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Jul. 18th, 2008

  • 8:08 PM
Ok, so there is Librarything.com, Bookcrossing.com and Goodreads.com. Are there any other book related web sites worth checking out?

Wicked: Witch & Curse.

  • Jul. 18th, 2008 at 5:04 PM
Wicked: Witch & Curse by Nancy Holder
(Fiction - Teen; 2002 & 2003)

Summary: (from Barnes & Noble) Holly Cathers's world shatters when her parents are killed in a terrible accident. Wrenched from her home in San Francisco, she is sent to Seattle to live with her relatives, Aunt Marie-Claire and her twin cousins, Amanda and Nicole.

In her new home... )

x-posted to [info]elvenflutist, [info]book_club, [info]book_worm, and [info]bookish.

These Lines ?

  • Jul. 18th, 2008 at 7:14 PM
Hello

I need help Identifying these lines, that I read in the Blood+ by Asuka Katsura. 
They appear to famous. 
But I've never heard them.
 

Start: 
Solomon: Charles, Your ophelia the other day was magnificent. That's what worries me. I don't want you to end up drowned in a brook.

Charles: How compassionate of you, Leartes

Solomon: *Smiles* 

End.

Leartes rings a bell, Something greek, maybe....? 

Cryptostrongylus pulmoni

  • Jul. 18th, 2008 at 8:57 PM
firstly, i'm very brain-foggy today so i apologise if this doesn't make all that much sense! i also apologise if this has been mentioned before!

i just wondered what people's opinions were on the suggestion that CFS might be caused by 'Cryptostrongylus pulmoni', which is basically a type of parasite that lives in the lungs [from what i can gather - please feel free to correct me if i'm wrong! :)]. apparently this parasite was identified in 63% of CFS patients who were tested, although there were only 30 participants which is a very small sample. i just wondered if anyone here has been diagnosed with this parasite, and whether or not any treatment has been successful?

thank you :)

Book #24

  • Jul. 18th, 2008 at 9:46 AM
Book #24
Book Title: All Together Dead
Author: Charlaine Harris
Category: mystery; romance
# of pages: 323
My rating of the book, F- [worst] to A [best].: B
Short description/summary of the book: (taken from amazon.com):Bestseller Harris mixes humorous Southern-fried fantasy with biting satirical commentary in her seventh novel to feature Sookie Stackhouse, the bubbly telepathic barmaid from Bon Temps, La. (after 2006's Definitely Dead). Sookie attends an all-important central U.S. vamp summit on the shores of Lake Michigan as a "human geiger counter" for Sophie-Anne Leclerq, vampire queen of a Louisiana weakened by Katrina and who will be tried during the event for murdering her king. Sookie knows the queen is innocent, but she's hardly prepared for other shocking murders, not to mention protests by the Fellowship of the Sun, a right-wing antivampire movement. Her sleuthing skills, along with those of her new telepath friend, Barry the Bellboy, are put to the extreme test. Harris juggles a large cast, including several romantic contenders for Sookie's heart, with effortless exuberance.

My Thoughts: There was so much that took place during this book! If I attempt to explain what happens I think I will spoil the book for others so let me just say that if you're reading this series, then this book twists the plot even further.

Books read this year: 24/50. I'm 48% done!!!


Next read(s): I just started reading Into Thin Air by Jon Krakauer.

The Complete Persepolis

  • Jul. 18th, 2008 at 10:09 AM


The Complete Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi
Pantheon 2007
341 pages
Memoir/graphic novel

Originally published in France in four separate volumes, and later in the US in two, The Complete Persepolis brings them all together for the first time. It is the story of the author's youth, growing up in revolutionary Iran before moving to Austria at 14, and then later returning to Iran before escaping again, this time to France, where she still lives.

Read on )

X-posted to my LJ.

Tags:

New problem.

  • Jul. 18th, 2008 at 5:55 AM
I'm using the new style I created, but it won't drop down the options in my navigation page. I don't know how to explain this, but what I mean is when I click on the Journal section, the option under it such as Change Journal Theme won't appear and I can't tweak my journal.

Is there anything I can do?

The Four Immigrants Manga

  • Jul. 17th, 2008 at 7:58 PM
 x-posted to books, bookshare, bookish

The Four Immigrants Manga
By Henry (Yoshitaka) Kiyama
 
            The Four Immigrants Manga is a must-read for fans of manga (Japanese comics) for it is an excellent early example of a Japanese artist taking an art style popular at the time (American newspaper comic strips) and adapting it to tell his own, uniquely Japanese-American stories. Yoshitaka Kiyama was a Japanese student who came to San Francisco in the early 20th century, re-named himself Henry, and set about studying Western art techniques. While technically proficient, Henry never broke into new territory with his painting. He experienced mild success back home in Japan, but for years was completely unknown on the other side of the Pacific.
 
            He did, however, create a semi-autobiographical collection of comic strips chronicling the lives of four friends, and these strips provide a compelling history of the first wave of Japanese immigrants, a group usually 

(...Review continued here...)

Jul. 17th, 2008

  • 2:39 PM
Forgive me if this is a stupid question:
is there any site to just log a collection of books? So it just shows your collection, in text, as plain and simple as possible?

Book Rec

  • Jul. 17th, 2008 at 2:28 PM
Howdy. I'm looking for recommendations for a book on the Maquis. Amazon has three listed which are general overviews. I was wondering if anyone knew if one was better than another. Additionally I was looking for perhaps more personal accounts.

Thanks!

Newly purchased books

  • Jul. 17th, 2008 at 12:10 PM
Have you read any of the following books?

Deja Dead by Kathy Reichs
Vampire Academy by Richelle Mead
Into Thin Air by Jon Krakauer
Rocket Boys by Homer H. Hickam, Jr.

What are your opinions on these books?

5 questions.

  • Jul. 17th, 2008 at 6:26 PM
Name of journal: [info]leelamii
Layout Style: S2, smooth sailing
Basic, Paid or Plus: paid
Problem you are having: since I have a few questions I put everything under the cut.

Read more... )

A Spring without Bees

  • Jun. 15th, 2006 at 12:17 PM

Book Title:
A Spring without Bees: How Colony Collapse Disorder Has Endangered Our Food Supply
Author: Michael Schacker
Category: 
# of pages: 304
My rating of the book, F- [worst] to A [best].: A
Short description/summary of the book: (taken from amazon.com):
On the 100th anniversary of the birth of Rachel Carson, the world faces a new environmental disaster, from a chemical similar to DDT. This time the culprit appears to be IMD, or imidacloprid, a relatively new but widely used insecticide in the United States. Many beekeepers and some researchers think IMD is the new prime suspect for the devastating syndrome known as Colony Collapse Disorder, or CCD, which has raised the annual die-off rate of honey bees to 30% of all the beehives in the United States. They say even trace amounts of IMD make bees lose their desire to feed, which would quickly lead to the collapse of their colony. After several days, there are few or no bees left in the hive. Since honey bees are essential to the production of fruit, nut, and vegetable crops around the world, their demise could spell catastrophe for our food supply and global economy.

In a riveting detective story that melds science and politics, Michael Schacker investigates the case of the missing bees, examining the many theories on the cause, including cell phones, mites, new pathogens, and bee management. He then examines the evidence against IMD. The book does much more than illuminate the scientific research, however. Using CCD as a metaphor for our own human hive, Schacker asks:  Are the bees trying to tell us something? Could this be the warning sign of a much larger crisis looming directly ahead? Might humankind suffer someday from “Civilization Collapse Disorder”?  And how must we change our human hive in order to ensure its survival?

Like An Inconvenient Truth and Silent Spring before it, A Spring without Bees is a compelling cautionary tale and a clarion call for action.


My Thoughts: This book is soooooooooo important. It's basically gives you a step-by-step explaination on what is killing the bees, how it's happening, and what we are going to have to do to stop it. It's a little depressing and a little daunting. The Bayer Corporation who invented IMD(the pesticide that is killing the bees), has A LOT invested in this pesticide--they are going to fight hard for it. Anyway, I love science non-fiction books like this! Like anything written by Michael Pollan. Alas, if only I could get my hands on his lastest book. The author isn't just talking about banning this one pesticide, he's talking about a whole change in world view, or "paradiagm shift", as it is called. As he explains, 

"Kuhn shows how paradiagm shifts are really more like religious struggles with opposing doctrines than reasoned theorizing based on scientific evidence. Evidence and data have little to do with it...a Catholic theologian who, when asked by Galileo to view the moons of Jupiter through a telescope, refused on the grounds it could be an optical trick. Yet that was simply a poor excuse, to avoid seeing with his own eyes the proof positive... Could this "paradiagm reluctance" be at play today in the controversy over IMD? Bayer Cropscience reseachers, along with most agrochemistsin the governments and universities, are seeing the world through the eyes of the old paradiagm, as it was before the new worldview of ecology came along." pg. 89

I think this is what makes his writing and point of view unique, yet similar to Rachel Carson's. Also, it turns out that IMD is similar to DDT. Schacker gives us a plan however! This plan includes everything from not using pesticides in your garden to having global campaigns about IMD awareness and banning the pesticide in congress, as well as legislation to help the beekeepers get out of debt.

Okay, done with my rambling--THIS BOOK IS INFORMATIVE AND IMPORTANT. READ IT AND SPREAD THE TRUTH!

Links: http://www.amazon.com/Spring-without-Bees-Collapse-Endangered/dp/1599214326
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ge8kFmujv0&feature=related (it's a movie of the author talking about the book)


Books read this year: A third of John Adams by David McCullough (go read it RIGHT NOW, john/abagail adams are soo cool. I would marry that man or his wife if I could.) Lolita, which I have almost finished. The Color Purple by Alice Walker, read for the the third time >drools<. Cunt by Igna Muscio for the second time.


Next read(s): School girls: Young Women, Self-Esteem and the Confidence Gap by Peggy Orenstein (for the third time, yes, I'm one of those readers that read books over and over again but I haven't re-read it since I was 16, so there!) And anything else that Gemma, my grammar-nazi best friend, requests me to read.

A Spring without Bees

  • Jun. 15th, 2006 at 12:17 PM

Book Title:
A Spring without Bees: How Colony Collapse Disorder Has Endangered Our Food Supply
Author: Michael Schacker
Category: 
# of pages: 304
My rating of the book, F- [worst] to A [best].: A
Short description/summary of the book: (taken from amazon.com):
On the 100th anniversary of the birth of Rachel Carson, the world faces a new environmental disaster, from a chemical similar to DDT. This time the culprit appears to be IMD, or imidacloprid, a relatively new but widely used insecticide in the United States. Many beekeepers and some researchers think IMD is the new prime suspect for the devastating syndrome known as Colony Collapse Disorder, or CCD, which has raised the annual die-off rate of honey bees to 30% of all the beehives in the United States. They say even trace amounts of IMD make bees lose their desire to feed, which would quickly lead to the collapse of their colony. After several days, there are few or no bees left in the hive. Since honey bees are essential to the production of fruit, nut, and vegetable crops around the world, their demise could spell catastrophe for our food supply and global economy.

In a riveting detective story that melds science and politics, Michael Schacker investigates the case of the missing bees, examining the many theories on the cause, including cell phones, mites, new pathogens, and bee management. He then examines the evidence against IMD. The book does much more than illuminate the scientific research, however. Using CCD as a metaphor for our own human hive, Schacker asks:  Are the bees trying to tell us something? Could this be the warning sign of a much larger crisis looming directly ahead? Might humankind suffer someday from “Civilization Collapse Disorder”?  And how must we change our human hive in order to ensure its survival?

Like An Inconvenient Truth and Silent Spring before it, A Spring without Bees is a compelling cautionary tale and a clarion call for action.


My Thoughts: This book is soooooooooo important. It's basically gives you a step-by-step explaination on what is killing the bees, how it's happening, and what we are going to have to do to stop it. It's a little depressing and a little daunting. The Bayer Corporation who invented IMD(the pesticide that is killing the bees), has A LOT invested in this pesticide--they are going to fight hard for it. Anyway, I love science non-fiction books like this! Like anything written by Michael Pollan. Alas, if only I could get my hands on his lastest book. The author isn't just talking about banning this one pesticide, he's talking about a whole change in world view, or "paradiagm shift", as it is called. As he explains, 

"Kuhn shows how paradiagm shifts are really more like religious struggles with opposing doctrines than reasoned theorizing based on scientific evidence. Evidence and data have little to do with it...a Catholic theologian who, when asked by Galileo to view the moons of Jupiter through a telescope, refused on the grounds it could be an optical trick. Yet that was simply a poor excuse, to avoid seeing with his own eyes the proof positive... Could this "paradiagm reluctance" be at play today in the controversy over IMD? Bayer Cropscience reseachers, along with most agrochemistsin the governments and universities, are seeing the world through the eyes of the old paradiagm, as it was before the new worldview of ecology came along." pg. 89

I think this is what makes his writing and point of view unique, yet similar to Rachel Carson's. Also, it turns out that IMD is similar to DDT. Schacker gives us a plan however! This plan includes everything from not using pesticides in your garden to having global campaigns about IMD awareness and banning the pesticide in congress, as well as legislation to help the beekeepers get out of debt.

Okay, done with my rambling--THIS BOOK IS INFORMATIVE AND IMPORTANT. READ IT AND SPREAD THE TRUTH!

Links: http://www.amazon.com/Spring-without-Bees-Collapse-Endangered/dp/1599214326
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ge8kFmujv0&feature=related (it's a movie of the author talking about the book)


Books read this year: A third of John Adams by David McCullough (go read it RIGHT NOW, john/abagail adams are soo cool. I would marry that man or his wife if I could.) Lolita, which I have almost finished. The Color Purple by Alice Walker, read for the the third time >drools<. Cunt by Igna Muscio for the second time.


Next read(s): School girls: Young Women, Self-Esteem and the Confidence Gap by Peggy Orenstein (for the third time, yes, I'm one of those readers that read books over and over again but I haven't re-read it since I was 16, so there!) And anything else that Gemma, my grammar-nazi best friend, requests me to read.

A Spring without Bees

  • Jun. 15th, 2006 at 12:17 PM

Book Title:
A Spring without Bees: How Colony Collapse Disorder Has Endangered Our Food Supply
Author: Michael Schacker
Category: 
# of pages: 304
My rating of the book, F- [worst] to A [best].: A
Short description/summary of the book: (taken from amazon.com):
On the 100th anniversary of the birth of Rachel Carson, the world faces a new environmental disaster, from a chemical similar to DDT. This time the culprit appears to be IMD, or imidacloprid, a relatively new but widely used insecticide in the United States. Many beekeepers and some researchers think IMD is the new prime suspect for the devastating syndrome known as Colony Collapse Disorder, or CCD, which has raised the annual die-off rate of honey bees to 30% of all the beehives in the United States. They say even trace amounts of IMD make bees lose their desire to feed, which would quickly lead to the collapse of their colony. After several days, there are few or no bees left in the hive. Since honey bees are essential to the production of fruit, nut, and vegetable crops around the world, their demise could spell catastrophe for our food supply and global economy.

In a riveting detective story that melds science and politics, Michael Schacker investigates the case of the missing bees, examining the many theories on the cause, including cell phones, mites, new pathogens, and bee management. He then examines the evidence against IMD. The book does much more than illuminate the scientific research, however. Using CCD as a metaphor for our own human hive, Schacker asks:  Are the bees trying to tell us something? Could this be the warning sign of a much larger crisis looming directly ahead? Might humankind suffer someday from “Civilization Collapse Disorder”?  And how must we change our human hive in order to ensure its survival?

Like An Inconvenient Truth and Silent Spring before it, A Spring without Bees is a compelling cautionary tale and a clarion call for action.


My Thoughts: This book is soooooooooo important. It's basically gives you a step-by-step explaination on what is killing the bees, how it's happening, and what we are going to have to do to stop it. It's a little depressing and a little daunting. The Bayer Corporation who invented IMD(the pesticide that is killing the bees), has A LOT invested in this pesticide--they are going to fight hard for it. Anyway, I love science non-fiction books like this! Like anything written by Michael Pollan. Alas, if only I could get my hands on his lastest book. The author isn't just talking about banning this one pesticide, he's talking about a whole change in world view, or "paradiagm shift", as it is called. As he explains, 

"Kuhn shows how paradiagm shifts are really more like religious struggles with opposing doctrines than reasoned theorizing based on scientific evidence. Evidence and data have little to do with it...a Catholic theologian who, when asked by Galileo to view the moons of Jupiter through a telescope, refused on the grounds it could be an optical trick. Yet that was simply a poor excuse, to avoid seeing with his own eyes the proof positive... Could this "paradiagm reluctance" be at play today in the controversy over IMD? Bayer Cropscience reseachers, along with most agrochemistsin the governments and universities, are seeing the world through the eyes of the old paradiagm, as it was before the new worldview of ecology came along." pg. 89

I think this is what makes his writing and point of view unique, yet similar to Rachel Carson's. Also, it turns out that IMD is similar to DDT. Schacker gives us a plan however! This plan includes everything from not using pesticides in your garden to having global campaigns about IMD awareness and banning the pesticide in congress, as well as legislation to help the beekeepers get out of debt.

Okay, done with my rambling--THIS BOOK IS INFORMATIVE AND IMPORTANT. READ IT AND SPREAD THE TRUTH!

Links: http://www.amazon.com/Spring-without-Bees-Collapse-Endangered/dp/1599214326
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ge8kFmujv0&feature=related (it's a movie of the author talking about the book)


Books read this year: A third of John Adams by David McCullough (go read it RIGHT NOW, john/abagail adams are soo cool. I would marry that man or his wife if I could.) Lolita, which I have almost finished. The Color Purple by Alice Walker, read for the the third time >drools<. Cunt by Igna Muscio for the second time.


Next read(s): School girls: Young Women, Self-Esteem and the Confidence Gap by Peggy Orenstein (for the third time, yes, I'm one of those readers that read books over and over again but I haven't re-read it since I was 16, so there!) And anything else that Gemma, my grammar-nazi best friend, requests me to read.

Review - Once; James Herbert

  • Jul. 17th, 2008 at 9:51 AM
 
Once…
James Herbert
Fiction; Horror / Dark Fantasy
 
I've loved James Herbert (a Brit, naturally!) ever since I read The Magic Cottage many years ago. 

Review - Once; James Herbert

  • Jul. 17th, 2008 at 9:46 AM
(alright, attempting this cut thing...)

Once…
James Herbert
Fiction; Horror / Dark Fantasy

I've loved James Herbert (a Brit, naturally!) ever since I read The Magic Cottage many years ago. 
 
  

Basic Accounts and X-Men

  • Jul. 17th, 2008 at 7:10 AM
Account Structure Update
Back by popular demand, Basic Accounts will be available to all users again by the end of the (northern hemisphere) summer. More information on the decision-making process and proposals relating to the future of Basic Accounts are in [info]lj_2008.

New Themes
Two attractive and all-new Flexible Squares themes, "Circular" and "Circular Brown" are now available.


L to R: Circular and Brown

New V-Gifts
Give someone you care about the gift of enticement. With the new Chocolate Ice Cream, Vanilla Ice Cream, Tea, Coffee, Curry and Sushi v-gifts, all the significant people in your life will be able to share in the longing for the tasty edibles below. Plus, it reminds loved ones you think they're really sweet, really savory or just plain satisfying.


L to R: Chocolate Ice Cream, Vanilla Ice Cream, Tea, Coffee, Curry and Sushi

Ж-Men...but not the ones you might expect!
This week LJ Russia launched Ж-Men, a new comedy series about superheroes, inspired by the LJ communities dedicated to superheros, comics and cartoons. The title's "Ж" comes from ЖЖ, the nickname for LiveJournal in Russia.

Ж-Men's script is written by a group of LJ enthusiasts who also happen to be television professionals. Who knew? Following the premiere, five more episodes will be broadcast over the next two weeks. We hope you find the series fresh and enjoyable.

This is, of course, an experiment for LiveJournal. As always, we'd love to hear what you think!

Turning around...

  • Jul. 16th, 2008 at 5:22 PM

 
LOL....okay, I got so many responses (immediately!) from so many people about the cross-posting thing (my previous post) that I changed my mind.  I really DIDN'T want to leave or stop posting, so I must have been (uncharacteristically, I swear it!) exhibiting some kind of passive-aggressive need for reassurance.   ROFLLLLLLLLLL

Seriously, many of you made the excellent point about just using lj cuts from now on, which to date I'd avoided because I have such a personal prejudice against them myself!  Obviously I just need to get over it.   For those few of you who have complained about my cross-posting, this should be more than satisfactory!!  You can't complain about multiple posts if it's just one or two lines before the cut, okay?  Please don't e-mail me about this issue anymore!  

I did read a couple of good books over my recent vacation, so I'll write them up in the next few days and post some reviews.  CUT, I promise.  :) 

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