Nu-ILB: What books have you purchased lately?

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Denton Welch - A Voice Through a Cloud
Friedrich Durrenmatt - The Judge and His Hangman

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 23 August 2009 20:13 (sixteen years ago)

Hugh MacDiarmid, Lucky Poet. Dumb title, but looks good. A bonus is the 1943 OK by the War Materials Board for the use of paper. $2.

Michelle Naka Pierce, Beloved Integer. From that ocean of contemporary poets I have never heard of, all of whose books have three blurbs by other poets I have never heard of. Looks OK. $2.

alimosina, Sunday, 23 August 2009 22:27 (sixteen years ago)

On our way to a hike last Friday, my brother and I stopped in the small town of Estacada, Oregon, where I noticed a thrift bookstore run by the volunteers to raise money for the local public library. These shops always sell at shamefully low prices. So, I purchased:

Haiku: Volume 2: Spring, R.H. Blyth, a used hardcover in fair shape, with a dust jacket. This looks to be a 1950 edition, printed in Japan by the Hokuseido Press so it is likely a first printing. I paid 25 cents for it.

This is something of a classic, in that the four volumes of this collection were probably the first real attempt to present and explain haiku to the English-speaking world. For a long time they were the only haiku collection you could find. I can recall longingly fingering these volumes as a impecunious college student, circa 1978, when I couldn't afford such expensive goods.

Aimless, Wednesday, 2 September 2009 03:47 (sixteen years ago)

Huizinga's book on the Middle Ages! I had seen it in a second hand shop with my friend. But it was closed so I asked my friend to buy it. She didn't. In the end I told her I would come over (to Antwerp) and buy it myself. When we arrived IT WAS GONE! I was so angry. I kept looking but it was gone. ARGH! Then I looked once more thinking noone could have bought it... Lo and behold it was located somewhere else. Someone had moved it. 4,50 euros for an out of print classic. Yipieeeee

Nathalie (stevienixed), Wednesday, 2 September 2009 09:51 (sixteen years ago)

I am still reading the other books I purchased, namely the Sookie Stackhouse series. Will probably start the last one this week. And also got the Treasury of Knitting Patterns books. Classics in their own field/ :-)

Nathalie (stevienixed), Wednesday, 2 September 2009 09:53 (sixteen years ago)

Rainy Saturday. Visited a few bookstores. Bought:

Aurthurian Romances, Chretian de Troyes, translated by Wm. Kibler and C.W. Carroll, used Penguin Classics paperback, $6.95.

The Ring and the Book, Robert Browning, Oxford Standard Authors, 'thin India paper' edition from 1930s, $6. Couldn't resist RB's magnum opus in such a compact form at such a good price.

The Beleaguered City, Shelby Foote, a hardcover Modern Library edition that excerpts just the siege-of-Vicksburg section of Foote's huge Civil War history, $4.

Aimless, Sunday, 6 September 2009 01:37 (sixteen years ago)

Nice 2nd hand run:

Henry de Montherlant - Chaos and Night
Joseph Roth - The Radetzky March (btw, Judd books have several new copies of this going for 2.95)
Robert Musil - Young Torless
Leonardo Sciascia - To Each His Own

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 6 September 2009 09:55 (sixteen years ago)

all 8 vols of Best SF Stories from New Worlds (1967-74)

ledge, Sunday, 6 September 2009 10:04 (sixteen years ago)

Just got a copy of The Annotated Alice (for those who don't know - Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass with marginal annotations on history, translation, mathematics and later uses in the arts). For some reason have never acquired this before, tho have been meaning to for years.

Likewise with Sciascia in fact - never read any and have been meaning to for ages, so I'd be interested to hear what you have to say on him, xyzzz__.

GamalielRatsey, Sunday, 6 September 2009 10:05 (sixteen years ago)

Nice buy, ledge!

GamalielRatsey, Sunday, 6 September 2009 10:05 (sixteen years ago)

Recently bought a cheap copy of Gaiman's The Graveyard Book at the library bookstore - very good, I think it's my favorite novel of his. Also picked up a copy of Saint Joan.

clotpoll, Sunday, 6 September 2009 10:17 (sixteen years ago)

Read Day of The Owl so far Gamaliel, and it had more than enough in it for me to go back for more. He talks in the after word of The Day... of his need to 'prune' (I think most, if not all of his books are 150 pages at most) but what seems to be as vital is his need to highly concentrate. The crimes as described in his books are a symptom of a wider disease and the inability of people to overcome whatever it is he is diagnosing -- which is what I'm still trying to decode.

The above might be a bit obscure at the mo but I'd also say his books do travel further than their Sicilian setting.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 6 September 2009 10:58 (sixteen years ago)

so i've started working in this second hand internet bookseller in a retail park in oxfordshire. i'm trying to be strong. i did buy a first edition of fowler's usage, though. but it was a slip up. it won't happen again.

thomp, Sunday, 6 September 2009 17:02 (sixteen years ago)

side effect: going into oxford, walking into second hand bookshops, thinking O GOD NO, walking straight out

thomp, Sunday, 6 September 2009 17:03 (sixteen years ago)

I think it would take a very strong constitution for a booklover's love to survive prolonged contact with the bookselling business. It must be time to revive What's it like working in a bookshop?, so you can dish us some dirt.

Aimless, Sunday, 6 September 2009 17:20 (sixteen years ago)

My "eternal distant hopeless crush" worked in a series of bookstores and most of them closed. She claims she's a bookstore jinx, but it's probably the times we live in.

Graham Farmelo, The Strangest Man.

alimosina, Sunday, 6 September 2009 18:47 (sixteen years ago)

I loved working in a bookshop. Plenty of reading - almost as much as at university - could order whatever I wanted pretty much. People coming in with snatches of poetry (including memorably the Jamaican cleaning lady who came up to me once and recited four or five stanzas of Childe Harold's Pilgrimage - a testament to the Scottish modelled Jamaican education system she said).

With the shelving, dusting and stocking you got to have a spatial awareness of the history of literature.

Another memorable moment was when a chap came in to ask if I had anything on And Quiet Flows the Don, and its disputed authorship. Funnily enough, I had been dusting in a rather gloomy corner, a small section rather hazily referred to as Critical Methods, whose books I had been hoping in a vague way to disperse amongst other sections, and noticed one of those books, always intriguing, whose spine presents no information. I pulled it out and saw that it was A Statistical Enquiry into the Authorship of And Quiet Flows the Don.

I took the chap to the place and presented the book to him, and he was delighted. Turns out he was a statistical analyst. It didn't have a price so I sold it to him for what I think was a nominal fee. Couple of quid I think.

Of course those slightly unusual pleasures were rare, but I always enjoyed helping people who didn't know what they want but wanted, or the endless queues of people lining up for a copy of Khalil Gibran's The Prophet. Can't stand bookshop snobbery.

Michael Foot used to come in as well, looking for his edition of Gulliver's Travels. He was delighted if we had it, and often bought a copy (for a friend he used to say), but was equally pleased if we didn't have it, as it meant we had sold out (I never pointed it out that it also showed I had failed my job as I had neglected to re-order it in time).

GamalielRatsey, Monday, 7 September 2009 09:32 (sixteen years ago)

Completely unhealthy god that's cheap, really Amazon clicking fortnight. Couple of volumes of Burke's selected works (bonus: the slightly uncomfortable feeling I get when I buy something published by The Liberty Fund), Waugh's Letters and Diaries (nice old hardbacks, matching), Sir Philip Sidney's Major Works, Doting by Henry Green, and at last a copy of Shaftesbury's Characteristics (still waiting on this, probably fairly rough considering it was <£10).

I would say I am unlikely to read all of these cover to cover.

Nice hardback of Kenneth Koch's Collected Poems, too, that was in Judd 2 books on Marchmont St (Serious q: is there a better remainder shop in London?)

woofwoofwoof, Tuesday, 8 September 2009 17:30 (sixteen years ago)

I never got anywhere with Waugh's letters/diaries. They were less, er, sparkling than one anticipated.

Also the ppl I work for are pretty neat so far! Maybe if I grow jaded and bitter about it I will post to that thread.

thomp, Tuesday, 8 September 2009 19:18 (sixteen years ago)

Ha woof I think I saw that Henry Green at Judd but I already had enough with me.

Now I got an idea for a book shopping ending with FAP :-)

Not a lot better than Judd. I like the couple of books around Charing X road and Skoob - any others apart from yer Charity shops? I guess not much more will emerge - unfortunately I never get around to Amazon.

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 8 September 2009 20:31 (sixteen years ago)

skoob are actually owned by the same people as the place i'm working.

thomp, Tuesday, 8 September 2009 21:09 (sixteen years ago)

over this past weekend:

morante - history: a novel
frame - a state of siege
stead - the man who loved children
stead - dark places of the heart
john cowper powys - wolf solent

omar little, Friday, 11 September 2009 22:35 (sixteen years ago)

Nice little haul!

When two tribes go to war, he always gets picked last (James Morrison), Saturday, 12 September 2009 00:20 (sixteen years ago)

frame - a state of siege
stead - the man who loved children
stead - dark places of the heart
john cowper powys - wolf solent

yeah!

scott seward, Saturday, 12 September 2009 01:47 (sixteen years ago)

Would be interested on any thoughts when you get round to the Morante, omar.

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 12 September 2009 10:25 (sixteen years ago)

b.f. skinner - 'walden two'
althusser/balibar - 'reading capital'
theodore h. white - 'the making of the american president 1960'
michael chabon - 'the final solution' (american edition i've wanted for the cover fr aaages)
james kelman, alasdair gray, agnes ownes - 'lean tales' (1st ed.)
british medical association - 'the medical effects of nuclear war'

thomp, Saturday, 12 September 2009 10:30 (sixteen years ago)

The Epistles of Horace: Bilingual Edition, trans. David Ferry, used paperback, good condition, $9.50.

Su Tung-P'o: Selections from a Sung Dynasty Poet, trans. Burton Watson, used hardcover from Colombia U. Press, 1966, $9.95.

Insurgent Mexico, John Reed, used paperback, $1. Firsthand account of Pancho Villa's guerrilla war, by the author of Ten Days That Shook the World.

Aimless, Sunday, 13 September 2009 03:54 (sixteen years ago)

will do!

xxp

omar little, Sunday, 13 September 2009 04:05 (sixteen years ago)

Thomp, yes, Waugh's diaries aren't much fun; the letters, though, I found very readable: like there's a lot of the shitty side of him (grumpy foul Catholic snob bigot), but it's fun enough when he sharpens up for writing to Nancy Mitford, also all the letters to other writers where he's sort of indifferent-critical about the book they've just sent him. Still, wouldn't exactly recommend above reading actual Waugh novels.

& xyzzzz, always on for bookshopping and pint. I'll sometimes do a circuit of Gower st Waterstone's, Skoob & Judd 2 of a weekend. Maybe see if used-to-be-Osborne's has fluked something interesting. I've never really got to know Charing X for second hand - I just imagine that every shop is full of ancient reptilian dealers waiting to gouge me. I don't really know about other second-hand and remainder places. The South Bank book tables can have pleasant surprises, I guess. And if I pass an Oxfam bookshop I'll drop in.

But I should slow down, since I've just been back to the Liberty Fund for Hume's History of Britain in six volumes.

woofwoofwoof, Tuesday, 15 September 2009 09:07 (sixteen years ago)

I really wish I knew which Oxfam shops were nearby where I work, and yeah Southbank is always worth a browse. And I do the Judd-Skoob-Gower Street Waterstones thing too.

Avoid Cecil court off Leicester Square - that's where all the expensive 1st edition booksellers reside, although I wouldn't avoid the music score shop once in a blue moon - they have a music books section that might be worth a browse. I would go into the Esoteric bookshops if I knew what I was looking for. That stuff needs to be more on my radar than it is (interested in histories of mysticism etc)

Anyway - cool, I emailed you woof. Hope you got it ok.

Last bought:

Antal Szerb - Journey into Moonlight

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 15 September 2009 21:14 (sixteen years ago)

Ed McBain -- Nocturne
Mandarin The Easy Way

both HOOSlarious and truthful (BIG HOOS aka the steendriver), Tuesday, 15 September 2009 21:43 (sixteen years ago)

Love that Szerb! Yes, got the email thanks, have (I hope, if the webmail works) replied.

Just remembered the Book & Comic Exchange in Notting Hill. Sometimes it's a bit dull, but it can come through with real surprises and f***-me bargains. Also enjoy that 50p book graveyard in the basement. There's something breathtaking about all those books no-one, not even me, wants.

woofwoofwoof, Wednesday, 16 September 2009 10:29 (sixteen years ago)

that's the only bookstore i particularly know of and like in london, the exchange

stuff on desk at present:

'the rime of the ancient mariner' - illust. by mervyn peake
'the stuffed owl: an anthology of bad verse', eds. d.b. wyndham-lewis and charles lee
'the first clerihews' - e. clerihew bentley - with illustrations by g.k. chesterton
'diary of a nobody' - 40s hardback reprinting original illustrations

thomp, Wednesday, 16 September 2009 10:35 (sixteen years ago)

also today:

max apple, 'the propheteers'
max apple, 'free agents'
nicholson baker, 'the mezzanine'
nicholson baker, 'room temperature'
donald barthelme, 'sixty stories'
donald barthelme, 'forty stories'
donald barthelme, 'the king'
borges and bioy-casares, 'six problems for don isidro parodi'
borges and bioy-casares, 'chronicles of bustos domecq'

hrm.

Thomp, yes, Waugh's diaries aren't much fun; the letters, though, I found very readable: like there's a lot of the shitty side of him (grumpy foul Catholic snob bigot), but it's fun enough when he sharpens up for writing to Nancy Mitford, also all the letters to other writers where he's sort of indifferent-critical about the book they've just sent him. Still, wouldn't exactly recommend above reading actual Waugh novels.

i am actually going to pick up the unread copy of brideshead i've had for years from my parents' house this weekend, might pick up the letters as well. i might try and locate scoop and flags first, though ... scoop's where i left off, last time round. (though i did read the loved one and what i could stand of pinfold, which wasn't much.)

thomp, Wednesday, 16 September 2009 20:14 (sixteen years ago)

Haven't visited the exchange in an age.

Yes, got the email thanks, have (I hope, if the webmail works) replied.

Didn't get it. I'd forgotten that email I signed up to ILX with doesn't work anymore. If you click on my name I list my other email address (obv replace the 'at' and 'dot') and try again.

xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 16 September 2009 20:29 (sixteen years ago)

today's charity shopping got me 'Don Quixote', Alice Munro's 'Runaway' (I'll credit that one as an ILB recommendation, since I'm not sure I'd be aware of her if not for the talk here) and Perec's 'Life: A User's Manual'. All for just £3.25! Pretty good. This buying five books a week thing when I only really have time for academic reading is probably a bad idea. I recently bought Eco's 'The Mysterious Flame of Queen Loana' and can't imagine being bothered to read it at any time in the next, say, ten years.

Akon/Family (Merdeyeux), Friday, 18 September 2009 13:46 (sixteen years ago)

I finally sold my unread copy of Don Quixote. It had acquired an accusatory look.

Aimless, Saturday, 19 September 2009 20:21 (sixteen years ago)

Just bought a bunch of cheap Folio Society books on ABE, having recently interviewed one of their illustrators and got a taste for big, nicely-designed illustrated hardbacks in slipcases that are probably too huge to read in bed.

When two tribes go to war, he always gets picked last (James Morrison), Tuesday, 22 September 2009 00:29 (sixteen years ago)

JM, Folio Society today, next thing you know it'll be calf-bound first editions.

alimosina, Tuesday, 22 September 2009 00:50 (sixteen years ago)

bookstores in berkeley sell heritage club books usually for around $10-$15 a piece... it seems like such a good deal, since paperback copies of the same books are only a couple dollars less.

a terrible camera... with fangs and shit... (ytth), Tuesday, 22 September 2009 02:24 (sixteen years ago)

JM, Folio Society today, next thing you know it'll be calf-bound first editions.

I know--this could be the end of me.

When two tribes go to war, he always gets picked last (James Morrison), Tuesday, 22 September 2009 05:52 (sixteen years ago)

Those Heritage editions are lovely but I can't help but want the proper, signed Limited Editions Book Club editions when I see them. I have a couple (the awesome Edward Bawden-illustrated Salammbo being my favourite; I have it without the beautiful slipcase but it was a gift...).

Tim, Tuesday, 22 September 2009 09:18 (sixteen years ago)

First editions are a mug's game. Really well-designed books are great, though.

Aimless, Tuesday, 22 September 2009 17:41 (sixteen years ago)

Charity shop fun times, hopefully a fiver well spent:

Dostoyevsky Crime and Punishment
Nabakov Pnin (finally reading Lolita; this fucking guy.)
Zola The Kill
A book of Dylan Thomas poetry.
Wilde The Happy Prince & Other Stories
Hollinghurst The Swimming Pool Library

Samuel (a hoy hoy), Tuesday, 22 September 2009 17:47 (sixteen years ago)

Crime & Punishment is worth way more than a fiver on its own.

Ismael Klata, Tuesday, 22 September 2009 18:41 (sixteen years ago)

Yeah--that and the Nabakov alone and you're well ahead of the game!

When two tribes go to war, he always gets picked last (James Morrison), Wednesday, 23 September 2009 00:03 (sixteen years ago)

xp to tim - i'm in the same boat... i have a couple limited editions club books, and they are way nicer than the heritage ones.

a terrible camera... with fangs and shit... (ytth), Wednesday, 23 September 2009 02:20 (sixteen years ago)

a trio of $1 purchases:

territorial rights - muriel spark
weymouth sands - john cowper powys
ocean of sound - david toop

omar little, Monday, 28 September 2009 20:22 (sixteen years ago)

I did some poetry grubbing over the weekend. You'd think I'd have enough by now, but no... I had some trade credit at Powell's Books and it was burning a hole in my pocket.

Collected Poems of Muriel Ruykeser, used paperback in good condition, $10. I usually veer away from women poets, just because they tend to handle language in ways that don't quite sit right with me. I don't really know why this is. But I am willing to be persuaded about Ruykeser's work.

Almost Paradise: New and Selected Poems & Translations, Sam Hamill, new (remaindered) paperback, $8. He's better known these days as a poetry editor, I think, but he's a local PNW poet and we share many influences.

Making the Scene: Selected Poems, Kenneth O. Hanson, new paperback, $7. A local poet, locally printed, and (again) has many of the same influences.

Greek Lyric Poetry: A New Translation, Sherod Santos, used (like new) hardcover, $5. I must own six or seven of these anthologies of Greek poetry in translation by now, both plain and fancy. This is one of the fancypants ones, but well done in that style.

Aimless, Tuesday, 29 September 2009 00:46 (sixteen years ago)

I keep buying books that I already have because I don't think to check the shelves.

Beth Parker, Tuesday, 29 September 2009 14:34 (sixteen years ago)


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