Middlemarch {George Eliot}
Season of Migration to the North {Tayeb Salih}
This Side of Paradise {F. Scott Fitzgerald}
A Farewell To Arms {Ernest Hemingway}
The Sun Also Rises {Ernest Hemingway}
Green Grass, Running Water {Thomas King}
The God of Small Things {Arundhati Roy}
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas {Hunter S. Thompson}
Siddartha {Herman Hesse}
Demian {Herman Hesse}
Jane Eyre {Charlotte Bronte}
Tess of the D'Urbervilles {Thomas Hardy}
Ishmael {Daniel Quinn}
The Grapes of Wrath {John Steinbeck}
Waiting For Godot {Samuel Beckett}
Les Fleurs de Mal (The Flowers of Evil) {Charles Baudelaire}
Les Miserables {Victor Hugo}
Pride and Predjudice {Jane Austen}
King Lear, Hamlet, A Midsummer Night's Dream {William Shakespeare}
A Wrinkle in Time {Madeline L'Engle}
The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe {C.S. Lewis}
The Stranger {Albert Camus}
The Plague {Albert Camus}
One Hundered Years of Solitude {Gabriel Garcia Marquez}
Memories of My Melancholy Whores {Gabriel Garcia Marquez}
Heart of Darkness {Joseph Conrad}
Apology {Plato} Electra {Sophocles}
Antigone {Sophocles}
Cannery Row {John Steinbeck}
The Jazz Age {F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald}
Judge on Trial {Ivan Klima}
Consolation of Philosophy {Boethius}
The Monodology {Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz}
On What Grounds What (essay) {Jonathan Schaffer}
Out of the Silent Planet {C.S. Lewis}
The Reader {Bernhard Schlink}
Dracula {Bram Stoker}
..........................................................................................................


"And now good morrow to our waking souls,
Which watch not one another out of fear;
For love all love of other sights controls,
And makes one little room an everywhere."
{John Donne, "The Good Morrow"}

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Refreshing...

http://outofprintapparel.com/blog/2010/found-britains-smallest-library/

This is a really great idea. I hope that more people realize the significance of community-centered education facilities like this one... even if it is just a phone booth.

My mom is currently trying to restore the library that used to be a block away from the house where I grew up. It was one of the reasons my parents chose the house, as they had two young children who would benefit from such close access to so many books. The building is called the Carnegie Center, and was initially set up to be a library because of funding donated from the legacy of Andrew Carnegie.

Soon after we moved there, however, the center was turned into part children's museum, part art museum... also an important community asset, but less popular. Now, almost 15 years later, a committee, including my devoted mother, is working to give the center back its original function.

Seeing as how our current city library is located in a strip mall, with hours that don't accommodate anyone, due to a lack of funding, a library in an old, beautiful building that was supposed to be a library in the first place would be extraordinarily refreshing.

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