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posted by [personal profile] kgbooklog at 07:52am on 18/05/2005 under ,
Since this account exists solely for me to talk about books, I don't have any excuse not to participate...

As requested by [livejournal.com profile] kate_nepveu.

1. Total number of books I've owned:

I think I own about 300-400 now, and about an equal number sold back. We are counting non-fiction too, right?

2. Last book I bought:

It's been a slow year so far. I think Nix's Sabriel (for re-reading). Most recent unread book would be Erikson's Midnight Tides.

3. Last book I read:

Last finished: Carole Nelson Douglas's Cat in a Hot Pink Pursuit

Currently reading: Rosenberg's Not Quite Scaramouche and Erikson's Midnight Tides (during breaks at work)

4. 5 books that mean a lot to me:

Kirstein's The Steerswoman's Road, underappreciated and no one else is writing anything like this (every time I ask for similar books, people recommend things like MacAvoy which are the exact opposite of what I want).

The Lord of the Rings

Gonick's Cartoon History of the Universe
Gleick's Chaos: Making a New Science
Gardner's Penrose Tiles to Trapdoor Ciphers
(making history, science and math fun)

5. Five people to take up the meme and answer in their own lj.

Heh, only six people read my journal, and at least one has already done this meme.
Mood:: 'awake' awake
There are 4 comments on this entry. (Reply.)
 
posted by [identity profile] papersky.livejournal.com at 01:22pm on 18/05/2005
There is one other thing a little like the Kirstein, which is Sylvia Engdahl's This Star Shall Abide. It isn't as good, but it is good and it really is in that direction.

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posted by [identity profile] kgbooklog.livejournal.com at 10:34pm on 18/05/2005
My local libraries don't have that title, and it seems to only be available in a small press omnibus.

Since I don't seem able to explain what I like about Kirstein, could you explain why you think Engdahl is similar to her and different from MacAvoy?
 
posted by [identity profile] papersky.livejournal.com at 05:12pm on 19/05/2005
Briefly, the emergence of a scientific worldview in a low tech background. They're also both colonies that don't know it, but that's not what makes them similar. The Engdahl's a YA, and I read it as a kid but it pushes many of the same buttons for me that the Kirstein does.

I believe it's in print in Britain from Puffin under the title Heritage of the Star. (If it's not, it was about two years ago.)
kate_nepveu: sleeping cat carved in brown wood (Default)
posted by [personal profile] kate_nepveu at 08:13pm on 18/05/2005
Heck, I counted nonfiction, though that would only knock the total down by a hundred or so.

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