I guess all good things had to come to an end.
I was going to post a book review today, but guess what., Google made me do a 1 hour runabout resetting my password just because I forgot the old one.
I didnt realise that Google had taken over Blogspot. I dont like Google - never have.
Google has no privacy rules - they invade peoples privacy at the drop of a hat.
That is why I refuse to use the Chrome Browser (I use Firefox instead) and also why I wont use any google email or other google product. I don't even use the google search engine.
Since I am seldom posting anything up at this blog any more, I have decided that I am going to close this blog and and move somewhere else - somewhere NOT controlled by Google.
It's been a good run. I have had this blog for 6 and a half years - from March 2007 when I started it.
I will slowly be moving some of my posts and reviews off this blog - some may reappear on my website and others may just go to my hard drive.
So Ciao for now and thank you so much for reading.
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BiblioHistoria
On Paper - The Everything Of Its 2000 Year History
By Nicholas Basbanes
Knopf Books
October 2013
I love Nick Basbanes' books. He writes wonderful book about books and bibliography.
So when I was offered the chance to read this new book, as an ARC (Advanced Readers Copy) I jumped at the opportunity.
This book is about the history of PAPER - that thin stuff we humans used to write on - before the Internet and the world wide web was invented. Now most of us type on keyboards and our writing is stored in Cyberspace!!
Paper was invented back in China some 2000 years ago, and eventually arrived in Europe by way of the Middle East. Paper was clearly readily available before Gutenberg invented the printing press. The Printing press may have been new to Europe in 1450 CE, but it had been around in China in one form or another for quite some time.
While reading the history of paper in this book, was extremely enlightening, Basbanes could have been lightened it up with a few more anecdotes, and personal stories.
Basbanes spent seven years travelling throughout China, Asia, Middle East, Europe and the New World, chasing the history of paper. Some of his stories are interesting, others are not. I am probably biased, but there are some areas of history and some cultures I really don't have any interest in.
The chapters about the history of paper in China and along the Silk Road were very interesting to me. I thoroughly enjoyed those. The chapter about making paper in Japan was not. I personally am not terribly keen on Japanese history or culture.
That's not to say that the history was dry and dull, it wasn't. But all that history, was certainly packed in tight and the chapters were quite lengthy to read. I think another reason why I had trouble getting through this book, is because this was an ARC, (and not the finished product) and there was NOT a lot of white space.
I like reading books with large (easy to read) text and lots of white space. They look "friendly" to me. This ARC had pages and pages of small text with very few photos and not a lot of white space - so again, I may have been biased. As a result, I could not read several chapters at one time.
Basbanes went on to describe different ways in which paper was used. These included chapters on the following subjects.
Currency
Cartridge wraps (for holding the gunpowder before metal bullets were invented)
Hand made paper - often used for Origami (very important in Japan)
Identity papers and passports
Government documents
Diaries, Journals, Letters, Prose, Plays and other forms of literature
Picture Postcards, Posters and Cards
Gift wrapping paper
Designs, plans, schematics and blueprints
Printed Photographs (before the digital photo came along)
And so on.
As you can see, Paper has always been used in a variety of ways and for a lot of different reasons.
This book is due to be published on or around 17 October, 2013 by Alfred Knopf Books.
Price will be USD35 and there will 448 pages.
Growing Up Again
By Mary Tyler Moore
MacMillan 2009
Publishers Review
Yeah, Yeah, I know - it's been way too long since I last read and reviewed anything.
But this book I have just finished reading precisely because like my son, Mary has also struggled with Type 1 diabetes. Except she was diagnosed way back in 1969 - 40 years before she published this book.
Mary was diagnosed in her 30's which is somewhat unusual, but it has been known to happen.
She has never looked after herself as well as she should. She tries hard to keep a tight control on her blood glucose level - but she is tempted by all sweet foods available and she finds it very hard to resist.
As a result, her eyes are not in the best shape. She has lost all her peripheral vision and the only sight she has left is literally tunnel vision (straight ahead).
The A1C is a blood test that shows an average Blood glucose level for the last 3 months.
A Normal A1C number for a non-diabetic is below 6
A diabetic adult is expected to try and keep that number below 7
Diabetic children have to keep it below 8.
Mary Tyler Moore says that sometimes her A1C reading is 9 - which for a diabetic indicates very poor control.
My sons last A1C (tested just last week in fact) is currently 8.5 - which is NOT so good.
I have to keep even tighter control over what food he eats while he is at home over these next 2 months. This is somewhat stressful because he is also entering the time of puberty, going through growth spurts, and complaining that he is always hungry.
It seems to me that after every single meal he is asking for more food. And it certainly doesn't help that all he wants to do is to sit at that damn computer and play video games all day.
Mary Tyler Moore also does not like doing maths and so she has chosen to NOT use a pump - because she cant seem to count the carbs right, or figure out how much extra insulin to add when she is eating.
My son is good at maths and has also shown an interest in going on the pump, so maybe once school starts again, we can look into him doing the required training to get on the pump. This will mean HE has to be in control of his insulin, his food and all the carb counting.
MTM does mention several episodes where she made mistakes, and went HYPOglycemic - this is when the blood sugar levels drop very low. These episodes can often be life threatening if the glucose level stays low for too long. These are also the one time when a diabetic is REQUIRED to eat glucose, sugar, candy, cakes or anything with fast acting carbohydrates, to get the blood glucose levels back up again.
But this does NOT give you carte blanche to gorge on and overeat on the candy and sugar. You eat just enough to get that number back up to a normal level, test your blood glucose level and then stop eating.
Mary does not go into details about her acting - that can all be read in her autobiography - After All. This book deals much more with her life as a diabetic, and her role as the Chairman of the JDRF board.
JDRF stands for Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation - the old name for Type One Diabetes.
If you really want to learn what it is like to have type 1 diabetes, then this is the book to read.
It is just a short book to read - only 160 pages - the rest is appendices about various aspects of diabetes. This is an open and honest look at what it takes and what it means to be diabetic - and showing just how much more the diabetic person has to work at staying alive.
I really enjoyed this book.
Oh rockin' robin well you really gonna rock tonight
BiblioHistoria
Sunday, November 3, 2013
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
Tom Clancy has died
One of my all time favourite movies is the Hunt for Red October. This was a movie made back in the 1990s, starring 2 of my most favourite actors - Sean Connery and Sam Neill.
The movie was adapted from the bestseller book by Tom Clancy.
The author of that book, Tom Clancy, died yesterday.
He was just 66 years old.
The movie was adapted from the bestseller book by Tom Clancy.
The author of that book, Tom Clancy, died yesterday.
He was just 66 years old.
Tuesday, September 17, 2013
The Scanners Universe
I have now been out of Squidoo for 6 months, but I still have an urge to write.
So over the last few days, I have created a new website where I can write my stuff.
I will continue putting book reviews up on this blog.
My new website is called The Scanners Universe
Because after all - I AM a Scanner!!!
This is still a free web-host and it claims to not have any advertisements, but eventually the ads will show up as a pop up. Please ignore the ads when they do show up and read my pages.
Thank you.
So over the last few days, I have created a new website where I can write my stuff.
I will continue putting book reviews up on this blog.
My new website is called The Scanners Universe
Because after all - I AM a Scanner!!!
This is still a free web-host and it claims to not have any advertisements, but eventually the ads will show up as a pop up. Please ignore the ads when they do show up and read my pages.
Thank you.
Monday, September 9, 2013
On Paper - Book Review
On Paper - The Everything Of Its 2000 Year History
By Nicholas Basbanes
Knopf Books
October 2013
I love Nick Basbanes' books. He writes wonderful book about books and bibliography.
So when I was offered the chance to read this new book, as an ARC (Advanced Readers Copy) I jumped at the opportunity.
This book is about the history of PAPER - that thin stuff we humans used to write on - before the Internet and the world wide web was invented. Now most of us type on keyboards and our writing is stored in Cyberspace!!
Paper was invented back in China some 2000 years ago, and eventually arrived in Europe by way of the Middle East. Paper was clearly readily available before Gutenberg invented the printing press. The Printing press may have been new to Europe in 1450 CE, but it had been around in China in one form or another for quite some time.
While reading the history of paper in this book, was extremely enlightening, Basbanes could have been lightened it up with a few more anecdotes, and personal stories.
Basbanes spent seven years travelling throughout China, Asia, Middle East, Europe and the New World, chasing the history of paper. Some of his stories are interesting, others are not. I am probably biased, but there are some areas of history and some cultures I really don't have any interest in.
The chapters about the history of paper in China and along the Silk Road were very interesting to me. I thoroughly enjoyed those. The chapter about making paper in Japan was not. I personally am not terribly keen on Japanese history or culture.
That's not to say that the history was dry and dull, it wasn't. But all that history, was certainly packed in tight and the chapters were quite lengthy to read. I think another reason why I had trouble getting through this book, is because this was an ARC, (and not the finished product) and there was NOT a lot of white space.
I like reading books with large (easy to read) text and lots of white space. They look "friendly" to me. This ARC had pages and pages of small text with very few photos and not a lot of white space - so again, I may have been biased. As a result, I could not read several chapters at one time.
Basbanes went on to describe different ways in which paper was used. These included chapters on the following subjects.
Currency
Cartridge wraps (for holding the gunpowder before metal bullets were invented)
Hand made paper - often used for Origami (very important in Japan)
Identity papers and passports
Government documents
Diaries, Journals, Letters, Prose, Plays and other forms of literature
Picture Postcards, Posters and Cards
Gift wrapping paper
Designs, plans, schematics and blueprints
Printed Photographs (before the digital photo came along)
And so on.
As you can see, Paper has always been used in a variety of ways and for a lot of different reasons.
This book is due to be published on or around 17 October, 2013 by Alfred Knopf Books.
Price will be USD35 and there will 448 pages.
Monday, July 15, 2013
Growing Up Again - Book Review
Growing Up Again
By Mary Tyler Moore
MacMillan 2009
Publishers Review
Yeah, Yeah, I know - it's been way too long since I last read and reviewed anything.
But this book I have just finished reading precisely because like my son, Mary has also struggled with Type 1 diabetes. Except she was diagnosed way back in 1969 - 40 years before she published this book.
Mary was diagnosed in her 30's which is somewhat unusual, but it has been known to happen.
She has never looked after herself as well as she should. She tries hard to keep a tight control on her blood glucose level - but she is tempted by all sweet foods available and she finds it very hard to resist.
As a result, her eyes are not in the best shape. She has lost all her peripheral vision and the only sight she has left is literally tunnel vision (straight ahead).
The A1C is a blood test that shows an average Blood glucose level for the last 3 months.
A Normal A1C number for a non-diabetic is below 6
A diabetic adult is expected to try and keep that number below 7
Diabetic children have to keep it below 8.
Mary Tyler Moore says that sometimes her A1C reading is 9 - which for a diabetic indicates very poor control.
My sons last A1C (tested just last week in fact) is currently 8.5 - which is NOT so good.
I have to keep even tighter control over what food he eats while he is at home over these next 2 months. This is somewhat stressful because he is also entering the time of puberty, going through growth spurts, and complaining that he is always hungry.
It seems to me that after every single meal he is asking for more food. And it certainly doesn't help that all he wants to do is to sit at that damn computer and play video games all day.
Mary Tyler Moore also does not like doing maths and so she has chosen to NOT use a pump - because she cant seem to count the carbs right, or figure out how much extra insulin to add when she is eating.
My son is good at maths and has also shown an interest in going on the pump, so maybe once school starts again, we can look into him doing the required training to get on the pump. This will mean HE has to be in control of his insulin, his food and all the carb counting.
MTM does mention several episodes where she made mistakes, and went HYPOglycemic - this is when the blood sugar levels drop very low. These episodes can often be life threatening if the glucose level stays low for too long. These are also the one time when a diabetic is REQUIRED to eat glucose, sugar, candy, cakes or anything with fast acting carbohydrates, to get the blood glucose levels back up again.
But this does NOT give you carte blanche to gorge on and overeat on the candy and sugar. You eat just enough to get that number back up to a normal level, test your blood glucose level and then stop eating.
Mary does not go into details about her acting - that can all be read in her autobiography - After All. This book deals much more with her life as a diabetic, and her role as the Chairman of the JDRF board.
JDRF stands for Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation - the old name for Type One Diabetes.
If you really want to learn what it is like to have type 1 diabetes, then this is the book to read.
It is just a short book to read - only 160 pages - the rest is appendices about various aspects of diabetes. This is an open and honest look at what it takes and what it means to be diabetic - and showing just how much more the diabetic person has to work at staying alive.
I really enjoyed this book.
Sunday, May 5, 2013
I don't feel old
Happy Birthday to me..
Today is my 49th Birthday.
Next year I will be 50!!
I am chronologically old and definitely grey.
But the curious thing is - I don't FEEL old.
I think this has to do with the fact (and I know, I have probably mentioned this before) that my son is still officially just 10 years old.
But if you have read this blog with any regularity, you would know that MAY is the birthday month in this family. All 3 of us have birthdays in May. Mine just happens to be first which makes me the OLDEST on this family. My husband will also turn 49 this month, and our son will turn 11.
One that has changed from previous years is that I am now officially the SHORTEST in this family.
I have been 5 feet 4 inches tall now for a good 30 years - since I was 19 - at least. My husband has always been just over 6 feet tall. So what's changed, you ask?
Kids have this annoying habit of growing taller, and my son who was shorter than me on my last birthday, is now TALLER than me. I'm 5 feet 4 and he is now 5 feet 5 inches as measured officially by the doctors.
This now makes me both the oldest and the shortest in this family, as well as being the only female.
Happy Birthday to me
Happy Birthday to me
Happy Birthday to me-ee
Happy Birthday to me.
PS while I am mentioning birthdays, this blog turned 6 years old on St Patrick's Day (March 17th) this year.
PPS now that I am no longer doing any Squidoo, I am hoping to go back to reading and reviewing more books for this blog.
Today is my 49th Birthday.
Next year I will be 50!!
I am chronologically old and definitely grey.
But the curious thing is - I don't FEEL old.
I think this has to do with the fact (and I know, I have probably mentioned this before) that my son is still officially just 10 years old.
But if you have read this blog with any regularity, you would know that MAY is the birthday month in this family. All 3 of us have birthdays in May. Mine just happens to be first which makes me the OLDEST on this family. My husband will also turn 49 this month, and our son will turn 11.
One that has changed from previous years is that I am now officially the SHORTEST in this family.
I have been 5 feet 4 inches tall now for a good 30 years - since I was 19 - at least. My husband has always been just over 6 feet tall. So what's changed, you ask?
Kids have this annoying habit of growing taller, and my son who was shorter than me on my last birthday, is now TALLER than me. I'm 5 feet 4 and he is now 5 feet 5 inches as measured officially by the doctors.
This now makes me both the oldest and the shortest in this family, as well as being the only female.
Happy Birthday to me
Happy Birthday to me
Happy Birthday to me-ee
Happy Birthday to me.
PS while I am mentioning birthdays, this blog turned 6 years old on St Patrick's Day (March 17th) this year.
PPS now that I am no longer doing any Squidoo, I am hoping to go back to reading and reviewing more books for this blog.
Friday, March 22, 2013
No more Squidoo
Ok my 2 year fascination with Squidoo has run its course.
Google keep changing their rules and algorithims about spam, spun content and duplicate content and Squidoo kept changing the rules to keep up.
Today was the last straw. They started telling us how to design our lenses. They said that they had created a prompt that strongly suggested that we have an Amazon Sales modules at the top of the lens - at least within the first 5 modules. Up until now, I have always placed my amazon modules at the end of most of my lenses.
I have also become worried about all the personal information and family photographs I was putting on my lenses. I have been thinking of removing them from Squidoo for quite some time now, so when they decided today to tell me how to design my lens, I decided that enough was enough.
I had 266 lenses in my account this morning. I deleted about 85 lenses - mostly the personal ones with personal information about me, and/or photos of various members of my family.
Now I have 181 lenses. I am going to keep those in place, just to continue receiving any residual cash I may pick up.
I wrote a comment in the forum about the HQ policy of this Amazon prompt. A lot of lenses just dont flow smoothly if you interrupt the flow of the content with a sales blurb. Especially if you are required to place a blurb in a specific location. I know HQ denies this, but I beleive that any lens that does not put an Amazon sales module at the top, will eventually be penalised
I also stated that the mere fact that HQ are mentioning this, indicates that income from sales and advertising is clearly dropping and the HQ team are losing income, so they need us to make more money for them. I know this is true because the amount of money I made from Squidoo also dropped for the first 3 months of 2013. My response was that I am not going to massage my lenses just to help them make more money.
To my astonishment, I got an email from the boss man himself - Seth Godin. I may have over-reacted just a smidgen . He claimed that those who did NOT put their Amazon modules near the top of their lenses, would not be penalised. But something tells me that eventually they will be.
His last line said - Sorry to see you go. Good Luck.
I am not leaving Squidoo. I am leaving my account up, and just choosing not to make any more lenses, that's all.
Google keep changing their rules and algorithims about spam, spun content and duplicate content and Squidoo kept changing the rules to keep up.
Today was the last straw. They started telling us how to design our lenses. They said that they had created a prompt that strongly suggested that we have an Amazon Sales modules at the top of the lens - at least within the first 5 modules. Up until now, I have always placed my amazon modules at the end of most of my lenses.
I have also become worried about all the personal information and family photographs I was putting on my lenses. I have been thinking of removing them from Squidoo for quite some time now, so when they decided today to tell me how to design my lens, I decided that enough was enough.
I had 266 lenses in my account this morning. I deleted about 85 lenses - mostly the personal ones with personal information about me, and/or photos of various members of my family.
Now I have 181 lenses. I am going to keep those in place, just to continue receiving any residual cash I may pick up.
I wrote a comment in the forum about the HQ policy of this Amazon prompt. A lot of lenses just dont flow smoothly if you interrupt the flow of the content with a sales blurb. Especially if you are required to place a blurb in a specific location. I know HQ denies this, but I beleive that any lens that does not put an Amazon sales module at the top, will eventually be penalised
I also stated that the mere fact that HQ are mentioning this, indicates that income from sales and advertising is clearly dropping and the HQ team are losing income, so they need us to make more money for them. I know this is true because the amount of money I made from Squidoo also dropped for the first 3 months of 2013. My response was that I am not going to massage my lenses just to help them make more money.
To my astonishment, I got an email from the boss man himself - Seth Godin. I may have over-reacted just a smidgen . He claimed that those who did NOT put their Amazon modules near the top of their lenses, would not be penalised. But something tells me that eventually they will be.
His last line said - Sorry to see you go. Good Luck.
I am not leaving Squidoo. I am leaving my account up, and just choosing not to make any more lenses, that's all.
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Oh rockin' robin well you really gonna rock tonight
Challenges for 2013
I have done NO challenges since the last Canadian Book Challenge in 2009. I completed that challenge reading 40 books in total.
3 times 13 books with 3 different genres, plus 1 extra to make the total books read = 40.
ABM - Autobiographies, Biographies and Memoirs
FS - Free Spirit - Any Canadian book
SA - Single Author - Robert Munsch
For 2013 I have 3 more challenges planned. This year I want to read 12 Public Domain Books, 12 Books by Women (Female) authors and 12 Bibliophilic books (or Books about Books).
I give myself the entire year to do these. I will post reviews here with links to Squidoo as well.
3 times 13 books with 3 different genres, plus 1 extra to make the total books read = 40.
ABM - Autobiographies, Biographies and Memoirs
FS - Free Spirit - Any Canadian book
SA - Single Author - Robert Munsch
For 2013 I have 3 more challenges planned. This year I want to read 12 Public Domain Books, 12 Books by Women (Female) authors and 12 Bibliophilic books (or Books about Books).
I give myself the entire year to do these. I will post reviews here with links to Squidoo as well.
Art and Antiques
GOODREADS WEBSITE
The Golden Era
Other Interesting Places
- Angela Browne
- Antique Map Collecting
- Beyond the Da Vinci Code
- Bibliomania
- Book Lounge Canada
- Books, Fun and Games
- BookThink
- Boston 1775
- Calladus
- Center for the Book
- Confessions of the Pioneer Woman
- Dust Jacket Review
- Freedom to Read
- Genealogue
- Helene Hanff
- Historical Novel Society
- Library of Congress
- Literary Stamps
- Literary Traveler
- Love The Book
- Random Thoughts (Environmentally Friendly)
- Robert J Sawyers Website
- Stories from Jamaica
- The Last Supper Details
- The Slot - Blog (copy editors)
- Today in Literature
- Travellers & Souvenirs
- Whale Song - Cheryl K Tardif
- WOTS Word on the Street
Antiquarian Book related
- ABCD Books
- Anglo Saxon Chronicles
- Antiquarian Bibles
- Antiquarian Book News
- Archaeologia
- Bodleian Library @ Oxford University
- Book Collecting 101
- Book Hunters Holiday
- Book Think
- Books & Book Collecting
- Byblos Books
- David Brass Rare Books
- Grolier Club
- Gutenberg Library
- Horizon Books Toronto Canada
- Nicholas Basbanes
- Oak Knoll Books & Press
- Papyrus, Books and Antiquities
- Pepys Diary
- Project Gutenberg
- Rare Book News
- Renascence Editions 1477-1799
- Scott from Fine Books & Collections Magazine
- Shapero Books
- The Essentials of Book Collecting
- The Huntingdon Library @ Pasadena
- University of Toronto Books
- World Wide School Library
Bookstores
- Aquila Books
- Asher Rare Books
- Bibliomania
- Book Express
- Bookcloseouts
- Books for Business
- Bromer Books
- Dundurn Publishers
- Eximious Books
- Hard to Find but Worth the Effort Second Hand Bookshop
- Ken Sanders Rare Books - Utah
- Locate your favourite Bookshops
- McNally Robinson Bookstore Online
- Nicholas Hoare Books Toronto
- Old Scrolls
- Parent Books
- Shelfari
- Tesseract - Science Fiction & Fantasy
- The Colophon Bookshop
- Tomfolio
- WordsWorth Books
Other Biblio Blogs
- 1001 Books - You Should Read
- A High and Hidden Place
- A Life in Books
- A Work in Progress
- Adventures in Bookland
- AHA
- Around the World in 100 books
- Biblio Technician
- Biblioaddict
- BibliOdyssey
- BiblioFiles
- Bibliophile Bullpen
- BiblioShakespeare
- Bibliothecary - the new version
- Book Chase
- Book Hunter's Blog
- Book in Hand
- Book Ninja
- Book Patrol
- Book Puddle
- Book Ride - Rare Book Guide
- Book Trout
- Book World
- Book Worm
- Bookaholic
- Books Found
- Books Lists Life
- Books Lists Life Too
- Deanna's Tragic Right Hip
- Dove Grey Reader UK
- Dundurn Publishers Blog
- Eves Alexandria
- Exeter Book History Devon UK
- Exile Bibliophile
- Great Books A Chapter a Day
- Grumpy Old Bookman
- Historia's Books
- Historical Tapestry
- Imani - Books of my Numberless Dreams
- Indextrious Reader
- Kates Book Blog
- Library of Congress Blog
- Literary Feline
- Literary Word
- Little Librarian
- Loaded Questions
- Lori - She Treads Softly
- Lux Mentis
- Lynnes Corner of the Globe
- Maproom
- Me & My Big Mouth
- Mirabilis from Canada
- Musings of a Bookish Kitty
- Patricia Storms Cartoonist
- Philobiblos
- Plan B for J.Anne
- Reading Challenges
- Red Room Library
- Robert J Sawyers Blog
- Sarah's Books
- Sassy Monkey
- Selling Books Online
- So Many Books
- The Millions
- Thoughts of Joy
- Work in Progress
- You Can Never Have Too Many Books
About Me
- Francesca Thomas
- I love books, I love reading them, I love owning them. I love History and Maps, Genealogy, Archaeology, and Sci Fi (Star Trek & Stargate) and Biographies.


