Membre : shearrob
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Auteurs préférésDouglas Adams, Robert Aickman, Woody Allen, Paul Auster, Alan Ayckbourn, Alessandro Baricco, Julian Barnes, Emmanuèle Bernheim, Deborah Biancotti, Scott Bradfield, Arthur Bradford, Kevin Brockmeier, Emily Brontë, Mikhail Bulgakov, A. S. Byatt, Emmanuel Carrère, Raymond Carver, Michael Chabon, Anton Chekhov, Daniel Clowes, Jonathan Coe, Roald Dahl, Charles Dickens, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Apostolos Doxiadis, Friedrich Dürrenmatt, Jean Echenoz, Deborah Eisenberg, George Eliot, Stanley Elkin, Jeffrey Eugenides, Michael Faber, Hans Fallada, Maxence Fermine, Amanda Filipacchi, Timothy Findley, Gustave Flaubert, Jonathan Safran Foer, Ford Madox Ford, Richard Ford, Jonathan Franzen, Michael Frayn, Renee French, Neil Gaiman, Anna Gavalda, Nikolai Gogol, Glen Gold, René Goscinny, Harley Granville-Barker, Robert Graves, Andrew Sean Greer, Arnon Grunberg, Mark Haddon, Patrick Hamilton, Thomas Hardy, David Hare, John Harwood, Glen Hirshberg, A. M. Homes, Paul Hornschemeier, Victor Hugo, Nancy Huston, Henrik Ibsen, Rachel Ingalls, John Irving, Kazuo Ishiguro, Junji Ito, M. R. James, Adam Johnson, Ben Jonson, Ismail Kadare, Panos Karnezis, Etgar Keret, Stephen King, Binnie Kirshenbaum, Milan Kundera, A. I. Kuprin, Andrey Kurkov, Neil LaBute, Gary Larson, Mikhail Lermontov, Alan Lightman, Kelly Link, Jason Lutes, Annabel Lyon, Alison MacLeod, David Mamet, Katherine Mansfield, Patrick Marber, Adam Marek, Christopher Marlowe, Gabriel García Márquez, Yann Martel, Harry Mathews, Guy de Maupassant, François Mauriac, Ian McEwan, Patrick McGrath, Joe Meno, Thomas Middleton, Andrew Miller, Arthur Miller, Steven Millhauser, A. A. Milne, David Mitchell, George Moore, Lorrie Moore, James Morrow, Harry Mulisch, Haruki Murakami, E. Nesbit, Kim Newman, Geoff Nicholson, Audrey Niffenegger, Anders Nilsen, David Nobbs, Amélie Nothomb, Joyce Carol Oates, George Orwell, Charles Palliser, Mervyn Peake, Viktor Pelevin, Susan Perabo, Georges Perec, Harold Pinter, Luigi Pirandello, Wena Poon, Christopher Priest, Philip Pullman, Jean Racine, Yasmina Reza, Dan Rhodes, Philip Roth, Geoff Ryman, Saki, George Saunders, Bernhard Schlink, Charles M. Schulz, W. G. Sebald, David Sedaris, Peter Shaffer, William Shakespeare, Dash Shaw, George Bernard Shaw, Sir Philip Sidney, A. G. Slatter, Vladimir Sorokin, Edmund Spenser, Art Spiegelman, John Steinbeck, Tom Stoppard, August Strindberg, Patrick Süskind, Graham Swift, Jonathan Swift, Donna Tartt, Yoshihiro Tatsumi, Osamu Tezuka, William Makepeace Thackeray, Jeremy Tinder, Viktoria Tokareva, Leo Tolstoy, Adrian Tomine, Lewis Trondheim, Ivan Sergeyevich Turgenev, John Updike, Voltaire, Kurt Vonnegut, Chris Ware, Sarah Waters, Andi Watson, Bill Watterson, John Webster, Clare Wigfall, Oscar Wilde, Geoffrey Willans, Tennessee Williams, P.G. Wodehouse, Cyril Wong, Taichi Yamada, Émile Zola (Favoris partagés)
À mon sujetMy name's Rob - and I'm a writer living in London. I'm best known, I expect, for my work on Doctor Who - I brought the Daleks back to the screen to menace Christopher Eccleston a few years back! But I dabble in *everything* - I do radio, theatre, you name it. And I'm proudest of my fiction. My first book, Tiny Deaths, a collection of rather quirky short stories, won the World Fantasy Award in 2008. And my second collection, Love Songs for the Shy and Cynical, which is slightly quirkier, has just been released by Big Finish Press. Do consider giving them a read, if the very word 'quirky' doesn't make you feel sick to the stomach!
À propos de ma bibliothèqueI'm very lucky - I've a house just about big enough to cope with the demands of my enormous (and ever growing!) book collection. I still have to smuggle them in when my wife isn't there to notice, however; both she and the cat are being edged out of the place! I love books - the smell of a new one, and the touch of an old one that has been loved already. Oh - and they're good for reading, too.
2010 reads:
Under the Dome (Stephen King) ****
The White Hand and Other Stories (Mark Samuels) **
Logicomix (Apostolos Doxiadis) ***
Miss Herbert (Adam Thirlwell) ****
The Road (Cormac McCarthy) ****
Aurora 7 (Thomas Mallon) ****
The Secret Lives of Buildings (Edward Hollis)
Northwest Passages (Barbara Roden) ****
Demons in the Spring (Joe Meno) *****
Alone in Berlin (Hans Fallada) *****
Box Office Poison (Alex Robinson) ****
Site Internethttp://www.robertshearman.net
Également surFacebook, LiveJournal
Membre du(des) groupe(s)
Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing/Dons des membres
Vrai nomRobert Shearman
LieuLondon, UK
Type de compteaccès public, abonnement à vie
Nouvelles des relationsNouvelles des relations
URLs
http://www.librarything.com/profile/shearrob (profil)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/shearrob (bibliothèque)
Membre depuisAug 12, 2006
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Good heavens! Seems Fame literally has gone to your head! *chuckle* :)
Congrats again on your books and awards!!! So very proud of you, you know. *smile* I miss you and our jolly old conversations about the adventures of sneaking books inside the house and past Those That Would Stop Us. LoL. Good times. :)
Hope all is well in your Kingdom. Much Bliss & Happy Reading!
~Pandora~
écrit par PandorasRequiem à 3:49 am (EST) le Mar 3, 2010
écrit par Jodyreadseverything à 2:31 pm (EST) le Feb 3, 2010
écrit par Jodyreadseverything à 4:41 pm (EST) le Feb 1, 2010
Which is good because on the way back on the train today I was thinking that's how we met, when I first started adding mine LT kept telling me that you were the person I shared the most books with so I came to say hello. I bet you get that a lot. A few more people have added the Zina Rohan since then though.
We had a lovely afternoon, Joseph was exhausted when we came home and was in bed by 7pm. This can go two ways, either he will sleep quietly all night until his usual breakfast time because he is so worn out OR he will be up at 4:30am and shouting for Weetabix. If it's the first option we really must do this again soon, if it's the second then I'll see you sometime after he starts school :-)
Thank you very much for a lovely day.
écrit par Jodyreadseverything à 4:10 pm (EST) le Feb 1, 2010
écrit par Jinjonator à 7:17 pm (EST) le Jan 23, 2010
One of the things about LibraryThing I guess is that everyone is going to approach it from their own angle, and do their own thing. Don't make your collection private, though, that would be a pity. I take your point about keeping track of stories you have in anthologies. I've got nothing against indexing story collections - I may wind up doing something similar myself (as a one time long time sf fan I've got quite a few anthologies, and a reasonable magazine collection too), but I will maintain my "Your LIbrary" policy.
écrit par dajashby à 1:07 am (EST) le Jan 22, 2010
écrit par dajashby à 11:05 pm (EST) le Jan 21, 2010
You realise that including short stories in Your Library is cheating? In my view Your Library should only include volumes that you actually own. When I have a work included in another work I put in a collection called Inclusions, and remove it from Your Library if it managed to sneak in there. How many actual books do you own?
Derrick
écrit par dajashby à 5:53 pm (EST) le Jan 21, 2010
I should have known that if I only suggested one date, then you'd be bound to be busy. Enjoy York! I'm still trying to work out plans, but I may be around the following weekend if that works. It's the last weekend before I go to India. The alternative is I see if I can escape work early one afternoon. I need to check my diary but I'm due some time in lieu. Otherwise we'll be into March and I'll be boring you with all my holiday photos!
By the way, I'm intrigued by this new way of judging art by finding the least distracting painting. I'm definitely trying that next time I go to a gallery.
Alison
xx
écrit par finebalance à 2:57 am (EST) le Jan 21, 2010
Happy New Year
Thanks for noting my comments about Tiny Deaths which I really enjoyed reading, and loved the title story. I'm already looking forward to reading your next collection, Love Songs for the Shy and Cynical. I have to thank librarything and noting shared books on the catalogue for finding out about you. BTW my (impossible 15 yr old) son is a fan of two things - daleks and Darren Shan's Demonata series.
Later this year I'm planning to read about Prague and its golems. I have a copy of Ripellino's Magic Prague, Meyrink's The Golem and our 77 Prague legends book lined up. I'm an expert book smuggler as well!
Kerry
écrit par avatiakh à 8:26 pm (EST) le Jan 19, 2010
Thanks for noting my comments about Tiny Deaths which I really enjoyed reading, and loved the title story. I'm already looking forward to reading your next collection, Love Songs for the Shy and Cynical. I have to thank librarything and noting shared books on the catalogue for finding out about you. BTW my (impossible 15 yr old) son is a fan of two things - daleks and Darren Shan's Demonata series.
Later this year I'm planning to read about Prague and its golems. I have a copy of Ripellino's Magic Prague, Meyrink's The Golem and our 77 Prague legends book lined up. I'm an expert book smuggler as well!
Kerry
écrit par avatiakh à 8:10 pm (EST) le Jan 19, 2010
Thank you for the email address -- I'm going to send out an invitation in a couple of minutes! We'd be chuffed to have you with us.
I confess to failing to understand Red Riding. I lived in northern England for nearly 3 years. I spent a year at Leeds Univesity as a "student studying abroad" from a US college; then I married there, and stayed on. I got a job at John Waddington. For the first week and more, people would stop me, say "turn around and say that," and then they'd understand. Well, me too. I would have to watch their lips. That was 1968-70.
I found the movie extraordinary in its realism, and the depiction of characters. However I couldn't understand what they were saying -- the accents defeated me. I need subtitles -- or to watch it when I am super alert. I think I might try again but as you say it's said to be very violent. As far as I had gotten, it was not that as yet.
Ellen
écrit par ellenandjim à 9:18 am (EST) le Jan 11, 2010
Ellen
écrit par ellenandjim à 5:22 pm (EST) le Jan 6, 2010
I am working my way through your excellent Tiny Deaths collection and I just wanted to let you know how much I enjoyed the story "Damned If You Don't" which is superb. I've spent the weekend telling anyone who will listen about how good it is.
It was by happy coincidence that as I navigated to your comments bit I noticed you have had a second collection published. Off I go to Amazon then.
Ben
écrit par benjaminjudge à 3:31 pm (EST) le Dec 20, 2009
I've added your new Love Songs of the Shy & Cynical to my wishlist and will be keeping an eye out for it. I've also added Tiny Deaths to my gifts list for several people whom I know will love it. So you can expect a small (minuscule?) bump to your (I'm sure already fabulous) sales in Chicago from me. It turns out we have a couple of rabid Dr. Who fans in the office here who have kindly offered to loan me their dvd sets so that I can see what I've been missing. They were appalled that I'd never seen it!
The cold has finally caught up with us after an unusually warm November and we're expecting some of the white stuff tonight. You should definitely plan your next Chicago trip for the Fall if you can. September, early October are the best times. Summer is a good time too - lots to do - but it can get awfully hot & humid. I don't think we have a Spring anymore. Maybe a day or two in May then its full on heat.
Wishing you a Merry Christmas & a Happy, Prosperous New Year,
Maureen
écrit par mphchicago à 12:55 pm (EST) le Dec 18, 2009
soniaandree
écrit par soniaandree à 5:48 am (EST) le Dec 11, 2009
écrit par Hope1982 à 9:05 pm (EST) le Nov 17, 2009
Enjoy Chicago. It's one of the US cities I haven't been too. I hope the bookshops prove rewarding. It's always just such a pleasure to see what new finds turn up in unusual places. I can never resist The Strand in New York and usually end up with a suitcase too heavy to haul home.
As to Hay. You have to do it some day, but you are right, it is a nightmare to reach without transport. Maybe one day when I have a bigger car I can start offering lifts... perhaps I should buy one of those library vans to travel with and be done with it, though it may not be very comfortable for passengers there would be plenty to keep them entertained.
écrit par finebalance à 7:43 am (EST) le Nov 14, 2009
You're not alone when it comes to second hand bookshops. Every time I go to Hay-on-Wye I have to go alone as I'd have no room for passengers on the trip home because of the number of books I buy. I try to steer clear of second hand bookshopping in London as I wouldn't be able to get in my flat any more.
And I love Daunts exactly because they file all their books by country. I have an addiction to reading books set in the place I'm visiting. Currently travelling over the next three weeks so I'm saving 'Tiny Deaths' for my return. And I'm guessing from your recent additions that the new volume is now out..
I forgot to mention last time that along with library envy, I'm also suffering cat envy. He/she is beautiful by the way.
Alison
écrit par finebalance à 10:06 am (EST) le Nov 11, 2009
Thank you so much for your message. I can promise you that your book is sitting at the very top of that stack of books that will keep me busy until 2030. I will be reading it very shortly. It is a much wanted addition to my collection. However, I have a long long way to until I achieve a library the size of yours. I am green with jealousy over that!
Alison
x
écrit par finebalance à 4:06 pm (EST) le Nov 2, 2009
écrit par marnocat à 1:20 pm (EST) le Sep 26, 2009
écrit par avatiakh à 10:07 pm (EST) le Sep 13, 2009
Happy reading!
écrit par Stilestrider à 2:04 pm (EST) le Aug 17, 2009
écrit par Stilestrider à 10:23 am (EST) le Aug 17, 2009
xxx
écrit par Booksloth à 12:26 pm (EST) le Apr 3, 2009
:))
Anne B
écrit par AnneBrooke à 2:23 am (EST) le Apr 3, 2009
It was great to meet you at Redemption. Hope you weren't too terribly shattered the next morning - I struggled to stay awake to get off my train at the right station. But it's hard to regret such a fun evening :-)
écrit par archerygirl à 8:45 pm (EST) le Mar 29, 2009
Was wondering if you'd be interested in reviewing my new novel and posting your comments here as well as a few other book-related sites. Saw you liked When I was Five I Killed Myself, and thought you might like my novel since it's also about a disturbed adolescent and a bit dark. I could e-mail you the novel in an e-book format if you'd like. Let me know if you're interested. Here's a link to a summary in case you're interested:
http://christophertusa.com/blog/?page_id...
Thanks,
Chris
écrit par cmtusa à 9:02 am (EST) le Mar 20, 2009
We haven't spoken in a while, so I thought I'd drop by. Have you ever read 'World Brain' by HG Wells? I'm reading about it here: http://people.lis.uiuc.edu/~wrayward/Wellss_Idea_of_World_Brain.htm
and it's amazing - how did he think of these things? He was an original genius - he's writing about the semantic web before the internet was even a twinkle!(setting aside for the moment his more unpleasant ideas on eugenics and his frankly horrid behaviour towards Rebecca West)
P
écrit par Goldengrove à 11:30 am (EST) le Mar 5, 2009
(Lillian Morrison)
Would you like
stories that surprise you
and/or hypnotize you,
a mystery, a history,
a volume to advise you
how to fix a motor,
build your own computer,
use a tape recorder,
get along with mother?
How about a voyage into outer space,
romance with an Alien
of a future race?
Then dip in, dip in,
grapple in with hooks,
dive in, delve in,
GET INTO BOOKS!
écrit par theoldman à 8:21 am (EST) le Mar 1, 2009
Lee Whiteside
écrit par leennnadine à 11:53 pm (EST) le Feb 17, 2009
Hi Rob, hope you are okay. Just sending you the link to the Green Dragon thread about meeting up in London later in the year. So far London seems to be the place of choice for August 15th.
I'm hoping to go but it will all depend on the baby (just over 7 weeks to go!).
And you will probably be travelling the world winning prizes again, but just in case you are free then I thought you might like to know.
When does the new book come out? I've been looking out for it but haven't seen it yet. I'm getting impatient now.
écrit par Jodyreadseverything à 9:07 am (EST) le Feb 9, 2009
écrit par Booksloth à 8:36 am (EST) le Feb 5, 2009
écrit par wordgirluk à 10:24 pm (EST) le Jan 20, 2009
écrit par avaland à 9:24 pm (EST) le Jan 7, 2009
écrit par chalambe à 1:54 pm (EST) le Dec 31, 2008
écrit par beulahry à 6:06 pm (EST) le Dec 29, 2008
It's late here in Canada and I should be in bed and not writing you. Hopefully we will touch base another time, maybe soon.
écrit par callmejacx à 12:18 am (EST) le Dec 21, 2008
Job well done---that is QUITE the impressive haul you managed to get back across the pond! You weren't joking or even beeing a smidgen facetious when you said you picked up, "a couple dozen" books, LOL. Glad that Myopic Books worked out so tremendously for you.
écrit par bookjones à 5:37 pm (EST) le Dec 18, 2008
Una
écrit par Altariel à 5:57 am (EST) le Nov 20, 2008
Also, I don't think I ever came up with one grand unifying theory in that long-winded round-up which is that if you ultimately find yourself having time for one neighborhood book expedition I feel you should definitely do the Wicker Park-Bucktown Myopic/Quimby's tandem (the Hyde Park stores being a very close second)! I don't even know how to adequately describe Quimby's to you except to say that although it is not a used bookstore it completely rises up to and probably exceeds the "quirky" content threshold you mentioned---everything in the place is interesting and off the beaten track IMO.
écrit par bookjones à 12:27 am (EST) le Nov 20, 2008
'Doing' Information Architecture now - oh, dear.
Nice to hear from you again. I'm looking forward to reading Tiny Deaths, but it's taking ages to arrive - just as well probably, I would definitely be reading that instaed of Information Architecture for the World Wide Web which is what I should be reading instead of writing to you!
P
écrit par Goldengrove à 9:54 am (EST) le Nov 19, 2008
écrit par Tifi à 4:43 am (EST) le Nov 19, 2008
écrit par Tifi à 7:10 am (EST) le Nov 13, 2008
Regards
Tim Jones
écrit par timjones à 6:44 am (EST) le Nov 4, 2008
Best
Charles
écrit par chalambe à 6:33 am (EST) le Nov 4, 2008
So so pleased to hear about your fantasy award (and in Canada too!). Well deserved indeed. May it be the first of many to come in the future!!!
Look forward to reading more of your works in the future.
Cheers,
Karen
écrit par kiwidoc à 12:44 pm (EST) le Nov 3, 2008
Booksloth gave me the good news and I am over the moon for you. Tiny Deaths deserved to win and I can now tell my family that the book I gave them last Christmas is now a first addition award winner.
Hope that you are well. I am fine and more importantly so is Babyreadseverything. We are now at week 18 of the pregnancy (although it feels so much longer), nearly the half way point. I've had my operation and that went well and they are now listening in to the baby once a week to reassure me that things are still going well. Trying to listen in anyway but BRE keeps kicking the microphone away and hiding. I am either having a shy baby or one that is already behaving like a moody teenager.
I'm still looking forward to the new book by the way and can't wait to buy it. I agree with avaland on your message below, printed word is better than laptop screen word. I keep getting messages from Waterstones about buying a Sony Reader but it's not for me. It won't look, feel or smell like a book so it can't compete. And once it is out I will have two of your books to move to the front of the shelves in Waterstones or use in my post-it campaign.
Anyway, once again, CONGRATULATIONS! Both you and Tiny Deaths deserved the award.
écrit par Jodyreadseverything à 11:50 am (EST) le Nov 3, 2008
Congratulations, again. Lois
écrit par avaland à 9:02 am (EST) le Nov 3, 2008
Thankyou for your 'Don't Panic' - that was the most sensible thing anyone had said to me that week! (we're on to Databases now, which make much more sense!)
P
écrit par Goldengrove à 3:03 pm (EST) le Nov 1, 2008
Best
Charles
écrit par chalambe à 9:08 am (EST) le Nov 1, 2008
We are awaiting our prepress copies to arrive in the mail for us to look over before giving the official go-ahead and assigning the ISBN. Although the link may allow you to purchase the book now, please don't! No matter how valuable you may think it may prove in a future eBay auction, we don't want anyone to be disappointed should we discover errors in the physical copy.
We hope you enjoy reading it as much as we did writing it.
Feel free to sound off with review commentary!
Here's the private link to check it out:
http://www.lulu.com/content/4707292
*(it may take a minute to load all the pages in the previewer depending on your connection and how busy the page is at certain times)
Boomer M. Wadaska
Illegal Pad Publishing
écrit par illegalpadpublishing à 5:05 am (EST) le Nov 1, 2008
Abby
écrit par ablachly à 3:40 pm (EST) le Oct 28, 2008
I see you've read my story The Zero Worm, from the Elastic Book of Numbers. Thank you! You may be interested to know that it's just been republished as part of my first collection of short stories, entitled The Scent of Cinnamon (Salt Publishing). The collection contains other stories that play around with reality in a similarly cavalier fashion to The Zero Worm. You might enjoy them.
Best
Charles Lambert
écrit par chalambe à 10:30 am (EST) le Oct 28, 2008
"scary & makes my brain throb" - that says it all! I've spent all week on the computing module and I still only got 50% in the test(and there's a test for each week!) When I said it wasn't 'hard' science, I meant strictly in the scientific sense - it's very hard for me...
Perfume - I thought it was brilliant, hubby thinks it sounds nasty and a bit sick, won't go near it. He likes Don Delillo and other American gangster book types - they make no sense to me at all. BUT we both spent our childhoods in Narnia and we both love Iain M Banks (but I suspect for different reasons)
P
écrit par Goldengrove à 3:10 pm (EST) le Oct 16, 2008
I should come clean and say that my MSc is Library & Information studies - so not 'hard' science, but the computing is keeping me busy...
I'm so glad that your story has taken off again - the idea of falling in love with someone because of their book choices makes perfect sense to me. I was a bookseller for quite a long time, and if it never got as far as love, yet I certainly had some very special customers...
Of course, it depends on what sorts of things inspire love in a person; for a bibliomane it will probably always have something to do with books. I don't think they necessarily have to be the same, 'though. My husband and I had almost no overlap in books or records when we married, but the important thing was that we both had books and records and liked to talk about them. Mind you, our first proper conversation was about the ones we had both read. And I've been giving him good suggestions ever since, which he ignores as a point of principle.
P
écrit par Goldengrove à 3:22 pm (EST) le Oct 12, 2008
I had a look at the R Haggard availability on Amazon, and it looks as if Allan Quartermain's adventures survive, but not much else.
He did write a lot, 'though, far more than I've got or had heard of -http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/h/h-rider-haggard/
I must admit that I haven't read all of mine yet - he was a favourite of my father's, and I used to search them out for him in second-hand shops, now they've come back to me in a rather neat circle. My father spent most of the second word war in Africa (6 years with no home leave!) and he had with him St John's Gospel, Lorna Doone and Allan Quartermain. Could you make up a more peculiar selection? And yet, so true to the man - peculiar, in fact. ('Let every creature rise and bring peculiar honours to their King' - my favourite line in hymnody!)
The book entry continues, but slowly, as I've just started an MSc and it's much, much harder than I though it would be - something to do with the 20+ years since my BA, I fear!
Best wishes,
P
écrit par Goldengrove à 4:36 am (EST) le Oct 11, 2008
Let me know how you're doing!
K
écrit par wordgirluk à 5:02 pm (EST) le Oct 9, 2008
I'm very flattered that you've added me to your interesting list!
I've been visiting your page from time to time, as you've been top of the list for raw overlap right from my first day on LT - mind you, I expect that's the case with quite a few people, considering your huge collection (I used to think I had quite a lot of books...)
The interesting thing is, of course, that we don't even appear on each other's wieghted lists. I still have most of upstairs to add - including all the scifi, and a-m fiction - and poetry, plays, history and art. I wonder if that will change things?
Your short stories sound like sort of thing I like, I will have to get hold of them.
I have to add (sorry) that my children will be thrilled to know that the man who brought back the daleks likes my library! (I'm pretty thrilled myself!)
Best wishes,
Goldengrove.
écrit par Goldengrove à 1:52 pm (EST) le Oct 5, 2008
Oh, also, I am just starting to read Zwilling's Dream, and I saw that you had it in your library too, and I was wondering if you've read it yet?
écrit par AlbinoRhino à 12:58 am (EST) le Sep 30, 2008
All the best,
Hannah Holborn
écrit par HannahHolborn à 11:52 am (EST) le Sep 27, 2008