data to do that.
Personally, I don't think enough people contributed to the list to call it "100 best" of anything, actually. Without enough input data, results are kind of skewed except towards the top of the list. But if it was given out as "100 books suggested by LibraryThing members as being good for...", then that seems pretty reasonable.
Anyway, you sure got an interesting discussion going that raised a lot of interesting points about lists of good books! You know, it might be worth raising something in particular with Tim Spaulding, the guiding developer of LibraryThing. One of the important comments was that there are different kinds of SF books (and readers). LibraryThing actually has statistics, through its "recommendations", that can be used to find which books are similar to each other, based on who likes them and how much. It could only be done through a computer. But LibraryThing could take your list of great SF books for a new reader that was suggested by a group of people, and subdivide it into groups programmatically. It would be a sort of "fuzzy logic" - Tim would know what I mean - but it would be really neat. One might wind up with three or four separate lists of books that are share some undefined characteristic. Then a person could look at descriptions of a few books in the lists to see which list is more likely his or her cup of tea, and probably like almost all the books in the list, whereas if they read the books in a different list, they might like none of them. Kind of a cool idea. You started that whole list thing. Why not mention it to Tim? He might go for it. He could do that with most any list of books from any source.
Sincerely,
Jim
posted by bibliojim at 7:08 pm (EST) on Oct 18, 2009
posted by moibibliomaniac at 1:42 pm (EST) on Jul 12, 2009
I haven't read Hestia, but there are used copies available at amazonmarketplace. I think my "acceptable" copy - which is certainly good enough for me to read - was a penny plus the $3.99 shipping and handling. I'm very careful to buy from sellers who have 92+ satisfaction ratings, and I have never been burned.
Saylor's novels are darker than Davis's. They use Cicero's cases as a starting point, and he has some interesting ideas about the mysteries and personalities of the time.
And I see that you've added an Elswyth Thane (Tryst is one of my never-fail comfort books) and a Kushiel. I was leery of the whole concept, so was happily surprised when I liked the first one. I'm still adding books randomly because that's my nature. Unfortunately, I'm still buying too many too because that's the nature of this place!
Peggy
posted by LizzieD at 9:48 pm (EST) on Jul 9, 2009
Now I'm off to look at your author page, but I did want to say that I'm happy to meet you.
Peggy
posted by LizzieD at 4:19 pm (EST) on Jul 9, 2009
d'you know I've not been able to become the kind of harry potter fan it seems to me i ought to be. i don't know if it's because i can't read them--maybe they're better to read than listen to--or due to some, hitherto unknown flaw in my character or what. I'm also one of those reprobates who didn't like the LOTR movies. i suppose i read, and now happily listen to, the trilogy every year or so and have done for, oh, going on 30 years. it just didn't work for me on the screen and i did so want it to. alas.
the robin paige books look right up my alley but aren't available in audio, blast it. at least, if they are, i can't find them. ah well, plenty of other things to listen to though they do sound a treat. :)
off to see if i can find the mystery group. thanks.
ellie
posted by mirrordrum at 4:03 pm (EST) on Jul 3, 2009
my parents taught, coached [dad] and librarianed [mom] at a military school for boys in so cal and i grew up eating in the mess hall. we often had creamed chipped beef on toast for breakfast. all the cadets and i hated it. the guys nicknamed it 'mung' and wouldn't eat it. my dad, fresh from 18 months of cold c-ration beans eaten in fox holes and aid stations in the Ardennes and environs thought it a treat, ate all he could get and told us we didn't know what we were missing. he was right. in so many ways.
thanks again. you're a gem. i'm indebted.
posted by mirrordrum at 11:10 am (EST) on Jul 3, 2009
it was about 55 years ago that i read the book and i can't remember and the local library hasn't got it. :(
please feel free to say 'no' as i realize it may be too much of a hassle. i deal very well with assertive refusals. i realize it's asking a bit much to make such an off-the-wall request.
thanks.
posted by mirrordrum at 12:02 am (EST) on Jul 3, 2009
posted by moibibliomaniac at 4:06 pm (EST) on Jun 11, 2009
posted by moibibliomaniac at 11:51 am (EST) on May 27, 2009
posted by moibibliomaniac at 11:31 pm (EST) on May 25, 2009
posted by copyedit52 at 9:37 am (EST) on May 10, 2009
Thank you for your interest in the Legacy Library of Eeva-Liisa Manner. She is one of the most important Finnish poets. Her language is beautiful. You asked if I know any translations. I compiled a list from a few sources. I hope you can find those books and magazines in or through your library.
Two books:
Fog horses. New York : Cross-Cultural Communications, 1986.
Selected poems. Guildford : Making Waves, 1997 (ISBN 1-873918-11-9)
Her poems have appeared in anthologies, but I don't know how easy is to find those. Here is a list of some poems and plays which have appeared in anthologies and magazines. 'Books from Finland' is an illustrated, quarterly journal of writing from and about Finland.
Burnt orange (play) in Stages of chaos : the drama of post-war Finland / edited by Pirkko Koski and Steve Wilmer, 2005 (ISBN 951-746-664-1)
The City. In Books from Finland 1989:1
Counterpoint ; When shore and reflection... In A way to measure time. Helsinki : Finnish Literature Society, 1992. (ISBN 951-717-695-3)
Here ; Into the silence of the forest ; Assimilation ; A walk ; Speculation ; Bach ; Last year in capricorn ; From my life I make a poem. In Salt of pleasure. St. Paul, MN : New Rivers Pr., 1983. (ISBN 0-89823-048-9)
Hippopotamus. In Finnish Odyssey. London : Research Publishing, 1975. (ISBN 0-7050-0038-9)
If sorrow smoked. In Books from Finland 1969:2
Jack, the Terror of the Thames and Puss in Boots. In Books from Finland 1977:1
The Othello of Sand Alley. In Books from Finland 1989:1 (part of the play)
Poems. In Books from Finland 1992:3
Poems from "Dead Waters". In Books from Finland 1978:4
Snow in May. In Snow in May. Cranbury, N.J. : Associated University Presses, cop. 1978. (ISBN 0-8386-1583-X)
This journey. Books from Finland 1995:3
Winners, beware. Books from Finland 1973:1
The world is the poetry my senses write. In Books from Finland 1970:3
The written stone. In Books from Finland 1970:3
I also found a few poems in the Web:
POEMS FROM 'THIS JOURNEY'
http://www.halldor.demon.co.uk/manner.ht...
You Picked Up the Planet
http://nordicvoices.blogspot.com/2009/04...
from "Games of the Moon"
http://nordicvoices.blogspot.com/2009/04...
The Forest
http://www.themanhattanreview.com/archiv...
Theorem
http://www.stephen-spender.org/SSMTrust/...
From Runoja 1956-1977
http://pi.library.yorku.ca/ojs/index.php...
posted by Anneli at 12:24 am (EST) on May 6, 2009
I lived in Ashland for six months during a training I took back in 1989. I really didn't want to leave, but at the time I didn't have a way of supporting myself there. The town is great. It is home of the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, which runs from February to November, so you get world-class theater most of the year at reasonably affordable prices. Much of the town's economy is based on the tourists OSF brings in, so you have restaurants and shops far more sophisticated than you might expect in a town of 20,000 people. You also have a good-sized population of artists and writers, as they are people who can support themselves without depending on local industry. There's even a good airport twenty minutes away.
The company I work for has a location in Medford, twenty minutes up the Interstate, so I'm hoping I can transfer. In fact, I was planning on doing that six years ago, before Spousal Unit seduced me to New York. The deal was, once his son graduated high school, we'd move somewhere sane. Then the economy tanked, so we're still here.
I can hardly believe it's been twenty years since I lived there. Ever since, I've wanted to go back, and my husband is happy with the plan to go as soon as we can. You are more than welcome to join the party :-)
The only thing to remember, is don't have people think you're from California -- people from California move up over the border just to drive up property values and annoy the locals. We will keep secret all the years Spousal Unit lived in Berkeley.
posted by PhaedraB at 11:09 pm (EST) on Apr 28, 2009
Veta
posted by VetaTorres at 9:28 pm (EST) on Apr 25, 2009
I haven't yet seen the HBO series of The No 1 Ladies Detective Agency. In fact, I've only read the first book in the series! I did enjoy Smith's writing though and eventually I plan to read many more of his books. I don't get any premium channels on my cable network, but glad to hear that the series is good! If (or when?) it is released on DVD I will plan to check it out! I don't know much about different dialects and accents in Africa so I can't attest to its realism either, but hopefully HBO's done at least a little research. ;) If you like mysteries and detective stories, I would highly recommend the first book! And if you like it and want to read more we could do a tandem read of the second book too! Thanks for your note and have a great week!
lisa :)
posted by elbakerone at 10:50 am (EST) on Apr 15, 2009
posted by jennieg at 3:29 pm (EST) on Apr 8, 2009
Great idea - thanks!
Don't want to divert the thread so I'm leaving a message.
Might be an idea to see if there is a UK/US split over recommendations when this is tabulated - that seemed to be a theme of the last thread. Let me know if I can help with that.
posted by kevmalone at 1:35 pm (EST) on Apr 7, 2009
posted by jennieg at 5:53 pm (EST) on Apr 2, 2009
I don't know Donna Andrews, but our lists look compatable.
We drove through NY state a few years ago after our younger daughter graduated from Vassar. I couldn't get over how beautiful it was.
posted by jennieg at 2:08 pm (EST) on Apr 2, 2009
posted by Garp83 at 7:29 pm (EST) on Apr 1, 2009
See you in the HE, ejj! I hope your weekend has been terrific!
posted by Kerian at 2:12 am (EST) on Mar 30, 2009
posted by moibibliomaniac at 6:54 am (EST) on Mar 23, 2009
The link to my inventory:
http://bookmooch.com/m/inventory/devoure...
posted by DevourerOfBooks at 6:40 pm (EST) on Mar 15, 2009
posted by mrgrooism at 1:04 am (EST) on Mar 7, 2009
posted by biblioholic29 at 8:56 am (EST) on Mar 4, 2009
posted by biblioholic29 at 8:23 pm (EST) on Mar 3, 2009
I usually put a little something on my 75 book challenge, but don't review every book I read as it seems too much like homework. I actually post a more detailed set of comments on the Book of the Month Group's monthly thread - I just posted my February reads there. I'll try to back-post them to the 75 book challenge thread.
I'm proud of myself for trying to bookmooch all these books except the Thomas Hardy book which I have - I actually am getting the first one via bookmooch within a week or so.
I have read Far From the Madding Crowd too, but it was in ... 1986?... so it's due for a re-read. Ditto The Pillars of the Earth, think I read that in 1992 or so (remembering from what who I borrowed it).
Bye for now.
Karen
posted by karenmarie at 10:41 am (EST) on Mar 3, 2009
posted by biblioholic29 at 10:07 am (EST) on Mar 3, 2009
We had our bookclub's book-picking meeting the other night and I mentioned your name - well, ejj1955 since I hadn't looked at your profile yet and seen that you were Elizabeth! I mentioned that you were plagued with weepy chick lit and told them I appreciated the interesting and varied books brought to the table. Here's our next 12 months of reading:
Paris to the Moon Adam Gopnik
The Pillars of the Earth Ken Follett
The People of the Book Geraldine Brooks
My Own Country Abraham Verghese
Unaccustomed Earth Jumpha Lahiri
Uncle Tom's Cabin Harriet B. Stowe
The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox Maggie O'Farrell
This is Not Civilization Robert Rosenberg
Far From the Madding Crowd Thomas Hardy
Loving Frank Nancy Horan
Cranford Elizabeth Gaskell (my book)
The Conjurer's Bird Martin Davies
Keep fighting for good books!
See you around!
Karenmarie
posted by karenmarie at 6:12 am (EST) on Mar 3, 2009
posted by Mandy2 at 3:24 pm (EST) on Mar 2, 2009
posted by biblioholic29 at 10:02 am (EST) on Mar 2, 2009
We really enjoyed our trip this year. The weather was wonderful, except for the day after Christmas when it actually snowed. But that's OK - we took the day off from golf and enjoyed it. We are seriously considering retiring to Tucson, or perhaps living there part-time.
Thank you again for lending your books to me - it was so thoughtful and generous of you!
Hope your winter is coming to an end! I'm in Anchorage right now where I think they will be having a few more months of winter....
Best regards,
Lisa
posted by LisaMorr at 11:59 pm (EST) on Mar 1, 2009
I have to ask: WHERE is the library that is in your Profile picture? I feel compelled to call and tell them to shutter the windows so the book covers don't fade!!! Lovely room!
I also happened to notice that you and I share a lot of books by Stephen R. Donaldson (my #2 favorite author). I don't see that you have his ~latest~ 2 books though -- the first half of the quartet, [The Last Chronicles of Thomas Covenant]. Go figure! He died at the end of the second trilogy, and now, thirty years later, he's back. And it's not like Donaldson used a trick like Lord Morham stepping out of the shower and telling Lindsey Avery that she dreamed it all happened, either. It took a bit of adjustment to get back into the story, but Donaldson has not lost his touch in the telling of the tale.
Regards,
Mike
WholeHouseLibrary
posted by WholeHouseLibrary at 6:32 pm (EST) on Mar 1, 2009
I had read the book with the idea Machiavelli was noting human nature in general, not his own but more along the lines of what man *might* do. Looking at the writings as satire makes it seem different all over again and yet I feel that I was not too far off...for a beginner :) It's a fascinating book.
posted by BritAnnia at 12:03 pm (EST) on Feb 23, 2009
posted by EricCGibson at 5:18 pm (EST) on Feb 10, 2009
posted by EricCGibson at 5:10 pm (EST) on Feb 10, 2009
I like your library very much. So much that I would love to see my novel in it. Would you like me to send you a copy?
Best regards,
Eric
posted by EricCGibson at 11:59 am (EST) on Feb 10, 2009
posted by cpizotti at 1:17 pm (EST) on Feb 7, 2009
posted by jeri889 at 5:57 pm (EST) on Jan 14, 2009
If you want recommendations, please let me know...
David
posted by DWWilkin at 11:12 pm (EST) on Dec 31, 2008
posted by Kerian at 3:56 am (EST) on Dec 29, 2008
I wish you a very happy Christams, and look forward to lots more fun in the HE in 2009!
With Love,
Naomi.
I'll send a proper thank you card in the mail :-)
posted by LadyN at 6:46 pm (EST) on Dec 20, 2008
Jerry
posted by moibibliomaniac at 12:13 pm (EST) on Sep 22, 2008
I was on my first cup of coffee as I wrote my comment: I reversed miles and time...mea culpa.
Irene
posted by saratoga99 at 9:54 am (EST) on Sep 21, 2008
Like "Flat Stanley," your book went on a journey. On 09/11/2008, it left Saratoga Springs NY. On 09/14/2008, it was "processed" in Springfield MA. Not enough "processing," it proceeded to Philadelphia PA and was again "processed" on 09/16/2008. Finally arrived in Sidney NY, on 09/19/2008. A road trip from Saratoga Springs to Sidney takes approximately 126 miles (2 hours, 8 minutes per Google directions). What a tale this book could tell!!!
Enjoy the book and your vacation.
No need to reply.
Kindest regards,
Irene
posted by saratoga99 at 9:07 am (EST) on Sep 21, 2008
I don't know if you've read this but here's my essay on 9-11: Old Stoneface. Memories of New York
posted by moibibliomaniac at 9:02 pm (EST) on Sep 11, 2008
Congratulations! As the first person to request a book from the soon-to-be-liberated section of my library, I am happy to announce that you have won a copy of [The Zookeeper's Wife]. It is on its way.
Regards,
Irene
posted by saratoga99 at 1:29 pm (EST) on Sep 11, 2008
http://ny.bloomsburyauctions.com/detail/...
posted by moibibliomaniac at 4:19 pm (EST) on Sep 9, 2008
posted by saratoga99 at 11:31 am (EST) on Sep 8, 2008
Thanks so much for offering up your electric typewriter. It sounds darling, and I would have taken it, but this past weekend I came across one in a thirft store and snatched it up! So, I finally have a typewriter to use when feeling nostalgic, or when I need something authentically vintage in craft projects.
Hopefully you'll find a home for it soon, or decide to put it to good use on your own!
Thanks again,
Audrey
posted by Audacity at 10:06 am (EST) on Aug 28, 2008
Yes, there are a number of reference books. And the shelves groan ever louder. I collect slang dicts - though those I don't now have are far far beyond even the deepest recesses of my pockets. And just buy reference books. I have a couple coming out myelf in October, and then my 3-vol. 'life's work/mag.op' in about 15 months. What to do after that...
Best,
JG
posted by abecedary at 9:06 am (EST) on Aug 28, 2008
posted by Booksloth at 6:36 am (EST) on Aug 18, 2008
This should be it:
http://www.librarything.com/talktopic.ph...
posted by Booksloth at 10:58 am (EST) on Aug 16, 2008
I want one of those steamer gizmos! My 15 year old has decided that corn's fattening, so won't eat it so two ears in a steamer would work perfectly for my husband and me.
Karen
posted by karenmarie at 9:46 pm (EST) on Aug 14, 2008
posted by tjsjohanna at 7:17 pm (EST) on Aug 10, 2008
just wanted to say kudos!
kath
posted by mckait at 2:23 pm (EST) on Aug 8, 2008
posted by Fourpawz2 at 2:15 pm (EST) on Aug 7, 2008
posted by reading_fox at 4:41 am (EST) on Aug 7, 2008
What did you think about the last few Battlestar G episodes? Did you like the way they resolved things? Did you find it hard to believe that some of the people they chose as Cylons were not more upset by the realization? That was my first thought. But I guess it is true that as a species humans do tend to adjust to survive, but therein lies the problem, since they are not really human can I expect them to think in human terms at all? Quite a confusing blend of characters on the show, thus making each situation equally clever and mysterious. I simply love SciFi and the way it allows writers and others-(screenwriters, etc) to venture anywhere to fulfill their story lines. I'm listening to the Mists of Avalon right now, read by Davina Porter, one of my favorite readers, it's quite lovely in the way that it shows powerful yet vulnerable women and has a believable dose of magic, blending in the fairy folk to make it both charming and suspenseful because of the mix of the more mischievous magic and the more predictable human behavior. MB
posted by mmignano11 at 12:18 pm (EST) on Jul 7, 2008
posted by MSKi23 at 12:39 pm (EST) on Jun 30, 2008
posted by aarti at 12:41 pm (EST) on Jun 29, 2008
posted by Busifer at 5:22 pm (EST) on Jun 24, 2008
http://tinyurl.com/4y4qds
posted by moibibliomaniac at 12:06 pm (EST) on Jun 23, 2008
posted by MrsLee at 2:54 pm (EST) on Jun 13, 2008
4-5 lb. Pork loin roast
Fresh ground pepper, Kosher salt (to taste)
Marinade:
1 can cola (Coke, RC, Pepsi, etc.)
1 T. dried sage
1 T. ground pepper
1 T. chili powder
1 t. comino
6 T. lime juice
1 T. lime zest
1 onion, minced
2 T. peanut oil
Sauce:
leftover marinade
2 c. cherries, no pits
½ c. brown sugar
¼ c. balsamic vinegar
¼ t. cayenne
1/3 tablet Mexican chocolate
Pinch of nutmeg
Salt, to taste
Put roast in plastic zip bag with all marinade ingredients, mix, set in refrigerator for 3-6 hours, turning several times.
About 1 ½ hours before dinner, place roast on a rack in a shallow pan (reserve marinade), fat side up, sprinkle with fresh ground pepper and kosher salt. Preheat oven to 500 degrees. Put roast in oven, reduce heat to 325 degrees and roast until meat is 140 degrees, basting with sauce every 10 minutes after the first 45 minutes. Turn roast and baste the bottom at least once. Takes approximately 1-1 ½ hours.
Sauce:
Put marinade into saucepan, bring to a boil and simmer 5 minutes. Add cherries and all other ingredients, simmer about 15 minutes. I used a hand held blender to puree all ingredients. If you don’t have one, carefully blend in a glass blender, or just mash with a masher. It will be a bit lumpy, but that’s O.K. When roast has been in oven ½ hour, begin basting with the sauce. You may need to adjust the sweet to sour ratio of your sauce to your taste.
The most tedious part for me was pitting the cherries, but I think frozen or possibly even canned cherries would work.
posted by MrsLee at 10:13 am (EST) on Jun 13, 2008
I'm glad you find my library interesting. You seem to have lots of history and speculative fiction in yours, so I'm adding you to mine as well, I could always use the recommendations!
- Meghan
posted by littlebookworm at 12:55 pm (EST) on Jun 2, 2008
There's plenty still to do, and probably other jobs if you wish to procrastinate some more!
posted by reading_fox at 4:27 pm (EST) on May 28, 2008
Thankfully, the only wastewater disposal regulations I have to know about are Colorado's. Which are bad enough.
But very little of my leisure reading has anything to do with the type of thing I do for work, which is mostly reference publishing--although I might argue that everything has to do with reference and many factoids come in handy sooner or later!
You know, if I had to read professionally it would probably cut back quite a bit on my reading for pleasure. Perhaps not; I suppose it would depend on what it was. I do have to read work-related stuff; most recently The Environmental Chemistry of Molybdenum and Chemical Deicers and the Environment and it was rather tough slogging.
I adore Lindsey Davis, though--I'd have more of her works listed, but lost the bottom shelf's worth of books, including a bunch of hers, from all my bookcases in a flood two summers ago. Irritatingly enough, most of what I lost were the ones I collected but hadn't yet read. On the other hand, through this site I've discovered BookMooch, so I'm repopulating my library at a great rate! (And so cheaply.)
I haven't read the Marcus Didius Falco books in order, unfortunately. I just picked up The Accusers on sale at B&N a couple of days ago but haven't read it yet. Usually I get mysterys and suchlike from the library rather than buying them, but I've kept all of hers. I have yet to try BookMooch; I must investigate it.
I'm grieved by your flood; I hate to see books damaged. OTOH Colorado - at least outside the river valleys - is fairly immune to flooding. I have had a couple of books eaten by the cat, though - if I leave them on the floor he'll devour the covers of paperbacks. Must like coated paper, I suppose.
posted by setnahkt at 1:46 am (EST) on May 26, 2008
Not to worry; I mean, aren't Lindsay Davis and MPM just as much history as most non-fiction? I had read lots of Roman history but it wasn't until I read the Gordianus the Finder series by Steven Saylor that I realized the same person could live through the Dictatorship of Sulla, the Servile Rebellion, and the Civil War.
My particular history interests tend to vary. I went through an American Civil War period and a Tudor period and a WWI period. I seem to be doing Tsarist Russia right now. It's generally just a coincidence - pick up one book, then happen to see another on more or less the same era, and so on. It has absolutely nothing to do with my work - environmental compliance - it's just relaxing and interesting.
posted by setnahkt at 1:09 am (EST) on May 26, 2008
-setnahkt
posted by setnahkt at 10:41 pm (EST) on May 18, 2008
I am new to this so bare with me...I saw where you were looking for new authors to replace Agatha Christie. Have you read anything by Margaret Yorke? She is a British author. I have read almost everything she has written, and every one has an unexpected twist for an ending! They are fairly short, quick reads. I have purchased mine first thru used books sales and then from Amazon. I think there are four I haven't been able to get and last I checked they were selling for around $200.00 on Amazon. Don't quite know why so much, but I won't be purchasing them. Most of the ones I have gotten are paperbacks, some hardbacks, a lot of copies pulled from libraries. Most around $10.00 or less. Hope this interests you.
Leah
posted by leahboyer at 8:27 pm (EST) on May 14, 2008
posted by moibibliomaniac at 7:01 am (EST) on May 3, 2008
posted by lilyfyrestorm at 2:54 pm (EST) on May 1, 2008
~Emily
posted by lilyfyrestorm at 2:29 pm (EST) on May 1, 2008
posted by laytonwoman3rd at 11:29 am (EST) on Apr 30, 2008
posted by laytonwoman3rd at 7:43 am (EST) on Apr 30, 2008
posted by ljreader at 2:34 am (EST) on Apr 22, 2008
posted by Garp83 at 9:20 pm (EST) on Apr 15, 2008
I have some second hand experience with the flooding problem. My mother went through Hurricane Andrew in Miami. She had her books in sheds and they leaked. She told me she threw away at least 1,000 to 1,500 books. She lives by herself and has at least made up by now for her losses. I am fairly attached to my library and would be badly hurt if it were destroyed.
Bill Rucker
posted by wildbill at 8:13 am (EST) on Apr 15, 2008
I want to give you my thanks and appreciation for the nice comment you left for me. I have been at LT a little longer than you and I am sure you will find more of the same "ah-ha" moments and fun and pleasant surprises of all kinds here. I signed up for the Early Reviewers and have received two books with another on the way since last December.
I've been an avid reader since the single digits and that energy has blossomed nicely on LT. Not just pollyanna moments either. I was discussing the fact that I had stolen two books from a library and was confronted in a post with the not so cute consequences that act had for others.
I've always wanted to write, but I never finish anything. History is my fave and now I'm focusing on essays. I trust we will cross paths again.
Bill Rucker (wildbill)
posted by wildbill at 8:23 pm (EST) on Apr 13, 2008
I moved to SF in January of '07 from Maine - I love it so very much, I just wish I had more time to explore it! Ah well, some day...
And I have no idea how it got to be 4am, but it happens *a lot* when playing on LT... Time Warp? :)
posted by aglaia531 at 4:14 am (EST) on Apr 10, 2008
posted by elisa.rolle at 2:03 pm (EST) on Mar 31, 2008
posted by alaskabookworm at 10:13 pm (EST) on Mar 29, 2008
posted by Booksloth at 12:55 pm (EST) on Mar 29, 2008
posted by Booksloth at 7:52 am (EST) on Mar 29, 2008
posted by Schmerguls at 7:27 am (EST) on Mar 27, 2008
posted by reading_fox at 5:03 am (EST) on Mar 17, 2008
My plan is to complete the John MacDonald collection. Being a parrothead, it's hard to avoid the Travis McGee series, given that Jimmy Buffett sings of him in "Incommunicado." That song was the main reason I bought my first McGee book. A Flash of Green isn't a McGee book, but if it's as good as anything else Mr. MacDonald wrote during his life, it will be well worth the time.
posted by phinz at 8:00 am (EST) on Mar 14, 2008
Which of Janny's books are you mooching?
posted by reading_fox at 7:14 am (EST) on Mar 14, 2008
posted by frogbelly at 12:39 am (EST) on Mar 14, 2008
7img src="x"7
where the x is the direct link to where it is saved on photobucket. Also, in the above code use an opening and closing < and > in place of the 7s. It wouldnt have shown up on this message if I'd put it in the correct way.
I know this sounds weird but it will make more sense when you play around on photobucket a bit.
good luck.
posted by frogbelly at 11:18 pm (EST) on Mar 13, 2008
posted by reading_fox at 5:15 am (EST) on Mar 13, 2008
Mysteries - I think I have about nearly everything written by Dick Francis, and I also like Ngaio Marsh, and for the very strange, the series of mysteries written by Dorothy Dunnett.
The closest thing to a mystery I wrote (fantasy of course) was To Ride Hell's Chasm, but it morphed into intrigue then action/adventure by the ending.
Other writers here on LT that I like to read are Sharon Lee and Steve Miller (their Liaden universe is quite splendid) and Kristine Smith. Both of these write SF.
posted by JannyWurts at 7:09 pm (EST) on Feb 28, 2008