What's On Your Bookshelf?
October 20, 2004 |
81 Comments
In the soon-to-be grand tradition of Cameron’s awesome Screen Grab Confab, I bring you the, um, Bookshelf Photo Confab!
I was looking my own bookshelf here at work as I was packing my stuff up, and I thought it’d be interested to see what others had in their bookshelf. So I took a picture, will post it (comment #1) and invite you to do the same. Here’s what to do:
- Take a picture of one shelf from a bookcase. It can be any old book case, but it needs to be yours.
- Create a 430px wide and no more than 200px tall picture of it at 100%. Lower the quality as much as is acceptable, we want to see what you’ve got, not wait forever for the photo to load.
- Post as a comment using a <img> tag with the photo hosted on your own server and any comments you like.
- If you don’t have access to a camera, just write a short description of your shelf. I’d hate to leave anyone out.
So what’s on your bookshelf people?
Filed under: News
Comments
1. Keith said:
Posted on October 20, 2004 12:19 AM | #
2. Jonathan M. Hollin said:
Ha, ha - great thread Keith. Here’s mine:
It’ll be interesting to see what’s on everyone’s shelves.
Posted on October 20, 2004 12:34 AM | #
3. Craig said:
From left to right:
Int. Japanese Grammar Dict.
Japanese Dict.
Tao Te Ching
Almost Transparent Blue
Almost Transp. Blue (Japanese)
Giving Up the Gun
Indian Nocturne
Jimmy Corrigan: Smartest Kid on Earth
Melancholy Death of Oyster Boy
Pocket Pal
collection of Yoshitake Shinsuke’s illustrations
Naomi
Pierre Declares
One Hundred Years of Solitude
Angkor (the temples)
The Stranger
Buddha
11 Copies of Kuhaku (with boxes more on the floor below)
Martin Amis
Pianissimo
Posted on October 20, 2004 12:44 AM | #
4. Tom said:
It’s more of a pile than a shelf and only has
There’s also a copy of the Zeldman book in the office which I’ve forced on someone else.
The rest are at home half of them nerdy (Either web design or Mac related) or stories, inc Huxley, Orwell, Asimov and a few others.
Posted on October 20, 2004 01:37 AM | #
5. Christian Machmeier said:
Great post, Keith!
I’m very interested to see what books others are reading. Here you got a german one.. well, mostly!
Posted on October 20, 2004 01:41 AM | #
6. graphic said:
“Using HTML and XHTML” is definitely the most precious in there, “XPath 2.0” is the newest (acquisition) and “Anaglife Geometrice” (“geometrical anaglyphs” in Romanian) is both the oldest (1973) and the sexiest :)
Posted on October 20, 2004 01:44 AM | #
7. Chris Glass said:
Posted on October 20, 2004 03:04 AM | #
8. Dysfunksional.Monkey said:
My amazon wishlist has just gotten twice as big… not good…
Posted on October 20, 2004 03:17 AM | #
9. Dave Marks said:
Most of my books are packed away, as I’m moving in 10 days (Not found anywhere yet, but thats a whole other story)
This is a couple of newish books/books i’m reading that I have kept stacked next to my monitor
Posted on October 20, 2004 03:17 AM | #
10. Dysfunksional.Monkey said:
Graig, who’s the author of the Buddha book you’ve got listed? Wouldn’t mind having a peek…
Posted on October 20, 2004 03:21 AM | #
11. Randy said:
I have my “geek” shelf as well, with books about PHP and MySQL and CSS and all that stuff. But this is my Tolkien bookshelf, which has the Lord of the Rings, the Hobbit, the Silmarillion, and the History of Middle Earth series.
Posted on October 20, 2004 03:32 AM | #
12. Steven said:
Most Useful: ‘CSS 2.0 Programmer’s Reference’
Best Read: ‘Universal Principles of Design’
(Great post Keith, beats the oh so serious, and slightly scary 100% validation thread. Have you been listening to those web design students you posted about??)
Posted on October 20, 2004 04:26 AM | #
13. Dan Mall said:
I’ve got a bunch of Visual Quickstart Guides, Flash MX Bible, Dreamweaver MX Bible, a bunch of old Flash 3 and Director 7 books from Macromedia, Flash deConstruction, Skip Intro, Designing with Web Standards, Web Standards Solutions, Taking your Talent to the Web, Trains of Thought, Essential PHP, Designing Brand Identity, Timing for Animation, and Photoshop: Secrets of the Pros.
Great post, Keith. You know how to keep people reading!
Posted on October 20, 2004 04:29 AM | #
14. Gabriel Mihalache said:
I don’t have a bookshelf. What I do have is a book pile on my bed side. Here’s a non-exhaustive list:
Friedrich Nietzsche - about 4 books
Ayn Rand - Atlas Shrugged
Eric Berne - Games People Play
(a bunch of guys) - Advanced Calculus/Algebra
(a bunch of guys) - Advanced Calculus/Algebra (exercises)
(a bunch of guys) - Introduction to Accounting (I need to throw this out for 2 years now, thx for reminding me)
J.P. Sartre - Existentialism and Human Emotion (collection of kick-ass essays)
Gary S. Becker - An Economic Approach to Human Behaviour
… so nothing computer or design related. Sorry ;-)
Posted on October 20, 2004 04:37 AM | #
15. Carl-Johan Kihlbom said:
I have a small fetish for books in general and computer books in particular. So here is one of my shelves:
Let me know if you’d like to see the other 5 shelves.
Posted on October 20, 2004 05:18 AM | #
16. chet said:
Arg. My webcam was being a pain.
Web Database Applications with PHP and MySQL
The Atlas of Middle Earth
PHP/MySQL for the Absolute Beginner
The whole Macromedia set of Training From the Source books.
Star Wars Visual Dictionary
Visual Basic.NET
Javascript 1.1
JavaScript for the Absolute Beginner
XHTML in Easy Steps
…And my iPod mini box. It was too beautiful to throw away.
Posted on October 20, 2004 05:29 AM | #
17. Jonathan M. Hollin said:
I want to see Carl-Johan Kihlbom’s other 5 shelves (please)! :-)
Posted on October 20, 2004 06:09 AM | #
18. Laura said:
It’s more than one shelf full but this is the list of the web related books that I own.
Posted on October 20, 2004 06:15 AM | #
19. Laura said:
Sorry, the URL above is incorrect.
These are web related books that I own.
Posted on October 20, 2004 06:20 AM | #
20. Steven said:
Ha! Randy mate, having a Tolkein shelf could also be considered “geek”. I have something similar, though not as organized!!
Posted on October 20, 2004 06:41 AM | #
21. Craig S. said:
Posted on October 20, 2004 06:41 AM | #
22. Mike S. said:
Web cam is causing me fits too…
1. Just XSL - Simpson
2. Visual Basic Design Patterns - Stamatakis
3. Designing Active Server Pages - Mitchell
4. Java In A Nutshell - Flanagan
5. XML IE 5 Programmer’s Reference - Homer
6. IE5 Dynamic HTML Programmer’s Ref - Francis, Homer & Ullman
7. Javascript Objects - Nakhimovsky & Myers
8. VB XML - Brit & Dunsteyn
9. Windows Web Scripting Dev. Guide - Heflin & Ney
10. The Struts Framework - Spielman
11. The Inmates are Running the Asylum - Cooper
12. The Essentials of User Interface Design - Cooper
13. The Essentials of User Interface Design 2nd edition - Cooper
14. XML Application Dev w/ MSXML 4.0 - Mohr et al.
15. GDI+ Programming - White, Garrett & Robinson
16. C# Programmer’s Reference - Palmer
17. Professional Windows Forms - Bell et al.
18. Professional Windows GUI Programming - Choudhury et al.
19. XSLT Programmer’s Reference 2nd Ed - Kay
20. Programming Visual Basic 6.0 - Balena
21. Succeeding w/the Booch & OMT Methods - Martin
22. User Interfaces in C# - MacDonald
23. .Net Enterprise Design - Nilsson
And this is just my shelf at work. 5X at home…my wife hates it.. This was a great exercise!!!
Posted on October 20, 2004 07:02 AM | #
23. Omar Shabbir said:
An odd selection I bet you’re all thinking!
The Taliban books were purchased shortly after 9/11 as I wanted to basically find out who exactly these mad men were. A Michael Moore book is in there somewere.
Currently enjoying Richard Branson’s book at the moment.
Posted on October 20, 2004 07:26 AM | #
24. Jeff Clark said:
No picture, but I can just tell you:
Textbooks. Lots and lots of freaking marketing textbooks. And I’ve still got a year to go before I graduate!
I also have “Creating Customer Evangelists” (highly suggested for marketing folks), a few page design books,, some other non-textbook marketing books, a crap-load of CommArts and Maxim mags and a Zagat’s for New York - even though I’ve never been there.
Not gonna lie. I probably also have porn in there somewhere, too.
Posted on October 20, 2004 08:04 AM | #
25. Taco John said:
A number of textbooks, including:
Essentials of Sport Law
Fundementals of Sport Marketing
Introductory Financial Management
Course packs for an operations management class and a behavior and management class;
An LSAT prep book (glad that’s over with);
A ton of law school applications and guidebooks;
The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy;
Magazines, including PC World, Runner’s World and Car and Driver.
As for non-reading stuff, there’s some Playstation 2 games and accessories, assorted junk, and a box of Quaker Fruit & Oatmeal bars.
Posted on October 20, 2004 08:04 AM | #
26. Rafal said:
I could take a photo but everybody knows how it looks like. Porn baby porn… hehe, j/k
Posted on October 20, 2004 08:06 AM | #
27. Jonathan M. Hollin said:
Craig: Been looking at your website, Kuhaku looks like a great book. It’s going on my wishlist. Thanks for the heads up.
Posted on October 20, 2004 08:35 AM | #
28. Carl-Johan Kihlbom said:
Okey, here we go! The remaining 5 shelves:
Posted on October 20, 2004 08:36 AM | #
29. Jacob said:
I couldn’t possibly take a photo of our little library at the office, seeing as how it’s way too large for 430x200px and it’s spread all over the office along with the people who need’s the books. One of my collegues recently made a little status though. I tried to sort out most of the danish books, correct me if I am wrong:
* Susan Shelly, Jim Schneck - The Complete Idiot’s Guide To Learning Sign Language
* Michael Moore - Dude Where’s My Country
* Michael Moore - Stupid White Men
* Tara Calishain, Rael Dornfest - Google Hacks
* Various authors - The Software Deployment Mystery (IBM Redbook)
* The complete LOTR collection
* Scott E. Donaldson Stanley G. Siegel - Successful Software Development
* Dimitrios Michelinakis - Open Source CMS
* Lon Poole, Dennis R. Cohen - Mac OS X Bible
* Matthew Gast - 802.11 Wireless Networks
* Rob Flickenger - Building Wireless Community Networks
* Drew Heywood, Rob Scrimger - Networking with Microsoft TCP/IP
* Brealey, Myers, Marcus - Fundamentals of Corporate Finance
* Ralph L. Kleim, Irwin S. Ludin - Project Management Practitioner’s Handbook
* Lorin Woolfe - The Bible on Leadership
* Linda Richardson - The Sales Success Handbook
* Wallace D. Wattles - The Science of Getting Rich
* Laurie McCanna - How to Do Everything With Photoshop 7
* Sharon Steuer - The Adobe Illustrator CS Wow! Book
* Jennifer Niederst - Web Design in a Nutshell
* Russell Chun - Macromedia Flash MX Advanced
* Branden Hall, Samuel Wan - Object-Oriented Programming with ActionScript
* Monica Pawlan - Essentials of the Java Programming Language
* Eric M. Burke, Brian M. Coyner - Java Extreme Programming Cookbook
* Budi Kurniawan - Java for the Web with Servlets, JSP and EJB
* Elliotte Rusty Harold - Java I/O
* Jack Schirazi - Java Performance Tuning (both 1st and 2nd edition)
* Hans Bergsten - JavaServer Pages
* Jason Hunter, William Crawford - Java Servlet Programming
* James Elliott, Robert Eckstein, Marc Loy, David Wood, Brian Cole - Java Swing
* W. Clay Richardson, Donald Avondolio, Joe Vitale - Professional Portal Development With Open Source Tools
* Westy Rockwell - XML, XSLT, Java and JSP
* Eric A. Meyer - CSS 2 Programmer’s Reference
* Eric A. Meyer - CSS Definitive Guide
* Eric A. Meyer - More Eric Meyer on CSS
* Chuck Musciano, Bill Kennedy - HTML & XHTML The Definitive Guide
* Dan Shafer - Designing Without Tables Using CSS
* David Flannagan - Javascript Definitive Guide
* Ken Coar, Rich Bowen - Apache Cookbook
* Various authors - Beginning PHP, Apache, MySQL Web Development (Wrox)
* Michael Tobler - Inside Linux
* Nicholas Wells - KDE in 24 Hours
* Bill McCarty - Learning Debian GNU Linux
* Jerry Peek, Grace Todino, John Strang - Learning the UNIX Operating System
* Paul DuBois - MySQL Cookbook
* David Sklar, Adam Trachtenberg - PHP Cookbook
* Rasmus Lerdorf, Kevin Tatroe - Programming PHP
* Daniel P. Bovet, Marco Cesati - Understanding the Linux Kernel
* Tobias Ratschiller, Till Gerken - Web Application Development with PHP 4
* Jeffrey Zeldman - Designing With Web Standards
And plenty more, but I thought I’d save you and just show you how a REAL library bookshelf looks like ;)
Posted on October 20, 2004 08:58 AM | #
30. Carl-Johan Kihlbom said:
Right, shelf number 2:
Posted on October 20, 2004 09:03 AM | #
31. Carl-Johan Kihlbom said:
Shelf number 3:
Posted on October 20, 2004 09:04 AM | #
32. Carl-Johan Kihlbom said:
Shelf number 4:
Posted on October 20, 2004 09:05 AM | #
33. Carl-Johan Kihlbom said:
Shelf number 5:
Posted on October 20, 2004 09:06 AM | #
34. Carl-Johan Kihlbom said:
And finally, shelf number 6:
Sorry for posting these one-by-one, but I got an error message when I tried posting them all together.
Posted on October 20, 2004 09:08 AM | #
35. Jason3D said:
I can’t seem to keep books on shelves.
1. Idea Index
2. Layout Index
3. Color Index
4. Creative Sparks
5. Essential ActionScript 2.0
6. Flash Hacks
7. Flash MX Professional 2004 for Server Geeks
8. Web ReDesign : Workflow that Works
9. Site-Seeing: A Visual Approach to Web Usability
10. PHP in Easy Steps
11. Sams Teach Yourself SQL in 10 Minutes
12. Beginning Php 4 (Programmer to Programmer)
13. Rise And Fall Of The Third Reich
14. The Restaurant at the End of the Universe
15. Prey
16. The Best of Business Card Design 3
Posted on October 20, 2004 09:15 AM | #
36. Jonathan M. Hollin said:
Fantastic Carl. You are a serious geek dude!
I wanna borrow… :-)
Posted on October 20, 2004 09:18 AM | #
37. Jacob said:
Carl’s library look sort of like ours :)
I’d have to ask you Carl though, why so many Sam’s Teach Yourself.. books?
Posted on October 20, 2004 09:24 AM | #
38. Adrian said:
And here’s mine at work:

This was taken with my picture phone, so the quality isn’t as good as I’d like… Here’s a listing from left to right of what’s on the shelf…
And there you have it. That is my used at least once a month staple of books.
Posted on October 20, 2004 09:26 AM | #
39. Jonathan M. Hollin said:
I have another one:
Posted on October 20, 2004 09:27 AM | #
40. Carl-Johan Kihlbom said:
Jonathan, any time you’re in Gothenburg, Sweden look me up and you can borrow some books :-)
Jacob, the Teach Yourself books are a bit old as you can see (DreamWeaver Ultradev 4 anyone?). They’re from when I was starting out in the field and trying to Teach Myself some of these things. I actually think that most of them are great beginners’ books. As you can see from shelf 1 and 2 I prefer O’Reillys books now. Plus, they look so pretty on the shelf :-)
Posted on October 20, 2004 09:53 AM | #
41. Jonathan M. Hollin said:
I’ll be in Gothenburg tonight Carl (just kidding).
I agree with you, O’Reilly rocks!
Posted on October 20, 2004 10:00 AM | #
42. teli said:
I no longer feel quite so geeky anymore :D
Since my digital cam is out with my sister, you will have to imagine it. Hmmm…well, since I have a library (literally…I think I need to donate some) I really will have to limit it to just one shelf - my top shelf:
Explanation: I try to keep my books organized - I really do - but sometimes it doesn’t happen. I keep the books I appreciate and use the most near me - the remainder of my books find a home on the bookshelves in the other room.
Posted on October 20, 2004 10:26 AM | #
43. nick santilli said:
Dang, Carl-Johan has got it goin on! I try to organize my books to look all neat easy to find, but it stops being that way after about a week…
here’s mine at work - mostly java & xml. the bulk of the books are at home, and are somewhat more design oriented.
Posted on October 20, 2004 10:34 AM | #
44. Cameron Moll said:
Bookshelf Photo Confab. Ha! Phunny.
(My shelf here at work is embarrassing – hasn’t been stocked yet.)
Posted on October 20, 2004 11:23 AM | #
45. Roger Johansson said:
Posted on October 20, 2004 11:24 AM | #
46. Pieter Jelle said:
one of the more design-oriented shelves, there’s 7 more, 4 of which are computer related, and 2 more with design stuff. I love books.
Posted on October 20, 2004 11:24 AM | #
47. Carl-Johan Kihlbom said:
Good to see your shelf Roger! Is Meyer’s books any good if you already know CSS? Btw, you work almost right across the street from me (Odinsgatan), so it’s easier for you to borrow books than it is for Jonathan I guess :-)
Posted on October 20, 2004 11:49 AM | #
48. Josh Poulson said:
Here’s a link to an old picture of my bookshelf. It’s far too big to inflict on your comments. :)
–jrp
Posted on October 20, 2004 12:50 PM | #
49. Tommy Hanning said:
I don’t have that many computer related books…some Windows stuff from when I used Windows. But I chose to give you list some other very good books instead.
and others….
Posted on October 20, 2004 01:19 PM | #
50. Roger Johansson said:
Carl-Johan: Yep, Eric’s books are great reads even if you know CSS well. There’s always something new to learn ;)
So you’re working just across the street from me? Wow. It’s a small world :-D
Posted on October 20, 2004 02:17 PM | #
51. Jeff Werner said:
Wow, didn’t know so many of you were programmers. I’m pretty new to web design and have yet to actually buy a book related to it. Most of mine (film theory / writing) are left over from school. Still, my most usefull of all—the OED—is within arm’s reach.
Posted on October 20, 2004 02:22 PM | #
52. Mike said:
That’s just one shelf of three bookcases that’s full of programming/technical references. I need a new bookcase.
Looking at some of the books in the pictures, I’m gonna need a new bookcase to hold all the ones I’m gonna order.
Posted on October 20, 2004 02:45 PM | #
53. Carl-Johan Kihlbom said:
By the way, raise your hand if your waiting for Delicious Library…
*Raises hand*
Posted on October 20, 2004 03:15 PM | #
54. Krista said:
Posted on October 20, 2004 03:33 PM | #
55. Keith said:
Wow, this is fun. Kind of like peering through a window into someone else’s world! It’s very interesting to see what y’all are reading (or have read) seems like most of you are pretty darn geeky!
I mean that in the best way.
Posted on October 20, 2004 03:44 PM | #
56. Cody Lindley said:
Strait from the cell phone camera.
Posted on October 20, 2004 03:44 PM | #
57. Chad Baker said:
Posted on October 20, 2004 07:41 PM | #
58. Thomas Hammer said:
My shelf at work:
Favs: “Fresh Styles for Web Designers” by Curt Cloninger, “The Art and Science of Web Design” by Jeff Veen, Defensive Design and Don’t make me think.
Never finished: “Designing CSS Web Pages” by Chris Schmitt.
What are those?!? “English Corpus Linguistics”, “White Hot” by Tricia Guild…
Posted on October 21, 2004 12:51 AM | #
59. Allan said:
I try avoid keeping computer related books near where I sleep :)
Posted on October 21, 2004 01:25 AM | #
60. Pierce said:
Hate computer books. I like novels.
Posted on October 21, 2004 05:30 AM | #
61. Lasse Fernov said:
Hmm most of my stuff is in danish.
There’s some books and mags on Graphic Design and Typography. And some Science and Math books.
And one on better writing.
English:
“Design for the 21st Century”
2 Wallpaper mags.
1 Cabinet Magazine - issue “Flight” (NY art mag.)
“Graphic Design for the 21st Century”.
Alan Fletchers “The Art of Looking Sideways”.
“Gehry talks”.
Sorry about the product placement - i use that bucket for bits ‘n’ bobs.
Posted on October 21, 2004 07:02 AM | #
62. Dave Marks said:
Carl, that sure is impressive - is it me or do you have two copies of ASP 3.0?? I always wanted that, but couldn’t bring myself to spending the £50, i did buy the SQL Server 2k programming one though, which was also £50 IIRC
I dread to think how much your collection must have cost you over the years…
Posted on October 21, 2004 08:36 AM | #
63. Stefan Visser said:
I would post my bookshelf, but it would be completely empty! (aside from 2 flash books, wich I’ve read half and 1/3rd, respectively)
I’m a hardcore autodidact. :o)
Posted on October 21, 2004 10:25 AM | #
64. Carl-Johan Kihlbom said:
Dave, the first one is Beginning Active Server Pages 3.0 and the second one is Professional Active Server Pages 3.0. I have two copies of a couple of titles, where I have both the first and second edition. Damn updates!
The cost is mitigated somewhat by the fact that I work occasionally at Sweden’s largest chain of bookstores and enjoy their staff discount of 45%. At least that brings the prices down to about US levels.
Posted on October 21, 2004 10:47 AM | #
65. Janne Kalliola said:
I don’t have any books at work, and I really don’t want to have them. I used to collect a lot of them a few years ago, but they just got outdated and atracted dust. Now I rely on the Internet and learning by doing.
I do have a sizeable collection of books at home. Here are glimpses of two shelves (sort of classic and contemporary fiction sections), I have 28 more and the book count is increasing steadily…
Books from the following (selected) authors:
Books from the following (selected) authors:
Keith, I ripped your idea for literature bookcase snapshots to my blog. Hopefully you don’t mind, but I thought that it would be better not to clutter your work related shelves too much with novels and other works of art.
Check it out at nomadig.com.
Posted on October 22, 2004 07:47 AM | #
66. Bill Curnow said:
On Top: GUI Bloopers Don’ts and Do’s, The Big Tip Book for the Apple II Series, Perl 5 Pocket Reference, PCResource Special Issue DOS Reference Card
Bottom Row (L-R): The VisiBone Browser Book, Collaborative Web Development, Hacking Web Applications Exposed, Understanding SOAP: The Authoritative Solution, Teach Yourself XML in 24 Hours, XML Design Handbook, Building Secure Microsoft ASP.NET Applications, Programming Visual Basic 6.0, Visual Basic to VB.NET, Microsoft .NET Sampler, VBScript Programmer’s Reference, VBScript in a Nutshell, Developing ASP Components, Professional Active Server Pages 3.0, ASP in a Nutshell, ASP.NET Unleashed, ASP.NET Website Programming VB.NET Edition, ASP to ASP.NET Migration Handbook, ASP.NET Components Toolkit, SQL Server 2000 Stored Procedure Handbook, Transact-SQL Programming, Code-Centric T-SQL Programming with Stored Procedures and Triggers, Joe Celko’s SQL for Smarties, The Guru’s Guide to Transact-SQL, Perl for Dummies, Windows NT Shell Scripting, Win32 Perl Scripting: The Administrator’s Handbook, Win32 Perl Programming: The Standard Extensions, Effective Perl programming, Object Oriented Perl, Data Munging with Perl, Learning Perl, Programming Web Services with Perl, Programming Perl, Perl Cookbook, Mastering Regular Expressions, Programming the Perl DBI, Perl for System Administrators, Cascading Style Sheets: The Definitive Guide, Web Performance Tuning, Web Security, Privacy & Commerce, Dynamic HTML: The Definitive Reference
Posted on October 25, 2004 03:24 PM | #
67. Amber said:
This is a fun thing :)
Posted on November 20, 2004 08:27 PM | #
68. Red Baron said:
1. Peanuts Complete
2. Ken Uston Million DOllar Blackjack
3. What to Expect When Your Wife is Expanding.
4. John Le Carre - The Night Manager
5. ALIVE - Piers Paul Read
6. Juiceman’s Power of Juicing
7. Saltwater Fishing in California…
Battery’s dead, but this is the highlights.
Posted on January 25, 2005 02:20 PM | #
69. shadeofblue said:
It’s a great idea this. It’s always fun to glance at someone’s bookshelf when you get invited over. I did the next best thing and took a picture of my virtual bookshelf:
You can browse over it in full here: http://www.shadeofblue.co.uk/bookshelf.html. Comments & thoughts on the books are to follow…some time!
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