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Thu, May. 5th, 2005 09:12 pm
oyceter: Stack of books with text "mmm... books!" (mmm books)
[personal profile] oyceter
In which I spend too much money at the used bookstore...

Went by the used bookstore yesterday, and was rather sad and amazed that I have managed to not go there for a good month, at the very least. Mostly it's been Borders trips these days. I suspect a large part of that is the desire to stand there and read manga, since the used bookstore doesn't have nearly half the selection there. Chatted with old co-workers there, which was extremely nice (I suck so much at keeping in touch with people), and then I got rather carried away.

I swear, I was only in there to look for Liz Carlyle's The Devil to Pay, thanks to [livejournal.com profile] oracne's rec in a previous post and my burning desire to read more spy/thief/women-of-dubious-morality romance novels. I found it. I also found a whole bunch of other stuff!

The bookstore has changed! There are entire new sections, and the videos section has expanded enormously! And there's a new paperback room, and more space for the sf/f mass markets, and the romances have been moved to an entirely different corner all together! But most surprisingly, the bookstore has started buying category romances. *gasp* It used to be one of those things that we just never bought. And now they are there! This makes me really happy, as this means I can hopefully get my hands on more of Crusie's backlist. Amazingly, they did have one of her old Harlequins there (or was it Silhouette? I can't remember), but it's one that's already been republished (Strange Bedpersons). Anyhow, now I can look for out-of-print Regencies and stuff. Joy!

Bookspoils:

  • Liz Carlyle, The Devil to Pay

  • Laura Kinsale, The Shadow and the Star.
    Thankfully, the reprint, not the one with the dreadful Fabio cover. I actually read the first half several years ago and disliked it, but I figure it's everyone's favorite Kinsale (or so it seems), so I should try again.

  • Diane Ackerman, A Slender Thread: Rediscovering Hope at the Heart of Crisis
    Because I really liked her A Natural History of the Senses and because it's on her experiences working on a suicide hotline, which is a subject that very much interests me on many levels.

  • Monica Furlong, Robin's Country,
    Because I didn't realize she wrote something outside of the Wise Child books and because it's Robin Hood.

  • Joan D. Vinge, Ladyhawke.
    I actually have no idea why I got this one, because I didn't like the movie. But someone mentioned it somewhere on someone's LJ (I hate it when I can't remember where I heard something) and I think it was part of a list of not-bad movie tie-in novels.

  • Georgette Heyer, Powder and Patch,
    Because I like the Georgian era (I am an atypical romance reader in that the Regency era doesn't do much for me at all... I don't hate it, but I don't get the fuss) and I was curious about the male-Pygmalion scenario and how it would play out. This is now the third Heyer that I own (others being Sprig Muslin and Convenient Marriage), all of which I have not touched. I'm just not in the mood for nice, proper romance right now, I suppose, but in case I ever do get in the mood, ye gods, I will have enough for a minor rampage!

  • Michael Swanwick, The Iron Dragon's Daughter
    Because [livejournal.com profile] rachelmanija keeps reccing it and I finally saw it in a bookstore! Ha! I feel like I have won. I'm not quite sure what I have won (besides the book, of course), but I have confounded the two nearby libraries that do not have it. So there.

Of course, now this means I have overshot my budget and must eat microwavable mac and cheese or frozen pizza or whatever else is hiding in my fridge for a few more days. Oh well. I have books! Really, it's almost like food ;).

ETA: reformatted because my eyes hurt from the giant blocks of text
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Thu, May. 5th, 2005 11:21 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] rachelmanija.livejournal.com
Terri Windling's autobiographical essay in that is going to blow you away. It's a great anthology, but that's the best thing in it.

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