My favorite collection
What makes mince meat of my film collection, are the books, leaning heavily on the eBook format of course, I shall slowly edit in a condensed list of it, using phrases, and sentences of varying quality of the haphazard nature of the moment they were typed. Arranged alphabetically, but if there's any missteps in my alphabetical arrangement, it's because my brain is deficient in some ways.
What the whole internet offers, my reading catalog still rises above, and must rise above, as in a year after initially posting this, there ought to be enough of any certain kind of thing that would actually make other people mad that i'm wasting time on SW at all, but even though the factual rising of this is for me, it cannot be the only high superstructure for daily perusal and amazement, time allotted to each spherical domain is to be perfected, not neglected.
Wilhelmus a Brakel -- when I can stomach it, it's nice, if I can say anything better, i'll edit it in.
Calvin's Institutes -- just the text of the Battles translation, but this major work of theology is also amongst my audible library which has the Beveridge translation
Ron Chernow -- Washington: A Life
Cioran -- just the aphorisms for starters here, and then the longer essays when I can stay focused for longer periods of time.
Mark Z. Danielewski's House of Leaves, in physical form, you need to with this one!!
Virginia Roberts Giuffre -- Nobody's Girl, Jeffrey Epstein's most famous victim.
Jeff Guinn's trilogy of madness as mentioned already in today's activity.
The Collected Work of CG Jung
Stephen King, can't forget this guy, so many memories, and when it's his classic stuff, it's tasty like your favorite happy meal.
Martial's Epigrams -- a saucy rendering of life in ancient Rome.
The Penguin Arthur Miller -- doing The Crucible 1st
NRSV -- this was mentioned by some here that it's the best translation, and it has all the apocrypha too, a year's long effort.
Plato - Complete Works edited by John M. Cooper
Proust's In Search of Lost Time, also in the public domain translation in audible.
Red Pine -- Three Zen Sutras, RP's edition of these sacred texts are generally seen as having high merit, he offers some guidance in commentary and footnotes. Buddhism in general is just so exotic to me, more so than any other Westerner would like like since say the 1910s and earlier.
Rilke -- i've got most of what an English speaker could ever want for this most interesting poet, reading The Book of Hours translated by Edward Snow, something I paid over 30 dollars on.
Gunnar Staalesen -- Varg Veum Collection, this is a pretty good Nordic Noir author, i've completed one in this Inherit the Wind, it was a good time, so I now christen it as more time worthy being here, everything here is worthy of more time in my personal preferences.
What the whole internet offers, my reading catalog still rises above, and must rise above, as in a year after initially posting this, there ought to be enough of any certain kind of thing that would actually make other people mad that i'm wasting time on SW at all, but even though the factual rising of this is for me, it cannot be the only high superstructure for daily perusal and amazement, time allotted to each spherical domain is to be perfected, not neglected.
Wilhelmus a Brakel -- when I can stomach it, it's nice, if I can say anything better, i'll edit it in.
Calvin's Institutes -- just the text of the Battles translation, but this major work of theology is also amongst my audible library which has the Beveridge translation
Ron Chernow -- Washington: A Life
Cioran -- just the aphorisms for starters here, and then the longer essays when I can stay focused for longer periods of time.
Mark Z. Danielewski's House of Leaves, in physical form, you need to with this one!!
Virginia Roberts Giuffre -- Nobody's Girl, Jeffrey Epstein's most famous victim.
Jeff Guinn's trilogy of madness as mentioned already in today's activity.
The Collected Work of CG Jung
Stephen King, can't forget this guy, so many memories, and when it's his classic stuff, it's tasty like your favorite happy meal.
Martial's Epigrams -- a saucy rendering of life in ancient Rome.
The Penguin Arthur Miller -- doing The Crucible 1st
NRSV -- this was mentioned by some here that it's the best translation, and it has all the apocrypha too, a year's long effort.
Plato - Complete Works edited by John M. Cooper
Proust's In Search of Lost Time, also in the public domain translation in audible.
Red Pine -- Three Zen Sutras, RP's edition of these sacred texts are generally seen as having high merit, he offers some guidance in commentary and footnotes. Buddhism in general is just so exotic to me, more so than any other Westerner would like like since say the 1910s and earlier.
Rilke -- i've got most of what an English speaker could ever want for this most interesting poet, reading The Book of Hours translated by Edward Snow, something I paid over 30 dollars on.
Gunnar Staalesen -- Varg Veum Collection, this is a pretty good Nordic Noir author, i've completed one in this Inherit the Wind, it was a good time, so I now christen it as more time worthy being here, everything here is worthy of more time in my personal preferences.

