Livres choisis au hasard dans la bibliothèque de ChatterboxMedici Money: Banking, Metaphysics, and Art in Fifteenth-Century Florence (Enterprise) (Enterprise) par Tim Parks Crosscut par Meg Gardiner The New Girls par Beth Gutcheon On the art of reading,: Lectures delivered in the University of Cambridge, 1916-1917, par Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch A Winter's Tale par Trisha Ashley Diplomatic Passport: More Undiplomatic Diaries, 1946-1962 par Charles Ritchie The Third Reich at War par Richard J. Evans Membres ayant les mêmes livres que ChatterboxContacts du membreAmis: alcottacre, ariadne02, boswellbaxter, cameling, cmbohn, cmt, John, Kasthu, Misfit, nellista, Whisper1 Bibliothèque intéressante: brive, CraigHodges, hnn, jbd1, moibibliomaniac, rebeccanyc, RidgewayGirl, Waldstein
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Membre : ChatterboxCollectionsVotre bibliothèque (3,736), Liste de livres souhaités (2), En cours de lecture (5), Lus mais non possédés (15), Favoris (1), Toutes les collections (3,750) Critiques38 critiques Mots-clésFiction (731), Mystery (629), History (385), Historical Fiction (221), Essays (214), Memoir (190), Current Affairs (161), Thriller (144), Suspense (136), Travel (131) — voir tous les mots-clés NuagesNuage des mots-clés, nuage des auteurs Groupes1001 Books to read before you die, 1010 Category Challenge, 50 Book Challenge, 75 Books Challenge for 2010, Books off the Shelf Challenge, Brooklynites, Historical Fiction, History Fans, Monthly Author Reads, New Yorkers City —voir tous les groupes Auteurs préférésPeter Ackroyd, Norman F. Cantor, Laurie Colwin, Colin Cotterill, Murray Davies, Patrick Leigh Fermor, Rumer Godden, William Hazlitt, Kazuo Ishiguro, Milan Kundera, Charles Lamb, Stephen Leacock, Bernard Levin, Hilary Mantel, Val McDermid, Stephen O'Shea, Reay Tannahill, Josephine Tey, Barbara W. Tuchman, Virginia Woolf (Favoris partagés) Librairie(s) préférée(s)BookCourt, Daunt Books - Holland Park, David Mason Books, Foyles, Hatchards, Librairie Champlain, Shakespeare & Company, Sleuth Of Baker Street, Strand Bookstore À mon sujetFor some people, it is alcohol. Or gambling, or cocaine. For me, it's books. That's right, my name is Suzanne and I'm a biblioholic... À propos de ma bibliothèqueEclectic. And rapidly overtaking the amount of available space in my apartment. Membre du(des) groupe(s) Vrai nomSuzanne Type de compteaccès public, abonnement à vie Nouvelles des relationsNouvelles des relations URLs
http://www.librarything.com/profile/Chatterbox (profil) Membre depuisOct 9, 2006 En cours de lectureOrdinary Thunderstorms: A Novel par William Boyd Activité récente |











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écrit par rebeccanyc à 9:45 am (EST) le Mar 16, 2010
cheers
caroline
écrit par cameling à 10:17 pm (EST) le Mar 3, 2010
Did you receive the cook book yet?
cheers
caroline
écrit par cameling à 8:08 pm (EST) le Mar 3, 2010
Congratulations on your hot review listed on today's home page!
écrit par Whisper1 à 11:22 am (EST) le Feb 27, 2010
I tried looking for the book 'Singapore Hawker Food' by Jimmy Chua but the bookstores don't seem to carry it anymore, which was pretty strange. Maybe they only published a certain number.
However, I did find one titled 'Singapore Food' by Wendy Hutton which has recipes of typical Singapore food, including some familiar hawker center favorites such as Satay, Otak-otak, Nasi Lemak, Laksa, Indian Mutton soup, Hokkien Mee and others. Would you like to have this book instead? I'm supposed to head back out there for a few days in March, so I can get this for you if you'd like and mail it to you when I get back. My mom's got a copy and said the recipes are true to the real food.
cheers
caroline
écrit par cameling à 2:28 pm (EST) le Feb 21, 2010
I will kill off all comments to my thread soon though because I think 4 of the 6 books were finance-y ones. (Zuckerman, Rogoff & Reinhardt, Cassidy, and the Lords of Finance (not your doing)). Plus the Cello Suites, and something I've forgotten. A very good day and I can pass 2 of them off as presents for Tim.
écrit par cmt à 11:55 am (EST) le Feb 11, 2010
Thanks so much for the comment you left me. The books all sound like ones which would interest me. I've already ordered a couple (The Crusades through Arab Eyes and Borderland). I'm resiting the urge to buy more, as I'm a pretty slow reader of non fiction, and who know how long it will take for me to get through them!
I'll certainly let you know what I think of them as I go :)
Steph
écrit par Steph78 à 5:57 am (EST) le Feb 11, 2010
The book isn't heavy all and neither is it very large. It weighs less than my case of power charges ... it's amazing how quickly these things add up ... charger for phone, camera, laptop, iPod, electric toothbrush. sheesh!
You're really fortunate in having traveled so extensively in SEAsia, and I'm envious that you got to live in Japan for a spell. I would have loved a term in Japan, but I tend to travel there just for a week at a time for work. I did get a posting to Hong Kong where I lived for a couple of years and really loved it. On the whole I'm still fortunate because I get to travel all over the Asia Pacific region for work and have developed some very nice local friends over time. More importantly (for me), I'm introduced to some fantastic eateries by the locals.
I would love to retire to Thailand if I could .... living on Koh Tao for example or Koh Yao Noi over on the Pangna Bay side of Phuket would be idyllic I think.
There is seriously nothing like the food of Asia, in my opinion, in terms of diversity and flavors. My husband loves it here too. In fact, he's coming out to Singapore next week and will be staying here for 3 months for a project he's working on.
I grew up in Singapore before I moved to London in the early 80s and then to Boston in the late 90s.
You're right ... I intend to make full use of my time here to enjoy the gastronomic delights of the island (exceedingly crowded these days ... I'm wondering this island doesn't sink under the weight) and I can work it off shoveling snow when I get back to Boston.
cheers
Caroline
écrit par cameling à 5:20 pm (EST) le Feb 7, 2010
I saw in the kitchen thread that you recently had a birthday. Happy Birthday. I hope it was a good one. Normally, I'm on top of sending members birthday wishes. I apologize for being late. I'm struggling with bronchitis and haven't had a lot of time to devote to LT.
All good wishes.
Linda
écrit par Whisper1 à 8:48 pm (EST) le Feb 6, 2010
I just saw one of your posts in the history fans group, and looking at your profile and friends, I'm guessing that you are the same chatterbox as on Historical Fiction Online. I am Amanda on there.
écrit par nellista à 10:43 pm (EST) le Jan 1, 2010
Here is another biblioholic, also suffering from abibliofobia, i.e. scared of being/going anywhere without a good to read at all times.
I have recently also read a lot about the Enlightenment, Diderot and d'Alembert. Michel Onfray's Les Ultras des Lumieres lead me on to Holbach, Helvetius, Maupertius and others less known. If you read French, I can also really recommend Elisabeth Badinter's Les Passions Intellectuelles. I have also read several books about the famous French Salons, run by quite some interesting ladies.
Take a look at tag "enlightenment" in my library if you are interested.
Hans
écrit par hnn à 3:30 am (EST) le Dec 29, 2009
I see also that we share "Brat Farrar" (which I'm just beginning), "Mr Calder and Mr Behrens" (which I absolutely loved), and "The Pupil" (which I enjoyed thoroughly and reviewed today). I look forward to browsing your library and to any conversation that may follow.
Happy New Year!
écrit par brive à 5:39 pm (EST) le Dec 27, 2009
Nanci
écrit par Book2Dragon à 9:55 pm (EST) le Mar 16, 2008