Nu-ILB: What books have you purchased lately?

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réstif de la bretonne le paysan et la paysanne pervertis: ou les dangers de la ville

no lime tangier, Wednesday, 1 June 2016 01:27 (ten years ago)

picked up a copy of memento mori after reading all the spark talk today. also picked up a copy of jon wyndham day of the triffids at the same store

de l'asshole (flopson), Saturday, 4 June 2016 02:08 (ten years ago)

Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell by Susanna Clark
I really enjoyed teh BBC TV adaptation of this so wanted to read it. So very glad to find it as 4 for €1.50 in a charity shop today.

alongside
The Vampire Lestat by Anne Rice,
remember having enjoyed those of her books I read previously so think this could be good. It has been 20 odd years since then though.

Secret History by Donna Tartt
Wait For Me by Deborah Devonshire a memoir by the youngest of the MItford sisters. Should be somewhat interesting, not sure if they were all Nazis but could be intriguing anyway.

also got a hardback 2fer of George Macdonald Fraserr's Flashman at the Charge and Flashman in The Great Game he tends to be fun een if the politics are a little dodgy.

Stevolende, Tuesday, 7 June 2016 23:41 (ten years ago)

from a book sale in a church that had the sf section listed as occult:
Iain Banks - Consider Phlebas and Use of Weapons, to go with my unread copy of player of games
Nicholas Pileggi - Wiseguy, a.k.a. the book goodfellas was based on
Three by Flannery O'Connor (Wise Blood, The Violent Bear It Away, Everything that rises...) i don't like that one flannery story that gets in textbooks, but i like the Huston movie version of Wise Blood.

remove butt (abanana), Wednesday, 8 June 2016 00:16 (ten years ago)

Finally saw 'Wolf in White Van' in a bookshop, so have bought it and started it and am really digging it

🐸a hairy howling toad torments a man whose wife is deathly ill (James Morrison), Wednesday, 8 June 2016 01:03 (ten years ago)

(Bought new, I should add!)

🐸a hairy howling toad torments a man whose wife is deathly ill (James Morrison), Wednesday, 8 June 2016 01:04 (ten years ago)

Plus was gifted about 50kg of sci-fi paperbacks from a friend moving house, need to sort through and see what is worth keeping

🐸a hairy howling toad torments a man whose wife is deathly ill (James Morrison), Wednesday, 8 June 2016 01:04 (ten years ago)

I decided to clean out some books. I took a bagful to sell at Powell's Books. They bought about 40% of them, but only for $15 in trade. I used the trade slip to buy:

Rome and the Mediterranean, Titus Livius, a Penguin Classics paperback, $4.95. Penguin put out Livy's history of Rome in four volumes. This one was missing from my shelves. I had the other three, now I've the full set.

Aucassin & Nicolette and Other Tales, tr. Pauline Matarasso, another Penguin Classics paperback, $2.50. This one is slender, weighs very little (~100 grams or 3.35 oz.) and will probably end up in my backpack on a multi-night hike in the wilderness this summer, where every ounce counts.

a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Wednesday, 8 June 2016 03:00 (ten years ago)

Looking up 'Aucassin & etc' and have never heard of any of the stories in it, and it looks very appealing

🐸a hairy howling toad torments a man whose wife is deathly ill (James Morrison), Wednesday, 8 June 2016 06:30 (ten years ago)

Becoming Elektra a 2010 history of the label

Stevolende, Wednesday, 8 June 2016 21:07 (ten years ago)

nyrb poets ellizabeth willis new/selected, knew nothing of her but why not bc it look intersting

also the new mallarmé translations out last year, under title 'azure', by blake bronson-bartlett and robert fernandez, includes the 1899 'poesies', 'a roll of the dice…', and for about half the volume, selections from mallarmé's big uncompleted 'book' project, which tbh looks like somebody had a bad day in math class

j., Friday, 10 June 2016 22:53 (ten years ago)

Sold a bunch for:

Tarjei Vesaas - The Ice Palace
Thomas Bernhard - Old Masters (two of my favourite bks)

Antonio Tabucchi - Time Ages in a Hurry

Also:

Joseph Roth - Tarabas
Bohumil Hrabal - The Little Time where Time Stood Still

xyzzzz__, Friday, 10 June 2016 23:51 (ten years ago)

a dollar each:

paul klee - on modern art
anthony burgess - ninety-nine novels
james joyce - a portrait of the artist...
the fiction of samuel beckett: form & effect
theatre of sleep: an anthology of literary dreams
t.f. powys - mr weston's good wine
synge - plays, poems and prose
zola - l'assommoir
prevert - paroles
faulkner - as i lay dying
a collection of mencken criticism

no lime tangier, Saturday, 11 June 2016 00:06 (ten years ago)

I bought a couple of used paperbacks at the charity shop (proceeds go to the local public library):

The Go-Away Bird and Other Stories, Muriel Spark, in a 1961 edition, for $1.
Amulet, Roberto Bolano, but it's not a Wimmer translation, so I may find his 'prose style' a bit less familiar, for $1.

a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Wednesday, 22 June 2016 01:49 (nine years ago)

Stumbled upon a box full of Simenon at a local library's used book sale this weekend. First American editions of eight non-Maigret hardcovers, plus eight Maigret hardcovers. Kind of overwhelmed and not sure where to begin.

there will be plenty of bros screaming "WHERES JIM" (cwkiii), Wednesday, 22 June 2016 03:06 (nine years ago)

start with a non-maigret: give us the list and we'll guide you! (I like the maigrets fine, and am reading them all, but the nons are usually better)

🐸a hairy howling toad torments a man whose wife is deathly ill (James Morrison), Wednesday, 22 June 2016 06:28 (nine years ago)

Just this morning finished reading The Engagement by Simenon - good, but not as purely enjoyable as The Man Who Watched Trains Go By, imho

Foster Twelvetrees (Ward Fowler), Wednesday, 22 June 2016 09:16 (nine years ago)

I've already read a few Maigrets and a few non-Maigrets and have really enjoyed everything so far (favorite is probably The Little Saint). Here are the non-Maigrets I just picked up:

The Nightclub
The Fugitive
Teddy Bear
The Girl With a Squint
The Premier
The Train
The Disappearance of Odile
Betty
The Little Doctor

cwkiii, Friday, 24 June 2016 05:48 (nine years ago)

Assuming The Train is the same as The Man Who Watched the Train Go By, and The Premier is The same as The President, those are both excellent. Don't know Betty or Tne Girl Witna Squint, but there seem to have been lits of different titles for various books over the years and inthe US and UK

🐸a hairy howling toad torments a man whose wife is deathly ill (James Morrison), Friday, 24 June 2016 10:06 (nine years ago)

yesterday, perhaps in subconscious celebration of ireland's win against italy, i bought:

mike mccormick - solar bones
gavin corbett - green glowing skull

Bein' Sean Bean (LocalGarda), Friday, 24 June 2016 10:12 (nine years ago)

xpost It turns out The Premier is the same as The President, but The Train is not the same as The Man Who Watched Trains Go By.

there seem to have been lits of different titles for various books over the years and inthe US and UK

Yes! I already learned the hard way that The Two-Penny Bar and Maigret and the Tavern by the Seine are the same book.

cwkiii, Friday, 24 June 2016 11:26 (nine years ago)

also known as:

Guinguette by the Seine
Maigret to the Rescue
A Spot by the Seine
The Bar on the Seine

very helpful for figuring out what is what as far as the maigret works are concerned... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jules_Maigret#List_of_novels

no lime tangier, Friday, 24 June 2016 11:36 (nine years ago)

apollinaire - the poet assassinated and other stories
leonora carrington - the house of fear: notes from down below
samuel beckett - echo's bones
blaise cendrars - moravagine
alfred kubin - the other side
andrei bely - complete short stories
restif de la bretonne - les nuits de paris
rayner heppenstall - saturnine, four absentees
nathalie sarraute - portrait of a man unknown
alain robbe-grillet - in the labyrinth, la maison de rendez-vous

no lime tangier, Friday, 24 June 2016 11:47 (nine years ago)

THird Ear book on Reggae.

& put aside the biography of Alex chilton.

Stevolende, Friday, 24 June 2016 18:31 (nine years ago)

library book sale this morning.

proust box - vintage softcover/moncrieff/kilmartin (this is kinda what i've been wanting to find. my two volume hardcovers that i've had for years is so unappealing.)

jennifer egan - a visit from the goon squad (i guess i'll be the last person to read it. i still don't want to read wolf hall though...)

laura e. richards - captain january (kid's book from 1892. it looks great. and its a 1892 edition too.)

mary ellen chase - the plum tree (it took 60+ years but the library is finally getting rid of its mary ellen chase collection)

mary ellen chase - dawn in lyonesse (they've been holding on to this one since 1939...)

mary ellen chase - the white gate (i was tempted to buy them all, but i just got three...this is a first edition she wrote in 1954 while teaching here at Smith College.)

eric ambler - the light of day

eric ambler - doctor frigo

lesley egan - the hunters and the hunted (seedy california crime circa 1979.)

edna ferber - so big

edna ferber - saratoga trunk

janet frame - towards another summer (i didn't even know this existed. posthumous. i thought i had it all.)

portable chekhov (in case i need some emergency chekhov while i'm on the go...)

frederick barthelme - natural selection

scott seward, Saturday, 25 June 2016 15:46 (nine years ago)

Always wondered about Ferber, author of Giant and several others made into v. watchable movies.
Recently got a Simenon from the library shop: Aunt Jeannie---didn't know about alt. titles for his, so haven't looked it up yet; is it good?

Also got (new) Luc Sante's The Other Paris. He says that, vs. at least one recent review, it's not meant as a successor to Low Life, about hi-jinks in a neighborhood of very pre-Robert Moses NYC: this 'un has more range, and is as much about working class per se as low lifers. Haven't read it yet so dunno. Looks great though, incl.striking pix.
Splendor In The Short Grass: The Grover Lewis Reader, edited by Jan Reid & Kip Stratton, intro by Dave Hickey. Lewis was a strong longform journo in early Rolling Stone and others---title piece is on location for The Last Picture Show---also incl. short stories, poems and excerpt from unfinished memoir. I still remember bits of the Stone work from orig. publication, and whole thing looks v. worthwhile.

dow, Saturday, 25 June 2016 19:42 (nine years ago)

A Man Called Destruction Holly George Warren (Alex chilton bio)
Joseph Campbell The Masks of God :Occidental Mythology
Chaos James Gleick
In Search Of Iraq Richard Downes
Set Your Voice Free Roger Love
When We Were Orphans Kazuo Ishigoro } 25c charity shop
1001 Country Household Hints Mary Rose}" " " "
The Devotion of Suspect X Keigo Higashino
Pattern Recognition William Gibson
How To Be A Woman Caitlin Moran
His Illegal Self Peter Carey

Stevolende, Tuesday, 5 July 2016 20:36 (nine years ago)

Julian, Gore Vidal, used mass-market paperback, $1. I read it nearly 40 years ago and recall it as worthwhile. Julian was a bit of a prig and an ass, but nowhere near as priggish and assholish as his sworn Christian enemies were. This copy is just to keep handy for when I'm in the mood for some light reading.

a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Tuesday, 5 July 2016 21:31 (nine years ago)

from the two used shops in town. (i really need to get out of town though. i'm itching to hit some of the better spots in the area...)

sci-fi stuff:

grass - sheri s. tepper

dilation effect - douglas r. mason

the integral trees - larry niven

galactic cluster - james blish

unearthly neighbors - chad oliver

daybreak - 2250 a.d. - andre norton (original title: star man's son)

the stars are ours! - andre norton

the star fox - poul anderson

destiny's road - larry niven

normal people books:


many inventions - rudyard kipling

the day's work - rudyard kipling (both kiplings from the 15 volume authorized edition of 1893/1899. i totally would have bought all 15 if they had been there...)

the complete poems 1927-1979 - elizabeth bishop

the collected poems - wallace stevens

st. lucy's home for girls raised by wolves - karen russell

don't cry - stories - mary gaitskill

bark - stories - lorrie moore (read most of them in the magazines they appeared in just waiting for that five dollar hardcover nice price...)

the eye of the story - selected essays & reviews - eudora welty

novelists in interview - john haffenden (80's interviews with martin amis, malcolm bradbury, brookner, carter, golding, hoban, lodge, mcewan, murdoch, pritchett, rushdie, storey, tennant, weldon.)

scott seward, Tuesday, 12 July 2016 00:49 (nine years ago)

Sex, Drugs And rock'N'Roll Zoe cormer a popular science book on the science of hedonism and tythe hedonism of science which could be fun if remotely accurate, or otherwise for that matter.

Colour Victoria Finlay
I think this is the book I read a few years ago after seeing it recommended somewhere, possibly on here. This is the paperback of a book i thought much thicker as a hardback. Think i was thinking of trying to get the copy back out of the library, so glad i went back intio this charity shop cos I didn't see it there yesterday.

and a book called Wanamurraganya The story of Jack McPhee by Sally Morgan story of a half aborigine maverick guy.

Stevolende, Tuesday, 12 July 2016 20:31 (nine years ago)

st. lucy's home for girls raised by wolves - karen russell

don't cry - stories - mary gaitskill
Haven't caught up w these yet, but did read Russell's Vampires In The Lemon Grove and Gaitskill's Because They Wanted To---awesome collections.

dow, Tuesday, 12 July 2016 22:11 (nine years ago)

1st hand:

Lazlo Krasznahorkai - Seiobo There Below
Elsa Morante - Arcoeli

2nd hand:

Kawabata - The Lake
Tomas Transtromer - New Collected Poems

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 16 July 2016 10:49 (nine years ago)

The Look the book on fashion over the decades. Been wanting to get a copy for ages I thought it made more sense last week when exchange rate was a bit better

Stevolende, Saturday, 16 July 2016 11:50 (nine years ago)

Alice Munro - Dear Life
David Mitchell - Black Swan Green
Mikhail Bulgakov - The Master and Margarita
Robert Reid - Year Zero

poolboy skew (voodoo chili), Saturday, 16 July 2016 21:59 (nine years ago)

went to my fave Owl Pen Books today. kinda like heaven if you are me. such a beautiful spot.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/rf/image_404h/2010-2019/WashingtonPost/2011/06/01/Production/Sunday/Travel/Images/it5_owl%20pen%20entrance.jpg

https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/3d/75/90/3d759034e9642b5e7c20ad76d5fab03f.jpg

love it when your annex is here:

http://www.sarahbeckphoto.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/082015-19.jpg

Sci-Fi (all hardcover. mostly 2 bucks each)

anywhen - james blish

the left hand of darkness - ursula k. leguin ($1.50 for an early book club edition with jacket)

the lost face - best science fiction from czechoslovakia - josef nesvadba

the listeners - james gunn

froomb! - john lymington

a mile beyond the moon - a collection of imaginative tales - c.m. kornbluth

shoot at the moon - william f. temple

coils - fred saberhagen & roger zelazny

the end of the dreams - three short stories - james gunn


Not Sci-Fi

dream children - a.n. wilson

a heritage and its history - ivy compton-burnett (hard for me to remember which ones i've read. i like having different editions though. so it's all good.)

god's funeral - a.n. wilson

small g - patricia highsmith

found in the street - patricia highsmith (two that i needed.)

mr. jack hamlin's mediation and other stories - bret harte

tales of new england - sarah orne jewett

the girls - edna ferber

scott seward, Tuesday, 19 July 2016 02:10 (nine years ago)

Any haul with highsmith and jewett is a good haul. Intrigued by the czech SF too. I wish that I still had 2nd hand bookshops in my area, let alone ones looking like that. The only ones left are paperback exchanges with nothing but grishams/rankins/connollys/cartlands/browns

🐸a hairy howling toad torments a man whose wife is deathly ill (James Morrison), Tuesday, 19 July 2016 09:28 (nine years ago)

Got an illustrated Candide by Voltaire

In The Shadow of A Saint by Ken Wiwa about his dad Ken Saro Wiwa .
The Road to Wellville the thing on the birth of Kellogs health cereals

Bury Me Standing on the history of Gypsies
An Astronauts Guide to Life On Earth by Chris Hadfield which looked interesting for 25c

Also thought I'd pick up Emotional Intelligence for the same price. Not ssure fi the whole idea has long since been debunked but thought I'd see what it was all about.

Stevolende, Tuesday, 19 July 2016 09:56 (nine years ago)

Wellville movie was one of the oddest Hollywood excursions in a while, wonder if the book is as peculiar

🐸a hairy howling toad torments a man whose wife is deathly ill (James Morrison), Tuesday, 19 July 2016 10:03 (nine years ago)

I haven't started reading it yet but it did look interesting. Think I came across some other reference to either it or events with Kellog over the last couple of weeks which meant I wanted to go back and se if it was in the shop I saw it in. Charity shop though. But it was so now I have it.

Stevolende, Tuesday, 19 July 2016 10:11 (nine years ago)

used

wolf hall
plato symposium
paris review - object lessons

new

david grann - lost city of z
jonathan lethem - motherless brooklyn

pdf

muriel spark - the girls of slender means
joseph henrich - the secret of our success (cultural anthropology)
robert gordon - the rise and fall of american growth (epic economic history of USA)

de l'asshole (flopson), Tuesday, 19 July 2016 16:45 (nine years ago)

Lots of amazing hauls here lately----I especially want to get xpost Tomas Transtromer - New Collected Poems. Never read any of his until he won the Nobel, when The New Yorker published a good brief intro and a set of poems great in translation.

dow, Tuesday, 19 July 2016 22:27 (nine years ago)

Speaking of translation, what's happening to my English---must stop for repairs.

dow, Tuesday, 19 July 2016 22:32 (nine years ago)

IBM and the Holocaust by Edwin Black
and a book on British History since the Normans taht I think is actually for children but looked pretty nicely presented

both from a charity shop I haven't been in for ages.

Stevolende, Tuesday, 19 July 2016 23:23 (nine years ago)

Transtromer's short memoir is really lovely, too
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/P/0811220184.01._SCLZZZZZZZ_.jpg

🐸a hairy howling toad torments a man whose wife is deathly ill (James Morrison), Wednesday, 20 July 2016 01:48 (nine years ago)

JUst found the Alan McGee memoir in a local Dealz for €1.50 which is nice.
Been wanting tio read taht, looks like it might be an ex-HMV copy or something since it said €11.99 on it but it was the standard Dealz price. So I presume they must be connected to clearance houses for some items

Stevolende, Thursday, 21 July 2016 10:58 (nine years ago)

Two used books today:

Classics Revisited, Kenneth Rexroth, a New Directions trade paperback in pretty decent shape, $2. Just scrapes together various short pieces he wrote about canonical authors and books.

Goodbye to All That, Robert Graves, in a Penguin Modern Classics copy, a bit dog-eared, but readable and not falling apart, $2. His WWI and post-war memoir published in 1929, in which he shows how a loyal, public school-educated, young British officer becomes completely disillusioned with English society and decides self-exile is to be preferred.

a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Sunday, 24 July 2016 00:01 (nine years ago)

that's a nice edish of Savage Detectives

flopson, Sunday, 24 July 2016 02:42 (nine years ago)

I'm currently reading The Savage Detectives in that same British paperback edition

Foster Twelvetrees (Ward Fowler), Monday, 25 July 2016 08:22 (nine years ago)

I never reread but that's one I've contemplated rereading. I was p young at the time but I was positively radiating something every time I picked it up

I exclusively buy books that ppl mention on this board lol

Cynthia Ozick - The Puttermesser Papers
Alan Hollinghurst - The Line of Beauty

flopson, Monday, 25 July 2016 16:03 (nine years ago)


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