Random books from kassetra's library
The Hand-Sculpted House: A Practical and Philosophical Guide to Building a Cob Cottage: The Real Goods Solar Living Book by Ianto Evans
Sabine's Notebook: In Which the Extraordinary Correspondence of Griffin & Sabine Continues by Nick Bantock
Galactic Patrol (The Lensman Series, Book 3) by Edward E. Smith
Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
The Tale of Genji: Scenes from the Worlds First Novel (Illustrated Japanese Classics) by Murasaki Shikibu
Worlds Of Amano by Yoshitaka Amano
Pollen by Jeff Noon
Members with kassetra's books
Member connections
friends: arthurfrayn, PDExperiment626, SimonHaynes, zette
interesting libraries: arthurfrayn, clamairy, drneutron, Morphidae, PDExperiment626
LibraryThing authors: Evan Marshall (EvanMarshall), Simon Haynes (SimonHaynes), Shazzie (shazzie)
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Member: kassetra
CollectionsPsychology (16), Science Fiction (80), Fiction (1), Your library (407), Favorites (36), Wishlist (402), Languages (48), Serendipity (60), Currently reading (6), Cooking (15), Home Economics (49), Technical (5), All collections (581)
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Tagswishlist (402), fiction (206), science fiction (93), psychology (69), fairy tales (62), classics (61), serendipity (60), children's stories (60), recipes (60), language (59) — see all tags
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GroupsAustralian LibraryThingers, Banned Books, Bikes and Bicycles, Cycles, Cyclists and Bikers, Buddhism, Common Knowledge, WikiThing, HelpThing, Happy Heathens, National Novel Writing Month (Nanowrimo), Science!, The Green Dragon, Vegetarians and vegans — show all groups
Favorite authorsYoshitaka Amano, Wilhelmina Baird, Nick Bantock, Alfred Bester, Jorge Luis Borges, Buddha, Nichiren Daishonin, Liza Crihfield Dalby, Richard Dawkins, Daniel C. Dennett, Philip K. Dick, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Neil Gaiman, Aldous Huxley, Daisaku Ikeda, Franz Kafka, Eric A. Meyer, Rand Miller, Haruki Murakami, Jeff Noon, Philip Pullman, Thomas Pynchon, Ayn Rand, Rudy Rucker, Carl Sagan, E. E. Smith, Dave Thomas, J. R. R. Tolkien, Burton Watson, H. G. Wells (Shared favorites)
Favorite bookstoresBlackwell Oxford, Blackwell University Bookshop Brookes, Dalton's Books, Dymocks Books, Electric Shadows Bookshop, Galaxy Bookshop, Gilbert\'s Books, Impact Comics!, Oxford University Press Bookshop, Powell's City of Books, Smiths Alternative Bookshop, Waterstone's Oxford
Favorite librariesAustralian National University (J.B. Chifley Library)
About meFor someone that loves rain and fog, I sure picked the wrong place to live. I was supposed to end up on the dreariest coast imaginable where no one comes to experience the biting cold and zero visibility. But no! I ended up not on a solitary soggy beach, but in a city in Australia. This is the opposite of rain and fog!
It's not quite exactly my fault though, you see. There was this mathematician... and well... he more than makes up for the craptacular sunny weather. I'll endure the endless bottles of spf 100+, the need for near-black sunglasses and sun hats for a while longer though. Hopefully not too much longer or else love really will make me BLIND. Too much sun! Hisssssss!
I'm a student in Psychology, so that occupies a lot of my time (wait for the groan from any other students nearby looking at their current work loads) preventing me from fully complaining about the bright orange pain orb in the sky (and to think, someday I'll be helping people with THEIR neuroses! HAHAHAHAHA!)
The other part of my time is devoted to stuffed animals. I have... a few... now... and I ravenously collect a specific brand of stuffed animals like a squirrel gathering nuts for winter. I also get a new animal whenever I go somewhere new. Appropriate, don't you think? New place, new animal... oh yeah, makes sense to me. I have favourites, but I can't say that too loudly, or else the rest of them will hear and then they'll feel bad, and I just can't afford group therapy for all of them. Have you seen the going rates nowadays?! Having even 1/4 of them hear me say that would break the bank in therapy costs...not that the financial crises need any help breaking the banks! One of my current favs is 'Huggy' the stuffed Koala backpack. Currently he's going out and about with me wherever I go.
The last part of my time is of course devoted to reading and writing. I think I'm getting pickier in the new books that I buy to read for fun though. I've noticed that I have next-to-no patience for a great many of the published science fiction books that I've been checking out lately. If I roll my eyes on the first page, it's not coming home with me. The amount of science fiction that has come home with me lately is nil. A simple google search would show some of these authors that their technological/scientific knowledge is *snirk* lacking *snirk*, to be polite.
Of course, there are always more fun morbid accounts of abnormal psychology to read, so honestly, is there anything that can really top gobsmacking human behaviour?
About my libraryWell, in an effort to simplify my life, my library is taking a beating. I have been dumping books that I can't stand, books I really don't ever want to read again, and books where I have just lost interest.
Let's see here, since I've gone to vegan / raw vegan... I've dumped most of my vegetarian cookbooks, and even some of the other regional cookbooks as well. What I have left (and it is growing by raw recipes heaps and bounds), can be found by clicking on the inappropriately named: Cooking Collection.
Also, since I'm no longer researching Pagan and Wiccan structures, all of those books have gone to my Wiccan aunt, who lost her library to a horde of mice during a cross-country move. That made her happy and I didn't feel too bad about giving them to someone I knew! So what I have left in this department are all my Buddhist books, which can be found under Buddhism.
And that brings me to my subject of study, psychology. I'm in the midst of redoing my personal reference and textbook library, so this is looking a bit pale and thin -- but nevertheless, here is my bookcase full of Psychology books.
As I was clearing out my storage unit, I discovered that I had book after book that I *truly* couldn't stand and possibly considered hating with a passion. Wouldn't you know it but all of these books were under Science Fiction. Seriously, there were enough in there that I debated just tossing the box onto the street, near a burning fire, or off the pier. But then I came to my senses and recognised that I still had books in there I didn't want smashed, burned, and/or waterlogged. This is what's left of the former shelf-eater: Science Fiction. Now, there are STILL some books in there that need to be flushed down the toi-I mean, given to charity, and I will deal with them once they're out of their new storage unit. *I'm looking at you GIBSON!* Honestly, I don't even know why they call it science fiction anymore, it's not like it has anything close to thoughtful science in it. Why not just call it Technofantasy?
Everything else is either boring, from my childhood, or I can't be bothered to remember right now. Eventually it will all be sorted and cleaned... but at the moment, doing everything a single book at a time, clicking, waiting for it to reload, rinsing, repeating is driving me into user interface design convulsions, and so it may not happen for a while.
One of these days though...
Homepagehttp://rubydolcevita.blogspot.com
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Member sinceSep 1, 2007
Currently readingPsychology : Australian and New Zealand edition by Drew Westen
Biology by Neil A. Campbell
Consciousness Explained by Daniel C. Dennett
Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon by Daniel C. Dennett
Freedom Evolves by Daniel C. Dennett
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You mentioned in the chocolate thread that cocoa butter can be used as a cream or butter replacement and I was wondering if you know of any books or websites where I can learn more about this? (I searched and failed, my google-fu is weak today.) I recently had to give up many foods, including cheese (*sigh*) and dairy and finding substitutes that I like for some ingredients is proving...difficult, if not impossible.
Thanks!
Blue
posted by bluesalamanders at 9:43 am (EST) on Nov 21, 2009
And I wish you much much happiness with your mathematician. I married the world's best math teacher (seriously - the man could teach anybody), and me with a galloping math-phobia. We were married for 34 years before he was taken from me, and in that time I didn't learn to love math, but I did learn what 7 times 8 was. I loved him a lot, and for some reason known only to God, he loved me. Math folk are very special people.
Good luck in your battle with that nasty old sun. I wish you fog and low-hanging clouds. Mary Lou
posted by MerryMary at 1:30 am (EST) on Nov 21, 2009
Random suggestions: I would suggest my favourite author CJ Cherryh, but she's more of a no-science SF writer looking at future cultures, so possibly not for you, Cyteen has a bit on cloning. Alisatir Reynolds - everything he's written contains some science, and maybe Stephen Donaldson's Gap series, which is science containing SF unlike all his other fantasy works.
Do you have something against fantasy?
posted by reading_fox at 11:56 am (EST) on Jun 17, 2009
The really funny thing is, I actually was not interested in any sort of discussion. I made a side remark in relation to something entirely different. Something like "evolution is not a satisfying explanation of adaptation and variation." I had previously mentioned my Christian faith, and everyone seemed to assume I had a theological basis for the initial statement.
Every comment I made was an effort to explain my difficulties. Which BTW, I still have.
But I never once asked anyone to explain or once challenged evolutionary science. I did suggest another thread be started where I would ask for explanations. It just seemed too off topic. It was recommended that I join evolve, which I did tonight.
Jim accused me of repeating the same line of questioning, when in my mind I never asked the question even once.
Every attempt to explain evolution to me was generous, but unsolicited.
The exercise was beneficial to me though. And especially so since it introduced me to you.
I am right now trying to find more science/math groups to lurk. Saw your name on a couple. Hope to read more of your comments. I will probably stay back. Really did not expect to find the level of expertise that is available here. I really have no business commenting on some of these subjects in a discussion with professionals, but I very much intend to listen in.
Richard
posted by richardbsmith at 9:33 pm (EST) on Jun 4, 2009
Went off list, looked like the exchange was going off topic a little. I understand what type of plasma your hubby works with. For some reason my thought went straight to blood. Not sure exactly what he is studying, but solar science is fascinating to a lay person like me.
I am in my old age trying to catch up in mathematics so I can delve into the physics of cosmology. My goal is to be able to follow the math involved - using a pencil and legal pad. :)
What I really found though was that mathematics is extremely fascinating, in itself.
Anyway appreciate your willingness and efforts to cure my shortcomings in grasping the helping hand of undirected mutations.
posted by richardbsmith at 7:51 pm (EST) on Jun 4, 2009
posted by hfglen at 9:21 am (EST) on May 1, 2008
In my mind's eye I see the perfect Xmas gift for everyone I know ........
posted by arthurfrayn at 10:52 pm (EST) on Apr 3, 2008
The wife and I moved from Louisiana to Michigan about three months after we got married so that I could go to grad school. Best decision we ever made. We really learned to lean on each other and separate from our individual families, and it's held us in good stead for the last 23 years. Best of luck to you and PDE!
sorry dad, I'm less mechanically inclined than a blind rabbit, as well as being a total klutz!
I'll keep you away from my spacecraft then...8^}
posted by drneutron at 11:26 am (EST) on Apr 3, 2008
I've always thought of sf from that era like comfort food. Something that's probably not the healthiest around, but sure does make you feel good and ain't gonna kill you. Besides, I always thought Doc managed to put some fairly modern messages about diversity into the stories - tolerance and understanding of alien cultures, acceptance of species different from humans as equals, even his women characters seem real instead of cardboard cutouts like some stories of the time. First time I ever saw my last name in print - I'm one of the Kinnison clan...
Admittedly we've just recently met, but I think you'd give anyone trying to drag you off a pretty good run for their money...8^}
posted by drneutron at 7:37 am (EST) on Apr 3, 2008
Jim (AKA drneutron)
posted by drneutron at 2:35 pm (EST) on Mar 29, 2008
posted by PDExperiment626 at 10:26 am (EST) on Mar 3, 2008
I disagree in the particular, but wow, do I agree with the general case -- I too am finding more and more stuff that I SHOULD like, but which simply doesn't work for me.
- Bob
posted by AsYouKnow_Bob at 2:13 am (EST) on Mar 3, 2008
posted by arthurfrayn at 1:47 pm (EST) on Feb 17, 2008
Be warned. We are a ROWDY bunch. :o)
posted by clamairy at 10:36 am (EST) on Feb 7, 2008