frameacloud: A green dragon reading a book. (Heradry transparent)
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I made some minor updates to the book list. The content is basically unchanged; as maintenance goes, this is the equivalent of doing some dusting, not of buying or rearranging furniture.

I put the book list logo on the front page to lend some character. There were a few places where I'd botched the html a little, so that a link didn't work or an image didn't show up, so I fixed that. In some reviews, I'd accidentally used italics to mark book titles instead of underlining; both are correct, but you're supposed to choose one and stick with it for consistency, so I changed those so they were all underlined instead. For the books that we've discussed here so far, I added something to their reviews: a link leading to all the entries tagged as being discussions about that book.

The content still desires a lot of revision, especially the slipshod scratch-paper final page with its list of "I dunno, should I include them or not?" books. I want to add other people's reviews in there, and I want to sort things out more. However, that kind of massive work has to wait until I've dealt with other things. Passing this semester, for example. Everything takes a back burner to school.

Would you like to post about what you think of Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book so far? How far are you in it? Just "fire when ready," don't wait for me to ask questions about it. Anything that enters your head about it is fine for mentioning. If you haven't read it yet or even said anything here yet, would you like to introduce yourself? Just jump on in, it's okay.
frameacloud: A green dragon reading a book. (Heradry transparent)
[personal profile] frameacloud
Some books were recently added to the LibraryThing bookshelf of the Therianthrope and Otherkin Book List:

Patrick Harpur's Daimonic Reality: A Field Guide to the Otherworld, since Lupa's LibraryThing bookshelf tagged it as being interesting in context with otherkin. I haven't read it yet.

Bernd Heinrich's Mind of the Raven: Investigations and Adventures with Wolf-Birds, since Lupa's LibraryThing bookshelf listed it, I took a look at it, and it appears to be very interesting. I don't know if it'll fit the theme of the book list, but it is about animal intelligence. I haven't read it yet.

Joseph Campbell's The Power of Myth, which probably should have been on the list before, though I'm not sure which section it should go in... secular interests or spiritual interests?

Theodore Schick's How to Think About Weird Things: Critical Thinking for a New Age, since I've been planning on adding it to the spiritual interests section of the book list for years now. I've read it from cover to cover twice and used it as reference a few times, but I keep going back and forth on whether I like it. Yes, critical thinking is an indispensable tool... and yes, it's useful to know the criticism for various New Age ideas, since the New Age books themselves aren't generally inclined to tell you that part even though it's something you'd want to know. On the other hand, the book isn't as neutral as it claims to be; it tends to take the stance that only scientifically provable things are worth believing in-- that you shouldn't believe in anything unless if you can see, hear, touch, measure, and experiment on it. That's really useful for identifying whether an idea is pseudo-scientific, but it's kinda opposed to spirituality of most any kind...

Adam Riggs's Critter Costuming: Making Mascots and Fabricating Fursuits. I stumbled across this in a search under the tag “costumes.” I was expecting to find some books on Halloween and stage make-up, but I hadn't realized there were any books on this in particular. I haven't read it yet.

Murray Bookchin's Re-Enchanting Humanity: A Defense of the Human Spirit Against Antihumanism, Misanthropy, Mysticism and Primitivism. I stumbled across this on a tag search... I have basically no idea what it is, but it could be interesting, or it might not. I haven't read it yet.

Bill Bryson's A Walk in the Woods: Rediscovering America on the Appalachian Trail. Possible secular interest.

I have a plan for a new section in the book list... I'm still uncertain about whether I want to do this, since it could either broaden the book list's theme to the point of degrading the whole and causing burnout for myself, or it could improve the book list by introducing people to yet more books that they otherwise wouldn't have heard of that suit their interests and broaden their minds. The plan is that the fiction section will include both the existing section of fictional stories that have characters who pretty much are otherkin in spirit, as well as a not-yet-existing section of fiction books that have an atmosphere evocative of otherkin. The atmospheric fiction section would include Bob Eggleton's Dragonhenge, Peter Beagle's The Last Unicorn, some urban fantasy novels... that sort of thing. People have always been recommending books to me that are like that. The Last Unicorn is not about otherkin, because it's about a unicorn who physically transforms into a human, which doesn't happen in real life and isn't how any real otherkin came to be... but most people agree that the atmosphere is evocative of otherkin, since a lot of otherkin feel like the Unicorn did about being in human form. Dragonhenge is a collection of myths told by dragons... but it obviously isn't about real dragons, it's not about people who identify as dragons, the myths the fictional dragons tell are equally fictional and aren't intended to be used for a real person to base their spirituality on, and nobody believed it was true when they were creating it... however, a lot of dragon otherkin would be very moved and inspired by reading a book about dragons where dragons are portrayed as spiritual, intelligent, capable of being either heroic or villainous, and with a mythology of their own. It bums me out that a lot of dragon otherkin are apparently unaware of Dragonhenge, since they're missing out on something they would like.

What do you think? Should I include a “fiction: atmospheres evocative of otherkin and therianthropes” section? Would it help people, or would it add confusion? Does it diverge too much from my goal of listing books that are about otherkin? Would it end up getting longer than the rest of the list? So far I've been so careful about what I do and do not include... would the proposed section lower the value of the rest of the list by including things that don't have as much to do with the list's subject?
frameacloud: A green dragon reading a book. (Heradry transparent)
[personal profile] frameacloud
The Otherkin and Therianthrope Book List is now on LibraryThing.com. LibraryThing is a website where users list the books they own in a "library," attribute tags to them, and find similar books based on other people's libraries and tags. It resembles some functions on Amazon.com, but it's oriented more towards social functions than commerce. The Otherkin Library currently contains 137 books rather than the 89(?) on the last update of the Otherkin and Therianthrope Book List. That's because I've decided to include some of the books I was iffy about or hadn't reviewed yet, for sake of completeness; the original Book List is in the process of being revised to include those as well. I've also found a few more books which fit the bibliography's theme, thanks to the various search functions on LibraryThing. I'm having a lot of fun on that site. If you're on LibraryThing as well, feel free to add the otherkin library to your watch list.
frameacloud: A green dragon reading a book. (Heradry transparent)
[personal profile] frameacloud
The Otherkin and Therianthrope Book List has been updated.

Changes in booklist as of September 6, 2006:
Rewrote the introductory text from scratch. Ah, much clearer now... and it has a link to [livejournal.com profile] t_o_book_club now.
Link to Lupa's book list on Amazon added.
Added false alarm section at the end of the book list.
Douglas's "The Beast Within" review added in false alarm section.
McCoy's "Advanced Witchcraft" review added, with link in false alarm section.
Rushkoff's "Cyberia" review added to non-fiction about otherkin section.
Changed index listing so that it's more detailed.
Changed the book list links and index listing so that they're bulleted lists in tables. It's prettier this way.
Edited the writing throughout... again. That part just keeps going on in every update.
Changed the ratings from five stars to alphabetical grades. (Alphabetical grades are less ambiguous in meaning, to me at least, and they look less like censored swearwords: ****!)

I've spent a lot more time and effort working on the book list than on the comic, so it would really make my day if you participated in [livejournal.com profile] t_o_book_club, even if you're not reading the bimonthly selected book.

Book list

Jul. 20th, 2006 11:01 pm
frameacloud: A green dragon reading a book. (Heradry transparent)
[personal profile] frameacloud
The Otherkin and Therianthrope Book List has moved. It is now located at http://therithere.comicgenesis.com/kinbooks.html although something of a local copy is kept within a few posts on this journal itself.

Updates to the booklist made on June 9... )
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