who wants some?
Jan. 28th, 2006 10:21 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Books, that is.
I am cleaning out the bookcases again, and have a few things that have ceased to interest me and should find new homes. I'll send them to you by media mail if you're interested; otherwise, these will probably wander towards the dumpster. Mediocre condition.
Brooke Siler, The Pilates Body. Basic Pilates training book.
Chris Achilleos, Sirens. Some nice fantasy art, some decent cheesecake pinup art. Not my thing, though...
Beryl Beare, Wales: Myths and Legends. Pretty photo book w/lots of short tales.
David Seidman, All Gone: Things that Aren't There Anymore. A fun book with a lot of short articles about Studio 54, L.S.M.F.T., pince-nez glasses, steam trains...
Teddy Bears: An Anthology of Verse and Prose. What else is there to say, really? A picture book, really.
The Happy Mutant Handbook. Kind of aggressively counter-culture from the mid-90s. Funny, gives interesting advice on telnet, but I find it oddly depressing.
Rosabeth Moss Kanter, Confidence: How Winning and Losing Streaks Begin and End. Leftover from a leadership training course held in a previous office. I browsed it once and found it a decent book but heavy on the empowerment-talk and cliches.
The 1996 Frommer's Irreverent Guide to Boston.
Joseph Campbell, Myths to Live By. The condensed version of his general thinking. I tend to look at his stuff with a whole lot more skepticism than before, and this just isn't staying on the bookshelf.
Hunter S. Thompson, The Great Shark Hunt.
Richard Frey, According to Hoyle. Card game guide! Any poker players want some?
I am cleaning out the bookcases again, and have a few things that have ceased to interest me and should find new homes. I'll send them to you by media mail if you're interested; otherwise, these will probably wander towards the dumpster. Mediocre condition.
Brooke Siler, The Pilates Body. Basic Pilates training book.
Chris Achilleos, Sirens. Some nice fantasy art, some decent cheesecake pinup art. Not my thing, though...
Beryl Beare, Wales: Myths and Legends. Pretty photo book w/lots of short tales.
David Seidman, All Gone: Things that Aren't There Anymore. A fun book with a lot of short articles about Studio 54, L.S.M.F.T., pince-nez glasses, steam trains...
Teddy Bears: An Anthology of Verse and Prose. What else is there to say, really? A picture book, really.
The Happy Mutant Handbook. Kind of aggressively counter-culture from the mid-90s. Funny, gives interesting advice on telnet, but I find it oddly depressing.
Rosabeth Moss Kanter, Confidence: How Winning and Losing Streaks Begin and End. Leftover from a leadership training course held in a previous office. I browsed it once and found it a decent book but heavy on the empowerment-talk and cliches.
The 1996 Frommer's Irreverent Guide to Boston.
Joseph Campbell, Myths to Live By. The condensed version of his general thinking. I tend to look at his stuff with a whole lot more skepticism than before, and this just isn't staying on the bookshelf.
Hunter S. Thompson, The Great Shark Hunt.
Richard Frey, According to Hoyle. Card game guide! Any poker players want some?