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#ooops this is veeeery long
keendaanmaa · 1 year
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my old/beautiful book collection
the pretty books shelves
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my Tolkien collection
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vintage fiction
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antique and vintage Bible study books
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I have very few truly old books, but more than I remembered are from the early 20th century. List of titles and more details under the cut
pretty books shelves
Reader’s Digest editions: Little Women (Alcott), Tales from the Arabian Nights, Emma & Pride and Prejudice (Austen), Jane Eyre (Brontë), The Last of the Mohicans (Cooper), The Adventures of Robin Hood (Creswick), Two Years Before the Mast (Dana), David Copperfield, Oliver Twist & A Tale of Two Cities (Dickens), The Robe (Douglas), The Adventures, The Further Adventures, The Memoirs, & The Return of Sherlock Holmes (Doyle), A Passage to India (Forster), The House of the Seven Gables, The Scarlet Letter & Twice-Told Tales (Hawthorne), Kim (Kipling), The Sea Wolf (London), The Song of Hiawatha and other poems (Longfellow), Anne of Green Gables (Montgomery), A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (Smith), Kidnapped (Stevenson), Uncle Tom’s Cabin (Stowe), A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court & Innocents Abroad (Twain), A Journey to the Centre of the Earth & Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea (Verne)
The Confessions of Saint Augustine—E. B. Pusey translation, Franklin Library edition. This was a Christmas gift from my parents and @bluesidedown​ has the same one
The Pilgrim’s Progress (Bunyan)—CBN University Press Christian Classics. I don’t actually remember where I got this one but most likely from my dad.
Through the Looking Glass (Carroll)—Heritage Press edition with slipcover and illustrations by John Tenniel. Again, probably from my dad but not 100% sure (he gives me a LOT of books).
The Complete Canterbury Tales (Chaucer)—F. H. Hill translation, Arcturus books with slipcover and illustrations by Edward Burne-Jones and William Morris. Another Christmas gift where Blue and I got matching copies from our parents.
Heretics & Orthodoxy (Chesterton)—Hendrickson Christian Classics. Again, a Christmas gift from my parents.
Nemesis & The Mirror Crack’d From Side to Side (Christie)—Heron Books. Another one I can’t remember the origin of.
The Prairie (Cooper)—Easton Press collector’s edition. From my parents, Christmas this year. This is pretty much the handsomest book I own.
Great Expectations (Dickens)—Chatham River Press. Based on the inscription on the flyleaf this belonged to my dad first. Probably I got it as a gift or in his thinning of his collection.
The Scarlet Pimpernel (Orczy)—International Collector’s Library. Another of unknown origin.
Quo Vadis (Sienkiewicz)—International Collector’s Library. It amuses me that in organizing these books alphabetical by author’s last name, these two matching editions still ended up side by side.
Treasure Island (Stevenson)—Children’s Classics, illustrated by Milo Winter.
Treasure Island–Prince Otto–Strange Case of Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde–Kidnapped–The Black Arrow–The Master of Ballantrae–David Balfour (Stevenson)—Canterbury Classics omnibus. I actually have most of these in other editions, but I keep this for the ones I don’t have elsewhere.....and keep the other editions too because I am a book-dragon.
The Prince and the Pauper (Twain)—Portland House Illustrated Classics, illustrated by Franklin Booth. Not sure where I got this one.
The Greek Myths (Graves)—Folio Society, two volumes in slipcover. These were a Christmas gift from my parents a couple years ago, because I collect fairy tales and folk tales and suchlike.
Tolkien
These are mostly newer Houghton Mifflin or HarperCollins editions. The Silmarillion has Ted Naismith illustrations; Children of Húrin has Alan Lee illustrations, as do the covers of LotR; The Hobbit and LotR have Tolkien’s original illustrations and maps, and Roverandom has cover art by him as well; and Bilbo’s Last Song, Farmer Giles of Ham, The Adventures of Tom Bombadill, and Smith of Wooton Major are all illustrated by Pauline Baynes.
vintage fiction (top down, left column first)
Malory’s Le Morte d’Arthur—Norwood Press, 1911
Stalky & Co. (Kipling)—Macmillan and Co, 1927. Completely leatherbound with gilt spine and seal on the front cover
The Master of Ballantrae & The Black Arrow (Stevenson)—Everyman’s Library, 1938
Popular Fairy Tales (Andersen)—Blackie and Son. No date, but google tells me it’s from sometime in the 30s/40s/50s based on the binding style
Jo’s Boys (Alcott)—The Children’s Press, 1965
Around the World in Eighty Days (Verne)—Dean and Son. No date, but I’m guessing mid-twentieth century
Three Cheers Secret Seven (Blyton)—Brockhampton Press, 1960
The Burgess Animal Book for Children—Little, Brown, and Company. Copyright 1948, though likely printed later
At the Back of the North Wind (MacDonald), The Little Lame Prince (Mulock), King Arthur and his Knights (Frith), All the Mowgli Stories (Kipling)—Junior Deluxe Edtions. Illustrations are copyright 1956, no print dates
The Door in the Wall (de Angeli)—Doubleday. Copyright 1949, no print date
Freckles (Porter)—Grosset & Dunlap, 1916. Very beat up and mostly held together by packing tape on the spine
The Call of the Wild (London)—Grosset & Dunlap, 1910. It has a very faded picture glued to the front cover as part of the original binding, as well as illustrations throughout. Quite worn, with many pages about to or falling out
Kilmeny of the Orchard (Montgomery)—Ryerson, 1947. This was actually printed before the Anne series was entirely published, as the list of Montgomery’s works in the front only includes the first three books in the series
Captains Courageous (Kipling)—Thrushwood Books. Date uncertain, but google tells me probably 1950s
Heidi (Spyri)—Collins, 1958. While this did originally belong to my dad, it’s the copy I read as a kid and has been on my shelf for a long time
The Mark of the Horse Lord (Sutcliff)—Oxford University Press, 1965. I learned in making this list that my copy is probably a first edition, albeit rather beat up from being a school library copy.
Warrior Scarlet (Sutcliff)—Oxford University Press, 1966. I also have a 1973 copy that still has its dust jacket.
Robinson Crusoe (Defoe)—Dent/Dutton, 1966. A beloved favourite copy that I read many times
Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea (Verne)—Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1953. Another beloved copy that I read many times, I flatly refuse to part with this one despite having a less faded and beat-up edition because 1) I am dreadfully sentimental and 2) the illustrations in this edition are much better than in the RD edition.
King Arthur and His Knights of the Round Table (Lanier)—Illustrated Junior LIbrary. Illustrations copyright 1950, no print date
antique and vintage Bible study books
Young’s Analytical Concordance—per a pencil note on the title page this was published circa. 1937, and it definitely looks the part
The Bible as History in Pictures (Keller)—Published in 1964, this is definitely outdated in terms of archaeological evidence of Bible events but it still fascinates me to see
The New English Bible: New Testament—as a Library Edition, I don’t think this strictly counts as a first edition, but it is definitely an early edition as it was printed in 1961 when the NT translation was completed (OT translation of this version wasn’t completed until 1970)
Exposition of Genesis (Leupold)—Wartburg Press, 1942
The Epistle to the Hebrews (Brown)—Banner of Truth, 1961
Luke the Physician (Ramsay)—Baker Book House, 1956
The Gospel in Ezekiel (Guthrie)—Adam and Charles Black, 1857 (or MDCCCLVII if you prefer). This is the oldest book I own, and while is is now quite beat up - the spine is 80% tape and the front cover has come off completely and been replaced with cardboard - I can tell it was a very handsome book when it was new. The spine is bound in dark blue and brown leather, with gilt lettering and decoration, and the edges of the pages have beautiful multicolour marbling on them.
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dailyspark · 5 years
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[getting ready to do this with 2018, so here’s a veeeery late one for the last year]
a year in review: 2017
ao3 link: eveljerome
total word count: 33′182
works in fandoms: Star Wars Sequel Trilogy (7 works)
works for pairings: kylux (7 works)
comment threads: 30
bookmarks: 33
breakdown by pairing: kylux
fics or links to fics crossposted to blog: @huxxkylo
total word count: 33′182
wordiest fic: I Don't Care As Long As You're Mine (17166 words) // Set after The Force Awakens: Snoke pushes at Hux's latent Force Sensitivity to make it take root. Is disenchanted with Kylo, so gives him Hux as an apprentice. They leave instead. Space adventures ensue. // The fall of Starkiller brings about changes in the Force. As punishment for the failure of the superweapon, Snoke pushes at Hux's mental strength and brings about his latent Force sensitivity. Now finishing Kylo Ren's training means he has to teach the ex-General.It doesn't go as either of them planned. // part 1 in starforce series
total kudos count: 410
most kudos on a fic: 112 kudos - I Don't Care As Long As You're Mine
least kudos on a fic: 19 kudos - That Force Unseen // Kylo Ren arrives on the Finalizer wishing to intimidate everyone, but there is someone there already that won't allow it. // Meeting General Hux was forgettable, and something Kylo later regretted a lot, as his first impression of the man was too mediocre, and boring. It should have been far more memorable, considering how things turned out further ahead.
a fic I like a lot, and it should get more kudos than it currently has: 72 kudos - And it’s More Than it Seems // Kylo Ren underestimates the Force and his greedy wishes for more power get him shrunk to a teeny tiny little Kylo Ren. Hux is amused. // There, resting against his lightsaber was Kylo Ren. Except. He was tiny. Hux decided to poke him.
most comments: 8 comment threads -  He Who Fights Monsters // Resistance!Hux interrogator getting his hands on First Order’s Kylo Ren.Meeting his greatest nightmare wasn't on Armitage's to do list today. But having spent many years with the Resistance he was the most capable (if somewhat underhanded) interrogator, with some tricks up his sleeve. That still didn't prepare him enough to get into the same room as the feared Kylo Ren, the Jedi scourge of the First Order.
most bookmarked fic: I Don't Care As Long As You're Mine
notes:
2013 holds a Harry Potter fic that was written originally in 2007 and posted on fanfiction net, and if I tried editing it, it would turn into a completely different fic, so I’m just leaving it as it is. read at your own risk
2015 has three thorki fics, but I won’t make a separate post for it. tho I would like to add some of the breakdown categories for your consideration -
fics or links to fics crossposted to blog: @thorloki
total kudos count: 175
wordiest fic & most kudos on a fic: 94 kudos -  Ooops (1645 words) // written for the prompt - "Holy shit i'm in the wrong car"Loki braked fast at the curb, and lept from the car – he didn't have the presence of mind to lock it. It was close to eleven pm, and this part of town went to bed at nine. So he wasn't overtly worried about thieves. Drunks – maybe. -- Antiseptic cream, colorful bandages with dragons on them, and a couple of painkiller doses in the bag, he hurried back out. The car was where he left it. He did have some semblance of thought before – and the keys were in his hand, and not in the ignition. Slapping himself in the face for carelessness, Loki got behind the wheel and quickly turned the car around, increasing the speed to get home. Braking before the intersection, Loki looked at the red light hatefully. .. A sudden voice said, “Don't you just hate waiting for the light to change in the middle of the night .. when the street's 're empty?” .. That definitely wasn't the radio.
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