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  • gurnemanz
    Full Member
    • Nov 2010
    • 7382

    Penguin: I'm greatly enjoying Meet the Dictionary People by Sarah Ogilvie, her enthusiastic exposition of discoveries she made concerning some of the diverse characters who contributed to the first edition OED

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    • Cockney Sparrow
      Full Member
      • Jan 2014
      • 2283

      Originally posted by smittims View Post
      That's a good tip about bending new books to make them last. Thanks.
      Originally posted by Bella Kemp View Post
      .......... Unread books, I suppose, feel unloved, and after a time their pages will become melancholy and detach themselves from the spine.
      I find it essential with new choral scores - I have enough to attend to without dealing with pages that don't turn easily or remain flat. I recall a rehearsal take where Boult refers to "disciplining" the score for the same result.

      I have to say that I find the thought of books having feelings unnerving. It would mean I'm surrounded by an enormous reservoir of resentment at my lack of attention to the many, many unread books. Also (shades of "Toy Story") the panic induced by my current considerable cull on the bookshelves and their possible fate - Oxfam bookshop, other charity shop, or paper/cardboard recycling...... Some can rest easy in the knowledge they are marked for sale on Ebay (when I get round to it) as definitely of interest and value, so will find a good home.

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      • smittims
        Full Member
        • Aug 2022
        • 4092

        Christopher Bishop : There was an awful noise of people turning scores.

        Sir Adrian. Sorry,it was just one person turning a score.

        Bishop. Oh , it was you, was it?

        Sir A (bashing the score) : Im trying to 'larn'* it.

        That's a delightful disc, isn't it? Attempting to improve ensemble between chorus and orchestra: 'Glourious time -lag up there, wasn't there? '

        I'm doing my best to re-read my books . It started when I realised I hadn't read Nostromo since 1977, and shouldn't wait that long to read it again. I'm amazed at some of the prices on my old Penguins. The Buildings of England (Pevsner ) 30p. Last time I bought one it was £60! Ah, but they now have colour photographs.


        ----------------------------------------------------------

        *larn : Dickensian: to teach .

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        • Ian Thumwood
          Full Member
          • Dec 2010
          • 4160

          I have the Pevsner edition for Hampshire and IoW which I bought sometime in the 1990s. It is interesting because some of rhe buildings singled out have now been demolished. I lost faith in Pevsner upon learning two things. One of these is that some editions have quite a few inaccuracies concerning historical elements. The other was told to be by a retired architect who informed me that the county architect consulted for advice in some instances and that Pevsner repaid the favour by incorporating some of the County architect' work in the book by way of favour. This is why some unremarkable buildings were included....at least in the Hampshire volume. Given that he worked for Hants CC at the time, I had no need to doubt him. I am sure this much have happened elsewhere.

          BTW... I would rate Nostromo as one of the greatest novels of all time. Joseph Conrads other books are not always so good. Struggled with Secret Agent and Lord Jim. Nostromo.and Heart of Darkness are good.

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          • Serial_Apologist
            Full Member
            • Dec 2010
            • 37614

            Originally posted by Cockney Sparrow View Post



            I find it essential with new choral scores - I have enough to attend to without dealing with pages that don't turn easily or remain flat. I recall a rehearsal take where Boult refers to "disciplining" the score for the same result.

            I have to say that I find the thought of books having feelings unnerving. It would mean I'm surrounded by an enormous reservoir of resentment at my lack of attention to the many, many unread books. Also (shades of "Toy Story") the panic induced by my current considerable cull on the bookshelves and their possible fate - Oxfam bookshop, other charity shop, or paper/cardboard recycling...... Some can rest easy in the knowledge they are marked for sale on Ebay (when I get round to it) as definitely of interest and value, so will find a good home.

            Comment

            • smittims
              Full Member
              • Aug 2022
              • 4092

              My only reservation about Pevsner is that he seems to think churches are so much more architecturally-interesting buildings than anything else (though admittedly he has a penchant for stately homes) . Of course churches are often fascinating capsules of history, but many more recent buildings are interesting too. Twentieth-century architecture often gets no more than a cursory nod.

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              • Old Grumpy
                Full Member
                • Jan 2011
                • 3600

                How Music Works by John Powell. Interesting, informative and amusing - but may not be to everyone's taste on these boards...

                Have you ever listened to an incredible piece of music and wondered exactly why it makes you want to dance or cry? Are you mystified by how musicians just 'know' what…

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                • smittims
                  Full Member
                  • Aug 2022
                  • 4092

                  That looks like the sort of book we need more of. I hope it sells well. I hope the days are log gone when one used to meet people who were proud of knowing nothing about the technical side of msuic. I've always found the more I know the more I enjoy it.

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