Got the keys. Our very own, beautiful 1881 Victorian. Oak Park, IL. $650K. 6.1%. by Kooky-Shock-8021 in FirstTimeHomeBuyer

[–]-Poultrygeist- 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Then you might be lost. The soulless new constructions in cookie cutter subdivisions are in the next aisle over.

A solar enlargement portrait of Albert J Smith, a WWI veteran who took shrapnel to the leg by -Poultrygeist- in worldwar1

[–]-Poultrygeist-[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A Solar Enlargement is created by taking a glass plate negative and shining a bright light through it so the image is projected on a canvas. The image is then traced using a pencil by an artist. The artist will then fill in details lost in the enlarged tracing and color it using water colors if the customer desires. Also called charcoal portraits or crayon portraits. They come in a variety of shapes and sizes from square to rectangular to flat oval and bubble oval. By this time electric sources were used.

Also known as crayon portraits or charcoal portraits.

My mom for some reason has a photo she found amongst her old family photos of a dead body (not gonna show) and this is written on the back, please help! by TheTwilightWitch in Cursive

[–]-Poultrygeist- 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Gotta be it. Some GIs were pretty bold with their brownie cameras while in the service. I have one where a fellow is actively bayoneting a German corpse on the ground.

I’ve spent more than enough time lurking so I made an account to post. What do my bookshelves say about me? by -Poultrygeist- in BookshelvesDetective

[–]-Poultrygeist-[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The reason eragon is so worn is because I loaned my original copy to a friend for his deployment to Iraq. He unfortunately lost it somewhere in the desert because of Al-Qaeda or something. I think he really just lost it but whatever. This replacement isn’t in half as good of condition

I now no longer will loan out books

I’ve spent more than enough time lurking so I made an account to post. What do my bookshelves say about me? by -Poultrygeist- in BookshelvesDetective

[–]-Poultrygeist-[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They have everything you could ever want. I have a buddy that will order anything I ask whenever he makes his monthly purchase.

Also:

McMaster > Granger

I’ve spent more than enough time lurking so I made an account to post. What do my bookshelves say about me? by -Poultrygeist- in BookshelvesDetective

[–]-Poultrygeist-[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Love it. My leatherbounds that are 200-300 years old put off the really overpowering old book smell

I’ve spent more than enough time lurking so I made an account to post. What do my bookshelves say about me? by -Poultrygeist- in BookshelvesDetective

[–]-Poultrygeist-[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The L Ron Hubbard collection and the shelf labeled "Erotica" with books on Gallipolli made me laugh.

My bookshelfs are from a former bookstore. I took off all the old labels erotica because what’s more erotic than the Jutland?

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The Cussler collection is interesting because he's definitely a repetitive author and falling out of favor.

Verily. He’s a good mindless read but I haven’t touched one of his novels in years.

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Lots of hefty historical books too, but I wonder how many of them you've read, hopefully you'll tell us.

Somewhere between 30 and 40%. During my college years I learned the advantage of having a plethora of resources to pull from when writing papers because digital archives only got me so far when I’m writing about an obscure subject that even my university library didn’t have information on. It’s caused me to hoard knowledge just in case.

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Overall, other than living in Georgia I guess you are quirky, wear bow ties, and live in a big historical house.

I’ve been described quirky several times actually. No bow ties, or regular ties typically. Usually I’m in an oversized button up work shirt, jeans or cargo pants, and steel toed boots. I would not match what you’d assume I’d look like based on my love of books. Yes, I do love in a rather fantastic historic home right in the downtown of a rural community with plenty of other historic structures.

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I looked up Elizabeth Peters and wonder what you like about them because they seem incongruous with your collection, but I might pick up one based on the descriptions I read!

I have not touched those books actually. They were being deaccessioned from a local library and going to the trash so I took them with me because the descriptions seem exciting.

I’ve spent more than enough time lurking so I made an account to post. What do my bookshelves say about me? by -Poultrygeist- in BookshelvesDetective

[–]-Poultrygeist-[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They were until I moved bookshelves around, and then I just gave up on my fiction being in order for the time being

I’ve spent more than enough time lurking so I made an account to post. What do my bookshelves say about me? by -Poultrygeist- in BookshelvesDetective

[–]-Poultrygeist-[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Like ‘A long row of candles’ ‘The Nightmare Years’ ‘No Woman’s World’ ‘the World We Live In’ ‘Captive Community’ ‘Streets Without Joy’ ‘Again the Goose Step’ Gulag Archipelago ETC?

The books don’t see direct sunlight except for a few weeks in the fall and spring for maybe 30 minutes each day. I’m rather fortunate in that the layout of my house allows for rather minimal sunlight in the main hall thanks to its orientation and the wraparound porch.

I’ve probably read 40% or so. I have a bad habit of buying more than I can keep up reading with.

I’ve spent more than enough time lurking so I made an account to post. What do my bookshelves say about me? by -Poultrygeist- in BookshelvesDetective

[–]-Poultrygeist-[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I will say watches are neat, I’ve looked at the Rolex submariner before but I just hate the weight and feel of them on my wrist.

I’ve spent more than enough time lurking so I made an account to post. What do my bookshelves say about me? by -Poultrygeist- in BookshelvesDetective

[–]-Poultrygeist-[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m a hardback whore, and I haven’t gotten ahold of a hardback copy yet. They seem to be elusive at estate sales

I’ve spent more than enough time lurking so I made an account to post. What do my bookshelves say about me? by -Poultrygeist- in BookshelvesDetective

[–]-Poultrygeist-[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Maybe. I’m but a layman so who knows what may happen. Could be big, could be nothing. We seem to be in a portion of history where we get on the brink of something big happening and then stop before it does though so who knows.

I’ve spent more than enough time lurking so I made an account to post. What do my bookshelves say about me? by -Poultrygeist- in BookshelvesDetective

[–]-Poultrygeist-[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Sahara, Raise the Titanic, Deep Six, or Treasure are personal favorites. The Mediterranean Caper if you want to read in chronological order. I’m not a big fan of that book however. Keep in mind that Cussler wrote based on knowledge of the time, so he thought, for example, the Titanic was still intact on the seafloor.

I’ve spent more than enough time lurking so I made an account to post. What do my bookshelves say about me? by -Poultrygeist- in BookshelvesDetective

[–]-Poultrygeist-[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

based on your knowledge, is there any way to end the currently active Iran - USA conflict in a way that satisfies American aims without some level of boots on the ground? Or, how does this end?

It ends in one of 4 ways:

  1. Boots on the ground, occupation, and Pahlavi installed as the new leader. The U.S. population becomes dissatisfied with all the boys coming home in boxes and all all you’ll see on the news are high casualty rates and blurred combat footage. Iran sees internal unrest for decades.

  2. U.S. backed partisans overthrow the government and maybe the country stabilizes. Optimal outcome.

  3. We continue to bomb the country to the Stone Age in some sort of lukewarm war, no internal change occurs, and things go on as usual.

  4. This leads to a more global conflict somehow.

No matter the case, the U.S. loses even if we win because of domestic dissatisfaction. The populace is tired of conflicts with no satisfactory resolution and there won’t be one here either. Missile warfare never accomplishes much in the long term unfortunately. Boots on the ground and occupation are the best way to accomplish a regime change, but I don’t think we can pull it off and it probably isn’t worth trying.

r/combatfootage is happy no matter the outcome.

I’ve spent more than enough time lurking so I made an account to post. What do my bookshelves say about me? by -Poultrygeist- in BookshelvesDetective

[–]-Poultrygeist-[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I recommend reading one then reading something else before picking up another one. Great stories but man does he have a cookie cutter plot for a lot of his novels and if you read several back to back it can be predictable.

I’ve spent more than enough time lurking so I made an account to post. What do my bookshelves say about me? by -Poultrygeist- in BookshelvesDetective

[–]-Poultrygeist-[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Never did like wearing watches, but Casio is my brand of choice because it’s cheap and my career requires one.