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Archive 2 |
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What Is This Place?
This is an archive. If you've
just discovered my site, perhaps you'll want to read about how it
has evolved. Please return to the
Introduction page for recent news & updates. These entries
are the entries from 1/2/05 to 10/21/05.
News and Updates about Website and Books:
10/21/05:
I did some more work on the
Norton collection, and also learned some more about the
Dilbert books.
In other news, I've just made $93.84 re-selling 40 graphic
novels on eBay. Go me!
This calls for celebration, i.e., book-buying. I've
ordered a Roger Zelazny omnibus called The Second Chronicles
of Amber as well as [finally!] a 1980's edition of Edward
Eager's Seven-Day Magic. Sadly, my Zits comic strip
book from PaperbackSwap got lost in the mail. Odd. That's
the third comic strip book that hasn't made it!
Meanwhile, a large upheaval of site implementation is being
pondered. Oracle database? XML + XSLT? My own
domain name? What does the future hold? |
[2nd chron] [7day] |
10/6/05:
I did some work on the
Norton collection. Scanning my Norton books put me
over the 800-cover mark! |
800+ |
9/24/05:
I have now upgraded all the remaining .htm author pages
to .shtml (meaning, now they all have a white paper background
and functional menu at left). Except Andre Norton.
My Norton collection needs work... |
.htm
->
.shtml |
9/18/05:
On 9/10, bought a bunch of books in Cranbury at the
street festival thing and at the Cranbury Bookworm. These
books are now posted, but I have a handful of other new books to
scan and post. Most notably, Chris B. retrieved two new
foreign editions of Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
during his summer journeying, the Czech edition and the Dutch
edition. |

Bookworm
[wrong season!] |
9/17/05:
My
eBay experiment is not going as well as I'd hoped -- I'm now
listing some books on
Half.com instead. Or not, as the case may be.I've recently discovered the power of the
Library of
Congress catalog. (Part of my new job involves sending
paperwork to the LC, so I'm more familiar with it than I was.)
It has a more complete listing of Scott Adams's Dilbert books
than Wikipedia. Thus, my
Scott Adams page is
much improved.
|

Library of Congress ceiling on postage stamp |
9/1/05:
The store is dead, long live the store! [Sound
familiar? It's a reprise.]I completed a rite of passage
today -- I sold a book on eBay! Many people have bought
something on eBay, and many of them talk about selling
something. But now I've gone and done it. I've
climbed the learning curve. This leaves me [perhaps
overly] optimistic about selling other books there. So now
the store
on my Verizon site is really dead. Please check for my
inventory here, here, and here:
|

Cha ching! |
8/25/05:
The store is dead, long live the store!What do I mean
by that? Well, I've discovered what I think is a great way
of getting rid of books I don't want. I have posted books
to
www.paperbackswap.com, where every book request I fulfill
and ship earns me one free book credit. There are several
websites that do this sort of thing, but PaperbackSwap seems to
have the most features and the largest inventory. The
system is easy to use. Plus, the users are rather active.
Within a couple of hours of posting 23 books, I got requests for
5 of them!
I've put my movies on
www.titletrader.com, but I'm not as enthusiastic about that
site. |

 |
8/6/05:
I've made some more book purchases! A buy.com
order came in, and I bought some while on vacation in Seattle.
The overall effect is that I've filled in some series holes.
Yea! And I've topped 700 cover scans.Buy.com
- The Witches of Bailiwick (Beatrice Bailey 5) by
Sandra Forrester
- The Witches of Winged-Horse Mountain
(Beatrice
Bailey 4) by Sandra Forrester
- How Are You Peeling?
by Freymann Saxton
- The Story of Dr. Dolittle by Hugh Lofting
- Chronicles of Chrestomanci II by Diana Wynne Jones
Twice Sold Tales (near U of WA)
- Dragondrums by Anne McCaffrey
- Stop Stealing Sheep
by Erik Spiekermann and E. M.
Ginger
- Beyond the Burning Lands by John Christopher
Magus near (U of WA)
- The Little White Horse by Elizabeth Goudge
Half Price Books (near U of WA)
- Stowaway to the Mushroom Planet by Eleanor Cameron
- Asimov on Numbers by Isaac Asimov
- The Beggar Queen
by Lloyd Alexander
- The Fairy's Return
by Gail Carson Levine
- The Fairy's Mistake
by Gail Carson Levine
BLMF Bookshop (in Pike Place Market)
- All About Language by Mario Pei
In Seattle I also bought some wheat pennies and winged
liberty (Mercury) dimes.
I just read Bored of the Rings, a parody I didn't
truly enjoy. It and some other books have just migrated to
the store
page. However, there are two quotes funny enough to
post.
Much more enjoyable was Jane Austen's Mansfield Park,
the audio version of which I have now finished listening to.
I now have Emma and Sense and Sensibility checked
out, and am listening to Emma.
|

Books to Sell |
Updates to the site include more on the
movies and
movie books pages. The
sci-fi/fantasy pages lost some books to the store, and gained
some from recent purchases. A handful of books too large
for the scanner have been added to the art and architecture page
and elsewhere. |
 |





~~~



~~~

~~~
700+ |
7/18/05:
I have lots of news, although the relevant updates are mostly
still over the horizon.
In no particular order:
- I went to Barnes & Noble on Friday for their Harry Potter
release party - it was amazing to see all the people.
I'm glad I went, even though I didn't have to buy a book in
person. On Saturday I received in the mail (and read)
the copy of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince that
my brother ordered for me. The "death of a major
character" was sad, but logical, come to think of it.
- I've recently bought books at these bookstores:
- Half Price Books in Montgomery
- Princeton Public Library
- Booktrader of Hamilton
- Book Swap in North Brunswick
- I won a yet-to-be-received "gold" medal at the
regional race on June 19.
- I've progressed in my cable knitting project.
- My new job as Associate Production Editor seems to
be going well, and the new Sales Assistant started today, so
this week I'll pass the torch.
- I've re-discovered Jane Austen's novels. I've
thus far checked out, listened to, and enjoyed Northanger
Abbey and Persuasion, and have started listening to
Mansfield Park. Although customs and manners have
changed, human emotion and human silliness seem not to
have done so...
Click for a nice
quote from Mansfield Park.
- My woefully undocumented coin collection has
been augmented by a recent visit to Trenton Stamp and Coin.
I still need a 1950-D nickel, though!
- Another book for the lost and found list: a book about a
modern teenage boy in a purple shirt who gets stuck in a
primitive valley. I did a search (well, several
searches!) on some plot keywords, and found the book described
on an Amazon page. It's called A Time of Darkness
by Sherryl Jordan, and it's out of print. I still had a
copy on my shelf at home, though. (Good old packrat
habits!) I re-read it, and it's just like I remember. .
. except that I forgot the punch line, that seemingly
insignificant actions can change the world.
- I've decided Mary Pope Osborne's Magic Tree House
series is cool. I read the first book, and it was
very cute. Plus, the series is designed to instill a
love of books, reading, and imagination. I haven't
bought any - there are more than 30 volumes, and they're $5
each. I'll watch for them at rummage sales, where
they'll be $0.50 -- that's 90% off!
|






|
6/30/05:
I've improved the organization of my online book/movie store.
Go see! |
|
6/24/05:
New stuff!From Amazon
- 50th Anniversary Edition of Edward Eager's Half Magic
- T. A. Barron's The Great Tree of Avalon: Child of the
Dark Prophecy
(After I read it, I'll be able to read the Avalon book I
got at BEA>)
- Shelley Duvall's Faerie Tale Theatre (4-disc set)
(I've watched 5 out of 26 so far.)
From Elsewhere
- Of Two Minds by Carol Matas and Perry Nodelman
(After I read it, I'll be able to read More Minds.)
- Gryphon in Glory by Andre Norton
- Wizard at Work by Vivian Vande Velde
- Rowan of Rin by Emily Rodda
(After I read it, I'll be able to read Rowan and the
Travelers.)
- Warriors: Into the Wild by Erin Hunter
(Start of a new series.)
Coming in the mail:
- Zits Unzipped by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
(Zits Sketchbook 5)
- Rhymes with Orange: A Cartoon Collection by Hilary
Price
(Neener, neener, neener! I only
paid $10.00, but I'm seeing it listed for at least $50, if not
$100 or $200!)
|



 |
6/11/05:
I am the proud owner of a new copy of Harry Potter and the
Prisoner of Azkaban in Japanese, purchased for me in Japan.
(Thank you, Hobors!)I'm also the somewhat sheepish owner of
another double handful of $0.50 paperbacks, thanks to a sale I
attended in Freehold on Friday. Now, where to put them?
I got my copy of Harry Frankfurt's NYT bestseller signed at
the Princeton Barnes & Noble on the evening of Thursday June
9th. The author gave a short talk on his book to a
healthy-sized audience, and answered questions.
I am looking into buying some computer parts from Tigerdirect.
I will probably soon buy a pair of USB speakers and a USB hub
(~$20 including shipping), but I'm also investigating buying a
"bare bones kit." It'd essentially be a new
computer, but will cost less than a new Dell system. The
package I looked at had a tower and a motherboard with
power supply, processor, fan, Ethernet, sound, memory, slots for
expanding, and slots for the bits I'm not replacing (floppy
drive, CD drive, 2 hard drives, graphics card). It cost
about $135. Not bad for a "whole" new machine! It'll
have to wait, though: right now I need the money more than the
machine. |

[In Japanese!]

[Signed!] |
6/4/05:
If you're here because you've typed in the ridiculously long URL
on a little
orange bookmark, welcome to the site and thanks for
bothering! If not, you're still welcome. Either way,
feel free to drop me an e-mail (using the link on the menu) and
give me your honest opinion of the site.I am so grateful to
the authors who signed books at the signing tables at BEA.
I don't watch television, and I seldom spend money on music, so
celebrity actors and singers don't mean much to me... but
authors do! Authors are my celebrities -- they create the
worlds I live in. For that, many thanks. It was
worth the lines.
signed |
signed
author
| signed |
signed

signed |
signed |
signed
author |
signed
author
Thanks also to the authors who signed books for me at the
publisher tables, and the other folks who spoke to me and gave
me samples and flyers. I think most folks staffing
publisher booths ignore attendees with exhibitor badges, since
publishers are there to do business with booksellers, not with
random employees of other publishers. So thanks to the
folks who didn't ignore me! I discovered two new genres
thanks to them: graphic novels (read one this morning, called
Ultra) and romance novels (which I haven't read yet).
Well, ok, my co-worker Dan gets some credit for introducing me
to graphic novels, since I followed him to those booths.
all signed!

not signed
And I accidentally discovered the publisher of some of my
favorite origami books, Kodansha. (I folded a simple
Tomoko Fuse box with paper they had at the booth.) Looking
through their catalog, it seems they sell many other interesting
books, too!
Thanks also to "the Aldrunkles": Margret got me The
Snowflake from her former employer, and her husband drove us
home from the train station.

Yes, I did lug
all these books
around Javits! Can you believe it? My body is not
thanking me today for loading so much onto it yesterday.
A footnote: Harry Frankfurt's book is now (or is about
to be) the #1 NYT bestseller in hardcover non-fiction.
We've now done 10 printings, totaling over 200,000 copies.
You can bet there was some gloating happening at the Princeton
University Press booth!

Some of the book categories on the site have
been re-arranged a bit.
Miscellaneous
has become three separate pages:
Miscellaneous
Fiction,
Miscellaneous Non-Fiction, and
Poetry &
Drama. The Site Map and
the menu on the left reflect these changes. |


|
6/2/05:
I've been promoted! On July 5, I will cease being the
Sales Assistant and become an Associate Production Editor
specializing in LaTeX manuscripts. This is perfect: the
production department wanted someone not scared of code and
equations, and I wanted to learn some new skills. I think
production will suit my personality more than acquisitions
would, since acquisitions is concerned with networks of
potential authors and production is concerned with preparing and
polishing the manuscripts elicited by acquisitions.
Tomorrow I'll be at BEA,
Book
Expo America, along with half the world. This is
the trade show for book publishing in the US. This
year it's happening at the Javits Center in New York City, which
is why I get to go. I'm really excited that I'll get to
see some of the authors whose books I buy, read and love.
As far as my site is concerned, various pages have been
tweaked. And I'm in the middle of scanning another shelf's
worth of books. Take a stroll around and see if you can
tell the difference. In particular, you might notice that
I fixed the
comic strips page, which had some height and width problems. |
 |
5/29/05:
With the addition of the books I scanned today, the site has
topped 600 volumes! |
600+ |
5/25/05:
June, despite being four letters long and starting with J, is
not July. In particular, June 16 is a month earlier than
July 16, and will undoubtedly be a perfectly normal Thursday,
whereas July 16 is the Saturday when the new Harry Potter book
comes out. Therefore why oh why, did I mistake the
one for the other? Now I'm done reading all five of the
preceding novels a month and a half early. Nuts.In the
meantime, adventures in hardware repair are going badly. Despite
the aid of some really amazing stuff called First Try, I was unable
to remove the fifth and final screw which attaches
my fried circuit
board to my old secondary hard drive. I have bought a new circuit
board which should render the drive functional again, but I have to
get the fried circuit board off first, don't I? On the happier
side, I ordered and received a copy of A Living Architecture,
and am pleased with my purchase. I saw Star Wars Episode III
and didn't like it. More opinion
here. |

"First Try (R) resists slipping for fast easy removal." |
5/8/05:
This weekend I went to a rummage sale at the nearby Unitarian
church. For $4.00 I acquired ten books, two of which I was
very, very pleased to find. Those two are at right. One is
the only Ruth Chew story I hadn't read yet, The Secret
Tree-House. The other is the prequel to John
Christopher's Tripods trilogy When the Tripods Came.
(I already owned a copy, but it didn't match the copies of
the Tripods books I already owned.) I would eventually
have bought these books for $10 or more a piece, if I had not
been lucky enough to find them yesterday for 50 cents!
This is why I go to rummage sales. They represent market
inefficiencies.Another birthday present has trickled in: I am
now editing my website with Microsoft FrontPage 2003.
(Previously, I was using the 2002 version.) Thanks is due
to my friend Dan at Microsoft for this useful upgrade. |

 |
5/1/05:
The recent library sale in West Windsor was somewhat
disappointing, but I found one treasure: the beautifully
illustrated book of myths shown at right.I have also bought
some Harry Potter paperbacks: I will be re-reading them starting
today, so that when the newest installment arrives in June, I'll
be all up on the story.
I have added some books to the site today, in particular to the
somewhat neglected
Reference page.
There's a book I'm coveting called A Living Architecture. There are many books
on Wright, but this book shows the work of Wright's Taliesin
Fellowship architects -- people with vision similar to Wright
who have carried on his work. Flipping through it, I got the
impression that this book contained interesting,
not-so-well-known, appealing buildings of all sorts.
I have decided to make my own Princeton Restaurants page.
Stay tuned. |
 |
4/24/05:
I have organized my
Love of Language
page into four sections: Popular Narrative, Etymology/Factoids,
Reference/How-To, and Scholarly. For a long time I had
been trying to sort these books logically, and I think this
scheme works. |
 |
4/23/05:
I've updated my
speed skating
page, with information on my progress and on a cool book,
Reflections in the Ice (the autobiography of Derek Parra, an
Olympic speedskater).I've updated my
knitting page too; go
see!
I got two new Harry Potter books for my birthday:
- Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone in Ancient
Greek (Thanks Aquinas!)
- Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban in Italian
(Thanks Hobors!)
Well, three new Harry Potter books, if you count the fact
that my brother Charlie ordered Harry Potter 6 for me, so that
I'll get it when it comes out. (Thanks Charlie!)
I was also given D'Aulaires' Book of Greek Myths.
(Thanks Chris!)
I have altered the cellpadding and cellspacing of my
website's tables so that my pages look decent in Netscape!
I had been meaning to do that for a while. And, having
decided that Nvu was the cause of my earlier technical
difficulties, I've re-installed Netscape on my home computer for
testing purposes. Now, if only I could get Netscape to
stop rendering table borders with ugly beveled edges... |


 |
3/27/05:
I have now scanned and listed the Bryn Mawr books,
plus about 20 more that were lying around. Look for newly
listed (and mostly unread) titles in the following categories:
|
 |
3/26/05:
I have now fixed the sound problems created by the
free software I downloaded. I spent some quality time on
the phone with a couple of Microsoft Support Professionals, with
the result that I did a very simple system restore, which, very
simply, restored my system. Whew!
I have a new fledgling page where I will put random
notes on language.
On that page, you will find my musings on English etymology,
romance language cognates, grammatical conundrums, pet peeves
and good clean word play. Enjoy, if you're that sort; if
not, avoid like the plague, (just as you would a cliché like
that one). |

Noises are back!Not that I have working
speakers to hear them with. |
3/24/05:
The Bryn Mawr Book Sale was great! I bought
30 books and 3
videos for $59.I was exploring new software for editing
and testing my website in the interest of compatibility. I
downloaded a WYSIWYG editor (Nvu) and the browser Netscape.
Naturally, one of these programs messed up some sound files
belonging to other applications, and now Outlook
beeps when I get mail instead of playing the "new mail" noise,
and my FTP software doesn't make any noises at all.
Disconcerting and completely un-called-for. So I
uninstalled both. But that didn't fix the problem.
There's one problem I think I could fix right away, having to
do with the esthetics of my website. I could save my magic
menu file as a .txt file rather than a full-blown .shtml file.
Netscape doesn't like it when the menu header shows up in a file
that already has a header. (Kaylee, I need that in
Captain Dummy Talk.) What I'm saying relates to the
fact that my tables don't have the correct spacing around the
edges when viewed in Netscape - everything is flush against the
surrounding box. I'm going to make it so there's a margin. |

Nvu+

Netscape
=

No Noises! |
3/20/05:
I have added movie scans to the
Movie Books page and the
Movies page. I have
added mini-dictionaries to the
Foreign
Language books page. |
 |
3/19/05:
I've now topped 500 books on the site! That
means over 500 individual cover scans are now available for your
viewing pleasure. The new ones are mostly on the sadly
neglected King
Arthur page. What's funny to me is that it seems to be
mostly Americans writing about the King Arthur legend.
I've made this intro page shorter by archiving entries from
2004. Visit the archive by clicking
here.
By the way, there's a Book Sale in Princeton Junction April
26 - 30 at West Windsor Library (Wed, Thu 10-9, Fri, Sat 10-5,
Sun noon-4 ). But first, coming next week is the Bryn Mawr
book sale... Yea! |
500+ |
3/14/05:
Today, Nancy Springer books four and five magically
arrived! I managed to read Sue Monk Kidd's A Secret
Life of Bees first. It doesn't belong to one of "my"
genres, but I enjoyed it anyway - the main character's narration
was pleasingly whimsical and honest. There was less
technical stuff about bees than I was expecting - the plot was
not nearly as burdened with bee lore as Moby Dick is with
whale lore. I was satisfied with the ending, which could
have sent the characters down any number of unpleasant paths,
and didn't.
Meanwhile in another part of town...
A Princeton University Press editor was overheard to remark
that "this must be the first time in human history that the
demand for bulls**t has exceeded the supply." He was
talking about Princeton University Press's bestselling book,
On Bulls**t by Harry G. Frankfurt, which has been out of
stock off and on since it was published.
It's currently #32 on the New York Times Bestselling
Hardcover Nonfiction list. We will soon have an
unprecedented 120,000 copies in print! The printing and
reprinting arrangements, to say nothing of the publicity
surrounding this book, have kept folks at the press busy and
giggling for weeks now. Frankfurt made a dignified
appearance on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, and has been
taped to appear on 60 minutes.
What? You haven't bought a copy yet?! I just
purchased mine yesterday, when I found out that the latest batch
shipping from the warehouse was made with black cloth and red
stamping (rather than tan cloth and green, red, black, or blue
stamping).
To purchase copies for yourself and your 87 best friends
and/or least favorite politicians, head on over to
Amazon, where this title is currently #17 on the top selling
books list! You can also purchase directly through
Princeton University Press's website.
For more information on On Bulls**t, read this
NYT article or watch Princeton's
interview with the author. Or type the title and
author into Google and get thousands of hits... |


 |
3/13/05:
Nancy Springer books four and five have not magically
arrived in time for the end of book three. So I read a
book by Gregory Maguire called Confessions of an Ugly
Stepsister instead.
It purports to be a re-telling of the Cinderella story.
Because I never read anything about the book, I believed
it would be a happy fairy tale. But it turns out to be a
gritty and somewhat darkly philosophical tale of a mother and
her two daughters trying to survive the vicissitudes of life in
the Netherlands during the tulip craze. (?!)
It is difficult for me to evaluate it as what it is rather
than as what I expected it to be. Gail Carson Levine's
Cinderella story Ella Enchanted beats Maguire's
Confessions hands down, but that's apples to oranges.
Since I don't read modern fiction, I have a hard time relating
to this book in a meaningful way - but I don't think I liked it.
I don't think I liked the message, or perhaps the fact that it
had one, or maybe the way the message was conveyed. It had
rough edges which were, to me, a little unpleasant. I
suppose naturalist writing will always strike me as
insufficiently whitewashed.
Call me crazy, or naive, but I prefer an unqualified happy
ending.
The contrast between Gregory Maguire's writing and Nancy
Springer's is instructive. Maguire has helped me identify
what I like so much about Springer's books. In the books
I've read by Nancy Springer, the heroes are heroic, the villains
are villainous, the magic is magical. Everything in the
world she creates is idealized, stylized, purified, distilled.
There is nothing gratuitously crass or crude or cruel, even
though the evil is as unadulterated as the good. There can
be no mistaking a character's intentions, motivations, or moral
worth. There is no grey area. There is no normal; no
mediocrity threatens; no one fades into the oblivion of guilty
compromise or vague remorse. Does such fantasy teach us
valuable life-lessons? Perhaps so, by showing us the
ideally loyal, the ideally strong, the ideally brave. But
no story has to tell us about what life is like. We
read books to escape life, sometimes... |
Buy my
copy of Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister! |
3/6/05:
I have been enjoying some fantasy novels by Nancy
Springer. First I read her current King Arthur books, and
now I'm reading her five out-of-print Books of Isle. These
books are delightfully sentimental, archaic, magical, tragic and
triumphant all at once. If you're not the sort of person
to make an emotional investment in this particular sort of
nonsense, these books will seem overwrought. But I think
they are beautiful, if somewhat draining. (Currently, I
only own the first three, but I've ordered the last two from
A Mystical
Unicorn Online Bookstore - I hope that they will arrive
before I finish reading book three!)
On a totally different note, you might like to read a funny
excerpt of the book
Dear Sir (Letters of ribaldry and desperation culled from war
plants, draft boards, government agencies...) wherein A is
not A as Aristotle's law of identity would have it, but rather A
is X!
On a technical note, now that I am not using Photoshop to
save my image files, I have to police my own filename lengths.
Apparently 31 is the magical compatible number. Some of my
recently uploaded images exceed 31 characters, so I have to go
back and fix them.
This utility will help me find the offending files, at
least. |
 |
2/26/05:
Happy Birthday to my brother Charlie!
I have recently bought, received, and read two
Ruth Chew books that I'd
never read before! They are The Secret Summer (aka
Baked Beans for Breakfast) and The Witch at the Window.
There's only one story left that I haven't read, which is
The Secret Treehouse, although there are several books I
still don't own.
I'm starting to think about my birthday. If you
are too, check my
Things I Want page, not to be confused with my
book wish list, which is always a
little wishy-washy. |
 |
2/21/05:
Happy Presidents' Day! (I had the day off.)
My store site is now beautissimus. I made it look a bit
like this site, with nested tables, but that site has
backgrounds of midnight and marble. I thought about making
it some kind of green, which would go with this site, and I
thought about making it red and black, because I have a cool
basketweave background that's red and black (and I really like
red and black in general), but I think the blue theme is as good
as it gets. Go
see for
yourself.
Last night I rediscovered a very cool book called Maze,
by Christopher Manson. It's not a story book.
It's a puzzle. You enter a house, and you have to choose a
numbered door. Then you turn to that page number, and
you're in a room with more doors to choose from. You are
supposed to go from page 1 to page 45 and back to page 1, but it
isn't obvious how, although there are "clues." Anyway,
it's just spooky enough to be mysterious, and just puzzling
enough to keep you flipping back and forth for a long time.
You really should find and explore this "book." It seems
to be out of print, but there seem to be many used copies
floating around (e.g.
on Amazon). Actually, there's an
online version with the text and images. But of
course, using the online version isn't as satisfying as using
the book itself. |
 |
2/20/05:
I have discovered the way to Happiness. It is
called The Way of the Purchase. To discover the
Way, you must follow The Seven Simple Steps. To
learn of these Steps, you must click
this link.
If this does not sound enlightened to you, then obviously
you're not one of the chosen. And therefore I suppose I'll
have to put it to you more plainly: I've created a sister
site on Verizon server space where I can sell books and movies
that I want to get rid of. You are hereby invited to
go buy
them. |
Follow
the Way of the Purchase.
$
|
2/19/05:
I messed with a bunch of things today!
- I converted the coming soon page to a page about
being webmaster.
- I moved some books back to the
love of
language page from
reference.
I also added some new books on this page. Some books
have photos still to come.
- I created an
art
and architecture page. This page needs more books on
it.
- I created a
geology page. I need to add some more books to it,
too. Right now, all the books there are just from the
miscellaneous
page.
- I updated the site map to
reflect these and other recent changes.
The language books are tricky to sort and separate, even
though they are pretty different from each other. I will
work more on this problem later. For now, anything
remotely language-y (except things that are foreign language-y)
will go on the ever bigger love of language page. I am not
sure what will happen to the reference page in the long run.
I may not have one.
Just a thought: I need to archive some of the older messages
on this front page! |
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2/17/05:
I added some more books and tweaked various pages.
In particular, the
origami page has improved. |
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2/16/05:
I bought and received a wonderful copy of Edward
Eager's The Time Garden. It is very hard to buy a
particular edition of a book which has been published in
multiple editions when there are few cover images among the
items listed for sale. I saw this copy for sale on eBay
complete with the cover image, and sprung!
I'm really enjoying the two Edith Nesbit books I got for
Christmas (see below). I really think everyone should read
Nesbit's books. They are very quaint and entertaining.
Eager, another favorite author of mine, was greatly influenced
by Nesbit: I think The Magic City inspired Knight's
Castle!
I've added some bookscans, most notably to the
foreign
languages page, under J.
K. Rowling, and on my
knitting page.
I'm eagerly awaiting the following series books:
- Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, by J. K.
Rowling (July 16, 2005)
- Eldest by Christopher Paolini (August 30, 2005)
- Inkspell Cornelia Funke (October 1, 2005)
- Ptolemy's Gate by Jonathan Stroud (October 6, 2005)
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Cha ching! |
2/13/05:
I've added a page about
knitting.
I have figured out a little bit about Google's
Picasa,
and I think it will help me process photos for the web in
batches (unlike with Photoshop, where basically everything has
to be done one image at a time). What that means is that
photos are more likely to begin appearing on the site.
However, I am puzzled by several aspects of Picasa still, and
the photos on my computer are sorta scattered, so don't count
your chickens, or hold your breath or anything.
Speaking of batches...
Holey spatulas! Why did I not go download the
free
Multiple Image Resizer utility months ago?! It
will help me process photos (like I just said Picasa could) but
it will also help me resize my book cover scans, which are sized
by percent, not by pixels.
Before:
I used to individually set the settings for and then
individually name and save 3 copies of each book cover scan.
Now:
I can select a whole folder full, and tell the utility what
percentage and what file format and what destination and what
quality to give the files, and they will all magically go land
there all at once! And, if I name the scans before I
resize, the resized copies won't need to be renamed.
Furthermore:
I'm not going to make 25% size covers anymore, since I never use
them. And from now on, I'm going to save all cover images
at a higher jpg quality, so that scanning them becomes
semi-worthwhile, though pages will be slower.
Gosh, either I am very clever for figuring this out now, or
very not clever for taking this long...! |

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2/8/05:
Dianetics: The Evolution of a Science by L. Ron
Hubbard, my synopsis:
This book is a dumbed-down highly metaphorical account of how
Hubbard supposedly discovered (he says "computed") a supposedly
scientific answer to all the problems of humanity. It has
a spaceship on the cover. I read the whole book hoping to
come across a reason for the spaceship, and the only thing
remotely related was a couple of sentences at the end of the
book: "Up there are the stars. Down in the arsenal is an
atom bomb. Which one is it going to be?" I suppose
Hubbard himself intended to lead mankind to the stars. By
offering mankind some expensive therapy, no doubt. Here's my
paraphrase, complete with some jargon from the book: "Engrams,
consisting of a complete set of perceptics, can occur
during anaten (the unconscious state) as early as
slightly before conception. They abberate the
basic personality of a human by entering the reactive
mind as demons which short the mental circuit
and cause insanity when keyed in at a later date.
These engrams and their locks must be lifted
and erased (by someone trained in Dianetics),
and then the patient will be able to recall 100% of his
conscious and unconscious experiences, and will be able to
control his bodily fluids (e.g. his endocrine system) perfectly,
so that all his organic psychosomatic ills will be cured."
If this isn't your idea of entertainment, and whose is it,
visit my Movies page for
more updates. |
Can someone please explain, why the spaceship?
Here's why. |
2/6/05:
Last week I went to the library book sale in
Plainsboro, but there weren't very many interesting books.
I think it's because they have the sale every month, and they
never clean out the unsold books. Blech!
I did, however, find one gem. It's L. Ron Hubbard's
Dianetics: The Evolution of a Science. This has high
amusement value. If you don't know anything about
Scientology, read
this article. Even an unbiased account of Scientology
makes it sound sketchy! Anything Hubbard says or writes is
total BS.
Speaking of which, Princeton has a new book out: a small-size
80-page essay by philosopher Harry Frankfurt called
On Bulls**t. I kid you not. The first print
run (5000x) has already sold out.
The
"74rd" annual Bryn Mawr book sale is March 23-26. It's
a pretty big deal. I went last year, and I'm looking
forward to it already, even though I still have to wait a month
and a half.
How do I know about all these sales?
This website lists them. You can use it to search for
sales anywhere in the country! |
"74rd"
Annual
Bryn
Mawr
Book
Sale
March
23
to
26 |
2/5/05:
New from Amazon: The re-release of the
Faerie Tale Theatre films! This so makes my
day. Even if the boxes look sorta cheesy, which is a
shame, because the originals didn't. See this and other
updates to my Movies
page.
This update is brought to you by the word "seldom."
Have you ever noticed that people almost never use this
word? |
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1/23/05:
New in my life (more to come, probably, on the About
Me pages):
- Aquinas has earned a masters degree! Only 3.5 more
years to go...
- I'm skating
in real speed skates now! I'm very excited, also very
tired.
- I'm learning to knit like crazy. Fun stuff.
I checked out a few books at the library recently. Bad
news first.
- Faerie Wars by Herbie Brennan
This book is not for me. I read a little and stopped,
which I almost never do. I am not surprised that the
blurbs on the cover were from Eoin Colfer, author of
Artemis Fowl, which I hated. Faerie Wars is
too much something for me; maybe it's too postmodernist for
me, maybe it's too "dark", or maybe it's just a little
disturbing. Thank goodness I got this from the library
rather than the bookstore. I almost bought a copy.
- The Tale of Despereaux by Kate DiCamillo.
This story was mostly very clever, very cute, and very fun.
But it has a dark side, too, and so I wound up not liking it
over all. Very short book, by the way: I read it in an
hour or so. I thought of my brother Charlie, because
there's a mouse in the story who keeps saying "Cripes!
- The Prophecy of the Stones by Flavia Bujor.
This book was written by a 13-yr-old French girl. Being
impressed with the fact that she published a book at all
is different from being impressed with the book itself.
It's an okay fantasy story, but it is, to my thinking, overly
sentimentalized - exactly the kind of story I would have
written when I was younger. I wouldn't buy this one
either.
- The City of Ember by Jeanne DuPrau
I really liked this one. That's why I'm buying a
hardcover copy of it and the sequel. It vaguely reminded
me of two other books, The Giver and Anthem.
The setting is a place which is fascinating to try to imagine,
and the characters are admirable - that is, the ones who are
supposed to be, are!
New books I just ordered (Thank you Colleen, for the B&N gift
card!):
- Knitting for Dummies
- The Witches of Sea-Dragon Bay by Sandra Forrester
- The City of Ember and The People of Sparks
by Jeanne DuPrau
- Freaky Friday by Mary Rodgers
The only new stuff on the site right now is
book log entries
and some links. |
(This is just what one of my
boots looks like. There are in fact two skates, and
they both have frames and wheels attached. Duuh.)
I am so cool.



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1/11/05:
I added bullet-arrows (►)
next to the links on the menu, which can now squeeze and stretch
horizontally if necessary.
If you haven't been to the
Random Stories
page in a while, there will be some entertaining stories there
that you haven't read yet.
I've added a few more author pages (see
Site Map for listing) so I could
move some info off the wish list page. I'm still working
on my wish list, but you can look at the quasi-improved version
here.
Oh, and my speakers have died, I think. They woke me up
in the middle of the night last night, making an intolerably
loud buzzing/siren sound. I turned off the speakers and
the noise stopped, but every time I try to turn them on again, I
get the noise. Grrrr! |
►Improved Menu!
►More Stories!
►Quasi-Improved Wish List!
►Dead Speakers!
B U Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z |
1/10/05:
I'm working behind the scenes to make a site where
I'll sell my unwanted books. It's not done yet so you
can't see it. But some books have vanished from these
pages.
I moved some books onto the
Reference page,
since that's where they belong, but I didn't add new scans
today.
I'm contemplating a geology category to be born out of the
Miscellaneous category, but there aren't quite enough books
there yet to warrant the creation of a new page.
I'm reading a book about Japan now, and I've got another
book about Japan that I've been meaning to read. (The one
I bought from University of California Press several entries
ago.) |
Japan |
1/2/05:
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
Books/Movies I got for Christmas:
- Dragon Rider by Cornelia Funke (Thank you,
Crouches!)
- The Phoenix and the Carpet by E. Nesbit (Thank you,
Crouches!)
- The Magic City by E. Nesbit (Thank you, Crouches!)
- Maxfield Parrish: A Retrospective (Thank you,
Aquinas!)
- Kusudama Origami by Tomoko Fuse (Thank you, Dan!)
- Centennial Edition of The Fountainhead (Thank you,
Mark!)
More Ayn Rand books from Penguin
- Dragonsdawn by Anne McCaffrey (Well okay, I
bought this one)
- Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban in
Traditional Chinese (Thank you, Hobors!)
- The Flight of the Navigator DVD (Thanks, Grandmartha &
Grandaddy!)
- Spellbound DVD (Thanks, Mom & Dad!)
- Book on The Origins of Chinese Characters (Thank you,
Hobors!)
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~☺~ |
| This is not all the stuff I've
archived.
|
! |
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