In order to get free shipping from Amazon.ca, I always order three books at a time.
Combine that with work, my Economist subscription, and other demands upon my time and the consequence is that I have several dozen books either ongoing or not yet started. Indeed, stacks of books now occupy my entire kitchen table.
My latest acquisitions are Primo Levi’s The Periodic Table, which was named by the Royal Institute as the best science book ever, and Bill McKibben’s edited collection of key environmental writings: American Earth: Environmental Writing Since Thoreau.
bookdepository.co.uk has free shipping on all books and is often cheaper than Amazon.
Wouldn’t an ereader solve the problem of shipping, desk space and (unmentioned) environmental concerns associated with paper books?
The Kindle and electronic books
Me too! I always order three books from Amazon.ca, and I always have a bunch of books on the go at the same time, plus a backlog of unread books.
I am now in even worse shape than before.
In New York, I picked up two collections of Richard Feynman’s writing (The Pleasure of Finding Things Out and Six Easy Pieces: Essentials of Physics Explained by Its Most Brilliant Teacher) as well as a copy of Richard Rhodes’ The Making of the Atomic Bomb.
I got them all at an excellent used bookshop in SoHo, called Housing Works.
I finished the first Feynman book and am more than halfway through the Rhodes book.
Amazon.ca is now offering free shipping on orders of over $25, down from $39 before.
My book inundation is about as bad as ever.
Nearly done:
More than half done:
Started:
Unstarted:
* Actively being read
I finished two books over the weekend:
Levi, Primo. The Periodic Table.
Ignatieff, Michael. The Warrior’s Honour: Ethnic War And the Modern Consciousness.
Reviews are forthcoming.
I am also making good progress on Richard Feynman’s Six Easy Pieces: Essentials of Physics Explained by Its Most Brilliant Teacher and Couple Skills: Making Your Relationship Work by Matthew McKay et al.
As of now, I have 16 fiction books ongoing and 21 non-fiction.
One more down
Geez Pete’s list of “Top 50 Essential Non-Fiction Books for Weirdos”
David Pescovitz at 9:52 AM Thursday, Feb 10, 2011
Inspired by the Modern Library’s “Top 100” list, Cheryl Botchick over at the Geez Pete blog took a crack at listing his picks for the “Top 50 Essential Non-Fiction Books for Weirdos.” Now, of course this is a “fool’s errand,” as she says, and the word “weirdo” is made of an infinite number of pocket subcultures, but it’s still a list of mostly really great, inspiring, or at minimum, provocative, books (not that I’ve read them all). Next, Geez is planning to tackle fiction for weirdos.