Retro Reads discussion
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Idle chatter!


Exactly - I think it will be quite an intriguing time for readers for so many reasons! Yay, something to look forward to in the new year!


Lots of 1923 book lists! Here’s one on GR: https://www.goodreads.com/book/popula...
I wonder if they’ll be on Gutenberg tomorrow?
Happy new year, everyone!

Lots of 1923 book lists! Here’s one on GR: https://www.goodreads.com/book/popular_..."
Wow! What a list! Thanks!

As a Retro Reader I'm happy about this: "...there were more new editions of books published in the 1910s than from titles published in the 2000s."

Watch out for those engraved coffee mugs...

That was an interesting article.
I didn’t realize that a work needed to be out of copyright for a annotated edition to be published. I have an annotated edition of Mansfield Park that I hope to read this year.
I was amused by the nickname of the legislation—“The Micky Miuse protection Act.” Ha

Well, unless you have the author’s (or their heirs’/estate’s) permission. :)

Yes, I’m sure in copyright as in so much else, money talks!


Ha! I was looking for Murder on the Links, too. [ And no, Amazon, I'm NOT going to fork over $1.99 for the Kindle edition.]
This was a fun post on the Oxford comma that almost ruined Frost's Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening
http://edittorrent.blogspot.com/2017/...
This was a fun post on the Oxford comma that almost ruined Frost's Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening
http://edittorrent.blogspot.com/2017/...
Susan, I've been on a bit of an Agatha Christie binge myself and last night I re-watched Murder on the Orient Express--the 1974 version with Albert Finney as Poirot. What a great film--one of those rare movies that I think even better than the book. Finney totally owned that role, so much so that he took over as my "head canon' Hercule. But also, what a perfect ensemble cast--and the score and cinematography! Ingrid Bergman and "the Little Brown Babies" and Anthony Perkins being weird and insecure. Just the best.
According to IMDB Agatha Christie actually attended the premiere...more fun tidbits: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0071877/...
According to IMDB Agatha Christie actually attended the premiere...more fun tidbits: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0071877/...

This was a fun post on the Oxford comma that almost ruined Frost's Stopp..."
Thank you, I’ve always loved that poem so I really appreciated that post!


This was a fun post on the Oxford comma that almost ruined Frost's Stopp..."
Only $1.99!! Here they want me to pay A$6.53 - I won't be doing that either.

Thanks- I haven’t seen that movie in years, I’d love to see it again.
I love my DVDs of Miss Marple with Joan Hickson! Did you see the recent Kenneth Branagh version of Orient Express? My husband told me it’s on Netflix, but I’m hesitant to watch it if it’s terrible, I hate to waste time I could be reading on mediocre films, I don’t know why...

This was a fun post on the Oxford comma that almost ruined ..."
Don’t you do it, Lesley - sounds like cheaper versions should be available worldwide soon, now that these titles are out of copyright. Right, Tadiana? (she’s our resident expert, I’m shamelessly taking advantage of her counsel...)


And the bit about Vanessa Redgrave and the crew members was funny, too!


Me, too!

Yay! Hope you’re right!

This was a fun post on the Oxford comma that almost ruined Frost's Stopp..."
Hey, Goodreads! Quit eating my comments! Anyway, loved the Robert Frost story.
Lovely...pause...dark and deep.
Yes!
Lesley wrote: "Only $1.99!! Here they want me to pay A$6.53 - I won't be doing that either. ..."
No way! I know Australia's housing market is insane but the book market too? Any way how are British publications subject to weird US copyright law in Australia? Globalism gone mad, perhaps.
No way! I know Australia's housing market is insane but the book market too? Any way how are British publications subject to weird US copyright law in Australia? Globalism gone mad, perhaps.
Karlyne wrote: " Lovely...pause...dark and deep..." I love that!
This is an interview of Robert Frost from 1952 in which he recites this poem, minus the Oxford quote. There is also an extraordinary passage where he voices his version of optimism, not just for the future but also for the present and the past: "...that the past will be found to be all right for what it was...."
What he has to say about his present, the future, and the limits of science when it comes to daily life is just amazing. https://youtu.be/Qem3v0zvajQ?t=1024
This is an interview of Robert Frost from 1952 in which he recites this poem, minus the Oxford quote. There is also an extraordinary passage where he voices his version of optimism, not just for the future but also for the present and the past: "...that the past will be found to be all right for what it was...."
What he has to say about his present, the future, and the limits of science when it comes to daily life is just amazing. https://youtu.be/Qem3v0zvajQ?t=1024

Obviously (at least I hope), my comments on copyright just apply to the U.S. If you live somewhere else, you have to check the rules in your own country. As a practical matter, though, you’ll still be able to go online and get the book from the U.S.-based Gutenberg.org, even if you’re technically not supposed to because the book is still copyrighted in your country.
True confession: sometimes I’ll go grab a book off of Gutenberg Australia or Gutenberg Canada because their copyright terms are usually shorter than the US’s. I’m so bad.
Also, Hana, I really loved that article on Frost and the Oxford comma (or lack thereof). Thanks for sharing!

Cheeky!

Which is surely all the more reason for a case for true globalization? :)

Karlyne wrote: "I'm wondering if reading a book in January which centers on making a garden, an Italian garden, which, as Vincent and Lovejoy know, is the best garden, is a good idea. (Rumer Godden's An Episode of..."
We do have a Rumer Godden read already this month The Greengage Summer - I don't know this book at all. Will that hit the spot for you, Karlyne?
My eyes have been bigger than my literary stomach this month! :D I am leading 3 reads, have 4 other group reads & a (rare) read for review. So I can't commit to anything else sorry. :)
We do have a Rumer Godden read already this month The Greengage Summer - I don't know this book at all. Will that hit the spot for you, Karlyne?
My eyes have been bigger than my literary stomach this month! :D I am leading 3 reads, have 4 other group reads & a (rare) read for review. So I can't commit to anything else sorry. :)



Oooooooh.....


My eyes have been too big, too - I’m trying to read the Reading the Detectives current and backlists, but don’t want to miss this group’s reads (I’ve got the Heyer for March, phew!)
Susan in NC wrote: "Quick question- I want to have all my ducks in a row for March reads - I know we’re reading Durrell’s Fillets of Plaice starting 2/15, but have we a March read? Sometimes I have to track them down...."
I'll check with the other moderators what they want to do. I have offered to lead The Demon in the House in early March. This is a very slim volume, third in the Barsetshire series. I have also offered to lead The Sun in the Morning: My Early Years in India and England by M.M. Kaye either 26th of April or the middle of May. I am away from about the 27th of March till approximately the 17th of April.
It would be best to keep the discussion here https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/..., as otherwise it gets a bit confusing. :)
I'll check with the other moderators what they want to do. I have offered to lead The Demon in the House in early March. This is a very slim volume, third in the Barsetshire series. I have also offered to lead The Sun in the Morning: My Early Years in India and England by M.M. Kaye either 26th of April or the middle of May. I am away from about the 27th of March till approximately the 17th of April.
It would be best to keep the discussion here https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/..., as otherwise it gets a bit confusing. :)

Books mentioned in this topic
Hudson River Bracketed (other topics)The Gods Arrive (other topics)
Tender Is the Night (other topics)
Tender Is the Night (other topics)
Three Houses (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Angela Thirkell (other topics)E.F. Benson (other topics)
E.C.R. Lorac (other topics)
Dick Francis (other topics)
Oh, that sounds good to me - accurate, thrift editions for those needing a certain book at a reasonable price, AND beautifully bound special editions for those who want them, best of both worlds! I’m with you, thanks, Critterbee!