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Tim W

Tim W

has 25 followers and is following 16 people

Much to the dismay of his parents, Tim has believed from a young age in the potential for the human scalp as a canvas for personal expression. At age 13, after his first week of high school, a friend helped him dye his hair blue for the first time, thus beginning a seven-year quest to have every color in the rainbow (and several that aren’t).... more »
  • Jamaica Plain, MA, USA
  • member since February 25, 2010

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Tim W’s last login was Tuesday, February 19, 2013. show recent activity » See more activity

Random books from my shelf

     
 
 
 

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  • Baxter Trautman

    Baxter Trautman says

    That's exciting! I've never met an opera singer before. How do you get opportunities to sing (you're in Massachusetts, right?) Justine Saracen wrote a lesbian novel around opera called "Mephisto Aria" but can't say I've read it - I try, but i'm not big into most lesbian fiction. A lot of it is just godawful romances or silly mysteries (all those "skimmers" I go through). Then in the next breath I have to turn around and admit I've written five of them! They're mysteries, police procedurals like Michael Connelly's "Harry Bosch" series. They're set in south central Los Angeles and pretty hard-core - the first in particular.

    Posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • Baxter Trautman

    Baxter Trautman says

    That's exciting! I've never met an opera singer before. How do you get opportunities to sing (you're in Massachusetts, right?) Justine Saracen wrote a lesbian novel around opera called "Mephisto Aria" but can't say I've read it - I try, but i'm not big into most lesbian fiction. A lot of it is just godawful romances or silly mysteries (all those "skimmers" I go through). Then in the next breath I have to turn around and admit I've written five of them! They're mysteries, police procedurals like Michael Connelly's "Harry Bosch" series. They're set in south central Los Angeles and pretty hard-core - the first in particular.

    Posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • Baxter Trautman

    Baxter Trautman says

    Busy! As an author I know how wonderful it is to see a good review about th ebook you've written so after I read something, if I liked it, I'll write a review and post it everywhere. No better promotion than word of mouth. (Or letter of eye?) That in addition of course to holding down a day job, writing, keeping a home life, social life, etc....How about you? What keeps you busy?

    Posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • Baxter Trautman

    Baxter Trautman says

    Why thank you! Love the munchkin on your neck!

    Posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • Baxter Trautman

    Baxter Trautman says

    Done!

    Posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • rOckY

    rOckY says

    Ugh, unemployment woes are a pain, pardon my French. But hey, LGBT books need reader input to get continually pushed forward and I think that groups like this one are key ways to push that forward.

    Best of luck on the job hunt and I suppose I'll catch you on the forums, hehe.

    Posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • Pam S

    Pam S says

    What's strange is, I get all the updates for the group, which means I'm a member, doesn't it?

    Posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • Pam S

    Pam S says

    I am a member of the group, which is the strange thing. Or does one get kicked off for not posting very often?

    Posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • Pam S

    Pam S says

    Dear Tim,
    I couldn't post a reply to your question about books on gay New York in earlier times, so I'll put my little list here and you can post it to the replies for me so others can see it too and add their ideas. This is my own idiosyncratic list of some books that come to mind when I think of queer New York in the 1960s to 1990s.
    Best wishes and thanks for starting this interesting thread!
    Pam

    Samuel R. Delany, The Motion of Light on Water (memoir)
    The Beebo Brinker novels by Ann Bannon (lesbian pulp fiction)
    Audre Lorde, Zami: A New Spelling of my Name (memoir)
    James Baldwin, Another Country
    Edmund White, esp. City Boy
    George Chauncey, Gay New York (history up to 1940)
    Sarah Schulman, esp. Rat Bohemia, People in Trouble, My American History: Lesbian and Gay Life During the Reagan/Bush Years
    Felice Picano, esp. The Lure, Art and Sex in Greenwich Village
    The Violet Quill Reader
    Joan Nestle, A Restricted Country (a memoir, 1988)
    Martin Duberman, Stonewall (history)
    Andrew Holleran, Dancer from the Dance (1978)
    Larry Kramer, Faggots (1979)
    James Barr, The Occasional Man (1966)

    Posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • rOckY

    rOckY says

    Wow, glad to see we have an active admin for the Gay and Lesbian Fiction and Non-Fiction group! Many thanks for taking that step towards revitalizing the group.

    Posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • Kevin Z

    Kevin Z says

    You've lost your ribbon! Slacker!

    Posted 2 years ago. ( send a note )
  • seekingenlightenment4

    seekingenlightenment4 says

    yeah its good. trungpa has an interesting life story. hows the weather in Boston?

    Posted 2 years ago. ( send a note )
  • BookCrazy - VERY limited time online for the foreseeable future

    BookCrazy - VERY limited time online for the foreseeable future says

    Yo, Bostonian...

    Have you seen this yet? http://tsj-photo.smugmug.com/Worlds2010/ArtofLego/13169496_QAwhE#956451333_trhEw

    L'eggo my Leggo!

    BC

    Posted 2 years ago. ( send a note )
  • Kelly M

    Kelly M says

    Thanks for the kudos!

    Posted 2 years ago. ( send a note )
  • BookCrazy - VERY limited time online for the foreseeable future

    BookCrazy - VERY limited time online for the foreseeable future says

    With dogs and a ranch, there is ALWAYS something interesting! Get goin' on the AMLit! There are many groups here on Shelfari that can encourage you. The one group that I found to be an absolute failure IMO was a Classical Music group. Nice people but they didn't want to actually discuss anything. Poor guy that created it finally just took it down. Don't blame him at all. I was more interested in a sound plan of reading biographies of composers from that period but they didn't do that either. Oh well.

    There are some pieces of some Operas that will bring me to tears but, I have to admit, it isn't my favorite musical form. I'm more plebian in my taste. That being said, it won't surprise you to know that I put Nessun Dorma performed by Pavarotti on continuous replay sometime. I go for the romantic arias. Some of Butterfly makes me actually weep. Then I just kick it over to Country/Western and dance away. (I can just SEE you rolling your eyes! LOL!)

    What is very odd is that I find some of the classical music easier to play on the piano than some of the simpler sounding forms such as Cole Porter. His stuff is lyrical in its simplicity but I can NOT play it. Guess the syncopation doesn't work with these old fingers. Don't mean to imply that I play anything well - I definitely have very little talent. With Porter, though, I can't even fool myself into thinking more practice will solve the problem. That delusion gets me through other music forms. (I'm even worse with the guitar.) Just call me by my middle name - masochist.

    BC

    Posted 2 years ago. ( send a note )
  • BookCrazy - VERY limited time online for the foreseeable future

    BookCrazy - VERY limited time online for the foreseeable future says

    I've been seeing that trend in your combination requests. Good luck on the Dalai Lama stuff.

    This work can be addictive, can't it? I'm retired and found myself spending 14-16 hours/day on edits and Librarian work. "Just have to find that one last edition for this combine...." You know the feeling. Anyway, I had to set some limits for myself and Shelfari. Took about 6 weeks away from the site to reset myself. Now, I'm contributing in a far less, er, intense way.

    Balance is necessary in all things no matter how enjoyable those things might be. Glad to hear you're gainfully employed again. That must be a relief!

    BC

    Posted 2 years ago. ( send a note )
  • BookCrazy - VERY limited time online for the foreseeable future

    BookCrazy - VERY limited time online for the foreseeable future says

    Thank you for all the work you do in cleanin' up the catalog.

    BC

    Posted 2 years ago. ( send a note )
  • BookCrazy - VERY limited time online for the foreseeable future

    BookCrazy - VERY limited time online for the foreseeable future says

    OK - since I have no memory at all about this, I think this is what happened. You might remember that some time back the Contributor Queue crapped out on us. We talked about this on the L&E group. When Shelfari fixed that queue access issue, we found scattered throughout that time period in the queues some "requests" that were empty - contained no data at all. Choosing the side of caution, I "rejected" those requests because I didn't know what they would do if "approved." We had to either reject or approve them to get them off the queue so we could get to the valid stuff. If all the changes that are odd are from requests submitted around 3 weeks or so ago, that might be the answer.

    The other reason (again, I don't remember this specific request) is to lower the number of names that crowd up under the title. The "primary" designation does nothing more than tell the system how to display the book when "author sort" is selected to show a shelf. Otherwise, the books still go onto the contributors record book list regardless of the primary designation.

    I wish I could remember this one specifically. I looked at the contributor history page and I can't tell if all those contributors were originally on the book page as non-primary or if I deliberately altered them to non-primary myself. If they were part of the original book page (version just prior to your edit), then the rejection would have done that.

    Guess this doesn't help much, huh?

    BC

    Posted 2 years ago. ( send a note )
  • jenuineindigo1

    jenuineindigo1 says

    Thanks Tim.

    I'll hope to read that Starhawk book. Right now I am reading books for my field, one by Dolores Cannon, one by Vianna Stibal, and "ONENESS" through Rasha, a channeled book overflowing with high vibrational guidance for these unique times! Feel free to view my website, as I have posted some favorite links there: www.TrailblazingTransformation.com In the meantime, happy reading! Jen

    Posted 2 years ago. ( send a note )